Wednesday 31 May 2023

The Coffee Pot Blog Tour casts the spotlight on Lucy the Suffragist by Vicky Adin


Book Title: Lucy

Series: The Art of Secrets Series

Author: Vicky Adin

Publication Date: 14 May 2023

Publisher: AM Publishing NZ

Page Length: 327

Genre: Dual-timeline historical fiction

Twitter Handle: @vickyadin @cathiedunn

Instagram Handle: @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #dualtimeline #historicalfiction #LucyTheSuffragist #WomensRights #BookBlast #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub 


Blog Tour Page:  



Lucy 

by 

Vicky Adin


Emma’s curiosity is piqued by a gutsy young climate change campaigner with an antique trinket box full of women’s rights badges, but tracing their history pushes her to her limit. 

Struggling to recover from Covid-19, Emma is terrified of developing a chronic and incurable condition and becoming a burden. She tries to ignore her fears and keeps working. She has clients who rely on her. Paige is a spirited environmentalist whose wealthy father tries to curb her enthusiasm. But she is intent on making her mark on the world in spite of him. Emma is torn between untangling the mysteries of Paige’s legacy or saving herself when exhaustion threatens everything she cares about.  

In 1892, twenty-one-year-old Lucy, a dedicated suffragist is determined women shall win the right to vote this time. Since her mother died, she has grown up in the glow of her father’s benevolence. Winning the franchise has become her raison d'ĂȘtre, greater even than her love for Richard. She goes canvassing and is ambushed by a man who undermines her confidence. Conflicted between winning the vote or safeguarding those she loves, she redoubles her campaign efforts. But a moral dilemma puts her future in jeopardy. 

A compelling tale of Lucy the suffragist and the courageous women who fought for their right to vote (Book 3 in The Art of Secrets series, dual-timeline sagas about finding your roots).



This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited. 


Universal Link: Amazon UK: Amazon US: Amazon CA: Amazon AU: 




Vicky Adin’s passion is writing inter-generational sagas inspired by early immigrant women’s stories in New Zealand, linked by journals, letters, photographs, and heirlooms.

As a genealogist and historian, Vicky has combined her skills to write heart-warming novels weaving family life and history together in a way that makes the past come alive.

Delve into the new dual-timeline series, The Art of Secrets, family sagas about finding your roots… or

Become engrossed in The New Zealand Immigrant Collection, suspenseful family saga fiction uncovering the mysteries, the lies and the challenges of the past.

Vicky Adin holds a MA(Hons) in English and Education. She is an avid reader of historical novels, family sagas and contemporary women’s stories and loves to travel. 


Social Media Links:


Website: www.vickyadin.co.nz 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/VickyAdin 

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

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vicky-adin-82b74513/

Pinterest: https://nz.pinterest.com/nzvicky/

Amazon Author Page: http://amzn.to/2tUG9co

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6543974.Vicky_Adin




Sunday 28 May 2023

The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tours present: Cold Blows the Wind by Catherine Meyrick


Book Title:  Cold Blows the Wind

Author: Catherine Meyrick

Publication Date: 28 April 2022

Publisher: Courante Publishing

Page Length: 425

Genre: Historical Fiction, Biographical Fiction, Women’s Fiction, Australian Fiction

Twitter Handle: @cameyrick1 @cathiedunn

Instagram Handle: @catherinemeyrickhistorical @thecoffeepotbookclub


Blog Tour Page: 



Cold Blows the Wind 

by 

Catherine Meyrick


Blurb:

Hobart Town 1878 – a vibrant town drawing people from every corner of the earth where, with confidence and a flair for storytelling, a person can be whoever he or she wants. Almost.

Ellen Thompson is young, vivacious and unmarried, with a six-month-old baby. Despite her fierce attachment to her family, boisterous and unashamed of their convict origins, Ellen dreams of marriage and disappearing into the ranks of the respectable. Then she meets Harry Woods.

Harry, newly arrived in Hobart Town from Western Australia, has come to help his aging father, ‘the Old Man of the Mountain’ who for more than twenty years has guided climbers on Mount Wellington. Harry sees in Ellen a chance to remake his life.

But, in Hobart Town, the past is never far away, never truly forgotten. When the past collides with Ellen’s dreams, she is forced to confront everything in life a woman fears most.

