Thursday, 19 February 2026

The First Chapter: Revisiting Moon Lord: The Fall of King Arthur – The Ruin of Stonehenge by J.P. Reedman



For Throwback Thursday,  we are revisiting the first chapter of an author’s career with Moon Lord: The Fall of King Arthur – The Ruin of Stonehenge by J.P. Reedman.





Mary Anne: What first inspired you to imagine a prehistoric Britain as the setting for this saga, and to place Stonehenge at the heart of the story?


Janet: I have had an interest in stone circles going back years, and was always a little disappointed that there wasn't more fiction about Stonehenge. The novels I encountered tended to be almost ALL about the building, which I found dull—I was more interested in the human element. The few I read that were character-based often had the people of the time depicted poorly in my opinion—one made them more Neanderthal than Neolithic, and the other had the Greeks coming over to show the barbarians how to build their monument....

Mary Anne: When you began writing what became Stone Lord and Moon Lord, did you already envision this as a sweeping saga, or did the scale grow as the story developed?

Janet: I knew that it was going to be quite a hefty tome because my angle was to make the MC a prehistoric  'King Arthur', which meant untangling threads from a very large extant mythos. 


Mary Anne: Ardhu Pendraec’s rise and fall as Stone Lord is central to the narrative. How did you approach shaping such a powerful and tragic leadership arc?

Janet: Life in the early Bronze Age was short and at times, probably violent. I didn't want to pull any punches. There was no happy ending, just as there wasn't one in the Arthurian cycle (except of course for the folklore about Arthur returning some day when needed.)


Mary Anne: The novel blends political intrigue, family betrayal and mythic destiny. Which of these elements proved the most challenging to weave together?

Janet: The mythic part, definitely. Trying to blend that in without the story becoming a purely fantasy novel was quite difficult at times. I would call The Stonehenge Saga 'historical fantasy', but really there is very little in the way of actual magic—everything that seems magical can be explained away but the Bronze Age belief in the otherworld and in ritual and omens.


Mary Anne: Morigau, Fynavir and Mordraed all play pivotal roles in Ardhu’s downfall. How important was it for you to explore betrayal from within the family itself?

Janet: I hope I managed to give them human and realistic reasons for their actions and did not  portray them as all 'eeeviiilll' or fickle, as do some of the Arthurian legends that they were based on. Guinevere often get a bad rep in books, even though Lancelot is just as guilt as she is in the betrayal of Arthur.


Mary Anne: You place Arthurian myth into a prehistoric context. What drew you to reimagine these legendary themes so far back in time?

Janet: My original inspiration came from an interview with Richard Carpenter, writer of the TV series Robin of Sherwood. He was musing about writing a TV show set at Stonehenge, in the Bronze Age, with  the stones being the Round Table.  He never wrote it and his ideas, other than the Arthurian theme, were very different from mine, which went deep into material culture and anthropology, but when I first read the article, I thought, “That's amazing! I could really imagine the Arthurian legends set in an much earlier time.” Of course in the actual Arthurian mythos, Stonehenge DOES in fact play a part—Merlin brought it from Ireland, using, NOT magic, but 'ingenious devices'. It also is mentioned as being a burial site of Britons killed by treachery—which shows that medieval writers were aware that the 300 burial mounds in the vicinity of the monument contained human remains.


Mary Anne: The relationship between the King and the Land is a recurring idea in the story. How did this concept influence the way you shaped the plot and its turning points?

Janet: The concept of the Divine King, tied to the land, is a very old one indeed and found in many cultures. Some have suggested that certain bog bodies, such as  Old Croghan man,discovered  in Ireland, were sacrificial kings, killed when they grew old or weak, and then placed in liminal areas such as a community's land boundary as offerings to the gods and perhaps also to be spirit guardians. Stonehenge itself has a very unusual burial from c2300 BC of a young man of  around 24 who was shot through the back by arrows, at close range. He was placed, very deliberately, at the ditch terminal of the entrance, between the worlds of the living and the Ancestors.


Mary Anne: Looking back now, what do you think this saga taught you about writing epic, multi-generational storytelling?

Janet: It was a great learning curve, and set the stage for me to write ongoing series about real people. I had been nervous about attempting that before.


Mary Anne: If you were revisiting this story today, is there any aspect of the world, characters or mythology you would explore further?

