Thursday, 16 April 2026

Hitler's Child: The Third Reich Lives On by Barry Cole




Hitler's Child: The Third Reich Lives On 
By Barry Cole


Publication Date: 21st December 2025
Publisher: Independently Published
Print Length: 407 Pages
Genre: Historical Thriller

A WWII novel full of mystery and intrigue where fact and fiction combine to suggest an alternative to the conspiracy surrounding Hitler’s death.

Having been sent to Berlin by Winston Churchill to gather sufficient evidence to prove that Hitler had indeed committed suicide, a British Intelligence officer stumbles on a mystery surrounding the disappearance of a woman called Anna Traube.

Forced to abandon his investigation into her disappearance, following his death, the baton is taken up by his nephew, Rex, a freelance journalist. After reading the dossier left by his late uncle, intrigued by his belief that Anna Traube was part of a conspiracy surrounding Hitler’s death, he decides to investigate her disappearance himself.

Arriving in Magdeburg, the city where Anna had lived at the beginning of the war, he discovers that she has a daughter, Lotte. Deserted at birth and desperate to find the mother she had never known, she persuades him to let her join him on his hunt for her missing mother. A quest which will take them across Europe to South America and a meeting with a woman long thought to be dead. A woman who is harbouring a terrifying secret; Hitler had fathered a child.


Start your reading adventure HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited


Barry Cole


Barry Cole was born in Yorkshire and after leaving the army he began contributing stories and articles to the monthly magazines of two Native American charities. With a love of film, he then studied for two years at the London Screenwriters Workshop. His first book, The Time Bandit was published in 2016, followed by a historical novel Shingas a few months later. His third book The Conquistadors Horse was published in 2018 and has been optioned as a short film by Looking Window Pictures. His latest book The Letter, which was inspired by the Battle of Stalingrad was published by Michael Terence Publishing in 2021. After living on a narrowboat for several years he has now returned to his roots in North Yorkshire. The idea for his latest book: A New Beginning came from a short screenplay written while studying at the Screenwriters Workshop which he now plans to re-write as a feature. For those who may be interested, the principal character is named after the author's great-uncle, Albert Edward Clemens who died in August 1915 during the ill-fated Gallipoli campaign. Although the only thing they have in common is that both were soldiers his inclusion in the book is to celebrate the family's ancestral connection with one of America’s greatest writers Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain). 


Millie’s Escape (Hartford Manor Book 4) by Marcia Clayton




 Millie’s Escape 
(Hartford Manor Book 4)
By Marcia Clayton


Publication Date: 2nd November 2023
Publisher: Sunhillow Publishing
Page Length: 250
Genre: Historical Fiction

1885 North Devon, England

It is winter in the small Devon village of Brampford Speke, and a typhoid epidemic has claimed many victims. Millie, aged fifteen, is doing her best to nurse her mother and grandmother as well as look after Jonathan, her five-year-old brother. One morning, Millie is horrified to find that her mother, Rosemary, has passed away during the night and is terrified the same fate may befall her granny, Emily.

When Emily's neighbours inform her that Sir Edgar Grantley has also perished from the deadly disease, the old woman is distraught, for the kindly gentleman has been their benefactor for many years, much to the disgust of his wife, Lilliana. Emily is well aware that Sir Edgar’s generosity has long been a bone of contention between him and his spouse, and she is certain Lady Grantley will evict them from their cottage at the first opportunity.

As she racks her brain for a solution, Emily remembers her father came from Hartford, a seaside village in North Devon and had relatives there. Desperate and too weak to travel, she insists Millie and Jonathan leave home and make their way to Hartford before the embittered woman can cause trouble for them. There, she tells them, they must throw themselves on the mercy of their family and hope they will offer them a home.

With Emily promising to follow them as soon as possible, the two youngsters reluctantly set off on their fifty-mile journey on foot and in the harshest of weather conditions. Emily warns them to be cautious, for she suspects Lady Grantley may well pursue them to seek revenge for a situation that has existed between the two families for many years.


