Giveaway: The Visitors by Catherine Burns

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One of the delights of being a book blogger is that I get access to so many wonderful books. Today, thanks to the lovely folk at Legend Press I’m able to share the book love as part of the paperback launch celebrations for The Visitors by Catherine Burns by offering UK readers a chance to win a paperback copy of the book.

The Visitors is published by Legend Press and is available for purchase here.

The Visitors

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Marion Zetland lives with her domineering older brother John in a crumbling mansion on the edge of a northern seaside resort. A timid spinster in her fifties who still sleeps with teddy bears, Marion does her best to live by John’s rules, even if it means turning a blind eye to the noises she hears coming from behind the cellar door…and turning a blind eye to the women’s laundry in the hamper that isn’t hers.

For years, she’s buried the signs of John’s devastating secret into the deep recesses of her mind–until the day John is crippled by a heart attack, and Marion becomes the only one whose shoulders are fit to bear his secret. Forced to go down to the cellar and face what her brother has kept hidden, Marion discovers more about herself than she ever thought possible.

As the truth is slowly unraveled, we finally begin to understand: maybe John isn’t the only one with a dark side…

The Visitors Giveaway

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Now I don’t know about you, but reading that blurb above makes me desperate to read Catherine Burns’ The Visitors! If you live in the UK and would like to enter to be in with a chance to win your own copy of the book, click here.

UK ONLY I’m afraid. Giveaway closes at UK midnight on Friday 8th June 2018.

About Catherine Burns

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Born in Manchester, Catherine Burns is a graduate of Trinity College Cambridge. She worked as a bond trader in London before studying at the Moscow Institute of Film, and teaching film theory at Salford University. The Visitors is her debut novel.

You can follow Catherine on Twitter @C_Burnzi and there’s more with these other bloggers too:

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Missing Pieces by Laura Pearson

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My enormous thanks to Lucy Irvine at Ipso Books for a copy of Missing Pieces by Laura Pearson in return for an honest review.

Missing Pieces will be published by Ipso, now Agora Books, on 21st June 2018 and is available for purchase here.

Missing Pieces

Missing pieces

What if the one thing that kept you together was breaking you apart?

All Linda wants to do is sleep. She won’t look at her husband. She can’t stand her daughter. And she doesn’t want to have this baby. Having this baby means moving on, and she just wants to go back to before. Before their family was torn apart, before the blame was placed.

Alienated by their own guilt and struggling to cope, the Sadler family unravels. They grow up, grow apart, never talking about their terrible secret.

That is until Linda’s daughter finds out she’s pregnant. Before she brings another Sadler into the world, Bea needs to know what happened twenty-five years ago. What did they keep from her? What happened that couldn’t be fixed?

A devastating mistake, a lifetime of consequences. How can you repair something broken if pieces are missing?

My Review of Missing Pieces

The Sadler family is in freefall after the death of Phoebe, with consequences that will last decades.

I’m seated here unable to write a review. I’m stunned after reading Missing Pieces by Laura Pearson. Stunned with grief at the events in this heart rending story. Stunned with astonishment at such a beautifully wrought work and stunned by my inadequacy at expressing what a powerful and utterly incredible experience it is to read Missing Pieces.

There’s a mystery and claustrophobia underpinning the narrative that the reader guesses at, making them almost complicit in the blame and guilt. The confined sense of rage, fear, obsession, love and devastation is enhanced by the narrow cast of characters so that I felt the level of crushing entrapment Linda experiences very vividly myself. The Sadler family is utterly extraordinary and simultaneously completely mundane, making the reader realise all too vividly that the Sadler lives, their relationships and their grief could happen to any one of us in the blink of an eye.

I loved the structure of the book, from the dated numbered days ‘after’ to the two distinct sections because they illustrated so clearly how the events reverberate through time. However, what impressed me most and gave me incredible joy, despite reading what is a devastating picture of grief, is the exquisite quality of the writing. Laura Pearson’s style is taut, intense, varied, smooth and natural. Not a word is wasted. She has the ability to look into the very souls of humanity in her characters and lay them bare for her readers to find themselves reflected. Hers is some of the most skilful writing I have read in a very long time.

I’m quite an emotional reader and felt an almost physical ache in my heart as I read. I fully expected I’d cry but I didn’t. Not because Missing Pieces isn’t emotional, but because I had the feeling that if I let myself give in to the emotions it was engendering in me, I might never recover.

