Wednesday, 15 July 2026

The Making of Marigold McGraph by Carrie Hayes - #extract #excerpt #blogtour

I am delighted to have an excerpt from The Making of Marigold McGrath by author, Carrie Hayes on the blog today. The book begins in 1930's New York before moving to London.


The Blurb

New York City, 1937 - Seventeen-year-old Marigold McGrath is coming undone.Her mother is dead. Her father is drawn to dangerous politics. The only place she feels joy is behind a camera — where she can frame the world on her own terms.

After a series of her own missteps, she reinvents herself in London: mentored by a celebrated émigré photographer, photographing Kindertransport children, working alongside Edward R. Murrow. She falls in love with Joop, a charming Dutch student, and shrugs off the war gathering around her.

Then the Blitz begins.Joop vanishes into the Dutch Resistance. And Marigold — who has always preferred to photograph the world as she wishes it were — must finally decide what kind of woman, and what kind of witness, she is willing to become.

A sweeping WWII coming-of-age novel set in wartime London.


The Extract

1936

WINTER

NEW YORK CITY

The cinema was nearly deserted, and the two girls took the best seats in the house. They opened their bags of peanuts and chocolate covered raisins, silently munching until the movie got to their favorite part. 

Marigold mouthed along with the woman on the screen who spoke first. “Not because I love England, but because it will pay me better.” She continued, “The very brilliant agent of a certain foreign power on the point of obtaining a secret vital to your air defense.”

Trude whispered, “I tracked two of his men to that music hall. Unfortunately, they recognized me.” The two girls took bites of their candy. Trude continued, “That’s why they’re after me now.”

Marigold smiled from ear to ear. She loved this part. “You ever heard of a thing called persecution mania?”

Trude’s eyes grew wide and she said, “You don’t believe me?” As if from nowhere, the usher came over and shushed them. 

Marigold scowled at him and turned back to Trude. “Frankly I don’t.”

They had been doing this for days now. Rather than go to math class, they skipped school instead. How it was that nobody reported them must have been because they were the kind of girls who were rarely in trouble. They did well enough that their absences didn’t seem to matter. So, for two weeks running, they faithfully bought tickets for the 2:55 show and watched The 39 Steps until they knew it cold.

Afterwards, they stood by the window outside the ladies’ room, where one could see the traffic below. 

Trude stopped Marigold and said, “Go and look down into the street then.” She always said this with a campy accent, like her father’s. Trude’s father was Swiss. Her late mother had been British and Marigold thought everything about Trude was glamorous in the most spectacular way. 

Marigold pretended to be afraid. “Are they there?”

Trude looked terrified. “Yes. I’d hoped I’d shaken them off. I’m going to tell you something which is not very healthy to know. But now that they have followed me here, you are in it as much as I am.” 

Then she grabbed Marigold’s hand and they bolted down the stairs, out through the back door gasping and chuckling on the short walk to the pharmacy. 

When they arrived, Trude stopped short. “Oh, mein Gott!”

“What is it?”

“It’s Will Carrington!” Trude pointed to the counter. 

“I love him.” Marigold spoke with as much gravity as she could muster. It was part of their shtick. Whenever Trude saw a boy they knew, Marigold would simply say, “I love him.”

These declarations of love always made Trude laugh, then respond by either sticking something up her nose, or putting her spectacles on sideways. Anything, anything to make Marigold laugh back and Trude look like a freak. 

Silently, they went to the counter. “Oh hi, Will,” Marigold said, in her most modest, simple style. Trude looked away. 

Will was blonde, handsome, an athlete. He was in the boys’ section at school, so they rarely saw him outside of class. “Hi.” He leaned past Marigold. “Hi Trude,” which didn’t surprise Marigold. All the boys were in love with Trude, who was beautiful, smart, and kind. 

Trude turned to face Will. She’d stuck a raisin into each nostril, so they hung out just the smallest amount. “Will, hi!”

Will stopped short of recoiling. He paid his tab and said, “See you.” Then gestured to his own nose, discreetly, for Trude’s benefit.

She continued to smile, oblivious. “See you tomorrow.”

“Girls.” Home was on Riverside Drive, where Marigold’s mother stood in the foyer, surrounded by boxes. Some were on the floor, others stacked upon the table, which normally held only letters and an orchid. On top of the boxes were large oblong tickets indicating their contents. The tickets were stamped with round and dashed holes, like eyelet made of cardstock. 

Marigold opened one of the boxes. “What are they?”

