Murder in the East End by Jennifer Ashley – a Review

Murder in the East End by Jennifer Ashley – a Review

 

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Description:
When young cook Kat Holloway learns that the children of London’s Foundling Hospital are mysteriously disappearing and one of their nurses has been murdered, she can’t turn away. She enlists the help of her charming and enigmatic confidant Daniel McAdam, who has ties to Scotland Yard, and Errol Fielding, a disreputable man from Daniel’s troubled past, to bring the killer to justice. Their investigation takes them from the grandeur of Mayfair to the slums of the East End, during which Kat learns more about Daniel and his circumstances than she ever could have imagined.

 

 

Review:

Murder in the East End by Jennifer Ashley is the 4th book in her Below Stairs Mysteries series. Brief refresher on this series:  The story takes place in Victorian, England, with Kat Holloway, our heroine, who is a cook extraordinaire and a great detective.  She is a smart, confident, independent, and very loyal and protective to the household staff, where she reigns.  What I love about this series, is the Downton Abbey feel of above and below the stairs, as well as this being historical time.

In Murder in the East End, Kat becomes involved in a mystery involving missing orphan children.  Daniel comes to Kat to ask for her help, as some children from the Foundling Hospital have disappeared.  We get to learn more about Daniel, as we meet his brother Errol, who is a vicar, with a troubled past. One of the nurses at the hospital is also missing, which Errol pushes Daniel and Kat to help him find the girl and the children.  In a short time, the nurse will be found dead, with everyone fearing for the lives of the children. 

Kat continues to work around her full-time job as cook, with Tess becoming an excellent assistant.   Cynthia, the niece of the lady of the house, continues to be a good friend to Kat, as well as wanting to help on the new case.  We also get to meet a new character, Miss Townsend, an artist, who starts sketching the ladies in the kitchen; she befriends Kat, as she is also smart, and wealthy.  It is fun to see Kat cook for the family, and all the delicious food she makes.  I love the upstairs downstairs feel of this story, with housekeeper, cooks, maids, footman, butlers, etc.

In between, she visits the hospital to talk to other staff about the children, and finds that perhaps board members may be embezzling money. What follows is an interesting and intriguing mystery, which kept us unable to put the book down.  It was a lot of fun to watch Kat and her friends work together in helping her find the children. 

Murder in the East End was a nice cozy suspenseful mystery, with Kat in the forefront in solving the crimes. I also like that Daniel and Kat’s slow build romance is starting to heat up (though still in the background), with both having feelings for each other. If you enjoy Victorian stories, with a mystery theme, a Downton Abbey background, two very good leading characters and very well written by Jennifer Ashley, I suggest you start this series.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

 

 

 

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The Lost Girls Trilogy by Cheryl Holt-Review& Giveaway Tour

The Lost Girls Trilogy by Cheryl Holt -Review, Except & Giveaway Tour

SOMEONE TO LOVE
The Lost Girls #1
by Cheryl Holt
Genre: adult, historical, romance
Release Date: August 11, 2020

ebook ONLY 99¢ Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / Amazon.uk B&N /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Libby Carstairs was found by Navy sailors on a deserted island in the Caribbean. She was all alone and had no memory of her past or parents. Who is she? And what happened to leave her stranded so far from home? After she was returned to England, her situation was sensationalized in the newspapers, which meant she’s enjoyed a life of public acclaim. Due to her unconventional history, she’s very different from other young ladies and has no desire to ever be ordinary.

Luke Watson had an exciting career in the Navy, but on his brother’s death, he’s come home to assume his role as Earl of Barrett. His brother, with his repeated scandals, ran the family’s reputation and estate into the ground, and Luke is determined to repair all that’s been destroyed by exhibiting stellar moral behavior at all times. He will wed the perfect aristocratic girl, settle down to a tedious country existence, and try to be content.

But when he meets Libby, sparks fly and passion ignites. She’s the complete opposite of the woman he thought he wanted in his life, but she just might be exactly who he needs.

••••••••••

REVIEW:Someone to Love is the first in the new trilogy by author Cheryl Holt. What an exciting start it is! Three little girls marooned on a tropical island are found by a passing British ship and rescued, each will have a story to tell. This is the story of Libby Carstairs and Lucas Watson, Earl of Barrett.

Libby had been an actress, performing scenes of her rescue from the Caribbean island that awed many audiences. However, when her uncle Harry Carstairs died recently, she learned from some of his letters in his possessions that she was not his brother’s child. She learned who her father was but was afraid to make it known. She wasn’t sure she would be accepted.

Lucas was in the Navy when his wastrel brother died and left him the new Earl of Barrett. He was determined to live quietly and inconspicuously. Then he met Libby.
They met at a crowded party, outside in an area with a view of the dock. She was trying to escape the crowd and so was he. Only first names were given, and an outrageous attraction was started. He was completely besotted and even though she denied it, so was she.

Author Cheryl Holt has written the first of three, I’m sure wonderful, novels about the three little girls that were rescued from that island. This one is fascinating and exasperating at the same time. It sizzles with hot romance and witty conversations. Some of the angst drove me to want to shake them, hard. However, it was compelling and hard to put down. The circumstances are imaginative and enthralling. Twists and turns have you on the edge of your seat. I’m so looking forward to the next novel.

Copies supplied for review

Reviews by Georgianna S.

__________

SOMEONE TO CHERISH
The Lost Girls #2
by Cheryl Holt
Genre: adult, historical, romance
Release Date: August 11, 2020

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / Amazon.uk B&N /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Caroline Grey was just four years old when she was found stranded and alone by Navy sailors on a deserted island in the Caribbean. When she was returned to England, she enjoyed a brief burst of notoriety. Who was she? Who had her parents been? Ultimately, she was claimed by her dour, miserly relatives who’ve treated her like an unwanted pauper. She’s spent her life trying to be accepted by those who should love her, but her haunting past has created too many obstacles. It’s difficult to fit in…

Caleb Ralston is a wealthy, infamous gambler who’s raging against the unfairness of life. After spending a decade in the Navy, he was forced out of the post he treasured, as he struggled to protect others from a scandal. As a result, he vowed to become very rich, so he could avenge himself against the sort of affluent oafs who’ve always disdained him…

When he meets Caroline, he’s intrigued by her beauty and pluck, but she’s part of the world he loathes, and he could never bind himself to her. But Fate and destiny have other plans for Caleb, and Caroline might turn out to be just the woman he needs..

••••••••

REVIEW:Someone to Cherish is the second book of the Lost Girls Trilogy. I’m loving this series and can’t wait to read book three. That’s how good these stories are. I don’t do spoilers because I think authors work too hard to put develop their stories. The details are intriguing and should be experienced by each reader. So, what can I tell you? I can tell you what I find so fascinating and how I feel about the stories. However, I will give you the gist of the setup as well.

All the stories in this trilogy are about three little girls who where shipwrecked on a Caribbean island. All the adults died over time and the little girls were completely alone on a small island. They were rescued by Captain Miles Ralston and his crew when they happed on them while stopping for water supplies (I assume). They were the talk of all England and there was a search for relatives to claim the girls. They were torn apart quickly and given to relatives as they appeared. It was quick and traumatic for the girls; they were not even given the opportunity to say goodbye to each other. They all have fond memories of Captain Ralston and his treatment of them. However, once he turned them over to officials in Jamaica they never saw or heard of him again. I find it interesting how the author shows the duality of how the Captain was a hero, but in his personal life, he was a bit of a mess.

This is the story of Caroline Grey “Little Caro” and Caleb Ralston. Caroline Grey was sent to her grandfather Walter Grey who was a hard and cruel man. He often locked her in her room for what he felt were bad behavior. He was strict and a true penny pincher, giving most of his money to the church of his choice. He passed away and Samson Grey, Caroline’s uncle, took over the estate. He seemed kinder, provided her with more clothes and responsibility for the household as she grew. Samson had a daughter, Jenny, who Caroline came to see as a sister, even if she was a bit spoiled. Simon also had a son, Gregory, who was slightly older than Caroline. Gregory grew to be a spoiled and self-centered jerk with many vices. Caroline, at her uncle’s request, became engaged to Gregory. Gregory lived and reveled in London, only visiting when his father insisted. The engagement has lasted seven years, but now her uncle insists the wedding proceeds. Caroline feels it’s her duty to her family, she doesn’t even know him very well, but he’s never been bad to her personally.

