Monday, 27 April 2026

Lucie Dumas by Katherine Mezzacappa- #extract #excerpt


I am so pleased to be sharing an extract from this book today. Lucie Dumas by author, Katherine Mezzacappa is an historical fiction novel set in the 19th century.


The Blurb

London, 1871: Lucie Dumas of Lyon has accepted a stipend from her former lover and his wife, on condition that she never returns to France; she will never see her young son again. As the money proves inadequate, Lucie turns to prostitution to live, joining the ranks of countless girls from continental Europe who'd come to London in the hope of work in domestic service.

Escaping a Covent Garden brothel for a Magdalen penitentiary, Lucie finds only another form of incarceration and thus descends to the streets, where she is picked up by the author Samuel Butler, who sets her up in her own establishment and visits her once a week for the next two decades. But for many years she does not even know his name. Based on true events.


The Excerpt

Avant, avant, lion le melhor 

‘Forward, forward, Lyon the best’

 Motto of the city of Lyon 

My parents were what is known as respectable. I know that my mother is dead and assume my father is also. If he were not, I would not wish to see him anyway, so we can say that he is dead to me. I don’t know how much my mother was grieved by my conduct, for no-one ever asked her opinion on anything, and I have not seen her since my flight to Paris with Gaston. My father, I since learned, turned to drink after what happened to me. It had always been his regular solace, but it was to become his life. I want you, my reader, to be reassured that I was not the cause of his descent, but his own greed and foolhardiness. I prefer to think that he drank to smother his own conscience. 

I was brought up in the Croix-Rousse district of Lyon, not amongst the crowded dwellings of the canuts, the silk weavers of the Montée de la Grand Côte, but closer to the foot of that steep quarter, where the traders and merchants lived. The further up in lyonnais society one was, the further down the hill one dwelled – pronounced calf muscles by contrast were a sign of poverty. My father straddled both ends of the silk trade, much as our home did. He was not a weaver, nor a merchant, but built the Jacquard looms that enabled both. Forty thousand looms whirred and clacked in Lyon when I was a child, many of them in the tall buildings marching close to each other up that gradient. If I close my eyes here in London, I can still hear that sound behind the rattle of hansom cabs on cobbles, the clop of their horses. The sticky, cloying smell of silk is in my nose still, as though when breathed in it clotted itself forever in those tiny hairs. 

Father would regale us with tales of the grandeurs of Lyon silk, telling us the brocades of Lasalle adorned palaces as far afield as St Petersburg. I wondered once if those who swathed their vast halls with the work of the canuts ever spared a thought for those who wove it. Now I know that they do not, any more than the respectable ladies of London consider those who trim their bonnets, stitch their ballgowns or accommodate their husbands. Once of Girondist principles, my father had grown to admire Napoleon, for every man can be bought, though not as easily as a man can buy a woman, perhaps. The Directorate effectively brought the heyday of Lyon silk to an end, for dressing sumptuously one’s person or one’s home amounted in some cases to a capital offence and Fouché’s butchery in 1793 is I am sure still remembered. It was thanks to Napoleon that the part of Lyon destroyed in that siege was rebuilt, the silk trade re-established to clothe the new dynasty’s court, and thus Father had money to feed and clothe us. 

It was through Father’s trade that I met Gaston. You do not need to know his real name so I do not supply it, even if he could be dead by now. For years my allowance was remitted. It was stopped when Théodore reached fifteen (if indeed he did, but its regularity until then suggests that was the case). Certainly someone is dead. It may be Gaston, and so his wife has ceased to honour his shabby commitment. It may be that 

she has followed her husband to the grave, and some notary has seen the payment made to the Comptoir in London, shrugged his shoulders and cancelled it. It may be that my child is dead, his grave unvisited because everyone who knew who he was is also deceased, and I am the only one who remains, not knowing it. I wondered often if Gaston and his wife had any children, not because I was allowed any concern in their marriage, but because a woman without children may choose to love another woman’s child, or to hate him. 