Based on a period in the lives of the author’s great-great-grandparents, Sarah Ellen Thompson and Henry Watkins Woods, Cold Blows the Wind is not a romance but it is a story of love – a mother’s love for her children, a woman’s love for her family and, those most troublesome loves of all, for the men in her life. It is a story of the enduring strength of the human spirit.


Excerpt

Ellen glanced ahead to check whether she needed to cross the street before she got to the Rob Roy, slowing her step at the sight of George and Alice standing with that skinny rat, Dan Rogers. George held a bundle in his arms too, a squirming bundle.

Ellen hurried up to them, scowling as she looked from George to Dan. ‘What’s going on here?’

George grinned at her. ‘We thought we’d give young Billy some air.’ There was a glitter in his eyes. ‘And then we ran into my mate, Dan, here.’ He nodded toward Dan. ‘That’s right, isn’t it, Dan?’

Dan nodded his head furiously.

‘And Dan was saying what a fine lad Billy is.’

Ellen raised her eyebrows. ‘Was he?’ She passed her parcel to Alice and took Billy, settling him on her hip and pressed her nose against his hair, breathing in deeply. She looked up to see Dan Roger’s forced smile.

‘Tell her yourself, Dan.’ George grinned.

The Adam’s apple in Dan’s scrawny neck bobbed up and down as he swallowed. ‘He’s a grand lad, he certainly is.’ There was strain around his eyes.

Ellen wondered what George had threatened him with.

‘I know,’ she said, still unsmiling. ‘He takes after his mother’s family.’

‘And Dan was saying he wants to give you something for the lad.’

Ellen pressed her lips tight shut against the laughter bubbling up. She almost felt sorry for the skinny gutter rat.

Dan’s eyes had bulged with surprise but he obediently put his hand in his pocket and pulled out a shilling. ‘Sorry, Ellen, I’m a bit short at the moment.’

‘Not so short you can’t buy a mate a drink for old time’s sake.’ George threw his arm over Dan’s shoulder and steered him into the bar.

Ellen held tight to the coin. She’d buy Billy a toy, that brightly coloured spinning top she had seen in the window of the pawnshop. She could already hear his burbling laugh.

Alice beside her, Ellen walked smartly across the street ahead of a couple of carts trundling down the hill. ‘How did George manage that?’

‘He asked him how his mate Hawkes was and Dan’s knees went wobbly.’

‘I’ll remember that if there’s a next time.’ She had forgotten Dan Rogers was related to Hawkes. Will and George had done a month in gaol three years ago for the hiding they had given him. Rogers should remember that Thompsons never forgot a wrong.

‘George said he’d get him to make up for being rude to you.’

‘I wish the mongrel wasn’t rude to me in the first place.’

‘Perhaps he’s sweet on you,’ Alice said.

‘What? No. He’s just a nasty little rat picking on someone he thinks is weaker.’ She stopped and stared at her sister. She was only eight years old. ‘Where did you get the idea boys behave like that? You’re too young …’

‘From you and Mary Ann. I listen.’ Alice skipped along beside Ellen.

They turned into Watchhouse Lane, past the mercifully quiet Sunday School on the corner. The children bellowing out their raucous hymns on Sunday mornings made sleeping late almost impossible.

‘Anyway.’ Alice spun around and skipped backwards as she spoke. ‘George said, with Easter coming, we should go up to the Springs and see Grannie and Mr Woods.’

‘Oooh, that would be good. We can all go and make a real party of it.’

‘Mr Woods has his son staying with him.’

‘I didn’t know he had a son.’

‘He’s come from wherever Mr Woods was from, but he’s old.’

Halfway along the lane, Ellen pushed open the gate with her foot. ‘I suppose he would be. Mr Woods is ancient. How do you know all this?’

Alice skipped in and stood holding the door for Ellen. ‘I listen.’ She grinned.

‘As long as you learn from what you hear,’ Ellen said, hoping her sister would learn enough not to get involved with feckless men.


Universal Link:  Barnes and Noble: Waterstones:   Kobo: Apple: 


Catherine Meyrick is an Australian writer of romantic historical fiction. She lives in Melbourne but grew up in Ballarat, a large regional city steeped in history. Until recently she worked as a customer service librarian at her local library. She has a Master of Arts in history and is also an obsessive genealogist.

When she is not writing, reading and researching, Catherine enjoys gardening, the cinema and music of all sorts from early music and classical to folk and country & western. And, not least, taking photos of the family cat to post on Instagram.