Caleb Ralston is one of two sons Captain Miles Ralston had with his wife in the Caribbean. The captain and his wife died while the boys were young. The Navy sent them and their mother’s maid, Sybil, to their relatives in England. It seems the hero captain had a wife and children there too, a son, Jacob, and a daughter. The wife had them thrown off the property. However, Sybil fought with the first wife and the Navy to make sure the boys were sent to school and educated, then had commissions purchased for them to naval careers. Caleb’s brother, Blake, got into some trouble helping his friends swipe some supplies. Caleb took the blame and was asked to resign from the navy. He now owns a gambling club in London, which Sybil helps him run. He’s become extremely wealthy, but also a bit cold. He traveled to Grey’s Corner to attend Gregory and Caroline’s wedding, but mostly to appraise the property that Gregory has been wagering on. He doesn’t like Gregory at all, but an immediate attraction develops when he meets Caroline.

Okay, that’s pretty much the background and setup. There’s quite a lot more, but as I said, I’m only giving you the basics. The characters in this novel and the last are well developed with unique personalities. The conversations are interesting and flow well. The story is well planned in its plot and interesting twists. It shows a lot about the times and the things women had to go through. The premise is simple, but there are many twists and turns. The romance sizzles from the beginning and does not let up. The author also begins to bring the close relationship of the girls to life, as she uses characters from the first book to help solve the issue brought up in the second. The timing is well crafted and thoroughly entertaining.

Do yourself a great favor and get a copy of this marvelous story. If you haven’t yet read the first, grab that one first. While I suppose they do stand alone, it’s best if they’re read in order. Personally, I’m ready to dive into number three! Kudos to author Cheryl Holt, this trilogy is simply superb!

________

SOMEONE TO WED
The Lost Girls Trilogy #3
by Cheryl Holt
Genre: adult, historical romance
Release Date: August 11, 2020

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / Amazon.uk B&N /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Joanna James had a brief moment of notoriety at age four when she survived a shipwreck in the Caribbean. She was returned to England and raised quietly in the country by a doting auntie. She’s descended from an ancient line of wise women, so she’s very different from other young ladies. She has the sight, and she can cast spells and brew potions, but she’s cautious with her peculiar gifts and hides them from her rural neighbors who don’t always understand her odd talents.

Captain Jacob Ralston works hard to be boring and ordinary. After learning at age ten that his notorious father was a bigamist and liar, he swore he’d grow up to be the most moral man in the kingdom. He would never rock a boat or raise a brow. After a stellar career in the Navy, he’s determined to retire to the country, marry the fiancée his mother picked for him, and force himself to be content.

When he crosses paths with peculiar, fascinating Joanna, he’s instantly bowled over. She’s beautiful, intriguing, and not like any woman he’s ever met. He can’t imagine how he would ever bind himself, but Fate and destiny have other plans for him, and Joanna just might be the one woman who can make him happy forever…

Lost forever…finally found

•••••••

REVIEW:Someone to Wed is the third installment in the Lost Girls Trilogy. This is the story of Joanna James and Jacob Ralston.

Joanna is perhaps my favorite character in this trilogy. She’s a lovely redhead with a history of women who use herbs and potions to heal the sick and much more. She has a little touch of the Fey that she tries to keep hidden. However, she truly does have power. She and her Aunt Pru lived in a cottage in the forest of Ralston Place. Before her aunt passed away, they adopted a little girl that Pru had delivered. The parents paid her to have the child disappear. Her name is Clara and she’s a lovely child, Joanna loves her very much. They don’t have much, but Joanna keeps them fed by tending the sick and they are happy. Before Joanna parted from Captain Miles Ralston, she asked him to watch over her and the other girls forever…could his ghost be doing just that?

Jacob Ralston is related to Caleb and Blake Ralston from the previous book. All three are sons of Captain Miles Ralston, although from different mothers. Very different mothers. Captain Miles Ralston rescued the girls from the Caribbean island they were shipwrecked on. Jacob is on furlough from the Navy and he stopped in London to visit Caleb. He wants to have a relationship with Caleb and Blake, now that his mother has passed away. He also has a sister Margaret. Margaret has returned from Egypt, where she lived with her cruel husband. Her mother insisted she marry the man to get her away from Sandy, the man she really loved, but he was their stablemaster. Her husband died leaving her penniless and desperate. She borrowed money from friends to pay her way back to England. Before she died, Jacob’s mother also arranged a marriage for him. Roxanne returned from Italy to be betrothed to Jacob. She is at Ralston Place and is planning the September bethrothal party.

Jacob comes home and stumbles upon Joanna James while she’s walking home. She has been treating Margaret for melancholy. He is immediately attracted to her and cannot seem to let her go. Even though he knows he’s about to be betrothed. He knows he can never marry her, she’s not of his status, but he’s completely besotted.

Okay, that’s the basic setup. This is one of the most interesting novels and I’m completely entertained and fascinated by the way Cheryl Holt has plotted this out. I think it’s a bit of genius. There is romance, to be sure! There is also danger, betrayal, heartbreak, and unspeakable happiness! The devil is in the details and I urge you to read them for yourself!

Copies supplied for review

Reviews by Georgianna

 

