Thursday, 4 November 2021

Book Review: The Poison Keeper by Deborah Swift #HistoricalFiction @swiftstory


The Poison Keeper:
An enthralling historical novel of Renaissance
By Deborah Swift


Publication Date: 18th May 2021 
Publisher: Quire Books 
Page Length: 394 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

Naples 1633

Aqua Tofana – One drop to heal. Three drops to kill. 

Giulia Tofana longs for more responsibility in her mother’s apothecary business, but Mamma has always been secretive and refuses to tell Giulia the hidden keys to her success. When Mamma is arrested for the poisoning of the powerful Duke de Verdi, Giulia is shocked to uncover the darker side of her trade. 

Giulia must run for her life, and escapes to Naples, under the shadow of Mount Vesuvius, to the home of her Aunt Isabetta, a famous courtesan. But when Giulia hears that her mother has been executed, and the cruel manner of her death, she swears she will wreak revenge on the Duke de Verdi. 

The trouble is, Naples is in the grip of Domenico, the Duke’s brother, who controls the city with the ‘Camorra’, the mafia. Worse, her Aunt Isabetta, under Domenico’s thrall, insists that she should be consort to him – the brother of the man she has vowed to kill. 

Based on the legendary life of Giulia Tofana, this is a story of hidden family secrets, and how even the darkest desires can be vanquished by courage and love.




“I will use treatment to help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but never with a view to injury and wrong-doing. Neither will I administer a poison to anybody when asked to do so, nor will I suggest such a course...”
 
There may well have been a time when the Hippocratic Oath meant something to Giulia Tofana, but that was before her mother was accused of poisoning Duke de Verdi. Now, Giulia is running for her life. 

Giulia had been as clueless as the Duke was to what her mother did behind closed doors, but by trying to help the Duke’s wife kill her abusive husband, Theofania also condemns her daughter’s future. The Duke has concluded that Giulia is guilty of the same crime as her mother, merely because of their association, and he will hunt her down. And he when he does, when he finds her, he will kill her...

From the first tender hints of love to a shocking discovery, The Poison Keeper: An enthralling historical novel of Renaissance by Deborah Swift is a fascinating, yet powerfully emotional story of the infamous poisoner, Giulia Tofana.

With a mesmerising sense of time and place, Swift has presented her readers with an utterly irresistible novel. This is the kind of book that grabs the reader from the opening sentence and does not let go until that final full stop. It is a story that is at all times hauntingly beautiful.

The coldly calculated and deliberate manner with which Giulia approaches her revenge goes against everything that she believed in. Her life, her future, should have included the handsome leatherworker, Fabio. Instead, she seeks revenge. Revenge for her mother and revenge for herself. Giulia, like her mother before her, dares to threaten the pattern of male domination and abuse. She uses her skills, which are aided considerably by her mother’s chymist book, to plot not only revenge but to give hope to those whose futures have been stolen by abusive husbands and circumstances beyond their control. Giulia dares to break this accepted pattern of submission to the dominant and powerful men in her life, and for that, her actions can be seen as heroic, and yet, there is always that realisation that we are following the journey of a woman who becomes not only a murderer but someone who willingly aids in the murder of others. Her desperate attempts to convince herself that she merely gives the means, and what happens to her poisons after she has sold them, seemed incredibly naïve on her part. But it was also understandable. Giulia goes to church every Sunday, however Christianity seemingly offers her little solace or hope of heavenly justice, and besides, Giulia cannot wait for God to avenge her. She still goes to church, she still wants the life she had, but that has been stolen from her, and as new revelations threaten to dismantle everything she thought she had known, the only thing that remains constant in her life is her knowledge of potions and poisons. For men such as Domenico, Giulia is the Eve that he has been waiting for—the one woman who dares to eat from that Tree of Knowledge and who dares to question the order of things. While Domenico wages war on the women in his life, Giulia, like the serpent in the bushes, dares to tread where angels fear to. Giulia was an incredibly fascinating character, her depiction was masterfully portrayed and very realistic in the telling. Although I deplored the person she became, I could understand her reasoning. In a world where men ruled and women endured, someone needed to stand up and be counted. It was not enough to shout the word “enough”—someone needed to be brave enough to see such a word through to the bitter end. Giulia is that someone.
 
