Monday, 6 July 2026

Author Interview: Jim Loughran



Today, I am delighted to welcome Jim to Yarde Book Promotions to discuss the history behind Syracuse Will Burn, the inspiration for its characters, and the challenges of bringing this remarkable era to life.


But first, let me intoduce you to Syracuse Will Burn



Publication Date: 2nd July 2026
Publisher: Sharpe Books
Print Length: 347 Pages
Genre: Ancient World Historical Fiction

413BC

The Greek city of Syracuse is fighting for its life against the might of Athens.

Timon, a thirteen-year-old miller’s son, makes the disturbing discovery that his premonitions have a habit of coming true.

When his vision warns of the imminent attack by the Athenian fleet, he becomes the boy who heard the voice of the god. His warning saves the city, but brings him and his seer’s gift into the brutal power struggle within Syracuse.

It is now 407BC, and Syracuse faces an existential threat as the Greek cities of Sicily fall like dominoes before the Carthaginian advance. But which is the greater danger, the threat of Carthaginian troops outside the walls, or the rising power of the ruthless and ambitious Dionysius, within?

As Timon investigates the murder of his mentor, General Hermocrates, he must use his instincts to find out who he can he trust? He follows the thread of evidence from the brothels of Syracuse to the councils of the rich and powerful. Step by step he is drawn into the heart of a dangerous conspiracy.

It is only when he learns to trust his own insights that Timon comes face to face with the killer.



Syracuse Will Burn is set during one of the most turbulent periods in the history of the ancient Greek world. What first drew you to Syracuse in 407 BC, and why did you decide it would make the perfect setting for a novel?

Serendipity played a large part in the genesis of Syracuse Will Burn. Five years ago, my partner and I were on holidays in Syracuse, and the first thing that struck me on arrival was the drama of the setting. Syracuse is set on a spectacularly beautiful bay and when you cross the bridge onto the fortress island of Ortigia, history grabs you by the throat. The first thing you see is the ruins of the Temple of Apollo and when you stand in front of the cathedral you are standing on what was the agora of the ancient city. The cathedral itself is built within the walls of the Temple of Athena, the pillars of which are still visible. The walls that circle the island of Ortigia were built by Dionysius and strengthened by Archimedes and across the city is the famous amphitheatre which, at the height of its glory, could seat fifteen thousand people. The whole city is like a stage set. The only thing missing was Maria Callas standing on the ramparts that look out over the Ionian sea, singing the role of Medea. A perfect setting for murder.


The novel begins against the backdrop of war, with Syracuse facing the growing threat of Carthaginian expansion. What fascinated you most about this often-overlooked period of ancient history?

What is often forgotten is that the Carthaginian empire lasted for more than six hundred years and, for a large part of that time, it was the commercial and military super power in the Mediterranean, before the rise of Rome. At different times, the Carthaginians controlled between a third and a half of the island. Palermo itself was a Carthaginian city and much of the history of ancient Sicily is the story of the struggle for dominance between Carthage and the Greek cities of Sicily. Exploring the Carthaginian presence on the island is part of the cultural archaeology of Sicily. For a writer this is relatively new territory in which to carve out a niche.


Timon is an unusual protagonist—a young man whose gift for premonition changes the course of his life. What inspired his character, and how did you develop his place within the wider historical events?


One of the most dramatic incidents in the history of Syracuse is the story of the ill-fated attack by Athens in 415-413BC, which ended in disaster. An estimated 40,000 Athenians were lost in land and sea battles. To put that in context, the population of Athens at that time was approximately two hundred thousand people. Syracuse was saved, but I needed to create a character who, by a single action, would save the city. The question was, how would he know to warn the city? Prophecy was the answer. We have to remember that the ancient Greeks deeply believed in, and relied on, divination. They viewed it as a legitimate way to communicate with the gods, understand the present, and navigate the uncertainties of the future. As the story developed into a novel Timon’s role had to grow with it. His gift of prophecy made him a key figure in a city facing an existential threat.