“Oh, my. Would you look at that?”Libby cowered in the traveling trunk where she’d been hiding, determined to make herself as small as possible. She’d shut her eyes, yearning to be invisible, but it hadn’t worked. The man who was loom-ing over her could definitely see her.He was wearing a uniform, so he appeared very large and very important. There were gold buttons on the front of his blue coat, and he had a belt with a big knife dangling on one hip and a big gun dan-gling on the other.“Out with you now,” he said, but she simply stared up at him, won-dering if she could jump out and escape.In the time she’d been living on the deserted island, the few adults who’d been stranded with her had constantly advised her to watch out for bad men, but how was she supposed to know if he was bad or not? How was she supposed to know if she could trust him? The adults had all passed away, so she had no one to answer those questions. She was only five, and it was frightening to have to decide so many issues on her own.She peeked over the edge of the trunk, wishing Caroline and Joanna would be standing there. When the man’s ship had dropped anchor out
2 Someone To Love – Prologue – Excerptin the bay, when the sailors had rowed to shore in their longboat, the sight had been so alarming that her two friends had run into the jungle. Libby was smarter than Caroline and Joanna, so she’d assumed the traveling trunk was a better spot to hide. She’d been wrong though. The man had entered their dilapidated hut and opened it almost immediately.What should she do? She was tired and hungry and anxious for him to help them. Tears welled into her eyes, which she hated. She wasn’t a baby, and she’d been told repeatedly that she had to stop acting like one.“Let’s go, you adorable moppet,” the man said, and when she didn’t move, he reached down and lifted her out.The instant her feet touched the ground, she tried to bolt out the door to freedom, but he was too quick for her. He grabbed her arm, and though she wrestled and kicked, she couldn’t get away.“Hold on, missy, just hold on.” He continued to talk, offering calming words until she was too fatigued to keep fighting him. Once her skirmishing ceased, he knelt down and asked, “What’s your name?”She scowled forever, debating whether to admit it. Her mother had warned her over and over that she should never confess it to anyone. It was a powerful secret, and if wicked people learned who she was, they’d take her away. Even though her mother had to be dead, the admonition still resonated.The man recognized her consternation. “You can tell me what it is. Don’t be afraid.”She debated a bit more, then said, “It’s Libby.”“Libby . . . what?”“Libby Carstairs.”“Hello, Miss Libby. I’m Captain Ralston. Is your mother or father with you?”“No.”
CHERYL HO LT3“Where are they?”“I don’t know.”“Do you have any idea what happened to them?”“I think they drowned.”“Were you on a ship? Did it sink?”“Yes. In a storm.”“I’m betting that was scary. Did you swim to shore?”“I don’t remember.”She thought she’d swum though. She had terrifying dreams of huge waves, dark water, angry clouds, and wind. For ages afterward, the palms of her hands had been sore and blistered, and she recalled gripping a piece of wood, loud voices shouting at her not to let go of it, and she hadn’t.The Captain glanced around the hut, assessing the crude beds, the ramshackle construction. They’d carried on the best they could with what they’d had, but it hadn’t been much. “Are there any adults with you?”“No.”“Were there some in the beginning?”“Yes.”“How many?”“There were six, but they died.”“How?”“They were hurt.”“When the ship sank?”“Yes. Then they got sick.”“How long have you been here?”She leaned in so they were nose to nose. “For a really, really long time.”She didn’t have a number to explain how many days it had been. At first, Joanna’s mother had survived with them, and she’d counted to
4 Someone To Love – Prologue – Excerpteighty-five, but after she’d cut her leg on a tree stump and had passed away, they’d lost track.“Gad, but aren’t you pretty?” he murmured. “You’ll break some hearts when you grow up.”“That’s what my papa always said.”“Your papa was right.”He stood and patted the top of her head, and the gesture made her feel safer. She didn’t think he was a bad man, so he might agree to fix what was wrong.“What was your papa’s name, peanut?” he asked her.“Papa?”He snorted at that. “What about your mother?”“Mama?” She frowned and posed a question that had been vexing her. “Could you find them for me? If they didn’t drown, I’m worried they might be searching for me, but they don’t know where I am.”“I will assist you as much as I can, but you shouldn’t hope we’ll locate your parents. I’m sorry, but I doubt you’ll see them ever again.”“Maybe in Heaven someday?”“Maybe in Heaven.”He sighed, and from outside, a sailor called, “Captain, would you come out? I have a surprise to show you.”On being summoned, he walked out, but he kept a hand on Libby’s shoulder so she couldn’t flee, but she’d decided she wouldn’t. He appeared incredibly commanding to her, so he’d be able to tell her what should occur next.Perhaps she could go home to England. She’d been happy there. At least she thought she’d been happy. She seemed to recollect a large mansion, a kind nanny, and a pony.The sailor had stumbled on Caroline and Joanna where they’d been crouched in the foliage. Caroline shrugged at Libby, as if to admit their plan to hide in the jungle had been stupid.
CHERYL HO LT5Libby supposed they were a fearsome sight. Their hair was long and tangled, bleached blond from the hot sun, their dresses bleached too, the fabric worn thin and faded to white. They were barefoot, their skin bronzed, their condition bedraggled.“Look what I found,” the sailor said to the Captain. He indicated Caroline and Joanna. “They’re all alone, and apparently, they’ve been living like a pack of wild animals.”“No, we haven’t!” Libby furiously insisted. “We have a hut and everything.”The sailor ignored her and addressed the Captain. “They’re like a trio of abandoned wolf pups.”“We had mothers!” Libby huffed. “It’s not our fault that they died.”But she was ignored again.“Are there any others?” the Captain asked the sailor.“Not that we saw.”The Captain peered down at her. “Is it just the three of you? And don’t lie to me. This is important.”“There’s just us three,” Libby said.“Lord almighty,” he muttered as he led Libby over to Caroline and Joanna. “Will you introduce me to your companions?”“This is Caroline”—Libby pointed to her—”and this is Joanna.”“Are you sisters?” he asked.“No.”“None of you?”“No. We’re like sisters though,” Libby told him. “We’re closer than sisters.”“I’m sure you are.”The Captain studied their surroundings. The sky was so blue, the ocean a brilliant turquoise color, the sand blazing under the sun’s unre-lenting rays. The palm trees swayed but provided no real shade.“What shall we do with them, Captain?” the sailor inquired.
6 Someone To Love – Prologue – ExcerptThe Captain grimaced with disgust. “It’s beyond me. We’ll convey them to the nearest port, and the authorities can figure it out.”“Shouldn’t I stay here?” Libby asked. “What if my parents come for me?”The Captain and the sailor exchanged a tormented glance, then the Captain said, “Trust me, Miss Libby, they won’t come. Now then, are there any items you’d like to take with you? Have you any dolls or clothes or other mementoes you’d like to bring?”“No, I don’t have anything,” Libby said.“That’s the saddest comment I ever heard.” He spun to Caroline and Joanna. “How about you two girls? Are there things you’d like to take?”They shook their heads, not keen to talk to him. It seemed like a dream, as if they would eventually wake up and the day would glide along as all the other days had glided along since they’d arrived.“There’s no reason to linger then,” the Captain said, and he motioned to the longboat. “Let’s get you out to the ship.”Libby blanched with dismay. “I won’t go on a ship! None of us will go on a ship ever again!”“It’s all right,” the Captain said. “Mine won’t sink.”“It’s what Mother claimed about the last one, but it wasn’t true.”“I’ll make it true,” the Captain firmly stated, “and you have to be very brave, so Caroline and Joanna will watch you and realize how to be very brave too. Can you do that for me?”“I guess,” she grudgingly replied.He picked her up and balanced her on his hip. She couldn’t remem-ber an adult picking her up before. And she was five, so she wasn’t exactly tiny. For once in her short life, she felt protected.“I’ll climb onto a boat for you,” she said, “but only if you promise I’ll be safe.”“You’ll be safe. I promise.”Libby rested her head on his shoulder and told herself to believe him. What other choice did she have? 


 

1. How much has publishing changed in the last 20 years?

I could write an entire book on this subject. I feel like I was battered by every bump in the road that happened in the last two decades. I’m a walking-talking survivor of the publishing industry and all of its many changes and calamities.

My first novel was published in 2000, which means I jumped into NY publishing as we were moving toward the end of the hey-day of paperback writing. I rode that wave until 2010. The (last) economic crash at the end of 2008 pretty much crushed my NY career. The publishing industry went into freefall in 2009, and in 2010 and 2011, 95% of the bookstores closed. They still haven’t reopened and won’t reopen.

After the bookstores closed, most of the working novelists were dumped by their publishers. The publishing companies have spent the last decade regrouping and figuring out how to get going again on a sound financial footing, which has been painful for everyone. As for me—and nearly all of the paperback writers in the country—there was no spot for me with the NY publishers anymore. Once there were no bookstores, there just wasn’t much of a market for paperbacks—simply because there was nowhere to sell them.

I had to figure out how to publish my own books, and I’ve been releasing my own books since 2012. It means I had to completely reinvent myself. My first 24 novels were published by the NY publishers, but starting with Novel #25, I have been publishing them myself. In 2021, I will be up to Novel #60. When I release them myself, I can get them out much faster, and I don’t have to rely on a publisher’s release schedule, where I was relegated to 2 books per year.

It’s a mixed blessing though. I can write whatever I want now, and I’m not constrained by any of the restrictions that publishers put on writers. I can tell any story I want, and I can make the books as long as I want. (I don’t have to worry about the price of paper, which is an issue for the publishers, so my books are much longer now.) I’m grateful that I was able to start over and re-invent myself, but it’s a hard endeavor that never gets easier.

Writing novels is not a job for sissies!

2. Do you have any advice for new authors?

Yes, it’s this: It’s really, really, really hard to learn to write a novel. Then it’s hard to learn to write a good novel. Then it’s even harder to learn to write a great novel, then to write a great one over and over again.

There’s only one way to get good at it, and that is to write constantly. There’s no other way to do it, but to write and write and write. It’s just like playing the piano. You’re learning a craft, and you have to practice to become a master.

3. Tell us a little about your latest trilogy.

This year, I’m releasing my “Lost Girls” trilogy.

For several summer now, I’ve been writing linked trilogies that have a defined premise that carries the plot through all three novels. In this series, the link is that the heroines were traveling to Jamaica with their families when they were little girls, and their ship sank in a terrible storm. Against all odds, they were the only survivors. They were found on a deserted island by British sailors, but no one could figure out how they survived—and they were too young to explain much of what had happened to them.

They were returned to England, where they enjoyed a bit of notoriety. Then they were separated and doled out to distant relatives. They never saw each other again. When the novels start, it’s the 20th anniversary of the shipwreck, and the three women’s lives are pitched off in new and exciting directions where they meet the men of the dreams.

Follow: Goodreads / Website /Twitter /Facebook

CHERYL HOLT is a New York Times, USA Today, and Amazon “Top100” bestselling author who has published nearly sixty novels.

Her books have been released to wide acclaim, and she has won or been nominated for many national awards. She is considered to be one of the masters of the romance genre. For many years, she was hailed as “The Queen of Erotic Romance”, and she’s also revered as “The International Queen of Villains.” She is particularly proud to have been named “Best Storyteller of the Year” by the trade magazine Romantic Times BOOK Reviews.

She lives and writes in Hollywood, California, and she loves to hear from fans. Visit her here -> Website

NOTE: The Reading Cafe is NOT responsible for the rafflecopter giveaway. If you have any questions, please contact the author.

Cheryl is celebrating the release of her new LOST GIRLS series by running this contest. She will give away ten autographed print copies of Book #1, Someone To Love, to ten lucky winners. Since the first three novels in the series will be released together on August 11th, she will also give away one grand prize to one lucky winner of autographed print copies of Books 1, 2, and 3. The three books included in the Grand Prize drawing are: Someone To Love, Someone To Cherish, and Someone To Wed. So there will be eleven winners in all!

