Tuesday 31 July 2012

WIP Weds -1st Aug - Nicola May


The lovely Nicola May shares her WIP today.  Nicola has just finished the first draft 
for her latest novel, due out in Oct.


Photo courtesy of the author


Nicola says......  

I quite  often collect my nieces from school and have noticed there are just so many things that do go on at the school gates, from outfits, to conversations, to jostling for prime car parking space. And then I envisaged everything that was going on beyond.... and that, plus reading about rivalry at the school gates in many newspaper articles is how the idea for this book grew.
This novel is grittier than Working it Out and Star Fish, dealing with issues of domestic abuse, IVF and loss. 
Mixed in with love, friendship, deceit & betrayal makes for a rollercoaster of a read.

Cover reveal!
Photo courtesy of the author



.
 The School Gates is due to be released early October

The blurb

At 3.10 pm every weekday, parents gather at Featherstone Primary to collect their children. For a special few, the friendships forged at the school gates will see them through lives filled with drama, secrets and sorrows.

When Yummy Mummy Alana reveals the identity of her love-child’s father, she doesn’t expect the consequences to be quite so extreme.  Ex Czech au pair Earth Mummy Dana finds happiness in her secret side-line, but really all she longs for is another child. Slummy Mummy Brenda’s wife-beating husband leads her down a path she never thought possible, and Super Mummy Joan has to cope when life deals her a devastating blow. And what of Gay Daddy Gordon? Will he be able to juggle parenthood and cope with his broken heart at the same time?
 Four very different mothers. One adorable dad. And the intertwining trials and tribulations that a year at the primary school gates brings.
Nicola's 3 other books Working it Out, Star Fish and Better Together are available on Amazon Kindle. The first 2 are also available in hard copy from Waterstones or order a signed copy directly from Nicola's website.
WEBSITE: www.nicolamay.com 
TWITTER: nicolamay1
FACEBOOK: nicolamay

DizzyC's Little Wedding Blog: Wedding Favours

DizzyC's Little Wedding Blog: Wedding Favours: A little part of the decoration, but oh so difficult to make a decision what to do for favours! I seem to be fretting over the little detai...

This is what is keeping me from the blog world, for a few more weeks!  LOL

carol

Thursday 26 July 2012

Book news! Self published sensation

The Mill River Recluse has sold over 750,000 downloads, and has spent over 35 weeks on the New York Times digital and joint bestseller chart (as the only self-published title on the chart)
It reached number 2 on the chart three weeks running, pipped only by The Help.
Making it one of the bestselling self-published eBooks in the world, ever.

The Mill River Recluse
DARCIE CHAN
Published in eBook by Hachette Digital  
26th July 2012, £1.99

Due out in Paperback in Dec 2012


The blurb


Disfigured by the blow of an abusive husband, the widow Mary McAllister has spent almost sixty years secluded in a white marble mansion overlooking the town of Mill River, Vermont. Her links to the outside world are few: the mail, an elderly priest, and a bedroom window with a view of the town below.


Most longtime residents of Mill River consider the marble house and its occupant peculiar, and few of them have ever seen Mary. But three newcomers - a police officer and his daughter and a new schoolteacher - are curious about the reclusive old woman. Only the town priest truly knows the Mill River recluse, and the secret she keeps . . . a secret that, once revealed, will change the town, and the lives of its residents, forever.


 In the tradition of Kim Edwards (The Memory Keeper's Daughter, The Lake of Dreams) and Elizabeth Buchan’s Daughters, The Mill River Recluse is a story of triumph over tragedy, one that reminds us of the value of friendship and the mysterious ways that love can come from the most unexpected places.


AuthorDarcie Chan
photos courtesy of the publisher

Darcie Chan grew up in various small towns in Wisconsin, Colorado and Indiana. Working as an environment lawyer for the United States Senate, she decided to self-publish The Mill River Recluse after being rejected by multiple publishers, never anticipating that her novel would become an eBook sensation. 

She now lives just north of New York City with her husband and son and is at work on a second novel set in Mill River, Vermont. 








Sunday 22 July 2012

Guest Author -Serdar Ozkan + UK Giveaway

The Missing Rose by Serdar Ozkan‏ has been published in 44 languages. Today the author is joining me in a Q&A session



photo courtesy of the publisher
Thank you for being my guest today. Please tell us a little about yourself.

