Wednesday, February 19, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery By Lois Cahall #HistoricalFiction #BiographicalFiction #WomenInHistory #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub @LoCahall @cathiedunn

 



In the heart of tumultuous times, amidst the grandeur of Victorian opulence, there existed an American socialite whose influence altered the course of the Anglo-Irish treaty:
Lady Hazel Lavery

Boston-born Hazel ascended from her Irish roots to become the quintessential Society Queen of Chicago, and later London, where she lived a delicate dance between two worlds: one with her esteemed husband, Sir John Lavery, a portrait artist to royalty, and the other with Michael Collins, the daring Irish rebel whose fiery spirit ignited her heart. Together, they formed a love triangle that echoed through the corridors of power at 10 Downing Street, London.

Hazel's wit and charm touched on the lives of the who's-who of England including Winston Churchill, George Bernard Shaw and Evelyn Waugh. The image of her memorable face graced the Irish note for close to half-a-century.

Book Title: The Many Lives & Loves of Hazel Lavery
Author: Lois Cahall
Publication Date: January 14th, 2025
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 340
Genre: Historical Biographical Fiction


Excerpt

The next afternoon John was painting a Lady Somebody-or-another who wanted her portrait to hang beside a Gainsborough in her husband’s ancestral hall. On the final day of the finished portrait, the Lady arrived with her husband who examined the portrait closely. His eyes roamed the canvas beginning at the head, then with his hand he traveled downward across the painting.

The husband finally spoke, “I pass the forehead and the eyes.”

“Very good,” said John, nodding.

“I pass the nose, the mouth, and the chin.”

“Excellent!” said John.

But then the man roamed his hands lower over the painting around his wife’s throat until he came upon her chest. “What is this flat-chested modernity that I see?”

“Pardon?” asked John.

“Where is the snowy amplitude of Her Ladyship?”

The man’s wife interjected. “I will not have an eighth of an inch added! I refuse!”

On cue I walked into the studio to interrupt, moving toward the painting but not before making eye contact with the husband. “So sorry, I think it’s quite lovely. Just as is,” I said to the man. “It captures her stunning beauty, her adoration of the man she’s gifted the painting to... you.” I let loose a big toothy smile and he smiled back.

“Well, if Lady Lavery thinks it’s fine...”

“I do... think it’s fine,” I said. “More than fine.” And I moved toward the wife. “Look at how beautiful she is and look how beautifully John has captured her… ah, sexuality ever so discreetly.”

“Yes,” said the man, inspecting the painting again. “By George, I think she’s right!”

And at that, everyone shook hands, and the deal was done. Off went the painting and the couple.

Left alone with John, I cornered him. “Sit, love, here.” And I pointed to the two chairs.

“Yes, my love,” said John, his tone suggesting he knew something was coming.

“It was lovely of you to paint Sir James Barrie last week. And it was so darling of him to gift me an autographed copy of his most treasured Peter Pan...”

“Yes, Hazel,” said John, wondering where this was all going.

“And I love when Sir Barrie dines with us. He’s always such a fan of my duck sauce.”

“Undoubtedly your biggest fan. Most certainly in the top ten of male admirers.”

“Right,” I said. “And I adore him.” I paused for effect, moving forward, and taking John’s hand in mine, the sun streaming through on various canvases and catching my expression just so.

“And he so loved when you did that portrait of him as a favor to me... the one where you made him pose as if working on that wooden bench, with the bench in semi darkness to camouflage his height. Would you say he’s about five feet?”

“Five foot, yes, dear,” assured John.

“And when I suggested we might donate the painting to the National Gallery of Scotland, well, he was thrilled and...”

“Hazel. What is the point?”

“The point is Mr. Barrie would love to meet Mr. Collins.”

“Mr. Collins?!” questioned John with sarcasm in his tone. “Is that what we’re calling that Renegade these days, Mr. Collins?”

“Well, it is his name,” I said, with sarcasm. John said nothing, only huffing under his breath. 

“Oh, Johnnie,” I begged, “please paint Michael Collins and the others from Ireland.” John eyed me up and down, the look on my pleading face not budging. “Just for historical reasons.”

“It would be fine, my love, except I have so many commissions lined up. And now I’m training Winston to paint, good God. Now they’re calling him my pupil.”