In my own case, I keep as far away from children as I can, walking in the opposite direction should I encounter a nursemaid with a perambulator in Russell Square Gardens (but then if the nursemaid knew what I was, she would do the same). Monsieur has a passionate dislike of all small humans, yet he will photograph those he regards as the most peculiar specimens, according to Mr Jones. I have seen some of these plates: barefoot Italian urchins, sturdier somehow than their London equivalent, as though clean air and sunshine nourishes them. Mr Cathie has shown me them, as he assists at the birth of these images in the darkroom. Never does Monsieur photograph the kind of children who have nursemaids or governesses. Sometimes I think his eye is cruel; some of those Italian children are crétins, horribly goitred. Mr Jones said that this is because they live too far from the sea. These poor souls dwell, for the most part, corralled behind high walls with others similarly afflicted. But if their parents do not gaze on them, I do not see why others should. Monsieur could have found a different subject for his camera. 

I have ceased to wonder what my life might have been had I not met Gaston. There is no benefit in regret unless it prevents one from making similar mistakes in future. You see, the problem is that once one falls, one is obliged to keep on in one’s descent, for that precipice is sheer. It isn’t that one doesn’t want to go on making mistakes; the desire to live makes them an obligation.

Sample book of Lyon silk, 1861

(Wikimedia Commons: Prelle livre de patron 1861 La Canute)


Book Details

ISBN: 978 1917334228

Publisher:  Stairwell Books

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  236 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Katherine Mezzacappa is Irish but currently lives in Carrara, between the Apuan Alps and the Tyrrhenian Sea. She wrote The Ballad of Mary Kearney (Histria) and The Maiden of Florence (Fairlight) under her own name, as well as four historical novels (2020-2023) with Zaffre, writing as Katie Hutton. She also has three contemporary novels with Romaunce Books, under the pen name Kate Zarrelli. The Maiden of Florence was shortlisted for the Historical Writers’ Association Gold Crown award in 2025 and has also been published in Italian.

Katherine’s short fiction has been published in journals worldwide. She has in addition published academically in the field of 19th century ephemeral illustrated fiction, and in management theory. She has been awarded competitive residencies by the Irish Writers Centre, the Danish Centre for Writers and Translators and (to come) the Latvian Writers House.

Katherine also works as a manuscript assessor and as a reader and judge for an international short story and novel competition. She has in the past been a management consultant, translator, museum curator, library assistant, lecturer in History of Art, sewing machinist and geriatric care assistant. In her spare time she volunteers with a second-hand book charity of which she is a founder member.

She is a member of the Society of Authors, the Historical Novel Society, the Irish Writers Centre, the Irish Writers Union, Irish PEN / PEN na hÉireann and the Romantic Novelists Association, and reviews for the Historical Novel Review. She is lead organiser for the Historical Novel Society 2026 Conference in Maynooth, Co. Kildare.

Katherine has a first degree in History of Art from UEA, an M.Litt. in Eng. Lit. from Durham and a Masters in Creative Writing from Canterbury Christ Church.

You can also find Katherine at:

Author Website

Facebook

Instagram

Bluesky





(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Friday, 24 April 2026

The Other Killer by Heidi Field - #bookreview #blogtour


 Standing on the pavement outside the prison is a rush like I haven't felt in twenty years, like someone's been standing on my chest for two decades and they just stepped off...

***

It has recently come to my attention that I must make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from Zooloo's Book Tours. I have not been paid for doing this and all opinions are my own. I am Bookshop.org affiliated, which means I earn a very small amount of money if you buy from there using my direct link. Although I include purchase links to Amazon, I am not affiliated with them. I include them to make it easy for you to navigate to them if you so wish.


***


The Blurb

You can change your name. Change your life. But someone knows exactly who you are.