The contest begins on June 28, 2020, and entries will close on August 12, 2020. The drawing will be held the next day, August 13, 2020, and winners will be notified by email. You may enter as many times as you wish, but please be aware that Cheryl’s books contain adult content. You must be 18 years of age or older to enter. All entrants’ emails will be added to Cheryl’s general mailing list. The email addresses are used to provide readers with information about Cheryl’s career and her upcoming novels, and the list is never shared with anyone.

Cheryl can only ship prizes to U.S. addresses. Thank you for understanding.

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The Enticing of Miss Standish by Julia Justiss-Review & Giveaway

The Enticing of Miss Standish (The Cinderella Spinsters #3) by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date August 1, 2020

A meeting of minds…

But a most unsuitable match!

When lady’s companion Sara Standish meets Cameron Fitzallen, he has his jacket off and he’s mending mill machinery. He is manly, capable—though it’s most improper for him to set her heart aflutter! He is a mill owner—trade—after all. They share the same aim to help impoverished children, but in the eyes of the ton, she must not mix with him. That doesn’t stop her craving his company, or his touch…

•••••••••

REVIEW:This marvelous historical romance takes place in London – summer of 1834. The setting for this adventure and love story is perfect. Progress, by way of machines, is taking hold and the world is changing. However, for women, it’s hard to do more than the expected and still marry well.

This is the delightful story of Miss Sara Standish and industrialist Cameron Fitzallen.

Sara is from a wealthy and titled family. Sara considers herself plain and ordinary. Ordinary is not the word for a lovely and intelligent woman like Sara. However, among the gentry, such intelligence and desire to improve the position of all the poor in England is not among the desired qualities of a wife.

Cameron Fitzallen was a poor orphan who rose in position to learn and work in a mill. He was mechanically inclined and driven to succeed. With a little help from the mill owner, Cameron went to school and learned to design and improve the machines in the mill. Making it more profitable and earning his promotions. Due to some patents, he now owns the mill and is still improving both the machines and the work conditions of his employees. He’s an honorable man but will never be accepted into society.

Happening in the background of the railroad expansion and the beginning of the industrial revolution, this marvelous love story is exciting and well-written. The characters are well-developed, and the conversations are realistic, but stilted in the times. Author Julia Justiss does a professional job of presenting various types of people while connecting them to the times they are living in.

This is a thoroughly entertaining story you won’t want to miss.