“Which, of course, is highly flattering,” I interrupted. “But you know it was me who taught him to paint. It’s how he got the bug to be an artist.”

“Yes, you certainly did,” said John. “And how you ever convinced him to paint a still life of an empty bottle of spirits and a crystal bowl of fruit...”

“Well, he was a lovely student,” I said.

“Oh, Poppet,” sighed John, using his pet name for me, then pulling back his hand from mine he
rested it in his lap with a deep sigh. “Darling, I just don’t know that I have the time...”
“Yes, but time does not count where a masterpiece is at stake,” I said, scanning his many portraits. “So, you will, won’t you Johnnie? Won’t you...”

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Lois Cahall

Lois Cahall began her writing career as a columnist for Cape Cod newspapers and local periodicals, including Cape Cod Life. She spent a decade writing for national magazines (Conde Nast/Hearst). Her articles have been published in Cosmo Girl, Seventeen, SELF, Marie Claire, Redbook, Ladies Home Journal, Reader’s Digest, Men’s Journal, and Bon Appetit. In the UK she wrote for RED, GQ, Psychologies, and for The Times. In addition, Lois wrote profiles for The Palm Beach Post. 

Lois’s first novel, Plan C: Just in Case, was a #1 bestseller in the UK, where it remained in the top three fiction for the year before selling into foreign translation markets. In July of 2014, her novel hit #1 on the Nook “Daily Deal” in America. Her second novel, Court of the Myrtles, was hailed as “Tuesdays with Morrie on estrogen” by Ladies Home Journal. Her latest novel, The Many Lives of Hazel Lavery, is a work of bio-fiction (January 2025) 

Lois is the former Creative Director of Development for JPE/James (Jim) Patterson Entertainment. She credits her friend, Jim, the world’s most successful bestselling author, with teaching her the importance of children’s love of reading. As a result, she founded the Palm Beach Book Festival in 2015, an annual event bringing in NYT bestselling and celebrity authors. The event is for book lovers, nurturing the written word for the children and adults of southern Florida. 

In 2024 Lois also founded The Cape Cod Book Festival, an annual autumn event that promises to be a new cultural footprint in Massachusetts. It will be for locals and ‘washashores’ alike – a magical place where charitably minded readers can rub elbows with great writers and thinkers.  

Lois divides her life between New York and Cape Cod, although her spiritual home is London. But most importantly, Lois can do the Hula Hoop for an hour non-stop and clear a Thanksgiving table in just under ten minutes.

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Sunday, February 16, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: The Fires of Gallipoli by Barney Campbell #TheFiresOfGallipoli #HistoricalFiction #WWI #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub @eandtbooks @cathiedunn

 



The Fires of Gallipoli is a heartbreaking portrayal of friendship forged in the trenches of the First World War.
 
‘In this vivid and engaging novel of war and friendship, Barney Campbell shows us once again that he is a natural writer. This is a novel of men at arms of the highest quality.’ 
~ Alexander McCall Smith

Edward Salter is a shy, reserved lawyer whose life is transformed by the outbreak of war in 1914. On his way to fight in the Gallipoli campaign, he befriends the charming and quietly courageous Theodore Thorne. Together they face the carnage and slaughter, stripped bare to their souls by the hellscape and only sustained by each other and the moments of quiet they catch together.

Thorne becomes the crutch whom Edward relies on throughout the war. When their precious leave from the frontline coincides, Theo invites Edward to his late parents’ idyllic estate in Northamptonshire. Here Edward meets Thorne’s sister Miranda and becomes entranced by her.

Edward escapes the broiling, fetid charnel-house of Gallipoli to work on the staff of Lord Kitchener, then on to the Western Front and post-war espionage in Constantinople. An odd coolness has descended between Edward and Theo. Can their connection and friendship survive the overwhelming sense of loss at the end of the war when everything around them is corrupted and destroyed?
 
The Fires of Gallipoli is a heartbreaking, sweeping portrayal of friendship and its fragility at the very limits of humanity.

Book Title: The Fires of Gallipoli
Series: n/a
Author: Barney Campbell
Publication Date: February 13th, 2025
Publisher: Elliott & Thompson
Pages: 320
Genre: Historical Fiction / WWI Fiction


Excerpt

Autumn turned into winter. The battalion moved a mile to the north-west of the blind crests to relieve a unit that was deemed combat ineffective following the twin heads of a failed attack and a virulent strain of dysentery that had torn through it.