I was born in Turkey and attended middle and high school in Istanbul. I completed my university education in the USA where I earned a BA in Business Administration and Psychology at Lehigh University. I began writing fiction fulltime in 2002 when I was 26 years old.  Actually it was the story of The Missing Rose which started to take shape within me which prompted me to write fiction fulltime. And I’d go even further and say that it is the story of The Missing Rose which made me a novelist.



Please tell us a little about how you came to write THE MISSING ROSE

The idea came from my own desire to know myself, and from the recognition that we have at least two conflicting selves within us. And the universality of the human being and the forces within the human being. However different we may appear on the outside, differences vanish as we go deeper within ourselves.
The Missing Rose has a story which intertwines different cultures and philosophies with contemporary modern life.
In all of my works, I intend to emphasize our meeting points, rather than our differences. I acknowledge the differences among people coming from various cultures, however, I believe that still our similarities as human beings are far more important than our differences.
Living abroad for four years for my college education in a culture totally different from my own gave birth to these ideas and thus the story of The Missing Rose.
Also, I could say that works of St. Exupery, especially The Little Prince, have been inspiration for my work. That is why I have included The Little Prince in my book; the main character in The Missing Rose leaves her home and embarks on a journey upon rereading The Little Prince after many years.
Such works like The Little Prince, also The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde, I can say that these incredible stories not only have inspired my work, but perhaps even inspired me to become a writer. 



THE MISSING ROSE has been published in 44 languages, congratulations, why do you think this novel appeals to readers worldwide?

Readers are very interested to know what inspired me to write this story. I think regardless of their nationality and culture, every reader finds something from themselves in this story, and something which is significant and meaningful to them. So they are wondering how a story written by an author from another culture can connect with them in such an intimate way.
It excites me each time I receive a mail from a reader who is thousands of miles away geographically, who is from a totally different culture, but whom I could share this story with on such an intimate level. Such mails and comments from readers worldwide confirm my belief that our similarities surpass our differences, and that we all meet at a common place.  



What are you working on next?

My second novel, When Life Lights Up, is already written and so far been published in over 20 countries. It is again related to self-discovery but on a different level.
It is a novel about hope, unconditional love and the miracle of life. The story is about a unique little boy; the special friendship he enters into with a dolphin and his experience with the Angel of Death twenty years later.
And currently, I am working on my third book which should remain as a surprise at least until all the foreign editions of my second book is published.

The Missing Rose
Serdar Ozkan

Published by Rider Books on 5th July 2012

ISBN-13: 978-1846043413

The publishers are offering you a chance to win your own copy.
If you would like the chance to win One of 3 copies of The Missing Rose by Serdar Ozkan, please
complete the form below.  

UK addresses only.
Please see the Giveaway Policy

3 pre-school books for the summer hols

AJ has had 2 lovely review books from TopThat Publishing.


Po-Tolo by Olly Oliver
  • 32 pages
  • Publisher: Top That! Publishing (1 Mar 2012)
  • ISBN-13: 978-1849566094

Po-Tolo is a spaceman, Lop is an octopus and Izzy is a Bumble Bee with hayfever!  So begins a tale with a green moral about how important bees are. Can Plan B work to save the bees and the planet?

Great characters and fabulous illustrations. A fun read with a serious green message.  Would love to see more from Po-Tolo

5 out of 5!



  • 64 pages
  • Publisher: Top That! Publishing (1 Mar 2012)
  • ISBN-13: 978-1849567237

We had already seen When I Dream of ABC and were excited to see When I Dream of 123 . 
Original illustrations that would make great posters for the wall.  Counting made fun finding numbers of everything from Polar Bears to Princesses to Snowflakes. It is a lovely companion to When I Dream of ABC.  Would make a  great gift for a pre-schooler.





