Monday, 20 October 2025
The Annalisse Series by Marlene M. Bell - #bookspotlight #bookpromo #blogtour
Wednesday, 8 October 2025
Holiday& Charles II's Portuguese Queen: The Legacy of Catherine of Braganza by Susan Abernethy
I am going to be taking a short break from the blog while I head up to sunny (I hope) Berkshire to look after my son's dog, Floki, while he and his family take a well earned break somewhere with some guaranteed sunshine. Floki is a gorgeous English Springer Spaniel. Our own dog, Roxie, who is a young bundle of energy, will be very excited to have Floki to play with.
Obviously, I'm debating which books to take with me. This book, Charles's II's Portuguese Queen: The Legacy of Catherine of Braganza by Susan Abernethy is top of my list as I've been wanting to read it for ages. I can't wait to get stuck into it. Keep your eyes peeled for my review that will be coming once I get home.
I guess I really should get to that packing. So far, all I've packed is my knitting, a book and some dog treats. I think that speaks volumes about my priorities. Clothing and other essentials are very overrated in my opinion!
This is how sleepy Floki usually looks after about half an hour with my energetic Roxie.
My crazy bundle of energy who I adore!
Tuesday, 7 October 2025
The Blackest Time by Ken Tentarelli - #bookreview #blogtour
Gino cracked the skull into pieces, dropped the fragments into a mortar, and began the arduous task of grinding them into a fine white powder...
The Blurb
Set in the 1300s during the devastating black plague, The Blackest Time is a powerful tale of compassion, love, and the human spirit’s ability to endure immense adversity.
Gino, the central character, is a young man who leaves his family’s farm to find work in a pharmacy in Florence. His experiences show us how people coped in the most horrific time in history.
Shortly after Gino arrived in the city, two years of incessant rain destroyed crops in the countryside, leading to famine and despair in the city. Gino offers hope and help to the suffering— he secures shelter for a woman forced to leave her flooded farm, rescues a young girl orphaned by the plague, and aids others who have lost everything.
The rains had barely ended when the plague hit the city, exposing the true character of its people. While some blamed others for the devastation, the story focuses on the compassionate acts of neighbors helping each other overcome fear and suffering. Doctors bravely risk infection to care for their patients. A woman healer, wrongly accused of witchcraft and driven from the city, finds a new beginning in a village where her skills were appreciated.
Despite the hardships, love blossoms between Gino and a young woman he met at the apothecary. Together they survive, finding strength in each other and hope in a world teetering on the edge.
The Blackest Time is a testament to the strength of the human spirit in overcoming unimaginable tragedy.
My Review
Through the lens of the main character, Gino, we get a glimpse of Italian history during the 14th century.
Set in Florence, we follow young Gino, who has left his poor family farm in Poppi to seek work as an apothecary's assistant. Through his work in the apothecary, we meet some interesting characters, and the author does a good job of depicting them.
Florence is going through one of its worst periods in history. First, a long period of rain and flooding means that none of the crops can grow, and a large-scale famine ensues. Finally, as life begins to look more hopeful for the city when the rain comes to an end, Florence is hit by the Black Plague.
I felt fully immersed in the time and setting of this novel. The author does a great job of immersing the reader in this horrendous situation, and whilst we observe that people are suffering in their homes and on the streets, it was never portrayed in a sensationalist way.
Instead, Gino is an unassuming hero. He has a good and kind heart and will help people in any way that he can, despite his own difficult circumstances as he watches society collapse around him. He is a resilient young man who I was rooting for with every turn of the page.
I recommend this book to those who enjoy historical fiction.
Book Details
ISBN: 978 1685136536
Publisher: Black Rose Writing
Formats: e-book and paperback (currently available on Kindle Unlimited)
No. of Pages: 268 (paperback)
Purchase Links
About the Author
Ken Tentarelli is a frequent visitor to Italy. In travels from the Alps to the southern coast of Sicily, he developed a love for its history and its people.
He has studied Italian culture and language in Rome and Perugia, background he used in his award-winning series of historical thrillers set in the Italian Renaissance. He has taught courses in Italian history spanning time from the Etruscans to the Renaissance, and he's a strong advocate of libraries and has served as a trustee of his local library and officer of the library foundation.
When not travelling, Ken and his wife live in beautiful New Hampshire.
You can also find Ken at:
(ARC and media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)
(all opinions are my own)
Monday, 6 October 2025
The Legend of Valentine by Sheldon Collins - #blogtour #guestpost
I’m delighted to bring attention to Sheldon Collins’s The Legend of Valentine, a gripping tale of love and defiance set during one of Rome’s most turbulent chapters. I am absolutely delighted to be hosting Sheldon today, who will be telling us about the day his book hit the best seller list.
