Thursday, 12 February 2026

Throwback Thursday with Carolyn Hughes


For this Throwback Thursday, we’re stepping back to where an enduring historical series first began. The Meonbridge Chronicles have drawn readers into the richly textured world of 14th-century England, bringing ordinary lives to the foreground against a backdrop of extraordinary upheaval.

In this interview, author Carolyn reflects on the origins of the series, from the initial spark that led her to the medieval period to the challenges of recreating an authentic “thought-world” for her characters. She shares insights into research, character development, the evolution of her writing process, and how a small English community has continued to grow across multiple books. It’s a fascinating look back at the creative foundations of a much-loved series — and where it may yet go next.



Mary Anne: Looking back to the very
beginning of The Meonbridge Chronicles, what first inspired you to set a series in 14th-century England?

Carolyn: When I was studying for my Masters in Creative Writing, I had to write a novel. But, what to write? I had been writing women’s contemporary fiction, and I didn’t want to continue with that…

I’d long been intrigued by the medieval period, for its relative remoteness in time, and, I think, for the very dichotomy between the common present-day perception of life in the Middle Ages as “nasty, brutish and short” and the wonders of the period’s art, architecture and literature. The briefest of investigations quickly convinced me that I wanted to know more about the period, and I suppose I also realised that, by writing an historical novel, I’d have the opportunity both to learn more about the medieval period and to interpret it, which seemed like a thrilling thing to do.

A second inspiration – in effect, the storyline for the first Chronicle, Fortune’s Wheel – came from reading more about the 14th century. Catastrophic events affected every part of the century, including terrible famines, the start of the Hundred Years War, the Black Death and the Peasants’ Revolt. So, plenty of background there for interesting storylines…

Such events would have meant (as they do in every century) huge changes to people’s lives, at all levels of society. But I was particularly interested in how events affected the lives of ordinary people, and I wanted to write—and still do—about ordinary lives (and in particular ordinary women) within the context of these big social changes. So, for Fortune’s Wheel, I chose to write a story about the aftermath of one of the greatest catastrophes of all time, in terms of the havoc it wrought to populations, the Black Death.


Mary Anne: When you wrote Fortune’s Wheel, what were your biggest hopes for the series — and did you imagine it would grow as it has?

Carolyn: When I was writing Fortune’s Wheel I didn’t even think about it becoming a series. But, having written that first story, I’d already grown to love the characters so much that I simply had to write more about them! To date, I’ve published six Chronicles, and also a companion novel and a trilogy of prequel novellas. I would never have imagined I could write so many books, let alone come up with so many stories!


Mary Anne: What was the greatest challenge you faced when writing your first book in this series?

Carolyn: I suppose, finding out about all the stuff I didn’t know! Researching physical details, such as houses, clothes, food, tools, is relatively easy. It’s also not too difficult to discover something of the social and political history of the time, so that the context for my stories have a ring of truth. But what is more difficult – and this applies to all historical fiction, I think – is to depict a reasonably convincing medieval “thought-world”. Yet, it is this that can give a novel depth, and a sense that the characters are “real” medieval people. 

Trying to portray, with any degree of authenticity, the way people thought – how they understood the world and the way it works, the part religion played in their lives, their belief in magic and superstition, their attitudes towards sexuality and gender, their sensibilities and mindsets in general – can be tricky. But it’s my job to draw characters with whom readers can associate but who do also seem truly “of their time”, and I work hard to try and ensure I do that as “authentically” as possible.


Mary Anne: How did you decide which characters and social classes to focus on within the world of Meonbridge?

Carolyn: I’m fascinated by social history. As I said above, catastrophic events always bring huge changes to people’s lives, at all levels of society. So, even if I’m more interested in how events affected the lives of ordinary folk, and in particular the lives of ordinary women, it was essential to portray those lives within the context of the whole community in which they lived. 

Years ago, a reviewer compared Fortune’s Wheel to BBC Radio’s long-running drama, The Archers – “An everyday story of country folk” used to be its strapline. The comparison hadn’t occurred to me before, but I could readily see the similarity. And it was essentially what I was doing, writing stories about the ups and downs of the lives of lots of different people in a small community, people of all ages and from all walks of life. 

For Fortune’s Wheel, I had already developed a cast of characters that reflected that: men and women, old and young, children, gentry, peasants of different stations, artisans and officials. In that book, I imagined huge conflict arising between the higher and lower strata of society as a result of the upheaval caused by the plague, and I gave three particular women a role in resolving that conflict. 

