Tuesday, 30 September 2025

The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour presents: The Man in the Stone Cottage by Stephanie Cowell

 


Name:  Stephanie Cowell

Book Title: The Man in the Stone Cottage: a novel of the Brontë sisters 

Series: N/a

Publication Date: September 16th, 2025

Publisher: Regal House Publishing

Pages: 258 

Genre: historical fiction

Any Triggers: no


Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-the-man-in-the-stone-cottage-by-stephanie-cowell.html 


The Man in the Stone Cottage: a novel of the Brontë sisters

By Stephanie Cowell

Audiobook by Brilliance Audio


“A haunting and atmospheric historical novel.” – Library Journal

In 1846 Yorkshire, the Brontë sisters— Charlotte, Anne, and Emily— navigate precarious lives marked by heartbreak and struggle.

Charlotte faces rejection from the man she loves, while their blind father and troubled brother add to their burdens. Despite their immense talent, no one will publish their poetry or novels. 

Amidst this turmoil, Emily encounters a charming shepherd during her solitary walks on the moors, yet he remains unseen by anyone else. 

After Emily’ s untimely death, Charlotte— now a successful author with Jane Eyre— stumbles upon hidden letters and a mysterious map. As she stands on the brink of her own marriage, Charlotte is determined to uncover the truth about her sister’ s secret relationship. 

The Man in the Stone Cottage is a poignant exploration of sisterly bonds and the complexities of perception, asking whether what feels real to one person can truly be real to another.

Praise for The Man in the Stone Cottage:

“A mesmerizing and heartrending novel of sisterhood, love, and loss in Victorian England.” - Heather Webb, USA Today bestselling author of Queens of London

“Stephanie Cowell has written a masterpiece.” - Anne Easter Smith, author of This Son of York

“With The Man in the Stone Cottage, Stephanie Cowell asks what is real and what is imagined and then masterfully guides her readers on a journey of deciding for themselves.” - Cathy Marie Buchanan, author of The Painted Girls

“The Brontës come alive in this beautiful, poignant, elegant and so very readable tale. Just exquisite.” - NYT bestseller, M.J. Rose

“Cowell’s ability to take readers to time and place is truly wonderful and absorbing.” - Stephanie H. (Netgalley)

“Such a lovely, lovely book!” - Books by Dorothea (Netgalley)


Read an Excerpt

After having stayed away from the cottage on the moors for many months and the shepherd within who no one else has ever seen, Emily is suddenly worried he may have vanished. She has just begun to draft her first novel Wuthering Heights 

The rest of the winter brought awful weather. It was too cold to hang wash outside, so chemises and underdrawers and petticoats and shirts were draped on ropes stretched across the kitchen to dry, steaming slightly from the hot fire. Outside, snow covered the fences and the high grass while the sheep seemed like ghosts as they moved in the blizzards. 

When Emily raised her face from the pages of her story, she finally allowed herself to think of Jonathan MacConnell in his small cottage, likely half buried in snow. No, likely not for she recalled that he said he might leave before this winter. The stone cottage would be empty, as it had been when she first discovered it. She put her fingers to her lips which he had wanted to kiss. But perhaps he had packed but not yet gone. 

Emily pulled on her warmest cloak and laced her mother’s boots, which could hardly be mended anymore. Within minutes, she was through the moor gate and plunging into the icy snow. She was panting by the time she saw the familiar hill before her which she had first climbed as a girl. I am always too late for everything, she thought. How could I forget to come?

Breathless she made the hilltop. Her hood fell off, and the snow flew in her face. For a moment she could see nothing. She wiped it away with her glove, looked down. Below her, in the icy piles around its foundations, the stone cottage had returned to the ruins in which she first had found it so many years before. The roof was half gone, and the door torn away.

Then he’s left for certain, she told herself. I have missed him because I forgot.

She covered her face with her gloved hands.