Janet: I fully intend to write more prehistoric-based fiction in the future, but probably more novella length than huge epics. Again, my aim will be to highlight the people of the era, rather than the building of their monuments. 


Mary Anne: Finally, as you reflect on The Stonehenge Saga and its place in your career, what does this work represent to you as a writer?

Janet: Well, it certainly was a  massive stepping Stone! It was my first venture into indie publishing although I had written fantasy for years and had submitted shorter works to small press publishers in the 80's. I used a hybrid publisher as I knew nothing of how anything worked back then in 2012 and it was all Scary Techy Stuff! I know some people are leery of hybrids, but the lady who ran my one was an author herself, and it was a fair deal, especially since a number of paperbacks were included. I sold them all to a local history group and went into the black almost immediately. Later, I struck out on my own, having learn the ropes. Still learning of course!


Thank you to J.P. Reedman for chatting with us about Moon Lord: The Fall of King Arthur – The Ruin of Stonehenge and the story that began it all. It’s been wonderful revisiting the first steps of a writing career that continues to captivate readers.


Check out the blurb:

Many Sun-Turnings have passed since the Ardhu the Stone Lord inherited the kingship of Prydn. His illegitimate son Mordraed seeks his father's hall on the Great Plain, and a place among the famed warriors of Kham-el-Ard, but his appearance brings a shadow and a doubt. With his power waning and the land beginning to fail, Ardhu must lead his warriors on a final journey to retrieve a golden Cup, which the Maimed King of the Wasteland foretells will unite a crumbling kingdom. Gal'havad, most trusted of Ardhu's men, and his only legitimate heir - a sickly youth, half in the World of Spirit - is befriended by his half-brother Mordraed and lured into a deathly pact. Meanwhile, The Merlin, old and ill, struggles to see through the darkness that is rising and is made temporarily powerless to help, betrayed by those he thought friends. With An'kelet and Fynavir's illicit affair discovered, Mordraed manipulates his father into leaving his Kingdom to wage war on his former friend and seizes power himself, turning the fields to dust and slighting Khor Ghor, the great temple to the Ancestors upon the Great Plain.. Mordraed, the Dark Moon, has Risen... and the Stones of the Giants' Dance will fall! Stand-alone sequel to STONE LORD Moon Lord is a book set in Britain's prehistory such as you've never read before. Mixing fiction with the latest archaeological discoveries, it covers a prehistoric landscape ranging from Stonehenge and Avebury, to Seahenge in Norfolk and Newgrange in Ireland. A novel of the prehistoric origins of the man we called KING ARTHUR...


Pick up your copy:
Amazon UK


J.P. Reedman was born in Canada but has lived in the U.K. for nearly 30 years. 

Interests include folklore & anthropology, prehistoric archaeology (neolithic/bronze age Europe; ritual, burial & material culture), as well as The Wars of the Roses and the rest of the medieval era.






Ready to escape to the Highlands?


This Throwback Thursday, we’re heading back to the misty glens of the Scottish Highlands with Highland Arms, Cathie Dunn’s debut Highland romance. Set against the haunting legacy of Glencoe and the Jacobite past, the novel weaves history, heartbreak, and an unforgettable enemies-to-lovers romance into a story that still holds a special place in readers’ hearts.

In this interview, Cathie looks back on the inspiration behind Highland Arms, the research rabbit holes, the characters she still adores, and how her voice as an author has evolved since first bringing Catriona and Rory’s story to life.




Mary Anne: Looking back to writing Highland Arms, what first sparked your idea for a romance set in the Scottish Highlands?

Cathie: Ever since my teens, I’ve had a soft spot for Scotland, and the dramatic history, breathtaking landscapes, and wonderful music. I remember writing essays about the country back in school, and during my English language studies. When I eventually moved to the north-east of Scotland, I finally had the chance to get my hands on regional history books and local accounts. 

At the same time, I read a lot of historical romance novels, most of them involving daring Highlanders, and the idea for Highland Arms soon began to take shape.



Mary Anne: What excited you most about writing your first published Highland romance, and what scared you the most?

Cathie: I loved delving into the historical background of the area in which Highland Arms is set – the beautiful Highland village of Ballachulish and tragic Glencoe. I could go down that particular rabbit hole for days. The history really gripped me, and I was thrilled how my main male character, Rory, emerged from this. Glencoe is still my favourite place on earth. 