Subsequent novels tell the stories of different characters from the first book, with new characters being introduced as necessary. It is fun choosing which character(s) should be in the spotlight. And, of course, as time has passed for the folk of Meonbridge – each book starts roughly two years after the end of the previous one – those characters have grown and, in some cases, changed, and it has been fascinating to describe and to “witness” that change. 

For four of the six books in the series, the principal characters are women, and this applies also to the companion novel and the novellas, but two of the books – and indeed the new one I’m writing – have male leading characters. But what you read about every time is a community, and I believe it is that broad and vibrant picture that those readers who love my books really enjoy.


Mary Anne: Since publishing the early books, how do you feel your writing or research process has evolved?

Carolyn: I hope you don’t think I’m bragging when I say that I do feel I am a better writer than I was eight years ago! To be honest, it shouldn’t be surprising, when I’ve put in so many hours of practice, learning what works and what doesn’t in terms of structuring a book, and how to draw engaging and believable characters. That’s not to say I now find writing “easy” – I certainly don’t! But I do feel that I now understand how to write. How to construct mellifluous sentences, and paragraphs and chapters, how to structure a novel with highs and lows, crises and calms – narrative arcs! That helps a lot. On top of that, and for me the most important aspect of my novels, is understanding how to bring characters to life.

I’m not sure I did so for the first couple of books but, for each of the rest, I have made a plan. And, for me, that has been a huge advance. Now, I couldn’t write a book without having some idea of its structure and broad content. Before I start drafting, I write an outline of the whole story. The book’s ending is usually fairly vague at this stage, but I’ll have some idea of what will happen. 

At the same time as this “plotting”, I clarify in my mind the “motivations, anxieties and transformations” of my characters, maybe even writing character outlines for the main players. Of course, when you write in series, by the time you’re on to book 7 you do know your characters quite well. However, the whole point of a story arc is to have your central characters change or develop in some way, so it’s vital to revisit your understanding of “who they are”.

When I start writing the first draft, I follow the outlines (plot and character), but not at all slavishly. Nothing is set in stone. I expect change. The plan is just a framework, which I expand and round out with description, character interactions and dialogue as I write. 

Anyway, I really do feel that this “planner” strategy has made a huge improvement to my writing.


Mary Anne: Which book or character in the series marks the biggest turning point for you as a writer?

Carolyn: I don’t really think any individual book or character fulfils the role of “turning point”. All I can say is that my two favourite Chronicles are perhaps two books that I feel worked best. Those two books are Children’s Fate and Sister Rosa’s Rebellion. Children’s Fate is memorable because the return of the Black Death is central to the story, and I wrote it during Covid, our very own pandemic. It was a weird experience. However, I think the reason I like it so much is that it has two “villains”, both of whom I thoroughly enjoyed writing and, at the time, felt were the best villains I’d written to date. Maybe much the same is true of Sister Rosa’s Rebellion, where the principal antagonist I feel is a really well-drawn villain. So, maybe my ‘turning point” moment is a realisation that I have learned how to draw villains that readers love to loathe! 


Mary Anne: What achievement in your career since starting this series are you most proud of?

Carolyn: Nothing specific. I have of course been delighted that The Coffee Pot Book Club has been kind enough to award a medal to each of the Meonbridge Chronicles: two gold, two silver and two bronze, plus golds for each of the currently available audiobooks. Thank you so much!


Mary Anne: If you could go back and give your earlier author self one piece of advice, what would it be?

Carolyn: I’ve been writing on and off all my adult life but family and career always took precedence and, in fact, it never occurred to me that writing might be something I could do full-time. Or even that I could have any of my writings published. I didn’t start writing “seriously” until I was retired and my children had left home, mostly because, in a sense, I didn’t know I could have started sooner. So, I guess I might say to my younger self, “Start sooner!”


Mary Anne: How has reader feedback over the years shaped the direction of the series?

I don’t think reader feedback has “shaped the series” as such, but I have certainly taken notice of comments in reviews – especially anything negative!


Mary Anne: Finally, what are you working on now, and what can readers look forward to next from you?

I’m now writing the seventh Chronicle, which might be the end of the series proper, though I think there is plenty of scope for writing more “companions” – offshoot stories from the main novels.