Twenty years ago, Mason Tucker was tried and convicted as the teenager who helped lure young boys to the serial killer known as the Pied Piper of Peasedale. After serving his twenty-year sentence, Mason is freed and hopes to remain invisible while he rebuilds his life as an adult, hoping to become a man he can be proud of. A new town, a new flat, a new job and a new purpose.

But living with secrets is challenging, and protecting his anonymity, the woman who stood beside him, and her child becomes impossible when the past pushes back. Hard. Within days of his release, Mason suspects he’s being stalked. He’s threatened and twice attacked. He never imagined being outside would be more dangerous than being in prison. The police aren’t an option. One headline will destroy him.

Someone wants him punished, not redeemed, and as danger closes in, you will never suspect where the next threat comes from.


My Review

Although this book is the third in a series, it also works brilliantly as a stand alone novel. In fact, the author was on the blog last year talking about her first book in this series, The Other Boy, and I reviewed the second book in the series, The Other Mother. Both that and this latest book are excellent and very well worth reading.

This book begins with the release from prison of Mason, also known as the Peasedale Accomplice. He has served twenty years and now wants to live quietly, with a change of name and anonymity. However, within days he realises someone knows about his past and he is being stalked.

The chapters, which are all told from Mason's perspective, flit between past and present. This enables the reader to understand how he was drawn into such wrongdoing in the past. The present day chapters demonstrate to the reader that although he has had a hard life in prison, he shows a level of naivety of life on the outside. Whilst he truly desires to help youngster, Kenny, I couldn't help but think that it would end badly for Mason, whilst truly hoping that it wouldn't.

The author tells her story very well. It is full of twists and turns and kept me gripped from the first page to the last. She knows just how to drag the reader in and how to keep them enthralled. I found myself constantly wanting to get back to this book when I wasn't reading.

She understands her characters well and thus portrays them with detail, understanding and compassion. I was really moved by Mason's story and his desire for a second chance at life. He is a character that will stay with me long after the book is finished.

This is an exceptional series of books which I highly recommend. That said, there are times that this novel is dark and graphic, and readers should be prepared for this. It won't suit everyone and if that is you then I would give this one a miss.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1970840629

Publisher:  Tule Publishing Group

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  344 (paperback)

Series:  Book 3 in The Peasedale Wood Killers series


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author


Heidi Field was raised in the beautiful countryside of the South of England with her parents and her two sisters. In her twenties she was a freelance Sports Massage Therapist. She achieved a Degree in Zoology at the age of thirty and then went on to raise two boys and became the stepmother of three more young children. She still lives near her family home with her partner, their Great Dane and the children that have yet to fly the nest. 

In her early forties Heidi completed a Masters in Creative Writing at Winchester University. She entered the course hoping she would become a children’s fantasy writer and left with a burning desire to write contemporary mysteries and thrillers. 

Heidi wanted to put relatable people in extraordinary situations, challenge them, push them to their limits and watch them fight for their sanity. The Other Boy is her first novel.

You can also find Heidi at:

Author Website

Bluesky

Facebook

Instagram

X





(ARC and media courtesy of Zooloo's Book Tours)

(all opinions are my own)


Tuesday, 21 April 2026

The Body That Floats by Jayne Chard - #bookreview #giveaway


A crisp February morning. The sun is shining down on Little Clarsden, an English village nestling in the county of Berkshire. At its heart is the village green,,,

***

It has recently come to my attention that I must make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the publisher. I have not been paid for doing this and all opinions are my own. I am Bookshop.org affiliated, which means I earn a very small amount of money if you buy from there using my direct link. Although I include purchase links to Amazon, I am not affiliated with them. I include them to make it easy for you to navigate to them if you so wish.

***

For a chance to win a copy of Jayne's first book in the series, More Than Murder, click on the link below. (open to UK residents only)

Good Luck!


GIVEAWAY of More Than Murder


The Blurb

The mystery’s deep, the water’s cold, and the locals are packing more than just fishing gear...