Progress up to the line was appallingly slow, rivulets of loose earth and rocks running down the trench walls to line the bottoms with obstacles. To Edward, sleep-deprived and hallucinating in the cold, it was as though he was a giant treading through a twilit valley, the countless little landslips becoming mighty waterfalls tumbling down the sides into the plain below. His feet – as they stumbled on the pebbles and stones – were great hammers that crushed houses and villages. He realised he was grinning and that the sounds that punctuated his progress were his own short bursts of laughter. He took several gulps of air to snap out of it and hoped that no one had noticed him in that state.

The next day, the men got used to the tiny strip of ground that was now their home, titivating the line and getting to grips with the lie of their land.

And then came the evening. The normal weather of the daytime, no different from the hundred that had preceded it save for winter’s siphoning away its daily ration of heat, passed into a squally, adolescent late afternoon with fast-moving clouds scudding across the sky before a vast grey blanket was pulled across it.

At seven o’clock the first drops spattered down onto them, tiny pinpricks to start but growing soon to fat droplets that sounded like sleet as they hit helmets and hands clenched round rifles. They kicked up sand round the rims of the tiny craters they bored in the ground, soldiers craning their necks back to let them fall onto parched tongues. Within ten minutes, the rain had whipped up to a tempo that would not drop for three days, skin, uniform and ground all now equally saturated and the men sitting there like cattle, morale and discipline melting away.

After half an hour, Edward had never seen the men so low, so visibly deflated, so defeated. The wind picked up and up, each gust bringing waves of freezing rain onto their scant, thin uniforms. They started to shiver uncontrollably, some lucky ones seeking shelter under the flimsiest tarpaulins. Those who couldn’t sat in the bottom of trenches that had quickly become swamps, hands thrust into pockets, their necks bent forward over their chests as rifles were cast into the mud, sentry duties abandoned, anything military forgotten about. Each minute rammed home that the biggest threat to their survival now came not from the Turks but from the weather.

The darkness was total, with the moon entirely obscured. The mud grew into an ooze that sucked in anything that fell on it, a slick, slippy filth that afforded no purchase for their boots, the leather already sodden and chafing. Edward held off from looking at his watch for as long as he could, but eventually broke and saw its luminous hands tell him it was only nine o’clock; it felt like four in the morning. He was so cold that he knew that to sit and sleep might be fatal; he had to keep moving, so he began a lonely plod up and down the trench, slipping and sliding, cutting himself a dozen times, anything to keep moving, anything to encourage the men. 

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Barney Campbell


Barney Campbell, author of The Fires of Gallipoli, was brought up in the Scottish Borders and studied Classics at university. He then joined the British Army where he commanded soldiers on a tour of Helmand Province, Afghanistan at the height of the war there.

That experience inspired him to write his first novel Rain, a novel about the war, which was published by Michael Joseph in 2015. The Times called it ‘the greatest book about the experience of soldiering since Robert Graves’s First World War classic Goodbye To All That’.

Barney has walked the length of the Iron Curtain, from Szczecin in Poland to Trieste in Italy. He currently works and lives in London.

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Thursday, February 13, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Murder on West Lake by I. M. Foster #HistoricalMystery #CozyMystery #RomanticMystery #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub @IMFosterMystery @cathiedunn




A scream shattered the tranquil air, echoing off the ice-covered lake, and Daniel's heart froze. He knew that voice all too well.

After a pleasant afternoon of ice skating on the frozen waters of West Lake, local librarian Kathleen Brissedon stumbles across a gruesome sight in the nearby gazebo. It only takes a moment for her beau, assistant coroner Doctor Daniel O'Halleran, to determine that the victim was murdered.

To protect Kathleen from the ghastly sight of the man’s slashed throat, Daniel insists she return home while he examines the body further. Though the immediate cause of death appears obvious, he fears the subsequent autopsy will uncover more questions than answers, and it's clear that he has his work cut out for him if he's going to find the person responsible.

Kathleen has no intention of remaining demurely at home, not when there's a murder to solve. Slipping back to the scene, she conducts her own investigation. Though her discoveries prove interesting, Daniel is too concerned about her safety to stifle his annoyance, especially after the killer makes a second attempt closer to home. But as the puzzle pieces begin to fall into place and Daniel starts closing in on the truth, the killer sets their sights on him.