General Hermocrates plays an important role in the story and in the history of Syracuse. What drew you to him as a historical figure, and what influence did he have on the direction of your novel?

In the end of the day, Syracuse Will Burn is a murder mystery and there had to be a primary victim. At this point, history came to the rescue. Hermocrates is a historical figure. He had played a key role in defeating Athens, but he had been exiled on suspicion of wanting to make himself tyrant of Syracuse. In late 407BC he was killed in a street fight while attempting to seize power. I have tweaked history to make that a murder. Thankfully, the details of his death are sufficiently vague as to allow me to get away with that. However, focussing on Hermocrates brought up the whole issue of the political factions fighting for power in Syracuse and the rise of Dionysius. In turn, the story of Dionysius is inextricably linked to the war against Carthage. That left me with the challenge of how to weave these disparate elements into a coherent story.


Ancient Syracuse was one of the wealthiest and most powerful cities in the Mediterranean. What aspects of daily life did you most enjoy bringing to life for modern readers?

Sadly, wars of conquest and colonisation have obliterated most of the architectural heritage of ancient Greece, and we are left only with fragments. In seeing the world through Timon’s eyes I had to recreate the streets, houses, and temples in my imagination. The story starts with Timon sitting on the steps of the amphitheatre looking out to sea; he has to walk from there to the Temple of Demeter and later he goes into the opulent houses of the High Priestess and Hipparinus who is one of the richest men in the city. I had to draw a map of the city as I needed it to be, and I had to sketch the lay-out of the inside of the houses. That was fun. The description of the Lady Artemisia’s bathroom, for example, is based on the bathroom of the Villa Kerylos in the south of France, which is a reconstruction of a Greek villa from the Hellenistic period. Interior design by proxy.


Your novel combines meticulous historical research with murder mystery and political intrigue. How did you balance historical authenticity with the demands of an engaging thriller?

One of the advantages of setting a story in ancient Greece is that a lot of the details of how people lived, what they ate or how they prayed are very sketchy. Even some of the dates are approximate. This gave me a degree of flexibility to shape events to suit me. At the same time, I had to stick to the basic facts of history. The greatest challenge was to avoid getting bogged down in the details of political life in Syracuse or the minutiae of Dionysius’ campaign against Carthage. It is a novel not a history book but, as this is the first in a series of three, I also had to create a world which is interesting and characters who are engaging. That meant telescoping some of the timelines to suit the needs of the story.


Ancient history often survives through incomplete or conflicting sources. What were some of the biggest research challenges you encountered while writing Syracuse Will Burn?

The biggest challenge was how to turn the bones of history into a coherent narrative. Most of what we know about ancient Greece is taken from the accounts of military historians such as Thucydides and his history of the Peloponnesian war. There is information about battles and wars but little information on the personalities of the leaders or what they had for breakfast. There are no diaries or memoirs and even the acknowledged sources were often writing hundreds of years after the events in question. Dionysius’ is one of the main characters whose wife dies tragically, both in fact and in the novel. She is the wife of one important man and the daughter of another. We know their names but hers is not recorded. I have given her the name Egeria and have tried to help her reclaim her voice.


Before becoming a novelist, you spent many years working in human rights and international advocacy. Has that experience influenced the way you approach historical storytelling?

Working in human rights involves a lot of research and analysis to identify the key facts and establish patterns of behaviour. The second part of the work is to humanise those patterns by pinning them to a person and a place so that people can identify with them. That analytical skill helped me to look at ancient Greece and see the parallels with life in 2026. What became clear in the process is that human nature does not change, and what we see is the recurring pattern of man’s inhumanity to man.


Syracuse Will Burn is the first in a planned trilogy. When you began writing, how much of Timon's wider journey had you already imagined?

