Thursday 10 November 2022

The continuing adventures of Jesamiah Acorne in Gallows Wake by Helen Hollick !

I am delighted to welcome Helen Hollick and Jesamiah Acorne to the blog today. Take it away, guys!



Welcome aboard the Sea Witch – swashbuckling adventure in the Golden Age of Piracy!


A new Sea Witch Nautical Adventure has recently been  launched!


GALLOWS WAKE

The Sixth Voyage of Captain Jesamiah Acorne

By Helen Hollick

Where the Past haunts the future... 

Damage to her mast means Sea Witch has to be repaired, but the nearest shipyard is at Gibraltar. Unfortunately for Captain Jesamiah Acorne, several men he does not want to meet are also there, among them, Captain Edward Vernon of the Royal Navy, who would rather see Jesamiah hang.

Then there is the spy, Richie Tearle, and manipulative Ascham Doone who has dubious plans of his own. Plans that involve Jesamiah, who, beyond unravelling the puzzle of a dead person who may not be dead, has a priority concern regarding the wellbeing of his pregnant wife, the white witch, Tiola.

Forced to sail to England without Jesamiah, Tiola must keep herself and others close to her safe, but memories of the past, and the shadow of the gallows haunt her. Dreams disturb her, like a discordant lament at a wake. 

But is this the past calling, or the future?

From the first review of Gallows Wake:

“Hollick’s writing is crisp and clear, and her ear for dialogue and ability to reveal character in a few brief sentences is enviable. While several of the characters in Gallows Wake have returned from previous books, I felt no need to have read those books to understand them. The paranormal side of the story—Tiola is a white witch, with powers of precognition and more, and one of the characters is not quite human—blends with the story beautifully, handled so matter-of-factly. This is simply Jesamiah’s reality, and he accepts it, as does the reader.” 

Author Marian L. Thorpe.


CHAPTER ONE

August 1719 – Gibraltar

“Rot? How could there be rot? Master John Benson, back at Appledore several months ago, checked and repaired everything needing checking and repairing.” Captain Jesamiah Acorne stood, legs spread, arms folded, chin tucked to his chest, his leather three-corner hat pulled well forward over his eyes against the glare of Gibraltar’s late afternoon summer sun. He was seething with frustrated anger and failing to keep his annoyance under control.

“Benson? I do not know him. Good chap, is he? And where is Appledore when it’s at home? Never heard of it.” The master shipwright, an English Kentish gentleman by his accent, pulled the stub of a worn graphite pencil from behind his ear and scribbled a few more calculations on the wedge of crumpled paper he held in his hand. Frowned myopically at what he’d written, then said: “It will take us several weeks to find and fit a new mainmast.”

Jesamiah swallowed down a bellow of outrage.

“You can have rot and not know it, Cap’n,” Chippy Harrison said, looking as grim-faced as Jesamiah.

“You’re my ship’s carpenter. You should have known about it,” came the unjustified response.

The answering retort was as tart. “I told you about it as soon as I did know. ’Tis not easy to spot when rot’s starting to take hold at the mast partners or the hounds supporting the crosstrees. There were no sign of anything back in Devon. Benson, as good as he is, would not have found it. Nor would I. As I recall, I advised you to look further, but you were in a hurry to sail.”

“All right, I get the gist,” Jesamiah answered, muttered churlishly, “You still should have seen it.” He knew, as well as anyone, that discovering rot, especially where it was well hidden, was nigh on impossible even to an experienced eye. Plus, he had indeed said no to further investigation; Chippy was right, so the blame, in the end, was his own. However, knowing facts did not help ease the frustration or annoyance.

The shipwright sniffed loudly and, tucking the pencil stub back behind his ear, announced, “From our first quick look, it has not too badly taken hold, but bad enough. We will know more when we strip her down. We will need to strike the t’gallants and topmasts and all the yards, rigging and such, then pull the mast and put a new one in.” He sniffed again and squinted at his rough notes and calculations. “A lot of work. Could easily eat up four, five, maybe six weeks if we have trouble getting a replacement mast.”

“Six weeks!” Jesamiah spluttered. “I can’t wait around here for six weeks! Ain’t you got a suitable mast in that warehouse of yours over there?”

“I might have. I will not know until I look.”

“Well go and look, then!”

The shipwright, refusing to match Jesamiah’s foul temper – the situation was nothing new to him – scratched at the stubbled whiskers on his chin. “I cannot be doing that, Captain, not until the morrow. A few hours ago, I might have had a chance for a quick rummage, but,” he withdrew a gentleman’s gold watch from his waistcoat pocket, squinted at it, “I am about to lock up for the night. My wife will have my guts for her stocking garters if I arrive home late for supper.”