Website: https://catherinemeyrick.com/ 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/cameyrick1 

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

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/catherinemeyrickhistorical/ 

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com.au/catherinemeyrick15/ 

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/catherine-meyrick 

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B07B8VXWYQ 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/17798235.Catherine_Meyrick 



Wednesday 24 May 2023

The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour presents: Alternate Endings – an Historical Writers Forum Anthology

 


Book Title: Alternate Endings – A Short Story Anthology of Historical What Ifs

Publication Date: November 1st, 2022

Publisher: Historical Writers Forum

Page Length: 360

Genre: alternate history


Tour Schedule page:  

Alternate Endings 

A Short Story Anthology of Historical What Ifs


by Salina B Baker, Stephanie Churchill (Foreword), Sharon Bennett Connolly, Elizabeth Corbett, Virginia Crow, Cathie Dunn, Karen Heenan, Michael Ross, and Samantha Wilcoxson


Blurb: 

We all know the past is the past, but what if you could change history?

We asked eight historical authors to set aside the facts and rewrite the history they love. The results couldn’t be more tantalizing.

What if Julius Caesar never conquered Gaul?

What if Arthur Tudor lived and his little brother never became King Henry VIII?

What if Abigail Adams persuaded the Continental Congress in 1776 to give women the right to vote and to own property?

Dive in to our collection of eight short stories as we explore the alternate endings of events set in ancient Rome, Britain, the United States, and France.

An anthology of the Historical Writers Forum.


This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.


Universal Link: Amazon UK: Amazon US:  Amazon CAAmazon AU:





Samantha Wilcoxson is an author of emotive biographical fiction and strives to help readers connect with history's unsung heroes. She also writes nonfiction for Pen & Sword History.


Samantha loves sharing trips to historic places with her family and spending time by the lake with a glass of wine. Her most recent work is Women of the American Revolution, which explores the lives of 18th century women, and she is currently working on a biography of James Alexander Hamilton.


Website




Historian Sharon Bennett Connolly is the best-selling author of five non-fiction history books, with a new release coming soon.

A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Sharon has studied history academically and just for fun – and has even worked as a tour guide at a castle. She writes the popular history blog, www.historytheinterestingbits.com. 


Sharon regularly gives talks on women's history; she is a feature writer for All About History magazine and her TV work includes Australian Television's 'Who Do You Think You Are?'



Cathie Dunn writes historical fiction, mystery, and romance. The focus of her historical fiction novels is on strong women through time.

She loves researching for her novels, delving into history books, and visiting castles and historic sites.

Cathie's stories have garnered awards and praise from reviewers and readers for their authentic description of the past.


Website



As an only child, Karen Heenan learned early that boredom was the enemy. Shortly after she discovered perpetual motion, and has rarely been seen holding still since.

She lives in Lansdowne, PA, just outside Philadelphia, where she grows much of her own food and makes her own clothes. She is accompanied on her quest for self-sufficiency by a very patient husband and an ever-changing number of cats. 

One constant: she is always writing her next book.


Website



Salina Baker is a multiple award winning author and avid student of Colonial America and the American Revolution. 

Her lifelong passion for history and all things supernatural led her to write historical fantasy. Reading, extensive traveling and graveyard prowling with her husband keep that passion alive. 

Salina lives in Austin, Texas.


Website



Virginia Crow is an award-winning Scottish author who grew up in Orkney and now lives in Caithness.

Her favourite genres to write are fantasy and historical fiction, sometimes mixing the two together. Her academic passions are theology and history, her undergraduate degree in the former and her postgraduate degree in the latter, and aspects of these frequently appear within her writings.

When not writing, Virginia is usually to be found teaching music. She believes wholeheartedly in the power of music, especially as a tool of inspiration, and music is often playing when she writes. Her life is governed by two spaniels, Orlando and Jess, and she enjoys exploring the Caithness countryside with these canine sidekicks.


She loves cheese, music, and films, but hates mushrooms.

website



Elizabeth K. Corbett is an author, book reviewer, and historian who has recently published a short story, “Marie ThĂ©rĂšse Remembers.” She is currently working on her debut novel, a gothic romance set in Jacksonian America.