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Georgianna S

Excerpt courtesy of the author

London—summer 1834
‘Act as a companion?’ Sara’s aunt echoed, her horrified voice rising. ‘Do you want to send me into a decline and be the death of your poor invalid mother? Why, society would think the Standish family had become indigent, like your poor friend Miss Overton!’
Sighing, Sara Standish gazed over at Lady Patterson, who occupied the other end of the sofa in the small back salon at Standish House where they were taking tea, Sara’s mother, as usual, being laid down upon her couch.
Sara supposed it wasn’t worth mentioning that her friend’s sudden loss of fortune had turned out to be a blessing, since it had led her to find the man she would fall in love with and marry. ‘Assisting a marchioness by accompanying her to meetings and society events would hardly suggest a sudden lack of funds.’
‘Perhaps not,’ Lady Patterson allowed. ‘But you might as well put on a cap and announce yourself a spinster, beyond all hope of marriage!’
‘Since I’m about to complete my fifth Season and have reached the advanced age of three-and-twenty, I expect society already considers me one.’
‘You needn’t have been. If you’d made just a little more push to engage one of the gentlemen who have shown interest in you,’ Lady Patterson argued. ‘Mr Ersby or Mr Berwicke. Or that charming baronet’s son, Mr Harlande.’
‘Mr Ersby, who talks of nothing but hounds and hunters. Mr Berwicke, who merely wanted some gently born female who wouldn’t baulk at residing year-round in the depths of Yorkshire and married Miss Woodward within a month after I politely refused him. And that charming baronet’s son lives with his mother and intends on remaining with her, even if he weds.’ Sweeping her hand down to indicate her plump, rounded figure, she said wryly, ‘He probably thought I resembled his mama.’
‘Not every man wants a tall, sylph-like beauty,’ her aunt retorted. ‘Some prefer a lady with a bit of flesh on her bones. True, you’d never be taken for an Incomparable, but your figure is elegant, your pale blonde hair is lovely and I’ve overheard several gentlemen describe your blues eyes as “very fine”.’
‘Be that as it may, I prefer a gentleman with a bit of sense in his head and a great deal of purpose in his heart!’
‘Then why haven’t you endeared yourself to one of those politicians you’re always talking about? It’s not as if you don’t spend the vast majority of your time working with Lady Lyndlington’s Ladies’ Committee, writing letters in support of Parliamentary bills, or some such vulgar thing.’
A politician she could admire.
Sara pressed her lips together, trying to keep her countenance from betraying her as the unhappy memories escaped. After heady weeks of having consulted and encouraged her, handsome, dashing Member of Parliament Lucius Draycott asking her for a private interview. Her nervous jubilation, her certainty he meant to offer for her. The humiliation of discovering that all he wanted was her opinion on which of two well-dowered, crushingly conventional young ladies he should court.
She’d never shared that pain and didn’t intend to divulge it now, since the resolution it produced—that she would never marry—would only prolong the argument with her aunt.
‘No activity sponsored by a viscountess could be considered “vulgar”,’ Sara countered after a moment, keeping her tone light. ‘I suppose you’d prefer me to devote myself solely to afternoon calls and shopping trips, and my evenings to soirées, routs and balls, meeting and talking with the same people about the same things I have for the last five years.’
‘Of course I would. They are your peers, the elite of England, society’s leaders.’
‘Most of them lead rather pointless lives,’ Sara retorted. ‘I prefer to spend my time among the small segment of that elite who are working to change the nation and make life better for all England’s inhabitants.’
‘But to bury yourself away as a companion? After all the time and effort I’ve expended, trying to get you respectably s-settled!’ Her aunt’s voice breaking, she drew a handkerchief from her reticule and dabbed at her eyes.
‘I know,’ Sara said quietly, putting a placating hand on her aunt’s arm. ‘I’m grateful that you were willing to take over sponsoring me after Mama decided that going about in society was too…taxing for her delicate health. And I do appreciate all the opportunities you have tried to create for me—even if it appears as if I don’t. I know you want the best for me. It’s just—your view of what that is, and mine, are so very different.’
‘You truly think you’d be happy living the rest of your days as a spinster, assisting some high-born lady to work on behalf of that orphan school and those legislative committees?’ her aunt asked. ‘Left behind, while your peers are raising their offspring, and left alone, with no child to comfort you, when your mother and I and the Marchioness pass? For I can’t imagine you could abide living with your brother and that silly featherhead he married!’
Perhaps she was making progress, Sara thought. Her aunt’s usual refrain was to recommend marriage—any marriage. Perhaps Lady Patterson was finally coming to see that wedding a typical society gentleman—a man with whom she had nothing in common—just wasn’t right for Sara. Such a man would almost certainly disapprove of her opinions, try to limit or forbid her political activities and probably leave his modestly attractive, quiet wife to run his home while he took his pleasure with a prettier, more dashing woman.
As her father had.
Whereas, though a political gentleman might encourage her opinions and applaud her activities, when it came to marriage, he usually chose a conventional society maiden as his bride.
Which pretty much swept the field of matrimonial prospects.
Was it any wonder she now yearned only to live an independent life?
‘I think I could be happy, yes. I have friends—and their children to coddle and love. I would be able to devote myself to working on causes that truly matter to me. I know I’m a sad disappointment to you, Aunt Patterson, but the usual rounds of entertainments and dinners and routs that delight most well-born ladies simply don’t interest me at all.’
Her aunt sighed. ‘So you’ve been telling me these last five years.’
‘Perhaps, now, you’re finally listening? Besides, both you and Mama had already agreed that at Season’s end, you would allow—if not give your blessing to—my moving with Emma and Olivia to the house on Judd Street, where we would all pursue our political activities.’
‘Except that Miss Henley and Miss Overton, quite sensibly, opted to marry instead,’ her aunt pointed out, a triumphant gleam in her eye. ‘Despite previously claiming, as you are now, that they preferred to remain unwed and devote themselves to good causes.’
‘If I were to capture the affections of a gentleman whose mind, heart, and purpose captivated me, as Emma did with Lord Theo and Olivia with Colonel Glendenning, I wouldn’t be opposed to marriage. But as you noted, I’ve encountered both society gentlemen and political gentleman over the years, without any such miracle occurring.’
‘But such a “miracle” will never happen unless you remain in society,’ her aunt countered. ‘Don’t hide yourself away as a companion and resign yourself to spinsterhood!’
‘Then perhaps we can make a bargain. If I agree to continue to forgo spinster’s caps and continue to conduct myself like a marriageable maiden, will you allow me to assist the Marchioness? As you may remember, she still suffers from that fall she took riding two years ago and is often in pain. It’s not as though I would be a paid companion—more a friend and assistant. To have someone to write out her correspondence for her, help her when she entertains and assist her to attend such meetings and social engagements as she wishes, would be a kind, Christian thing to do. For the present, when in London, I could still reside here with you and Mama. And assisting her would hardly mean hiding myself away! Despite her injuries, she moves in the first circles of society. Indeed, accompanying her might give me an even better chance of meeting that sterling young man who could tempt me into marriage.’
‘Oh, very well,’ her aunt said. ‘I suppose you’d talk me around to it one way or another eventually anyway. Goodness, for all that you scarcely say a word in company, you can be persuasive when you want to be!’
‘Then I may call on Lady Trent and let her know I can begin?’
‘I never thought I’d see the day…my darling niece, a companion?’
‘A kind, Christian assistant,’ Sara substituted.
Lady Patterson shook her head, that gesture telling Sara the change in wording didn’t make the proposition any more palatable to her. ‘But…yes, you may call on her.’
‘Thank you, best of aunts!’ Delighted, Sara jumped up to give her Lady Patterson a vigorous hug.
‘Goodness, now,’ that lady grumbled, ‘careful of my cap!’
‘I’ll go out at once,’ Sara said, walking towards the door. ‘Lady Trent has invited the members of the Parliamentary Committee who are to oversee the newly appointed Factory Inspectors to stay at Brayton Hullford, her country estate in Derbyshire. They will be touring the manufacturers in the region to check their compliance with last year’s Factory Act. Lady Lyndlington and the other committee members were as concerned as I was about the Marchioness taxing her limited strength, trying to manage such a large house party on her own.’
‘Why, you sly thing!’ Lady Patterson said reproachfully, shaking a finger at Sara. ‘Securing my approval of your proposition before informing me that taking up the position will send you out of London before the Season ends!’
‘The Season will be ending soon anyway. And you know you never stay in London after July. So I shall probably see you next in Kent.’
‘Not until we’re settled in Kent?’ Lady Patterson wailed. Then, shaking her head again, she said, ‘Oh, get on with you then, before I change my mind!’
Blowing her a kiss, Sara couldn’t help grinning as she walked out. For the first time since her friends’ unexpected marriages had ended for good any hope of leaving her mother’s house to live independently, she had the possibility of finding another way to take up the life the three of them had dreamed of since they’d met, bookish girls of serious natures, at Mrs Axminster’s Academy for Young Ladies.
She would miss her friends, of course. And happy as she was for their happiness, going to assist Lady Trent wouldn’t be like setting up a household with the two people dearest in the world to her.
With determination, she shook off the melancholy that always seized her when she thought of them, both now so far away, Emma with Lord Theo on their Grand Tour of Europe and Olivia back at her husband’s estate in Somerset. Though she couldn’t expect Lady Trent to be a replacement for her friends, she hoped the lady would turn out to be as congenial and interesting a companion over an extended period as she had been the short duration of the Ladies’ Committee meetings.
If they should prove to be incompatible—one couldn’t blame a woman who suffered constant pain from being querulous, after all—after the trip to Derbyshire, Sara could gracefully bow out of any further commitment.
But in the meantime, there was Derbyshire. Her spirits rose again and excitement tingled her nerves, just thinking of it. Living independently at Judd Street would have allowed her to spend as much time as she liked on her Ladies’ Committee work and assisting with Ellie Lattimer’s school—but it would be political work at a distance. In Derbyshire, she and Lady Trent intended to accompany the committee members on their factory tours, giving her an unparalleled opportunity to see with her own eyes, rather than reading about it second-hand in a journal or Parliamentary report, the working conditions of the factory children whose plight so touched her heart and whose best interests she was determined to advance and protect.
As she mounted the stairs to her room to collect her pelisse, she had to chuckle. If Aunt Patterson had any idea that during the visit to Derbyshire, her darling niece would be visiting factories employing pauper children and indigent females, she would lock Sara in her bedchamber.
Instead, she would shortly be on her way to inform Lady Trent she had her family’s permission to assist her on the journey. She couldn’t wait to begin.
But despite Aunt Patterson’s fondest hopes, she sincerely doubted that among the members of the Parliamentary committee or the inspectors Parliament had appointed, she would discover any discerning gentleman interested in enticing her into wedlock.
*
In the afternoon two weeks later, Cameron Fitzallen stood by his desk in the manager’s office of the Hughes Cotton Works near the village of Knively, trying not to grimace as the owner, Mr Hughes, informed him about the Parliamentary Committee that was to visit the mill later that afternoon.
‘Shouldn’t be anything to worry about, Cam my boy,’ Mr Hughes said. ‘We run a model mill and the working conditions here already surpass the standards established by the Factory Act.’
‘Oh, I’m not worried about what they will find. But I can’t help resenting the obligation to nursemaid yet another group of ignorant outsiders through the mill while they gather tales to amuse their London friends. A waste of my time! Only those who work in the business have the expertise to change things for the better.’
‘Aye, I know you’ve little taste for visiting committees,’ Hughes replied. ‘But sometimes, a nudge from outsiders doesn’t come amiss. In fact, I believe Mr Pennington, the committee member who represents Derby, wanted to bring the group to Hughes first for just that reason—so that they would see how a mill should be run, before they visit others that may need…improvements.’
‘We’re certainly proud of the establishment you’ve built,’ Cameron replied, looking at his mentor with admiration and respect. ‘Everyone from the over-lookers to the newest piecer will be happy to show off their work.’
‘And I’ll hear no more protest about having you do the tour, or the speech to them afterwards. Not for nothing did I insist you be trained up to talk like a London nob! They’ll listen a deal more attentively to you than they would to me, with my thick north-country speech.’
‘They ought to listen to you,’ Cameron retorted. ‘You’ve got as much expertise as I do. And a great deal more experience.’
‘Well, as so often in life, it’s the appearance that counts. Looking fine as five pence, and speaking as though you was one of them, always helps. Today, and when you’ll be on the hunt for more investors for those expansion schemes of yours.’
Cameron smiled. ‘I’ll let you take care of investments. I’ll concentrate on machinery. I might look and speak like a gentleman, but I wasn’t born one.’ The ugly memories of his time in London threatened and, with a dash of anger, he pushed them away. ‘Not that I care one whit about their opinions, but those who were born gentlemen will never forget I wasn’t.’
‘Aye, `tis the way of the world,’ Hughes acknowledged. ‘May we live to see the day when a man is recognised for his achievements, rather than his birth! True, I started the business and kept the capital flowing. But it’s the improvements you’ve made to the machinery, your study of the work and techniques of others, that have kept Hughes Works so profitable.’
‘Thank you, sir. I appreciate the vote of confidence.’
Mr Hughes chuckled. ‘I should hope I have confidence in the man to whom I will be turning this operation over! The first of several mills you mean to direct, eh, my ambitious young lad? Aye, I expect you’re itching to try out some of those novel new techniques you’ve been reading about! Well, keep the mill profitable is all I say. I’ll handle any grumbling from the investors over your changes.’
‘I intend to keep it profitable, sir.’
At that moment, a knock came at the door, followed by the entry of a child who worked in the card room. ‘What is it, Jenny?’ Cameron asked.
‘’Scuse me, Mr Hughes, but Lennox sent me up to fetch Mr Fitzallen. He’s having some trouble with the oiling of one of the spinning mules.’
‘With the committee due here any time, you’d better get the machinery working at once,’ Mr Hughes said.
‘On my way,’ Cameron replied. ‘Let’s go, Jenny.’
As he followed the child out of the office, the noise of the machinery drowned out all other sound—and made him smile. Though the clatter had awed and intimidated him the first time he entered the mill as a nervous six-year-old, he’d loved the complex machinery at first sight and the thrill he felt every time he gazed upon it had never faded. The levers and pulleys, gears and wires, rollers, drums and bobbins fascinated him, their interplay an elegant language of motion and efficiency he’d been studying ever since.
He’d done pretty well for an orphan from the parish workhouse, he thought as he followed Jenny. Working his way up over twenty-five years from a scavenger cleaning lint and fly from the edges of the machines to overall manager, along the way looking for ways to improve both efficiency and safety. The small adjustments he’d made had first caught the eye of his supervisor, then of Mr Hughes himself. Recognising his potential, the owner had sent him away to school. And very soon now, he thought with a rising swell of excitement, Mr Hughes would turn over the factory to him, to improve and expand even more.
He mimed a goodbye to Jenny in the carding room and walked on to enter the larger space occupied by the mule spinners, the heat and humidity hitting him like a slap to the face. Lennox, one of the senior minders, must have been watching for him, for he waved Cameron over. Using hand gestures, he indicated the machine that was giving him difficulty. Though he’d shut it down, the problem had occurred on one of the least accessible pulleys, a place difficult to reach even with the machine not in motion.
Stripping down to his shirtsleeves in the heat, Cameron tossed his coat, vest and cravat to the minder. The skinny workhouse orphan he’d once been had grown into a tall, broad-shouldered, powerfully built man, so he could no longer slither under the yard sheet to access the part, as he had as a boy—nor could Lennox, which Cameron figured was why the man had summoned him. He’d have to reach through and around, a delicate process to avoid ruining the thread being made—or catching a hand in one of the shuttles.
But solving mechanical difficulties was the sort of puzzle he loved—applying angle and torque and finesse and an intimate knowledge of the machine and its workings to successfully make the repair. With a hand motion to Lennox to indicate he was studying the situation, Cameron dropped to his knees and looked up at the recalcitrant part from below, then stood and peered down at it from several different angles. Satisfied he’d worked out the best way to proceed, he motioned to Lennox for the oiler, got back down on his knees and set to work.
His concentration intensely focused on his task, it wasn’t until he’d finished and got back to his feet that Cameron noticed Mr Hughes leading a group of strangers into the room. The Parliamentary Committee, no doubt.
He’d just handed the oiler back to Lennox when he realised that, among the seven or eight individuals approaching him, two were female. He frowned at that discovery, wondering why the committee had brought ladies with them. One older woman in an elegant pelisse and turban was leaning on the arm of a second female, who seemed to be assisting her as she walked.
The second lady turned towards him and looked up. A shock ran through Cameron as he realised this lady was not only much younger, but very attractive.
She looked like the pictures he’d seen of angels, he thought disjointedly. A twist of golden curls framed the soft, pale face under her bonnet, large, beautiful china-blue eyes looked at him enquiringly—and her deep blue pelisse accentuated curves much too voluptuous to belong to one of the heavenly host.
As his body had its inevitable reaction to that observation, the lady’s eyes widened. Cameron suddenly realised he was standing there, gaping at her, coatless and cravat-less, his open-necked shirt revealing the top half of his bare chest. Which, to someone from the Polite World, was akin to being practically undressed.
His face heating, he grabbed his garments back from Lennox and hastily shrugged on vest and coat and wrapped the cravat around his throat. No time to tie it properly, but a quick knot would bring the edges of his shirt back together and render him decent.
What was a young, attractive, gently born lady doing at Hughes Works? Besides looking as out of place in this cotton mill as he would at a reception at St James’s Palace.
Pasting a smile on his face, he tried to shake off the strong sensual reaction she’d elicited. As he walked over to meet the committee, he hoped by the time they finished the tour and returned to his office, where he would answer their questions, she would cease distracting him, else he might not be able to remember the speech he’d prepared.
After all, he had about as much business admiring the physical attributes of a Lady of Quality as he would those of a celestial being. 


