ARC Review: The Irish Yankee, book one in The Dawn of America series, by Regan Walker

#historicalfiction #histfic #historicalromance #romance

Book Blurb

June 1775, amid the Revolutionary War’s early stirrings, Irish Yankee Jeremiah O’Brien, seizes a British armed schooner off the Maine coast to thwart the cargo of lumber she was escorting from reaching British forces in Boston. Inspired by this daring victory, Jeremiah abandons his lumber business to command privateer vessels, relentlessly pursuing British merchant ships across dangerous waters.

Defying the British navy’s tightening grip on the Massachusetts coast, he risks his life and his ships to capture many prizes. Yet his greatest battle may lay onshore: winning the heart of Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, a fiercely independent woman who loves the freedom he fights for. Only a man worthy of the title “the hero of the Lexington of the Sea” could earn her love and prove himself worthy of her strength.

My Review:

In Pursuit of Love and Liberty –  a captivating start to a new series: 5 stars

The Irish Yankee is the first book in Regan Walker’s The Dawn of America series, which features lumber businessman turned privateer Jeremiah O’Brien and Elizabeth Fitzpatrick who has recently moved from Nova Scotia to his hometown of Machias in Maine. The read combines romance with danger and suspense and expertly explores the impact of the Revolutionary war on individuals and communities.

I particularly enjoyed the realistic portrayal of hardships endured by the colonists and how they come together with fortitude and tenacity to fight and ultimately defeat the representatives of the British crown who have ruled and exploited them. The scenes where the revolutionaries gather in the local taverns, places of worship and within their homes, to unite against the British rule and ultimately overcome them were particularly evocative, as were the descriptions of the skirmishes and battles at sea carried out by Jeremiah and his fellow privateers. I now have an understanding of just how important the American privateers were in seizing British merchant ships and disrupting their supply lines during the Revolutionary war.

I appreciated how the author once again features scenes with key historical figures such as General Washington. The book gives and insight into how the general and those in his circle interacted with and supported the privateer Jeremiah and the small community which he represented.

As for Jeremiah and Elizabeth, they are well matched in their strength and determination to defeat the British, and both become key players in the local community. The development of their romance is a gentle one, but it is clear from the start that they were destined for each other. There are a number of scenes which I found extremely moving as the conflict impacts on their life together.

This page turning read is well paced as it explores the themes of loyalty, bravery and honour and the growing love between a strong man and an independent woman. It is recommended to lovers of historical fiction and historical romance alike.

Reviewed by Tina Williams

Please note that a copy of the book was given to me by the author and I am voluntarily leaving an honest review.

Purchase Links 

Amazon UK

Amazon US

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*BOOK REVIEW TOUR* – STORY AND STRUCTURE, A COMPLETE GUIDE, BY LEON CONRAD

#storystructure #storytelling #writing

Story and Structure: A complete guide illustrated by Jason Chuang
Nonfiction 528 pages (xxviii, 500)

Book Synopsis

Why does story exist? What makes story ‘story’?
And how can understanding story help us shape our life story more effectively?

Story and Structure tells the untold story of how story works. Using just six primary symbols, author Leon Conrad outlines eighteen story structures and shows how they all optimally solve the problems which give rise to them. The book also demonstrates the much wider application of story, presenting new insights into story as a dynamic force of life, allowing the reader to access more harmony and flow in their life. Writers, storytellers, creative writing teachers, folklorists, narrative therapists, anthropologists, poets, and readers interested in how story works will all find this book useful and informative. Rethink your idea of story.

Paperback – The Squeeze Press – 1 Nov 2022 – £29.95
Signed Limited Edition Hardback (450 copies) – Aladdin’s Cave Publishing – 10 Aug 2022 – £40.00
Purchase link: http://www.leonconrad.com/writer

My Review

Delves Deeply into the craft of storytelling – 5 stars

Story and Structure delves deeply into the crafting of story in its many and varied forms, As an avid reader, it gave me a valuable insight into the structure, patterns and motivations inherent in what I read. In the work the author examines 18 types of stories and their structure in what I found to be a unique approach using a set of 6 primary symbols. The story types examined include the creation myth, rags to riches, the quest, dilemma, voyage and return and others I was less familiar with.