But first, a little about the book...
The Blurb
The story unfolds in the year 268 AD, when the empire is fractured by cruelty and fear. Valentine, a warrior once defined by violence, emerges from near death with a new sense of purpose inspired by his love for Agatha, a woman whose blindness cannot dim her strength. Risking everything, Valentine secretly blesses Christian couples in marriage despite the emperor’s ban, each act of devotion both a rebellion and a beacon of hope. As he defies tyranny, Valentine becomes more than a man—he becomes a symbol, his sacrifices shaping a legend that centuries later would be celebrated as Valentine’s Day. Collins delivers a novel that blends the intensity of rebellion with the tenderness of romance, transporting readers to a world where faith and love are tested by the harshest of empires.
Book Details
ISBN: 979 8991362412
Publisher: Hutchinson and Collins
Formats: e-book, hardback and paperback
No. of Pages: 352 (paperback)
The Day My Book Hit the Bestseller List
On January 24, 2025, The Legend of Valentine reached the Amazon bestseller list for Classic Roman Literature — only three days after release. For many authors, that moment would be all celebration. For me, it came three weeks after the Palisades Fire destroyed my home and nearly everything I owned.
At the time, I could barely register the achievement. My days were consumed with relocating my family, replacing the basics, and simply surviving. It wasn’t until months later that the significance of that milestone sank in — and when it did, I was struck by how much my own life seemed to echo the very story I had written.
Valentine, my protagonist, is a soldier of Rome. He’s courageous on the battlefield, but emotionally unmoored — a man who has lost family, lost a true sense of home, and nearly loses his own life. The only anchor he knows is the brotherhood of warriors at his side. What makes his journey powerful isn’t just the clash of empires, but the quieter battles: the movement from emptiness to belonging, from faithless to faithful, from loveless to love-full.
After the fire, I felt some of those same fractures. A house is more than walls; it is a sense of place, of rootedness. Losing that left me feeling adrift, as though the ground itself had shifted. But, like Valentine, I began to see what remains when everything else is stripped away. For him, it was faith and love reborn in the midst of loss. For me, it was the outpouring of community — friends, neighbors, and even strangers showing up with tangible acts of kindness.
What deepened the experience was hearing back from readers. Some wrote to me about the history, others about the love story, still others about the themes of endurance, forgiveness, or faith rediscovered. I realized then that the book wasn’t one-dimensional; I had packed many threads into it, using Rome as the stage to explore truths that still resonate today. There issomething in it for everyone to take hold of, because the themes are timeless.
That, to me, has been the real gift. Hitting a bestseller list is meaningful, of course, but the deeper joy is discovering that a story born in another century can meet readers right where they are — just as it met me in the ashes of my own life.
In the end, the lesson is the same for both author and reader: when everything seems lost, love and faith have a way of finding us again.
About the Author
Sheldon Collins began his creative career in Hollywood, where he wrote and directed films acclaimed for their strong characters and powerful narratives. His projects earned awards and were broadcast on premium networks before he turned to fiction with The Legend of Valentine, his debut novel, which is also available as a multi-cast audiobook he co-directed. Today Collins lives in California with his wife and daughter, drawing inspiration from the beauty of the outdoors and enjoying hiking, biking, surfing, and skiing. He holds a BA in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley and an MFA in Directing from the American Film Institute. Discover more on his website or follow him on Instagram.
Purchase Links
(media courtesy of Book Amplifier)
(all opinions are my own)
Friday, 3 October 2025
Tailored Truths by Nancy Jardine - #bookreview #blogtour
The Blurb
Is self-supporting success enough for Margaret Law or will her future also include an adoring husband and children? She might secretly yearn for that though how can she avoid a repeat of relationship deceptions that disenchanted her so much during her teenage years?
Employment as a lady’s maid, and then as a private tutor in Liverpool in the 1860s bring thrilling opportunities Margaret could never have envisaged. Though when those posts end, her educational aspirations must be shelved again. Reliance on her sewing skills is paramount for survival when she returns to Dundee.
Meeting Sandy Watson means love, marriage and starting a family - though not necessarily in that order – are a striking development though it entails a move north to Peterhead. Yet, how can Margaret shed her fear of commitment and her independence and take the plunge?
Jessie, her sister-at-heart, is settled in Glasgow. Frequent letters are a life-line between them but when it all goes horribly wrong, the contents of Margaret’s correspondence don’t necessarily mirror her awful day-to-day realities.
My Review
Although this is the second book in the series, there is sufficient reference to the first book to make this one work perfectly as a standalone.