But I do also have another project waiting in the wings: the novel I wrote for my PhD in Creative Writing. It’s called The Nature of Things and is complete but still needs a good deal of editing to make it publishable. Here's the blurb:

Medieval England. Devastating poverty and disastrous famine. The violence of war. The calamity of plague. Society’s unravelling. An innocent’s betrayal. The ever-present prospect of untimely death….

A carpenter, a soldier, a merchant and a priest; a prostitute, a countrywoman and a city wife. Each tells their own story; together they chronicle the century.

Each year I hope that “this” will be the year I publish it, but I haven’t yet managed to complete it alongside the work on the Chronicles. But maybe 2026 WILL be the year! We’ll see…


Our sincere thanks to Carolyn for taking the time to share her reflections on The Meonbridge Chronicles and the creative journey behind them. Her insights into history, character, and community offer a deeper appreciation of a series that continues to captivate readers. We’re grateful for the opportunity to look back with her — and we look forward to seeing where the story leads next.


Check out the blurb:

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.


However you love to read, this book is waiting for you — available on #Kindle, in paperback, as an audiobook, and with #KindleUnlimited. Pick up your copy HERE.


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:

Throwback Thursday with Vanda Vadas

 


The Pirate Lord by Vanda Vadas is a sweeping tale of romance and adventure set during the golden age of piracy. In this interview, Vanda Vadas shares the inspirations behind her debut novel, the challenges of crafting believable characters in a brutal eighteenth-century world, and why The Pirate Lord remains a defining milestone in her writing career.





Mary Anne: What first inspired you to write The
Pirate Lord
and set your story in the swashbuckling world of the high seas?

Vanda: My fascination with the golden age of piracy stems from my early childhood. Evidence of this exists within the pages of a Grade Four ‘Composition Book’ which I’d kept from my school days (I’m sentimental in that way). As a nine-year-old, I’d written a poem about a pirate and had even drawn a pirate ship. I have absolutely no recollection as to the source of its inspiration. My family was living in Papua New Guinea at the time, and we didn’t have a TV, so I daresay a book or a comic had stirred my imagination.

Decades later, my husband and I were cruising the Caribbean Islands—thanks to a work-related holiday—and my muse kicked in. Penguin Random House Australia published The Pirate Lord and to my absolute delight, a pirate ship features in the background on the cover.


Mary Anne: When you began this book, what excited you most about portraying life aboard pirate ships and among coastal communities?

Vanda: I’d started writing The Pirate Lord well before holidaying in the Caribbean. It’s one thing to gather research from academic books, journals, articles, documentaries etc, but it’s another to visit the destination in which your story takes place. I was so incredibly excited to visit Barbados, St Kitts, Dominica and Martinique. For me, this was tangible research heaven. I took hundreds of photos and videos and wrote copious research notes. Being there engaged all the senses. Breathing the air, seeing up close the flora and fauna, and visiting museums and historical buildings of note. Scenes in the book that took place above and below deck were easier to write after having navigated my way around what used to be a real pirate ship.


Mary Anne: What was the biggest challenge you faced while building believable characters in such an adventurous setting?

Vanda: The biggest challenge was grounding larger-than-life adventure in believable human behaviour. Pirates of the mid-eighteenth century are often portrayed as romantic or mythic figures but the people who lived in that world were shaped by brutal realities: class divisions, violence, imperial politics and survival at sea. I had to make sure the characters felt like real people responding to those pressures, not modern personalities dressed up in period clothing.


Mary Anne: How did you balance historical adventure elements with the romantic storyline so they complemented one another?

Vanda: At its heart, The Pirate Lord asks whether love can survive in a world driven by revenge, secrecy, and survival. I balanced the historical adventure and romance by letting them constantly collide. Miles’s pursuit of justice and vengeance creates the very circumstances that bring Eloise into his life, while falling in love forces him to question everything he’s sacrificed for that pursuit. The romance doesn’t soften the adventure, it sharpens it.


Mary Anne: Was there a moment during your research or writing when the story took an unexpected turn for you?

Vanda: I can’t say that the story took an unexpected turn, however, there was one chapter I revisited to add an integral scene which demonstrates just how gutsy a heroine, Eloise is. Unbeknownst to Miles, Eloise is adept with a sword. When conflict between them escalates, the matter is solved not with words, but by the blade.