The short answer is nothing. Syracuse Will Burn started as an exercise as part of an online writing course. It evolved into a short story which then became a novel. At the beginning I was focussed only on the night Timon hears the voice warning him of the Athenian attack. In that story he meets the High Priestess and General Hermocrates and he agrees to serve the goddess. There was nothing else planned. I decided to pick up the story six years later when he is nineteen. From that point on, I had to develop a career path for Timon which would establish him as a strong enough character to carry two more books.

For readers who may know little about ancient Syracuse, what do you hope they discover? 

I hope they will realise what a wonderful and fascinating place Sicily is. The history of Sicily is both glorious and tragic with layers of culture spanning millennia as well as a vibrant city life that will change the way they see the world. 


My thanks to Jim Loughran for taking the time to answer my questions. It has been fascinating to learn more about the history behind Syracuse Will Burn and the rich tapestry of ancient Sicily, where political ambition, war, and faith shaped the destinies of individuals and nations alike. 



Pick up your copy of Syracuse Will Burn HERE.
This book is available to read with #KindleUnlimited

Jim Loughran

Jim Loughran was born in Northern Ireland and studied French and Spanish at Queens University Belfast. Following graduation he spent a year in Paris before completing his Post Graduate Certificate in Education. Jim taught French in Belfast and then moved to Dublin where he worked for ten years as a Media Planner in one of Dublin’s leading advertising agencies. During this time he also got involved, on a voluntary basis, with Amnesty International and was Chairperson of Amnesty Ireland for five years. He then joined the organisation on a full-time basis as Development Manager before taking on the role of Head of Media. He initiated ground breaking research into Irish links to the arms trade and produced two major reports: “Ireland and the Arms Trade – Decoding the Deals” and “Claws of the Celtic Tiger.”

Jim was head hunted by Irish based international human rights organisation Front Line Defenders, which works world-wide on the security and protection of human rights defenders at risk, to take up the newly created role of Head of Media and Communications. Prior to his retirement he was responsible for setting up the Human Rights Defenders Memorial Project, a unique collaborative project involving leading national and international organisations to document the killings of human rights defenders. He was the author of ‘Stop the Killings’ a major report which analysed the patterns of violence that led to the killings of human rights defenders in: Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and the Philippines. These 6 countries collectively account for 80% of the killings of human rights defenders annually. He was jokingly referred to in the office as, ‘Head of Killings.’

Since he retired Jim has shifted his focus from writing press releases and opinion articles to historical fiction. His first published work, ‘Ill Met by Moonlight’ is a short story published in October 2025 by Briar Press, New York, as part of ‘These Dark Things,’ an anthology of 12 gothic short stories. His first novel, The Bratinsky Affair, was published in 2025 by Sharpe Books.

Jim lives in Dublin with his husband.


Connect with Jim:



The Rabbits of Ravensbrück by Jana Petken


 


The Rabbits of Ravensbrück
By Jana Petken


Publication Date: 2nd July 2026
Publisher: JCP Publishing
Print Length: 556 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction 

The International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg is over, but the Doctors’ Trial is just beginning. Twenty German doctors and three SS officials have been indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Three defendants must face the prosecution’s star witness, a survivor of their mutilations.

Malina Dostler, a German Romani woman, is not only an eyewitness to murder and maiming by German doctors in Ravensbrück Concentration Camp, but she is also a victim of some of the most inhumane experimental medical procedures ever conducted by the Nazi regime.

Josh Steinbock, an American army captain, is tasked with preparing Malina for the witness box, but as the story of her imprisonment in Auschwitz and Ravensbrück unfolds, his feelings for her begin to blind his judgement. Malina is hiding something, but can Josh find out what it is before she takes to the witness box?

Christian Bloss, an ex-SS-Sturmbannführer and defendant in the Doctors’ Trial, is a man cloaked in many layers. Josh believes Bloss and Malina share a secret, but how deep does their relationship go?

Drawing on the true story of the Doctors’ Trial, the first of twelve post-war American Military Tribunals in Nuremberg, Jana Petken presents a riveting tale of courage and resilience in the face of unimaginable evil.