The 3rd book was a gift after the lovely folks at TopThat saw my tweets about how very ill AJ had been with a severe asthma attack a few weeks ago. Big thank you to TopThat


  • Paperback: 30 pages
  • Publisher: Top That! Publishing (1 Aug 2011)
  • ISBN-13: 978-1849564557

AJ chose Fast Cars Sticker Reference Book.  He is ready to go to school in Sept and is becoming more interested in anything that moves.
I liked this book because it would make an ideal gift. It comes with a free metal keyring of a racing car attached to the front.
It is factual but not overwhelming for younger readers just starting to look at information books.  The stickers add an extra fun activity to the book.

5 out of 5 for us!

More titles can be found here

Thursday 19 July 2012

Guest Author - Gillian Bagwell

Today I have the pleasure of welcoming back to the blog, GILLIAN BAGWELL, who is celebrating the UK publication of THE KING'S MISTRESS


photos courtesy of the author

Gillian Bagwell’s novel The King’s Mistress will be released on July 19, 2012. It’s the first fictional account of the perilous and romantic odyssey of Jane Lane, who risked her life to help the young Charles II escape after the disastrous Battle of Worcester in 1651 by disguising him as her servant. (It was released in 2011 in the U.S. under the title The September Queen). Her blog Jane and the Royal Miracle (www.theroyalmiracle.com) chronicled the daily events in Charles’s escape .Gillian’s novel, The Darling Strumpet, based on the life of Nell Gwynn, 17th century actress and mistress of Charles II, is a finalist for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA award for Best First Book. Her third novel, Venus in Winter, about the formidable four-times widowed Tudor dynast Bess of Hardwick, will be released in the U.S. in July 2013. 

Visit Gillian’s website, www.gillianbagwell.com, for further information about her books and upcoming events, and links to her blogs, articles, and videos of sites in Nell Gwynn’s London.






  • Publisher: Avon (19 July 2012)
  • ISBN-13: 978-1847562593
Also available for Kindle

Gillian has kindly shared an excerpt from THE KING'S MISTRESS with us here today

It was near midnight when Jane heard the soft whinny of a horse in the darkness of the stable yard. John was back from Moseley. She could hardly believe that the king would really be in the house in a moment. She lifted the candle to view herself in the mirror above her dressing table. She looked anxious and white-faced, her eyes wide in the darkness of the room. She attempted a smile. Better. She wondered if she should change clothes. She had pondered what to wear. It was the king, after all, whom she would be greeting, and yet she would be meeting him in the kitchen in the middle of the night. She had settled on her favorite gown, a brocade of dusky rose, set off by the lace-trimmed sleeves of her shift. Her bosom swelled at the neckline of the bodice, and she draped a white kerchief around her neck and then tossed it away. It was the king, and she would look as pretty as she could, whatever the circumstances. She tucked a stray curl into place, and crept silently out of her room.

As Jane approached the kitchen door, she could hear men’s voices. She paused to listen, her heart beating fast. John’s voice, quiet and steady, but intense with emotion. Wilmot’s tenor whisper. And a lower voice, speaking only a few words, which could only be the voice of the king.

She took a deep breath and entered the kitchen. The men were huddled near the warmth of the fireplace, their faces eerie in the flickering firelight. She stared with shock at what appeared to be a tall scarecrow standing between John and Lord Wilmot. Beneath a greasy and shapeless gray steeple-crowned hat, bloodshot eyes shone from a face that was freakishly mottled sooty black and greenish brown and creased with sweat and dirt, dark hair hanging lank and damp on either side. A threadbare green coat, too small for the broad shoulders, stretched over a battered leather doublet and ragged breeches, and the stockings of coarse yarn were heavily darned at the knees.

The king it must be, but if Jane had not known otherwise, she would have thought him some desperate beggar or Tom O’Bedlam. The men were looking at her and she collected her wits enough to curtsy deeply.

“You are most welcome, Your—” she began, but the scarecrow hastened to her and raised her, whispering fiercely, “No formalities, I pray you, Mistress. I thank you for your hospitality, but the less said the better for all.”

Jane looked up at into the shining dark eyes of the king. She was astonished to see him summon a weary smile, and she found herself smiling back, her nervousness melting away.
“Then I will say only I pray you sit, sir, while I get you some supper.”

