Thursday, February 19, 2026

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Secrets in the Woods by Susan D. Levitte


Secrets in the Woods

By Susan D. Levitte


On October 8, 1871, fire turned night into a living hell.


While Chicago's blaze claimed the headlines, a fiercer and more devastating inferno swept across Wisconsin's Green Bay peninsula-obliterating farms, forests, and families in its path.


Here, among immigrant settlers carving new lives from the wilderness, survival came down to split-second choices: to run, to hide, to fight the flames. Mothers shielded children with their bodies, fathers vanished into smoke, and neighbors faced the firestorm with nothing but faith and will.


Inspired by forgotten accounts and newspaper fragments, Secrets in the Woods brings to life the untold human drama of one of America's most harrowing nights-a story of resilience, loss, and the fragile hope that rises from the ashes.


Publication Date: October 17th, 2025
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 269

Genre: Historical Fiction


Praise for Secrets in the Woods:

'This book will stay in your thoughts long after you finish it!'
~ Patricia Cords, 5* Amazon Review

Excerpt

A panicked horse burst through the opening in the trees and made a strange circling motion almost like a dog, then it snorted deeply and ran to the east. 

She and the children increased their speed to get to Cédonie and the children who must be heading to Sofie’s for safety. The trees were exploding, and the wind was whirling even in the dense forest. It was getting harder and harder to breathe and the blankets were nearly dry when she stumbled over what she thought was a log in the forest. Brought to her knees she realized it was three figures lying on the ground. 

Slightly raising the corner of the blanket they were under, she made out that it was Cédonie and her children. When she looked toward her neighbor’s house, she saw a wall of fire that they were not going to get through. The only option was to get to the well on their side of the trees. 


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Susan D. Levitte


Susan was born and raised as the fifth generation to live on the family land in Northeast North Dakota (nearly Canada). She moved to Wisconsin in 1997, living in Door and Manitowoc County and now resides in the pastoral Kewaunee County. Married to Quentin, they share their home with Olive and Penny, their silly Labrador retrievers, and Gil, their ever-lazy cat.

As a devoted reader of historical fiction and nonfiction, she brings her passion for history and desire to educate readers into her work. With twenty-five years of experience in global advertising and marketing, she holds a master’s degree in communications and currently contributes her expertise to the Green Bay Austin Straubel International Airport.



On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: A Theory in Vienna by Heidi Gallacher


A Theory in vienna

By Heidi Gallacher



Publication Date: October 28th, 2025
Publisher: The Book Guild
Pages: 305
Genre: Historical Fiction


‘I bring to light a truth, which was unknown for many centuries with direful results for the human race.’ – Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis. 

 

Imagine you’d discovered something. Something that could save hundreds of thousands of lives. But they wouldn’t let you tell anyone. Wouldn’t it drive you mad?

 

Young Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis uncovers the real reason thousands of young women are dying after childbirth. Yet, in mid-19th century Europe, his simple methods are ridiculed. Semmelweis faces the battle of his life to convince others that the cause is simple…

 

Based on the true story of a forgotten hero, A Theory in Vienna brings the remarkable story of this man to life.



Praise for A Theory in Vienna:

'A booked based on truth, and this novel didn't disappoint.'
~ Andrew, 5* Amazon Review




An interview with Heidi Gallacher

What inspired you to start writing?

I’ve always felt that I had a book within me. Writing became the way to find out what that book was - a way of turning curiosity and restlessness into something shaped and shareable. I took writing courses, culminating in a Masters in Creative Writing. What began as an instinct eventually became a discipline, yet the impulse is still the same: to follow the stories, like Semmelweis’s, that won’t leave me alone. This is the third novel I have written. 

What was the hardest part in writing this book?

The hardest part was the sheer commitment the book demanded. Writing it meant giving a great
deal of time to research - not just facts and dates, but the emotional texture of the period - and
trusting that this would eventually find its shape on the page. Allowing the book to unfold slowly, and accepting the patience that required, was difficult at times, but essential to telling Semmelweis’s story honestly.

Does one of the main characters hold a special place in your heart? If so, why?

Actually two characters do, in particular. Firstly Felix, whose quiet loyalty and friendship offered Semmelweis moments of grounding, and also Maria, Semmelweis’s wife, whose steadfast support carried him through even as everything began to fall apart. Both reminded me that even in the loneliest struggles, kindness and companionship matter. And not forgetting Semmelweis himself, whose incredible story is the reason for this book. He will always hold a special place in my heart. 

