Touch Me Not (Naughty Fairy Tales #1) by Jen Katemi-Review & Guest Post

TOUCH ME NOT (Naughty Fairy Tales) by Jen Katemi-Review & Guest Post

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO /Bookbub / Apple

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date August 3, 2018

Mia doesn’t believe in happily-ever-after. She’s spent her whole life fighting the pain of overly-sensitive skin and has never known the joy of being touched in a way that brings pleasure instead of pain. When a mysterious woman suggests her son might be the key to breaking Mia’s curse, it sounds far too crazy to be real—especially when she finds out he’s a renowned Dom in an exclusive, members-only club. But Mia is desperate enough to try anything…

Alexei knows there’s no such thing as happily-ever-after. He’s a child of the streets, rescued by a brothel queen, and the last thing he needs is another suburban princess getting in his way. Bondage is his lifestyle choice. Pain is his business. He wouldn’t know what to do with a woman who likes it subtle. What is his adoptive mother thinking, to bring an innocent like Mia into the dark heart of their infamous Club Plaisir?

A steamy contemporary retelling of the fairy tale, The Princess and the Pea.

••••

REVIEW: TOUCH ME NOT is the first instalment in Jen Katemi’s (aka Jennifer Lynne) contemporary, adult NAUGHTY FAIRY TALES erotic, romance series retelling some of our favorite childhood stories. This is Mia and Alexei’s story line.

Told from dual first person perspectives (Mia and Alexei) TOUCH ME NOT follows the quick building relationship between twenty-five year old Mia, and thirty-five year old Dom Alexei. Mia has an aversion to touch; not quite an aversion but touch of any sort causes her excruciating pain, and our heroine is determined to find someone, anyone who has the ability to take her beyond the physical limits of painful touch into the pleasure of sexual arousal. Enter Dom Alexei, the co-owner of the adults only, sex club Club Plaisir. What ensues is the quick building relationship between Alexei and Mia as Alexei’s touch is the magic needed to pull Mia down from her pain filled existence.

TOUCH ME NOT is an energetic read; an erotic story line focusing on the pleasure of touch- a reverse BDSM scenario (of sorts) in that our hero Alexei does not want to inflict pain but hopes to illicit the comfort and contentment of the pleasures of touch for the young woman that quickly calls to his heart.

The author offers up a little bit of background about our story line hero, a man whose earlier life on the streets came to an end when he met Masha, the woman who would raise Alexei as her own. Masha is a bit of a ‘fairy godmother’ in that Masha ‘rescues’ Mia from a life of unimaginable loneliness and pain, offering up a membership and potential happiness through Alexei and Club Plaisir. The premise is intriguing and entertaining; the characters are charismatic; the romance spicy and hot-on that note, I do struggle with the use of a certain four-letter word in all romance storylines but TOUCH ME NOT is a story of erotica wherein the word is commonly used throughout the story.

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Sandy

New release: Touch Me Not by Jen Katemi

Thank you, Sandy and The Reading Café, for having me to visit. I’m delighted to share news of my latest release, Touch Me Not. This novella is a slightly different writing adventure, in that it’s my first foray into re-imagining a classic fairy tale.

I’m primarily a steamy contemporary romance author, so I decided to take the basic premise of The Princess and the Pea and rework it into a contemporary and very steamy version in which a woman with super-sensitive skin meets a princely Dom who delivers pain for a living.

I’m not sure what possessed me when I started writing this story. Alexei, the hero of Touch Me Not, owns and works in a brothel. That’s definitely not your average hero material, I know, but he is so deeply complex and in need of someone who can save him, that I simply couldn’t resist writing his story.

Mia is a young “suburban princess” who has spent her whole life fighting the pain of overly sensitive skin and dealing with the physical isolation that comes with such hypersensitivity.

I thought it would be interesting to pair these complete opposites and see where the story took me. As I wrote Chapter One, I had no idea how these two poor souls would ever achieve their happy-ever-after, let alone a happy-for-now. Oh, the joys of being a pantser – without a plot, you have no idea where the characters are going to take you!

Along the way, I have to admit I fell in love with Alexei and Mia. Touch Me Not has now become one of my favorite stories. I’m so pleased Evernight Publishing liked it too!

Touch Me Not releases from Evernight on August 3rd.

FOLLOW: Website / Facebook / Twitter / Goodreads

Jen Katemi (aka Jennifer Lynne) is an award-winning & bestselling author of steamy contemporary romance. Jen is published with Evernight Publishing, Naughty Nights Press, and as Jennifer Lynne with Red Sage. She has also forged a successful indie career starting with her popular GODS OF LOVE and FORBIDDEN series of erotic novellas.

When she’s not writing, Jen works in admin, looks after the family, pampers various cats, and tries to find a smidgen of time for her husband. She lives in Melbourne, Australia.

Sign up for Jen’s e-newsletter to be in the running for regular giveaways, and ensure you never miss a new book release.

Share

Deep Cover (Love Over Duty #3) by Scarlett Cole-a review

DEEP COVER (Love Over Duty #3) by Scarlett Cole-a review

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 31, 2018

ARE THEY IN TOO DEEP?

Ex-Navy SEAL Cabe Moss always comes when called to duty―at all costs. Even though the death of his fiancée nearly destroyed him, Cabe won’t let his past interfere with any work that has to get done. When his latest task pushes him to team up with FBI Agent Amy Murray, a fierce beauty with the undercover skills to match, Cabe must admit that, for the first time in years, he wants to do more than just complete their mission together…

Amy was born ready for this assignment, but working side-by-side with the strong, silent, and frustratingly professional Cabe seems to be the biggest challenge of all. But when the sparks begin to fly―and the stakes rise to dangerous heights―the only thing Amy is left worrying about is how she can resist him. Their lives may be in danger, but their hearts hold the biggest risk of all

••••••••••

REVIEW: DEEP COVER is the third (and final?) instalment in Scarlett Cole’s contemporary, adult LOVE OVER DUTY erotic, romantic, military suspense series focusing on a group of childhood friends who own and work for Eagle Securities, a Special Ops firm formed by Navy SEALS Cabe Moss, Sixten Rapp, and Malachai “Mac” MacCarrick. This is thirty-four year old, former Navy SEAL Cabe Moss, and twenty-nine year old, FBI agent Amy Murray’s story line. DEEP COVER can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the previous story lines is revealed where necessary although there is an on-going investigation from book one Under Fire.

Told from dual third person perspectives (Cabe and Amy) DEEP COVER follows the building but forbidden relationship between thirty-four year old, former Navy SEAL Cabe Moss, and twenty-nine year old, FBI agent Amy Murray. The FBI and the CIA has called in help from Eagle Securities in their hunt to take down a money-laundering operation, and a potential human trafficking ring operating out of one of San Diego’s largest gambling venues, The Lucky Seven Casino, owned by father and son Hemingway and Faulkner Woods. FBI agent Amy Murray, the daughter and granddaughter of two of Las Vegas’ most prolific poker champions has been tasked to go undercover as a Black Jack dealer, with the help and assistance of Eagle Securities. Enter former Navy SEAL Cabe Moss, the man with whom Amy will fall in love. What ensues is the building relationship between Amy and Cabe, and the potential fall-out as Amy is groomed by the casino boss for something bigger, something that Amy hopes will get her on the inside track to taking down the men responsible for a number of missing women.

Cabe Moss battles demons from the past, so much so that the death of his beloved fiancé, killed in action two years earlier, continues to control his highs and lows. Unable to move on from the past, Cabe finds himself struggling with his attraction to FBI Amy Murray, a woman that calls to his heart and his soul, but a heart firmly locked into the past. Amy Murray knows what it is like working in a world dominated by powerful men. Sexually harassed on the job by a superior Amy battles her attraction to Cabe fearing repercussions from the investigation that all but destroyed her career in the FBI.