With the danger increasing, Kathleen intent on assisting in the investigation, and his family descending on Patchogue to spend the Christmas holidays, Daniel has his hands full. 

Will he and Kathleen be able to put their heads together and discover who is behind the attacks, or will the killer continue to plague the tranquil South Shore village unhindered?

Title: Murder on West Lake
Series: South Shore Mystery series – book #3
Author: I. M. Foster
Publication Date: December 9th, 2024
Publisher:  Inez M. Foster – self-published
Pages: 438
Genre: Historical Mystery

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This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.

I. M. Foster


I. M. Foster is the pen name author Inez Foster uses to write her South Shore Mystery series, set on Edwardian Long Island. Inez also writes historical romances under the pseudonym Andrea Matthews and has so far published two series in that genre: the Thunder on the Moor series, a time-travel romance set on the 16th century Anglo-Scottish Borders, and the Cross of Ciaran series, which follows the adventures of a fifth century Celt who finds himself in love with a twentieth-century archaeologist.

Inez is a historian and librarian, who loves to read and write and search around for her roots, genealogically speaking. She has a BA in History and an MLS in Library Science and enjoys doing the research almost as much as she does the actual writing of the story. In fact, many of her ideas come to her while doing casual research or digging into her family history. Inez is a member of the Long Island Romance Writers, the Historical Novel Society, and Sisters in Crime.

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Sunday, February 2, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Lalji’s Nairobi by Nitin Nanji #HistoricalFiction #AfricanHistoricalFiction #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub : @cathiedunn



British Gujarat, 1905.

Despairing of the social injustices and crippling taxes under the British Raj, Lalji, 19, flees to British East Africa hoping to build a better life using his natural business skills and acumen. But he soon finds unexpected dangers in his new home- turbulent politics and war with German East Africa- as well as some surprising opportunities. A combination of luck, coincidence, and his flair for commerce lead to early success. 

Then, just as he is at his most vulnerable, a new threat emerges from where he least expects: from within his own family. 

Can Lalji beat overwhelming odds to fulfill his hopes and ambitions?

A story about survival, faith, ability, humanity, and a deep desire to succeed.

Book Title: Lalji’s Nairobi
Series: n/a 
Author: Nitin Nanji
Publication Date: 30th August 2023
Publisher: self-published
Pages: 282
Genre: Historical Fiction




Excerpt

Janki could not contain her excitement and as soon as she reached home, she opened the small package from Lalji. She gasped so loudly that her Aunt Lalbai in the next bedroom heard and rushed in.

“What happened, Janki?” she asked urgently.

Janki was overjoyed at seeing a pair of silver payals (anklets), which she held across one palm, looking at the detail of the intricate design. Lalbai’s eyes lit up and she gasped, “Waah, what beautiful payals. The silver is so beautiful. Put them on, let us see what they look like,” making space for Janki to sit on the floor. 

Both struggled to fasten the soft metal, carefully placing the small hooks into their delicate clasps. As soon as they were on, Janki jumped up, held her dress shin high and stared at her ankles, taking small steps then long ones to get the tiny bells to jingle. With each step her joy multiplied and she was grinning more and more, with sounds of admiration from her aunt in the background.

Lalji had acquired the pair of payals (anklets) thanks to Mohan and his four partners. They were all in Mohan’s shop one day when Arjun Jetha called. He was a travelling soni from Surat in Gujarat who frequented Nairobi annually to sell his latest designs. Nairobi had yet to get a soni shop although Mombasa boasted four. Mohan was contemplating buying something for his sister and was looking at some gold bangles. He asked Lalji if he would like to buy something for his future wife and Lalji declined. He had never bought any jewellery in his life. The only jewellery he had ever touched was his mother’s bridal ornaments.

Lalji’s lack of interest made Nizar and Bhasker go over and take a closer look. Bhasker asked the soni if he would show them something for a young bride-to-be. Arjun Jetha opened his metal trunk and from somewhere in the depths brought out a cloth bag and loosened the strings. He put a red piece of velvet on the counter and brought out a few pairs of silver payals. None of them recognised what they were, so Arjun Jetha demonstrated how they were worn and showed the workmanship. He held up and shook them to produce the soft sounds of the tiny bells. 