This book features Margaret as the main character. We read of how she fights to keep her head above water - working in various jobs from tutoring, to being a lady's maid/companion and even sack sewing. However, her skills enable her to move up in the world to a leadership role in a factory.
Her search for employment highlights how women were viewed during the period in which the book is set. It was very hard for a woman to make much of herself, as all the opportunities to grow were only available to men. Through this, the author demonstrated the role of women at the time and how they were considered by Victorian society.
Margaret was an excellent character. She is a hard-working young woman with a strong character, which enabled her to survive in difficult situations.
The author immerses the reader in the time and place. She has exhaustively researched the time period and, therefore, immerses the reader in the book. I almost felt like I was there.
It is a dialogue-led book, which served to move the story along at an appropriate pace for the genre. It made for easy and engaging reading.
I enjoyed this book very much, and am looking forward to the next book in the series already.
Book Details
ISBN: 978 1739696443
Publisher: Nancy Jardine with Ocelot Press
Formats: e-book and paperback (currently available on Kindle Unlimited)
No. of Pages: 468 (paperback)
Series: Book 2 in the Silver Sampler Series
Purchase Links
About the Author
Nancy Jardine writes historical adventure fiction, historical saga, time travel historical adventure and contemporary mysteries. Research, grandchildren, gardening fill up her day in the castle country of Aberdeenshire, Scotland, when not writing or promoting her writing. Interacting with readers is a joy at Book and Craft Fairs where she signs/sells paperback versions of her novels. She enjoys giving author presentations on her books and on Ancient Roman Scotland.
Memberships include: Historical Novel Society; Scottish Association of Writers, Federation of Writers Scotland, Romantic Novelists’ Association and the Alliance of Independent Authors. She’s self-published with Ocelot Press.
You can also find Nancy at:
(ARC and media courtesy of The Coffee Pot Book Club)
(all opinions are my own)
Thursday, 2 October 2025
The Self-Made Saint by Alexandra Addams - #bookreview #blogtour
"Best get on with it before you go under it."
The Blurb
Judith Drainger has always played life by her own rules. But these days life seems to be playing her right back.
Divorced, orphaned and forcibly retired, 59-year-old Judith is determined to seize the opportunity to leave her broken home in London and move across the world to Australia. Here she reunites with her estranged adult daughter Cassandra – only to land smack bang in the emotional quagmire of her daughter’s anger and abandonment issues. To make matters worse, Judith can see her new granddaughter Emily has a serious health issue, but her offers of help are ignored and rejected.
When an accident knocks her off her feet, Judith is swamped by the kindly care of her nosy new neighbours. Yet, when given a chance to become a part of their community, Judith shocks even herself by making a series of unforgivable blunders. Realizing if she’s to have any hope of reuniting her family, well-meaning but stubborn curmudgeon Judith must learn the power of saying ‘sorry’ - and what it actually means to be a good person.
My Review
Hidden between the covers of this book is a real gem.
The main character is Judith. She is bad-tempered, curmudgeonly and irascible. She has left England and gone to live near her daughter, Cassandra, and baby granddaughter, Emily, in Australia, in order to rescue her from an unhappy relationship and take her and Emily away to live with her. However, the reality is that Cassandra is very happy in her relationship and has no intention of going anywhere - let alone with the mother with whom she has abandonment issues.
Judith was a fabulous character. She is complex and flawed, and it made her such an interesting character to spend time with. She is also highly relatable. I think most readers, especially those of us who have adult children, will find a little of themselves in Judith.
The author demonstrated real skill in her depiction of the characters and their various interactions. They all came very much to life on the page, from the handsome man next door to the dog walker who allowed his dog to toilet by Judith's house. Even the minor characters are well-nuanced.
I enjoyed being immersed in the environment and the characters, both Judith and those around her. The Australian setting was perfect and well portrayed. This was a fabulous book to read. Despite Judith's irascibility, it was impossible not to like her, and I loved observing how her character developed through the book.
This is a fantastic debut novel and I can't wait to see what the author brings us in the future. If this novel is anything to judge by then she is definitely one to watch.
Book Details
ISBN: 978 1962931175
Publisher: High Frequency Press
Formats: e-book, audio, hardback and paperback
No. of Pages: 266 (paperback)
Purchase Links
About the Author
You can also find Alexandra at:
(ARC and media courtesy of the publicist)
(all opinions are my own)
Wednesday, 1 October 2025
Books I Want to Read in October 2025
Welcome October - the month of pumpkins, witches and all things spooky!
I've got some cracking books in my to read list for this month. Some new, some old and some that have been on my TBR for far too long.
What are you planning to read this month? Is there anything here that has caught your eye?
Frankie by J.M. Gutsch and Maxim Leo




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