 

Award-winning historical romance author Julia Justiss has written more than thirty-five novels and novellas set in the English Regency and the Texas Hill Country.

A voracious reader who began jotting down plot ideas for Nancy Drew novels in her third grade spiral, Julia has published poetry and worked as a business journalist.

She and her husband live in East Texas, where she continues to craft the stories she loves. Check her website for details about her books, chat with her on social media, and follow her on Bookbub and Amazon to receive notices about her latest releases. For special subscriber giveaways, discounted books, character sketches and more, sign up for her newsletter at:

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The Lions of Fifth Avenue by Fiona Davis-a review

The Lions of Fifth Avenue by Fiona Davis-a review

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 21, 2020

It’s 1913, and on the surface, Laura Lyons couldn’t ask for more out of life–her husband is the superintendent of the New York Public Library, allowing their family to live in an apartment within the grand building, and they are blessed with two children. But headstrong, passionate Laura wants more, and when she takes a leap of faith and applies to the Columbia Journalism School, her world is cracked wide open. As her studies take her all over the city, she finds herself drawn to Greenwich Village’s new bohemia, where she discovers the Heterodoxy Club–a radical, all-female group in which women are encouraged to loudly share their opinions on suffrage, birth control, and women’s rights. Soon, Laura finds herself questioning her traditional role as wife and mother. But when valuable books are stolen back at the library, threatening the home and institution she loves, she’s forced to confront her shifting priorities head on . . . and may just lose everything in the process.

Eighty years later, in 1993, Sadie Donovan struggles with the legacy of her grandmother, the famous essayist Laura Lyons, especially after she’s wrangled her dream job as a curator at the New York Public Library. But the job quickly becomes a nightmare when rare manuscripts, notes, and books for the exhibit Sadie’s running begin disappearing from the library’s famous Berg Collection. Determined to save both the exhibit and her career, the typically risk-adverse Sadie teams up with a private security expert to uncover the culprit. However, things unexpectedly become personal when the investigation leads Sadie to some unwelcome truths about her own family heritage–truths that shed new light on the biggest tragedy in the library’s history.

••••••••

REVIEW:THE LIONS ON FIFTH AVENUE by Fiona Davis is a fictional, historical story line focusing on the Lyons family of New York.

Told from dual third person perspectives using two different time lines THE LIONS ON FIFTH AVENUE follows housewife/mother/ and feminist Laura Lyons in 1913-1914 as she struggles with family, friendships and a direction in life. Having always wanted to be a journalist, Laura enrols at the prestigious Columbia Journalism School where she will discover that life as she knows it is about to change. From exposure to the Heterodoxy Club, the thefts of valuable books from the New York Public Library where she and her family lived, to her husband’s death and her son’s disappearance, Laura will have to face the reality that her world was spiralling out of control.

Fast forward to 1993, wherein we will meet Laura Lyons granddaughter, New York City Library curator Sadie Donovan, a woman whose own life will begin to mimic that of her grandmother’s when a series of manuscripts, notes and books go missing from a rare collection at the public library. With the investigation quickly focusing on Sadie Donovan, Sadie begins to research her family history only to discover that the truth is stranger than fiction.

THE LIONS ON FIFTH AVENUE is a slow building story that bounces between two time lines, one family, and a series of missing and stolen books. We are witness to but a few months in the life of both leading heroines yet Sadie has only skimmed the surface of her grandmother’s tale. THE LIONS OF FIFTH is an impassioned, dramatic and tragic story of one family, two women, and the New York Public Library.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

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The Dearly Beloved by Cara Wall-Review & Interview

The Dearly Beloved by Cara Wall-Review and Interview

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 7, 2020.

The Dearly Beloved traces two married couples whose lives become entangled when the husbands become copastors at a famed New York city congregation in the 1960s.

Charles and Lily, James and Nan. They meet in Greenwich Village in 1963 when Charles and James are jointly hired to steward the historic Third Presbyterian Church through turbulent times. Their personal differences however, threaten to tear them apart.

Charles is destined to succeed his father as an esteemed professor of history at Harvard, until an unorthodox lecture about faith leads him to ministry. How then, can he fall in love with Lily—fiercely intellectual, elegantly stern—after she tells him with certainty that she will never believe in God? And yet, how can he not?

James, the youngest son in a hardscrabble Chicago family, spent much of his youth angry at his alcoholic father and avoiding his anxious mother. Nan grew up in Mississippi, the devout and beloved daughter of a minister and a debutante. James’s escape from his desperate circumstances leads him to Nan and, despite his skepticism of hope in all its forms, her gentle, constant faith changes the course of his life.

••••••••

REVIEW:THE DEARLY BELOVED by Cara Wall follows the lives of four people, two couples and their relationships both in and out of the church.

Told from third person perspectives THE DEARLY BELOVED, set against the turbulent times of the 50s, 60s and 70s- following the end World War II, the Korean War, and the drama and protestations of the Vietnam conflict-THE DEARLY BELOVED is a story of opposites attract including the opposition to church and faith. Lily lost her parents at the age of fifteen, and in the ensuing aftermath walked away from church and God. Meeting Charles, a devout man with aspirations of the cloth found Lily struggling with a direction in life, a direction that would take Lily towards a path in opposition to her husband’s faith, and those of the Church for which he attends.