The recurrent theme in this novel is the way in which men held power over women. They are both physically stronger and, with the backing of a seemingly morally corrupt Church, they can do whatever they want. Through the depiction of characters such as the de Verdi brothers, Swift explores the power that such men had and how their wealth covered a multitude of sins. For example, Domenico, the younger brother, is determined to build a lavish church to demonstrate his devotion to God, but as he steals from the very people he is meant to protect, by the means of a brutal protection racket, the real reason for Domenico's seemingly Christian devotion soon becomes clear. The church he is having built is not for God. It is so Domenico can feed his insatiable desire for admiration. The brothers seem inherently evil. They are both vile and cruel, but there is also an element of vulnerability about the two of them. They may think they are invincible, but the shocking truth is that despite their wealth and their men at arms they are no safer than the women they so cruelly abused.
 
The beautiful and famous courtesan, Isabetta, was a character that fascinated me. Unlike what those closest to her think, Isabetta is not completely lost to the scent of the poppy. Her addiction may well have shaped her life and taken her away from the man she loved, but she still tries to hang onto the life she has built for herself and the women under her charge. Isabetta is a woman that one could not help but feel sorry for. Her world has the appearance of wealth and opportunity, but her feet are on unstable ground as she is forced to bow to the whims of the wealthy. However, Isabetta is a character that is not as meek as she first appears. There is a strength in her that made her a very appealing character, and she certainly helped to drive the story forward.
 
The historical detailing of this novel is second to none. The hours that Swift has dedicated to researching this period of history shines through in the enthralling narrative. Swift has an almost visceral understanding of what makes history worth reading, and she is also the perfect tour-guide to take her readers on a trip back in time to a dangerous past.

The Poison Keeper: An enthralling historical novel of Renaissance by Deborah Swift is the kind of book that you have to recommend to everyone you know so that you can discuss it at length over coffee. I was thoroughly enchanted with this novel from beginning to end. This novel is a must-read for fans of quality Historical Fiction.

I Highly Recommend.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
The Coffee Pot Book Club



Read for FREE with #KindleUnlimited subscription.



Deborah Swift is the author of three previous historical novels for adults, The Lady’s Slipper, The Gilded Lily, and A Divided Inheritance, all published by Macmillan/St Martin’s Press, as well as the Highway Trilogy for teens (and anyone young at heart!). Her first novel was shortlisted for the Impress prize for new novelists.

She lives on the edge of the beautiful and literary English Lake District – a place made famous by the poets Wordsworth and Coleridge. 

Connect with Deborah: WebsiteFacebookTwitterGoodreads.





Tuesday, 2 November 2021

Blog Tour: The Scribe (The Two Daggers, Book 1) by Elizabeth R. Andersen @E_R_A_writes


Join The Coffee Pot Book Club on tour with…

The Scribe
(The Two Daggers, Book 1)
By Elizabeth R. Andersen


January 27th – March 31st 2022

Publication Date: 18th July 2021
Publisher: Haeddre Press
Page Length: 360 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction


All Henri of Maron wanted was to stay with his family on his country estate, surrounded by lemon groves and safety. But in 13th century Palestine, when noble-born boys are raised to fight for the Holy Land, young Henri will be sent to live and train among men who hate him for what he is: a French nobleman of an Arab mother. Robbed of his humanity and steeped in cruelty, his encounters with a slave soldier, a former pickpocket, and a kindly scribe will force Henri to confront his own beliefs and behaviors. 

Will Henri maintain the status quo in order to fit into a society that doesnt want him, or will fate intervene first?

The first book in The Two Daggers series, The Scribe takes readers on a sweeping adventure through the years and months that lead up to the infamous Siege of Acre in 1291 CE and delves into the psyches of three young people caught up in the wave of history.


The Land of God
(The Two Daggers, Book 2)
By Elizabeth R. Andersen


Publication Date: 8th November 2021
Publisher: Haeddre Press
Page Length: 350 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

Pain. His sister’s screams. And a beautiful face in the jeering crowd. When Henri of Maron woke, he had only a few memories of his brutal flogging, but he knew the world had changed. He had changed.

Now, as he grapples with the fallout from his disastrous decisions, war with the Mamluk army looms closer. To convince the city leaders to take the threat seriously, Henri and the grand master of the Templars must rely on unlikely allies and bold risks to avoid a siege.

Meanwhile, Sidika is trying to find a way to put her life back together. When she is forced to flee her home, her chance encounters with a handsome amir and a strangely familiar old woman will have consequences for her future.

The Land of God weaves the real historical figures with rich, complex characters and an edge-of-seat plot. Readers who enjoyed the Brethren series by Robyn Young and The Physician by Noah Gordon will appreciate this immersive tale set in the Middle East in the Middle Ages.