There had to be thousands inside. She passed a dozen cards over to Trude, who fanned herself with them. 

“These could be dollahs, thousands of dollahs, nicht so, Schatze,” Trude said.  

“Jahwohl, they could.” Marigold held up a card to the chandelier, examining the tiny square holes in the light. She held it over the face of her friend and it created dashes and dots upon Trude’s skin. She moved to look through the dashes at her mother. Cool and elegant in her grey silk dress, with her creamy colored pearls and her white, white skin. 

“They’re some sort of punch cards, darling,” her mother said. “They’re for your father.” 

“I love them,” Marigold said.

Trude raised an eyebrow. “Even more than Will Carrington?” 

Marigold bit her lip to keep from laughing. Her mother didn’t know about her silly crushes. “Yes, even more than he.” Marigold spread the cards out upon the table. They looked vast and impersonal, like in that film. What was it? Metropolis. Oh, yes, she thought, just like Metropolis. “Say, Moms, how about I take some pictures of you and Trude with these cards?”

“Aren’t you girls supposed to be doing your algebra or something?”

“Yes, but let me take your picture first, Moms, and you should wear that dress, you know, with the print just like these cards.”

“Marigold.” She loved the way her mother folded the R in the word Marigold. It was always under the tongue with a delicate precision used by those whose English is flawless albeit foreign. 

“Come on, Momsy. You’ll be the living embodiment of industry, and Trude will be the future. It’ll be fun!”

Her mother chuckled and left the room, only to reemerge in her dress with the printed dashes and circles just like the punch cards. In her hand was a large silk scarf printed with the same design. 

“We’ll stack them like this. Then Trude, lean on them here and look up at Momsy, like so.”

Marigold opened her camera case. She looked through the lens and adjusted the aperture. Her models struck a pose. The light in the foyer was bright, bright. Her mother was cool, aristocratic, and Trude simply brimming with life. Both of them were beautiful. Marigold wound the film and pressed the button. 

“Perfect,” she said and wound the film again. 

Suddenly, her mother waved an arm and the scarf fluttered outward, like a wing. Trude moved her own arms upward. 

“Wonderful!” Marigold pressed the button. “Wonderful!” 

She did it again, then her models adjusted their poses in varying degrees, leaning away and toward each other. 

“Fabulous!”

“What are you doing? Put those down.” Marigold’s father stood in the doorway. “Don’t touch those. Put the camera down.” Suddenly, he roared, “I said put the camera down!”

“Sorry.” Marigold looked down at the ground. There was a tense silence It was the same silence which often occurred when Marigold’s parents were in the same room. 

Her mother said, “She was merely experimenting.” 

“Not with my cards, she’s not. Stupid girl.”

“Ta gueule, Arnold.” Her mother had been from Arlon, in Belgium. But she rarely spoke French. “Don’t talk to her so.” 

Marigold watched her mother go into the kitchen as Trude gathered her coat and slipped out of the apartment.

Make amends, Marigold warned herself. “Excuse me, Dad.” She stacked the cards and returned them to their boxes. “I just thought—”

“Don’t think. They’re not for you.”

“Sorry.” 

“They’re for my German clients.” He glanced at himself in the mirror, his reflection confirming his golden hair and hazel eyes were still handsome, still distinguished.

“Sorry,” she said again. “What are they used for?”

“These cards store information. Who is doing what and how much of it they’re doing. Like who’s buying how many apples, or how much money is withdrawn from a bank. Who lives where in what part of town. It’s the latest technology, Marigold. They revolutionize how records are kept. And they come from IBM. They’re the future. Not props for a childish fashion show.” With a small nod, he took a lapel pin out of his pocket. “Help me with this.” He held it out to her and Marigold obliged, fastening it behind the worsted wool as he added, “I’m going to present them at tonight’s dinner.”

She turned the pin. The black lines echoed themselves as they had when the symbol meant good fortune, in Asian religions, long, long before it was used by the German government. Marigold rotated the pin the other way, so the black lines inside the white circle with the red background appeared in a more upright position. 


Book Details

ISBN: 979 8995323914

Publisher: HTPH Press

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

No. of Pages:  346 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Carrie’s first two novels, Naked Truth or Equality and Well Dressed Lies, follow the lives of the iconoclastic suffragist sisters, Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin.

Carrie lives with her husband and two spoiled dogs in a rambling Victorian house just outside of New York City. 