If I’m honest, I feel somewhat overawed by Laura Pearson’s Missing Pieces. Its pure genius. It’s raw, vital and almost overwhelming. Outstanding.

About Laura Pearson

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Laura Pearson lives in Leicestershire with her husband and their two children. Missing Pieces is her first novel.

You can follow Laura on Twitter @LauraPAuthor and visit her website for more information. You can also find Laura on Facebook.

Staying in with Lana Grace Riva

Happier Thinking

Staying in with Lana Grace Riva

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Lana. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Thank you for inviting me, it’s lovely to be here.

Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

Happier Thinking

I’ve brought my only book Happier Thinking. It’s a collection of tips and methods for looking after your mental health.

(I think we could all do with some of that advice at times Lana.)

What can we expect from an evening in with Happier Thinking?

It’s a short non-fiction read offering some options to try for exercising your mind. I know the word exercise is not always overly appealing. However, mind exercises at least don’t involve the effort of changing clothes, paying for equipment, risk of inflicting pain on originally perfectly pain free muscles… etc.

(Good point – and we still need to look after our minds as much as our bodies.)

In the same way there are many options for choice of physical exercise, there are many options for looking after your mental health – meditation, mindfulness, seeing a therapist, or smaller simple little exercises that you don’t need much training to try out yourself. This book focuses on the latter and concentrates on a different tip/exercise in each chapter. Different things work for different people so it might be a little presumptuous of me to tell you that every single chapter will benefit you greatly… but hopefully some will resonate with you.

(I’ll look forward to trying out your suggestions Lana and finding some that work best for me.)

Mental health is thankfully receiving more focus currently and I have spent a long time working out how I can look after mine. The result of that time is this book. Initially because if I didn’t write it down I would forget it. But later because I wanted to share it in case, even if in a small way, it might help another person.

(What a wonderful premise for Happier Thinking.)

What else have you brought along and why?

chocolate

I’ve brought some hot chocolate because well… it’s chocolate. And that always makes my thinking happier. Plus it’s in warm comforting drinkable form, giving the effect of having a nice cup of tea at the same time. My perfect accompaniment to reading. I hope it might be yours too. Otherwise, I will force myself to drink your cup as well as mine as it would not be good to be wasteful 😊

(No chance of that! I love hot chocolate. Maybe we should try out some of your suggestions from Happier Thinking as we relax and drink it?)

Thank you for staying in with me to chat about Happier Thinking. I really hope the book does well for you and helps your readers along the way.

Happier Thinking

Happier Thinking

Changing how you think is possible. I wasn’t always so sure that was true until I experienced it myself, but I know now we don’t have to just accept unhappiness. Not always anyway. This book is my collection of tips and suggestions that have helped me achieve happier thinking. It’s sort of a gym for my mind. I’d love to tell you it was easier than the real gym but well… it’s not really. It takes time, effort, and practice but it’s absolutely well worth the rewards.

Happier Thinking is available for purchase here.

About Lana Grace Riva

Lana Grace Riva has always loved reading but is new to writing. Her book Happier Thinking is based on her personal experience of investigating how the mind works and finding ways to maintain good mental health. She loves to learn about mindfulness, meditation, mind and body health, and is always on the lookout for ways to challenge how she lives to make improvements for both herself and others. She is currently based in the UK.

You can visit Lana’s website.

Discussing Sunshine and Sweet Peas In Nightingale Square with Heidi Swain

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You know, it’s a real privilege to be able to close this very special Sunshine and Sweet Peas In Nightingale Square blog tour for lovely Heidi Swain. I’ve met Heidi several times in real life as well as virtually and she’s just wonderful.

It’s far too long since I read and reviewed Heidi’s Mince Pies and Mistletoe at the Christmas Market here, so I’m thrilled to be staying in with her today to chat all about Sunshine and Sweet Peas In Nightingale Square.

Published by Simon and Schuster on 31st May 2018, Sunshine and Sweet Peas In Nightingale Square is available for purchase through the publisher links here.

Sunshine and Sweet Peas In Nightingale Square

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Kate is on the run from her almost-divorced husband who is determined to have her back, and she has found the perfect place to hide… a little cottage on Nightingale Square in Norwich, far away from her old life in London. But the residents of Nightingale Square don’t take no for an answer, and Kate soon finds herself pulled into a friendship with Lisa, her bossy but lovely new neighbour.