When she is not writing, she teaches academic writing, something she is very passionate about. She believes in empowering students to express themselves and speak their truth through writing. Additionally, she is a women’s historian who studies the lives of women in eighteenth and nineteenth century North America. Mostly, she is fascinated by the lives of the lesser known women in history.


A resident of gorgeous coastal New Jersey, she takes inspiration from the local history to write her historical fiction. She is an avid reader who adores tea and coffee.  website



After serving time as a corporate paralegal in Washington, D.C., then staying home to raise her children, Stephanie Churchill stumbled upon writing, a career path she never saw coming.

As a result of writing a long-winded review of the book Lionheart, Stephanie became fast friends with its New York Times best-selling author, Sharon Kay Penman, who uttered the fateful words, “Have you ever thought about writing?” 

Stephanie’s books are filled with action and romance, loyalty and betrayal. Her writing takes on a cadence that is sometimes literary, sometimes genre fiction, relying on deeply-drawn and complex characters while exploring the subtleties of imperfect people living in a gritty, sometimes dark world.

She lives in the Minneapolis area with her husband, two children, and two dogs while trying to survive the murderous intentions of a Minnesota winter.  website


Website


Best selling author Michael Ross is a lover of history and great stories.

He's a retired software engineer turned author, with three children and five grandchildren, living in Newton, Kansas with his wife of forty years. He was born in Lubbock, Texas, and still loves Texas.

Michael attended Rice University as an undergraduate, and Portland State University for his graduate degree. He has degrees in computer science, software engineering, and German. In his spare time, Michael loves to go fishing, riding horses, and play with his grandchildren, who are currently all under six years old. 

Website




Thursday 4 May 2023

The next step on Amy Maroney's Coffee Pot Book Club Book Tour: The Queen's Scribe


Book Title: The Queen’s Scribe

Series: Sea and Stone Chronicles

Author: Amy Maroney

Publication Date: April 25, 2023

Publisher: Artelan Press

Page Length: 388

Genre: Historical fiction

Tour Schedule Page: 



The Queen’s Scribe

Amy Maroney


A broken promise. A bitter conflict. And a woman’s elusive chance to love or die.

 1458. Young Frenchwoman Estelle de Montavon sails to Cyprus imagining a bright future as tutor to a princess. Instead, she is betrayed by those she loves most—and forced into a dangerous new world of scheming courtiers, vicious power struggles, and the terrifying threat of war.

 Determined to flee, Estelle enlists the help of an attractive and mysterious falconer. But on the eve of her escape, fortune’s wheel turns again. She gains entry to Queen Charlotta’s inner circle as a trusted scribe and interpreter, fighting her way to dizzying heights of influence. 

 Enemies old and new rise from the shadows as Estelle navigates a royal game of cat and mouse between the queen and her powerful half-brother, who wants the throne for himself.

 When war comes to the island, Estelle faces a brutal reckoning for her loyalty to the queen. Will the impossible choice looming ahead be her doom—or her salvation?

 With this richly-told story of courage, loyalty, and the sustaining power of love, Amy Maroney brings a mesmerizing and forgotten world to vivid life. The Queen’s Scribe is a stand-alone novel in the Sea and Stone Chronicles collection.

Praise for the Sea and Stone Chronicles:


“Island of Gold is a nimbly told story with impeccable pacing.” —Historical Novel Society, Editor’s Choice Review


“Sea of Shadows is stunning. A compelling tale of love, honor, and conviction.”—Reader’s Favorite Review

 Amy Maroney is the author of the award-winning Miramonde Series, the story of a Renaissance-era female artist and the modern day scholar on her trail.


This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.


Universal Link Amazon UK: Amazon USAmazon CA: Amazon AU: 


A Forgotten Queen: Uncovering the Extraordinary Life of Charlotta of Cyprus

My new novel, The Queen’s Scribe, features Queen Charlotta of Cyprus, a fifteenth century monarch with an astonishing story of personal ambition, courage, and dedication to her kingdom. But what exactly was her kingdom? How did it come to be? And why did it vanish just a few centuries after it began?

The Lusignan Court of Cyprus got its start in the early middle ages, when the island was under the control of the Eastern Roman Empire. In the 7th century, Arab forces began invading Cyprus, triggering a period of instability and violence. In 965, the Byzantines “reconquered” Cyprus for Christendom. In 1195, Richard the Lionheart seized control of the island. He sold Cyprus to the Knights Templar, who then sold it to Guy de Lusignan, the King of Jerusalem. 

