Sunday, May 10, 2026

Lady of Lincoln: A Novel of Nicola de la Haye, the Medieval Heroine History Tried to Forget (The Nicola de la Haye Series, Book 1) by Rachel Elwiss Joyce



A true story. A forgotten heroine. In a time when women were told to stay silent, could she become the saviour her people need?

12th-century England. Nicola de la Haye wants to do her duty. But though she’s taught a female cannot lead alone, the young noblewoman bristles at the marriage her father has arranged to secure her inheritance. And when an unexpected death leaves her unguided, the impetuous girl shuns the king’s blessing and weds a handsome-but-landless knight.

Harshly fined by Henry II for her unsanctioned union, Nicola struggles to salvage her estates while dealing with devastating betrayals from her husband… and his choice to join rebels in a brewing civil war. Yet after averting a tragedy and gaining the castle garrison’s respect, she still must face the might of powerful men determined to crush her under their will.

Can she survive love, threats, and violent ambition to prove she’s worthy of authority?

In this carefully researched and vividly human series debut, Rachel Elwiss Joyce showcases the complex themes of honour, responsibility, and freedom in the story of a remarkable heroine who men tried to erase from history. And as readers dive into a world defined by violence and turmoil, they’ll be stunned by this courageous young woman’s journey toward greatness.

Lady of Lincoln is the gritty first book in the Nicola de la Haye Series historical fiction saga. If you like richly textured female heroes, courtly drama, and fast-paced intrigue, then you’ll adore Rachel Elwiss Joyce’s gripping true-life tale.

Publication Date: February 27th, 2026
Publisher: Hedgehog Books
Page Length: 462
Genre: Biographical Historical Fiction / Medieval Historical Fiction




Praise for Lady of Lincoln:

"Joyce’s vivid prose and masterful storytelling immerse the reader deeply into the emotional landscapes of her protagonists, making their struggles and triumphs resonate long after the final page has been turned. This debut is not only impressive in its narrative depth but also remarkable in its ability to evoke thought and reflection long after the final page is turned."
 
The Coffee Pot Book Club 5* Editorial Review


An interview with Rachel Elwiss Joyce.

What inspired you to start writing?

I used to write a lot as a child – mainly stories about a princess who lived in a castle(!) but also timeslips. Historical fiction was always my favourite – even when I lived in the US for a short time, I was fascinated then by the stories of the Pilgrim Fathers and Native Americans. But English history – from Stonehenge to the Tudors, has always been my favourite.

I was never taught creative writing at school and, being good at physics, maths, chemistry and biology, I stopped dreaming of writing and immersed myself in a scientific career. 

But the desire to create my own historical fiction never left me and when my children studied for their English GCSEs and were taught creative writing, I could see it was possible.

One day, I just decided to start. I wrote my first novel (yet unpublished, as it needs a lot of work), set in 8th Century Lincolnshire. I loved researching it, I loved the world, the characters, and writing the story. In fact, I was hooked.

But it was when we visited Lincoln Castle that I came across the story of the remarkable Nicola de la Haye. I knew, with an absolute and surprising certainty, that I had to write about her. 

What was the hardest part about writing this book?

Lady of Lincoln was a work of pure passion, so I wouldn’t describe it as “hard.” I loved the research, the storytelling, and the challenge of shaping real people from history - alongside fictional characters - into a cast who felt vivid, complex, and alive.

The most demanding part was the more niche historical research. Historians often say that little is known, for example, about Nicola’s first husband, but I discovered that there was information out there. It was simply buried deep in contemporary chronicles. Some had never been translated from Latin; others had not been digitised or indexed. That meant going through them page by page, which was slow, painstaking work - but ultimately incredibly fruitful.

At times, it felt like finding buried treasure. I uncovered surprising and highly story-worthy details about both Nicola’s first husband and her uncle, including material I had not seen mentioned in any history of the family. Discovering those hidden sources of conflict - events that must have had a profound impact on Nicola and those around her – ended up being one of the most exciting and rewarding parts of writing the novel.