But when she took away her hands, the house was whole again. The icy snow was dying down, blowing away. Making her way to the back of the house, she saw a ladder and Jonathan MacConnell standing on it. His face lit up at the sight of her and he called, happily, “Can it be you? I almost left, a few months ago before Christmas. How glad I am to see you!”

She picked up his fallen hat and when he came down, gave it to him. He brushed it off with his bare hand, leaving sparkles of ice in the strands. She could find no words to say but that she was very glad to find him, and she would not say that. Her throat swelled.

The snow had entirely ceased to fall.

Finding her voice, she asked him, “Why didn’t you go?”

“I almost did, but I wanted to see you first. I waited, willing you to come to me. One Sabbath between storms a few months ago, I rode my old mare to your church but remained in the back. You were with your sisters, singing hymns from the book. Three charming girls in bonnets.”

She said uncomfortably, “I wish you had spoken to me when you came to the village.”

“I know you a little and you didn’t want it. I’m your secret. I sensed it. It gets lonely being a secret, lass.”

“I think of us as friends.”

“Strange friends indeed. ‘I won’t come to you, and you may not come to me.’ ‘I’ll see you in a year, maybe not.’” He smiled, teasing. “Come inside where it’s warm,” he said. When she did not take the hand, he shrugged and opened the door to his cottage. 

Avoiding even brushing his coat sleeve, she passed him and sat down carefully on the wobbly chair near the burning logs. He took the other chair, removing his mufflers.

She said, “I did stay away a time. I’ve been writing a book. It so possesses me, I forget the world. I forgot everything. Even friends…you.”

His face softened. “Friends indeed then?”

“Why yes, of course.”

“A whole book! I cannot imagine writing so much.”

“I think my sisters write books, but they aren’t very successful. None of us are. Sometimes mine seems realer than my own world.”

“Can it do that?”

“Oh yes! It makes me forget things I can’t manage.”

“Do you mean your brother? I’ve been thinking of him. Last month after seeing you girls in church, I had a mug in the Haworth pub and heard talk that he fell in love with a married woman who’s widowed now and who’ll marry him soon and solve your family’s financial needs.”

“Is it the general talk?”

“It is and I see you don’t like it. I like the look of your father, very much the old prophet. What would he think of me, I wonder?”

“I don’t want him to know yet. He’s ill at the idea of us being hurt or taken in by a stranger.”

“Am I still a stranger?”

“Not anymore, but my family mightn’t understand, because you’re a married man run away from your wife from a place no one has ever heard of. And we met in such a strange way. And you may disappear from my life as abruptly as you came. With my knowing nothing of it.” 

“I won’t,” he said. “I’ll stay a time if you will continue to come to me.”

“I’ll always come,” Emily said. Rising, she walked around the table and bent down to press her lips against his. He touched the back of her head to bring her closer. His lips were warm and slightly chapped, and she lingered a time before springing away. All the way home, she ran over the sopping ground as fast as she could.

That night her novel woke her like something shaking her arm. She stumbled to the desk. She had some attempts to light the lamp. The words came from nowhere, rushing and pushing. The scenes were still coming out of order. She remembered how years ago, in the marketplace, she had seen a boy about five years old, staring after her.

The clock on the stairs chimed two in the morning.

She forgot everything but her book.

Emily wrote for a long time, trying to make her penmanship legible, catching the words as they came. It was not until dawn began, slowly lightening the sky, that she felt too tired to continue. She locked everything away and lay down again. The whole story was gray, like the light, but she felt its edges, its middle, its muddled endings, the many of them.

Emily pulled the pillow over her head against the strange people in her room and whispers from corners. We have always been here, they murmured. We are more real than you are. We are more real than he is, your man in his stone cottage, and he is dangerously real.

Live for us alone.

I know that ghosts have wandered on earth. Be with me always. Take any form, drive me mad, only do not leave me in this dark alone where I cannot find you. I cannot live without my life! I cannot die without my soul.


Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/mqLV2d 


***


Stephanie Cowell has been an opera singer, balladeer, founder of Strawberry Opera and other arts venues including a Renaissance festival in NYC.

She is the author of seven novels including Marrying Mozart, Claude & Camille: a novel of Monet, The Boy in the Rain and The Man in the Stone Cottage. Her work has been translated into several languages and adapted into an opera. Stephanie is the recipient of an American Book Award. 

Website: https://stephaniecowell.com 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stephanie.cowell.14 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cowell.stephanie/ 

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/stephaniecowell 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/197596.Stephanie_Cowell 




Monday, 29 September 2025

Wendy J. Dunn drops by on her Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour!


Name: Wendy J. Dunn

Book Title: Shades of Yellow

Series: n/a 

Publication Date: September 7th, 2025

Publisher: Other Terrain Press

Pages: 350

Genre: Women’s Fiction / Literary Fiction / Dual-Timeline


Any Triggers: Adult themes and with a few well-deserved F words included.   

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-shades-of-yellow-by-wendy-j-dunn.html 



Shades of Yellow

By Wendy J. Dunn


During her battle with illness, Lucy Ellis found solace in writing a novel about the mysterious death of Amy Robsart, the first wife of Robert Dudley, the man who came close to marrying Elizabeth I. As Lucy delves into Amy’s story, she also navigates the aftermath of her own experience that brought her close to death and the collapse of her marriage. 

After taking leave from her teaching job to complete her novel, Lucy falls ill again. Fearing she will die before she finishes her book, she flees to England to solve the mystery of Amy Robsart’s death. 

Can she find the strength to confront her past, forgive the man who broke her heart, and take control of her own destiny?

Who better to write about a betrayed woman than a woman betrayed?


READ AN EXCERPT: 

When they found a spot at the Oxford carpark, Lucy inwardly sighed with relief. It was where they wanted to be, close to The White Horse pub, where they had booked for lunch at 12:30, and not too far from Saint Mary the Virgin, the site of Amy’s tomb. She checked her watch. Just a little after noon – plenty of time to walk to the pub.

 Before she had left for England, Max thought it hilarious that she wanted to go there, to this touristy pub. Until she explained it was because of her father. He had been a hard and fast fan of Inspector Morse. Before going to uni, thanks to all the times she had watched the series with her father and because of all the time Morse spent at The White Horse, she used to dream of that pub.  

 Besides that, it was a sixteenth-century pub. As a history-loving Australian, why wouldn’t she want to go there for lunch? It was also right next door to Blackwell’s. She had no desire to buy more research books to add to her luggage, but she could never resist popping into a good bookshop.

She slipped out of the passenger side of the car and opened the rear door to grab her small day backpack. Locking the door, she turned to Max. ‘Quarter past twelve. Just as you said last night. Even with the traffic, we still got here in time.’ 

 He shrugged. ‘I live in London. I always factor in getting held up by traffic. Best get on our way. We will have to move the car after lunch. Hopefully, we will find another parking spot nearby.’ He gestured towards the nearby lane. ‘Stick to the pavements, Lucy. The bike riders around here think they own the roads.’

Well-kept English gardens lined the streets. Creeping, flowering wisteria festooned their purple flowers against old sandy-coloured stone buildings. English singsong voices reminded her she was no longer in her own country. People edged past them on the narrow pavement. Footsteps drummed a determined march on the uneven pavement before they faded away. Hearing another good-mannered, poshly spoken ‘Excuse me,’ almost made her giggle. 

The siren of a police car screamed in the distance. There was no letup of the busy car traffic on the road. Bikes whizzed right next to the footpath. A gust of wind fluttered loose litter down the road. She hid a smile. Being a gentleman, Max walked on the side of the pavement closest to the traffic, keeping her safe from harm.  