Jesamiah swallowed a few choice words about wives and what they could do with their garters, stockings and suppers. Said instead, “A few hours ago I was clearing my hold ready for your inspection.” Added, “What’s it going to cost?” 

The shipwright looked again, more solemnly, at the scribblings on the top sheet of his notes. Made a few adjustments. “This is only a rough tally. I will get a more accurate estimate to you tomorrow morning.” He made another adjustment and showed the result to Jesamiah, who whistled incredulously.

“’Struth! And they call honest seamen pirates! For that much,” he said, thrusting his face closer to the shipwright’s, “I expect the work to be done in no more than three weeks.”

“I’ll do my best, Captain, but we have several frigates in harbour; any Royal Navy vessels requiring my attention will take precedence.”

The thought, blow the bloody Navy, ran through Jesamiah’s mind, but judiciously he only said, “Help him look for a mast first thing tomorrow, Chippy.” He nodded a curt dismissal to both his ship’s carpenter and the Gibraltar shipwright, turned on his heel, thrust his hands deep into the pockets of his old buckram coat and strode away, not trusting himself to glance along the wharf towards where his beloved Sea Witch was moored.



THE VOYAGES

SEA WITCH   Voyage one

PIRATE CODE  Voyage two

BRING IT CLOSE  Voyage three

RIPPLES IN THE SAND  Voyage four

ON THE ACCOUNT  Voyage five

WHEN THE MERMAID SINGS  A prequel to the series

(short-read novella) 

And just published...

GALLOWS WAKE voyage six

BUY LINKS: 

Amazon Author Page (Universal link) 

Where you will find the entire series waiting at anchor in your nearest Amazon harbour – do come aboard and share Jesamiah’s derring-do nautical adventures!

(available Kindle, Kindle Unlimited and in paperback) 

Or order a paperback copy from your local bookstore!


ABOUT HELEN HOLLICK


First accepted for traditional publication in 1993, Helen became a USA Today Bestseller with her historical novel, The Forever Queen (titled A Hollow Crown in the UK) with the sequel, Harold the King (US: I Am The Chosen King) being novels that explore the events that led to the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Her Pendragon’s Banner Trilogy is a fifth-century version of the Arthurian legend, and she writes a nautical adventure/fantasy series, The Sea Witch Voyages. She is now also branching out into the quick read novella, 'Cosy Mystery' genre with her Jan Christopher Murder Mysteries, set in the 1970s, with the first in the series, A Mirror Murder incorporating her, often hilarious, memories of working as a library assistant.

Her non-fiction books are Pirates: Truth and Tales and Life of A Smuggler. She lives with her family in an eighteenth-century farmhouse in North Devon and occasionally gets time to write...


Website: Newsletter SubscriptionBlogFacebook:  Twitter: @HelenHollick 



Wednesday 9 November 2022

The Coffee Pot Blog Tours present: Julia Ibbotson: A Shape on the Air: Dr DuLac Series Book #1

 


Book Title:  A Shape on the Air

Series:  Dr DuLac series #1 (The Dragon Tree #2; The Rune Stone #3)

Author:  Julia Ibbotson

Publication Date: January 2022 (previously published by Lume Books July 2017)

Publisher:  Self-published on Amazon KDP

Page Length: 220

Genre: historical romance (timeslip mystery)



Tour Schedule page: 



A Shape on the Air 

by Julia Ibbotson

A haunting Anglo-Saxon time-slip of mystery and romance

Can echoes of the past threaten the present? They are 1500 years apart, but can they reach out to each other across the centuries? One woman faces a traumatic truth in the present day. The other is forced to marry the man she hates as the 'dark ages' unfold.

How can Dr Viv DuLac, medievalist and academic, unlock the secrets of the past? Traumatised by betrayal, she slips into 499 AD and into the body of Lady Vivianne, who is also battling treachery. Viv must uncover the mystery of the key that she unwittingly brings back with her to the present day, as echoes of the past resonate through time. But little does Viv realise just how much both their lives across the centuries will become so intertwined. And in the end, how can they help each other across the ages without changing the course of history?

For fans of Barbara Erskine, Pamela Hartshorne, Susanna Kearsley, Christina Courtenay.


Praise for A Shape on the Air:


“In the best Barbara Erskine tradition …I would highly recommend this novel” - Historical Novel Society

“Amazing …a really great book …I just couldn’t put it down” - Hazel Morgan

“Well-rounded characters and a wealth of historical research make this a real page-turner” - Amazon review

“Enthralling” - Amazon review

“Julia does an incredible job of setting up the idea of time-shift so that it’s believable and makes sense” - Amazon review

“Viv/Lady Vivianne … lovely identifiable heroine in both time periods … I love her strength and vulnerability. And Rory/Roland is simply gorgeous!” - Melissa Morgan

“gripping … a very real sense of threat and danger, an enthralling mystery … a wholly convincing romance, across both timelines” - Anne Williams



This novel is available on #KindleUnlimited


Universal Link: 


Julia Ibbotson is fascinated by the medieval world and the concept of resonances across time. She sees her author brand as a historical fiction writer of romantic mysteries that are character-driven, well-paced, evocative of time and place, well-researched and uplifting page-turners. Her current series focuses on early medieval dual-time/time-slip mysteries. 