If your book were to be made into a movie, who would star in it?

I love this question and I feel the novel would lend itself well to moviehood!

For Semmelweis, I would choose Mark Rylance, whose quiet intensity and emotional depth feel
perfectly suited to the role. He has successfully portrayed Semmelweis on stage in the West End.

For Maria, I could see Catherine Zeta-Jones, who brings both strength and warmth, and for Felix,
someone like Paul Mescal - understated, humane, and quietly loyal.

What do you hope your readers take away from this book?

I hope my readers come away with a deeper appreciation for how change really happens - often
quietly, slowly, and through care rather than grand gestures. How perseverance will lead to results, and never to give up, especially if you feel the truth is near. I hope the book will encourage attentiveness: to overlooked voices, to uncomfortable truths, and to small acts of compassion.


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Heidi Gallacher


Heidi was born in London in the Sixties. She grew up in South Wales, UK and moved to Paris as a young adult where she taught English for two years. She currently lives in Switzerland and recently completed an MA in Creative Writing.

    Her first short story was published in Prima magazine (UK) in 2018. Heidi now writes historical fiction. Her first novel, Rebecca’s Choice, is set in Tredelerch - an old house in Wales that belonged to her family generations ago. This novel won an award from the Coffee Pot Book Club in 2020, Debut Novel Bronze Medal.

Her second novel, A Theory in Vienna, is set in 19th century Vienna and Budapest. It tells the incredible story of unsung hero Ignaz Semmelweis, whose life-saving discovery was ridiculed at the time.

Heidi enjoys travelling (the further North the better!), singing and writing songs, and spending time reading and writing at her Swiss chalet where the views are amazing.




Tuesday, February 17, 2026

On Tour With Yarde Book Promotions: Wolf of the Nordic Seas (Valiant Vikings Book 2) by Jennifer Ivy Walker



Wolf of the Nordic Seas
 (Valiant Vikings Book 2) 
By Jennifer Ivy Walker


Named after the Norse God of the Sea, Njörd grew up sailing, swimming, and fishing the fjords of Norway. Endowed with extraordinary senses, speed, and strength, he became known as Wolf of the Nordic Seas, leading lucrative Viking raids from the Baltic shores to the Black and Caspian Seas. When a Viking völva foretells his future through a seidr vision, Njörd learns that his fate and his mate—the siren with the sea goddess eyes—lie on the alabaster coast of Normandy in the distant Land of the White Chalk Cliffs.

Elfi Thorfinnsdóttir is a skilled shieldmaiden who seeks vengeance against the ruthless Frankish count who killed her brother and abducted her father in an attempt to seize her clifftop castle. But rather that submit to the count’s relentless demand for her hand in marriage, Elfi allies with Richard the Fearless—the Viking Duke of Normandy— and the Danish Jarl of Ribe known as the Wolf of the Nordic Seas.

As Elfi and Njörd discover startling secrets about their respective pasts, they find that the three Norns have entwined the threads of their fates not just as political allies, but as mates destined to fulfill a divine prophecy.

Wolf of the Nordic Seas— book 2 of the Valiant Vikings series set in tenth century Normandy— is a sizzling, scintillating blend of historical fiction, Norse mythology, paranormal fantasy, and steamy Viking romance!

Publisher: Green Mermaid Publications
Print Length: 357 Pages
Genre: Historical Romance / Norse Mythology / Fantasy


My Review

I don’t know much about Norse mythology beyond the basics, and I was slightly wary of starting Wolf of the Nordic Seas without having read the first book. That concern disappeared almost immediately. The story is easy to settle into, and it never assumes prior knowledge or leaves you feeling behind.

The mythological elements are folded into the narrative in a way that feels natural rather than instructional. Gods, prophecy, and fate are simply part of the world, revealed as the story unfolds rather than explained outright. It made the reading experience immersive without ever feeling heavy.

The romance is swoon worthy and believable.

This was my first time reading Jennifer Ivy Walker, and it left a strong impression. The writing is confident, the story engaging, and by the final pages I realised I was genuinely disappointed to be finished. A very enjoyable read that I would happily recommend.