I particularly enjoyed the well-crafted use of examples the author uses to illustrate the analysis, using stories which range from old favourites such as the Three Little Pigs and Snow White to those from other cultures. The references to poetry, song and the oral tradition of storytelling were also useful in examining both the origin and development of all types of storytelling over time. It is a work which made me think more deeply about what I read and one which will become a valuable source of reference in the future.  

The book provides a valuable set of keys to unlock, create and comprehend story in all its forms and as such is highly recommended to readers, writers, students and academics alike.

Please note, this book was given to me by the author and I am voluntarily leaving an honest review.

About the Author

Leon Conrad – Author, Educator, Story Structure Consultant

I’m a traditionally published author and storyteller. I’ve been a regular columnist, had articles published in journals and magazines, written theatre shows, and contributed to radio programmes. I teach creative writing and am a meticulous and collaborative editor and story structure consultant to both fiction and non-fiction writers.

My latest book, Story and Structure (The Squeeze Press, 2022) reveals new information about story and how we can live more harmoniously by following the ‘laws of story’. It’s based on the work of George Spencer-Brown’s remarkable book, Laws of Form. I was his last student, and he guided me through the work himself.

My TEDx talk on the Magic of Words, with marimba player Aristel Škrbič, is on YouTube (HYit3MYAoqM) and my free on-line course taking readers through Laws of Form available on You Tube (https://www.leonconrad.com/lawsofform) has had over 5,000 views (as at July 2022).

As a storyteller, I’ve been studying the Drut’syla Midrash, a little-known oral tradition and approach to latticing stories with storyteller Shonaleigh Cumbers since 2015.

I’m co-founder and lead trainer at The Academy of Oratory (previously The Conrad Voice Consultancy) and I tutor students across the world using an integrated approach to a classical liberal arts education through The Traditional Tutor and The Penelope Institute for gifted and profoundly gifted learners as well as being Orator in Residence at The Next Society Institute.

Contact details

Website 
Email 

Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US

OUT NOW—Not That Kind of Witch, A Brand-new M/F Steamy Contemporary Romance by Lucy Felthouse (@cw1985)

 #contemporaryromance #romance #steamyromance

The latest release from Lucy Felthouse, Not That Kind of Witch is a M/F steamy contemporary romance filled with fun and steam, which also tackles some serious topics. So if you’re looking for a hefty dollop of realism in your romance, then check this one out!

Blurb

Can Willow let go of her fears and begin living her life again, or will her issues get the better of her?

Willow Green is having a hard time of it. Losing her job at the beginning of the pandemic and her elderly grandmother’s ‘clinically vulnerable’ status have resulted in her becoming housebound. While her entrepreneurial, hard-working spirit and the knowledge passed down through generations of green witches in her family mean she has solved her employment problem, her fear of going out, of allowing the dreaded virus into the house she shares with her grandmother, is far from resolved. In fact, it seems worse than ever.

That is, until Joe Lane comes along. The handsome care worker turned delivery driver does Willow a favour, gaining her attention and reluctant admiration. He’s got plenty of baggage of his own, but he also has the skills and temperament to help her with her problem—and he really seems to care.

The question is, will she let him get close enough to try?

Available in eBook and paperback formats

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*****

Excerpt

Willow Green had just stepped into the kitchen from the back garden when there came an almighty hammering on the front door. Panic and irritation flared in equal measure and she dumped her loaded wicker basket on the huge farmhouse-style table before hurrying through the house towards the source of the noise.

Another hammering. The irritation started to outweigh the panic. Whoever was there was in danger of waking the dead, never mind disturbing mostly-deaf Grandma Annie, whom Willow had left happily knitting in the conservatory with a cup of tea on the table at her side before she’d headed out to the garden.