Start your reading adventure HERE
Read with #KindleUnlimited



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. 




Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Blood and Bronze by Jude Grayson

 


Blood and Bronze
By Jude Grayson


Publication Date: 8th January 2025
Publisher: ‎Independently Published
Print Length: 447 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

The war that destroyed a world began with a single choice.

When Paris of Troy steals Helen from Sparta, he sets in motion a conflict that will pull kings and armies into a war no one can escape.

Across Greece, rival rulers unite. Armies gather, oaths are sworn, and old grudges begin to surface. At the center of it stands Achilles, the most feared warrior of his age, and Hector, the prince sworn to defend Troy at any cost.

But this is not just the story of a war.

It is the story of:

a prince torn between desire and duty
a queen whose choice will shape the fate of kingdoms
and warriors who will chase glory, whatever the cost
As the walls of Troy rise against the might of Greece, ambition, pride, and loyalty will decide who survives—and what is lost.

Because legends are not born. They are made in war.


Head back to the Trojan wars and start your reading adventure HERE. Read with #KindleUnlimited

Jude Grayson


Jude Grayson writes epic historical fiction where war, ambition, and betrayal shape the fate of empires. From the battlefields of ancient Troy to the fractured kingdoms of early China and the rise of the Mali Empire, his novels bring history to life with intensity and realism.

His stories explore the brutal choices of kings and warriors, the clash of loyalty and power, and the human cost behind the rise of nations. Grounded in historical detail and driven by compelling characters, his work is ideal for readers who enjoy immersive, action-driven fiction.

He is the author of Blood and Bronze, Tyrants and Traitors, and Lion of Mali.




So Shall Ye Reap: Book #2 of the REVENGE SERIES by Terry Tyler

 


So Shall Ye Reap: 

Book #2 of the REVENGE SERIES

By Terry Tyler


Publication Date: 21st December 2025
Print Length: 248 Pages
Genre: Crime Fiction / Suspence

"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap"
-Galations 6:7

Call it karma, call it poetic justice - two novellas that explore the cunning way life can exact its own revenge, in a way that no amount of foresight can ever fully predict.

Ordinary Joe

A phone call on a cold November morning summons Joe Carter from Vienna to Brazil, to meet up with his old travelling buddy, Ziggy. But Ziggy's changed. He has a new crowd, different values, and a clever way of reeling Joe in.

Soon, Ziggy will make an offer Joe could refuse, if he really wanted to. When he agrees, he has no idea of the dark path he will travel down.

Some roads don't let you turn back.

King of the Playground

The path between love and hate is narrow indeed.

At six years old Jerry and Mikkel become inseparable, the brothers each other never had. Mikkel is generous, funny, adventurous, the leader of the gang, the king of the playground. Jerry feels honoured to be his second-in-command, but over the years his resentment grows. Why can't he be the king? Why does Mikkel always turn up smelling of roses?

As they become men, Jerry acknowledges that this choke hold of emotions that intensifies as the years pass, has consumed him.

Start your reading adventures HERE
Read with #KindleUnlimited



Terry Tyler
 is the author of twenty-eight books available from Amazon, the latest being the post-apocalyptic thriller, Safe Zone. 

Other recent publications include the SFV-1 rage virus trilogy: Infected, Darkness and Reset, also 'Where There's Doubt', the story of a romance scammer and his prey, and 'Megacity', the final book in the dystopian Operation Galton trilogy. Happy to be independently published, Terry is an avid reader and book reviewer, and a member of Rosie Amber's Book Review Team.

Terry is a Walking Dead addict, and has a great interest in history (particularly Saxon, Plantagenet and Tudor), along with books and documentaries on sociological/cultural/anthropological subject matter. She loves South Park, the sea, and going for long walks in quiet places where there are lots of trees. She lives in the north east of England with her husband.






Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Editorial Book Review: Singing Bones: An Epic Saga of Loss and Survival in an Ancient Neolithic World (The Téuta’s Child) by S. G. Ullman

 


 Singing Bones: 
An Epic Saga of Loss and Survival in an Ancient Neolithic World 
(The Téuta’s Child) 
By S. G. Ullma


Publication Date: 25th March 2026
Publisher: Stuart Ullman
Page Length: 339
Genre: Historical Fiction


Nearly 8,300 years ago, a sudden climate collapse reshaped the earth. Winters grew longer and colder, harvests failed, coastlines flooded, and the ground itself became unstable. For the Téuta, a settled Neolithic village that had endured for generations, survival became uncertain.

Eini is born with troubling visions of disaster—warnings her people dismiss as superstition. As the climate worsens and violence spreads among desperate neighbors, Eini spends her lifetime trying to protect her family and preserve the fragile traditions that hold her community together. When catastrophe finally strikes, the Téuta must face the unthinkable: abandoning their ancestral home and redefining who they are in a transformed world.

Told across generations, Singing Bones follows the lives of women whose strength, memory, and resilience shape the fate of their people—from prophecy, to survival, to leadership forged in loss. Song, story, and shared history become tools of endurance in a world where nothing can be taken for granted.

Grounded in real archaeological and climate research, Singing Bones is ancient historical fiction set during the Neolithic era. Its spiritual elements arise from a prehistoric worldview in which nature, belief, and survival are inseparable. Sweeping yet intimate, it explores how early civilizations responded to climate catastrophe, displacement, and change.

Perfect for readers of immersive historical fiction, ancient civilizations, prehistoric survival stories, and epic sagas rooted in humanity’s deep past.



History, though often recorded in the rise and fall of kingdoms, is equally shaped by quieter stories—those of communities who endure, adapt, and survive in the face of forces far beyond their control. In "Singing Bones", S. G. Ullman presents a deeply evocative work of historical fiction that explores not conquest or empire, but the fragile persistence of human life within an ever-changing world. It is a novel concerned not with dominance over nature, but with the difficult art of living within it.

Set within a prehistoric landscape where survival is uncertain and the environment itself is in a constant state of quiet transformation, the narrative follows the Teúta people, a community whose existence is closely bound to the rhythms of the natural world. Ullman approaches this setting with careful attention to detail, creating a world that feels both distant and immediate. The land is not merely a backdrop to human activity, but an active force—at times sustaining, at others unforgiving—shaping decisions, relationships, and the fragile balance upon which survival depends.

At the centre of the novel lies Eini, whom we first encounter as a child, already set apart by her unusual perception of the world around her. From these earliest moments, Ullman establishes a quiet sense that Eini’s experience of reality is not entirely shared by those around her. Her sensitivity to subtle shifts—both within her environment and within herself—introduces an awareness that this is a story concerned with change on a scale not yet fully understood. Through Eini, the novel explores the idea that perception, while powerful, does not always bring clarity, and that there are forces at work which cannot be fully understood, only sensed. This awareness is not presented as something distant or abstract, but as part of daily existence, woven into the way individuals respond to the world around them. In this, Ullman introduces a quiet but persistent tension, where awareness exists without certainty, and knowledge remains incomplete.

As the narrative unfolds, the perspective gradually broadens, introducing a wider cast of characters whose lives intersect in ways that feel both organic and purposeful. This expansion is handled with a natural fluidity, allowing the story to deepen without ever losing its cohesion. Each character brings with them a distinct response to the challenges of their world, reflecting differing ways of confronting uncertainty, loss, and the necessity of adaptation.

One of the novel’s most compelling qualities lies in its portrayal of community. Survival is not presented as an individual achievement, but as a shared endeavour, sustained through cooperation, experience, and the bonds between people. Ullman captures the quiet strength found within these connections, illustrating how resilience is often rooted not in isolation, but in the relationships that endure even in the most difficult of circumstances.