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

Nicola holds a very special place in my heart because she is the reason I wrote the book. I first came across her story at Lincoln Castle and was astonished that a woman who had played such a remarkable role in English history was not better known. The more I learned about her, the more I wanted to understand the girl she might once have been before she became the formidable woman who held Lincoln Castle against all comers. 

In Lady of Lincoln, Nicola is brave, but not effortlessly so. She makes mistakes, follows her heart when perhaps she should not, and often has to learn through pain, grief and responsibility. That is what makes her so compelling to me. She is not simply ‘strong’ in an easy, modern sense; her strength is earned. She grows into leadership through love for her family, her people, her castle and, eventually, through a hard-won belief in herself. I admire her courage, but I think I love her most for her loyalty: once she accepts that others depend on her, she will do almost anything to protect them.

The character many people tell me is their favourite is a secondary character – one of the castle’s garrison – called Saewulf. Saewulf also holds a special place in my heart because he is so much more than the rough soldier he first appears to be. He has grown up in the harshest of circumstances, the son of a woman who worked in a brothel, surrounded by poverty, judgement and violence, yet he is not hardened in the way people might expect. 

Saewulf loves his mother and sister fiercely, and that love shapes him. Saewulf is capable of brutal acts; he lives in a brutal world and has learned to survive within it. But he also has a profound respect for women, especially those whom society is quickest to dismiss or condemn. He can be frightening, even dangerous, yet he is also loyal, protective and deeply human. Through him, I wanted to show that honour is not always found where medieval society expects to find it. Saewulf has no noble blood, no polished manners and no easy life, but he understands loyalty, gratitude and respect in a way some far grander men never do. His devotion to Nicola matters because she earns it not through rank alone, but through seeing the humanity in him and in the people under her care.


If your book was to be made into a movie, who are the celebrities that would star in it?

Lady Nicola (main character) - Saoirse Ronan
Sir William FitzErneis, ‘Fitz’ (love interest) – Henry Cavill
Sir Gerard de Camville (love interest) – Pedro Pascal
Bella (best friend, daughter of Aaron) - Golshifteh Farahani
Gyda (old nurse and maid) – Brenda Fricker
Raghild (young maid) - Florence Pugh
Baron Richard de la Haye (Nicola’s father)- Gabriel Byrne
Sir Edwin (garrison commander) – Sean Bean
Saewulf (soldier) - Stephen Graham
Aaron of Lincoln (leader of Lincoln’s Jews) - Ben Kingsley
Baron Ralph de la Haye (Nicola’s uncle) - Mark Gatiss
King Henry II - Ciaran Hinds
Henry the Young King (Henry II’s rebellious son) - Timothée Chalamet
Sir William Marshal (knight) - Nikolaj Coster-Waldau

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

I hope readers come away from Lady of Lincoln feeling that Nicola de la Haye is no longer a forgotten name from the margins of history, but a living, breathing woman whose courage, flaws, loves and losses mattered. 

At its heart, this is a story about female agency in a world designed to deny it; about duty and desire, love and loyalty, ambition and honour, and the quiet strength required to protect others when power is uncertain and survival is never guaranteed. 

Nicola begins as a young woman taught to believe she needs a man to safeguard her inheritance and her people, but through heartbreak, betrayal, war and responsibility, she learns that true leadership lies not in birth or gender, but in courage, judgement, compassion and service. 

I hope readers feel immersed in the danger and texture of the twelfth century, while recognising something timeless in Nicola’s struggle for self-belief and respect. Most of all, I hope they remember her not simply as the woman who held Lincoln Castle, but as a woman who loved fiercely, endured deeply, inspired loyalty, and earned her place in history.





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Rachel Elwiss Joyce


After a rewarding career in the sciences, Rachel returned to her first love—history and the art of storytelling. Fascinated by the women history neglected, or tried to forget, she creates meticulously researched, emotionally resonant fiction that brings her characters’ stories vividly to life.