Nan grew up following the preachings and ministry of her beloved father but never expected to fall in love with a man who struggles with his faith. Charles earlier years brought with it the pain of hardship and the aftermath of war, but a life focusing on God gave Charles a purpose and a path, albeit a path that meandered both in and out of the spiritual belief.

THE DEARLY BELOVED is not a story of God and religion, but a story of faith, doubt and belief. Both couples will struggle with family, friendships, and acceptance. Lily is a woman intent on following a path of protests and equal rights, while Nan battles to accept that Lily will never be the friend she was hoping to find.

Cara Wall’s story will resonate with readers regardless of their religious beliefs. A journey of four unlikely friends, whose personal relationships, are in opposition to their professional lives, THE DEARLY BELOVED is a thought provoking and character driven story about the humanity of faith ( as religion is a man-made construct); the conflict and arrogance of a belief system that seemingly goes against the reality of the world; and the promise of acceptance, the optimism and judgment, and the perception that faith, belief and prayer are the balm to a world in pain and sin.

There are struggles and battles, a crisis of confidence between man and God, and a crisis of faith between man and church. The character development of Nan and Lily is lacking, to some degree, as neither one is willing to accept that which they do not understand including the belief in, or lack of belief in a higher power, while James and Charles waiver in their own beliefs as the personal struggles and hardships of both couples come to fruition.

Copy supplied by the publisher

Reviewed by Sandy

TRC: Hi Cara and welcome to The Reading Café. Congratulations on the release of The Dearly Beloved.

We would like to start with some background information. Would you please tell us something about yourself?

Cara: I am a native New Yorker—I was born in New York City and grew up here and in London.

TRC: Who or what influenced your career in writing?

Cara: I was always a voracious reader and as soon as I realized that real, living people were writing books, I knew I wanted to do that, too. I went to a wonderfully supportive high school, Emma Willard—which, coincidentally, is the school the main character attends in Elizabeth Gilbert’s City of Girls. So many of my teachers there encouraged me to write: my freshman English teacher told me “I was not using the talent I so obviously possessed”, which I took as a challenge, the English department let me write a novel instead of taking senior literature, and my sophomore Creative Writing teacher introduced me to Writing Down The Bones, by Natalie Goldberg, which is the book that absolutely convinced me to be a writer. Because of their support, I never doubted that I had potential—even when I couldn’t figure out how to use it effectively.

TRC: What challenges or difficulties did you encounter writing and publishing this story?

Cara: My greatest challenge as a writer is ALWAYS getting myself to sit down to write. There were many years during the creation of this book when I did not write at all, because I was working, raising my child, and focused on the daily chores of being a grown up. Even now, I have to bribe myself with cookies to start typing.

Once I wrote it, the process of getting this book published was absolutely lovely! I met my wonderful agent, Wendy Levinson, at a mom’s night out for our kids’ school, and she found my incredible editor, Marysue Rucci. I have loved every moment of working with these two women.

TRC: Would you please tell us something about the premise of THE DEARLY BELOVED?

Cara: The Dearly Beloved follows two couples from their courtships through their first life crises. I have always been fascinated by the ways we create relationships with one another and wanted to explore the complications of the “after the happily ever after”. The two couples meet when the men become co-ministers at a church in New York City in 1963, and the women dislike each other at first sight. It was fascinating to spend so many years exploring how these two couples learn to live and work together, to support each other, even though they would never have chosen to be friends.

TRC: What kind of research/plotting did you do, and how long did you spend researching /plotting before beginning THE DEARLY BELOVED?

Cara: The characters in The Dearly Beloved are inspired by the two ministers I grew up with in my childhood church, so I had a pretty clear physical picture of them from the very beginning. I don’t write chronologically—I’m not a linear thinker—so I had many character sketches and scenes written before I started even thinking about a plot. I did quite a bit of research on autism, New York in the 1960’s, and how ministers are trained. But I did all of that during the process of writing, not before, so the most accurate answer to your question is that I just jumped into the book without a plan, and it grew on its own.

TRC: Do you believe authors should be historically accurate when writing an historical, fictional story line?

Cara: This is a hard question. Every author has to create a whole world for the reader, and I was a history major, so I find researching the details of historical time periods incredibly fun. I do think it’s the historical author’s job to represent history accurately—food, clothing, architecture, smells, sounds, current events. But there are so many wonderful ways to write historical fiction that subvert what we know of a time period; I’m thinking especially of books and stories that give minor historical characters time on center stage. Still, even if a writer chooses to revise history, I believe every author of historical fiction needs to have a good grounding in the details of their chosen time period—otherwise why write historical fiction?

TRC: Do you believe the cover image plays a deciding factor for many readers in the process of selecting a book or new series to read?

Cara: I think the synopsis on the book jacket is more important than the cover, but the deciding factor for me is always recommendations from friends.

TRC: When writing a storyline, do the characters direct the writing or do you direct the characters?

Cara: The characters, every single time.

TRC: The mark of a good writer is to pull the reader into the storyline so that they experience the emotions along with the characters. What do you believe a writer must do to make this happen? Where do you believe writers fail in this endeavor?

Cara: An acting teacher once told me that the purpose of art is to give people the gift of living through emotional experiences they could never have in their ordinary lives. She went on to say that the only way to give people those experiences is for the actor to live through them, fully and openly, on stage. “If you don’t cry, they won’t cry,” she said.

Writers need to truly feel what their characters feel in any given moment. You can’t just assume a character is happy, you need to sit with the character—or inside the character—and really tune into what’s happening in their body, in their mind, in their heart. It’s often very surprising. A character may, indeed, be happy but also angry, resentful, or bitter. This complexity is what brings characters to life on the page.When I write, my characters are real people to me, with strengths, weaknesses, biases, hopes and hatreds that are completely different than my own. I have to get to know them and then write THEIR stories for them, as carefully and truly as I can. It takes an inordinate amount of time, vulnerability, and empathy.

Another thing I learned in acting school is that it is crucially important to know what your characters want—not just in the big picture of the plot, but in each moment you choose to include on the page. This is especially important for dialogue. Conflicting desires make for electric conversations between characters. Put two people who want very different things in a room and give them a time limit to try to resolve the problem. The whole page will crackle.

TRC: Do you listen to music while writing? If so, does the style of music influence the storyline direction? Characters?

Cara: I don’t ever listen to music when I write—I’m not a huge music person and it would really distract me.

TRC: What do you believe is the biggest misconception people have about authors?

Cara: I have no idea! What is the biggest conception people have about authors?

TRC: What is something that few, if anyone, know about you?

Cara: I studied flamenco dancing for four years, and still get my castanets out every once in a while.

TRC: Who is your favorite author (living or dead)?

Cara: That’s an impossible question to answer! But some of my favorite books are A Little Life, by Hana Yanagahiri; The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert; State of Wonder, by Ann Patchett; Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward; and Me Talk Pretty One Day, by David Sedaris.

TRC: On what are you currently working?

Cara: I am working on a book about a painting that is left on the steps on the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It follows two storylines: one in the present, about the people trying to figure out why the painting is significant, and one in the past that follows a painter in Italy in the years after World War II.

LIGHTNING ROUND

Favorite Food: chocolate

Favorite Dessert: molten chocolate cake

Favorite TV Show: Sherlock

Last Movie You Saw: Hamilton

Dark or Milk Chocolate: dark—but only barely

Secret Celebrity Crush: Benedict Cumberbatch (not so secret)

Last Vacation Destination: Lake George

Do you have any pets? Sadly, my partner is allergic to everything.

Last book you read: Heavy, by Kiese Laymon

TRC: Thank you Cara for taking the time to answer our questions. Congratulations on the release of THE DEARLY BELOVED. We wish you all
the best.

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A British Heiress in America by Becky Lower – a Review

A British Heiress in America by Becky Lower – a Review

 

Amazon

 

Description:
Lady Philippa Worthington wants to marry young and sexy. Her father plans for her to marry stodgy…old…and rich.

What’s a beautiful British heiress to do if she’s going to escape a life of passionless marriage? With her father planning to sell her off to the highest bidder in order to support his own lavish lifestyle, Pippa knows there’s only one thing she can do to save herself.

Lady Philippa dons boys’ clothing and stows away on a London ship destined for the American colonies and a new life. One full of hope, freedom, and the chance to finally live up to her feisty nickname among the rough sailors—‘Pip.’