What worried me the most was the fact that Highland Arms contains more historical (or should I say, political) background details than many Scottish romance novels. Would readers enjoy delving into the dark side of Scottish history, and its effect on Rory, with me?


Mary Anne: How did you approach creating the emotional connection between Catriona and Rory — was their chemistry clear from the start, or did it develop as you wrote?

Cathie: Oh, that was such fun to write right from the start! Catriona is headstrong and opinionated, and her banishment is unjust, which makes her come across as entitled at times. Rory doesn’t think much of Lowlanders, and he regards her as a threat to his secret life as a Jacobite smuggler. If she discovers his secret, he’d be in big trouble. 

I suppose, these days you’d call it ‘enemies to lovers’. Both have much to learn from each other, even though they realise what matters when it’s almost too late.


Mary Anne: What was the biggest challenge you faced during the writing or research process for this story?

Cathie: I wrote the first draft of Highland Arms
during NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in November 2009, and the big challenge was to finish it in time. I did it. Yay! But then the serious process of editing and more research was required, which took another few months.

Research could be tough, as I mention several pivotal events. The story is set between the two major Jacobite Rebellions, so there is talk of the first failed rebellion, and the reprisals on the Highlanders, and, of course, the massacre at Glencoe in 1692, still within living memory in 1720, when Highland Arms is set. Research made for heartbreaking reading.


Mary Anne: Since publishing Highland Arms, how has your writing evolved or changed in subsequent novels?

Cathie: Oh, it has changed a lot. Looking back now, I realise I hadn’t fully found my own voice. Having read many historical romance novels, I clearly tried to emulate some of the authors of the day, even though hints of my own voice are breaking through now and then. 

My early novels have quite a different ‘feel’ to my recent books. Every author evolves as we continue to write. We discover new facets to our voice, new ways of interpreting our characters’ paths, new outlooks as to what we want out of a story, and how to get it. And so, our writing changes all the time.


Mary Anne: Which scene or character in Highland Arms are you most proud of — and why?

Cathie: I adore Auntie Meg. She’s the heart and soul of the story, showing off the famous Highland welcome. Astute, caring, and savvy, and she knows right from wrong – and she’s not afraid to voice her opinion. Then, of course, there’s troubled Rory, for whom I have a soft spot…

As to favourite scenes, I still love the scene where Catriona walks into the kitchen at Taigh na Rhon very early in the day in her nightshift, a blanket wrapped around her shoulders, and encounters a topless Rory. To this day, this scene always makes me giggle, and I can’t believe I actually wrote it.


Mary Anne: What was one piece of feedback from readers that surprised you or influenced how you write now?

Cathie: It’s important to find your own voice, and follow your instinct. At the time I wrote my earliest books, I tried to copy the style of historical romance authors, as I thought that that was what readers wanted. (That caused me a lot of trouble with my then work in progress, Dark Deceit, which I still want to tweak.) Now I know that readers enjoy authors’ genuine voices, and their own interpretations. Readers’ feedback and reviews have been invaluable in my progress as a writer.

Just listen to your inner voice, and you’ll find it. It may be hiding sometimes (I’m just going through that phase), but it’ll come back.


Mary Anne: If you could go back to your first day working on this book, what advice would you give your earlier author self?

Cathie: Don’t try to copy others! I realised when I edited Highland Arms that much of the narrative didn’t sound like ‘me’, so I made quite a few major changes. And my editor at The Wild Rose Press, my first publisher, was wonderful in helping me gather my own thoughts on where I wanted to take the story, and find my voice in its delivery. Her guidance was a great learning curve, and it helped me to understand the ins and outs of writing and editing, even though I’d already studied Novel Writing by that time.


Mary Anne: How do you balance historical setting and romance — and has that balance shifted in your later work?

Cathie: Historical setting has always been of major importance to me, which is why the focus of Highland Arms changed a bit when I re-released it after I got my rights back. In effect, I closed the bedroom door. 

It also made me realise that, whilst the romance aspect is important and should always be genuine and heartfelt, I prefer this to happen within a historical construct. That means including real historic events, and people who lived at the time. I’m keen to portray daily life, with all its joys and tragedies. 