You can also find Carrie at:

Author Website

Facebook

Instagram

Substack





(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)


Tuesday, 14 July 2026

The Anniversary by Andrea Bajani and Translated by Geoffrey Brock - #bookreview

'On that day, ten years ago, I saw my parents for the last time. Since then I’ve changed phone numbers, houses, continents, I’ve erected an impregnable wall and put an ocean between us. They’ve been the best ten years of my life.'

***

I am required to 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.

***

The Blurb

A son is celebrating a bittersweet anniversary. It is a decade since he saw his parents: the father who ruled through petty acts of intimidation and fear, the mother who silently accepted it, fitting herself in the spaces around others’ lives. As he looks back, he recalls the airless family home, unsettled only by the ringing of a telephone, or a visitor who was soon rejected. And he remembers how he became possessed by the irrepressible desire to be free, to live his own life. But can you ever escape the grip of your origins?

At once unflinchingly honest and razor sharp, The Anniversary is above all a novel of liberation which dismantles the tyranny of the family. It becomes a mirror in which we glimpse something that, even if we have not known it, affects us all.


My Review

This slim book of just 144 pages is quite remarkable. Translated from Italian by Geoffrey Brock, it tells the story of the narrator's estrangement from his parents. In fact, the titular anniversary is in recognition of the ten years since he walked away and has never contacted them since.

What has led him to this decision is the need to escape his father's violent, controlling and narcissistic behaviour. His mother has resigned herself to a life of servitude to her husband, never contradicting him, just silently moving around him as though not to be noticed. Initially, I felt sympathetic towards her character but at times, and by the end of the book, I wanted to pick her up and shake her; make her see sense and walk away from this man.

However, these situations are notoriously difficult to escape and both history and current times see women tied to violent or coercive men. That said, the narrator often felt his mother was complicit in his father's violence towards him by withdrawing herself from the situation, never speaking out to protect him and remaining silent. 

This is a powerful novella which considers the effects that growing up amidst violence and aggression can have. It is a short work and the author has portrayed much. Every word is considered and accurately placed. The author has contained the larger than life character of the father, along with the meekness of his mother, ingeniously within the covers of this book and has created a great work in doing so.

This novella is well worth reading and I highly recommend it.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 0241766507

Publisher: Penguin Classics

Formats: e-book, audio and paperback

No. of Pages: 144 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author


Andrea Bajani is the author of several award-winning novels including If You Kept a Record of Sins, Every Promise and The Book of Homes, which have been translated into over twenty languages. The Anniversary was a bestseller in Italy and won the Strega Prize in 2025. Born in Rome, he now teaches creative writing at Rice University in Texas.


Other Blog Posts Featuring Translations

Through Three Rooms by Sven Elvestad

Painting Time by Maylis de Kerangal

Some Kind of Company by Nan Ostman

The Tunnel by A. B. Yehoshua


US cover

(book courtesy of the publisher)

(author photo courtesy of Rice University)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Monday, 13 July 2026

The Quest for the Crown of Thorns by Cynthia Ripley Miller - #bookspotlight #blogtour

I am delighted to be shining the spotlight on this book today. Quest for the Crown of Thorns is second book in the Long-Hair sagas. You can find the first book in the series, On the Edge of Sunrise by clicking here.


The Blurb

AD 454. Three years after the Roman victory over Attila the Hun at Catalaunum, Arria Felix and Garic the Frank are married and enjoying life on Garic’s farm in northern Gaul (France). Their happy life is interrupted when a cryptic message arrives from Arria’s father, the esteemed Senator Felix, calling them to Rome. At Arria’s insistence, but against Garic’s better judgment, they leave at once.

 On their arrival at Villa Solis, they are confronted with a brutal murder and a dangerous mission. The fate of a profound and sacred object—Christ’s Crown of Thorns—rests in their hands. They must carry the holy relic to the safety of Constantinople, away from a corrupt emperor and old enemies determined to steal it for their own gain. But a greater force arises against them—a secret cult who will commit any atrocity to capture the Crown. All the while, the gruesome murder and the conspiracy behind it haunt Arria’s thoughts.  

 Arria and Garic’s marital bonds are tested but forged as they partner together to fulfill one of history’s most challenging missions, The Quest for the Crown of Thorns.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 1634925525

Publisher: Book Locker

Formats: e-book and paperback

No. of Pages: 278 (paperback) 

Series: Book 2 in the Long Hair Saga series


Purchase Links

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Cynthia Ripley Miller is a first-generation Italian-American writer with a love for history, languages, and books. She has lived in Europe and traveled worldwide, holds two degrees, and taught history and English. Her short fiction has appeared in the anthology Summer Tapestry, at Orchard Press Mysteries.com, and The Scriptor.