But instead of finding independence on the high seas, Pippa is plunged deep into the dangerous world of espionage–and the arms of handsome Daniel Simmons, a merchant sailor for the British—who is also an American Revolutionary spy!

Torn between allegiance to her home country and the passion she’s always been searching for, Pippa now faces an unexpected threat—and it may cost Pippa and Daniel the very freedom—and love—they’ve both been searching for.

If they manage to survive the very heart of the beginnings of the Revolutionary War, can the daring spy find love in the arms of A BRITISH HEIRESS IN AMERICA?

 

 

Review: 

A British Heiress in America by Becky Lower is the first book in her new Revolutionary Women series. A sea captain who may or may not be a spy. A runaway debutant who won’t be auctioned off to the highest bidder. A British Heiress by Becky Lower was not my usual read, but once opened it was a pleasant surprise.

Philippa “pip” Worthington isn’t sure if being a stowaway on a ship bound for America is the best idea she’s ever had, but she’s not going to become some bored London housewife. She longs for love and adventure….

Daniel is the captain of the boat Pip has stowed away on, only he’s unaware that Pip is actually Philippa!!  He’s aware the “boy” is running away from something in London, but that’s not Dan’s issue, but the boy could be useful, if he gets a job in the army, then Daniel could use him as a spy! But he has to be careful, his daughter could become a casualty of war (he’s a widower, his daughter lives with her mothers parents)

I did have to chuckle, Pip is not your usual debutant, she’s quite a character (smoking cheroots and drinking pints of ale!) she is very independent, she’s off for an adventure in America, she’ll marry an officer in the British Army and be happy! But working as a cabin boy is proving challenging, it doesn’t help that the captain is very easy in the eye, she has to remain in character at all times! Daniel is a double agent! To the outside world he takes arms to the British army, he also spies for the American government! If he’s caught it could mean death!

It’s a fun read. Well written and very descriptive. Had to laugh when poor Pip was feeling seasick. And when she wished she could have a cheroot! The banter between Daniel and Pip is lighthearted, Daniel feels he should take the boy under his wing, but with the option of using the boy to his advantage, I found I grew to dislike Daniel!

Chuckling at the inappropriate thoughts the captain has about his cabin boy, he’s off to get laid once he’s back on dry land, but his thoughts keep straying to his “boy”. And when Daniel discovers his cabin boy is in fact a woman ……

Daniel now changes strategy and decides a debutante would be a better spy! But does he take what Pip is offering?  And Philippa is now facing a dilemma herself, she knows that Daniel runs guns for the British, does she inform the American society she will belong to? Or can she be of some assistance in the fight for their freedom?

Reviewed by Julie B

Copy supplied for Review

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The Last Train to Key West by Chanel Cleeton-a review

The Last Train to Key West by Chanel Cleeton-a review

 

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

Apple Books / IndieBound / Penguin

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date June 16, 2020

In 1935 three women are forever changed when one of the most powerful hurricanes in history barrels toward the Florida Keys in New York Times bestselling author Chanel Cleeton’s captivating new novel.

Everyone journeys to Key West searching for something. For the tourists traveling on Henry Flagler’s legendary Overseas Railroad, Labor Day weekend is an opportunity to forget the economic depression gripping the nation. But one person’s paradise can be another’s prison, and Key West-native Helen Berner yearns to escape.

The Cuban Revolution of 1933 left Mirta Perez’s family in a precarious position. After an arranged wedding in Havana, Mirta arrives in the Keys on her honeymoon. While she can’t deny the growing attraction to the stranger she’s married, her new husband’s illicit business interests may threaten not only her relationship, but her life.

Elizabeth Preston’s trip from New York to Key West is a chance to save her once-wealthy family from their troubles as a result of the Wall Street crash. Her quest takes her to the camps occupied by veterans of the Great War and pairs her with an unlikely ally on a treacherous hunt of his own.

Over the course of the holiday weekend, the women’s paths cross unexpectedly, and the danger swirling around them is matched only by the terrifying force of the deadly storm threatening the Keys.

••••••••

REVIEW:THE LAST TRAIN TO KEY WEST by Chanel Cleeton follows the lives of three women, in a fictional account of the 1935 Hurricane that swept through Key West, Florida on Labor Day weekend.

Told from three first person perspectives (Helen Berber, Marta Perez, Elizabeth Preston) LAST TRAIN TO KEY WEST focuses on the journey of three women whose lives are about to cross paths and intersect with the approach of a deadly hurricane in the Florida Keys.

Helen Berner is a young, pregnant woman who is desperate to escape her abusive husband when a stranger, a military veteran offers Helen a way to escape, an escape that will bring Helen in the direct line of the impending storm where our couple will find themselves washed away along with so many of the Florida residents.

Marta Perez is a newlywed -married to a New York crime lord, whose enemies have followed the couple to the Florida Keys but the storm is about to bring more danger than anyone could have expected in the form of a stranger demanding everything including the lives of our story line couple.

New Yorker, Elizabeth Preston is desperate to find her brother, who has been missing for several months but Elizabeth is also on the run from a marriage of convenience to a dangerous man, a man who bought our heroine as payment for a loan. An undercover FBI agent offers to help Elizabeth find her brother John but said agent is currently on assignment, an assignment that involves our story line heroine.

THE LAST TRAIN TO KEY WEST is an intriguing, brilliant and wonderfully fictional story line set against the real-life disaster of the 1935 hurricane that destroyed much of the Florida Keys. With the world struggling to survive in the aftermath of the stock market crash, and ensuing Great Depression, Key West Florida is about to suffer like never before. Chanel Cleeton delves into the lives of three women, all facing an uncertain future but a future that will intersect and converge in more way than one.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

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To Catch An Earl (Bow Street Bachelors 2)by Kate Bateman-a review

To Catch An Earl (Bow Street Bachelors 2)by Kate Bateman-a review

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date June 30, 2020

A case of secret identities finds reunited lovers on opposite sides of the law in this fun, flirty Regency romance.

There’s only one case Bow Street agent Alex Harland, Earl of Melton, hasn’t cracked: the identity of the mysterious woman who stole a kiss from him before he left for war. He’s neither forgotten–nor forgiven–her for leaving him wanting. When he starts investigating the Nightjar, an elusive London jewel thief, he keeps running into the alluring Emmy Danvers, who stirs feelings he hasn’t felt in years.

Even though Emmy’s loved Alex for years, she can’t risk revealing her heart, or her identity as the Nightjar. With Alex on her case, Emmy knows that her secrets are in danger of being discovered. Their cat and mouse game heats up with every interaction, but when Emmy’s reputation–and life–is at risk, will Alex realize that some rules are made to be broken for love?

•••••••••

REVIEW: Wow! This is a magnificent story from the prologue to the Epilogue.

Emmy Danvers is the daughter of the infamous jewel thief, the Nightjar. However, it isn’t about stealing jewels to sell. Her father wanted to retrieve the jewels from the French royals to keep them until the Bourbon’s returned to power. She was raised to know the trade and participate.

Alexander Harland was the second son of his family, so he was left free to make his own fortune. Indeed, he did. He spent time fighting Napoleon title and has the scars to prove it. He was given the title of the of Earl of Melton for his aid to the crown. He and two of his friends also owned a gambling hall and it was a popular one.

The two met in 1812 at a masked ball, just before Alex served in the army or had made his own place in the world. It all Emmy’s doing. She wanted to have one night with the handsome and intelligent gentleman. She knew she couldn’t have a future with him and had to keep her identity a secret. She wore a lovely gown, a blue powdered wig and a mask that hid half her face. He would never be able to recognize her, or so she thought. They danced and he led her out on the terrace and into the gardens. They shared magnificent kisses but parted with her still hiding her name and him vowing to find her when he came back from the war.

Chapter one begins four years later, after the war. Alex had been wounded and ended up with a small scar at his temple and partially losing his peripheral vision. He was now the Earl of Melton, part owner of the Tricorn, and worked part time for Bow Street as a detective along with his two friends, who had also been awarded titles. They are pretty much on opposite sides of the law and each is a master of their own side.

Okay, that’s pretty much the setup. I don’t do spoilers, so I’ll simply let you know what I found so exciting and wonderful about this novel.

The writing is extremely well done. The conversations are thoroughly enticing. The cat and mouse games played by the main characters as well as their own thoughts are entertaining as well as insightful. I found it fast paced and sexy as they get. By all means, grab a copy for yourself and settle in for a great time and swoon worthy romance.

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Georgie

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