Closer to their destination stood the Church of Saint Mary Magdalen. A few early cowslips flowered at the edges of the long, green, manicured lawn. 

Lucy took Max’s arm to stop him. She pointed to the bright yellow bells nodding in the breeze. ‘Good to see cowslips.’

‘Do you remember the stories your father told us about them?’

‘I remember him saying they once grew everywhere in England, but now only traces remain.’

‘He told us they once use them for decoration for maypoles. And don’t forget the fairies.’ 

Lucy laughed. ‘How can I forget the fairies? Do you remember the print of the cowslip fairy in my bedroom at home?’

‘The one using a cowslip as an umbrella?’

‘Yes – not like the stories Dad told us about the fairies seeking shelter in cowslips because of danger. Cowslips were regarded as quite magical.’  

‘I remember best his stories about how they used them to treat everything under the sun.’

‘Like Tudors used them. I can see Amy Robsart using them during her time of illness.’

Still thinking about cowslips, Lucy walked on beside Max.




Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/mqPGgd 

This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



WENDY J. DUNN is a multi-award-winning Australian writer fascinated by Tudor history – so much so she was not surprised to discover a family connection to the Tudors, not long after the publication of Dear Heart, How Like You This, her first Anne Boleyn novel, which narrated the Anne Boleyn story through the eyes of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the elder. 

Her family tree reveals the intriguing fact that one of her ancestral families – possibly over three generations – had purchased land from both the Boleyn and Wyatt families to build up their holdings. It seems very likely Wendy’s ancestors knew the Wyatts and Boleyns personally.

Wendy gained her PhD in 2014 and tutors in writing at Swinburne University of Technology, Australia. She loves walking in the footsteps of the historical people she gives voice to in her books. 


Website: http://www.wendyjdunn.com/

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Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Wendy-J.-Dunn/author/B004FRTZFA 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/197156.Wendy_J_Dunn

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-wendy-dunn-6358181a 



Thursday, 25 September 2025

Nancy Jardine drops by on her Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour



Name: Nancy Jardine

Book Title: Tailored Truths

Series: Silver Sampler Series, Book 2

Publication Date: September 12th, 2025

Publisher: Nancy Jardine with Ocelot Press

Pages: 468

Genre: Historical Fiction; Family Saga; Women’s Fiction


Any Triggers: I don’t think so. (Deaths described but not murder.)


Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-tailored-truths-by-nancy-jardine.html 



Tailored Truths

by Nancy Jardine


An engrossing Victorian Scotland Saga (Silver Sampler Series Book 2)

Is self-supporting success enough for Margaret Law or will her future also include an adoring husband and children? She might secretly yearn for that though how can she avoid a repeat of relationship deceptions that disenchanted her so much during her teenage years?


Employment as a lady’s maid, and then as a private tutor in Liverpool in the 1860s bring thrilling opportunities Margaret could never have envisaged. Though when those posts end, her educational aspirations must be shelved again. Reliance on her sewing skills is paramount for survival when she returns to Dundee.


Meeting Sandy Watson means love, marriage and starting a family - though not necessarily in that order – are a striking development though it entails a move north to Peterhead. Yet, how can Margaret shed her fear of commitment and her independence and take the plunge?


Jessie, her sister-at-heart, is settled in Glasgow. Frequent letters are a life-line between them but when it all goes horribly wrong, the contents of Margaret’s correspondence don’t necessarily mirror her awful day-to-day realities.

Tailored Truths 


Read an Excerpt :

Propositioned at the opera


A signal bell from the orchestra below, and the dimming of the gas lights that bordered the stage, heralded a noisy return of those who had left their seats. For a minute or two, it seemed to Margaret that the people who had been chatting were rushing their conversations to conclude them before the Second Act began. The buzz of expectancy around the auditorium was quite a palpable delight.


Margaret decided that attending a theatre performance truly was a brand new and tremendously exciting experience and being clad almost as beautifully as the women around her was a thrill in itself.