Praise

“Bestselling author, Jana Petken, presents a riveting story of courage and survival in the face of evil. A stunning portrayal of one of the most atrocious events of the Second World War, The Rabbits of Ravensbrück, is a serious and accomplished piece of work..”

C.M. Gray, author of One More Hour of Daylight

Pick up your copy of The Rabbits of Ravensbrück HERE.

Jana Petken


Jana Petken is critically acclaimed as a bestselling, gritty author who produces bold, colourful characters and riveting storylines. She is the recipient of numerous major international awards for her works of historical fiction. 

Before life as an author, she served in the British Royal Navy. During her service, she studied Naval Law and history. After the Navy, she worked for British Airways and turned to writing after an accident on board an aircraft forced her to retire prematurely.

Titles by Jana Petken. 

Bestseller, Multi Award Winning, The Guardian of Secrets. (2013) 

The bestselling Mercy Carver Series: award-winning, Dark Shadows, book 1, and award-winning Blood Moon, book 2. (2014) 

Multi Award Winning, The Errant Flock: The Flock Trilogy Book 1. (2015)

Multi Award Winning, Swearing Allegiance. (2016)

Award Winning, The Scattered Flock (The Flock Trilogy book 2)

Award Winning, Flock, The Gathering of The Damned (The Flock Trilogy Book 3)

Multi-Award-Winning, The German Half-Bloods The German Half-Bloods Trilogy Book 1 (2018)

The Vogels: On All Fronts. The German Half-Bloods (Book 2)

Multi Award winning | Bestseller Before the Brightest Dawn. The German Half-Bloods (Book 3)

Oath of Allegiance (2020)

Dawn of Ages (2021)

From the Ashes of Amiens (2021)

The Man from Section Five: Brinley Knight of MI5

The Dying Peace: Brinley Knight of MI5

Connect with Jana Petken:



Kindle The Light of Liberty: A Jewish Colonial Love Story of the American Revolution by Mirta Ines Trupp



Kindle The Light of Liberty:
A Jewish Colonial Love Story of the American Revolution
By Mirta Ines Trupp


Publication Date: 4th July 2026
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 223 pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

They had no voice. They held no power. Yet they helped decide the fate of a nation.

In the bustling streets of Philadelphia, Rose Wachsman has no time for the rigid expectations of society—and even less for the infuriatingly reserved Nathan Hirsch. She is a woman of the hearth, sharp-witted and fiercely loyal to the cause of liberty; he is a man of business and tradition, seemingly more concerned with ledgers than the fires of revolution.

But as the war moves from a tradesman's chandlery to the parlors of the elite, Rose and Nathan find themselves forced into a dangerous game of intelligence and alliance. In a world that would rather forget their names, they must overcome their own prejudices to discover that their greatest adversary— might be their only hope.


Pick up your copy of Kindle The Light of Liberty HERE.


Mirta Ines Trupp


Mirta is a second generation Argentine; she was born in Buenos Aires in 1962 and immigrated to the United States that same year. Because of the unique fringe benefits provided by her father’s employer- Pan American Airlines- she returned to her native country frequently- growing up with "un pie acá y un pie allá" (with one foot here and one foot there). 

Mirta's fascination with Jewish history and genealogy, coupled with an obsession for historical period drama, has inspired her to create unique and enlightening novels. She has been a guest speaker for book clubs, sisterhood events, genealogy societies and philanthropic organizations. Sharing her knowledge of Jewish Argentina has become her passion. 

Besides being an avid novel reader, she has had a lifelong love for choral music and is a devoted Beatles fan. 