Having said that, I don’t want to write about kings and queens (at least not for the time being) – there are already some brilliant writers out there who know them much better than I do. But recently, my focus has shifted to forgotten women in history, and I want to bring them to life. Romance is a big part of that, but not the major one. That’s life itself.


Mary Anne: What are you working on now, and what can fans of Highland Arms look forward to next from you?

Cathie: I’m (still, after three years!) working on Treachery (the sequel to Ascent) about Sprota the Breton, handfasted wife William Longsword, son of Poppa of Bayeux and Rollo the Viking. Set in 10th-century Normandy, I’m keen to show her struggles as the mother of William’s only heir, especially after his assassination. 

I hope to have that novel finally finished in the summer. Famous last words… 


Thank you so much for allowing me to chat about my first published novel, Highland Arms, on your fabulous blog, Mary Anne. I thoroughly enjoyed my journey back to those early days as a published author. 


Check out the blurb:

A Highlander with a dangerous cause. 

A Lowland Lady in disgrace. 

Sizzling romance in the Highlands.

Betrayed by her brother’s lies, Catriona MacKenzie is banished from her home to her godmother’s manor in the remote Scottish Highlands. While her father ponders her fate, Catriona’s insatiable curiosity leads her into trouble – and straight into the arms of a notorious Highland rogue.

Five years after an ill-fated Jacobite rebellion, Rory Cameron smuggles cattle and weapons to raise money for another uprising – until Catriona uncovers a deadly plot against him. When she inadvertently exposes his activities, Rory is faced with a decision that could save their lives, or destroy them both.

But is he running out of time?


Ready to escape to the Highlands?

Available now on #Kindle, Paperback, and #KindleUnlimited Pick up your copy HERE.



Cathie Dunn is an Amazon-bestselling author of historical fiction, dual-timeline, mystery, and romance. She loves to infuse her stories with a strong sense of place and time, combined with a dark secret or mystery – and a touch of romance. Often, you can find her deep down the rabbit hole of historical research…
 
In addition, she is also a historical fiction book promoter with The Coffee Pot Book Club, a novel-writing tutor, and a keen reviewer on her blog, Ruins & Reading.
 
After having lived in Scotland for almost two decades, Cathie is now enjoying the sunshine in the south of France with her husband, and her rescued pets, Ellie Dog & Charlie Cat. 

She is a member of the Historical Novel Society, the Richard III Society, the Alliance of Independent Authors, and the Romantic Novelists’ Association.

Connect with Cathie: 


Where illusion fades and truth demands to be seen




Today, I’m delighted to welcome Roberta Tracy, author of Zig Zag Woman, a historical mystery that takes readers into the shadows of early twentieth-century Los Angeles, where illusion, danger, and determination collide.


✔️ A gripping historical mystery set in early twentieth-century Los Angeles
✔️ Featuring one of the city’s first policewomen with arrest powers
✔️ Vaudeville illusions, hidden crimes, and dangerous secrets
✔️ A body discovered behind the iconic Pantages Theatre
✔️ Inspired by real locations and historical detail
✔️ A determined heroine challenging prejudice and power
✔️ Where illusion fades and truth demands to be seen


Check out the blurb:

The last thing LAPD Detectives McManus and Tyson expect to find behind Pantages Theatre is a body rolled up in a blanket.

The last thing Margaret Morehouse, one of the city's first policewoman with arrest powers, expects to do is join the investigation. When a deadly explosion at the L. A. Times derails their efforts, Margaret finds herself at a crossroads and strikes out on her own, a path leading to delusion and self-discovery on a vaudeville stage. Her husband's nephew Leland further complicates the situation by sharing a ransom note and confiding his failure to report his wife's disappearance the Dominguez Air Meet.

A brief stint as a magician's assistant takes Margaret to Chicago, where she almost signs on as a zig zag girl, the term used for ladies performing in the "cutting-a-woman-in-two" illusion. Instead, Margaret returns to the tumultuous world of early twentieth century Los Angeles. Reunited with McManus and Tyson, she confronts prejudices and societal norms in efforts to identify a body, clear Leland's name, and topple the stranglehold one powerful, amoral person has over many lives. Their efforts lead to dead ends and misconceptions before truth comes to light. Love is rekindled and danger uncovered in unlikely places. Margaret goes from Zig Zag Girl to Zig Zag Woman, no longer cut in two but headed on a clearer path.