Her fascination with the past began early. At six years old, she was already inventing tales about medieval women in castles, inspired by her treasured Ladybird books and other picture-rich stories that transported her to another time. By the time she discovered Katherine by Anya Seton as a teenager, she knew the joy and escape that only great historical fiction can bring.

Rachel’s two grown-up children still tease her (fondly) about childhoods spent being “dragged” around castles, archaeological sites, and historical re-enactments. For Rachel, history and imagination have always gone hand in hand.

There was, however, a long gap between the stories of her childhood and her decision to write her own novel. The spark came when she discovered the remarkable true story of Nicola de la Haye—the first female sheriff of England, who defended Lincoln Castle against a French invasion and became known as “the woman who saved England,” Rachel knew she had found her heroine, and a story she was destined to tell.

Rachel lives in the UK, where she continues to explore the lives of women who shaped history but were left out of its pages.


Connect with Rachel:
Website • Twitter / X • Bluesky • Facebook • Instagram



Thursday, May 7, 2026

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: That Catskill Summer (Lived-In Love Book 1) by Bart Charlow



That Catskill Summer 
(Lived-In Love Book 1) 
By Bart Charlow


He wrote the book he lived. Now she wants to rewrite the ending.

For fans of the 1960s Catskills era of Dirty Dancing, this is a very different kind of love story.

Author Aaron Ben-Ami’s steamy novel, based on a failed youthful love affair in the "Summer of Love" Borscht Belt, is a sensation. Love was easy to come by in the resort culture of the early sexual revolution, but not so easy to keep. Now, as his story is being made into a movie starring Isobel “Izzy” Sandler, the past and present are about to collide.

Ironically, it was a chance meeting with Izzy that inspired Aaron to write the book in the first place—she was his muse. But as they grow close during filming, Izzy discovers the raw truth behind the fiction. She is the granddaughter of Elyse, the real woman who modeled for the novel’s lead—and Aaron's greatest "what if".

Set against the richly textured backdrop of a disappearing American era, That Catskill Summer is a story of what we miss in the moment and what stays with us long after. It is a journey through the humor, the heat, and the heartbreak of youth, told through the reflective eyes of someone who survived it.

Perfect for readers of emotionally rich, time-layered fiction who value reflection over resolution – and those who believe that a single summer can define a lifetime.

Publication Date: April 21st, 2026
Publisher: independently published
Pages: 318
Genre: Historical Romance / Literary Romance



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Bart Charlow


Bart A. Charlow is an author, consultant, and retired therapist whose writing explores the intricate intersections of memory, legacy, and the human heart. With over 45 years as a visual artist and photographer, Bart brings a painterly eye to his prose, capturing the atmospheric beauty and lingering shadows of the people and places that shape us.

Born into the carnival life of a Borscht Belt Catskills hotel family, he has never let the ordinary constrain him.

His first book, A Catskill Carnival: My Borscht Belt Life Lived, Lost and Loved, is a memoir of his early years in a unique setting, coming to terms with it and cherishing its life lessons. Pickle Barrel Tales: More Borscht Belt BS is the companion book of over 50 wry vignettes from several “mountain rats”.

A true son of the Catskills, Bart’s deep connection to the "Borscht Belt" Dirty Dancing era serves as the foundation for his storytelling. His novels delve into the complex emotional landscapes of mature characters, often focusing on the ways the past refuses to stay buried and how new love must contend with old ghosts. His latest series is “Lived-In LoveTM”, dedicated to telling realistic relationship stories with deep emotional connections, not the usual tropes.

Whether through a camera lens, a paintbrush, or the written word, Bart is dedicated to capturing the "circus of memories" that defines the mature experience.

He writes a regular column, “Bart on Art”, for The San Mateo Daily Journal.

Bart has been a favored speaker on TV, radio and in print media for decades and is recognized for his service in the United States Congressional Record.