Guy de Lusignan established the Kingdom of Cyprus and brought the Latin world’s Catholicism to the island, endowing it with supremacy over the Greek Orthodox church. Lusignan Kings would reign over Cyprus until 1489, and the tension between Latin and Greek culture was a hallmark of the dynasty’s rule.

                             BELLAPAIS ABBEY, DEPOSIT PHOTOS STANDARD LICENSE

The Lusignans decreed that French was now the official language of Cyprus, taking precedence over Greek. A new noble class made up primarily of French people (known locally as Franks or Latins) took over. They forced commoners to become their serfs and persecuted Cypriots for their adherence to traditional beliefs and rituals.

With its prime location in the eastern Mediterranean, Cyprus was a very important point of trade; it was also a key stopover point for European pilgrims venturing to the Holy Land. Its main port city of Famagusta attracted merchants from all over Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

The evolution of language in Cyprus during this time fascinated me during my research. Though French became the language of high administration, Greek remained the language of everyday life. In port towns, people communicated in French, Arabic, and Italian. Over the years, all of these languages converged.

The fourteenth-century historian and scribe Makhairas of Cyprus complained that under the Lusignans, “we (Cypriots) write both French and Greek in such a way that no one in the world can say what our language is.” In fact, the French spoken in Cyprus was so distorted that native French speakers visiting from Europe could not understand it. This fact underpins the plot of The Queen’s Scribe, which features a fictional French heroine whose skills as a scribe and interpreter become essential to Queen Charlotta.

                   ST. HILARION CASTLE RUINS, DEPOSIT PHOTOS STANDARD LICENSE

As difficult as life was for Cypriots under Frankish rule, the elites enjoyed outrageous levels of privilege, wealth, and leisure. Cyprus was famous for its production of luxury fabrics such as camlet (a blend of silk and wool), cloth-of-gold, and embroidered silks. In my research, I saw records of purchase for such goods by Western European nobles and royalty. Local artisans made intricate artificial birds of metal, and goldsmiths produced fine jewelry for export all over Europe.

The Kings of Lusignan and their courtiers were obsessed with falconry and hunting. The German traveler Ludolf von Suchen visited Cyprus in the mid-fourteenth century and observed nobles playing in tournaments, jousting, and hunting daily. He wrote that wild rams were hunted and caught with “leopards” (these were likely cheetahs) during mountain hunting expeditions that could last up to a month. He described a nobleman who owned more than 500 hounds; 250 servants were in charge of the animals. King Jacques I of Cyprus reportedly owned 300 falcons and 24 “leopards” (again, probably cheetahs), some of which he took hunting on a daily basis.

 All of this was a drain on the royal coffers, as were the increasing attacks on Cyprus by Venetians, Genoese, Turks, and Egyptians. By 1458, when the fifteen-year-old, widowed Queen Charlotta ascended the throne, the Lusignan dynasty was weakened by war, debt, corruption, and betrayal. 

ARCHBISHOP’S PALACE IN NICOSIA, WHERE QUEEN CHARLOTTA’S HALF-BROTHER JACCO LIVED, DEPOSIT PHOTOS STANDARD LICENSE

Though she faced these complications with tremendous ambition and courage, the queen’s greatest test came from her power-hungry half-brother, Jacco. In his quest for the crown, he launched a civil war against Charlotta, further hobbling the Cypriot court. When Queen Charlotta’s second husband Louis of Savoy proved a dismal leader, she left him in a seaside fortress and sailed around the Mediterranean begging allies to help save her kingdom. Her tenacity and courage earned respect and attention from some of Europe’s most powerful leaders, but in the end, she could not protect her crown. 


Amy Maroney studied English Literature at Boston University and worked for many years as a writer and editor of nonfiction. She lives in Oregon, U.S.A. with her family. When she’s not diving down research rabbit holes, she enjoys hiking, dancing, traveling, and reading. 

Amy is the author of The Miramonde Series, an Amazon-bestselling historical mystery trilogy about a Renaissance-era female artist and the modern-day scholar on her trail. Amy’s award-winning historical adventure/romance series, Sea and Stone Chronicles, is set in medieval Rhodes and Cyprus. 

An enthusiastic advocate for independent publishing, Amy is a member of the Alliance of Independent Authors and the Historical Novel Society.


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