This book is available in ebook format. You can pick up your copy HERE.


Early experience as a staff greeting card writer introduced Roberta Tracy to witty people who shared the writer’s dream. Marriage, motherhood, and career intervened, but she maintained that creative desire. A degree in nonprofit management led her to work situations where newsletters, grant proposals, and business correspondence took precedence. Still, she wrote poetry, some of which won prizes and publication, and children’s books set in worldwide locations. Recently, she co-authored Come Dream With Me, a part travelogue, part hippie nostalgia work of creative nonfiction, detailing the adventures of colleague Inese Civkulis. No matter what writing projects unfold in the future, she'll never find enough words to thank family and friends for their inspiration and encouragement.



Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Political intrigue, betrayal, and ruthless ambition at every turn.




Today, I’m delighted to welcome G. G. MacLeod to the blog, author of the dark and compelling historical novel VIA MALORUM.


✓ Set in ancient Rome, 37 CE, under the dangerous rule of Caligula

✓ A dark, power-driven story centred on Agrippina and Messalina

✓ Political intrigue, betrayal, and ruthless ambition at every turn

✓ A tense journey through Rome’s shadowed streets and secret alleys

✓ Prophecy and fate entwined at the Temple of Fortuna


Check out the blurb:

In the shadowed streets of ancient Rome, 37 CE,
power is a blade that cuts both ways. Agrippina, a towering enigma of ambition, slips from Caligula’s gilded cage with her newborn son, Domitius, her mind a labyrinth of cold calculation. At her side prowls Messalina, a siren in scarlet, her seductive cunning as deadly as her blade. Together, they navigate a city teeming with decadence and deceit, pursued by whispers of treachery and the emperor’s wrath.

Their journey leads to the Temple of Fortuna where the enigmatic Prophet Cassandra unveils a cryptic fate- one that demands sacrifice and promises blood. As alleys echo with violence and forbidden passions ignite. Agrippina’s quest for dominion collides with Messalina’s ruthless desires. In a night where every step drips with danger, who will rise and who will fall?

VIA MALORUM is a visceral plunge into the heart of Roman darkness, blending historical intrigue with the chilling allure of giallo. Prepare for a tale where power bleeds red, and trust is a luxury none can afford.


VIA MALORUM by G. G. MacLeod is available now in ebook and paperback. Step into the shadowed streets of ancient Rome and discover a story where power bleeds red—pick up your copy HERE.



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



Based on true events uncovered in century-old letters.



An Echo of Ashes is a thoughtful and quietly powerful work of historical biographical fiction, tracing a young man’s coming of age in a world increasingly shaped by industry, war, and social upheaval.


✔️ Based on true events uncovered in century-old letters

✔️ When World War One and the Spanish Influenza collided

✔️ A family torn between duty, fear, and hope

✔️ Music, words, and love in the shadow of war

✔️ Brothers pulled onto different paths by history

✔️ Patriotism, sacrifice, and the cost of survival

✔️ Ordinary lives caught in extraordinary times

✔️ A forgotten chapter of American history brought to life

✔️ Tragedy echoed through time — but never disappeared


Check out the blurb:

An Echo of Ashes is a story lost to time, then
found again in century-old letters that lay in a tattered box.

Based on actual events taken from the pages, this story tells of when the Great War and the Spanish Influenza forever altered the lives of millions, including a family of subsistence farmers who also worked the oil fields of Pennsylvania.

Ella and Almon make their home in the backcountry. Almon and his sons work in the oil fields, just as their forefathers before them. As war and influenza break out, the parents seek to shield their family from the impending perils. Earl, the eldest son, is a gifted trombone and piano player. He is captivated by Lucile Lake, a girl from a higher social status. All he has to win her heart are his music and his words as the military draft looms in the foreground. Jack, a friend as close as a brother, faces the horrors of war at the Western Front. Albert's free spirit creates chaos as he searches for direction. Arthur's patriotism leads him to the Mexican border. Young Russell must suppress his fear to save a life, while Little Clara remains protected from the distress.

World War One and the Spanish Influenza Pandemic are most often documented separately, yet they intersected in 1918. For those who endured sacrifice and loss during this time, looking forward seemed their only choice. The sharp echo of tragedy, carried through the ashes of what once was, likely dulled but never vanished from their minds. This is just one of countless family stories from such a perilous chapter in American history.