Willow cast her gaze to the ceiling and grunted with frustration. The whole point of installing the smart doorbell and having it set to only sound an alert on her phone had been to prevent Grandma being tempted to get out of her chair and make her way to the door, putting her at risk of a trip or fall along the way, or placing her in a vulnerable position with a complete stranger. The added bonus being, Willow could be at the furthest reaches of the garden, and her phone would cleverly let her know someone was at the front door.

Had this person not seen the sign? Smack dab in the middle of the door: Please use doorbell. With an arrow pointing to it. Couldn’t they read?

Then she remembered. The last time this happened, which had been a while ago, prior to getting the doorbell camera in the first place, it had been kids at the door. Kids who, once she’d opened up, backed off down the path and began flinging jibes and questions at her from what they considered a safe distance.

Hey, witch.

Been out flying on your broomstick?

What’s bubbling in your cauldron?

You gonna turn us into toads?

Did your ancestors get burned at the stake?

Where’s your black cat?

Her heart sank. She sighed and prepared herself for more of the same. It was unlikely, after all, they’d have come up with something new or more original—despite the astonishing wealth of information the human race had at its fingertips these days. Perhaps they hadn’t bothered to look, to educate themselves, or simply thought it was fun to torment a forty-year-old woman who’d never harm anything or anyone—not even if it was possible to turn people into toads. Though, admittedly, if she were a lesser woman, she’d be sorely tempted to throw out a few fake incantations to scare them, make them think she’d cursed them.

Maybe she should. Yes, it was stooping to their level, but if it stopped them coming back…

No. I’m not going there. She briefly considered not answering the door at all. She could access the doorbell speaker and tell them to clear off from the safety and comfort of her hallway, but she didn’t want them to think she was weak, or frightened. That’d just enhance the thrill for them, encourage them to harass her more often. Not happening. Not on my watch. I don’t have time for that kind of idiocy.

She shook her head, unlocked the door and yanked it open, her annoyance already spilling forth. Generally speaking, she was an incredibly placid person, and slow to anger. But she didn’t want these kids to think this house was an easy target. She’d kept the previous incident from Grandma, not wanting to worry her, and had hoped the addition of the doorbell camera might deter them from returning. “Have you horrible toerags seriously got nothing better to do? You should be ashamed of yourselves, pestering people like this! I’ve a mind to contact your parents—”

She stopped dead as the door swung wide enough to provide a view of who was on the other side of it. Not kids—horrible or otherwise—but a man. With a large cardboard box at his feet, bearing a familiar logo. Uh-oh.

A glance past him to the gravel lane leading to her house confirmed her fears. A white Transit van sat there.

She cringed and forced her gaze back to the man. A navy-blue T-shirt bearing the delivery company’s logo was stretched over his muscular biceps and chunky abdomen—a dad bod, she supposed it’d be classed as, though she didn’t really agree with the terminology—as well as a pair of tan shorts and some beat-up looking trainers. He was tall, well over six feet, and she had to crane her neck to meet his eyes. “I’m so sorry. The last time someone hammered on my door like that, it was a bunch of kids shouting abuse. I thought you were them. If you’d just rung the doorbell, like the sign…”

The frown that appeared on the man’s face as she spoke made her shift her attention to her right, a sinking feeling taking over. Where there should have been a sign attached to the centre of the door, were now only six evenly-spaced blobs of Blu-Tak.

Heat flared into her cheeks, and she let out a groan and closed her eyes momentarily. “Well, there was a sign. It’s obviously fallen off. I had no idea. Or I wouldn’t have… never mind. I’m really sorry. And now I’m waffling.” She gave a pained smile, her face threatening to burst into flames. “Anyway. You have a parcel for me?” Her voice went so high at the end she was surprised she hadn’t summoned the neighbourhood dogs.

To his credit, the man simply shrugged. “No worries. I’ve been called worse. You’re…” he consulted the screen of the smartphone in his hand, “Willow Green?”