Among honors he holds is the Jefferson Award for his community leadership and service.

He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife, grown children and grandchildren.




Monday, April 27, 2026

On tour with Yarde Book Promotions: Infidel: The Daughters of Aragon (Six Tudor Queens) by Nicola Harris

 



Infidel: The Daughters of Aragon 
(Six Tudor Queens)
By Nicola Harris


Born in the glittering courts of Castile and Aragon and forged in the shadow of war, Catalina de Aragón grows up surrounded by queens, rebels, and explorers. She is her mother’s last daughter, the final jewel of a dynasty built on conquest and faith, and the one child Isabella of Castile cannot bear to lose.

But destiny has already claimed Catalina.

Promised to Prince Arthur of England since childhood, she is raised to bind kingdoms, soothe old wounds, and carry the hopes of an empire across the sea. Yet, Spain fractures under rebellion, grief, and the ruthless zeal of its own rulers.

From the burning streets of Granada to the storm lashed Bay of Biscay, Catalina and her sisters must navigate a treacherous path shaped by ambition, betrayal, and the dangerous love of men who fear the power of queens. She learns to read cyphers, to read hearts, and to stand unbroken even as her childhood is stripped from her piece by piece.

And when she finally sails for England armed with her mother’s lessons, her father’s steel, and the ghosts of the Alhambra at her back, Catalina steps into her fate not as a girl, but as a force.

A princess.
A survivor.
A daughter of Aragon.

Infidel is the story of a young woman raised for greatness and destined to reshape the fate of nations. This is Catalina, as she has never been seen before. She is fierce, vulnerable, and unforgettable.

A sweeping, intimate portrait of sisterhood, survival, and the making of a dynasty, Infidel reveals the hidden lives of a woman whose courage shaped the Tudor world.

Publication Date: 5th March 2026
Publisher: ‎Independently Published
Print Length: 268 Pages
Genre: Biographical Historical Fiction | Tudor Fiction | Historical Fiction

A conversation with Nicola Harris.

What inspired you to start writing?

I have always been a writer, but I only began to take it seriously
when I became extremely ill. I didn’t have the energy to crawl to the end of my bed, but I could still use my laptop. I was eventually diagnosed with a genetic disability and writing helped me to cope with all my frustrations and the loss of my career. Writing became my lifeline and my passion because at last I had the time to write about what I really care about.

My research for Infidel began long before I ever thought of writing a novel about Catherine of Aragón. It began on a beach in Tenerife, years before tourism transformed the island. To a child, it felt like another world. The light, the heat, the colours, the food, the rhythm of life. 

I was fortunate enough to spend a great deal of time with a Spanish family who welcomed me into their home and their culture year after year. They taught me fragments of their language and, more importantly, the stories that shaped their history. Through them, I first encountered the world of Muslim Spain and the Catholic warrior monarchs who fought to reclaim it. It was impossible not to be fascinated.

What was the hardest part about writing this book?

There is a great deal of sadness in this story, because there was a great deal of sadness in Catalina’s early life. She lost people she loved. She witnessed the brutality of war. She learned to read cyphers and how to read people’s hearts. She watched her parents arguing over her father’s love affairs. She learned to stand firm even when everything around her was shifting. 

Her childhood was not soft or sheltered. It was an ordeal. She came face to face with native Americans who were snatched from their land and brought to the palace. I wanted to understand what forged her, what hardened her, and what gave her the strength she carried into England. Her resilience did not appear by magic. It was earned.

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

Catalina’s sister Juana is often reduced to the label Juana the Mad, but she was far more than that. In Infidel, Juana allows me to explore the moral questions surrounding the Muslim wars and the Inquisition. She is outspoken, intelligent, and unwilling to accept cruelty as the natural cost of faith. Through her, I could give voice to the discomfort a modern reader might feel when confronted with the punishments and persecutions of the age. Without revealing too much, Juana’s own journey takes her far from home, and the emotional cost of that distance shapes her view of the world. 