This book is available as an ebook, paperback, and hardback. You can pick up your copy HERE.


Ron Allen Ames is a history enthusiast who attributes his 46 years of life experience as a hands-on business co-owner, for giving him insight into human nature, a benefit when portraying the lives of others. The information he received, dating 1914 to 1919 is what prompted Ames to bring this history to light in An Echo of Ashes. Ames lives with his wife Cathy in Pennsylvania. They have two grown sons.

"I don't see myself as the author of this book, but more of a conduit relaying the information given to me about the past. The family letters, postcards, journals, newspaper articles, and photographs found in a tattered old box contain a record of a somewhat forgotten time when a great war and a pandemic simultaneously struck the world. History records major events, statistics, details of destruction, and world changes, but it often overlooks the home front and the emotional impact of such a perilous time. An Echo of Ashes is just one of many stories from this era."








Tuesday, 17 February 2026

An aspiring opera singer caught between art, ambition, and rising tyranny.

 


Set in a Europe on the brink of profound change, this novel follows a young woman whose love of music is tested by forces far beyond the concert hall. As political tensions rise and personal loss reshapes her world, she must decide what it truly means to stay true to herself in a society that seeks to control both art and identity. Thoughtful and emotionally engaging, the story asks timely questions about courage, conscience, and the power of finding one’s own voice when doing so comes at a very real cost.


✔️ A gripping historical novel set in Munich and Vienna, 1932
✔️ An aspiring opera singer caught between art, ambition, and rising tyranny
✔️ A glamorous legacy shadowed by family scandal and sudden loss
✔️ A courageous young woman refusing to let her voice be weaponised







Check out the blurb:

Munich & Vienna, 1932

Aspiring opera singer Angelika Eder thought she had
it all — a cultured life in Vienna, along with the guidance of her glamorous mother, a world-famous soprano. But when tragedy strikes and her mother dies amidst a swirling family scandal, eighteen-year-old Angelika finds herself uprooted to Munich, where civil unrest is rife and leaders of the increasingly powerful Nazi Party seek to use her voice as propaganda.

When a figure from her mother’s past offers Angelika the chance to study and sing at an elite Viennese university, she decides to fight for her dream while evading the vile Nazis she despises. But the Nazis aren’t relenting in their demand that Angelika support their party and sing for Hitler himself. Can Angelika find her voice and stand against evil, even if it means risking not only her dreams of fame, but also the safety of herself and everyone she loves?


Step into a powerful story of history, resilience, and survival. Available now in ebook and paperback, this compelling novel brings a turbulent era vividly to life through unforgettable characters and real historical events. If you enjoy immersive historical fiction that doesn’t shy away from difficult truths, this is a book not to miss. You can find your copy HERE.


Heather Walrath is an author crafting new stories while celebrating the release of her debut historical novel, The Diva’s Daughter. Whether they are standing against evil in fractious 1930s Europe or solving a sticky bootlegging mystery in Prohibition-era America, Heather’s relatable heroines make the past accessible and engaging for modern readers. She has a master’s degree in publishing from George Washington University and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from California State University, Northridge.

Connect with Heather Walrath:




Love, Honour, and Temptation: A Valentine’s Interview with Vanda Vadas



With Valentine’s Day celebrating love won against the odds, I was keen to speak with Vanda Vadas about The Scoundrel Scot and the powerful romance at its centre. Set against the fierce beauty of the Scottish Highlands, Lachlan and Helene’s story is shaped by honour, restraint, and secrets that make every step towards love a risk. In this interview, Vanda reflects on the cost of trust, the appeal of an honour-bound hero, and why the most compelling romances are those in which love must be earned before it can be fully claimed.



Mary Anne: Valentine’s Day celebrates love won against the odds. What makes Lachlan and Helene’s romance especially hard-fought?

Vanda: Lachlan and Helene are each bound by obligations that directly oppose love. Lachlan’s sense of honour, shaped by past mistakes, makes him determined never to surrender his heart again, while Helene arrives carrying a dangerous deception borne of desperation. Their romance is hard-fought because every step toward one another carries real consequences, emotionally and morally. Readers who enjoy romances where love is earned through difficult choices will find their journey especially rewarding.