Elizabeth R. Andersen


Elizabeth R. Andersen's debut novel, The Scribe, launched in July of 2021. Although she spent many years of her life as a journalist, independent fashion designer, and overworked tech employee, there have always been two consistent loves in her life: writing and history. She finally decided to do something about this and put them both together. 

Elizabeth lives in the Seattle area with her long-suffering husband and young son. On the weekends she usually hikes in the stunning Cascade mountains to hide from people and dream up new plotlines and characters. Elizabeth is a member of the Historical Novel Society and the Alliance of Independent Authors.

Connect with Elizabeth:

Discover the inspiration behind Dianna Rostad's fabulous novel - You Belong Here Now @DiannaRostad



You Belong Here Now
By Dianna Rostad


Publication Date: April 6, 2021
Publisher: William Morrow
Page Length: 339 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

In 1925, three brave kids from New York board the orphan train headed west. An Irish boy who lost his whole family to Spanish flu, a tiny girl who won’t talk, and a volatile young man who desperately needs to escape Hell’s Kitchen. These kids are paraded on platforms across the Midwest to work-worn folks and journey countless miles, racing the sun westward. Before they reach the last rejection and stop, the kids come up with a daring plan, and set off toward the Yellowstone River and grassy mountains where the wild horses roam. Fate guides them toward the ranch of a family stricken by loss, but the children are unable to outrun their dark pasts in New York, and to save them, the family must do the unthinkable. 


Hello, I’m Dianna Rostad. I’m going to share with you the history and inspiration for my novel: You Belong Here Now. You’ll learn about the orphan trains, life in 1920s Montana, and wild horses. But first, here are some great reviews! 


You Belong Here Now is a novel as straightforward and powerful as the characters who populate it. I love this book and I guarantee you won’t find a finer debut work anywhere.”


               William Kent Krueger, New York Times bestselling author of This Tender Land


You Belong Here Now distills the essence of the American spirit in this uplifting story. Perfect for book clubs looking to discuss the true meaning of family.” 


              Kathleen Grissom, New York Times bestselling author of The Kitchen House


 “A sweeping, atmospheric story set in Montana. Dianna Rostad has penned a heart-warming, epic story built on the premise of a search for belonging that reads as an odyssey in all that it takes to find the heart of one’s family.” 


              New York Journal of Books


When I first discovered the history of the orphan trains, I felt a special kinship to the street kids from 1920s New York. You see, after the riots in the 1990s, I worked with a similar group of kids in South Central Los Angeles. So, when I saw the pictures of these orphans on old steam trains, I recognized that look of determination and hope, and their stories began to take root in my heart. 


I researched this fascinating adoption phenomena with a passion, and learned the trains ran for 76 years, between 1853 and 1929. There were many catalysts to this, and the most interesting was the building of the railroad itself! In the mid-19th century, the United States began surveying railroad lines to the Pacific, but they needed people to go West, otherwise, why build it? Posters and flyers were sent to Europe and the rest of the world to advertise free land. Imagine over 4mm folks boarding steamships and coming to the Eastern seaboard and how crowded our cities became.



People were often jammed ten to a room, food became scarce, and young children were forced to work. All these dire conditions led people to abandon their children on doorsteps of the wealthy, churches, and finally to the growing institutions such as the New York Foundling Hospital. 


It’s estimated that 30,000 children at one time were homeless in New York. It wasn’t long before these kids had gangs of their own, filching food, sleeping in alleys, and banding together to survive. 


In 1853, a little-known Methodist minister, Charles Loring Brace and a group of businessmen formed The Children’s Aid Society. This society ran orphanages, lodgings for Newsies, but what the society is most famous for, is the idea of sending children out to the farms and ranches on orphan trains.



 They left New York on trains bound for the Midwest and beyond, stood on train platforms, stages of playhouses, and churches across the US. Folks took some of them as real family members and others took them on for the work. The older a child was, the more likely they were being taken in for work, and so the contracts changed with the age of the children until the contracts reflected indentured work programs. The last train ran to Texas in 1929, ending an era of foster care and adoption in our country. 


During my research, the kids in the old photos, peering out the windows of trains and standing on platforms looked determined and brave. Just like the kids from South Central Los Angeles that I used to work with. I had a caseload of youthful offenders, and simply put, it was my job to get them employed. I would pick them up after they paroled and take them around to get clothes, help them fill out job applications, and take them to job interviews. When they came to me in the Youth Authority to be part of my program, they were hopeful and determined. The kids on my caseload had committed terrible crimes, but just like the kids from New York, they were orphans with courage. I felt like I was the right person to tell the story of the children who rode the trains, but I didn’t know where to set it. 