Wilmot’s serving man settled himself on a stool by the fireplace and the others sat at the kitchen table, seeming near to collapse now that they were safe inside. Jane drew a pitcher of ale and put it before them with slipware mugs, and then dished stew from the kettle that hung on a hook to the side of the fire. She was pleased at the smile on the king’s face when she set a steaming dish before him, and when she came back a minute later with bread, cheese, and butter, he had already eaten most of the stew.

“Forgive my animal nature, Mistress,” he said, meeting her eyes. “It’s little I’ve had to eat in the last days, and this meal is the best that I can recall in my life, it seems.”

Jane blushed, and took up his empty dish. “Then I beg you let me give you more, sir.”

The king consumed the second plate of stew hungrily while John and Wilmot and Wilmot’s man ate at a slower pace. Jane lit some more candles, and as the light fell on the king’s feet, she was shocked to see that his shoes had been slit around the sides, and that his protruding toes were bandaged and dark with dried blood. What a terrible ordeal he had already passed through in the last few days, she thought, and what unknown dangers lay ahead of him.

“My brother has fresh clothes for you, sir,” she said, setting another loaf of bread upon the table. “And water for a bath is hot and ready.”

“The happiest words I’ve had in a week.” He smiled, and she was pleased that so simple a thing probably was the most welcome gift she could give him at that moment.

“Then I will bid you good night,” she murmured, with a half curtsy.
“And I will see you on the morrow, a changed man.”

Jane turned to go, but the king took her hand and spoke again. “I thank you, Mistress Lane, most humbly, for your kindness and your bravery.”

Jane felt herself lost in his eyes, and was conscious of the other men watching her.

“Not at all, sir,” she murmured. “I’m happy to do whatever I can in your service.”

The king raised her hand to his lips and kissed it, and she felt as though a bolt of lightning had shot through her. She tried to speak but no sound would come, and she could only nod and smile as she fled into the darkness of the hall.

In bed, Jane lay looking at the star-flecked night sky outside her window. She touched the back of her hand, where the king had kissed her. She seemed to feel the imprint of his lips on her skin and shivered. She was excited, but a thrill of terror was roiling her belly. Only a few days ago she had been longing for adventure, but what lay ahead of her was no story out of a book, but a real journey fraught with danger. The plan that had seemed thrilling now felt like madness. The king was a big man, not easily disguised. What hope was there that they could make their way undetected along a hundred miles of roads teeming with enemy troopers, and pass among countless common people for whom a thousand-pound reward would mean a life of security?

Guide us and protect us, Lord, Jane prayed. Make clear our path and cloud the vision of our foes. Preserve the king,that he may live to protect our beloved England. And help me to have the courage to see the journey through, whatever may come.


The Publishers, AVON are kindly offering a copy of THE KING'S MISTRESS to one lucky UK reader.
Please complete the form below to be entered into the draw.
UK addresses only.

Please see giveaway policy.

Exciting competition for readers!

My review
8 women go to Boot Camp all for different reasons but with one goal, to lose weight.

Along the way they find friendship, team spirit and get fit in the process.

I really enjoyed this novella. It was good getting to know the characters and why they were there.
Shame it was only a novella as I would love to have found out what happended to all of the characters after boot camp.
I shall be reading the next novel from Molly Hopkins which follows the character Evie.

Review copy


News of a very exciting competition that Little, Brown are running to tie in with the publication of Molly Hopkins’ amazing new eBook only exclusive novella, It Happened at Boot Camp, which costs only £0.99 and is published today, 19th July.  It Happened at Boot Camp is unusual in that it has three alternative endings – so readers can choose the resolution they like best!   

Today sees the launch of an exciting competition for readers to write their own ending to It Happened at Boot Camp The winning entrant will receive a copy of both books in the It Happened series , It Happened in Paris and It Happened in Venice, which is published next month), and the entry will be posted on Little, Brown Books.net plus Molly Hopkins’ website http://www.mollyhopkins.co.uk/.

For more information about the competition please visit the website:

To enter, simply submit your 500 word ending to betweenthesheets@littlebrown.co.uk with the subject line ‘It Happened at Boot Camp Competition’ by midnight on Thursday 2nd August 2012.