Underlying the narrative is a persistent awareness of change—gradual, often imperceptible, yet ultimately transformative. Ullman conveys this with remarkable subtlety, allowing the reader to sense the shifting balance of the world long before its full implications are understood. In doing so, the novel invites reflection on how individuals and communities respond when the familiar begins to give way to the unknown.

Thematically, "Singing Bones" engages with questions of continuity and memory, asking what is preserved when a way of life is altered, and what must be relinquished in order to endure. Ullman does not offer simple answers. Instead, he presents a thoughtful meditation on the ways in which culture persists—not solely through place, but through tradition, shared experience, and the passing of knowledge from one generation to the next.

Ullman’s prose is measured and immersive, unfolding at a deliberate pace that reflects the lives it portrays. There is a quiet lyricism within his descriptions of the natural world, reinforcing the sense of a landscape that is both beautiful and unforgiving. This restraint allows the narrative’s emotional and thematic depth to emerge naturally, without ever feeling imposed.

At times, the novel invites deeper reflection on the relationship between humanity and the environment, raising questions that resonate far beyond its historical setting. In this sense, "Singing Bones" becomes not only a story of the past, but a meditation on enduring human concerns—adaptation, resilience, and the necessity of change, as well as the unseen forces that shape human experience in ways not always fully understood.

Rich in atmosphere and thoughtful in its exploration of human experience, "Singing Bones" is a quietly powerful novel that lingers long after the final page has been turned. S. G. Ullman has crafted a work that speaks to the enduring strength of community, the persistence of memory, and the deeper currents that run beneath human understanding, offering a nuanced and deeply reflective reading experience.

Highly recommended.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
Yarde Book Promotions


Start your reading adventure HERE. Read with #KindleUnlimited


S. G. Ullman



Stuart Ullman retired from working after 38 years as an economist and engineering project manager at a US Navy lab. He has been an avid recreational sailor for decades, and was, for a time, the Commodore of the Sailing Club of Washington; he once sailed to Bermuda on one of the U.S. Naval Academy’s 44-foot sailboats. Since his retirement he has pursued a life-long interest in writing. He has been active in the Maryland Writers Association and for several years was president of the Montgomery County chapter. He and his wife raised two children, have a grandson, and are currently living in Kensington, Maryland.





The Atheling Chronicles by Garth Pettersen

 


Today, I’m delighted to welcome Garth Pettersen as we shine a spotlight on his gripping historical fiction series, The Atheling Chronicles. Rich in atmosphere, political intrigue, and vividly drawn characters, this powerful series transports readers to a turbulent medieval world where loyalty is tested, power is contested, and survival is never guaranteed.


The Atheling Chronicles follows the perilous journey of Harald, son of King Cnute, through loyalty, love, and power in eleventh-century England and beyond.


✓ Book One – The Swan’s Road

A storm-tossed journey to Rome turns deadly when Harald aids a Frisian woman, Selia, and finds himself hunted by Norman enemies. Separated from King Cnute, Harald must race across Europe to prevent an assassination that could plunge Engla-lond into invasion.


✓ Book Two – The Dane Law

Summoned back to Engla-lond, Harald becomes entangled in brutal court politics and a bitter succession struggle. Seen by many as a better heir than his cruel half-brother, Harald must survive unseen enemies while resisting a crown he does not want.


✓ Book Three – The Cold Hearth

Threatened by the chilling words “The sons of Cnute are dead men,” Harald seeks peace on a rural estate—only to uncover a history of massacre and suspicion. With danger lurking among neighbours and servants, trust becomes a deadly gamble.


✓ Book Four – The Sea’s Edge

Sent unwillingly to Ireland to prepare an invasion of
Gwynedd, Harald faces a moral crossroads. Torn between duty to his father-king and his own sense of justice, he must decide whether loyalty is worth the cost of honour—and his marriage.