Mary Anne: Looking back now, which character in The Pirate Lord do you feel most connected to and why?

Vanda: I’m most connected to Eloise, because she’s driven by principle rather than convenience. No matter how dangerous or emotionally complicated her situation becomes, she holds fast to her sense of right and wrong. That commitment to integrity, even at great personal risk, is something I admire and strongly relate to.


Mary Anne: How has writing this book influenced the way you approach setting, action, or character in later works?

Vanda: Writing The Pirate Lord taught me to think of setting as an active influence rather than a backdrop. The world shapes the characters, the action tests their values, and every choice carries consequences. That perspective has stayed with me and continues to inform how I approach storytelling in subsequent novels.


Mary Anne: What’s one piece of feedback from readers that has stayed with you or shaped how you think about your work?

Vanda: Readers often tell me that my writing makes them feel as though they’re actually there, experiencing the story alongside the characters. That feedback has stayed with me and continues to shape my work, reminding me that emotional immersion is just as important as plot or historical detail.


Mary Anne: If you could revisit your first draft of The Pirate Lord, what would you tell your earlier author self?

Vanda: I’d tell myself to trust the process and the characters. The heart of the story was always there, and revision is where clarity, confidence, and depth truly emerge.


Mary Anne: Finally, as you reflect on this novel’s place in your career, what does The Pirate Lord represent to you creatively?

Vanda: Creatively, The Pirate Lord represents perseverance. It was my first novel, but it took years of learning, rewriting, rejection, and growth before it reached its final form. I always believed in the story, even when I knew my skills had to catch up to my ambition. Seeing that persistence rewarded with traditional publishing offers made the novel a defining milestone in my career.


Mary Anne: Thank you, Vanda, for sharing such thoughtful insights into the journey behind The Pirate Lord. Your reflections on perseverance, research, and character bring a deeper appreciation to a novel that continues to resonate with readers. It’s been a pleasure exploring the story behind the book that launched your career, and we look forward to seeing where your storytelling takes us next.


Check out the blurb:

Can love for his beautiful, aristocratic captive rescue Miles from his lust for revenge?

A family tragedy steeped in deceit and betrayal saw Lady Eloise Blakely vow never to fall victim to a man's charms, let alone invite him into her bed. Until fate swept her aboard a pirate's ship and into its captain's embrace.

Yet when he reveals a dark secret, her lover becomes her enemy . . .

Ten years ago, Miles Zachary Fenton was framed for murder. For so long he has fought to clear his name and reclaim his dukedom. Now, when both appear to be just within reach, he is forced to abduct a meddling beauty, one who wreaks havoc with his emotions and complicates his plans . . .


This story is waiting for you. Available as an ebook — pick up your copy HERE and start your adventure.


Before residing in Australia, Vanda's birthplace and early childhood years were spent in Papua New Guinea. At the age of eleven, a holiday in England sparked an interest in the days of old. Castles, ruins and discovering Jane Austen novels inspired her interest in all things historical, a passion that later kick-started Vanda's desire to write historical fiction.

Vanda's locale and global visits to faraway places inspire her to create fictitious characters and dramas - past and present - set against authentic and geographical backdrops.



Perfect for readers who enjoy character-led storytelling and heartfelt domestic fiction.

 


Some stories invite you to slow down, breathe deeply, and step into a world shaped by memory, landscape, and quiet resilience. The Mazzard Tree is very much one of those novels.

Rooted in the rhythms of rural Devon, this book offers readers a deeply evocative sense of place, where personal histories are entwined with the land itself. It is a story about endurance, belonging, and the small but powerful moments that shape a life. With its gentle pacing and emotional undercurrents, the novel unfolds like a walk through blossom-filled orchards—beautiful, reflective, and quietly absorbing.

Perfect for readers who enjoy character-led storytelling and heartfelt domestic fiction


✔️ A heartfelt, character-driven story set in rural Devon
✔️ Rich sense of place with beautifully evoked countryside
✔️ Themes of resilience, belonging, and emotional healing
✔️ Perfect for readers who enjoy gentle, immersive storytelling
✔️ Ideal for fans of cosy, reflective historical fiction




Check out the blurb:

1880 North Devon, England

Annie Carter is a farm labourer’s daughter and life is a continual struggle for survival. When her father dies of consumption, her mother, Sabina, is left with seven hungry mouths to feed and another child on the way. To save them from the workhouse or starvation, Annie steals vegetables from the Manor House garden, risking jail or transportation.