Julia read English at Keele University, England, specialising in medieval language/ literature/ history, and has a PhD in socio-linguistics. After a turbulent time in Ghana, West Africa, she became a school teacher, then a university academic and researcher. 

Her break as an author came soon after she joined the RNA’s New Writers’ Scheme in 2015, with a three-book deal from Lume Books for a trilogy (Drumbeats) set in Ghana in the 1960s. She has also indie-published three other books, including A Shape on the Air, an Anglo-Saxon timeslip mystery, and its two sequels The Dragon Tree and The Rune Stone. Her latest, Daughter of Mercia, is the first of a new series of Anglo-Saxon dual time mystery/romances where echoes of the past resonate across the centuries. 

Her books will appeal to fans of Barbara Erskine, Pamela Hartshorne, Susanna Kearsley, and Christina Courtenay. Her readers say: ‘compelling character-driven novels’, ‘a skilled story-teller’, ‘evocative and well-paced storylines’, ‘incredible writing style’, ‘intricately written’, ‘absorbing and captivating’, and ‘an absolute gem of a trilogy’.


Website: Twitter:  Facebook: LinkedIn:  Instagram: Pinterest:   Amazon Author Page:  Goodreads: 

 



Sunday 6 November 2022

The Coffee Pot Blog Tours present: Squire's Hazard, the Fifth Meonbridge Chronicle, by Carolyn Hughes



Book Title: Squire’s Hazard, The Fifth Meonbridge Chronicle

Series: The Meonbridge Chronicles

Author: Carolyn Hughes

Publication Date: 6th October 2022

Publisher: Riverdown Books

Page Length: 360

Genre: Historical Fiction


Blog Tour Schedule page: 


 Squire’s Hazard

Carolyn Hughes


  How do you overcome the loathing, lust and bitterness threatening you and your family’s honour?

 It’s 1363, and in Steyning Castle, Sussex, Dickon de Bohun is enjoying life as a squire in the household of Earl Raoul de Fougère. Or he would be, if it weren’t for Edwin de Courtenay, who’s making his life a misery with his bullying, threatening to expose the truth about Dickon’s birth.

 At home in Meonbridge for Christmas, Dickon notices how grown-up his childhood playmate, Libby Fletcher, has become since he last saw her and feels the stirrings of desire. Libby, seeing how different he is too, falls instantly in love. But as a servant to Dickon’s grandmother, Lady Margaret de Bohun, she could never be his wife.

 Margery Tyler, Libby’s aunt, meeting her niece by chance, learns of her passion for young Dickon. Their conversation rekindles Margery’s long-held rancour against the de Bohuns, whom she blames for all the ills that befell her family, including her own servitude. For years she’s hidden her hunger for retribution, but she can no longer keep her hostility in check.

 As the future Lord of Meonbridge, Dickon knows he must rise above de Courtenay’s loathing and intimidation, and get the better of him. And, surely, he must master his lust for Libby, so his own mother’s shocking history is not repeated? Of Margery’s bitterness, however, he has yet to learn…

 Beset by the hazards these powerful and dangerous emotions bring, can young Dickon summon up the courage and resolve to overcome them?

 Secrets, hatred and betrayal, but also love and courage – Squire’s Hazard, the fifth MEONBRIDGE CHRONICLE.

   

This book is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.

 

Universal Link:

 

The paperback is available to buy at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Waterstones.



CAROLYN HUGHES has lived much of her life in Hampshire. With a first degree in Classics and English, she started working life as a computer programmer, then a very new profession. But it was technical authoring that later proved her vocation, as she wrote and edited material, some fascinating, some dull, for an array of different clients, including banks, an international hotel group and medical instruments manufacturers.

 Having written creatively for most of her adult life, it was not until her children flew the nest several years ago that writing historical fiction took centre stage, alongside gaining a Master’s degree in Creative Writing from Portsmouth University and a PhD from the University of Southampton.

 Squire’s Hazard is the fifth MEONBRIDGE CHRONICLE, and more stories about the folk of Meonbridge will follow.

 You can connect with Carolyn through her website www.carolynhughesauthor.com and on social media.

 Website: www.carolynhughesauthor.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/writingcalliope

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CarolynHughesAuthor/

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/carolyn-hughes

Amazon Author Page UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Carolyn-Hughes/e/B01MG5TWH1/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16048212.Carolyn_Hughes