The relationship between Amy and Cabe begins as a ‘fluke’, a quick meeting at a local bar before Cabe walked away without looking back. Working together meant the palpable sexual attraction did not go unnoticed by Cabe’s business partners, partners who themselves, fell in love on the job. The $ex scenes are intimate, erotic, seductive and intense, without the use of over the top, sexually graphic language and text.

The secondary and supporting characters are colorful, fun, sexy and sassy. We are re-introduced to Six and Louisa (Under Fire #1), and Mac and Delaney (Final Siege #2), as well as a number of former SEALs now working for Eagle Securities. With the approach of Six and Louisa’s upcoming nuptials it was fun watching a group of former SEALs trying to plan the wedding for their childhood friend. The requisite evil has many faces including Hemingway and Faulkner Woods, and the Russian syndicate Ivan Popov, Sergei Lemtov and Konstantin Sokolov.

DEEP COVER is a story of friendship, brotherhood, moving on from the past, and letting go. The premise is edgy, engaging and heartfelt; the romance is flirty, passionate and moving; the characters are intelligent, realistic and inspiring. DEEP COVER is a suspenseful and emotionally charged tale as one man comes to grips with his past, moving towards his own happily ever after.

Book one UNDER FIRE ebook is available for ONLY $1.99:

Amazon / Amazon. ca / B&N / KOBO / Google Play

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

Share

The Protector (Games People Play #4) by HelenKay Dimon-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway Tour

THE PROTECTOR (Games People Play #4) by HelenKay Dimon-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway Tour

THE PROTECTOR
Games People Play #4
by HelenKay Dimon
Release Date: July 31, 2018
Genre: adult, contemporary, erotic, romantic suspense

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play / iTunes

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 31, 2018

Salvation, Pennsylvania. The commune located in the small town was advertised as a modern Utopia: a place to live, share, and learn with other like-minded young people. Cate Pendleton’s sister was one of them. Now she’s dead—and Cate won’t rest until she finds out who killed her. Stonewalled at every turn, she approaches a DC Fixer for help and ends up with Damon Knox, a mysterious man with a secretive past. But Cate soon discovers that she not only needs Damon, she wants him, which isn’t good—for the attraction brewing between them will only lead to complications that can turn into danger . . .

Damon has tried to erase the hellish memories and the evil that happened in Salvation ever since he left a long time ago. Still, he can’t turn his back on Cate. As Damon works with Cate to uncover her sister’s killer, he finds himself drawn to her more and more. But how will she feel about him when she learns about his connection to the place?

Joining forces to uncover the truth, they must stay one step ahead of a cunning killer who’s bent on not being exposed.

•••••

REVIEW: THE PROTECTOR is the fourth full-length instalment in HelenKay Dimon’s contemporary, adult GAMES PEOPLE PLAY erotic, romantic, suspense series focusing on a tight knit group of life-long friends, known as the Quint Five whose business it is to investigate and ‘fix’ whatever has gone wrong. This is Damon Knox and Cate Pendleton’s story line. THE PROTECTOR can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the previous story lines is revealed where necessary.

Told from dual third person perspectives (Cate and Damon) THE PROTECTOR follows Damon Knox as his latest assignment working for Levi Wren is to return to a place that all but destroyed his life. Cate Pendleton’s sister ‘died’ under mysterious circumstances while living and learning at the Sullivan Compound in Salvation Pennsylvania, a cult-like compound whose secrets lie hidden behind locked gates and armed guards. Having approached Levi Wren for assistance in uncovering the truth Cate learns she is to work with a man whose own secrets are closely related to the Sullivan Compound where her sister had died. Enter Damon Knox, the man with whom Cate will fall in love. What ensues is the fake relationship between Damon and Cate, and the potential fall-out as Cate and Damon are targeted for sins of the past, sins that wish to remain buried along with the dead.

Cate is desperate to uncover the truth about her sister’s death but years of searching for the truth have the people living and working at the Sullivan Compound worried when our heroine arrives in town with Damon Knox. Damon is a man who is unable to let go of the past but finding himself in Salvation, Pennsylvania stirs up too many memories for himself and the people who remember what happened years before.

The relationship between Cate and Damon begins as a business arrangement that must present as a fake romance in order to get past the people in charge. Damon believes himself empty and cold, unworthy of love having been betrayed by the people from his past. Cate suspects Damon’s inability to let go of the past stems from his need for closure thus facing his demons means facing the man who destroyed his life. A fake relationship with Cate forces Damon to reveal the truth, and in doing so allows our hero to forgive himself for what happened in the past. The $ex scenes are intimate, erotic and intense without the use of over the top, sexually graphic language and text.

The colorful secondary and supporting characters include Levi Wren, Wren’s second in command Garrett McGrath and Trevor Gault (of the Quint Five); as well as several members of the Sullivan Compound-Leader Steven Sullivan, brothers Roger and Vincent, and Steven’s assistant Liza.

THE PROTECTOR is a story of suspense, romance, betrayal and revenge. The premise is entertaining; the romance is seductive and compelling; the characters are charismatic and dynamic but the lack of any significant background information regarding Cate or Damon was a bit disappointing especially as it concerned Damon and his years spent in the Sullivan Compound; or what it was he actually did for Levi Wren. THE PROTECTOR is an interesting, spicy and intriguing tale of determination and grit.

Reading Order and Previous Reviews
The Fixer
The Enforcer
The Negotiator
The Pretender
The Protector

Copy supplied by Edelweiss

Reviewed by Sandy

I am not a hero, Cate.” He tried to pull away.
She held on, resting their joined hands against her chest. “Never said you were. You’re a flesh and blood man.”
And this close, she could smell the soap on his skin and see the darker streaks in his green eyes.
“Very much so.” His breath seemed to hiccup.
“So . . .”
When his voice trailed off she got a taste of what it felt like to have someone drop the end of important sentences like she often did. But she didn’t think he tried it or that he was playing games.
“Now you’re the one who should finish the sentence.” Her voice came out in a breathy whisper.
“We’re in a tense situation. Stress sometimes disguises itself as something else.”
The words crashed into her brain, wiping out every other thought. She pulled back a bit, but kept holding his hand. “What are you talking about?”
His gaze traveled over her face now, landing on her mouth. “How much I want to kiss you.”

Goodreads /Website /Twitter /Facebook /  Tumblr | Instagram | Pinterest

HelenKay Dimon spent the years before becoming a romance author as a…divorce attorney. Not the usual transition, she knows. Good news is she now writes full time and is much happier. She has sold over forty novels and novellas to numerous publishers, including HarperCollins, Kensington, Harlequin, Penguin Random House, Riptide and Carina Press. Her nationally bestselling and award-winning books have been showcased in numerous venues and her books have twice been named “Red-Hot Reads” and excerpted in Cosmopolitan magazine. She is on the Board of Directors of the Romance Writers of America and teaches fiction writing at UC San Diego and MiraCosta College. You can learn more at her website: www.HelenKaydimon.com

NOTE: The Reading Cafe is NOT responsible for the giveaway. If you have any questions, please contact the tour provider.

To celebrate the release of THE PROTECTOR by HelenKay Dimon, Pure Textuality PR is giving away one paperback copy of the book!