Given the circumstances, she let the slight waver of amusement in his voice at her name slide. “Yes,” she replied resignedly. “That’s me.”

“Great. It’s a tracked parcel, so I need to take a photo to prove I’ve delivered it…”

“Okay. Go ahead.”

He tapped his phone screen a few times, then lifted the device and stepped back, presumably ensuring he got the right angle so his image would contain both the parcel and her feet inside the open doorway. Pressed the button. “Got it. Thanks. Do you want me to bring it in for you? It’s pretty heavy.” He pocketed the phone.

“No,” she said quickly, recoiling as he approached and made to pick up the box. “I mean, no thank you. I’m fine. I need to find the sign before I go indoors, anyway. Don’t want to shout at any more undeserving delivery drivers, do I?” The chuckle she let out sounded forced, even to her own ears.

“Guess not.” He backed off and clasped his chin, then stroked his thick beard, more grey than black—the colour of his thick, plentiful hair, which had only a dusting of grey at the temples. He glanced at the doorbell and wrinkled his nose. “Should’ve spotted that, really. Especially when no one answered after I knocked a few times. The Blu-Tak should have provided a clue that maybe there was a sign there, and I could have put two and two together. I’m sorry. Such an idiot. Won’t make that mistake again though, will I?” Despite the weakness of his smile, it transformed his face enough that Willow’s stomach flipped. Goodness, he’s handsome.

Author Bio

Lucy Felthouse is the award-winning author of erotic romance novels Stately Pleasures (named in the top 5 of Cliterati.co.uk’s 100 Modern Erotic Classics That You’ve Never Heard Of), Eyes Wide Open (winner of the Love Romances Café’s Best Ménage Book 2015 award), The Persecution of the Wolves, Hiding in Plain Sight, Curve Appeal, and The Heiress’s Harem and The Dreadnoughts series. Including novels, short stories and novellas, she has over 175 publications to her name. Find out more about her and her writing at http://lucyfelthouse.co.uk/linktree

Release blitz organised by Writer Marketing Services.

*Book Blitz* Welcome Back, Jack (A Jack LeClere Novel #1) by Liam Sweeny

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Welcome Back JackCov2Title: Welcome Back, Jack (A Jack LeClere Novel #1)

Author: Liam Sweeny

Genre: Mystery, Thriller

Release date: October 1st, 2015

Released by: Down & Out Books

Length: 313 pages

Blurb: When Jack was six years old, his parents were brutally slain by a serial killer. The police later found drifter Clyde Colsen driving a stolen car, his clothes soaked in blood. He was tried, convicted and executed. Jack grew up knowing that they got the guy.

Now, Jack, a decorated homicide detective in New Rhodes, arrives at the third crime scene of the “South End Killer” murders and finds his name. He will soon find out something else: Thirty years ago, they got the wrong guy. And now the right guy’s come back to pay Jack and New Rhodes his bloody respects.

As Jack struggles to stay on the case, his cat-and-mouse with the killer makes him wonder if he’s the cat or the mouse. His family, and everyone in his life is fair game. As the killer escalates and threatens the entire city, Jack has a question he must answer in his desperation; can he stop the monster without becoming one?

Author bio:

Liam Sweeny has worn many hats in his life. In addition to being a writer for ten years, he has been an artist, musician, grassroots campaign staffer and spent four years in disaster response, both in leadership and in the field.

It was in the field in New Orleans that Sweeny got his start as a writer. Hurricane Katrina, and his role in the relief effort, fueled his early writing, where he began in sci-fi/fantasy before transitioning into crime, mystery and noir.

As a crime writer, Sweeny’s work has appeared in many publications, such as Thuglit, All Due Respect, Near to the Knuckle, Shotgun Honey and others. You can find out more at www.liamsweeny.com

Follow the Author

Facebook: www.facebook.com/liamsweeny

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Amazon: http://amzn.to/1PKiaOs

Goodreads: http://bit.ly/1FpWdnj