Within a matter of days Kate is landed with the job of campaigning the council to turn the green into a community garden, meanwhile all the residents of Nightingale Square are horrified to discover that the Victorian mansion house on the other side of the square has been bought by developers. But when all hope is lost, the arrival of a handsome stranger is sure to turn things around!

Staying in with Heidi Swain

Welcome back to Linda’s Book Bag, Heidi. It’s so lovely to see you again. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me.

Thank you so much for inviting me and for hosting the final spot on what has been an amazing blog tour. It’s a pleasure to be here.

As if I didn’t know, tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it?

sunshine-and-sweet-peas-in-nightingale-square-9781471164873_hr

I have brought my latest release, Sunshine and Sweet Peas in Nightingale Square, with me this evening. As we are now bowling headlong into summer and the holiday season it felt like the perfect choice!

(You’re absolutely right. It’s always holiday season in this house!)

What can we expect from an evening in with Sunshine and Sweet Peas in Nightingale Square?

As always, I’m aiming for a warm, fuzzy feeling! I want you to feel transported to the green oasis in the fine city of Norwich, become a part of the vibrant and friendly community and, if I’ve really hit the spot, I’m hoping I will have tempted you to fling open the doors and get out into your own patch to start sowing and growing.

(That’s easy Heidi – I love your writing, I have my garden and allotment and I even have some Sunshine and Sweet Peas in Nightingale Square plants emerging, even though I was a bit late sowing them as I was away.)

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(Having interrupted you, Heidi, tell me a bit more.)

As well as finding love, two of the main themes within this book are the importance of friendship and the benefits of enjoying the great outdoors.

True friendship is a gift to be treasured and as the three friends, Kate, Lisa and Heather, prove, that doesn’t necessarily have to come from a relationship that was formed in childhood.

(Oh I agree. I have friends from all phases of my life.)

With regards to the joy of gardening, I’ve tried to show how life enhancing and beneficial those connections to nature can be, but in a subtle way.

cherry tree

Readers often get in touch to tell me they’ve taken up craft projects after reading The Cherry Tree Café or taken time to look at the countryside after a trip to Cuckoo Cottage so I’m hoping this latest book will get folk gardening! I’m looking forward to hearing from anyone who has taken up the green mantle as a result of visiting Nightingale Square.

(That’s such a good idea. I adore gardening and actually had my allotment as a birthday present from my husband a few years ago. There’s nothing better than growing your own!)

What else have you brought along and why?

champagne

Tonight, as we’ve reached the end of the tour, I thought we should have a celebration in true Nightingale Square style so I’m expecting quite a crowd to turn up, Linda.

(The more the merrier Heidi!)

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I’m supplying the fizz, some tasty seasonal eats and of course armfuls of sweet peas to add their exquisite scent to the occasion. There are always so many people to thank when a book is published – bloggers, readers, my publishing team and agent, friends and long suffering family – that a party in the garden felt like the most wonderful way to do it!

That’s such a lovely way to celebrate Sunshine and Sweet Peas in Nightingale Square. Let’s throw open the conservatory doors and head out onto the patio and get the party started. Thanks so much for staying in with me tonight Heidi and all the very best with the book. I can’t wait to read Sunshine and Sweet Peas in Nightingale Square.

Thank you so much for inviting me along. Here’s to a truly memorable evening filled with friendship, fun and laughter!

Cheers!

About Heidi Swain

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Heidi Swain is the Sunday Times bestselling author of five novels: The Cherry Tree Cafe, Summer at Skylark Farm, Mince Pies and Mistletoe at the Christmas Market, Coming Home to Cuckoo Cottage and most recently, Sleigh Rides and Silver Bells at the Christmas Fair. She lives in Norfolk with her husband and two teenage children.

You can follow Heidi on Twitter and visit her blog or website. You’ll also find Heidi on Facebook and there’s more with these other bloggers:

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An Extract from Wilde Like Me by Louise Pentland

wilde like me

I’m so pleased to be helping celebrate the paperback publication of Wilde Like Me by Louise Pentland. It looks such a gloriously entertaining read and I am thrilled to have a copy of Wilde Like Me on my TBR. Even better, I’m able to share the opening of the book with you today so you can see why I’m so excited to read this one!