✓ Book Five – Ravens Hill

Granted a vast estate meant as a reward, Harald and Selia instead inherit hostility, corruption, and an unsolved murder. As they try to rule with fairness, generosity is mistaken for weakness—and Ravens Hill threatens to destroy everything they have built.


The Atheling Chronicles by Garth Pettersen is available now in ebook and paperback. Choose your format, start with The Swan’s Road, and immerse yourself in this compelling historical series today. Pick up your copy HERE.


Garth Pettersen is a Canadian writer and historian who lives with his wife on a farm in the beautiful Fraser Valley near Vancouver, British Columbia. When he is not writing, he is looking after horses and mending fences. He has a bachelor's degree in History and a background in Education (History, English, Theatre). Garth Pettersen's short stories have appeared in several anthologies and in journals such as Blank Spaces, The Spadina Literary Review, and The Opening Line Literary 'Zine. His award-winning historical fiction series The Atheling Chronicles is set in Anglo-Saxon/Danish England early in the eleventh century and features the largely unknown figure of Harald Harefoot, second son of the “Viking” King Canute. Reviewers have praised the author for his extensive research on the era.

Connect with Garth:

Monday, 13 April 2026

The Swan Maiden: Book Two of the Surface and the Deep: Story of Anna of Cleves by G. Lawrence

 



The Swan Maiden: 
Book Two of the Surface and the Deep: 
Story of Anna of Cleves 
By G. Lawrence


Publication Date: 3rd July 2024
Publisher: Independently Published
Print Length: 273 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

November 1539

Sent as a bride for the much-married King of England, Anna of Cleves has left her homeland and family behind to travel to England. There to be wed to a man who has killed one wife, and perhaps caused the deaths of two more, Anna fears her marriage and husband, yet she has been promised to Henry VIII to secure alliance for her country, and safety for her people.

But will there be safety for Anna? Into a court of scandal and cutthroat politics she is thrown, and only by her wits will she survive.

The Swan Maiden is Book Two of the Surface and the Deep: Story of Anna of Cleves, by G. Lawrence


Start your reading adventure HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited



I am an independently published author, and proud to be so. Living in a little cottage in Wales in the UK, I love where I live as much as I love to write.

The age of the Tudors has been an obsession for me since I was a child, and many of my upcoming books will centre on that time, but I also pen the odd dystopian fiction or historical fiction from other time periods. I will be releasing all my titles on amazon, for kindle, paper and hard back, and soon to come, audio books!

I studied Literature (with a capital L) at University and usually have twenty or more books I'm currently reading. Reading and writing are about mood for me, and I haven't found a genre I didn't enjoy something about so far...

I can often be found on social media, sharing my books and any interesting historical site I have managed to find that week, so come find me if that’s what you like to see!





Sunday, 12 April 2026

Meet the author: Penny Hampson

 


The countdown is on!

We’re so excited to be taking A Plethora of Phantoms (Spirited Encounters Book 2) by Penny Hampson on tour next week!

But first… let’s meet the author behind the mystery.

Penny Hampson writes mysteries and because she has a passion for history, her stories also reflect that. A Gentleman’s Promise, a Regency romance, was Penny’s debut novel and the first of her Gentlemen Series.

Penny also enjoys writing contemporary novels with a hint of the paranormal because where do ghosts come from but the past?

The Unquiet Spirit, a spooky mystery/romance set in Cornwall, the first of the Shades, Shadows, and Spectres Series, was a contender for the Joan Hessayon Award 2021.

Penny lives with her family in Oxfordshire, and when she is not writing, she enjoys reading, walking, and the odd gin and tonic (not all at the same time).

Connect with Penny Hampson:
Penny’s books are all available on Amazon: viewauthor.at/Pennysbooks

Be sure to follow the tour HERE.