Connect with Mirta:




Christmas Star Cottage by Kathryn LeBlanc

 


Christmas Star Cottage 
By Kathryn LeBlanc


Publication Date: 27th November 2022
Publisher: Independently Published
Page Length: 186 pages
Genre: Christmas Romance

Molly Parker is on a mission to uncover the origin of a rare quilt pattern. The reclusive researcher is charmed by the idyllic small town, dazzling winter wonderland, and handsome guide. Can she look up from her quilting long enough to see the possibility of love?

Job-focused Nate has sworn off of superficial relationships. His gram always said he’d know ‘the one’ immediately when he met her, but failed relationships have left him empty-hearted. Will Molly Parker be more of the same?

Will the charms of Sprucewood open their hearts to the possibilities of love right in front of them?

Holiday Cottage Series, the Holiday Cottages are a special place where travelers stay for a getaway in Sprucewood, Colorado. There, they find their spirits renewed, relationships kindled, and unexpected dreams coming true.


Pick up your copy of Christmas Star Cottage HERE.
Read with #KindleUnlimited


Kathryn LeBlanc



Kathryn LeBlanc, author of award-winning Quilting Cozy Mysteries under the pen name Kathryn Mykel is an avid quilter and full-time author in both the cozy mystery and romance genres.







Saturday, 4 July 2026

Editorial Book Review: Syracuse Will Burn by Jim Loughran




Syracuse Will Burn
By Jim Loughran


Publication Date: 2nd July 2026
Publisher: Sharpe Books
Print Length: 347 Pages
Genre: Ancient World Historical Fiction

413BC

The Greek city of Syracuse is fighting for its life against the might of Athens.

Timon, a thirteen-year-old miller’s son, makes the disturbing discovery that his premonitions have a habit of coming true.

When his vision warns of the imminent attack by the Athenian fleet, he becomes the boy who heard the voice of the god. His warning saves the city, but brings him and his seer’s gift into the brutal power struggle within Syracuse.

It is now 407BC, and Syracuse faces an existential threat as the Greek cities of Sicily fall like dominoes before the Carthaginian advance. But which is the greater danger, the threat of Carthaginian troops outside the walls, or the rising power of the ruthless and ambitious Dionysius, within?

As Timon investigates the murder of his mentor, General Hermocrates, he must use his instincts to find out who he can he trust? He follows the thread of evidence from the brothels of Syracuse to the councils of the rich and powerful. Step by step he is drawn into the heart of a dangerous conspiracy.

It is only when he learns to trust his own insights that Timon comes face to face with the killer.



Jim Loughran's "Syracuse Will Burn" is a historical novel that refuses to treat the past as mere spectacle. Instead, it presents history as something lived, breathed and endured by people whose lives are swept into extraordinary events. Rich in political intrigue, moral complexity and deeply human insight, this is a novel that demonstrates, time and again, that history serves the story rather than overshadowing it.

At its heart is Timon, a young miller's son whose gift of prophecy places him at the centre of Syracuse's increasingly dangerous political landscape. It would have been easy to turn him into an infallible hero, gifted with certainty and destined for greatness, yet Loughran wisely chooses a different path. Timon never claims to be something he is not. Despite finding himself surrounded by generals, politicians, priestesses and tyrants, he remains grounded by humility, compassion and integrity. His defining strength is not his ability to glimpse the future, but his unwavering determination to do what is right, even when every choice carries consequences.

One of the novel's most impressive achievements lies in its treatment of prophecy. Instead of functioning as a convenient device to predict events or provide easy answers, each vision creates new dilemmas, exposing the ambitions, fears and desires of those desperate to control the future. The prophecies reveal far more about the people interpreting them than the future itself. Dionysius sees opportunity, Artemisia sees power, while Timon sees only the burden of knowledge and the impossible choices it demands. In Loughran's hands, prophecy becomes less about foretelling the future than revealing the character of those who seek to control it. It is an intelligent and refreshingly original approach that gives the novel both philosophical depth and emotional weight.