Published by Zaffre, Wilde Like Me is available for purchase here.

Wilde Like Me

wilde like me

You’ll never forget the day you meet Robin Wilde!

Robin Wilde is an awesome single mum. She’s great at her job. Her best friend Lacey and bonkers Auntie Kath love her and little Lyla Blue to the moon and back. From the outside, everything looks just fine.

But behind the mask she carefully applies every day, things sometimes feel . . . grey. And lonely.

After 4 years (and 2 months and 24 days!) of single-mum-dom, it’s time for Robin Wilde to Change. Her. Life!

A little courage, creativity and help from the wonderful women around her go a long way. And Robin is about to embark on quite an adventure . . .

An Extract from Wilde Like Me

‘I resisted this for too long,’ I think as I step out of my black cab, bubbling with excitement. After a long call and an intense exchange of messages I’d finally agreed to meet him. He invited me to a rather exclusive bar at the top of the OXO Tower, one of London’s most iconic buildings on the River Thames with wrap-around views of the city from its terrace and, apparently, cocktails to die for. I was secretly pleased that the job I’d assisted Natalie, my boss, on today – make-up for a shoot in a trendy loft studio in Shoreditch – had finished early. With an entire afternoon to spare, I’d taken the time to pamper myself and really enjoy getting ready for this night.

Stepping onto the pavement and gliding down the pathway to the riverfront, I feel like a peacock parading its feathers. As I approach the red-brick old factory building, I catch my reflection in the gleaming windows. For the first time in a bloody long time, I feel beautiful. I’ve always thought that my 5′ 6″ frame, conker-brown hair and brown eyes were the dullest of all the potential ‘beauty stats’. They’re not exactly exotic or outstanding, are they? And they’re certainly not hailed as the epitome of perfection in the magazines, but today something feels special. My eyes seem softer and my hair bouncier, as I glimpse myself walking along with my head held high. I don’t think, ‘slummy mummy’ but, instead, ‘lovely woman, out on a special date’. Feeling this worthwhile makes me stand a little taller and, oh my God, am I sashaying my bum about?

Happily, my make-up looks sultry and glowing. I’ve gone all out on the contour and highlight, but managed to pull it back before I gave my face actual corners (I still don’t regret that luxury make-up binge last month), and I’m in love with my outfit. I’m wearing a knee-skimming black layered lace skirt that I picked up for pennies in a tuckedaway vintage shop. In between the light layers of lace and tulle are tiny stars embroidered with gold thread. You can barely see them until the street lights catch them, and then they look like the night sky swirling past. I’ve tucked a deep V wrap top into the satin waistband and paired it with black-patent heels passed down from my best friend’s sister, Piper, before she moved away. If I were deep-down ballsy enough to ask a stranger to take a full-length picture, I’d put it on Instagram with an #OOTD (Outfit Of The Day, for those not as obsessed with social media as I am) and pretend to be a blogger.

Taking a deep breath and reminding myself of everything I am, I pull open the grand glass door, walk confidently to the lift and push the ‘up’ button.

It’s going to be perfect.

 It’s going to be everything I want it to be.

(I don’t know about you, but I think that sounds like the start of a fabulous read. I can’t wait!)

About Louise Pentland

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Louise Pentland is a lifestyle and beauty blogger, vlogger, author and fashion designer. Her two YouTube channels have a total of over 3.7 million subscribers and her debut book, Life with a Sprinkle of Glitter was a Sunday Times best seller. Wilde Like Me is her debut novel.

She is also a champion for Gender Equality and female empowerment and in 2016, she was named as a United Nations Change Ambassador for Gender Equality.

You can follow Louise on Twitter @LouisePentland and view her Sprinkle of Glitter YouTube channel here and her Sprinkle of Chatter channel here. You’ll find Louise on Facebook and there’s more with these other bloggers:

Wilde like me

An Extract from Shelter by Sarah Franklin

Shelter 1

I know we shouldn’t judge a book by its cover and I don’t usually like those which feature real people, but Shelter by Sarah Franklin just screams at me to read it. I’m delighted I have a copy waiting for me on my TBR and that I can share an extract from Shelter today as part of these paperback celebrations. My grateful thanks to Midas PR for inviting me to participate.

Published by Bonnier Zaffre, Shelter is available for purchase here.