Saturday, 11 April 2026

Then There’s Trust: A forbidden love...a relationship in jeopardy...a tested trust (Blossoming of Truth Book 3) by Susan Gray




Then There’s Trust
(Blossoming of Truth Book 3) 
By Susan Gray


Publication Date: 16th March 2026
Publisher: UK Book Publishing
Print Length: 322 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Romance

A gripping emotional story of love, fidelity and trust set in 1950s northeast England.

A forbidden love...a relationship in jeopardy...a tested trust
Perfect for fans of Kate Morton, Victoria Hislop and Lucinda Riley

Darcy Dukas is fearless and feisty - but can she be trusted? Left bereft by a personal disappointment, her vulnerable mindset causes her to seize an opportunity to pursue her dream career. When Marcel Duval arrives in Durham to establish his detective agency, she agrees to work with him. But is she prepared for the risks she will encounter? Risks for her safety...risks for her young marriage...and risks affecting her family's trust?

In 1952 Josh Smallwood, Darcy's brother, returns home after completing his National Service. Trying to sort his future, he begins working on the family farm and befriends Judy, a young nurse. He is baffled to discover any liaison with her is forbidden by her family. This mystery fuels an intense, secret relationship...can they overcome obstacles to be together?

A shroud of guilt clings to Chantal Martin - will she ever be free from its taint? As an unmarried mother, her once tenacious trait seems to have deserted her. Striving towards the final hurdle, an unexpected decision and an untimely event threaten to blight her resilience...can her trust be rewarded?

THEN THERE'S TRUST is a gripping, emotional story of love, fidelity and trust set in 1950s northeast England.

Start your read adventure HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited

Susan Gray


'Never to old to follow your dreams' has become Susan Gray's mantra since beginning to write novels after celebrating a significant birthday. Susan endeavours to entwine the genres of mystery and romance and sets her novels in the early Twentieth Century. She lives with her husband in northeast England, setting her books in this picturesque area. She has a son and daughter, both married, two granddaughters and a grand dog. When not writing she loves to spend time reading, puzzling, walking and catching up with friends over a coffee. She enjoys travelling and tries to include many of the places she has visited in her books. Her plots are inspired by 'life' and how her characters navigate the waters. She loves to 'people watch' and creates her characters based on the many strangers she has observed. She has written six novels. SPANISH HOUSE SECRETS was her debut novel and is now joined by another standalone novel BLOSSOMING OF TRUTH. 

Connect with Susan:



Friday, 10 April 2026

Blog Tour: No Ordinary June by L. N. Jacobs

 

No Ordinary June
By L. N. Jacobs



We warmly invite book bloggers and #Bookstagrammers to join us on tour from June 15th to June 19th, 2026 for the blog tour of No Ordinary June — a witty Regency romance filled with sharp banter, slow-burn tension, and a wager that changes everything.








Throughout this five-day tour (15th June – 19th June 2026), we will be featuring:

✨ Reviews
✨ Author interviews
✨ Guest posts
✨ Extracts
✨ Book spotlights

If you enjoy Regency romance, enemies-to-lovers tropes, clever dialogue, and heartfelt love stories, we would love to have you join us on tour!

Check out the blurb:

Miss June Fairmont, second daughter to Baronet Fairmont, believes in true love. Gregory Kendall, Earl of Kendall, believes in practical arrangements.

One dance. That's all it took for Gregory to decide June would make an adequate Countess of Kendall. The next morning, she overhears him presenting her father with a marriage proposal—complete with a list evaluating her suitability. When she bursts into her father's study, fury barely contained, Gregory has the audacity to look amused. Worse, he offers a wager. He'll give her one Season to find her perfect romantic match. When she inevitably fails to find this "true love"—and he's clearly certain she will—she'll accept his practical proposal.
June agrees instantly—let him watch her prove that love conquers logic. But Gregory proves an insufferable shadow throughout her Season, offering his pragmatic assessment of every swooning poet and debt-ridden rake. Somewhere between his dry observations and brutal honesty, June makes a horrifying discovery: she's starting to enjoy his company. His wit makes her laugh. That insufferable smirk becomes almost... attractive.