Wednesday 18 July 2012

Guest Author - Louise Candlish + UK giveaway

Happy Publication day to LOUISE CANDLISH who celebrates the launch of her latest novel  THE DAY YOU SAVED MY LIFE


  • Publisher: Sphere (19 July 2012)
  • ISBN-13: 978-0751543551

Photos courtesy of publisher



Louise, thank you for being guest author.

Where did the idea for The Day You Saved My Life come from?

When I was writing my previous novel, Other People's Secrets, I spent a few weeks in the Italian Lakes, where that book was set. Travelling around the area by ferry, I began to imagine the drama that would unfold if someone fell overboard. Not just the drama of a rescue, but the repercussions of the event for all involved, especially for the rescuer, who would have started his day a normal man and ended it a hero. I knew it was an idea I wanted to explore because I had that feeling of excitement I always get if I hit on 'the next thing'. You have to store the idea away, though, because you're still in the middle of the one before.
You say this novel took you a little longer than usual.  Why do you think this was?

It took longer for lots of reasons, one being that it is a longer book, almost 500 pages, my longest to date. The main reason, though, was that I had a health crisis in the middle - I went blind in one eye and had to have surgery and then to recover from that. For a few months it was too tiring to read (I got into audio books in a big way) so I couldn't work at my normal pace.
What does your writing day look like?

It depends which part of the process I'm in. At the beginning of a book, I try to be disciplined and produce a certain number of decent words a week. I'll take my daughter to school, walk the dog, make coffee, then start quite promptly at 10am. Once I'm about half way through the schedule I get more complacent and allow myself to be distracted (that's the phase I'm in right now). Towards the end, I get serious again, and also quite worried. I might work evenings and weekends then, cursing myself for the previous slacking and generally being a bit of a pain to live with.
What are you working on next?

It's a story about a young woman called Tabby, who has been abandoned by her boyfriend while travelling and ends up on a remote island in France, where she is befriended by a mysterious fellow Englishwoman who claims to be there in exile. I love the idea of exile and disgrace. Tabby tries to find out who this woman is and why she should need to lie low in this way. What has she done that is so terrible? The book has no title yet, or rather it does, but my publishers are not keen on it. This often happens with my title suggestions, so I'm not too alarmed. We'll get to the right one in the end.




Now a chance to win 1 of 3 copies of The Day You Saved My Life. (UK addresses only)


Please complete the form below.
Please read the giveaway policy








a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday 17 July 2012

Review - Chocolate Shoes and Wedding Blues - Trisha Ashley

The blurb (from Amazon)


When Tansy Poole inherits a run-down shoe shop tucked away in the village of Sticklepond, ‘Cinderella’s Slippers’ is born – providing the footwear to make any fairytale wedding come true…
Carrying everything a bride would want to walk down the aisle in, Tansy’s shop soon expands to carry shoe-themed wedding favours, bridesmaid gifts and even delicious chocolate shoes. It’s the dream destination for any shoe-lover!
If only everything in her personal life could be as heavenly – but with a fiancĂ© trying to make her fit into a size 8 wedding dress, not to mention the recent discovery of disturbing family revelations, Tansy takes refuge in the shop’s success.
But one man isn’t thrilled by the stream of customers hot-footing it to Cinderella’s Slippers… Actor Ivo Hawksley, resident of the cottage next to the shop, is troubled by a dark secret in his past and has come to Sticklepond to nurse his own broken heart.
However, Ivo realises that he and Tansy have a link in their past and soon, they both find out how secrets shared can make a very strong bond indeed…



Tansy is a down to earth character.  One I could identify with as she was not a size zero heroine who loves her baking and is happy with her shape.  The same cannot be said of her doctor boyfriend.  After several years their relationship is gong nowhere and Tansy's body clock is ticking away.

Tansy's Great Aunt Nan is advancing in years and wants Tansy to take over her little shop in Sticklepond. Should Tansy give up on the stagnant relationship and move to the village?  Soon the decision is made for her. Will there be a happy ending.

 This was not my first visit to Sticklepond, the fictional village in Trisha Ashley's novels.  I loved being back in the village sampling a taste of village life that the author captures with such affection.

I had to control the urge to read Nan's Living Archive entries before the rest of the story, but did so. 

A lovely summer read with romance, chocolate, and wedding shoes.

4.5 out of 5 for me. Loved it!

Review copy,  this did not influence my review in any way.