But my absolute favourite is Prince Jaun who is the heir to the throne. He is silly, cheeky and everything an older brother should be. He gets away with so much more than his siters because he is the heir and even when his mother Isabella of Castile is angry with him she still calls him “my angel”. 

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

Everyone knows Catherine of Aragon’s story in England as the first wife of Henry VIII but almost no one knows what she endured in Spain to make her so strong. That’s the story I wanted to tell. When at the very end Catalina steps on the ship to England armed with her mother’s lessons and her father’s steel and with the ghosts of the Alhunbra at her back. Catlina will step into her fate not as a girl but as a force. A Princess, a survivor and a daughter of Aragon. 


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Nicola Harris


I’ve always been a writer, but it was only when illness forced me to stop everything that I finally had the time to write a novel. After decades of misdiagnosis, I learned I was born with a serious genetic condition, not rare, but profoundly misunderstood. The clues were there from birth, and suddenly, a lifetime of struggle made sense.

Writing became my lifeline: a way to step beyond my pain, to shape my experience into a story, and to find meaning where there had once been only endurance.

I have a lifelong love of children, Counselling, and Psychotherapy Theory and history.






On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Sarah’s Destiny (The Ancestors) by Vicky Adin



Sarah's Destiny
(The Ancestors)
By Vicky Adin


Young Sarah Daniels is the heart, soul and future of The White Hart Inn on the Welsh Back. Alongside the quay and wharves on Bristol’s floating harbour, she dreams of finding love, and a destiny where she can escape the drudgery and tragedy that life usually delivers Victorian women. But dreams are free, and few share her ideals. When reality strikes, and Sarah learns the hard way that life is unkind, one man offers her hope.

Through many decades of heart-aching loss, false promises and broken dreams, the young widow clings to that one hope. With six children to care for, she takes risks few others would consider. She breaks conventions and makes sacrifices to keep that hope alive.

Will her wishes come true, or is she destined to be another unfortunate in the sea of many?


Publication Date: April 9th, 2025
Publisher: AM Publishing New Zealand
Pages: 354
Genre: Historical Fiction / Women's Historical Fiction

A conversation with historical fiction author, Vicky Adin.

What inspired you to start writing?

Are you asking only about this book or the previous nine? Either way, the answer is the same – genealogy.

In my teens I came from a family of two until I married. My husband was one of six, his father one of nine, his grandfather one of seven. Add in spouses and children, their partners and children, and I had married a village. The only way I could untangle the names, nicknames, and generations was to create a family tree. 

From there my genealogy journey began and continues to this day. I love running down rabbit holes and following branches that lead to limbs, that leads to twigs, that may offer me another clue. Along the way, I discover amazing stories of resilience, of strength and determination, of love and loss. I am always astonished how stoic women were and with few laws to protect them, often made a fulfilling life for themselves. They deserve to have their stories told. 

While I have written two books inspired by my husband’s ancestors, Sarah’s Destiny is inspired by one of my own. 

What was the hardest part about writing this book?

The location. I’m a Welsh born, Cornish raised first generation Kiwi girl who married a fourth generation Kiwi bloke with Scottish, Irish, and English roots. My previous stories have all been set in New Zealand. Sarah’s story could only be set in Bristol during the Victorian era, a place I had never visited. 

I had little choice but to do extensive research. I think I utilised every repository of historical information available in Bristol including family history groups, bloggers writing about the Lost Pubs of Bristol, public transport history, seafarer’s lists, archived and interactive maps, council and government archives, engineering organisations and many, many more. Google Earth gave me the opportunity to ‘follow’ in the footsteps of my ancestors as I ‘wandered’ around the city, both old and modern, making connections and pinpointing buildings and institutions that had she would have known, seen built, or had not in existence at the time. 

The Bristol dialect and unique words also had to be taken into consideration when writing dialogue. I visited many websites, learnt new words, and listened to many pronunciations trying to capture the essence at least. I would never claim I mastered the nuances, but hopefully I signalled my best intention.