The political landscape is equally compelling. Loughran refuses to divide his characters neatly into heroes and villains. Dionysius is courageous as well as ruthless, capable of inspiring fierce loyalty whilst simultaneously destroying those who challenge him. His rise to power is unsettling precisely because it feels believable. Artemisia emerges as one of the novel's most fascinating creations. Initially appearing to be a guardian of tradition, she gradually reveals herself to be something altogether more complex, and the slow unravelling of her true motivations is handled with impressive restraint. By the time the full extent of her ambitions becomes clear, readers will find themselves mentally revisiting earlier conversations with an entirely new understanding. Even seemingly minor characters are afforded depth and purpose, their actions echoing throughout the narrative in ways that feel entirely earned. Every decision matters, every alliance carries consequences, and every conversation subtly shifts the balance of power.

Equally impressive is the way relationships drive the story. Timon's friendships and loyalties never feel secondary to the political intrigue; rather, they form the emotional foundation upon which the novel is built. His respect for Hermocrates, his unwavering loyalty to Nicomedes, and his determination to help those who have stood by him all reveal a young man who refuses to surrender his compassion, even when surrounded by those who view it as weakness. The smallest acts of kindness carry lasting consequences, reminding readers that history is often shaped as much by simple decency as by grand political ambition. That moral consistency makes Timon an immensely engaging protagonist. He is not remarkable because he seeks greatness, but because he repeatedly chooses integrity when compromise would be easier.

Whether exploring the politics of Syracuse, the rituals of the Temple of Demeter or the daily realities of ancient Sicilian life, Loughran's research is seamlessly woven into the narrative, enriching the story without ever overwhelming it. The world feels authentic because it is experienced through the eyes of those who inhabit it rather than explained for the reader's benefit.

The battle sequences deserve particular praise. There is no romanticising of warfare here. Instead, Loughran presents battle as chaotic, exhausting and devastatingly human. Plans unravel, confusion reigns and victory comes at a terrible price. Far from celebrating triumph, he continually reminds readers what those victories cost the people forced to achieve them. The deaths of young soldiers, the suffering of civilians and the impossible decisions faced by commanders strip away any illusion of glory, reminding us that countless forgotten lives lie behind every historical victory. Some of the novel's most affecting moments occur not on the battlefield itself but in its aftermath, where grief, loss and small acts of compassion speak louder than any military success.

Equally noteworthy is Loughran's restraint. He never forces emotion upon the reader. Instead, he allows moments of grief, courage and sacrifice to unfold naturally, making them all the more powerful because they are earned rather than manipulated. That confidence in both his characters and his readers gives the novel a quiet emotional resonance that is felt throughout.

What lingers most, however, is not the rise of Dionysius nor the fate of Syracuse, but Timon's gradual loss of the ordinary life he never realised he would one day miss. As his reputation grows, his freedom steadily diminishes. The simple life of the miller's son is slowly consumed by the expectations of others until he finds himself carrying responsibilities he never sought. It is a profoundly Greek tragedy, not simply because of prophecy or fate, but because the cost of greatness is measured by the life left behind. Long before Syracuse itself begins to burn, Timon's ordinary life has already been sacrificed to the ambitions of those around him.

The finest historical fiction does more than recreate the past; it allows readers to inhabit it. Jim Loughran achieves exactly that. Through Timon, he reminds us that history is shaped not only by kings, generals and tyrants, but also by ordinary individuals who choose integrity over ambition when the cost of doing so is greatest. "Syracuse Will Burn" is an exceptional novel—thought-provoking and emotionally resonant—and one that lingers long after the final page has been turned.


Review by Mary Anne Yarde
Yarde Book Promotions

Pick up your copy of Syracuse Will Burn HERE.
This book is available to read with #KindleUnlimited

Jim Loughran

Jim Loughran was born in Northern Ireland and studied French and Spanish at Queens University Belfast. Following graduation he spent a year in Paris before completing his Post Graduate Certificate in Education. Jim taught French in Belfast and then moved to Dublin where he worked for ten years as a Media Planner in one of Dublin’s leading advertising agencies. During this time he also got involved, on a voluntary basis, with Amnesty International and was Chairperson of Amnesty Ireland for five years. He then joined the organisation on a full-time basis as Development Manager before taking on the role of Head of Media. He initiated ground breaking research into Irish links to the arms trade and produced two major reports: “Ireland and the Arms Trade – Decoding the Deals” and “Claws of the Celtic Tiger.”