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Jennifer Ivy Walker


Jennifer Ivy Walker is an award-winning author of medieval Celtic, Nordic, and paranormal romance, as well as contemporary romance, historical fantasy, and WWII romantic suspense.

A former high school teacher and college professor of French with an MA in French literature, her novels encompass a love for French language, literature, history, and culture, including Celtic myths and legends, Norse mythology, Viking sagas, and Nordic lore.







Friday, February 13, 2026

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Gradarius: Roman Equestrian Series by A.M. Swink




Gradarius
Roman Equestrian Series
By A.M. Swink


WAR IS ON THE HORIZON


Sworn enemies turned lovers, Decimus and Luciana face new challenges that put their love to the test. Decimus, haunted by his past, struggles with his feelings in the present. Luciana, when confronted with her old friend Boudicca's struggles, questions which of her loyalties is more important: her loyalty to Decimus, or her loyalty to her people? When sent to investigate a Roman traitor in Decimus's legion, both will have to decide which side of the coming battle they'll be on.


Rome and Britannia are hurtling toward a reckoning. Will Decimus and Luciana find a way forward together before war tears them apart?


Publication Date: October 18th, 2025

Publisher: Historium Press

Pages: 364

Genre: Ancient Historical Fiction / Historical Romance






Excerpt

‘Luigsech of the Cornovii?’ Boudicca stopped short, shock widening her bright eyes. ‘What in the name of Andraste are you doing here?’

She smiled ruefully. ‘I could ask you the same. We’re a long way from the lands of the Iceni.’

Boudicca’s face darkened. ‘We were bringing the tribe’s yearly tribute to the Roman scum.’ She gestured to the water. ‘It belongs to the gods now.’

Luciana frowned, regarding the woman. Boudicca, her childhood foe in the Beltane chariot contests, had always been a proud, fearsome woman. She’d refused to admit that her tribe’s horses could ever be bested, even when Luciana and her plucky mare, Belena, had done exactly that. She’d also been held up by Luciana’s parents as a shining example of everything that Luciana ought to be. Boudicca, they’d pointed out, had married for the sake of strengthening cross-tribal alliances. She’d borne children and risen to tribal leadership alongside her husband. She’d used her knowledge of the Romans to avert further retribution after a failed Iceni insurrection had stripped the tribe of their weapons. She had it all, and she still had time to breed and race ever-swifter ponies. If only Luciana, who’d resisted such a fate, could have done the same.

Looking at Boudicca now, Luciana felt vindicated in her choices. Though of roughly the same age as Luciana, the Iceni queen looked far older. Her noble features had creased with worry, her skin frighteningly pale and clammy. Her form looked a bit hunched bundled in its furs and woollen finery, despite the gold glinting from her thin hands and the beautifully struck fibula in the shape of a hare that held her cloak in place. Her long, bright red tresses, neatly coiled at the nape of her neck, showed streaks of silver amid their gold. The once fierce warrior she’d raced in her youth seemed a shadow of her former self.

Boudicca heaved a broken sigh, choking down her sobs. 'You did what you could, I suppose.’ She spun on her heel. ‘Come. I need to make sure my husband’s all right.’

Luciana and Tor fell into step with Boudicca. The trio fought the bustling crowds eyeing up trinkets and fresh-caught oysters hawked by merchants on the quay, heading west. Boudicca sharply veered when they reached the Walbrook’s marshy banks, clattering up cobbled Roman paths. 

‘I hope the gods enjoy their bounty, for it means our demise,’ Boudicca said bitterly.

Luciana matched her strides, frowning thoughtfully. ‘Surely, you can explain to the procurator and ask for an extension?’

Boudicca laughed. ‘Hardly! We’re already trying to pay off last year’s back taxes. The Romans won’t give us yet another extension.’

Luciana cocked her head. ‘Have things been so bad?’

Boudicca lifted her set chin, glaring straight ahead. ‘Do you have any idea how being unable to hunt has crippled us? With the droughts, we can hardly grow enough grain to feed ourselves, let alone set any aside to pay the Romans.’ She lowered her voice as they passed a group of uniformed legionaries in the street. ‘Too many have starved to death, and more still won’t survive the winter.’ She glanced at Luciana’s drawn brows. ‘I’m sure the Cornovii have been well-fed with the forests you have to hand.’

Luciana grimly shook her head. ‘The Cornovii are no more.’