Mary Anne: Lachlan is sworn to protect Helene’s virtue while fighting his own desire. How does restraint become an expression of love in this story?

Vanda: For Lachlan, restraint is love. He believes protecting Helene, even from himself, is the only honourable path, regardless of how deeply he desires her. Each moment he chooses her safety and reputation over his own wants becomes a quiet declaration of devotion. Readers who appreciate honour-bound heroes and simmering tension will recognise restraint here as one of the most romantic gestures of all.


Mary Anne: Helene’s mission begins in deception but grows into something deeper. At what moment does love truly begin to outweigh duty for her?

Vanda: Love begins to outweigh duty for Helene when she realises that Lachlan’s honour is unwavering, and that he would sacrifice his own happiness to protect her. In that moment, her mission no longer feels justified. What once seemed necessary begins to feel cruel.


Mary Anne: Temptation plays a powerful role in the novel. How did you balance sensual tension with emotional intimacy?

Vanda: I wanted the sensual tension to arise naturally from emotional closeness rather than physical opportunity alone. Forced proximity brings Lachlan and Helene together, but it’s their shared vulnerabilities and unspoken longing that fuel the heat. The Scoundrel Scot is for readers who love a slow-burn historical romance, and they’ll find that the emotional intimacy makes every moment of temptation far more satisfying.


Mary Anne: Lachlan believes himself unworthy of love because of his past. How important was self-forgiveness to his romantic journey?

Vanda: Lachlan’s belief that he is unworthy of love is rooted in betrayal. He is convinced that surrendering his heart is both foolish and dangerous. His vow never to love again becomes a form of self-protection, but also a quiet punishment he inflicts upon himself. Self-forgiveness is essential to his journey, because loving Helene requires him to release the guilt he carries from the past wound. Lachlan’s struggle to forgive himself is at the very heart of his redemption, and what makes his eventual surrender so deeply satisfying.


Mary Anne: Valentine romances often hinge on trust. What does it take for Helene and Lachlan to risk trusting one another completely?

Vanda: For Lachlan, trust means risking the kind of heartbreak he has already survived once, and vowed never to endure again. For Helene, is means confessing a deception that could cost her everything. Complete trust only becomes possible when both choose honesty over self-preservation.


Mary Anne: The Highlands are fierce, beautiful, and unforgiving. How does the setting mirror the intensity of falling in love?

Vanda: The Scottish Highlands provide a backdrop that mirrors the romance perfectly: wild, breathtaking, and demanding respect. Love in The Scoundrel Scot unfolds much the same way. Readers who delight in richly textured historical settings will find the landscape inseparable from the emotional intensity of Lachlan and Helene’s journey.


Mary Anne: Both characters carry wounds from betrayal. What does the story suggest about love’s power to heal—or reopen—those wounds?

Vanda: Love in The Scoundrel Scot does not bypass pain, but rather demands that old wounds be faced head-on. Lachlan’s past betrayal makes loving again terrifying, while Helene’s deception risks reopening that wound entirely. Yet the story suggests that love’s true healing power lies in honesty and forgiveness. It’s the willingness to risk pain that allows something stronger to grow in its place.


Mary Anne: If Lachlan were to plan a Valentine’s gesture worthy of Helene, what do you imagine it would look like?

Lachlan would favour meaning over spectacle. His gesture would be private and sincere, perhaps a quiet ride through his lands or a promise spoken plainly and kept faithfully. 


Mary Anne: At its heart, is The Scoundrel Scot more a story about earning love, or about daring to believe you deserve it?

At its heart, the story is about daring to believe you deserve love. Both Lachlan and Helene begin by believing love must be paid for through sacrifice. Their journey challenges that belief, offering historical romance readers a deeply hopeful reminder that love, once chosen, can be freely given, and bravely accepted.


My thanks to Vanda Vadas for sharing her insights into The Scoundrel Scot and the richly emotional journey of Lachlan and Helene. Her reflections on honour, restraint, and the courage it takes to risk love offer a fitting reminder this Valentine’s season that the most enduring romances are those forged through difficult choices and hard-won trust.




✔️ A sweeping Highland romance perfect for Valentine’s Day

✔️ A guarded Scottish laird with a rake’s reputation

✔️ A spirited heroine caught between duty and desire

✔️ Slow-burn attraction with emotional depth

✔️ Secrets, honour, and love tested by betrayal






Check out the blurb:

In the Highlands, love is forged in fire—and
bound by home.