Unknown to her, she is watched by Robert, the wealthy heir to the Hartford Estate, but far from turning her in, he befriends her.

Despite their different social backgrounds, Annie and Robert develop feelings they know can have no future. Harry Rudd, the village blacksmith, has long admired Annie, and when he proposes, her mother urges her to accept. She reminds Annie, that as a kitchen-maid, she will never be allowed to marry Robert. Harry is a good man and Annie is fond of him. Her head knows what she should do, but will her heart listen?

Set against the harsh background of the rough, class-divided society of Victorian England, this heart-warming and captivating novel portrays a young woman who uses her determination and willpower to defy the circumstances of her birth in her search for happiness.


However you love to read, The Mazzard Tree is available on Kindle, paperback, and hardback, and is also available to read on Kindle Unlimited. Find your copy HERE.


A farmer’s daughter, Marcia Clayton, was born in North Devon, a rural and picturesque area in the far South West of England. When she left school, Marcia worked in a bank for several years until she married her husband, Bryan, and then stayed at home for a few years to care for her three sons, Stuart, Paul, and David. 

As the children grew older, Marcia worked as a Marie Curie nurse caring for the terminally ill and later for the local authority managing school transport. Now a grandmother, Marcia enjoys spending time with her family and friends. She is a keen researcher of family history, and this hobby inspired some of the characters in her books. Marcia and Bryan are keen gardeners and grow many of their own vegetables. 

An avid reader, Marcia can often be found with her nose in a book when she should be doing something else! Her favourite genres are historical fiction, romance, and crime books. Marcia has written five books in the historical family saga, “The Hartford Manor Series”, and is working on the sixth. Besides writing books, Marcia produces blogs to share with her readers in a monthly newsletter. 



Rough Diamond – Rough Justice by Avien Gray plunges readers into a dangerous landscape of intelligence work, targeted killings, and the ruthless international diamond trade

 



Rough Diamond – Rough Justice by Avien Gray plunges readers into a dangerous landscape of intelligence work, targeted killings, and the ruthless international diamond trade. From Australia to Florida, South Africa and beyond, the novel moves at breakneck speed, delivering a constantly shifting backdrop where danger and deception are never far behind.


✔️ Fast-paced international thriller

✔️ Espionage, undercover operations, and intelligence intrigue

✔️ A morally complex anti-hero

✔️ Global settings from Australia to South Africa

✔️ Action, betrayal, and high-stakes danger

✔️ A story of justice served on Cain’s own terms





Check out the blurb:


After a first kill, MI5 Agent and erstwhile photographer Cain becomes
an undercover, extra-judicial killer for a secret Bureau.

Recovering from injuries sustained protecting the Royal Family, Cain embracesa new life and romance in sun-drenched Australia, leaving his past life behind.

But when tragedy strikes, he is on the move again. This time to a new career in the world of diamond dealings in Florida.

Curiosity takes Cain to the diamond world in South Africa, where his past finally catches up with him, the criminal world allies against him and he becomes a killer again.

In Cain's action-packed escapades, a spectacular betrayal takes him into the rigours of a Chinese prison where the truth about his past begins to unravel.

Aided by a loyal band of friends from the shadowy world of intelligence, he delivers his own particular brand of rough justice.

However, with enemies closing in on all sides, will Cain prevail?


Rough Diamond – Rough Justice by Avien Gray is available now from Amazon, Apple Books, and Nook. Click here to buy your copy.


Avien Gray, the English author behind Rough Diamond – Rough Justice, brings a wealth of experience to his gripping debut novel. Born in the UK, Gray has led a dynamic, bachelor’s life marked by an impressive array of skills and global adventures. He has a driver’s license, motorbike license, and pilot’s license. His physical discipline extends to martial arts, where he earned a karate black belt, complemented by a lifelong passion for photography that captures the world through his discerning lens.

Gray’s rumoured travels paint the picture of a man unbound by borders. He is said to have spent many months in Saudi Arabia, Australia, the USA, South Africa, Europe and China. This rich tapestry of experiences infuses his writing with authenticity, lending a vivid, worldly edge to the thrilling narrative of his complex protagonist: a man called Cain.

Avien and his best friend shared a flat and went out with various female friends together. They had a great time. As it says in the book when Cain is talking with his best friend: a Royal Protection Officer.