‘What?’ Boudicca checked her step, bumping into a dark-complexioned sailor toting a heavy sack. ‘But old Suliac brought us word of a Cornovii troupe staying among the acolytes on Mona.’

‘That would be my brother and the warriors.’ Luciana ducked underneath a line of washing strung across the path. ‘The Romans killed the old men and the boys, including my father. The women and children live for now, locked in the prison of the Viroconium fort.’

‘How did you ever escape?’

‘I didn’t.’

When Boudicca stopped and turned to her, Luciana sighed. ‘I’m enslaved to a Roman officer.’ 

Sadness glittered in Boudicca’s pale green eyes. Her hand clasped Luciana’s. ‘It seems we have both fallen victim to their tyranny.’

‘My lady!’ A man with dark mustachios and a gaunt, wild-eyed look, gestured frantically from further up the street. 

Boudicca dropped Luciana’s hand and raced towards him. ‘How is he?’

Luciana whistled a wandering Tor to her side and followed Boudicca’s billowing yellow and black cape. She stopped just behind the queen’s shoulder and gasped. There, stretched out upon the ground and supported by his warriors, lay the mighty Prasutagus, chieftain of the Iceni.

‘Husband!’ Boudicca knelt, gently palpating the bruise at the back of Prasutagus’s head. The Iceni men closed ranks around her, nearly blocking the scene from Luciana’s view. She stepped forward and muscled in beside the wild-eyed man. She regarded the pair in shock, dumbfounded by the profound change time had wrought.

Luciana remembered Prasutagus as a tall, hulking figure, taller even than his formidable wife. There had been a power about his stern glare and deep voice, one that could intimidate his listener even when he spoke words of peace. As amenable as he was to Roman rule, Prasutagus hadn’t been a man you’d choose to cross. And yet, the figure before her was a frail, shrivelled old man. He was small, bent, having lost all semblance of bulk or muscle. The skeletal fingers that clutched at his fur cloak repulsed her as much as they fascinated her. The flesh had fallen from his face, leaving his eyes and cheeks sunken into his withered, wrinkled skin. His raven hair had greyed and receded from his brow, hanging in lank, thin strands down his stringy neck. A rheumy film had cascaded over his eyes; they gazed sightlessly beyond his wife’s shoulder, staring through Luciana into the sky.

His thin, dry mouth opened to reveal a largely toothless maw. ‘The…money…?’

Boudicca shook her head, taking one of his claws between her hands. She bent her head over it, holding his knuckles against her cheek. ‘We are doomed, my love.’

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A. M. Swink


A.M. Swink, the author of the award-winning Roman Equestrian series, grew up in Dayton, Ohio, obsessed with two things: books and horses. After a childhood of reading, writing, showing, and riding, she moved to Lexington, Kentucky to complete three degrees and work as a college professor of reading and writing.

She’s travelled extensively around Europe, exploring ancient sites and artefacts relating to the Iron Age and Roman era. She is fascinated by our connection to the past and the ancestral tether that draws us back into the mists of time.


Monday, February 9, 2026

On tour with Yarde Book Promotions: Quillan Creek and the Little War: Time Stones Book I by Ian Hunter


Quillan Creek and the Little War: 
Time Stones Book I 
By Ian Hunter

Jessie Mason lives with her nose in the pages of history. But she is about to discover that the past is a dangerous place where she doesn't belong, and knowledge alone is not going to save her.

In Jessie’s troubled life her aunt is the only constant and comfort she has. But when she inexplicably disappears, and Jessie uncovers her mother's Time Stone, that unhappy life turns unreal and terrifying.

She is summoned to a world in crisis, 250 years in her past, to three unlikely companions, and the aged Onondaga shaman, Nishkamich, who promises an education in the powers of the stones which they each possess.

Over one glorious summer, Jessie reluctantly settles to village life and the developing bond with her prickly friends, until they are forced to accept that their stones are being hunted through history.

But in the depths of winter, their friendship, their wits, and the very limits of their endurance, will be tested by an unforgiving Nature as war finally erupts around them.


Praise

"...the kind of book that one would forgo sleep to finish." 
The Coffee Pot Book Club

"...fantastical and riveting." 
booklife 

"...an exciting adventure for readers with unforgettable companions." 
The Book Commentary 


An interview with Ian Hunter

What inspired you to start writing?