She is a Chanticleer International Chatelaine Award finalist with awards from Circle of Books: Rings of Honor and The Coffee Pot Book Club. She has reviewed for UNRV Roman History, and blogs at Historical Happenings and Oddities: A Distant Focus and on her website.

Cynthia is the author of On the Edge of Sunrise, The Quest for the Crown of Thorns, and A Sword Among Ravens, books 1-3 in her Long-Hair Saga series set in Late Ancient Rome, France, and Jerusalem. Cynthia lives outside of Chicago with her family and a cute but bossy cat. 

You can also find Cynthia at:

Author Website

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Facebook

Instagram

Pinterest






(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)


Friday, 10 July 2026

Vengeance is Mine by Michael Wood - #bookreview

Tyne and Wear 1999

Stephanie White had been begging and pleading with her parents for months to buy her a pair of rollerblades for her birthday, and now she finally had them on, she realised she had no idea how to stay upright...

***

I am required to make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the author. 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

A GRUESOME MURDER

Twenty years ago, a young girl vanished from a quiet street in Northumberland. When her body was found in an attic close to her home, the whole neighbourhood was shocked.

A DEVASTATING SECRET

For her entire life, Dawn Shephard has never known her father. But when news breaks that a murderer is about to be released from prison, her mother has no choice but to reveal his identity.

THE ORIGINS OF EVIL

As Dawn digs into her father’s history, she lands on a chilling connection. And the closer she gets to the truth, the more dangerous it becomes. Just how far will she go to discover if a killer’s blood runs through her veins?


My Review

I recently won a whole set of books by this author in a giveaway, which I am absolutely thrilled with. This is the first of them that I have read, and it has left me wanting to dive into the rest.

The main character, Dawn, is easy to identify with. Raised by her mother with the knowledge that her conception was the result of a one-night stand at a party, she has never known the identity of her father. Until the day that the newspapers declare that the murderer of a young girl is soon to be released from prison and her mother decides to reveal that he is actually her father.

I could fully identify with Dawn as she learns this truth. I think any of us would feel as though the rug had been pulled from under our feet. I felt much sympathy for her as she begins to navigate her feelings. She is a well drawn character and the author did a good job of bringing her alive on the page. The secondary characters in the book are also well portrayed.

It is set in Newcastle in the North of England, beginning with the prologue in 1999 and the disappearance of thirteen year old Stephanie White. The narrative then moves to 2019, where the book is told from Dawn's current day perspective.

The book is perfectly paced for the genre, and there are plenty of twists and turns which kept me reading well past bedtime. It is a compelling and highly suspenseful story as we are drip fed little revelations along the way. 

The author explains in his note at the back that the manuscript for this took twenty years for him to complete, making changes to the novel until he actually got it to where he wanted it before being published. It was a gripping book and, for us readers, it was worth waiting for.

I highly recommend this for lovers of the genre.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 0008618568

Publisher: One More Chapter

Formats: e-book, audio and paperback

No. of Pages: 384 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Michael Wood is a crime fiction writer born and raised in Sheffield, South Yorkshire where his detective series featuring DCI Matilda Darke is set. He has worked as a journalist and proofreader, but is now a full-time author currently living in Newcastle in the Northeast of England. He is also the author of the Dr Olivia Winter series of psychological thrillers, as well as several standalone books. When he's not trying to think up ingenious ways of murdering people, he is reading books about ingenious ways of murdering people while drinking incredibly strong black coffee and biting the heads off a Freddo.

You can also find Michael at:

Author Website

Facebook

X

Instagram


Other Blog Posts Featuring Crime Novels

Deadly Truths by Paul Gitsham

Little Secrets by Victoria Goldman

The Long Call by Ann Cleeves

The Saint Zita Society by Ruth Rendell





(book and media courtesy of the author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Thursday, 9 July 2026

Wedded to Her Enemy Knight by Lissa Morgan - #bookreview

June 1460

Edmund Deverell leaned on the rail and watched the town of Calais, with its isolated but stubbornly entrenched population of English colonists, slowly recede into the morning sea mist...

***

I am required to make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from the author. 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

An enemies to lovers, convenient marriage Medieval romance

A house divided…

A passion ignited!

Outraged when Yorkist knight Edmund Deverell stakes his centuries-old claim on her beloved home, Lancastrian maiden Isobel Calvert won’t leave without a fight! But her best defense against destitution is to propose marriage—to her enemy!