On everyone’s insistence Lalji had a look and was about to walk away when he noticed one pair of interest. It had its little bells hanging from three tiny spheres, arranged in a triangle. He remembered Janki’s ankle tattoo of three dots. He touched the anklet and wondered how it might look on Janki’s ankle. The others noticed and Bhasker immediately volunteered, “I think this will be an ideal gift for your future wife.”

A chorus of agreement followed from the others and Lalji bought the anklets with cheering from all.

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*The ebook will be free to download on Kindle from February 4th – 8th, 2025*


Nitin Nanji


Historical novelist of Indian parentage, born and raised in Kenya, educated in England, writing about India and East Africa under the British Empire.
Nitin has come to writing his debut novel after retiring as a doctor. Born in Kenya before its independence he came to England at the age of fifteen. His parentage is Indian, his grandfather having moved during the British Raj from Gujarat in India to Colonial East Africa as an economic migrant.

'Lalji's Nairobi' is set in the early part of the last century, inspired by the stories of Indian migrants who settled in East Africa. A 'rags to riches' story of the experiences of Lalji as a determined young businessman who grapples with the challenges of living in the new colony.

Within the backdrop of a racist administration, Nitin immerses the reader into the times and norms of colonial society and shows how Lalji achieves rapid success despite difficult odds, leading a team of four compatriots from his village.

The novel is well-researched and retains the undertones of the era. Nitin's intimate knowledge of the three cultures of the colony (British, Indian, and African) succeeds in making this an enjoyable and authentic read.

'Lalji's Nairobi' is now an award-winning novel that recently won acclaim from the prestigious New Generation Indie Book Awards as a 'Finalist'. It also earned Five Stars and the 'Highly Recommended' award of excellence from The Historical Fiction Company, which has recently also awarded the book with a silver medal in the Blixen Africa Category.

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Wednesday, January 29, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: THE USURPER KING and THE ACCURSED KING (The Plantagenet Legacy) by Mercedes Rochelle #HenryIV #Plantagenet #Lancaster #Medieval #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub @authorrochelle @cathiedunn




From Outlaw to Usurper, Henry Bolingbroke fought one rebellion after another.

First, he led his own uprising. Then he captured a forsaken king. Henry had no intention of taking the crown for himself; it was given to him by popular acclaim. Alas, it didn't take long to realize that that having the kingship was much less rewarding than striving for it. Only three months after his coronation, Henry IV had to face a rebellion led by Richard's disgruntled favorites. Repressive measures led to more discontent. His own supporters turned against him, demanding more than he could give. The haughty Percies precipitated the Battle of Shrewsbury which nearly cost him the throne—and his life.

To make matters worse, even after Richard II's funeral, the deposed monarch was rumored to be in Scotland, planning his return. The king just wouldn't stay down and malcontents wanted him back.

Publication Date: 5th April 2021
Publisher: Sergeant Press 
Page Length: 305 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

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What happens when a king loses his prowess?

The day Henry IV could finally declare he had vanquished his enemies, he threw it all away with an infamous deed. No English king had executed an archbishop before. And divine judgment was quick to follow. Many thought he was struck with leprosy—God's greatest punishment for sinners. From that point on, Henry's health was cursed and he fought doggedly on as his body continued to betray him—reducing this once great warrior to an invalid.

Fortunately for England, his heir was ready and eager to take over. But Henry wasn't willing to relinquish what he had worked so hard to preserve. No one was going to take away his royal prerogative—not even Prince Hal. But Henry didn't count on Hal's dauntless nature, which threatened to tear the royal family apart.

Publication Date: 18th April 2022
Publisher: Sergeant Press 
Page Length: 301 Pages
Genre: Historical Fiction

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Mercedes Rochelle


Mercedes Rochelle is an ardent lover of medieval history, and has channeled this interest into fiction writing. She believes that good Historical Fiction, or Faction as it's coming to be known, is an excellent way to introduce the subject to curious readers.

Her first four books cover eleventh-century Britain and events surrounding the Norman Conquest of England. Her new project is called “The Plantagenet Legacy” taking us through the reigns of the last true Plantagenet King, Richard II and his successors, Henry IV, Henry V and Henry VI. She also writes a blog: HistoricalBritainBlog.com to explore the history behind the story. 