Then one year, my father came to Christmas, and he brought all these amazing photos of the family ranches in Montana. They had stories written on the back, and in a lot of these pictures, people wore boots. In one of the first scenes in my book, Charles climbs up onto the porch, takes his boots off, and puts them right next to a long line of boots. In this moment, Charles finally feels like he’s a part of something good and wholesome.   


You know, I never could understand why my grandfather was so fascinated with old steam trains, but they revolutionized his life in rural Montana, much like the internet did for all of us in the 90s. They were able to get fruits they never had before, order just about anything from the Sears Catalog, including the parts to make a windmill. 



My grandfather walked miles to the Piper train station to pick up the makings of a windmill to light just one light bulb in his house. Funny thing is, my grandfather became an electrician. He also loved to sing and play the guitar. All the songs in the book are songs he sang or wrote: Little Footprints in the snow was about a little girl who went missing in the blizzard on her way back from school. The old Sidehill gouger was about a legendary creature that roamed the hills at night.


Back in the 1920s there were so many creatures roaming the hills, and wild horses were among them. They play a big part in my novel, You Belong Here Now. It’s important to me to make sure that everything that was there in that time and place, is in my story. During my research, I came upon The Pryor Range Mustangs that roamed that part of Montana. Now, I grew up out West, and I never knew we had bands of wild horses roaming national lands! I spent a good day looking at pictures and researching wild horses when I found a picture of a blue roan, and I knew immediately this majestic creature had to be in my novel. They look blue in certain lights and have black manes and tails, something straight out of Hollywood. 



Unfortunately, I soon discovered that ranchers back then rounded up the mustangs to preserve forage for their cattle and sheep. Once they took possession of the horses, they sold them off. Often to slaughterhouses, where they would be canned for chicken feed. The mere thought of that broke my heart. And in my book, it breaks Patrick’s heart, too. He falls in love with the wild horses, but Patrick and Charles are forced to round up that band of wild horses for an adjacent rancher who wants to preserve his grass for his stock. It’s a terrifying process for wild horses, many of them die, breaking legs in their flight. 


 I’m sorry to say we haven’t made much progress in nearly a hundred years. The Bureau of Land Management is still rounding them up to give forage to stock ranchers. These wild horses are placed in small pens and live miserable lives. And even though it’s illegal, many of them are being adopted by people who sell them off to the slaughterhouses for meat. 


Most of our wild horses live in Nevada, Colorado, Oregon, Utah, Arizona, and Wyoming. They are gorgeous creatures that live in family bands and have long standing bonds. When they forage our native grasses, the seeds to these grasses are not destroyed in their stomachs as they are in beef cattle, and so they make great protectors of our public lands. 



When I look back at the research and discovery for this book, I’m astounded at all that I have learned--even about my own family. Writing is truly an enriching occupation for me. Research and discovery are my favorite part of the writing process. It enables me to breathe life and truth into my stories, and most importantly hope. Whenever I look back into our shared history, I come across the American spirit. Whether it’s a wild mane flying in the wind, or the look on a young boy’s face as he boards a train for a new life or climbs on top of his home to mount a windmill. I always see determination, bravery, and hope. 


I hope you’ve enjoyed this sneak peek behind my novel and learning some of the history that went into writing You Belong Here Now. 


Amazon USBarnes and NobleAmazon UK WaterstonesAmazon CAIndigoAmazon AU Booktopia


Dianna Rostad was born and raised in the Pacific Northwest. Her parents and extended family come from the ranches of Montana and the farms of Arkansas. Dianna raised three kind, human beings, and when they began to test their wings, she took to writing with a passion, completing Southern Methodist University Writer’s Path program in 2009. A favorite task of her creative endeavors is the discovery and research of people and places where her novels are set. She has traveled extensively to pursue the last artifacts of our shared history and breathe life, truth, and hope into her novels. Now living in Florida, Dianna continues to write big-hearted novels for wide audiences everywhere.


Social Media Link:

WebsiteFacebookTwitterInstagramGoodreads Amazon Author Page 


Read an #excerpt from Heidi Eljarbo fabulous novel - Hidden Masterpiece @HeidiEljarbo


Hidden Masterpiece
(Soli Hansen Mysteries, Book 3)
By Heidi Eljarbo


Publication Date: 28th September 2021
Publisher: Independently Published
Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Mystery, Dual Timeline

In this riveting third book in the Soli Hansen Mysteries series, a woman’s courage to follow her conviction during a horrible war leads her to the portrait of a young Jewish heiress painted three centuries earlier.