After the pain of his first union, Edmund had never planned to wed again, his only allegiance now is to the House of York. Still, he can’t deny a practical marriage will secure his legacy and leave his emotions intact. But days of verbal sparring with his new wife lead to nights of unforgettable passion, until Edmund finds his loyalties wavering dangerously… 


My Review

Lissa Morgan is my favourite author of this type of historical fiction. Needless to say, when she asked me if I would review this book for her, I was more than happy to do so. This book did not disappoint in any way. In fact, I think this is my favourite of those of her novels that I have previously read.

The book is set in 1460 during the Wars of the Roses and is a wonderful escape into medieval England.  The main character, Isobel, is a Lancastrian and the last remaining survivor of the Calvert family. At this point in history, the Yorkists are on the rise, and the King's Knight, Sir Edmund Deverell, arrives at her home and commandeers her property.

Isobel is faced with the prospect of marrying a man old enough to be her grandfather, or to enter a convent and live out her days as a nun. At this point in history, women had no choice about how to live their lives, and the author depicts this patriarchal society extremely well.

However, Isobel is a rebel and takes matters into her own hands by suggesting a marriage of convenience to Edmund. This will enable her to remain in her beloved home. However, it isn't long before a mutual attraction and desire between them becomes evident. This is a wonderful enemies-to-lovers story which the author tells well.

I loved Isobel's character. She is strong, determined and feisty. Although Edmund had arrived at her home with a sense of entitlement, it quickly becomes apparent that he is a caring man who is carrying much hurt from a past marriage which we learn as some of the book is told from his perspective.

I loved how immersive this novel was. The author has researched her time period extremely well and depicts it with clarity, bringing an authenticity to her novel.

There is a mix of narrative and dialogue throughout; both of which move the story along at an appropriate pace for this genre of novel.

This was an engaging story which I enjoyed reading very much. I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys historical fiction with an enemies-to-lovers trope.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 0369769756

Publisher:  Harlequin Historical

Formats: e-book and paperback

No. of Pages:  272 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US


About the Author

Lissa Morgan hails from Wales but has travelled far and wide over the years, usually in pursuit of the next new job.  A history graduate and former archivist, she now works in academia and freelance website design, which she fits in around her writing time. She lives between the mountains and the sea in rugged north-west Wales surrounded by medieval castles that provide the perfect inspiration for her books.

You can also find Lissa at:

Author Website

Facebook

Bluesky

Instagram


My Other Blog Posts Featuring This Author

Alliance with Her Renegade Knight

The Warrior's Forbidden Maiden

The Warrior's Reluctant Wife


(book and media courtesy of the author)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Fiona and the Forgotten Piano by Kate Demaio - #bookreview #blogtour

Fiona and the Forgotten Piano was the winner of BBNYA 2025!

(more about BBNYA at the end of this post)

***

I am required to make it clear at the beginning of my reviews that I received this book for free from The Write Reads. 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

Eleven-year-old Fiona isn’t allowed in the Fermata woods. And though its unique trees are fascinating, Fiona has no problem following her mother’s rules. That is, until the trees begin to sing.

Suddenly, it feels as though long forgotten memories are being unlocked in Fiona’s mind. As she nears the woods edge, the trees fall silent, so silent even the leaves stop rustling. Fiona will finally break the rules and venture into the woods. She’ll soon find herself traveling through portals to undiscovered worlds. And she’ll have to trust her instincts and her quirky new friends to bring back the music or she may get lost within its notes.


My Review

This is a lovely middle grade novel which I enjoyed reading.

Eleven year old Fiona dislikes her piano lessons as all she ever does is practice scales. She just wants to learn to play a song. She also dislikes her teacher. However, Fiona has a connection to the music which is the key aspect of this story.

Fiona lives on the edge of a forest and knows not to go in. When she goes against her parents' wishes and enters it she becomes lost, entering other worlds and makes some unusual friends: Ferris the frog, Nori the axolotl, and others along the way. Ferris and Nori are sweet characters, and Fiona herself is a character that children will love.

It's an imaginative story full of colour and character. Children will be able to identify with Fiona. She is embarrassed by her freckles and gets teased at school. However, in these alternate worlds, her freckles are admired and considered differently. I think this aspect of her character will resonate with readers.