A major historical event, of course, was the construction of the Bristol Suspension Bridge and what that meant to an already productive and progressive city moving towards the 20th century. The bridge’s dedicated website and the newspaper archives provided far too much material about the construction, the delays, the arguments, and the financial constraints until culminating eventually in celebration with all its pomp and ceremony. Deciding what to include and what to leave out was a challenge.

Equally, the maritime history of Bristol was huge. Long before the construction of the famous floating harbour in 1809, shipping had been a vital part of Bristol’s economy and way of life for several hundred years. Coastal trade, especially between Wales using specially designed and built trows, boats with collapsible masts that could navigate under the many bridges, flourished despite the many dangers of crossing the notorious Bristol Channel. Add in the Crimean war and Bristol was a city of great importance. 

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

That would have to be Sarah herself. The real Sarah. I could hardly believe what the records of her life were telling me. Victorian England was known for its rigid morals and codes, yet Sarah defied them all for one reason, and one reason only. Love. She made sacrifices. She accepted censure and isolation and never wavered. Decades later her reward made it all worthwhile. What more could you ask? Her story was too compelling to forget. 

Although, I do have a soft spot for the totally fictitious Ethel, the chattering, kind-hearted and loyal servant who enables Sarah’s misdemeanours. 

If your book was to be made into a movie, who are the celebrities that would star in it?

That’s a bit like asking a dinosaur if they could imagine an aeroplane. The actors I know and love from my youth are as old as me. They are no longer anything like the bright young Sarah we first meet, but as she ages, as life delivers its knocks, someone like Clare Foy or Meryl Streep – character actresses with depth – could bring her determination to life. 

However, I still remember seeing a young Colin Firth, as Mr Darcy the romantic figure in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, walking out of the lake. As he’s aged, his ability to add depth and authenticity to a character would definitely suit Sarah’s love interest. 

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

That love conquers all. I know it’s considered a cliched phrase these days but it was first authored by the Roman poet Virgil (around 37BC according to history) “Love conquers all; let us, too, yield to love!” to suggest that love had the power to overcome obstacles and hardships.

I hope readers will gain the sense that the intrinsic nature of humans has changed little down the generations and over centuries and that true love is the ultimate goal. For Sarah, love gave her the power to overcome, and remain steadfast throughout – and to endure. 


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Vicky Adin



Like the characters in her books, Vicky has a passion for family history and a love of old photos, antiques, and treasures from the past. After researching the history of the time and place, and realising the hardships many people suffered, Vicky knew she wanted to write their stories. Tales of love and loss, and triumph over adversity. Her latest release, Sarah’s Destiny, Book 1 of The Ancestors series, is inspired by a true love story set in Bristol.

Vicky particularly enjoys writing inter-generational sagas, inspired by true stories of early immigrants to New Zealand, linked by journals, letters, photographs, and heirlooms.

She’s an avid reader of historical novels, family sagas and women’s stories and loves to travel when she can. She has a MA (Hons) in English and Education. Her story of Gwenna won gold in The Coffee Pot Book Club Women’s Historical Fiction Book of Year in 2022 and several of her books carry the gold B.R.A.G medallion.

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Thursday, April 23, 2026

On tour with Yarde Book Promotions: Another Soul Saved by John Anthony Miller

 


Another Soul Saved 
By John Anthony Miller


Vienna, 1941

Monika Graf, the wife of a wealthy Austrian military commander, steals two Jewish girls from the Nazis—a crime often punishable by death. With soldiers in rapid pursuit, a homeless Jew named Janik, a mysterious man who lurks in the shadows, helps her escape.

Unable to have children of her own, she finds a new purpose in life—rescuing Jewish children from the horrendous Nazi regime. She asks the Swiss for help, trading military secrets she gleans from her husband for the lives of Jewish children. With Janik’s continued support, she also enlists Father Christoff, a priest at St. Stephen's Cathedral coping with unexpected emotions and doubting his commitment to God. Monika quickly forms bonds that can’t be broken, feelings exposed she never knew existed. 