Norway 1944. Art historian Soli Hansen has gone undercover to rescue masterpieces and keep them from falling into the hands of Nazi thieves. Working with a small resistance group led by her best friend Heddy, Soli will stop at nothing to thwart the efforts of the invaders of their scenic country. Trust and loyalty mean everything when working against a merciless enemy.

Riddles and clues lead the way to a mysterious work of art. It’s a race against time, but Soli and her network refuse to give up. However, when news arrives that her sweetheart Nikolai is missing in action, she strives to concentrate on the demanding quest.

From the streets of Oslo to the snow-covered mountains and medieval churches of Nume Valley, Soli takes risks larger than her courage, trying to preserve and hide precious art. But she must decide if it’s all worth losing the man she loves.

Antwerp 1639. Fabiola Ruber’s daughter, Annarosa, wants to honor her mother’s last wish and have her portrait done by a master artist who specializes in the art of chiaroscuro. Her uncle writes to an accomplished painter in Amsterdam and commissions him to paint his beloved niece.

Struggling with religious and social persecution, the Jewish Ruber family uproots once again and travels northward. On the way, they will sojourn in Amsterdam for Annarosa’s sitting in the master painter’s studio. But will they make it there? None of them can foresee the danger of such a journey.

Oslo, 1944


Soli stiffened and pursed her lips. Was Ingrid talking about the ledger Soli had hidden in Far’s trunk? Her stomach knotted at the thought of the Nazis deciphering the clues to the hidden masterpieces.


“Where did you find this book?” Soli asked, keeping her voice calm.


“In the coffer by the sofa-bed. I never go in there, but he asked me to locate his family Bible—not the one he reads every night, but the old one from his parents with all the dates for births, marriages, and deaths written on the first blank pages. I looked around and ended up checking the trunk.” Staring at Soli with wide eyes, Ingrid gnawed on the corner of her thumbnail.


Soli folded her hands in her lap. The ledger. Something had happened to the old ledger. The one Soli thought was safe at the bottom of her father’s trunk. 


Trying to appear calm, she hugged herself, squeezing her upper arms until they hurt. “That trunk is always locked.”


“Yes, but I found a key. I only wanted to help your father find the Bible.”


Soli relaxed her grip on her arms. Poor Ingrid. This was not her fault. Soli had to choose her words carefully. If the ledger had fallen into the wrong hands, her undercover work could become even more dangerous. When Nikolai had entrusted her with the journal a few months earlier, she’d promised to keep it safe, learn what secrets the book held within its pages, and use those bits and pieces of information in their clandestine operations. She’d found two masterpieces, but a third one was still out there somewhere, waiting to be found. The missing ledger held clues that would help Soli locate that third piece of artwork. If the Nazis got a hold of that information, they would go to great lengths to obtain the treasure.


Soli got two cups and filled them with warm tea from a kettle. She handed Ingrid a mug and sat down and faced her friend again.


“That ledger is my responsibility.” Soli tipped her head. “Actually, I don’t believe my father has ever seen it. A while back, I asked if I could keep an item in Mor’s trunk, and he agreed—no questions asked, no reservations.” She took a sip of her drink and put the cup on the table. “But I’ll speak with Far about this. I’ll probably tell him I took it with me when I left home last time, or something like that. He doesn’t even have to know what it was.”


Ingrid’s brow wrinkled. “I have no idea why that horrible man threatened me to give him the old journal. Now, I still don’t know, but the expression on your face adds to my worries. This situation is serious, isn’t it?”


“Oh, it is. That book has caused people to become greedy and commit horrible acts, even murder.”


“My goodness. I didn’t know.”


Soli rubbed her hands. Other than her resistance group, only a few people knew about the ledger. Two were dead. The others served Der Führer and were not to be trusted.


Amazon UK • Amazon US • Amazon CA • Amazon AU


This novel is available to read for free with #KindleUnlimited subscription. 


Heidi Eljarbo is the bestselling author of historical fiction and mysteries filled with courageous and good characters that are easy to love and others you don't want to go near.

Heidi grew up in a home filled with books and artwork and she never truly imagined she would do anything other than write and paint. She studied art, languages, and history, all of which have come in handy when working as an author, magazine journalist, and painter.

After living in Canada, six US states, Japan, Switzerland, and Austria, Heidi now calls Norway home. She and her husband have a total of nine children, thirteen grandchildren—so far—in addition to a bouncy Wheaten Terrier.

Their favorite retreat is a mountain cabin, where they hike in the summertime and ski the vast, white terrain during winter.

Heidi’s favorites are family, God's beautiful nature, and the word whimsical.

Sign up for her newsletter at https://www.heidieljarbo.com/newsletter