Thursday, 10 April 2025

The Coffee Pot Book Club presents: White Feathers by Susan Lanigan


Book Title: White Feathers

Series: White Feathers, Book #1

Author: Susan Lanigan

Publication Date: 21/3/2025

Publisher: Idée Fixe Press

Pages: 398

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any Triggers: Abortion (non-graphic), Death

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/04/blog-tour-white-feathers-by-susan-lanigan.html 



White Feathers 

by Susan Lanigan


"Anti-war and anti-patriarchy without ever saying so - a bravura performance of effortless elegance" - Irish Echo in Australia

SHORTLISTED FOR THE ROMANTIC NOVEL OF THE YEAR AWARD 2015

In 1913, Irish emigrée Eva Downey receives a bequest from an elderly suffragette to attend a finishing school. There she finds friendship and, eventually, love. But when war looms and he refuses to enlist, Eva is under family and social pressure to give the man she loves a white feather of cowardice. The decision she eventually makes will have lasting consequences for her and everyone around her.

Journey with Eva as she battles through a hostile social order and endeavours to resist it at every turn.



Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/4APnB0 


Susan Lanigan’s first novel White Feathers, a tale of passion, betrayal and war, was selected as one of the final ten in the Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair 2013, and published in 2014 by Brandon Books. The book won critical acclaim and was shortlisted for the UK Romantic Novel of the Year Award in 2015. This edition is a reissue with a new cover and foreword.

Her second novel, Lucia’s War, also concerning WWI as well as race, music and motherhood, was published in June 2020 and has been named as the Coffee Pot Book Club Honourable Mention in the Modern Historical Book of the Year Award.

Susan lives by the sea near Cork, Ireland, with her family.



Website: https://susanlanigan.com 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100028262426042 

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

Threads: https://www.threads.net/@susan_lanigan 

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/susanlanigan.bsky.social 

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/susan-lanigan 

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B00MTKLNLO 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4181196.Susan_Lanigan 





Sunday, 6 April 2025

Ghost Encounters: The Lingering Spirits of North Devon by Helen Hollick, with Kathy Hollick



Book Title: Ghost Encounters: The Lingering Spirits of North Devon

Author: Helen Hollick with Kathy Hollick

Publication Date: 27th February 2025

Publisher: Taw River Press

Pages: 201

Genre: Non-Fiction (with a bonus of two short stories)


Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/02/blog-tour-ghost-encounters-by-helen-hollick-and-kathy-hollick.html 





Ghost Encounters: The Lingering Spirits of North Devon

Helen Hollick with Kathy Hollick

Everyone assumes that ghosts are hostile. Actually, most of them are not.

You either believe in ghosts or you don’t. It depends on whether you’ve encountered something supernatural or not. But when you share a home with several companionable spirits, or discover benign ghosts in public places who appear as real as any living person, scepticism is abandoned and the myth that ghosts are to be feared is realised as nonsense.

It is a matter for individual consideration whether you believe in ghosts or not, but for those who have the gift to see, hear or be aware of people from the past, meeting with them in today’s environment can generate a connection to years gone by. Kathy and Helen Hollick have come across several such departed souls in and around North Devon and at their 18th-century home, which they share with several ‘past residents’.

In GHOST ENCOUNTERS: The Lingering Spirits Of North Devon, mother and daughter share their personal experiences, dispelling the belief that spirits are to be feared.

Ghost Encounters will fascinate all who enjoy this beautiful region of rural South-West England, as well as interest those who wish to discover more about its history... and a few of its ghosts.

(Includes a bonus of two short stories and photographs connected to North Devon)

cover design: Avalon Graphics

cover artwork: Chris Collingwood


Universal Buy Link: https://mybook.to/GhostEncounters

This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.


Read an Excerpt :

North Devon is predominantly rural, with a few towns dotted amongst scattered villages and farms, which mostly concentrate on dairy or sheep. The Exmoor coast has high, rugged cliffs, the highest, being Great Hangman, a 1,043ft hog's-back, with a 820ft cliff-face.