TWO RETIRED SISTERS. ONE FLOATING DEAD BODY

Julia, a retired head teacher with a fondness for order, and her half-sister Frankie, who believes that rules are more like vague suggestions, are back—this time in the picturesque Cornish village of Portscatho.

Their morning swim off Tatum’s beach is rudely interrupted by a floating corpse. The police declare the death accidental, but the sisters have other ideas.

Soon, they’re knee-deep in smugglers’ tunnels, taking a bumpy ride in the back of a builder’s van, and facing down a gun-toting local with questionable fashion choices.

Can the sisters keep their heads above water long enough to uncover the truth or will the killer make sure they sink without a trace?


My Review

This was an easy and entertaining read and I enjoyed it very much.

In fact, this was my second foray into the antics of the main characters, Julia and Frankie. It is the second book in the series but it works perfectly well as a standalone novel. However, if you would like to win a copy of the first book in the series, More Than Murder, follow the link to my review of that book for details of how to enter.

Julia and Frankie are half-sisters. Having inherited their aunt's cottage in Cornwall, the will stipulated that they must both live together in the cottage for a year before the cottage becomes theirs. However, they are very different and haven't always got along. This book takes place in the latter part of this one-year proviso to their inheritance.

They are fabulous characters and I love the way they have such different personalities yet complement each other very well. Julia, a retired headteacher, is as organised as Frankie is disorganised and impetuous. When they discover a body floating in the lake, they suspect foul play and it falls to them to investigate what happened and to prove that this was murder and not an accidental death.  They are really fun characters and add much humour to the story.

The book has been well written and I felt that the author had portrayed her plot and characters extremely well. The Cornish setting is nicely described and the perfect location for her to have set the books.

The story moves along at a good pace with some twists and turns along the way. It was easy to read and I got through it in a couple of sittings. It is the perfect read for a lazy weekend and I highly recommend it.

Publishing on 7th May, The Body that Floats is the second book in the Julia and Frankie Mystery series. My review of the first book, More Than Murder, can be found here. 


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1068325021

Publisher:  Chapters Crime Press

Formats:  paperback

No. of Pages:  284 (paperback)

Series:  Book 2 in the Julia and Frankie Mystery series


Preorder Links

Bookshop.org

Direct from Author Website

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Jayne Chard began writing plays when she was eight years old and wrote her first “book” at fourteen.

 After graduating with a degree in psychology and drama, she went on to win the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Buzz Goodbody Director Award. She directed a number of theatre plays, including shows at the Royal Court and Riverside Studios. During this time, Jayne continued to write, and two of her plays were performed on the London Fringe. Attracted to the small screen, Jayne became immersed in directing TV dramas. Now a multi-award-winning film and TV drama producer, her credits include the BBC flagship brand, Silent Witness and three feature films.

 In addition to her television career, Jayne was instrumental in establishing a veterinary clinic on the remote island of Koh Tao in Thailand and also worked as a radio presenter. Jayne lives in the West Country with her partner and two cuddly cockapoos.

You can also find Jayne at:

Author Website

Facebook

Instagram

Bluesky

X


For a chance to win a copy of Jayne's first book in the series, More Than Murder, click on the link below. (open to UK residents only)

Good Luck!


GIVEAWAY of More Than Murder



(ARC and media courtesy of the publicist)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Monday, 20 April 2026

Perotine by Dreena Collins - #bookspotlight #blogtour


I am delighted to be shining the spotlight on this book today. Perotine by Dreena Collins is inspired by the true story of the Guernsey Martyrs.


The Blurb

Abandoned, faithful – and on trial for heresy. 

On a bleak autumn morning in 1555, Protestant Perotine wakes to find her husband packed to leave. Catholicism has returned to Guernsey, and, fearing for his life, he abandons Perotine, her sister and mother to face increasing hostility alone. 

The three women endure a challenging winter of rain, isolation, and poverty – until a dramatic series of events draws unwanted attention. When a local woman asks Perotine to hide stolen goods, what begins as a trial for theft spirals into accusations of heresy. 