This was a fun read which has been well written. I recommend it to young readers who I'm sure will enjoy this book.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 1958531822

Publisher: Wild Ink Publishing

Formats: e-book and audio

No. of Pages:  247


Purchase Links

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon CA

Amazon US


About the Author

Kate grew up in Salem, Massachusetts surrounded by ghost stories and witch tales. As a microbiologist, she studies the tiny worlds of bacteria, viruses and antibodies. As a writer, she creates magical worlds of her own. Kate now lives just outside of Boston with her husband, son, dog and cat.

You can also find Kate at:

Author Website

X

Instagram

Bluesky


About BBNYA

BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on X @BBNYA_Official. 





(ARC and media courtesy of The Write Reads)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)

Monday, 6 July 2026

The Spirit of the Times by Justin Newland - #bookspotlight #blogtour

I am thrilled to be shining the book spotlight on this book today. The Spirit of the Times is set in 14th century Central Asia.


The Blurb

From a land of milk,

And a Road of Silk,

To a ring of roses,

And a dance of posies,

Comes the tale of the spirit of the times! 

In fourteenth-century Central Asia, Karia is a young woman living under the yoke of Mongol occupation. But she’s different. She’s a fighter with supernatural powers. She could use them to keep the Black Plague at bay and solve the mystery of the purple skies at dawn – if only she could overcome her self-doubt. 

Travelling in caravans on the Silk Road, she faces dangers seen and unseen – from sandstorms and slave traders to the desert djinn and folk who believe she’s a witch. She fears losing Abi, her little cousin, who’s fascinated by roses and the dance of the Whirling Dervishes of Bukhara.

When Karia falls in love with an English sailor fleeing the Knights Hospitaller, they sail to England with Abi to unravel the meaning of the purple skies, a dance, a posy tree, and a ring of roses.

The Spirit of the Times is part history, part fiction and part speculation: on the origin of disease; the power of innocence; the unfortunate aspects of custom and dogma; and humanity’s ability to respond to the governing influence or spirit of the times.


Book Details

ISBN: 978 1806344154

Publisher: Troubador Publishing

Formats: e-book and paperback

No. of Pages: 264 (paperback)


Purchase Links

Author's Website (with free personalised dedication)

Bookshop.org

Amazon UK

Amazon US

Troubador Publishing


About the Author

Justin Newland’s novels represent an innovative blend of genres, from historical adventure to supernatural thriller and magical realism.

Undeterred by the award of a doctorate in mathematics from Imperial College, London, he conceived his debut novel, The Genes of Isis (Matador, 2018), an epic fantasy set under Ancient Egyptian skies. Next came The Old Dragon’s Head (Matador, 2018), set in Ming Dynasty China in the shadows of the Great Wall. 

The Coronation (Matador, 2019) features the Great Enlightenment and speculates on the genesis of the most important event in the modern world – the Industrial Revolution. The Abdication (Matador, 2021) is a mystery thriller in which a young woman confronts her faith in a higher purpose and what it means to abdicate that faith.

At this point in his writing career, after four self-published books, Justin was offered a part-funded contract with the Book Guild.

The Mark of the Salamander (Book Guild, 2023) is the first in a two-book ‘The Island of Angels’ series. It tells the epic tale of England’s coming of age during the Elizabethan era. The second in the series, The Midnight of Eights (Book Guild, 2024), charts the uncanny coincidences of time and tide that culminated in the repulse of the Spanish Armada. 

His latest novel, The Spirit of the Times (Matador, 2026), is to be published in July. It tells the story of a young Kyrgyz woman’s journey westwards along the Silk Road. With purple skies at dawn, and a supporting cast of Genghis Khan, the Black Plague, a perplexing rhyme, a ring of roses, it explores the greatest mystery of all – the spirit of the times. 

Justin’s enduring passion is to explore the origins of our current time. This prompted a broad research into what we’ve inherited from history – encompassing Egypt, China, Prussia and Tudor England. He also writes entertaining talks which he gives to the WI, U3A, Probus, Rotary and local historical associations. Please visit his website for a current list of the talks. 

Alongside the talks, Justin promotes his work with regular book signings at TG Jones (ex. WH Smith) high street stores, selling over 3,500 books since 2019. He has sponsored over 40 UK and US blog tours, given frequent radio interviews and penned many guest posts. 

His current book signing motto is: Enjoy, Imagine, Discover.

As a member of the Society of Authors, he has Public and Products Liability Insurance.

Born in Essex, England, three days before the end of 1953, he lives with his lady in plain sight of the Mendip Hills in Somerset, England.

You can also find Justin at:

Author Website

Facebook

Instagram





(media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)

(all opinions are my own)

(Bookshop.org affiliated)