LINK: https://www.subscribepage.com/TheProtector

GIVEAWAY TERMS & CONDITIONS:  Open to US shipping addresses only. One winner will receive a paperback copy of the The Protector by HelenKay Dimon. This giveaway is administered by Pure Textuality PR on behalf of Avon Romance.  Giveaway ends 8/14/2018 @ 11:59pm EST. Avon Romance will send the winning copies out to the winner directly. Limit one entry per reader and mailing address. Duplicates will be deleted.

 

Share

Darkest Night (Wired and Dangerous #2) by Megan Erickson-a review

DARKEST NIGHT (Wired and Dangerous #2) by Megan Erickson-a review

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 31 2018

Bodyguard Jock Bosh has one job: keep Fiona Madden safe. Safe from the men who’ve been hunting her. Safe from the bastard responsible for ruining her life. And with the attraction sizzling white-hot between them, that means keeping Fiona safe from him too.

Fiona has spent the past decade on the run. Her survival is the single greatest weapon she’s had against the men out to destroy her. Until Jock. Now, with him by her side, she finally has a chance to bring them down. But when her enemies make their next move and Jock puts himself in the line of fire, Fiona realizes that there’s more at stake than just her life-she’s also risking her heart.

••••••••

REVIEW: DARKEST NIGHT is the second instalment in Megan Erickson’s contemporary, adult WIRED AND DANGEROUS romantic suspense series focusing on a group of computer hackers and coders. This is thirty-eight year old, former US soldier and bodyguard Jamison ‘Jock’ Bosh, and thirty-year old Fiona Madden’s story line DARKEST NIGHT can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the previous story line is revealed where necessary.

Told from dual third person perspectives (Jock and Fiona) DARKEST NIGHT follows the building relationship between thirty-eight year old, former US soldier and bodyguard Jamison ‘Jock’ Bosh, and thirty-year old Fiona Madden. More than ten years earlier Fiona Madden survived a horrific ordeal- kidnapped, abused and tortured as a sex slave for a human trafficking ring. On the run trying to stay one step ahead of the men who destroyed her life, Fiona will soon discover that what little semblance of peace she had managed to obtain is about to be destroyed once again. Enter bodyguard Jamison ‘Jock’ Bosh, the man with whom Fiona will fall in love. What ensues is the building relationship and romance between Fiona and Jock, and the potential fall-out as Fiona continues to be targeted by the men from her past.

Jamison ‘Jock’ Bosh volunteered to covertly watch over and protect Fiona Madden, a woman unaware of how close the threats to her life had come full circle. Undercover and alone Jock would soon come face to face with his future when his ‘hiding’ spot is revealed to an all-too alert Fiona Madden. Fiona knows her time may be limited especially with the all too familiar images and photos that constantly appear in the mail whenever she moves. Meeting Jamison ‘Jock’ Bosh finds our heroine thinking about a possible future with the remote, quiet and brooding man, a man whose own demons continues to ride hard.

The relationship between Jock and Fiona begins as a working assignment when Jock volunteers to protect the woman with whom he will fall in love. Fiona is one-time best friends with computer hacker Wren Lee, Roarke Brennan’s girlfriend (Zero Hour #1) but friends that have not seen one another in over ten years. As a favour to Roarke and Wren, Jock offers up his services to protect the young woman that will call to his heart. The $ex scenes are passionate and intimate without the use of over the top, sexually graphic language and text.

There is a large ensemble cast of colorful and charismatic secondary and supporting characters including Roarke and Wren, Marisol Rosa, Erick Lee, and the mysterious Tarr, a man who will do anything for Jock including placing himself in the line of fire.

DARKEST NIGHT is a story friendship and family; mystery and suspense; romance and love. The premise is exciting; the romance is sensual; the characters are dynamic and spirited but I wish the author revealed some of the background history and friendship between Wren and Fiona, as well as the trauma surrounding the kidnapping and violation of our story line heroine; the ‘hacking’ and computer elements of which Roarke’s team specializes are limited such that the reader is told what happened not shown the process of the how or why.

Click HERE for Sandy’s review of book one-ZERO HOUR.

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

Share

Betting Bad (Reform #1) by Cathryn Fox-a review

BETTING BAD (Reform #1) by Cathryn Fox

 

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 30, 2018

I just walked away from eight years in state prison, went up against some of the meanest bastards on the inside, but until I rode my bike down the rain soaked street of Middletown, Chicago, I had no idea what real fear was.

Home.

I have to face my family, find a way to make up for a son’s recklessness.

Secrets.

I was forced to keep them all those years. There’d been no choice but to walk away from a football scholarship and…Sara. The girl I’ve never stopped loving.

Reform.

Now I’m back, ready to re-enter a society leery of trusting convicted felons. Ready to face…Sara. I’d broken what was between us, turned her world upside down. I know I need to stay away from the girl who means everything to me. But when danger enters her life, I’m willing to lose it all again to protect her. Except I soon realize the biggest threat to Sara, is me.

••••••

REVIEW: BETTING BAD is the first instalment in Cathryn Fox’s contemporary, adult REFORM erotic, romance series. This is ex-con Tyler Barrett, and twenty-eight year old Sara Ramsey’s story line.

Told from dual first person points of view (Tyler and Sara) BETTING BAD follows the second chance romance between ex-con Tyler Barrett, and Sara Ramsey. Nine years earlier, with a football scholarship in hand, Tyler found himself on the wrong side of the law facing fifteen years in prison, and the loss of the only woman he would ever love. Fast forward to present day wherein a hardened Tyler finds himself back where it all began in Middletown, Chicago in the hopes of recapturing all that he lost. Enter Sara Ramsey, Tyler’s former girlfriend, and the woman he hasn’t stopped loving. What ensues is the rekindling and secret romance between Tyler and Sara, and the potential fall-out as Tyler is targeted by someone from his past.

High school sweethearts Tyler and Sara had their whole lives ahead of them including plans to open their own sporting goods store but for a moment of passion that landed our hero in prison for a crime meant to protect someone he loved. Sara has struggled in the years since Tyler broke her heart including having never moved on from what was or what could have been. With Tyler’s return Sara begins to hope for a future with the man she lost years before, a man who keeps secret the how and why.

The relationship between Tyler and Sara is one of second chances; a rekindling romance that Sara keeps hidden in light of her father’s inability to forgive and forget the heartbreak and destruction nine years earlier. Hoping to reclaim his status as the man in her life, Tyler begins to make amends beginning with Sara’s father, and his offer to help coach the local high school football team. The $ex scenes are intimate, erotic and passionate.

There is a large ensemble cast of colorful secondary and supporting characters. We are introduced to Tyler’s siblings: sixteen year old, sight-impaired Gracie, college student Alex, mechanic Lucas, and their mother Viola: Sara’s father and high school football Coach Ramsey, as well as Tyler’s prison ‘brothers’-Deacon, Justin, Ryder, Jamie and Christian; and college professor Caleb Douglas. I am looking forward to many more stories featuring Tyler’s brothers from another mother.

BETTING BAD is a story of family and friendship; forgiveness and love; struggles and redemption. The premise is engaging; the characters are sassy and charismatic; the romance is hot and spicy.

I did have an issue with the quick conflict resolution, and the four-year jump in time where the reader is not privy to what happened –I am hoping the author will address some of the missing information in future story lines.

Own a copy

Reviewed by Sandy

Share

Claimed by Her Cougar (Cougar Creek Mates #1) by Felicity Heaton-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway Tour

CLAIMED BY HER COUGAR (Cougar Creek Mates # 1) by Felicity Heaton-Review, Excerpt and Giveaway Tour

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com.au /  B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play / iBooks USA | iBooks UK | iBooks Canada | iBooks Australia | iBooks New Zealand

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 28, 2018

Having lost his parents and mate in a brutal attack on his cougar shifter pride by a hunter organisation, Rath burns with a need to keep humans off his land and out of his life. He’ll do whatever it takes to protect his pride from them, but when a lone female wanders into his territory, it isn’t a burning need to drive her away he’s feeling and it isn’t his pride that needs protecting—it’s his heart.

Down on her luck, Ivy follows a lead to a spot where she hopes to photograph black bears, but what she discovers there is a mountain of a man who lacks manners and seems determined to drive her off his property—a man who stirs unbidden fire in her veins and a strange sense of home.

With a pride gathering on the verge of happening at Cougar Creek and the air charged with a mating heat, the last thing Rath needs is a human on his land, especially one as beautiful and alluring as Ivy, one who rouses a fierce need to fight for her, but he can’t convince himself to let her go… and that proves dangerous for them both.

•••••••••••

REVIEW: CLAIMED BY HER COUGAR is the first instalment in Felicity Heaton’s contemporary, adult COUGAR CREEK MATES paranormal, romance series focusing on the cougar shifters of Cougar Creek, Canada. This is cougar shifter Rath, and human photographer Ivy’s story line. The Cougar Creek Mates series is a spin-off from the author’s Eternal Mates series. It is not necessary to have read the previous series but there is an on-going premise throughout with the inclusion of the group known as Archangel.

Told from dual third person perspectives (Ivy and Rath) CLAIMED BY HER COUGAR follows the building relationship between cougar shifter Rath, and human photographer Ivy. With the approach of the ‘pride gathering’, a time of mating heat between unmated females and males, Rath must ensure the protection of his kind but the unexpected and unwelcome arrival of a human photographer puts Rath on alert to the possibility of the return of Archangel, a group of human hunters who hunt the supernatural beings for experimentation and torture. Enter Ivy, the woman with whom Rath would fall in love. What ensues is the building relationship between Rath and Ivy, and the potential fall-out with the return of Archangel, and its’ possible connections to our story line heroine.

Rath knows grief at the hands of Archangel, having lost his parents, his mate and unborn child to a group of human killers whose goal in life is to destroy that which they do not know. Ivy struggles in the face of rejection and betrayal but her love of photography is the soul source of happiness for our story line heroine.

Like most of Felicity Heaton’s story lines CLAIMED BY HER COUGAR is more of a narrative where the story is told through thoughts and the emotional struggle of fated attraction. The relationship between Ivy and Rath is one of immediate attraction; an insta lust/love attraction but with the ‘gathering’ on the horizon Rath is worried that Ivy, as an unclaimed female, will be targeted by the unmated males forcing our hero to kill in order to protect. The $ex scenes are limited but passionate.

We are introduced to Rath’s brother Storm, another unmated male who suspects his brother is out of his element with the human female Ivy; cougar shifter Ember; Ivy’s boss and former lover Alexander, and Alexander’s sister Gabriella. Gabriella and Storm’s story is next in CAPTURED BY HER COUGAR.

CLAIMED BY HER COUGAR is a quick read; a flirty story with a feisty heroine and protective hero. The premise is entertaining; the romance is fast and furious; the characters are spirited and passionate.

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Sandy

Gods, he needed coffee.

Rath scrubbed a hand over the two-days’ growth on his face, thought about shaving and then shrugged it off. He was going to be out all day again, repairing the cabin by the river and clearing up a few more odd jobs he needed to complete around the settlement at the other dozen or so cabins spread throughout the trees on his side of the river. A little insulation on his face wasn’t a bad thing.

Winter had loosened its grip on Cougar Creek, but the mornings and evenings were still chilly, the air holding a bitter bite that was slow to go as the sun struggled to heat the land and quick to return once darkness fell again.

He had been working non-stop since the snowmelt, when that damned feeling had stirred in his gut and he had found himself pacing the porch, scenting the air, hungry for a female he didn’t want and didn’t need.

Wasn’t going to chase.

Gatherings meant one thing for him and his brothers—patrolling the area, acting as a security force to keep the community safe when they were together and in danger of attracting attention.

They also acted as a security force within the pride too, breaking up any fights that weren’t over a female.

Cougars were solitary, so things always got tense when the entire pride gathered in the small village of cabins. The lodges were scattered throughout the broad band of forest that hugged the mountain behind him and the river before him, with enough space between them to keep everyone calm, but there were always a few males too riled up by the season and the reason they were at the village, and fights always broke out.

Last time a gathering had happened, he had personally intervened in more than a dozen brawls, tearing the two opponents off each other and confining them to their cabins for a day or two as punishment.

His three younger brothers weren’t as diplomatic. Storm in particular loved getting stuck into a fight, bashing heads and drawing blood, giving the two males a taste of his strength.

Storm hated being in charge of overseeing the gathering, would prefer to be in the thick of it, fighting and fucking, but it was tradition for their bloodline now, and that meant his brother was confined to the side lines with the rest of them.

Personally, Rath wasn’t interested in the gathering at all, would rather it never happened, or at least happened elsewhere, somewhere far away from Cougar Creek.

He didn’t need females invading his territory.

Wasn’t interested in the silent, or sometimes not so silent, invitations they issued to him.

He would leave the job of satisfying them to the other males who would follow their instincts back to the pride village, forgoing their solitary life for a few weeks to wait for the females to come and to fight for dominance and the right to be the one who would ease her needing.

Hell, some of them would even mate.

Rath paused at the kitchen counter in front of the picture window, staring out of it at the lush grass and the valley beyond it, and the snow-capped mountains that rose in the distance, seeing a different time, one close to fifty years ago now.

When he had found a mate of his own.

One who had been ripped from him.

He shoved her out of his thoughts and focused on his morning ritual, reaching for the cafetiere and setting it down on the polished wooden counter, spooning coffee grounds into the bottom of it and then grabbing the steel kettle. He set it on the stove, stooped and grabbed the white plastic water container and growled.

It was empty.

Shit.

He had meant to fill it last night before heading to bed, but had been so tired after finishing the repairs to the inside of the cabin nearest the river, one of a couple that had been damaged by a winter storm, that he had passed out on the couch.

A cabin he would have to work on again today, getting the roof repaired, because he was running out of time.

The family who owned it had sent word that they would be arriving soon.

The letter he had picked up on a supply run to the nearest settlement had contained more than just news of their imminent arrival though.

It had contained a request for him to personally court the female who would be coming, one who had recently reached her one hundredth year and matured.

He wasn’t interested and he would make that clear when the party arrived, would have sent them a damned reply already if they had chosen to email him rather than sending a letter. A flat refusal wouldn’t appease this particular family, would only see them trying to convince him, so he would use his position as pride protector as a shield to get them to change their mind, telling them he couldn’t participate.

The only thing he wanted to take care of were the cabins.

He stuffed his feet into his black boots, grabbed the empty water can and a metal pail, and zipped up his fleece before opening the door and bracing himself. Damn, it was cold. He needed water, and then coffee, lots of coffee, before he could brave the weather and start work on the roof of the cabin.

His strides were quick at first, carrying him off the raised deck and down the steps to the grass, but they slowed as he looked at the valley, at his home, breathed in the crisp air and absorbed the silence, falling back into savouring it again, clinging to these last remnants of quiet before the storm hit.

Literally.

Things always got crazy when his brothers descended on him all at once, returning from the cities to annoy him for weeks on end, stomping all over his territory and invading his space.

His second youngest brother, Storm, always lived up to his name, and he was due to return soon, before the others and before the males came for the gathering, having drawn the short straw to help him prepare all the cabins, opening them up and airing them out, and getting any last minute repairs completed.

A smile tugged at his lips. It would be good to see him though. It had been more than a year since Storm had hit the creek, his work keeping him away. Rath appreciated the extra funds rolling in from his direction though, so he wasn’t going to complain when he saw him. Everyone who owned a cabin at the creek donated to running the village, paying Rath a small wage that covered whatever food and supplies he had to buy and couldn’t just hunt or gather.

He glanced at the single storey log cabin nestled beneath the trees to his left and groaned as he saw the state of the right hand side of the pitched roof. He was going to be up there for hours, repairing and replacing all those shingles. Still, he would have one heck of a view.

Rath looked to his right, at the river and the mist that danced above it, swirling in places as the breeze stirred it. Birdsong filled the air, the sound a melody he always loved hearing, and the sun cast a golden glow over the fog as it rose, and turned the snow on the peaks amber too. The sky beyond them was clear today, threaded with only fingers of clouds that burned gold in the sunrise.

Fuck, it was beautiful.

The bite in the air felt good in his lungs, invigorating him.

He looked back at the cabin, at the damage that had been done to the roof when the lodgepole pines that sheltered it had shed snow on it, the sudden impact breaking a whole area of old shingles and one of the roof trusses. The square window on that side of the gable end had a crack in it and would need repairing too, but he would have to patch it up for now, until he could get some glass in. He was sure the family would understand he had prioritised the roof and replacing the old rotten deck planks, and that other cabins had needed his attention so he hadn’t been able to get new glass.

The cabin was larger than his own, formed an L shape in the woods, branching off to the left of the front of the cabin, around the tallest lodgepole pine, and the ceiling was vaulted inside, left open above the rooms.

It added a feeling of space, but Rath preferred having his bedroom in the loft, making use of the roof area.

Plus, he had a fantastic view of the valley from his bed.

He twisted the cap off the white water container and stuck it in his back pocket as he approached the river. When he hit the pebbled bank, he set the container down and bent to scoop water into the pail.

He paused.

His ears twitched.

The birds fell silent.

His instincts rose to the fore, heightening his senses, and he swept them around him, searching for the source of the disturbance he had felt. Something was out there. It was probably just one of the local animals on the other side of the river, stepping out of cover to scare the birds. With the mist, he couldn’t see the bank on that side, and it had him twitchy, his cougar instincts putting him on high alert.

Only one thing in the valley could harm him, and possibly kill him, and the bear shifters tended to keep to themselves and avoid the creek.

Whatever had just wandered into his territory was just an animal, not a threat to him.

Still, he tipped his head back and drew air over his teeth, scenting it to see what he was dealing with.

Rath stilled as he didn’t scent an animal.

He smelled a human.

A floral note, tinged with sweat. Probably a hiker, but he was damned if a human was going to encroach on his territory.

He set the pail down beside the container as he rose onto his feet in one fluid motion. He tracked the scent through the mist, following it along the bank to the right of the clearing. It grew stronger as he reached the trees, and he slowed his breathing and moved stealthily through the fog, his acute senses charting the route ahead of him. His muscles coiled as he focused, his senses heightening further, and he assessed the danger and the human he could now feel ahead of him, barely twenty metres away.

They were still on his senses.

Stalking something?

He slowed his movements, each step careful and silent, so he didn’t alert them, just in case it was a hunter strayed into his territory.

His vision sharpened, allowing him to see the human before it could see him through the mist, giving him the upper hand.

Rath stilled again.

It wasn’t a male.

It was a female.

A curvy brunette who looked as stunned as he felt as the mist cleared between them and she lifted her head and blinked at him.

She wasn’t a hunter either.

She had been shooting, but it wasn’t a gun she had aimed at him.

It was a camera.

Felicity Heaton is a New York Times and USA Today international best-selling author writing passionate paranormal romance books. In her books, she creates detailed worlds, twisting plots, mind-blowing action, intense emotion and heart-stopping romances with leading men that vary from dark deadly vampires to sexy shape-shifters and wicked werewolves, to sinful angels and hot demons! If you’re a fan of paranormal romance authors Lara Adrian, J R Ward, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Gena Showalter and Christine Feehan then you will enjoy her books too.

If you love your angels a little dark and wicked, the best-selling Her Angel series is for you. If you like strong, powerful, and dark vampires then try the Vampires Realm series or any of her stand-alone vampire romance books. If you’re looking for vampire romances that are sinful, passionate and erotic then try the best-selling Vampire Erotic Theatre series. Or if you prefer huge detailed worlds filled with hot-blooded alpha males in every species, from elves to demons to dragons to shifters and angels, then take a look at the new Eternal Mates series.

If you want to know more about Felicity, or want to get in touch, you can find her at the following places:

Website: http://www.felicityheaton.co.uk
Blog: http://www.felicityheaton.co.uk/blog/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/felicityheaton
Twitter: http://twitter.com/felicityheaton
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/felicityheaton

NOTE: The Reading Cafe is NOT responsible for the Grand Giveaway. If you have any questions, please contact the author.

Enter the grand tour-wide giveaway to win one of a $75, $50 or $25 Amazon Gift Card at the Claimed by her Cougar book page. This giveaway is international and open to everyone, and ends at midnight on August 12th. Enter now: http://www.felicityheaton.co.uk/claimed-by-her-cougar-shifter-romance-book.php

Share

Assassin Games (Tarnished Heroes #2) by Sidney Bristol-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway Tour

Assassin Games (Tarnished Heroes #2) by Sidney Bristol-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway Tour

ASSASSIN GAMES
Tarnished Heroes #2
by Sidney Bristol
Release Date: July 23, 2018
Genre: adult, contemporary, romantic, suspense

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / iBooks / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 23, 2018

Anderson Gratney does odd jobs that usually involve a gun and covert ops for the CIA. His latest assignment? Kidnap a CIA analyst in order to keep her safe. Easy. Except there’s nothing simple about the beautiful, careful Carol Sark, who tempts him the more he learns about her.

Coming face to face with a masked man in her home is the most terrifying experience of Carol’s life—until he kidnaps her. He claims he’s there to keep her safe, but she doesn’t know who to trust. And until they can figure out who the threat is, she’s forced to take him at his word.

Time is ticking, and even though she drives him nuts, Anderson very much wants to keep her alive. Unfortunately, the assassins have other ideas

•••••••••

REVIEW: Andy is a decent guy, a bit rough around the edges but he’s good at what he does. A loner, but knows right from wrong.
Andy works at the moment for the CIA (a contract worker) he is watching Carol an analyst working on a code to pull out information on a string of deaths.

Carol’s character, when the when it got tough, she wasn’t a pushover, she was clever and definitely an asset.

The agency know they have a mole, they just don’t know who and how it’s connected. Her analysis can help tie things together.
And when the assassins figure out that Carol is getting to close, Andy is the one sent in to get close to Carol. And if she needs to disappear, then he’s there to help her.

Being kidnapped isn’t high on Carol’s list of things to do. And when the kidnapper explains that he’s here to help keep her safe, Carol isn’t sure who to trust.

The plot was interesting, a few twists and turns kept me reading until I was done.
The characters are well written, and the scenes followed each other really well.

I haven’t read any other the other books in the series, but I think I’ll have to go back and take a look ?

Click HERE for Rachel’s review of SPY GAMES book one

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Julie ?

“I have the strangest urge to kiss you,” she said without embarrassment tightening her throat. Must still be a little tipsy.

“Don’t.” Andy’s voice was sharp, his reply immediate.

“Why not?”

“It wouldn’t be a good idea.”

“What constitutes a good idea?”

“Anything that doesn’t put you at risk or would result in some form of positive gain.”

“But you aren’t a risk to me, are you?”

“Carol, you should go back to bed. It’s late.”

“You don’t want to answer the question. You have that moral code, and I don’t fit in those boxes. That’s your problem with me. You kill people and gather information. I’m a round peg when you deal with square holes. Why is kissing you a bad idea? If it’s not good, then it’s bad. What’s so wrong with kissing? If we’re analyzing good and bad—”

“Stop, Carol. I’m warning you.”

And yet, he didn’t move, he didn’t flee; he remained right where he was.

“If we’re classifying good as no harm and leads to gain, well, it seems like it would be more good than bad. Fostering physical familiarity, building that trust. You know, you could have probably continued to pretend to be Mark, whisk me away somewhere and keep playing that role which would both endear me to you emotionally and create greater trust, but you didn’t. You destroyed the persona of Mark—why? Because it wasn’t a truth, because he was a lie, because it was a danger to you?”

“We’re all on the same side. I wasn’t going to lie to you. Just—stop it.”

“Even if lying means everyone gets what they want? You get the program, I get the fantasy, everyone gets something?”

What had he said before? He liked talking to her. He hadn’t expected to have to play the part of Mark that long.

Part of Andy was Mark.

Was it all a lie? Or was this the wine still talking?

“You keep saying stop it, but you don’t move, you don’t act. Are you telling me to stop it, or yourself? Is the big truth here that it wasn’t all a lie, but you want it to be? Is that what’s going on here? Is that why you’re doing all of this? Look at me and tell me to stop talking, stop asking questions. Do it.”

She was playing with fire. Just because she didn’t fit Andy’s system, because he thought of her as a good person, it didn’t mean she was safe. She was facing a new reality outside the CIA and country she’d grown up in. And that meant she had to be different. She had to face her problems head on, and she was starting with Andy.

He turned his head so that he faced her. His nose had been broken a time or two and little scars marred his face here and there. Dark eyes stared at her, so hard and dark he might not even be Andy right now.

Was she right? Was Mark in there?

It can never be said that NYT & USA Today Bestselling author Sidney Bristol has had a ‘normal’ life.  She is a recovering roller derby queen, former missionary, tattoo addict and board game enthusiast. She grew up in a motor-home on the US highways (with an occasional jaunt into Canada and Mexico), traveling the rodeo circuit with her parents. Sidney has lived abroad in both Russia and Thailand, working with children and teenagers. She now lives in Texas where she spends her time writing, reading, hunting Pokemon, playing board games and catering to her furry overlords, aka the cats.

Connect:

Site: http://sidneybristol.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Sidney.Bristol.Romance.Author
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sidneybristol
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/SidneyBristol

 

 

NOTE: The Reading Cafe is NOT responsible for the rafflecopter giveaway. If you have any questions, please contact the tour promoter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Share

At The Dark Hour by John Wilson-Review, Interview & Giveaway

AT THE DARK HOUR by John Wilson-Review, Interview and Giveaway

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca /Amazon. uk / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 19, 2018

A loving affair is destroyed by the Blitz on London. Julia ends her relationship with Adam. Her concern is for her children and that, if she is divorced, she will lose them. What is the nature of love? Does it have gradations? Love, and it’s textures, lie at the heart of this story. Love is where you find it. And sometimes it ambushes you. And, often, it is hidden.

•••••

REVIEW: AT THE DARK HOUR by John Wilson is a fantastic tale of historical fiction set in 1940 London, England during the London Blitz.

Told from third person perspective, following several timelines, from the outset the reader is pulled into a logistical nightmare as our anti-hero Adam Falling, a member of the King’s Council (KC) finds himself charged with infidelity- an affair with a fellow KC’s wife, all the while, himself married with a twelve year old daughter. As art begins to imitate life, Adam is the lead defence attorney for another man accused of adultery but not before Adam’s legal skills are in demand for a Czechoslovakian refugee who is charged with treason and potential threats against the English crown. What ensues is the build-up of three legal cases, defence and prosecution, and the culmination of secrets, lies, and questionable evidence that are procured and presented in an effort to protect several men whose extra-marital dalliances have destroyed too many lives in the face of the on-going destruction set upon by WWII.

John Wilson pulls the reader in 1940 London, England during the London Blitz bombing. Rationing, and the evacuation of children to the rural countryside, finds families torn apart, as the destruction of London threatens not only their lives but their spirit as well. As darkness befalls London, so too do the blackout restrictions for those whose lives remain at risk by an invisible threat from the skies.

AT THE DARK HOUR is a lengthy story line that focuses on the legal drama of Adam Falling, down on his luck, chronically ill attorney whose on-going affair with the wife of a fellow member of the KC begins to unravel as suspicion leads to accusation, lies, secrets and cover-ups. Adultery is illegal; divorce requires an admission of fault; love becomes dependant upon a hierarchy of importance for the heart. John Wilson takes the reader into the ethically questionable side of courtroom law as the world outside is vanquished by death and destruction of the nightly bombs.

The structure of the novel is broken down into four parts plus an epilogue. The use of quotation marks for traditional speech is absent but that is not to say the conversations go unmarked. Indentation and the use of hyphenation (-) denote speaking parts but the author does not always differentiate between speakers or characters; memories and events recalled are italicized for ease of context.

AT THE DARK HOUR is a wonderfully detailed, complex and focused story line with a large ensemble cast of colorful secondary and supporting characters whose role in Adam’s life culminates in a series of events leading to a frenzied trial of revelations and lies. John Wilson’s AT THE DARK HOUR is a thought-provoking, cautionary tale of infidelity and the destruction of lives. An intelligent, impressive, imaginative and profound story with spirited but flawed characters whose passion for life upsets the balance of the status quo.

Copy supplied for review

Reviewed by Sandy

TRC: Hi John and welcome to The Reading Café. Congratulations on the recent release of AT THE DARK HOUR.

We would like to start with some background information. Would you please tell us something about yourself?

Website:https://www.johnwilsonauthor.net/


John: I come from Wigan in Lancashire although my mother was Scottish. Both of my grandfathers were coal miners although my maternal grandfather had to work above ground because of the disabling injuries he received at the Somme during WW1. He became quite a figure in the Scottish Mineworkers Union and had been intending to stand for Parliament in 1939 for the Labour Party but got called down to London by Clement Atlee to work in the Directorate of Labour. A young Harold Wilson would come around for Sunday lunch and walk my grandad’s dog.

My father joined the RAF at the start of WWII and was a navigator / bomb aimer in Halifaxes with Bomber Command before transferring to 624 squadron flying special ops out of North Africa. After the war he went to Strawberry Hill to train as a teacher which is where he met my mother. I did not find out until after she died in 2004 that she had been working with the Code-Breakers at Bletchley Park.

My paternal grandfather died of a lung related disease before I was born.

My parents were naturally rebellious and adventurous and travelled widely, living in South Africa, Rhodesia (as it then was) and, when I came along Cyprus and South Korea. So, I had an unusual and peripatetic education.

I went to Cambridge to study law – where I played bass guitar (badly) in a band called the Underachievers – and then did the Bar exams. Before University I spent most of a year working in a bakery in Wigan. After Bar exams I worked in a wholefood warehouse before going to live for a while in Connecticut and then Paris where I got a job as a bi-lingual secretary at UNESCO.

TRC: Who or what influenced your career in writing?

John:I have always written and the urge to write is something I have little control over. I was much influenced by writers such as Orwell, Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, Aldous Huxley and Herman Hesse. In particular, I read nearly everything that George Orwell wrote and his essay “Why I write” had a profound effect on me as I recognised in me what he was saying about the impulse to write. It made perfect sense. I was also strongly influenced by a number of Russian writers such as Dostoyevsky, Bulgakov, Zamyatin and, more recently Andrei Kurkov. I also found the writings of Sol Stein and, in particular, his books Solutions for Writers and Solutions for Novelists, extremely helpful.

TRC: What challenges or difficulties have you encountered writing and publishing your novels?

John:The biggest difficulty I had with writing At the Dark Hour was finding the time to write. I had a very busy practice at the Bar, particularly before I took silk in 2011 and so time was very short. I was also writing a lot of academic things, either whole text books or chapters in large well known standard texts. These were all contractual and subject to deadlines and, regrettably, my fiction writing had to take third place behind my practice and my contractual obligations to write text books and articles.

In terms of getting published the difficulty was in finding a literary agent who would be prepared to represent me, although I got close on two or three occasions. My novel is long and it takes some commitment from potential agents to read it when, at the outset, they do not know whether it will be worthwhile. I also found the traditional publishing model to be extremely slow. Teaming up with Clink Street Publishing has been an excellent move for me as everything has moved very quickly and they have been extremely helpful with such things as pricing and, for example, practical things like working out how wide the spine of the book will need to be.

TRC: Would you please tell us something about the premise of AT THE DARK HOUR?

John: At the Dark Hour came to me in three separate phases. As a Bar student who had never really been to London before I was spellbound by the beauty of the Temple but intrigued by the signs everywhere, in the form of plaques or Latin inscriptions that pointed to the enormous devastation that had been wrought by the Blitz. I was one of the editors of Pegasus, the Student Magazine, and decided to research this story. I went up into the galleries in the Inner Temple Library and found monographs by long dead and long forgotten barristers who had written down their experiences of being under the bombing. I subsequently discovered that these sources had all been missed by the primary historians of the age. I thought it was an interesting story but it did not amount to a plot.

A few years later I was commissioned by the BBC to write some radio programmes. We did two series. My first producer worked primarily on Women’s Hour and my second producer worked on producing radio plays. After we were done he left me a voice message asking me to write some radio plays, on a subject of my choosing, which he would then produce for radio. I agreed and decided to write some radio plays about treason trials during the blitz. However, I never had the time actually to sit down and write them. I thought that this would tie in nicely with a story about the destruction of the Temple although it still did not amount to what I thought was sufficient for a plot.

At about the same time my chambers moved out of the Temple and I did not return there until 2002. By now I was a divorce lawyer. My practice and my academic work meant that I learnt a lot about the misogynistic nature of the divorce laws in the 1940s – if a man succeeded in proving that his wife had committed adultery she would lose the custody of her children and all financial support – and it was this final strand that brought everything together in my mind. Linked to this was a long-standing supposition I had about the nature of love. Is it possible to love two people at the same time? Well, I concluded that it was but, when it comes to that sticking point you will have to conclude that you love one person more than you love that other person. In those circumstances, do you love the other person at all?

So, the book contains a series of love stories all set against the backdrop of the destruction of the Temple and of the divorce laws that had such an impact on people’s actions. Julia Pemberton breaks off her affair with Adam Falling because she does not want to be divorced and lose her children. But it is too late. Her husband has found out and petitions for divorce. Central to the story is the development and then the end of their affair. Is it really over? Is there any way back for Adam? Why did she end it? Will they even survive the blitz? And interwoven into this narrative is a further adultery trial where Adam is representing the co-respondent accused of committing adultery with the respondent wife whilst Jeremy Pemberton KC, whom Adam has cuckolded, is representing the cuckolded petitioner.

TRC: What kinds of research/plotting did you endeavour, and how long did you spend researching /plotting before beginning AT THE DARK HOUR?

John: I did my early research into the Blitz and the Temple whilst still a student. In terms of research generally, I had the benefit of reading the complete writings of George Orwell and, in particular, his wartime diaries. I read every book I could find on London and the Blitz as well as reading fiction that was written during that period such as Greene’s Ministry of Fear and The End of the Affair and Tragedy at Law by Cyril Hare. I read practically all of the Times Archive for the period, concentrating in particular on the small ads where much of the “grain” of the time could be found as well as finding all sorts of diaries from the time that had been subsequently posted online. Because the plot involved an alleged attempt to poison London’s water supplies I needed to learn all I could about the London Metropolitan Water Board. I found reference to a book online and tracked it down to an antique book shop in the West Country. I ordered it and it was delivered to my house in the South of France a few days later. It had belonged to the head of the Water Board – his signature was there with a flourish in the frontispiece and, from looking up his obituary I realised that this book had probably been languishing in the book shop for over forty years. I read a small article in the Evening Standard about the Westminster Public Record Map where all the bombs were charted and recorded during the blitz. So, I went to the Westminster Public Library and took out the original bomb maps with carbon copies of typed reports of the bombs or handwritten copies still sitting there.

In the mid-1980s I was representing a defendant in a long running vice trial at the Old Bailey. Whilst being kept in the holding cell just beyond the dock he tried to commit suicide in an imaginative way that involved tying a small piece of string tightly around his neck and then tying his tie equally tightly but with the knot at 180 degrees to the first knot. As I was waiting for the day to begin all hell broke loose and I was summonsed to the cell behind the dock. The warders had succeeded in cutting him free but he had an enormous red wheal around his neck. It was very dramatic and I thought to myself: I can use this. Which I did subsequently in ATDH. I got him off.

I suppose I began writing At the Dark Hour in earnest in about 2007 / 2008. However, I was stymied by my other commitments. My wife and I took three months off in 2008 with a view to me finishing the novel but I was also in the process of writing my text book, Cohabitation Claims which had required a lot of writing and re-writing as the law kept changing. That was published in April 2009. Then I was commissioned to write two chapters of Jackson’s Matrimonial Finance which came out in January 2012. In the meantime, in 2011, I was asked to write a second edition of Cohabitation Claims. This proved to be a lengthy and difficult job and it was not published until October 2015.

In the meantime, I was continuing to write ATDH when I could find the time and showing the work in progress to friends all of whom loved it. The turning point came for me in the summer of 2014. I was conducting a very big trial in the High Court and my solicitor asked to see what I had written. It was about 570 pages long at this point but unfinished. He read it in five days. I told another friend about this over a beer on the Friday night and he asked me to send it to him. I sent it to him at 7 am on the Saturday morning and on the Sunday at 9 am he wrote back to say that he had read it all, staying up until 2 am to finish it. He was only disappointed that, after 570 pages it was not complete. I realised that this was becoming ridiculous so, that summer, when we went down to France, I sat down and finished it in a matter of weeks. It was all up there in my head and I just knew that I needed to write it all down.

So, I suppose my research started in 1981 and limped haphazardly along. It was largely completed by 2007 although I continued to learn new things. There were then spurts of writing when I could find the time between other commitments but it was not until 2014 that I decided just to write the final parts down.

TRC: Do you believe authors of historical fiction should follow historical accuracy and fact? Do authors have a responsibility to be factually accurate?

John:Broadly speaking I think that authors of historical fiction should seek historical accuracy. It makes the story credible and it keeps the reader believing in what has been written. So, in ATDH, if newsvendors are shouting “Victories in Libya” that is what happened on the day in question. Or when a civic official is taking an oxyacetylene lamp to the railings around Lincoln’s Inn Fields that is because that happened on the day. When Julia sports a coat that she purchased from Bradley’s in Chepstow Place for twelve and a half guineas the previous season it is because that very coat was on sale that season. However, subject to that general belief in accuracy I do not think that it is essential. I have tweaked some of the facts ever so slightly for dramatic effect here and there and I suspect most readers will not spot them. There is a libel trial involving three literary siblings called the Renshaws. Only two of my readers realised that this was in fact a trial that actually took place on the days in question involving the Sitwell siblings. I don’t think that this sort of “tweaking” with the historical record causes any harm or other problems.

TRC: How did publishing your first book affect your writing style going forward?

John:I don’t think that having my first book published has greatly affected my writing style going forward in that I think that it has largely been formed now. My work means that I am writing most days of the week. I remember acting for a famous science fantasy writer on his divorce. We were having a companionable fag outside the Hastings County Court and I asked him what he thought of the financial documents I had prepared for his case. He said that he liked my prose style. I had to say to him that this was not the point: it was the content rather than the style that mattered. I have written so many things now from radio programmes to co-writing the European Youth Forum Policy on Youth Unemployment and Training that I think that my style is quite adaptable to whatever it is I am writing about at the time.

TRC: Do you believe the cover image plays a deciding factor for many readers in the process of selecting a book or new series to read?

John:Yes, I do. I was greatly assisted with the cover of this book by Gareth Howard of Clink Street Publishing. Amazingly, we both had almost exactly the same concept of what the cover page should look like. Then it has to be kept as simple as possible because, frequently, it will be seen only as a “thumbnail” picture.

TRC: When writing a storyline, do the characters direct the writing or do you direct the characters?

John:This is a very good question. With my story line I had in my mind a very clear narrative arc. However, I am also of the view that, if you direct the characters in your story, you remove their free will and they turn into cardboard. So, I would not say that I direct the characters. However, there is often a range of things that a particular character could do in certain circumstances and as long as you can keep them broadly on track they can do what they like. I found this quite infuriating at times and there was one particular character, Roly Blytheway, who caused me no end of grief as he would not do what I wanted him to do. But it was very rewarding, in the end, to let him do things his way.

TRC: The mark of a good writer is to pull the reader into the storyline so that they experience the emotions along with the characters. What do you believe a writer must do to make this happen? Where do you believe writer’s fail in this endeavor?

John:This question covers an awful lot of ground. I remember when I began thinking seriously about writing a novel, studying the writings of those authors who had the ability to “pull you into the storyline”. When our hero is pressing himself against a damp brick wall to stay hidden why do some writers make you feel as though you too are breathless and feeling that same brick wall whilst other writers will leave you cold? As mentioned earlier I found the writings of Sol Stein extremely helpful on this. The old mantra is that one must “show and not tell”. I think that this is correct but simplistic. Yes. The writer must show and not tell. However, he or she must do a lot more than this. It is necessary to imagine every scene from all particular angles. To make oneself aware of the time of day, the quality of the light, any ambient factors that would play on the protagonist and then distil those down into a few sentences. For me, every short scene had a long gestation. One needs to cut back on the adverbs and adjectives. If you tell the reader that your protagonist is nervous you are taking the imaginative involvement away from the reader. If you show the reader your protagonist trying to light a cigarette with a tremor in his right hand such that he spills all his matches on the floor you give the scene to the imagination of your reader.

I think that writers frequently fail in this endeavour because they do not make a sufficient attempt to show rather than tell. They do not fully picture the scene in question in their mind’s eye and then seek to reproduce that scene so that the reader can see it as well. I think that this is sometimes down to lazy or sloppy writing and it is a sign of disrespect to the reader who, of course, is entitled to the utmost courtesy.

TRC: Do you listen to music while writing? If so, does the style of music influence the storyline direction? Characters?

John:I don’t tend to listen to music when writing unless it is necessary for the plot. Thus, in the two funeral scenes in the novel the choice of music for the funerals was very important to me and to the scenes in question. And so I listened to a lot of classical music when trying to imagine these and trying to picture how the music chosen would affect the actors at these dramas. Pergolesi was particularly important.

TRC: What do you believe is the biggest misconception people have about authors?

John:From my point of view I think that the biggest misconception people have about authors relates to the whole question of writer’s block. When I was starting out I assumed that with “writer’s block” that meant that the author did not know what was supposed to happen next. Perhaps that is true of some writers. Bruce Robinson (of Withnail and I fame) has spoken movingly about “the Block”. However, I came to the conclusion that writer’s block is rarely about not knowing what is supposed to happen next. It is more to do with finding the paradymic scene that is more than the sum of its parts or dealing with issues such as “point of view” or “pacing”. These, in my experience, are the true sources of writer’s block.

TRC: What is something that few, if anybody, knows about you?

John:One of my favourite songs is “In my Secret Life” by Leonard Cohen. The lyrics of the song speak for themselves. I can relate to that. I have my secret life and, by and large, it remains so.

TRC: On what are you currently working?

John:I am working on a number of projects. I wrote a novella in 2016 called “A Short While” which, simplistically, is about cancer in the Home Counties. My god-daughter, Hannah Sharp, who is a very talented artist and actress, and I are turning it into a screenplay and we are on the fourth draft. I have written some children’s stories about two wombats, Wallis and Wendy, escaping from the circus on their tandem to go and play at the Ayer’s Rock Country and Western Music Festival. I am collaborating with Candida Spencer, a very close friend and great artist and she is in the process of illustrating it for me. I have another novella on the boil which starts in Gipsy Hill in the mid-1980s with a hundred mechanical parrots squawking “give me your money!” in a suburban garden. I am also working on the prequel / sequel to At the Dark Hour. I have two chapters of an academic book to write by September and the third volume of Cohabitation Claims text book is due out next year. I have decided to share the writing out with other people on this because it is too much for one person to do. I have also, I hope, recently finalised the next issue of Family Affairs, a magazine that I edit which I hope will be reaching our subscribers’ trays this week.

TRC: Would you like to add anything else?

John:I am a huge fan of David Bowie and I liked, in particular, the way that he would always seek to collaborate on his future work.

LIGHTNING ROUND

Favorite Food
Tuna

Favorite Dessert
Summer (red) berries covered in melted white chocolate

Favorite TV Show
Death in Paradise

Last Movie You Saw
Source Code

Dark or Milk Chocolate
Milk Chocolate

Secret Celebrity Crush
Ingrid Bergman

Last Vacation Destination
Iran

Do you have any pets?
Two cats: Dooley Wilson and Monty Wilson. Dooley is a black cat.

Last book you read
A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles

TRC: Thank you John for taking the time to answer our questions. Congratulations on your the release of AT THE DARK HOUR. We wish you much success.

Tuesday 17thJuly

Behind Closed Doors Book Review

Wednesday 18thJuly

Belleandthenovel

Thursday 19thJuly

Short Book and Scribes

Friday 20thJuly

Bound 2 Escape

Evermore Books 

Monday 23rdJuly

Blue Striped Square

Tuesday 24thJuly

Celticlady Reviews

Wednesday 25thJuly

Portable Magic

The Reading Café

Thursday 26thJuly

The Writing Greyhound

Friday 27thJuly

Donna’s Book Blog

John Wilson’s publicist is graciously offering a  paper copy of AT THE DARK HOUR to TWO (2) lucky commentators at The Reading Cafe

1. If you have not previously registered at The Reading Cafe, please register by using the log-in at the top of the page (side bar) or by using one of the social log-ins.

NOTE: If you are having difficulty commenting after logging onto the site, please refresh the page (at the top of your computer).

2. If you are using a social log-in, please post your email address with your comment.

3. Sign up for John Wilson updates and newsletter.

4. LIKE us on FACEBOOK and then click GET NOTIFICATION under ‘liked’ for an additional entry.

5. LIKE us on Twitter for an additional entry.

6. Please FOLLOW us on GOODREADS for an additional entry.

7. Please follow The Reading Cafe on Tumblr

8. Giveaway is open to USA and UK only

9. Giveaway runs from July 25 -30, 2018

Share