Secluded, steadfast, and terrified, the women face their plight with fortitude and prayers. Together.

But Perotine Massey holds a terrible secret. One that could bring a reprieve, or a fate worse than death.

And she’ll do anything to keep that secret safe. 


Book Details

ISBN:  978-1915786357

Publisher:  Blue Ormer Publishing

Formats:  e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  312 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Dreena Collins is a multi-genre author. Her short fiction has been listed and placed in numerous writing competitions, such as The Bridport Prize and the Bath Flash Fiction Award. She is also the author of a suspense novel, And Then She Fell. 

As Jane Harvey, Dreena writes commercially successful, feel-good fiction: The Hummingbird House series. Books one and two of the series both won the Eyelands International Awards, Published Novel of the Year (2021 and 2022). 

Perotine’ is Dreena’s first full-length work of historical fiction, and a labour of love, retelling the powerful story of the Guernsey Martyrs of 1556. Shortlisted in the Flash 500 Novel Opening Competition, the manuscript was also a top ten finalist in the Marlowe and Christie prize. 

She lives in Jersey with her spouse, a teenage son, and a grumpy white dog, where she also works as the Project Manager for a local charity. 

You can also find Dreena at:

Author Website

Instagram

Facebook

Bluesky





(media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)


Friday, 17 April 2026

The Enemy's Wife by Deborah Swift - #guestpost #blogtour


I am delighted to welcome author, Deborah Swift onto the blog today.

Deborah is one of my favourite authors and I have read a few of her books. I will add links to my reviews at the bottom of this post so do check them out. I am also looking forward to sharing my thoughts of The Enemy's Wife on 12th May so keep your eye's posted for my review.

Before I hand over to Deborah, let me tell you a little about the book.


The Blurb

A poignant story of the impossible choices we make in the shadow of war, for fans of Daisy Wood and Marius Gabriel. 

1941. When Zofia’s beloved husband Haru is conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army, she is left to navigate Japanese-occupied Shanghai alone.

Far from home and surrounded by a country at war, Zofia finds unexpected comfort in a bond with Hilly, a spirited young refugee escaping Nazi-occupied Austria.

As violence tightens its grip on the city, they seek shelter with Theo, Zofia’s American employer. But with every passing day, the horrors of war and Haru’s absence begin to reshape Zofia’s world – and her heart.

Can she still love someone who has become the enemy?


Over to you Deborah?



The Hidden Vice of Opium in 1940s Shanghai 

One of my characters in The Enemy’s Wife gets caught up in the grip of an opium addiction. The setting of The Enemy’s Wife is Shanghai – the Paris of the East. Beneath its dazzling and glamorous appearance, it was also a hotbed of corruption, sleaze, and of course the drug trade.

The Shanghai underworld was shaped by one of the most influential commodities in modern Chinese history: opium. To understand opium’s grip on Shanghai, it is necessary to look back to the Opium Wars of the nineteenth century which forced China to open its port to foreign powers such as England, making Shanghai one of the most important trading posts among them. The foreign concessions within Shanghai (areas governed by British, US and other European countries operated under their own legal systems, which allowed the opium trade to flourish in ways that would have been impossible under a unified administration.


The Opium Economy

Opium was not just a vice; it was a business—one that generated enormous profits. Shanghai’s position as a commercial hub made it an ideal distribution centre for opium imported from British India. The trade involved a wide network of merchants, corrupt officials, criminal gangs, and even legitimate businesses that laundered opium money. In The Enemy’s Wife one of the characters is based on members of the so-called Green Gang, one of Shanghai’s most notorious criminal gangs. They were corrupt and lawless, controlling the distribution, protecting the dens, and running rackets with various political figures. 

For many businessmen, involvement in opium was less about addiction and more about survival or profit and the revenue generated by opium was difficult for authorities to ignore. Taxes on opium sales became a significant source of income, creating a moral and political dilemma: how to eliminate a destructive drug without destabilizing public finances.