Jim was head hunted by Irish based international human rights organisation Front Line Defenders, which works world-wide on the security and protection of human rights defenders at risk, to take up the newly created role of Head of Media and Communications. Prior to his retirement he was responsible for setting up the Human Rights Defenders Memorial Project, a unique collaborative project involving leading national and international organisations to document the killings of human rights defenders. He was the author of ‘Stop the Killings’ a major report which analysed the patterns of violence that led to the killings of human rights defenders in: Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and the Philippines. These 6 countries collectively account for 80% of the killings of human rights defenders annually. He was jokingly referred to in the office as, ‘Head of Killings.’

Since he retired Jim has shifted his focus from writing press releases and opinion articles to historical fiction. His first published work, ‘Ill Met by Moonlight’ is a short story published in October 2025 by Briar Press, New York, as part of ‘These Dark Things,’ an anthology of 12 gothic short stories. His first novel, The Bratinsky Affair, was published in 2025 by Sharpe Books.

Jim lives in Dublin with his husband.


Connect with Jim:



Editorial Book Review: The Valet's Witness by Rohn Hein





The Valet's Witness 
By Rohn Hein


Publication Date: 4th July 2026
Publisher: Historium Press
Page Length: 374
Genre: American Historical Fiction


In the summer of 1776, as the Declaration of Independence takes shape within the charged chambers of the Second Continental Congress, two lives unfold in quiet, irrevocable collision-one etched into the official record, the other deliberately erased from it.

Edward Rutledge, the youngest delegate from South Carolina, moves with calculated precision through a world of rhetoric and reputation. Brilliant, ambitious, and deeply entangled in the economic realities of his homeland, he walks a perilous line between liberty and self-preservation. He argues fiercely for independence while working just as diligently to shield the institution of slavery from scrutiny, determined that the new nation will rise without unsettling the foundation upon which his power-and his prosperity-rests.

At his side stands Pompey, his enslaved valet-unseen, unacknowledged, yet ever-present. Moving silently through corridors thick with ambition and contradiction, Pompey becomes a witness to history in its most unguarded moments. He listens where others speak freely, observes where others perform, and remembers what others choose, or need, to forget. To the men shaping a nation, he is invisible; to the truth, he is indispensable.

Among the servants and valets attending the southern delegates, a hidden network begins to take shape-men bound by circumstance yet united by awareness. In kitchens, in narrow stairwells, in the shadowed edges of candlelit rooms, they exchange fragments of overheard debates and whispered concessions. They piece together a parallel record of the nation's birth: one of uneasy compromises, moral evasions, and calculated silences. They hear the arguments over freedom and tyranny; they witness the careful removal of any language that might threaten the institution that binds them.

As Rutledge maneuvers behind closed doors-pressing to strike any condemnation of slavery from the final draft-Pompey gathers something far more fragile and far more dangerous than political victory: memory. Each conversation, each omission, each moment of hesitation becomes part of a story that has no place in the official narrative. It is a story carried not in ink, but in the minds of those denied the power to write it.

Yet history has a way of resurfacing through the voices it tried to silence.

The Valet's Witness is a sweeping, intimate reimagining of America's founding, illuminating the lives that moved just beyond the margins of recorded history. With lyrical depth and moral clarity, it reveals not only how independence was declared, but what-and who-was sacrificed to secure it. In the space between liberty and bondage, between principle and profit, a hidden truth emerges-one that challenges the very meaning of freedom in a nation built on both hope and contradiction.