Her agenda is deception. His vow is protection. However, fate has other plans.

Lachlan MacLanoch is a Scottish laird with a rake's reputation, yet his past has left him embittered, untrusting of women, and unwilling to marry. When an English aristocratic lass arrives at his Highland estate, he is pledged to protect her virtue—at all costs. But the spirited and beautiful Sassenach is so very, very tempting…

To atone for one sin, Lady Helene Beckett is forced to commit another. She undertakes to dupe and seduce the Laird of Drumocher Castle as part of a desperate mission to save her young sister's life. Complications arise when the laird's honourable code of conduct proves impenetrable—and her feelings begin to soften towards him.

Outside forces conspire against them—meddling families, secret wagers—forcing Lachlan and Helene to rethink their long-held beliefs. Will it be enough to mend hearts broken by betrayal, heal souls scarred by secrets, and discover a love brave enough to forgive?


The Scoundrel Scot is available now in ebook and paperback. If you’re ready to escape to the Highlands and lose yourself in a story of passion, honour, and hard-won love, you can pick up your copy HERE💕


Born in Papua New Guinea and raised under the canopy of the rainforest, I found my first love in the stories hidden within the ancient stones of England’s Warwick Castle. My childhood adventures across the globe—from the bluebell woods of England to the traditional parades in Canada—ignited a passion for history and storytelling that has never faded.




"The World Turned Upside Down" takes readers on an exhilarating journey through one of history's most transformative periods.

 


Set against the upheaval and ambition of the American Revolution, The World Turn’d Upside Down by Seth Irving Handaside plunges readers into the turbulent years when rebellion reshaped history.


✔️ A gripping account of the American Revolution told with pace and clarity

✔️ Explores the fight for liberty and the birth of a new republic

✔️ Perfect for readers who enjoy immersive, character-driven history

✔️ Brings the chaos and courage of revolution vividly to life

✔️ Ideal for fans of accessible, narrative-led historical non-fiction

✔️ A thought-provoking look at what it takes to build democracy from upheaval


Check out the blurb:

"The World Turned Upside Down" takes readers
on an exhilarating journey through one of history's most transformative periods.

​This masterful work of historical fiction follows the audacious British-American colonists, known as the Founders, as they boldly rise against the mightiest empire of their time: England. Their unprecedented struggle challenged the status quo and reshaped the foundation of global politics and human rights, ushering in the era of democracy. As the narrative unfolds with rich, immersive detail and dynamic characters, the story poses a profound question: after securing their hard-won liberty, could they preserve and nurture the fragile promise of a new world? This compelling tale captures the spirit of revolution and the enduring quest for freedom.

This book is available in the following formats: ebook, paperback and hardback. You can pick up your copy HERE.

Growing up in Putnam County, named after General Israel Putnam, I walked its roads and explored the hills and valleys American rebels tread. I often thought, what would I have done when the head of the state, King George III of England, ignored the rights of the American colonies and the rule of law? Would I have marched to the tune of the revolution and been in a regiment commanded by General Putnam or sided with the loyalists?

“The World Turn’d Upside,” Volume Two of four of “Creating a Republic,” is my perception of the founding of the American experiment for citizens who care about democracy. I have attempted to give each character their own story from the beginning of the revolt in the summer of 1775. I am a researcher and historian and intend the novel to be of value to all who cherish liberty and the creation of all things beautiful. I have attempted to abstain from indulging in the minutia of the past so anyone with a limited historical background can wade through the story. 

In school, a teacher triggered my interest in the founding of America. She asked: "What would you have done when the most powerful nation on earth, headed by King George III and Parliament, attacked your rights, taxed you without representation, and placed you beneath the rule of law?"

This question burned in my soul for years and finally led me to answer it using six founders who risked their lives. The characters in this creative nonfiction novel, rooted in actual persons long deceased, cared about the welfare of the land that bound them.                                       
Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Patrick Henry, Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and James Wilkinson are intoxicating, like youth soon lost. 

I have spent a decade researching these Patriots, who helped found and were at the country's helm. The novel is grounded in historical facts by mixing myth, reality, and extraordinary personalities.