Born in St. Louis, MO, she received by BA in Literature at the University of Missouri St.Louis in 1979 then moved to New York in 1982 while in her mid-20s to "see the world". The search hasn't ended!

Today she lives in Sergeantsville, NJ with her husband in a log home they had built themselves.

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Monday, January 27, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: The Lotus House by Ann Bennett #HistoricalFiction #HistoricalRomance #AsianHistoricalFiction #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub @annbennett71 @cathiedunn





A gripping, emotional drama of love and courage set in the Philippines during WW2.

1960: Nancy Drayton, an American nurse living on Lake Sebu, is visited by a stranger who hands her some faded letters, given to her by a dying man. Reading them transports Nancy back to the terror of the war years.

1941: When Nancy’s world is blown apart by the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, she volunteers to travel to the Philippines to serve at the front. She soon finds herself working in a field hospital on the Bataan Peninsula in the thick of the fighting, experiencing the horrors of war first hand.

When tending to some wounded men, she meets Captain Robert Lambert, and they become close. But the Japanese are closing in on Bataan, and when the US surrenders, they are driven apart.

As Robert struggles to survive the horrors of the Bataan Death March and the brutality of captivity in a prison camp, Nancy too finds herself a captive, fighting for her life. Will they survive to find one another again or will the forces of war keep them apart?
If you enjoy compelling historical fiction, you’ll love this sweeping story of love and war. 

Perfect for fans of Kristen Hannah, Dinah Jeffries and Victoria Hislop.

Book Title: The Lotus House
Series: Echoes of Empire
Author: Ann Bennett
Publication Date: 9th October 2024
Publisher: Andaman Press
Pages: 337 
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Romance / Historical Asian Fiction

Praise

‘What an amazing read!!! I didn't expect this to be a roller coaster of emotions, suspense, and mystery but it was everything!!… The characters were amazing, the story will keep you wanting more and more until the end.’
Goodreads reviewer

‘So captivating, I was on edge while flipping through the pages as fast as I could… Truly heartwarming… Emotional, heartbreaking … I loved this… A must read… Amazing.’
Page Turners

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*Reduced to 0.99 for a limited time!*
This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.

Ann Bennett


Ann Bennett is a British author of historical fiction. Her first book, Bamboo Heart: A Daughter's Quest, was inspired by researching her father's experience as a prisoner of war on the Thai-Burma Railway and by her own journey to uncover his story. It won the Asian Books Blog prize for fiction published in Asia in 2015, and was shortlisted for the best fiction title in the Singapore Book Awards 2016. 

That initial inspiration led her to write more books about WWII in Southeast Asia – Bamboo Island: The Planter's Wife, A Daughter's Promise, Bamboo Road: The Homecoming, The Tea Planter's Club, The Amulet, and The Fortune Teller of Kathmandu. Along with The Lotus House, published in October 2024, they make up the Echoes of Empire Collection.

Ann is also the author of The Oriental Lake Collection - The Lake Pavilion and The Lake Palace, both set in British India during the 1930s and WWII, and The Lake Pagoda and The Lake Villa, set in French Indochina during the same period. A Rose in the Blitz – the first in the Sisters of War series and set in London during WWII, was published in March 2024.

The Lake Pagoda won a bronze medal for historical fiction in Asia in the Coffee Pot Book Club, Book of the Year awards 2022. The Fortune Teller of Kathmandu won a silver medal for dual-timeline historical fiction, and A Rose in the Blitz won bronze in the historical romance category in the Coffee Pot Book Club, Book of the Year awards 2024.

The Runaway Sisters, USA Today bestselling The Orphan House, The Child Without a Home and The Forgotten Children are set in Europe during the same era and are published by Bookouture. Her latest book, The Stolen Sisters, published on 29th November 2024 is the follow-up to The Orphan List (published by Bookouture in August 2024) and is set in Poland and Germany during WWII.
 
A former lawyer, Ann is married with three grown up sons and a granddaughter and lives in Surrey, UK. 

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Thursday, January 23, 2025

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: The World Turned Upside Down by Seth Irving Handaside #AmericanRevolution #UnitedStateHistory #FoundingFathers @cathiedunn #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

 



"The World Turned Upside Down" takes readers on an exhilarating journey through one of history's most transformative periods.