 ‘We will have to write that book when we retire,’ Cain said.

 They looked at each other with knowing smiles – for a long few seconds.

 ‘All those secrets,’ said Jerry. ‘Perhaps we will.’

 And time moved on.

But in real life, his best friend tragically died – leaving Avien to write their book alone.

Connect with Avien Gray:


Apollo’s Raven is for readers who believe the most powerful romances are the ones that should never exist.

 


Valentine’s Day is often wrapped in roses and promises, yet some love stories are born in defiance—shaped by danger, secrecy, and impossible choices.

Apollo’s Raven is for readers who believe the most powerful romances are the ones that should never exist. It explores the quiet intensity of forbidden love, where the heart refuses to bend to duty, loyalty, or the lines drawn by war.


✔️ A love story shaped by danger and longing


✔️ Romance that grows in secrecy and sacrifice


✔️ When the heart chooses what the world forbids


✔️ Ideal for Valentine’s Day readers who want more than a fairytale






Check out the blurb:

A Celtic warrior princess is torn between her
forbidden love for the enemy and duty to her people.

AWARD-WINNING APOLLO'S RAVEN sweeps you into an epic Celtic tale of forbidden love, mythological adventure, and political intrigue in Ancient Rome and Britannia. In 24 AD British kings hand-picked by Rome to rule are fighting each other for power. King Amren's former queen, a powerful Druid, has cast a curse that Blood Wolf and the Raven will rise and destroy him. The king's daughter, Catrin, learns to her dismay that she is the Raven and her banished half-brother is Blood Wolf. Trained as a warrior, Catrin must find a way to break the curse, but she is torn between her forbidden love for her father's enemy, Marcellus, and loyalty to her people. She must summon the magic of the Ancient Druids to alter the dark prophecy that threatens the fates of everyone in her kingdom.

Will Catrin overcome and eradicate the ancient curse? Will she be able to embrace her forbidden love for Marcellus? Will she cease the war between Blood Wolf and King Amren and save her kingdom?


This Valentine’s Day, lose yourself in a love story that dares to defy fate. Apollo’s Raven is available for just 0.99 on #Kindle for a limited time. Also available in audiobook, paperback, and hardback. Pick up your copy HERE.



Award-winning author, Linnea Tanner, weaves Celtic tales of love, magical adventure, and political intrigue in Ancient Rome and Britannia. Since childhood, she has passionately read about ancient civilizations and mythology. She is particularly interested in the enigmatic Celts, who were reputed as fierce warriors and mystical Druids.

Linnea has extensively researched ancient and medieval history, mythology, and archaeology and has traveled to sites described within each of her books in the Curse of Clansmen and Kings series. Books released in her series include Apollo’s Raven (Book 1), Dagger’s Destiny (Book 2), Amulet’s Rapture (Book 3), and Skull’s Vengeance (Book 4). She has also released the historical fiction short story Two Faces of Janus.  

A Colorado native, Linnea attended the University of Colorado and earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in chemistry. She lives in Fort Collins with her husband and has two children and six grandchildren.



Editorial Book Review: Julien’s Terror by Laura Rahme


This week’s review turns to Revolutionary France,
where Laura Rahme’s "Julien’s Terror" explores the enduring psychological cost of violence long after the guillotine has fallen silent. Rather than focusing on political spectacle, the novel examines fear as something inherited and internalised, carried forward by those who survive. The following review considers how Rahme approaches trauma, memory, and moral collapse, and why the novel’s scope extends far beyond its titular character.


***


In “Julien’s Terror”, Laura Rahme has written a novel that does far more than explore fear—it examines its origins and its consequences. Set against the moral collapse of Revolutionary France, this is a psychological historical novel that understands terror not as a single moment of violence, but as something slow, corrosive, and enduring. It is a book concerned with what history leaves behind, and with the quiet devastation borne by those who survive it.


From the opening pages, the prose establishes a grave and measured tone. The cities and landscapes of France are rendered with care and precision. Nantes is not merely a setting but a presence in its own right, its streets heavy with memory and complicity. The Loire, in particular, functions as a silent witness—absorbing what human voices cannot contain. This is historical fiction that treats place with seriousness, recognising that geography itself can carry moral weight.