Class and Opium

By the turn of the century, opium was deeply embedded both in Shanghai’s economy and in its social fabric. Opium dens ranged from luxurious lounges catering to wealthy elites, to grim, dimly lit rooms serving the urban poor. Smoking opium was both a recreational activity and a symbol of status in some circles, while in others it represented despair and decline.

Among the wealthy, opium habits were a social ritual, often conducted in ornate settings with finely crafted pipes and elaborate ceremonies. I enjoyed researching the paraphernalia that was 

used by the wealthy people in my book. At the same time, I was aware that in the poorer Chinese population, opium was used as a means of escape from gruelling factory work, starvation, and economic hardship. By the time of my novel, the 1940s, people began to view opium as a symbol of China’s weakness. Anti-opium campaigns gained momentum in part because of international pressure when westerners grew addicted to ‘the poppy’.

During the 1920s and 1930s, the Chinese Nationalist government sought to suppress the opium trade, but the Japanese occupation of Shanghai further complicated the situation. Occupying forces exploited the opium trade as a means of social control and to make money for themselves. Soldiers used opium as a means to ‘sweeten’ their experiences in the war.  In some cases, addiction among the local population was actively encouraged by the Japanese invaders to weaken resistance.

In the end, the turning point in Shanghai’s opium obsession came with the rise of the Chinese Communist Party and the establishment of the People’s Republic of China in 1949. Unlike previous regimes, the new government adopted a zero-tolerance approach to opium. Dealers faced severe penalties, including execution, while users were compelled to undergo treatment. Within a few years, opium use in Shanghai and across China was dramatically reduced.

This was too late for my character though, who must use his own willpower to overcome the perils of his addiction. Will he succeed? 

I enjoyed researching opium dens in 1940s Shanghai, and for this I was indebted to Opium by Martin Booth and Opium Fiend: A 21st Century Slave to a 19th Century Addiction by Steven Martin.

The rise and fall of opium in Shanghai is a powerful reminder of how deeply one plant and its trade can shape the history and destiny of a city.



The Enemy’s Wife is out now in ebook, audio and paperback.

Thank you Deborah for being my guest today. That was absolutely fascinating and I can't wait to read the book.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 0008739737

Publisher:  HQ Digital

Formats:  e-book, audio and paperback

No. of Pages:  352 (paperback)

Series:  Book 2 in the Survivors of War series


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US

Amazon CA

Amazon AU


About the Author

Deborah used to be a costume designer for the BBC, before becoming a writer. Now she lives in an old English school house in a village full of 17th Century houses, near the glorious Lake District. Deborah has an award-winning historical fiction blog at her website www.deborahswift.com.

Deborah loves to write about how extraordinary events in history have transformed the lives of ordinary people, and how the events of the past can live on in her books and still resonate today.

Her WW2 novel Past Encounters was a BookViral Award winner, and The Poison Keeper was a winner of the Wishing Shelf Book of the Decade.

You can also find Deborah at:

Author Website

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Facebook

Pinterest

Tik Tok


Links To My Reviews of Deborah's Other Books

The Last Train to Freedom

Operation Tulip

The Fortune Keeper

The Shadow Network

The Cameo Keeper

Shadow on the Highway

Deborah Swift's Desert Island Books





(ARC and media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Six Mile Store by A.M. Belsey - #bookreview

The store had always been there. By the time it got into your blood, it was already old, grimy and hunkered down by the side of the road in a way that seemed like it was growing out of the foothills it neighboured. It sat on a crossroads, linking nowhere to nowhere...

***

It has recently come to my attention that I must make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the publicist. I have not been paid for doing this and all opinions are my own. I am Bookshop.org affiliated, which means I earn a very small amount of money if you buy from there using my direct link. Although I include purchase links to Amazon, I am not affiliated with them. I include them to make it easy for you to navigate to them if you so wish.