From Celtic to Roman, through the Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans, via the Tudors, Stuarts, Georgians and Victorians North Devon has been rich in its history. And its ghosts.

Ghost, spirit, shade, soul – whatever term you prefer, unless you are a sceptic the general thinking about ghosts is that these unexplained phenomena are troubled or tormented apparitions which haunt the places where they died. They are misty shapes curling beneath trees, lurking in dark shadows or eerie cellars while oozing an atmosphere of supernatural horror. Spirits allegedly remain through spite or remorse; their only intention is to frighten living people in any and every way they can. Most of this thinking is generated by religious beliefs and enhanced by the fascination for horror novels and Hollywood movies of the paranormal. Exposing an angry poltergeist or a vengeful demon is common on the TV or cinema screen. Readers and viewers (for some unfathomable reason!) like to be scared. There are hostile spirits creating hostile environments, but outside of high drama and the movies, these are in a minority.

It is natural to have a reaction of fear if something supernatural is encountered, but there is usually no reason to stay frightened. Some, particularly the spirits of children, can be mischievous, but aggressive or malevolent hostility, despite what is depicted on TV, is rarely an intentional threat. Some lingering spirits may be confused and bewildered, or even unaware that they are dead, and may need a sympathetic nudge to move on. Quite a few drift among us because they want to stay.


Find out more – and meet a few ghosts – in Ghost Encounters: The Lingering Spirits of North Devon

ABOUT HELEN HOLLICK

Known for her captivating storytelling and rich attention to historical detail, Helen might not see ghosts herself, but her nautical adventure series, and some of her short stories, skilfully blend the past with the supernatural, inviting readers to step into worlds where the boundaries between the living and the dead blur. 

In addition to her historical fiction, Helen has written several short stories, further exploring themes of historical adventure or the supernatural with her signature style. Whether dealing with the echoes of the past or the weight of lost souls, her stories are as compelling as they are convincing. Through her work, she invites readers into a world where the past never truly lets us go.

Helen started writing as a teenager, but after discovering a passion for history, was published in the UK with her Arthurian Pendragon’s Banner Trilogy and two Anglo-Saxon novels about the events that led to the 1066 Battle of Hastings, one of which, The Forever Queen (USA title – A Hollow Crown in the UK) became a USA Today best-seller. Her Sea Witch Voyages are nautical-based adventures inspired by the Golden Age of Piracy. She also writes the Jan Christopher cosy mystery series set during the 1970s, and based around her, sometimes hilarious, years of working as a North London library assistant.

Helen, husband Ron and daughter Kathy moved from London to Devon in January 2013 after a Lottery win on the opening night of the London Olympics, 2012. She spends her time glowering at the overgrown garden and orchard, fending off the geese, helping with the horses and, when she gets a moment, writing the next book...


ABOUT KATHY HOLLICK

Diagnosed as severely dyslexic when she was ten, Helen pulled Kathy out of school at fifteen to concentrate on everything equine.

When not encountering friendly ghosts, Kathy's passion is horses and mental well-being. She started riding at the age of three, had her own Welsh pony at thirteen, and discovered showjumping soon after. Kathy now runs her own Taw River Equine Events, and coaches riders of any age or experience, specialising in positive mindset and overcoming confidence issues via her Centre10 accreditation and Emotional Freedom Technique training. EFT, or ‘tapping’, uses the body’s pressure points to aid calm relaxation and to promote gentle healing around emotional, mental or physical issues.

Kathy lives with her farmer partner, Andrew, in their flat adjoining the main farmhouse. She regularly competes at affiliated British Showjumping, and rides side-saddle (‘aside’) when she has the opportunity. She produces her own horses, several from home-bred foals.

She also has a fun diploma in Dragons and Dragon Energy, which was something amusing to study during the Covid lockdown.


Website: https://helenhollick.net/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/HelenHollick

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/helen.hollick

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/helenhollick.bsky.social 

Amazon Author Page: https://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/helenhollick

Blog: supporting authors & their books https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/

Monthly ‘newsletter’: Thoughts from a Devonshire Farmhouse. 

https://thoughtsfromadevonshirefarmhouse.blogspot.com/


Kathy: 

Website: https://www.white-owl.co.uk/

Facebook: North Devon - Taw River Equine Events https://www.facebook.com/groups/1491518561152309




Wednesday, 2 April 2025

New Release Coming Soon!