One Season. One wager. And a growing suspicion that the real danger isn't losing the bet—it's winning it.

Filled with sharp banter, a wager that changes everything, swoony kisses, and one insufferably pragmatic earl, "No Ordinary June" is the witty Regency romance you've been waiting for. A closed-door enemies-to-lovers where the tension is in every glance, and the slow burn will leave you breathless.


Pre-order your copy HERE.
Release Date: 11th June 2026

L. N. Jacobs


L. N. Jacobs is an Italian paediatrician living in Sweden, where she's perfected the art of balancing hospital shifts, family chaos, and an unhealthy obsession with happy endings.

By day, she wrangles tiny patients and their worried parents. By night (and early mornings, and lunch breaks), she writes emotional romances about imperfect people finding love in the messiest, most unexpected ways.

Her stories blend the high-stakes drama of medical life with sizzling chemistry, sharp banter, and characters who feel like friends you'd text at 2 AM. Think ER meets happily-ever-after, with a hefty dose of wit and a side of Swedish fika.

When she's not writing or saving lives, you'll find her devouring romance novels, hoarding chocolate like it's currency, plotting her next adventure, or convincing her family that "just one more chapter" is a valid excuse for everything.

L. N. Jacobs writes the kind of love stories that make you laugh, swoon, and believe that even the most guarded hearts can find their home.


Tour Schedule to follow

Hitler's Child: The Third Reich Lives On by Barry Cole




Hitler's Child: The Third Reich Lives On 
By Barry Cole


Publication Date: 21st December 2025
Publisher: Independently Published
Print Length: 407 Pages
Genre: Historical Thriller

A WWII novel full of mystery and intrigue where fact and fiction combine to suggest an alternative to the conspiracy surrounding Hitler’s death.

Having been sent to Berlin by Winston Churchill to gather sufficient evidence to prove that Hitler had indeed committed suicide, a British Intelligence officer stumbles on a mystery surrounding the disappearance of a woman called Anna Traube.

Forced to abandon his investigation into her disappearance, following his death, the baton is taken up by his nephew, Rex, a freelance journalist. After reading the dossier left by his late uncle, intrigued by his belief that Anna Traube was part of a conspiracy surrounding Hitler’s death, he decides to investigate her disappearance himself.

Arriving in Magdeburg, the city where Anna had lived at the beginning of the war, he discovers that she has a daughter, Lotte. Deserted at birth and desperate to find the mother she had never known, she persuades him to let her join him on his hunt for her missing mother. A quest which will take them across Europe to South America and a meeting with a woman long thought to be dead. A woman who is harbouring a terrifying secret; Hitler had fathered a child.


Start your reading adventure HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited


Barry Cole


Barry Cole was born in Yorkshire and after leaving the army he began contributing stories and articles to the monthly magazines of two Native American charities. With a love of film, he then studied for two years at the London Screenwriters Workshop. His first book, The Time Bandit was published in 2016, followed by a historical novel Shingas a few months later. His third book The Conquistadors Horse was published in 2018 and has been optioned as a short film by Looking Window Pictures. His latest book The Letter, which was inspired by the Battle of Stalingrad was published by Michael Terence Publishing in 2021. After living on a narrowboat for several years he has now returned to his roots in North Yorkshire. The idea for his latest book: A New Beginning came from a short screenplay written while studying at the Screenwriters Workshop which he now plans to re-write as a feature. For those who may be interested, the principal character is named after the author's great-uncle, Albert Edward Clemens who died in August 1915 during the ill-fated Gallipoli campaign. Although the only thing they have in common is that both were soldiers his inclusion in the book is to celebrate the family's ancestral connection with one of America’s greatest writers Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain).