Sunday 25 March 2018

The Summer Will Come by Soulla Christodoulou - Blog Tour Extract

On today's blog stop for Rachel's Random Resources I am thrilled to bring you this exclusive extract from The Summer Will Come 


Genre:  Modern Historical Fiction, General Fiction, Drama
Publication Date:  25 March 2018
Standalone Novel
Estimated Page Count:  480


Set in the 1950s, the story begins in Cyprus. EOKA, British rule, and the fight for Enosis (unity) disrupt the world of two Greek Cypriot families, living in different villages on the island. They are desperately trying to cope with the unpredictability of this fractious time. Circumstances over a five-year period push both families to escape to London where, as immigrants, they struggle to settle, face new challenges, trauma and cope with missing their homeland's traditions and culture. Both families' lives cross paths in London and it seems that happier beginnings could be theirs. But at what cost?
A story of passion for a country in turmoil, family love, loyalty and treachery and how, sometimes, starting over isn't always as imagined.




EXCLUSIVE EXTRACT

Her boss eventually came out of the office slamming the door behind him, rubbing his big hairy hands together.
‘So you think you can be late now you’ve been working for me a while, eh?’
‘No not at all…I wasn’t well.’
‘Well you look well enough to me.’ A combination of halitosis and acrid sweat made her heave and she visibly recoiled.
‘Sorry. It won’t happen again.’
‘No it won’t. Or that daughter of yours and you will be outta here.’ He moved a step closer towards her and she felt his thigh against her arm. She shivered. ‘Anyway enough about work. I wanted to spend some time with you. You’re a fine woman and you’re never here alone.’
‘Well I have to go now if that’s all. Dinner won’t cook itself.’
‘Talking of dinner, I’m rather hungry…’
‘My husband will be home soon so I can’t be late.’
‘Oh I know all about your husband…he’s not even around is he?’
Evangelia peered at him. His pupils, menacingly black, pierced her. She pushed back her chair and made to get up from behind the sewing machine. She stumbled slightly as the chair tipped back and she tripped on the front leg. He reached out for her; his grip tighter than was necessary.
‘Thank you,’ she said, her head spinning worse than ever.
‘If you really want to thank me, there’s something else you can do.’ Before Evangelia took in the situation he pushed her round and forced her over the sewing table. He pulled at her skirt and ripped her knickers down below her knees. He held onto her hair and pulled her head back as his urgent rough thrusting burned her. Her head thumped as she struggled to focus, her vision blurred. Her legs took root to the cheap linoleum floor, stiff with pain. It was over within a few minutes. She didn’t stop him. She didn’t scream out. She couldn’t find her voice.
‘Didn’t realise you’d make it this easy.’ He stood close, too close. His words grazed her cheek as sharply as if a knife edge scraped over it. She didn’t look at him. She didn’t move. She heard him pull the zipper on his trousers. The sound invasive, physically painful. She followed his footsteps across the factory floor to the office.
Terrified he would return she still didn’t move. She didn’t know how long she stayed there for but eventually her legs gave way; she dropped to the floor. Shaking, she pulled at her skirt to cover herself. A burning sensation gripped at her. Her insides tangled, twisted, knotted. There was blood running down the inside of her leg. She watched it, mesmerised by its lucid vigour. Then it trickled dry and into nothing, staining her leg a smudgy brown. She edged her knickers over her feet and scrunched them in her hand. Her knuckles white with anger.
A loud banging at the main doors startled her. She recoiled. Conscious of her state of undress; not wanting to be seen. She crouched behind the sewing machine gripping the back of the chair for support. Her legs still trembled beneath her, threatening to give up on her.
‘No, I’m still here.’
‘Well move aside…let me in…’ She heard a man’s voice. She didn’t recognise it.
‘Not now…you know how it is…extra perks of the job.’
‘You dirty dog.’
‘Don’t tell the wife.’
‘Nothing to do with me. Leave you to it.’
‘Thanks mate.’
‘Will call back tomorrow. Want all the money you owe me.’
‘Yeah sure. Counted out on my desk already.’ She listened, too scared to breathe, as the door slammed shut and seconds later a car back fired outside in the courtyard before noisily screeching off. The engine noise echoed around the four walls of the inner courtyard and rang around in her ears bringing on the nausea again. She heard her employer cough, clear his throat. He called over to Evangelia.

‘Call it a night luv. See you on Monday. Oh and this is our little secret.’ Acid bile strangled her throat and she gagged, retching over the floor. Sick spattered two rolls of fabric and a bundle of zippers dumped next to her machine.

Purchase from Amazon UK - https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1976908043/



MEET THE AUTHOR


Born in London to Greek Cypriot parents Soulla Christodoulou spent much of her childhood living carefree days full of family, school and friends. She was the first in her family to go to university and studied BA Hotel & Catering Management at Portsmouth University. Years later, after having a family of her own she studied again at Middlesex University and has a PGCE in Business Studies and an MA in Education.
Soulla is a Fiction author and wrote her first novel Broken Pieces of Tomorrow over a few months while working full time in secondary education. She is a mother of three boys.
She is a compassionate and empathetic supporter of young people. Her passion for teaching continues through private tuition of English Language and Children’s Creative Writing Classes as well as proof reading and other writing services.
Her writing has also connected her with a charity in California which she is very much involved in as a contributor of handwritten letters every month to support and give hope to women diagnosed with breast cancer. One of her letters is featured in a book ‘Dear Friend’, released on Amazon in September 2017.

When asked, she will tell you she has always, somewhere on a subconscious level, wanted to write and her life’s experiences both personal and professional have played a huge part in bringing her to where she was always meant to be; writing books and drinking lots of cinnamon and clove tea!

She also has a poetry collection, Sunshine after Rain, published on Amazon and The Summer Will Come is her second novel. She is currently working on a third novel Trust is a Big Word about an on-line illicit relationship that develops between two people.
Social Media Links –

Friday 23 March 2018

The Best Boomerville Hotel by Caroline James - Blog Tour & Book Review

I am thrilled to be today's stop on The Best Boomerville Hotel's Blog Tour - my review is below


Let the shenanigans begin at the Boomerville hotel …

Jo Docherty and Hattie Contaldo have a vision – a holiday retreat in the heart of the Lake District exclusively for guests of ‘a certain age’ wishing to stimulate both mind and body with new creative experiences. One hotel refurbishment later and the Best Boomerville Hotel is open for business!
Perhaps not surprisingly Boomerville attracts more than it’s fair share of eccentric clientele: there’s fun loving Sir Henry Mulberry and his brother Hugo; Lucinda Brown, an impoverished artist with more ego than talent; Andy Mack, a charming Porsche-driving James Bond lookalike, as well as Kate Simmons, a woman who made her fortune from an internet dating agency but still hasn’t found ‘the One’ herself.

With such an array of colourful individuals there’s bound to be laughs aplenty, but could there be tears and heartbreak too and will the residents get more than they bargained for at Boomerville?


What a fabulous idea, taking a run-down hotel and turning it into a retreat just for Baby Boomers like myself!  I would definitely book into this retreat and have fun meeting all the quirky characters and learning new experiences from Shaman to life models!

When Kate meets Andy it's lust at first sight, he is perfect, handsome, charming, intelligent, wealthy, but is he too perfect?  I liked Kate and enjoyed being with her on her journey.

A really good fun read that I didn't want to end.



MEET THE AUTHOR

Macintosh HD:private:var:folders:tl:krvp65ld3cv_z653hw2x916w0000gn:T:TemporaryItems:IMG_0022-200x300.pngCaroline James has owned and run businesses encompassing all aspects of the hospitality industry, a subject that features in her novels. She is based in the UK but has a great fondness for travel and escapes whenever she can. A public speaker, consultant and food writer, Caroline is a member of the Romantic Novelist’s Association and writes articles and short stories and contributes to many publications.

Her debut novel, Coffee, Tea, The Gypsy & Me is set in North West England, at the time of a famous gypsy horse fair.  The book went straight to number three on Amazon and was E-book of the Week in The Sun.

So, You Think You're A Celebrity...Chef? was runner up the Winchester Writers festival for best TV Drama and takes a light-hearted look at the world of celebrity chefs as they battle it out for fame and fortune. Coffee, Tea, The Caribbean & Me was runner up at The Write Stuff, LBF, 2015 and is an Amazon best-seller and top recommended read by Thomson Holidays. Jungle Rock, a romcom novella set in Australia, revolves around a TV game show.

In her spare time, Caroline can be found trekking up a mountain or relaxing with her head in a book and hand in a box of chocolates.

The Best Boomerville Hotel Links:



Ibooks/Google:  https://goo.gl/2aq7sz


Caroline James Links:






Wednesday 21 March 2018

Paradise Girl by Phill Featherstone - Book Review, Guest Post, Extract & Giveaway

As part of Brook Cottage Tours Blog Blitz Day I am delighted to be bringing you my review of Paradise Girl, together with an Extract, a Guest Post and a fabulous Giveaway!


Genre:  Nominally YA/NA, General Fiction
Publication Date:  27 January 2017
Publisher:  Matador



Kerryl Shaw has always kept a diary, but this one is different because she knows she is going to die.
A highly infectious and incurable virus spreads worldwide. Seventeen-year-old Kerryl lives with her family on a remote farm. They think they will be safe, but the danger advances. One day a stranger arrives, and it soon becomes apparent that he has brought the plague to their door.

Kerryl is sure it’s only a matter of time before she catches the infection and dies, and decides to record what she thinks will be her final days. She realises that her diary will never be read, so she imagines a reader and calls him Adam. Loneliness and isolation affect the balance of her mind. Little by little Adam comes alive to her, and she sets off across the moor to meet him.


Paradise Girl is one of those stories that stays with you for quite a while afterwards. I keep thinking about it even now and it's been several days since I finished reading it.
The voice of Kerryl comes through very strongly in the diaries she has written - one before the Infection came and one after, which she is writing now as she is the only one left all alone in her family's farm.
Her twin brother has run away, she doesn't know if he's dead or alive, she finds some clues on his computer as to why he has gone and she misses him terribly.
I really felt as if I knew Kerryl and felt so sorry for her, she must have been so scared on her own. I kept wondering how I would cope in that situation, probably not as well as she did! Her mind imagined noises and seeing people, but was it her imagination or was there someone there? That kept me reading on and on till I found out. Very skilful writing to keep me guessing!
I thought this was an amazing and fascinating read, it really captured my imagination from the start and I would recommend it if you're looking for something out of the ordinary.

GUEST POST BY AUTHOR PHILL FEATHERSTONE
Why YA?

A question I’m sometimes asked is why I write fiction for young adults. I suppose a good answer would be, why not?’ However, it’s a fair enough query. After all, I’m no spring chicken and anyone who looks at my photo on my Facebook or Twitter pages will see straight away that my own YA days are a long way behind me!

One answer is that I don’t always write in the YA genre. My latest novel - The God Jar - is a blend of historical and literary fiction, and unlikely to appeal to many teens. However, the one I’m working on now - The Poinsoner’s Garden - will probably be another YA.

I suppose one reason for this is that I like teenagers. I don’t teach now, but I used to teach English to teens, and one of the parts I enjoyed most was coming into contact with their ideas. To listen to them talking about their lives, their hopes and ambitions, their ideas and their reading was a huge privilege. There’s something inspiring about young people who come to things fresh with their ideals still intact and their lives before them. Sadly, of course, not all young people are so lucky, but many are, and I love watching how they grapple with the world and try to make sense of the million things that are happening to them and around them. And sometimes I wonder how on earth they can forgive us for the messes we make.

The question that started this ramble - why do I write in the YA genre - assumes it’s a deliberate choice I make. It’s not. There are authors who write with a particular genre in mind. Pick up book by PD James, John Grisham, Stephen King, and you pretty much know what you’re getting. For some authors the association with a genre becomes so fixed that if they want to escape it they have to take drastic action. When JK Rowling wanted to write thrillers she took the completely new name of Robert Galbraith (very brave, when you think of what clout her real name has). So there are some who establish a style and a clientele and write for it, and there are others who, when they begin a novel, have no idea of the genre they’re aiming for. I’m one of those. That’s why I said above that The Poisoner’s Garden will probably be YA. I write what I write because characters appeal to me and I want to tell their stories, and the genre will depend on who those characters are. Kerryl Shaw is seventeen, so her story - Paradise Girl - is likely to appeal to readers who are in or can identify with that age group. Much of The God Jar - concerns the Elizabethan magician John Dee, so that’s less likely to appeal to teens and more likely to interest older readers. I think the best answer I can give when people ask me who I’m writing is, ‘People like me.’

Finally, I’d like to tackle a couple of myths. The first one is to do with how some people think of the YA genre. I’ve often heard books described as ‘only’ YA, the implication being that writing for that market is somehow easier. It isn’t! I once had a conversation with a distinguished author of books for both adults and young adults, who insisted that the latter audience was by far the hardest to write for. Just because the protagonists are not fully mature doesn’t mean that what they do and feel and what happens to them isn’t worth the attention of the ‘literary’ reader. I can remember reading The Fault in Our Stars and a friend being astounded. ‘But that’s a kids’ book!’ he said. Good writing is good writing, and work by John Green, Suzanne Collins, Philip Pullman, Patrick Ness, Neil Gaimon and other greats appeals across age groups partly because it’s extremely well written, and also because it deals with matters that are of interest and concern to us all, regardless of age. Making the reader interested in and care for their characters is the mark of a good writer, regardless of what genre they’re writing in. One of the loveliest reviews I’ve had for Paradise Girl was from an experienced and respected book blogger, the wonderful Anne Williams. She wrote, ‘Don’t be put off by the “young adult” tag – although the clear voice is of a young girl on the cusp of adulthood, there’s absolutely no simplification or dumbing down here. This is a book full of fine writing that would appeal to any adult, even those of advanced years like me.’ I walked around for several days on a cloud after reading that, and t still cheers me when I get a less than enthusiastic review.

EXTRACT

Introductions are boring, but unless I take time to explain things it will be confusing for you. Me first. Not very polite, I know, but it’s probably the best place to start.
My name is Kerryl – or that’s what my family and friends call me. My proper name is Cheryl. Cheryl Alison Shaw. They call me the Paradise Girl. Don’t get excited – it sounds sexy but it’s not. I’m seventeen years old and still a virgin. I’m not a nun, I’ve been out with loads of boys – Tim, Mark (two of them), Nathan, Jake, Tristram, Steve – but I wasn’t that keen on any of them and they didn’t last. The exception was Mark II. He was older than me, fearsomely good looking and he had a nice car. I thought he was really hot. When I wasn’t with him I was thinking about him. But it seems he wasn’t as keen as me, and one day my best friend, Josie, told me that he was going out with Monica Woodbridge and saying I was a frigid cow. It seems everybody knew I’d been dumped and I was the last to find out.
The worst thing was the shock. I thought Monica Woodbridge was my friend. As well as that, all the girls in our group had been going out with the same boys for a long time, but I seemed to keep a boyfriend for only a few weeks. Was there something wrong with me? To be honest, I’m not a great beauty. I don’t mean I’m a train wreck or anything. I’m not bad looking, but I’m not like Charlene Brooker or Suzy Simmonds. They’re electric, both of them. Charlene could be a model, and Suzy’s always surrounded by a gang of drooling boys.
They’re gone now: Charlene, Suzy, Josie, Monica, all of them.
Sorry for the break there. I had to stop to have a little weep. I’ll try not to do too much of that. I suppose I can console myself with one thing: with everyone else dead, I must be the most beautiful girl in the world!