First, an apology. Every day I get emails asking if I am still writing and when the next book will be published. I am writing, it just takes me longer these days. My body doesn't like sitting, my brain is slower and I have to check and recheck every detail. The good news is that my next book.
Marguerite: Hell Hath no fury - the story of Marguerite of Anjou is complete, and currently with the editor. That means the end is in sight. I will be setting up a pre-order soon.

I don't think I have read a book, fiction or  otherwise, in which Marguerite is shown in a good light. That is because she is one of history's losers. When her husband, King Henry VI, became mentally ill and unable to rule, she saw it as her duty to step into his shoes. The English lords had other ideas, they disliked her not just because she was a woman but because she was French. England had been at war with France for hundred years but the glory years under Henry V were long over, the country was impoverished yet still men were dying for a war already lost. The union between Henry and Marguerite was part of a peace treaty - a lull in the fighting while the opposing parties worked  out their differences but the English blamed Marguerite for the loss of French territories and viewed her as a spy. 

Marguerite came from a family of strong women, her mother and grandmother both ruled in their husband's stead while their men were otherwise engaged. She had a nose for politics, spoke out when other women kept silent and influenced the king on matters of state. None of these things won Marguerite friends in England. The Duke of York in particular did his utmost to undermine her, even before the king fell ill.

As Henry's heir the last thing he wanted was for Marguerite to prove an adept leader, he was even less enthusiastic for her to produce an heir. So when Marguerite announced her pregnancy shortly after the king was struck with his strange malaise, a rumour began that the child she was carrying was fathered by Edmund Beaufort. You don't have to look far to discern the perpetrator of this rumour.

Without giving away too much of the plot, the dissent between the queen and the Duke of York escalated into a prolonged civil war; a war that lasted for four decades, costing an estimated 30 -38,000 deaths in some of English history's bloodiest battles.

Marguerite's hopes were finally extinguished at Tewkesbury where seventeen year old son, Edward of Lancaster, perished in battle. During the course of the war, Marguerite's power was usurped, her king imprisoned, her son disinherited; she was exiled, slandered and finally beaten but she never gave up until her son was killed and she had nothing left to fight for.

Had circumstances been different of course, she would be lauded as a hero but instead  has been remembered in history as a she-wolf and an adulteress. Modern authors have taken their cue from Shakespeare who pulled no punches when he described as a “Foreigner, white devil, shrew, virago, vengeful fury” and demonised her as  “a foul wrinkled witch’ and a ‘hateful withered hag.” 

As always when I write, I try to stand back and let the protagonist tell their own story. Recorded events remain the same but the perspective alters. Just as Henry VIII in The Henrician Chronicles made his actions plausible, and Margaret Beaufort made it quite clear that she had nothing to o with the deaths of Edward IV's sons, Marguerite turns her own reputation on its head.

She makes bad decision, she takes drastic action but she reminds us that she was slandered, her crown was stolen, her son disinherited and the ruling king, Henry VI murdered. 

She is not without guilt but her crimes were no less than those of York but they were not greater either. In Marguerite: Hell Hath no Fury, the queen emerges as a woman who would do all in her power to protect her son - just as any mother would.




Blurb

Marguerite: Queen of England

From the moment Henry VI's new queen, Marguerite of Anjou, sets foot on English soil she is despised by the English as a foreigner, and blamed for the failures of the hundred years war in France.

 Her enemies impede her role as the king’s consort and when Henry sinks into apparent madness her bid to become regent is rejected. Marguerite must fight, not only for her own position but to maintain Henry’s possession of the crown. 

The ambitious Duke, Richard of York seizes control of the country, thrusting Marguerite aside and inflating the mutual hatred between the houses of York and Lancaster. But the queen refuses to relinquish power and fights determinedly for the rights of her son, Edward of Lancaster.

The long and bitter civil conflict, that has come to be known as the war of the roses, commences.