***


The Blurb

SOMETHING UGLY’S WAITIN’ FOR YOU

Honey’s working weekends down at the Six Mile, trying to figure her life out. Her boyfriend’s about to leave the country, her college advisor hates her guts, her momma ain’t listening, and she’s got this cop breathing down her neck just about all the time.

She finds a friend in her new colleague Lisa, but when one of their regular customers turns up dead, everything goes sideways faster than a greased hog at the county fair…


My Review

This character-driven novella made for excellent reading.

Set in Arkansas during the 1990s, the story revolves around Honey and the characters she works with or meets whilst working in the titular Six Mile Store.

The author did a great job of packing so much into just 125 pages. That said, it didn't feel rushed and moved along at an appropriate pace for the genre. She writes very well and this made for absorbing, albeit short, reading.

The book is told from Honey's perspective until later in the novel when it switches to one of her colleagues, opening up a different side to the day-to-day routine of the store/petrol station.

Honey is a great character. She is ambitious for her education and is working for her MA alongside supporting herself by working at the store. I loved her determination and slightly feisty character.

This book is well worth reading. It is packed with atmosphere and has a great narrative with some twists and turns along the way. It makes for reading in one sitting and was most enjoyable.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1917090124

Publisher:  Deixis Press

Formats:  e-book, audio and paperback (currently available on Kindle Unlimited)

No. of Pages:  125 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

A M Belsey was born in Arkansas but moved to the United Kingdom at age 21. She ain’t never looked back.

You can also find her at:

Instagram

Substack




(ARC and media courtesy of the publisher)

(all opinions are my own)

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Twenty Six Years Living a Lie by Gina Cheyne - #authorQ&A #authorinterview


I am super pleased to be welcoming the author of Twenty Six Years Living a Lie, Gina Cheyne, to the blog today. Gina is going to be answering some questions about her book. 

First, a little about the book...


The Blurb

In 1997, high in the alpine resort of Tignes, Cecily celebrates her third wedding anniversary with a night of passion. But in the morning her  happiness turns to misery and shock when she find her husband Nick dead in the bed beside her, the victim of a sudden heart attack.

Six weeks later, Cecily learns she is pregnant.Twenty-six years later, her son Charlie takes a DNA test alongside his uncle Adam, Nick’s identical twin. The results shatter everything he thought he knew: Charlie is not related to Adam. If Nick wasn’t his father, then who was?Cecily insists she was faithful, and the timing points only to that single night in Tignes. Desperate for answers, she turns to the SeeMs Detective Agency. Could someone have entered her room that night without her knowing? And if so—who? And why?As the detectives dig deeper, they uncover a web of conflicting memories, buried secrets, and dangerous lies. Slowly they discover other people are in danger and if they don’t find out very soon what really happened in that wonderful night in Tignes two, or maybe more, lives will be lost.


Welcome to the blog Gina. It's lovely to have you here.

Thank you for much for giving me a chance to appear on your blog. I enjoyed answering the questions and I hope you enjoy reading them.

Q  What is your favourite part of writing a book?

A  Developing the idea into a novel. With this one, Twenty-Six Year Living a Lie, I had the idea and it developed speedily and was extremely enjoyable to write. I was awake in our completely dark room in Tignes with the balcony door open and the wind blowing the curtain and I thought, someone could climb into my bed, we could have a night of passion, and I would never know it was not my husband. And the book was born.


Q  Are some books harder to write than others?

A  Yes, most definitely so. With some, like this one, I had an inspiration and I had to stop everything I was doing write it down. The book was finished in 3 months, which is fast for me. However, there are some other books where I think the idea is good, but when I sit down to write inspiration deserts me, the idea turns turgid and I limp slowly along. Occasionally, I get a second wind, if that is the right description, and suddenly I re-find excitement and can write fluidly again. This happened with Murder in the Cards, my second book. But sometimes, for example the book I am currently writing about countryside crime, inspiration has been replaced by hard graft and I seem to be progressing very slowly. 