History is usually written by those with the power to shape it. Documents are signed, speeches are recorded, and names become immortalised, while countless other lives quietly disappear into the margins. It is this question of whose stories survive that lies at the heart of Rohn Hein's The Valet's Witness. Rather than simply retelling the events surrounding the American Revolution, Hein invites readers to look beyond the official record and consider the people who witnessed history unfold without ever having the opportunity to shape it.

At the centre of the novel stands Edward Rutledge, one of South Carolina's delegates to the Second Continental Congress. Intelligent, ambitious, and politically astute, Rutledge emerges as a figure defined by contradiction. He argues passionately for liberty and independence while simultaneously working to protect the institution of slavery. Hein resists the temptation to simplify him into either hero or villain, instead presenting a man whose ideals and actions remain fundamentally at odds. The result is a portrait that feels both historically convincing and morally unsettling.

Standing beside him is Pompey, his enslaved valet. Although denied any voice within the political debates, Pompey becomes one of the novel's most important witnesses. Moving quietly through rooms where the future of a nation is being decided, he observes not only the speeches and negotiations but also the silences, compromises, and omissions that rarely find their way into the official record. Through his eyes, Hein reminds readers that history is experienced very differently depending upon where one stands.

One of the novel's greatest strengths is the way it presents these parallel worlds. Upstairs, delegates debate principles of liberty, representation, and independence. Beyond the meeting rooms, servants and valets exchange their own observations, gradually assembling a very different account of the nation's birth. Hein uses these contrasting perspectives to explore the distance between political ideals and lived reality without allowing either to overshadow the other.

The historical research underpinning the novel is extensive. The atmosphere surrounding the Second Continental Congress is recreated with confidence, and the political negotiations feel carefully grounded in the historical record. Readers familiar with the American Revolution will appreciate the author's evident knowledge of the period, while those approaching it for the first time will find themselves immersed in both the personalities and the events that shaped the emergence of a new nation.

At times, the novel pauses to explain aspects of the historical background in considerable detail. While these passages demonstrate the depth of Hein's research, they occasionally interrupt the momentum of the narrative. Yet whenever the focus returns to the characters and their relationships, the story quickly regains its emotional resonance, reminding readers that history is ultimately experienced through people rather than events alone.

Perhaps the novel's most thought-provoking achievement is its exploration of memory. Official records preserve one version of history, yet Hein suggests that another survives in the recollections of those whose names never appeared in the documents that changed the world. The Valet's Witness asks readers not only to reconsider the founding of the United States but also to reflect upon who has been remembered, who has been forgotten, and why those forgotten voices still matter today.

Richly researched, intellectually engaging, and emotionally resonant, The Valet's Witness offers a thoughtful reimagining of one of history's defining moments. By looking beyond the familiar names and celebrated figures, Rohn Hein has crafted a novel that challenges readers to reconsider not only the founding of the United States but also the way history itself is remembered. It is an ambitious and rewarding work of historical fiction that lingers in the mind long after the final page.

Review by Ellie Yarde
Yarde Book Promotions


Pick up your copy of The Valet's Witness HERE.


Rohn Hein


Rohn Hein is a first-time author with fifty years of involvement in non-partisan community activism. Starting as a VISTA volunteer in 1973, he worked for five different non-profit organizations working with welfare recipients, senior citizens, urban housing, racial justice, and environmental efforts in Wisconsin, Minnesota, New York and New Jersey. For the last 40 years Rohn was an investment adviser while volunteering with social justice activities in affordable housing, racial justice, and environmental issues. Rohn has written testimony presented in the Minnesota and New Jersey Legislature and appeared at numerous churches, city council, county, and regional government agencies.

He works with many New Jersey non-profit organizations on racial justice issue, such as The NJ Institute for Social Justice, Salvation and Social Justice, NJ NAACP, Fair Share Housing, and UU Faith Action. He has worked on landmark affordable housing legislation and on the enactment of a racial justice impact statement on legislation in New Jersey.