The second and third acts made more sense and Margaret found she was thoroughly enjoying the opera. They had had some refreshments during the longer second interval so when the shorter third one came, she expected a continuation of their dissection of the opera. She was quite unprepared for the corridor door to the box being rapped upon before it opened, obscuring her in behind it.


“Forgive my intrusion. I noticed your party and came across to pay my respects.”


Margaret gulped. The voice was definitely familiar. She didn’t need to lean forwards to know that it was the Earl of Sefton who stepped in past her to greet the others before he closed the door behind him.


The conversation which followed made clear that the Earl of Sefton had already met Mister and Mistress Grainger. The performance was briefly commented upon before the earl made to take his leave again after the signal for the end of the short interval rang clear and the gas lighting was dimmed.


Margaret opened the corridor door, shifting back a little to allow him more space to exit. She found that she was then the recipient of his attention, his focus on her alone. The expression in his gaze was akin to admiration but it veiled something else, something more expectant. His words were a whisper since the auditorium had quietened down, expectantly awaiting the orchestra to resume.


“You are looking particularly fetching tonight, Miss Law.”


Margaret stared at him, hoping her swallow wasn’t heard by the others, the flustering inside her not something she wanted to happen. How was she supposed to respond to a comment like that? Coming from an earl?


The almost smile that she’d detected on his face slipped away when he realised she wasn’t gushing her thanks, and wasn’t saying anything at all.


“But I digress. The school that I mentioned the other day?”


Margaret managed a brief nod. “My Lord, I do remember.”


“You may be pleased to know that my architect and I finally agreed on the last of the plans, yesterday. Building work will begin very soon.” There was a momentary pause before he continued, the intensity of his eyes illuminated by the nearest corridor lamplight. “I wondered if you would be interested in seeing the plans the day after tomorrow, when I have some free afternoon time, Miss Law? A fresh eye from one who has knowledge of the pupil being taught has to be a good thing at this stage.”


Disappointment warred with quite a degree of embarrassment at his words, but more from the renewed speculation in his expression. It took no more than an instant to decide to appear obtuse about any possible inference that he wasn’t just going to show plans to her.


“Oh, I would have loved to look at the architect’s drawings, My Lord,” she said. “I’d be very interested in seeing them, but unfortunately I won’t be here. Miss Marianne is returning to Dundee tomorrow.”


“Ah, in that case I will bid you goodbye, Miss Law.”


The door shut silently behind him leaving Margaret quite perplexed. His slight aloofness was much as it had been at Croxteth Hall, but as Marianne had mentioned days before there was more than a hint of something in the earl’s eyes that indicated an anticipation – about more than his building project.


An eagerness about anything more personal would have been a disaster, Margaret was sure of that. He was definitely a tempting morsel, a handsome man indeed who just might have been considering an illicit liaison with someone like her. Though perhaps she had just been reading him completely wrongly and it was just because he had made her pulse increase.


She was thankful that Marianne had heard none of the conversation as she slipped down onto her seat, the music restarting and the stage curtain fluttering upwards. She willed the twitching inside her stomach to settle down.



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

This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Nancy Jardine writes historical adventure fiction, historical saga, time travel historical adventure and contemporary mysteries. Research, grandchildren, gardening fill up her day in the castle country of Aberdeenshire, Scotland, when not writing or promoting her writing. Interacting with readers is a joy at Book and Craft Fairs where she signs/sells paperback versions of her novels. She enjoys giving author presentations on her books and on Ancient Roman Scotland.


Memberships include: Historical Novel Society; Scottish Association of Writers, Federation of Writers Scotland, Romantic Novelists’ Association and the Alliance of Independent Authors. She’s self-published with Ocelot Press.


Website: https://www.nancyjardine.com/

Twitter / X: https://x.com/nansjar

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

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Amazon Author Page: viewauthor.at/findmybookshere

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5139590.Nancy_Jardine