This masterful work of historical fiction follows the audacious British-American colonists, known as the Founders, as they boldly rise against the mightiest empire of their time: England. Their unprecedented struggle challenged the status quo and reshaped the foundation of global politics and human rights, ushering in the era of democracy. As the narrative unfolds with rich, immersive detail and dynamic characters, the story poses a profound question: after securing their hard-won liberty, could they preserve and nurture the fragile promise of a new world?

This compelling tale captures the spirit of revolution and the enduring quest for freedom.

Book Title: The World Turn’d Upside Down
Series: Volume 2 of 4 of Creating a Republic the American Way
Author: Seth Irving Handaside
Publication Date: November 30th, 2024
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 287
Genre: Historical Fiction


Excerpt

Politics

The water sparkled as the sun dove into the distant fast-flowing ribbon-like Hudson River. 
 
“To the “spirit of 76,” said the guests still on the veranda at Richmond Hill. 

General Wilkinson stood refreshed by his medicinal herbs and enjoyed the occasion. 

Wilkinson was again front and center for the next ten minutes, full of himself, but no one seemed to care.  “I do not think,” he said, “there was a moment where someone was not pointing the finger at someone else.”

“Be careful,” said General Willet, who caught Burr’s eye, “or he will give you another rundown of the Battles of Saratoga.”

Willet’s words made Wilkinson laugh so hard that he feared spilling his drink.  “It started,” he said, “in the army when Schuyler, Gates, and Arnold had concurred on the retreat from Crown Point.  A contingent of New England subordinate officers remonstrated to Washington, who rebuked the presiding officers without the fort’s abandonment facts.  As any man of honour would do, Schuyler asked for a court of inquiry from Congress, and upon it not being granted, he sent in his formal resignation.”  

General Willet, one of the many heroes who were under siege at Fort Stanwix, interjected, “The first of many because of his tinctured pride, that man possessed more vanity than leaves in the forest.  If I recall, Congress appointed a committee to investigate the northern department’s affairs, not with Schuyler in attendance but with his inferior, Gates, in command.” 

“Hamilton’s future father-in-law,” said Burr, “fumed about that.” 

Music did not come to Colonel Burr’s ears when the name of Schuyler entered the conversation.  He thought of his daughters, “Betsey” and Angelica, and John Church, Angelica’s husband. 

“The aristocratical Schuyler,” said Willet, “thought in terms of social class, believing himself more equal, an octave above.”

After considering the implications of this, Wilkinson shrugged.

Washington Irving’s curiosity heightened, considering the conversation one of the most entraining of his life.

His mind in a different time, Colonel Burr sat quietly, a little off from the others, not hearing Wilkinson.  He puffed his long seegar, thinking how Wilkinson could straddle the fence between Gates and Schuyler.  This straddling between political parties plagued him throughout his political life.  It dawned on him that the birth of political parties began with the battle between the Gates and Schuyler forces in Congress.  

Gates, a Whig, personified the future Jeffersonian Republicanism.  And Schuyler, the embodiment of the future Federalism of Alexander Hamilton.  One committed to freedom from the hammer of authority, and the other believed the privileged should be the rulers.  

The Colonel thought politics, the jewelry of vanity, sought out a point of access in Congress and, when found, impacted the lives of the innocent faithful soldiers.  

His epaulets highlighted by the light of several candles, General Wilkinson’s brow lifted.   

Above, the black roof of heaven bejeweled by glittering stars, he scanned his fellow patriots and Congress’s thought.  Nausea entered his tone, “They were like a wandering compass, rotating in vain, trying to direct victory but endangering the revolution.  Of course, they needed to organize a revolution.  Fund it.  Create an organization.  But they feared the military.”

Sighing, he walked the length of the veranda.  

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Seth Irving Handaside


Growing up in Putnam County in the town of Putnam Valley, named after General Israel Putnam, Seth Irving Handaside walked its roads.

He explored the hills and valleys that American rebels tread. But, he often thought, what would have done when the head of the state, King George III of England, ignored his rights and the rule of law?

Would he have marched to the tune of the revolution and been in a regiment commanded by General Putnam or sided with the loyalists?

Fascinated by American history since elementary school, politics runs in his veins. He has spent the last ten years researching and reading about the founding fathers and settled on six men, three boys not yet twenty, and three Virginians who risked having their necks stretched to make the American dream a reality.

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