Monday 16 July 2012

Guest Author - Molly Hopkins

Today my guest author is MOLLY HOPKINS, author of It Happened at Boot Camp  an exclusive digital download story , which is available to download for 99p from 19th July.
and It Happened in Venice.   


Happy Publication day, Molly!



The idea to write It Happened at Bootcamp, the novella with three different endings, was formulated in a very posh restaurant around the corner from Little Browns equally posh offices, opposite Blackfriars Bridge.

                ‘Shall we have a glass of wine?’ Rebecca my clever editor asked, peeping over the top of the wine list.

                ‘Why not?’ Manpreet, my other clever editor piped up, rather keenly for someone on their lunch hour that had to go back to work.

                ‘We might as well have a bottle,’ I suggested, ‘’you know we’ll drink it.’ I said, with a nod of certainty, ‘and it only costs a couple of quid more.’

I hid my face in the huge menu.

                ‘OK, we’ll have a bottle,’ Rebecca said conclusively, ‘we’ll have our usual?

                I crunched on a breadstick while Rebecca rattled our order to the waitress. Out of the corner of my eye I spotted someone who looked suspiciously like Sean Connery. I love Sean Connery. I tried not to stare.

                Rebecca gave me a wise look, mirrored by Manpreet. They tipped forward officiously.

                ‘Molly, we’ve been thinking . . .’

                And they certainly had been thinking.

                The idea was for me to write a novella featuring my two main characters Evie and Lulu, as an introductory springboard for It Happened in Venice, the second book in the series. The novella had to be stand-alone, so that readers did not have to be familiar with the It Happened storyline.  We wanted to showcase the girls at their hilarious best. Subsequently it was decided to take them completely out of their comfort zone and place them against a backdrop totally alien to them. A Bootcamp! In fairness a Bootcamp is alien territory to most of us. We all like the idea of losing half a stone in six days, but we’re not overly enthused at the prospect of dragging ourselves on an assault course and de-toxing to achieve it. Are we?

                ‘Obviously I’ll have to go to a Bootcamp for research purposes,’ I said sensibly.
                ‘Good idea,’ Rebecca and Manpreet chorused.

 After all I absolutely love watching my Davinia McColl DVD, but . . .  I don’t actually do it. And I’ve bought a Wii Fit, but there again; I haven’t gotten around to using it yet because I’ve only had it for two years. And suddenly I was thinking. Hang on a minute. Me, go to a Bootcamp? I’m lost in thought and hesitant. I know authors spend a lot of time researching, but I’m positive Dan Brown didn’t murder four cardinals before he wrote La Da Vinci Code. Do I really need to do this?

                ‘Now, let’s talk about the three different endings concept,’ Rebecca said brightly, ‘have you ever wondered what would happen if we’d chosen differently . . .’

                And suddenly I’m back in the conversation, because . . . yes, I have often wondered what would happen if I’d chosen differently. I was excited, my mind was shifting with ideas; I would go to a Bootcamp, lose loads of weight, get fit, meet new people and write a funny story with three different endings. I took a mouthful of wine and leaned in closer. I liked this conversation. I liked it a lot.

                If you want to know how I got on at Bootcamp read my blog at www.mollyhopkins.co.uk

                To find out how Evie and Lulu got on at Bootcamp, read It Happened at Bootcamp. 

Also coming soon, from Molly Hopkins......








Sunday 15 July 2012

DizzyC's Little Book Blog is 2 today!


My baby is now 2!  Where have the last 2 years gone??


I have aged a little since I began my blog :)


Those glasses have been changed


This last year I have had busy time reviewing, blogging, tweeting and socialising.

Since my first blogiversary I have 


and personally I have 
  • set a date for my wedding - 8th September
  • had one or two scary moments including my daughter learning to drive and passing her test,and my youngest having a severe ashtma attack.
  • had proud moments with my daughter getting A's and B's in her GCSES, my eldest son coping with his medical problems and making progress, my youngest starting school in only 7 weeks time.

Thank you to all the authors, publishers, bloggers and readers that have been featured, sent me books to review, visited and commented over the last year.  It means a lot to me.
Here is to the next year of blogging! Cheers!


Carol
DizzyC