Q  Why do you write books?

A  This is a question asked me very often by my more financially orientated friends. Why do you write books when writing makes so little (if any) money. But, at least for me, writing is not about making money it is for enjoyment and the thrill of being able to express what you think about various events or happenings in words. Of course I love it when readers buy my books and it would be fantastic to make a living from writing, but I have always had another job which gives an income and allows me to write freely.


Q  Would you consider writing in a different genre in the future?

A  Yes, I am already thinking about a historic novel which may or may not have a who dunnit in it. My idea is about someone from the Victorian era who arrives in the twenty first century and how she processes the shock of such a different world. A sort of time travel experience with hopefully lots of humour involved. However, I do often have lots of ideas about books I would like to write which do not come to fruition, so let’s hope this one soars above the crowd. 


Q Which of the characters in Twenty-Six Years Living a Lie stand out as fun?

A  One of the Beta readers highlighted Boy, Cecily’s brother, as being a particularly charming character. His lazy young boyish attitudes contrast well with his sister’s more anxious and needy personality and his wife’s down-to-earth hard working character. He and his wife have had four children despite having almost no money between them. However, he says, it will all be OK in the end, just wait and see, while she says, don’t worry my little charmer, you look after the baby but I’ll get a job!


Q Do you write for yourself or for the reader?

A  There was a time when I would have said for myself, but as I write more books, read the reviews, and think about the comments of readers, I have changed. All my stories and their inspiration are written from my experience and knowledge, so in that way I am writing for myself, but I have also become much more aware of how a reader digests information. 

 I write in an English, rather than a USA style. English writing tends to be slower and more thoughtful whereas US writing has more excitement and punch. Oddly, most of my readers are from the USA. I don’t know if this is just because the population is larger or because a lot of American readers like the British writing style or because they are more curious and experimental. Whatever! I have become aware that I probably need to make my writing more exciting and less thought based, so in that way I am changing, if not what I write, but at least the style to adapt to the reader.


Thank you so much for being on Left on the Shelf today Gina. It has been a delight to have you.


Book Details

ISBN:  978 1915138255

Publisher: Fly Fizzi Ltd

Formats: e-book, hardback and paperback (currently available on Kindle Unlimited)

No. of Pages:  284 (paperback)

Series:  Book 7 of the SeeMS Detective series


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

This is Gina Cheyne’s seventh novel in the SeeMs Detective series (the agency that looks behind what seems to be true). Gina’s family are keen and dedicated skiers and this book was inspired by a holiday in Tignes in France. 

Gina has worked as a physiotherapist, a pilot, freelance writer and a dog breeder. 

As a child, Gina's parents hated travelling and never went further than Jersey. As a result she became travel-addicted and spent the year after university bumming around SE Asia, China and Australia, where she worked in a racing stables in Pinjarra, South of Perth. After getting stuck in black sand in the Ute one time too many (and getting a tractor and trailer caught in a tree) she was relegated to horse-riding work only. After her horse bolted down the sand, straining a fetlock and falling in the sea, she was further relegated to swimming the horses only in the pool. It was with some relief the race horse stables posted her off to Thailand... after all what could go wrong there?

In the north of Thailand, she took a boat into the Golden Triangle and got shot at by bandits. Her group escaped into the undergrowth and hid in a hill tribe whisky still where they shared the 'bathroom' with a group of pigs. Getting a lift on a motorbike they hurried back to Chiang Rai, where life seemed calmer. 

After nearly being drowned in a fiesta in Ko Pha Ngan, and cursed by a witch in Malaysia, she decided to go to Singapore and then to China where she only had to battle with the language and regulations. 

Since marrying life has been calmer. She became a writer because her first love was always telling a good yarn!

You can also find Gina at:

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(media courtesy of Rachel's Random Resources)

(all opinions are my own)