I was probably seven when my father presented me with “Goalkeepers are Different” by the football journalist Brian Glanville. I remember, having finished the reading it, writing the first page of my own version. But page 1 was about as far as it got. In my early twenties, I had an idea which resulted in a couple of notebooks but nothing else.

I have always been fascinated by history, and whilst reading the set books of my Open University course, I realized there were glaring gaps in my knowledge. Outside of certain well-covered periods, an awful lot of our world history doesn’t get much coverage in film, TV and fiction, and I certainly never encountered it in school. I thought it would be interesting and fun to build a story around some of the lesser covered historical times and places. But to build a series, with a geographic diversity and a timeline extended over centuries, I quickly came to the obvious conclusion that if I wanted to develop the same characters through the series, they would have to travel in time.


What was the hardest part about writing this book?

Time was, without question, the biggest problem. From initial ideas to publication was almost a decade, as writing had to fit around full-time employment, family life and, still progressing, house renovation. In addition to the late nights, I remember writing notes and passages in the strangest places; in the car at half-time during our son’s football matches, a few times in Zürich airport waiting for last flight of the day, hotel rooms in far flung locations, wherever I had time to kill. 

But looking back, time was also a problem in that I had no deadline, no pressure and it didn’t matter how long it took, and so it took forever. But writing the first book was enjoyable. The second took around nine months from start to finish, proving to myself that I can do it quicker.


Does one of the main characters hold a special place in your heart? If so, why?

I think there is something of me in all the characters, but a lot of things which I am not besides. Jessie’s musical tastes mirror my own, and I wouldn’t have her listen to anything else. But as she and her friends developed, I could also see traits from other people that I know coming out. Without really planning to, I unconsciously projected specific people onto the character, and found myself thinking, what would X say here, or how would Y react in this situation.

I have one lead and three further main characters in the series and I would say together, they represent different aspects of many people I have met or known over many years, and, as such, are very dear to me.


What do you hope your readers take away from this book?

The book is primarily an adventure, so the first take away I hope would be simply to enjoy the adventure. But I also refer to my first answer earlier. The inspiration to write this first came when I started to research the huge gaps in my understanding of world history, still a work in progress. If a reader finished Quillan Creek, having enjoyed the tale and taken the characters to heart, then I would be happy. If it had also piqued an interest in the Native American culture and experience in the eastern Woodlands, or the French & Indian War and its contribution to the later American Revolution, I couldn’t ask for more.


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Ian Hunter

Books have been an important part of my life as long as I can remember, and at 54 years old, that’s a lot of books. My earliest memories of reading are CS Lewis’, “The Horse and His Boy” – by far the best of the Narnia books, the Adventures series by Willard Price, and “Goalkeepers are Different” by sports journalist Brian Glanville. An eclectic mix. My first English teacher was surprised to hear that I was reading, Le Carré, Ken Follett, Nevil Shute and “All the Presidents’ Men” by Woodward and Bernstein at the age of 12. I was simply picking up the books my father had finished.

School syllabus threw up the usual suspects – Shakespeare, Chaucer, Dickens, Hardy, “To Kill a Mockingbird” – which I have reread often, and others I don’t immediately recall. By “A” level study, my then English teachers were pulling their hair out at my “perverse waste of talent” – I still have the report card! But I did manage a pass.

During a 35 year career, briefly in Banking and then in IT, I managed to find time, with unfailing family support, to study another lifelong passion, graduating with an Open University Bachelors’ degree in History in 2002. This fascination with all things historical inspired me to begin the Time Stones series. There is so much to our human past, and so many differing views on what is the greatest, and often the saddest, most tragic story. I decided I wanted to write about it; to shine a small light on those, sometimes pivotal stories, which are less frequently mentioned.

In 1995, my wife, Michelle, and I moved from England to southern Germany, where we still live, with our two children, one cat, and, when she pays us a visit, one chocolate labrador. I have been fortunate that I could satisfy another wish, to travel as widely as possible and see as much of our world as I can. Destinations usually include places of historic and archaeological interest, mixed with a large helping of sun, sea and sand for my wife’s peace of mind.

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Tour Schedule







On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Secrets in the Woods by Susan D. Levitte

Secrets in the Woods By Susan D. Levitte On October 8, 1871, fire turned night into a living hell. While Chicago's blaze claimed the hea...