BUY LINKS
WATERSTONES - http://bit.ly/2jw1uFR

BUY DIRECT FROM THE AUTHOR AND GET IT SIGNED! http://bit.ly/2hE3lHY
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Phill Featherstone was born and brought up in the north of England. He trained as a teacher and taught English in comprehensive schools. In the late 1990s he and his wife, Sally, founded a publishing company specialising in education books for the early years. In 2008 the business was acquired by Bloomsbury, after which they moved to Yorkshire. He now spends his time writing, travelling, on the arts and on conservation work. Phill has degrees from Cambridge and Leicester Universities, and is a member of the Society of Authors. Paradise Girl is his third novel, although the first to be published.
Paradise Girl recently won a CHILL WITH A BOOK AWARD!
Twitter: @PhillFeathers

GIVEAWAY




Friday 9 March 2018

The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay by Nicola May - Cover Reveal & Prologue

I am thrilled to be bringing you this gorgeous cover reveal for The Corner Shop in Cockleberry Bay today


Genre:  Romantic Comedy
Publication Date:  9 April 2018
Standalone Novel
Estimated Page Count:  364



Praise for Nicola May’s books


‘This book will twang your funny bone & your
heartstrings’ – Milly Johnson
‘A fun and flighty read’ the Sun
‘A funny and fast-paced romp – thoroughly enjoyable!’  
WOMAN Magazine
*
Rosa Larkin is down on her luck in London, so when she
inherits a near-derelict corner shop in a quaint Devon village,
her first thought is to sell it for cash and sort out her life. But
nothing is straightforward about this legacy.  While the
identity of her benefactor remains a mystery, he - or she - has
left one important legal proviso: that the shop cannot be sold,
only passed on to somebody who really deserves it.
    Rosa makes up her mind to give it a go: to put everything
she has into getting the shop up and running again in the
small seaside community of Cockleberry Bay. But can she
do it all on her own? And if not, who will help her succeed -
and who among the following will work secretly to see her fail?
    There is a handsome rugby player, a sexy plumber, a
charlatan reporter and a selection of meddling locals. Add in
a hit and run incident and the disappearance of a valuable
engraved necklace – and what you get is a journey of
self-discovery and unpredictable events.

With surprising and heartfelt results, Rosa, accompanied
at all times by her little sausage dog Hot, will slowly
unravel the shadowy secrets of the inheritance, and
also bring her own, long-hidden heritage into the light.



Excerpt
PROLOGUE
‘Are you sure you’ve got the right person?’
Rosa took off her bright red woolly hat and scratched the
back of her head furiously, causing her dark brown curly
hair to become even more unruly.
The tall, pinched-faced solicitor nodded. ‘Yes, of course we
have. Evans, Donald and Simpson do not make mistakes.
You, Miss Larkin, are now the official owner of the corner
shop in Cockleberry Bay.’
He handed the bewildered twenty-five-year-old a battered
leather briefcase and pointed to a small combination padlock
on its brass clasp.
‘Here. The will stated that you - and only you - can open
this, using your date of birth.’
‘This is all very strange,’ Rosa said.  ‘And where exactly is
this Cockleberry Bay?’
‘Devon, dear, Devon.’  The solicitor looked under his rimless
glasses. ‘I take it you know where that is?’
‘I may have a cockney accent, Mr Donald, but I’m not
stupid.’
‘Well, open it then.’ The solicitor was shifting from foot to
foot in anticipation. He confided, ‘We’ve been wanting to
know what’s in there for days.’
Showing no emotion, Rosa gazed at him with her striking
green eyes and asked coolly: ‘Is there anything else I need?’
‘Er, no - but are you not going to . . .?’
‘I need to get to work.’ Rosa put her hat and scarf back on,
zipped up her fur-lined bomber jacket and headed for the
door. ‘Thank you so much for your help.’
     And she was gone.
‘Rude!’
The solicitor peered crossly out of the window of the
offices in Staple Inn and watched as the young woman,
the briefcase in her arms, strode across the frosty
cobbled courtyard and out into the bustle of London’s
ancient legal quarter.

About Nicola May



Award winning author Nicola May lives in Ascot in Berkshire
with her rescue cat Stanley. Her hobbies include watching
films that involve a lot of swooning, crabbing in South Devon,
eating flapjacks and enjoying a flutter on the horses. Inspired
by her favourite authors Milly Johnson and Carole Matthews,
Nicola writes what she describes as chicklit with a kick.


Follow Nicola May

Website - www.nicolamay.com





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