Relentlessly pursued by Gestapo Captain Gustav Kramer, Monika combats continuing risk to her clandestine operation. When her husband, a rabid Nazi, returns from the battlefield severely wounded, she gets caught in a cage that she can’t crawl out of.

Wrought with danger, riddled with romance, Another Soul Saved shows humanity at both its best and worst in a classic struggle of good versus evil.

Publication Date: April 1, 2026
Publisher: Independent
Pages: 415
Genre: Historical Fiction

A conversation with John Anthony Miller

What inspired you to start writing?

A love of history, travel, and reading served as my initial inspiration—and it still does. I write all thing historical—thrillers, mysteries and romance—and I’ve published nineteen books and ghostwritten two others. My books have common themes: exotic locations, ordinary people fighting demons both real and imagined, and interesting historical periods.

What was the hardest part about writing this book?

Another Soul Saved is a Holocaust novel set in Vienna, Austria at the outset of WWII. The citizens of Austria had voted to become part of Greater Germany, and 99% of the people approved of Hitler’s policies. It was difficult to write with the voice of the 1% who didn’t—those who risked their lives to save others, knowing that friends, neighbours, and even family members could betray them.  

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

Monika Graf is the main character who holds a special place in my heart. She’s a wealthy woman who risks everything to rescue Jewish children, with no recognition or reward, betraying both her country and her husband. As I wrote her story, and her character developed, I couldn’t help wondering how many of us would be as strong and selfless as she was.

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

I would like my readers to take two things away from the book. The first is the historical aspect—the brutal Nazi regime of the Second World War, and those brave few who defied it. The second is that a single person can positively impact many lives, even in ways most wouldn’t expect. 


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John Anthony Miller


John Anthony Miller writes all things historical—thrillers, mysteries, and romance. He sets his novels in exotic locations spanning all eras of space and time, with complex characters forced to face inner conflicts—fighting demons both real and imagined. He’s published twenty novels and ghostwritten several others, including Another Soul Saved. He lives in southern New Jersey.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

On tour with The Coffee Pot Book Club: Bride of the Devil: Agnes, Wife of Robert de Belleme (Medieval Babes) by J.P. Reedman


Bride of the Devil:
Agnes, Wife of Robert de Belleme

Medieval Babes
By J.P. Reedman



She is a great heiress; he is the wickedest man in Normandy.

Known to men far and wide as 'The Devil,' Robert de Belleme terrorises France alongside his equally fearsome mother, Mabel the Poisoner. But even a Devil needs an heir, and Mabel chooses the wealthy heiress Agnes of Ponthieu to be her son's bride. The marriage is unhappy, though the longed-for son and heir is eventually born...but when Robert is away on one of his military campaigns, Agnes flees back to her father's castle.

She is not safe; her young son William is not safe.

The Devil will seek to claim his own.

BOOK 13 IN THE MEDIEVAL BABES SERIES.


Publication Date: August 4th, 2025
Publisher: independently published
Pages: 248
Genre: Historical Biographical Fiction / Medieval Fiction

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J.P. Reedman


J.P. Reedman was born in Canada but has lived in the U.K. for over 30 years. Interests include folklore and anthropology, prehistoric archaeology (neolithic/bronze age Europe; ritual,burial & material culture), as well as The Wars of the Roses and the rest of the medieval era. Novels include the popular  I, Richard Plantagenet series about Richard III, The Falcon and the Sun (featuring other members of the House of York), and Medieval Babes, an ongoing series about lesser-known medieval queens and noblewomen.


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Lady of Lincoln: A Novel of Nicola de la Haye, the Medieval Heroine History Tried to Forget (The Nicola de la Haye Series, Book 1) by Rachel Elwiss Joyce

A true story. A forgotten heroine. In a time when women were told to stay silent, could she become the saviour her people need? 12th-century...