The Terror is depicted with notable restraint. There is no reliance on spectacle or excess. Instead, violence unfolds through routine and authority: orders issued, bodies processed, dignity systematically stripped away. Rahme conveys with chilling clarity how cruelty becomes acceptable when ideology overrides conscience and obedience is rewarded. The effect is deeply unsettling precisely because it feels so plausible.

Especially powerful are the scenes involving Louis-Charles, the lost Dauphin. Rahme resists turning him into a political symbol or sentimental figure. He is presented, simply and devastatingly, as a neglected child whose physical and emotional decline occurs in isolation and silence. His fear of light, his inability to endure the outside world, and his gradual withdrawal from life are rendered without embellishment. These passages are among the novel’s most affecting, reminding the reader that some of the Revolution’s worst crimes took place away from crowds and guillotines, hidden behind locked doors.

The novel draws an illuminating parallel between the suffering of Louis-Charles and that of Marguerite Lafolye. Marguerite’s ordeal is defined by movement—flight, concealment, survival—while the Dauphin’s is marked by stillness and confinement. Marguerite is repeatedly told that his fate is worse, and this knowledge becomes an additional burden rather than a consolation. The comparison does not diminish her trauma; it deepens it. In doing so, the novel avoids simplistic hierarchies of suffering and instead demonstrates how deprivation and abandonment can be as destructive as overt violence.

The sections set in the underground caves of the Vendée are among the most quietly effective in the novel. Beneath a country in turmoil, the earth becomes a place of refuge. These hidden chambers, cold and with only a sliver of light, offer a fragile form of safety where silence is essential, and existence itself feels provisional. Life persists underground while destruction unfolds above it. Rahme handles these passages with restraint, allowing the physical conditions to speak for themselves and reinforcing the sense of a population forced to erase itself to endure.

Although the novel bears Julien’s name, its narrative scope extends well beyond a single viewpoint. Julien’s journey—from a troubled childhood in Paris to relative stability under Napoleon—provides an important structural thread, but the novel resists a narrow, protagonist-centred focus. Instead, it unfolds as a broader examination of shared trauma. Marguerite, in particular, emerges as a central moral presence. Her silences, memories, and unresolved past shape the emotional heart of the book, transforming it into a meditation on survival, identity, and inherited pain.

What distinguishes "Julien’s Terror" is its psychological acuity. Rahme understands that trauma does not end when danger recedes. It reappears in memory, in sound, and in obsession. The recurring motif of a crying child heard at night is used sparingly yet effectively, underscoring how the past continues to intrude upon the present. Terror, in this novel, is not confined to prisons or battlefields; it persists in domestic spaces and private thought.

The integration of Breton folklore adds an additional layer without undermining the novel’s historical grounding. These elements function less as supernatural interventions than as expressions of belief and fear when rational explanation fails. They enrich the atmosphere while remaining subordinate to emotional truth.

Rahme also demonstrates notable moral restraint. There are no easy villains and no reassuring resolutions. Revolutionaries and royalists alike are capable of cruelty, and ideals are shown to be dangerously malleable when separated from compassion. Yet the novel never descends into cynicism. Acts of loyalty and protection are given their due weight, even when history itself offers no reward.

“Julien’s Terror” is not an easy or hurried read. It demands attention and emotional engagement, but those willing to give it both will find a novel of depth, seriousness, and quiet power—one that treats its subject with respect and lingers in the mind long after the final page.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
Yarde Book Promotions

Check out the blurb:

In this chilling psychological tale set in revolutionary France, a young couple confront their darkest fears. Looming above them, between healing and oblivion, lies the French Republic's most shocking secret.
FRANCE, 1794 - The Reign of Terror
Julien d'Aureville, a young boy from a broken home in Paris, meets a fugitive aristocrat who changes his life. As the Terror subsides and Napoleon rises to power, Julien's fortunes improve.
Then he meets the mysterious Marguerite.
Upon her marriage to Julien, Marguerite Lafolye has all a Parisian woman could ever wish. Yet something is not quite right.
Is Marguerite hiding a dark secret?
When she attempts to see into Marguerite, even the celebrated fortuneteller, Marie Anne Lenormand, cannot read her cards.
From bourgeois Paris to the canals of Napoleon's Venice, Marguerite seems to be living a lie. Who is she really? What drives her obsession with the late Dauphin, Louis-Charles, son of Marie-Antoinette?
Could the answer lie in a memory - in Nantes' orphanage, or in the hidden undergound caves of war-torn Vendée, or else in the secret refuge of Gralas Forest, deep in Western France?
Or could the answer be right here, in Paris, within the forbidding walls of the Temple Prison that Napoleon threatens to destroy, and where the Dauphin tragically perished.

Julien’s Terror by Laura Rahme comes highly recommended for readers of historical fiction who value psychological depth and moral complexity. The novel is available in paperback, on #Kindle, and through #KindleUnlimited. You can pick up your copy HERE.

Laura Rahme
was born in Dakar, Senegal where she spent her early childhood. Dakar's poverty and raw beauty left a strong impression on Laura. Deeply inspired by her Lebanese, French and Vietnamese heritage, she has a passion for covering historical and cultural ground in her writing. Laura holds honours degrees in Engineering and Psychology. Her non-writing career has seen her in the role of web developer, analyst programmer, business analyst and Agile manager. She lives in Brittany, France.


Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Set in a world of seafaring warriors, political alliances, and ancient magic, the novel invites readers into a bold and dangerous age shaped by fate and ambition.

 


Dragon of Denmark (Valiant Vikings, Book 1) by Jennifer Ivy Walker launches an epic Viking saga that blends history, myth, and romance. Set in a world of seafaring warriors, political alliances, and ancient magic, the novel invites readers into a bold and dangerous age shaped by fate and ambition. Awarded the Bronze Medal for Yarde Book Promotions Book of the Year 2025 in the Romance category, Dragon of Denmark stands as a powerful opening to the Valiant Vikings series and a standout Viking romance.



✔️ Historical Viking romance

✔️ Norse mythology and magic

✔️ Powerful warlord hero

✔️ Prophecy, fate, and forbidden desire

✔️ Paranormal and fantasy elements








Check out the blurb:

Skårde the Scourge, bastard son of the Danish king
Harald Bluetooth, is a fierce Viking warlord who earned the prestigious title Dragon of Denmark through victorious battles and lucrative Viking raids. When his royal father announces that Skårde will forge a Viking alliance through an arranged marriage to the daughter of Richard the Fearless, the Dragon of Denmark considers the voyage to Normandy an infuriating banishment.

Illegitimate daughter of Richard the Fearless, the Viking Duke of Normandy, Ylva is a Druid priestess and Celtic healer with the otherworldly gift of sight. She learns that she must leave her Breton village behind and travel to Normandy, where she will marry the Viking brute that she has foreseen in a terrifying vision.

When the Frankish king, determined to drive the Vikings from Normandy, attacks and seizes Richard’s clifftop fortress, the Dragon of Denmark must ally with Ljósálfar Light Elves, a Viking völva with powerful seiðr magic, and a vitki-- a shapeshifting sorcerer who can assume the form of a falcon--to reclaim the ducal palace.

Dragon of Denmark is a sizzling, scintillating blend of historical fiction, Norse mythology, paranormal fantasy, and steamy Viking romance!


Step into an epic Viking romance today. Dragon of Denmark is only £0.99 on Kindle for a limited time, also available in paperback, and free to read with Kindle Unlimited. Pick up your copy HERE.


Enthralled with legends of medieval knights and ladies, dark fairy tales and fantasies about Druids, wizards and magic, Jennifer Ivy Walker always dreamed of becoming a writer. She fell in love with French in junior high school, continuing her study of the language throughout college, spending summers in France as a foreign exchange student, exploring medieval castles and troglodyte caves in the Loire Valley, sites of pilgrimage such as le Mont-Saint-Michel, eventually becoming a high school teacher and college professor of French.

As a high school teacher, she took her students every year to the annual French competition, where they performed a play she had written, "Yseult la Belle et Tristan la Bête"--an imaginative blend of the medieval French legend of "Tristan et Yseult" and the fairy tale "Beauty and the Beast", enhanced with fantasy elements of a Celtic fairy and a wicked witch.

Her debut novel, "The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven"--the first of a trilogy-- is a blend of her love for medieval legends, the romantic French language, and paranormal fantasy. It is a retelling of the medieval French romance of "Tristan et Yseult", interwoven with Arthurian myth, dark fairy tales from the enchanted Forest of Brocéliande, and otherworldly elements such as Avalonian Elves, Druids, forest fairies and magic.

Explore her realm of Medieval French Fantasy. She hopes her novels will enchant you.

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