Shelter

Shelter 1

Early spring 1944.
In a clearing deep within an English forest two lost souls meet for the first time.

Connie Granger has escaped the devastation of her bombed out city home. She has found work in the Women’s Timber Corps, and for her, this remote community must now serve a secret purpose.

Seppe, an Italian prisoner of war, is haunted by his memories. But in the forest camp, he finds a strange kind of freedom.

Their meeting signals new beginnings. In each other they find the means to imagine their own lives anew, and to face that which each fears the most.

But outside their haven, the world is ravaged by war and old certainties are crumbling. Both Connie and Seppe must make a life-defining choice which threatens their fragile existence. How will they make sense of this new world, and find their place within it? What does it mean to be a woman, or a foreign man, in these days of darkness and new light?

A beautiful, gentle and deeply powerful novel about finding solace in the most troubled times, about love, about hope and about renewal after devastation. It asks us to consider what makes a family, what price a woman must pay to live as she chooses, and what we’d fight to the bitter end to protect.

An Extract from Shelter

Connie draped the frock against her overalls and dragged the rickety chair over to the window, craning to catch a glimpse of her reflection. Behind the panes, finger-like twigs tapped at her and she jumped. This place gave her the willies, always something creaking or scratching. Whoever thought the countryside was still and calm hadn’t spent any damn time in it.

She twisted on the chair to get a better look at the dress and nearly toppled over. Hmm. The dress was made for someone else and it showed. It was going to be a hell of a squeeze to get into it after the time on the farm.

She gritted her teeth, willed the stampeding thoughts away. The yellow dress would have to do – and perhaps the music would snap her out of these doldrums.
Connie dropped the dress onto the bed. In no time at all she’d be out there on the dance floor, whirling around, and for those few hours nothing else would matter. Not this war, not what the future held, none of it.

She lay back on the bed for a moment, the counterpane scratching her cheek, and screwed up her eyes. She’d loved the dances back home in Coventry, had lived for that tingly moment when the factory’s closing siren would rise in duet with the shrill clamour of the girls. They’d all dash to the lavs shrieking with the fun of it, the foremen yelling at them to pipe down a bit but them paying no real notice. They’d cluster round the sliver of mirror above the sink and chatter like magpies as they did themselves up, then head out into the city.

Invincible, that’s what they’d been. But then, before they’d even known what they had, it was shattered.

Connie shivered. ‘Right, let’s get this thing on.’

She discarded her overalls and squashed herself into the dress, its faded cotton soft against her skin after the lumberjill dungarees, a reminder of when life was all dances. She twirled and the full skirt span out around her like a chink of light escaping from a blackout. There was no full-length looking glass anywhere in the cottage, so Connie had to trust that she wasn’t flashing her scanties where the buttons that ran down the bodice gaped and strained. She’d get Hetty to check at the hostel, cover up any dodgy bits with a brooch. Wouldn’t be the first time they’d been on display, admittedly, but things were different now.

Jagged thoughts crawled along the edges of her mind. Connie took a deep breath to shoo them out. Better hang up those sopping wet socks in the window to try and dry them out before tomorrow’s shift. She just couldn’t be doing with drawing stocking seams on her legs tonight; she was licked. Anyway, it itched when she did that, and she’d forget the pencil was there and rub one leg against the other, like she always did. She tiptoed down the stairs, trying and failing to avoid the one that creaked. She jolted past it, the wood cold where the carpet had worn down, and paused at the bottom, one hand on the newel post.

She’d better go and say goodnight to Amos, or try at least – keep kidding herself that they actually spoke to each other rather than circling like Heinkels waiting for the signal to start the bombing. She pushed open the door into the little back room and the homesickness roared out at her so strongly that she stepped back again. The air in here was heavy, tangy; Connie could almost taste Hillview Road again in the stewed tea and ash from the grate.

(Gosh I love this. I’m off to rearrange my TBR so that Shelter is nearer the top!)

About Sarah Franklin

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Sarah Franklin grew up in rural Gloucestershire and has lived in Austria, Germany, the USA and Ireland. She lectures in publishing at Oxford Brookes University and has written for the Guardian, Psychologies magazine, The Pool, the Sunday Express and the Seattle Times.

Sarah is the founder and host of Short Stories Aloud, and a judge for the Costa Short Story Award. Sarah lives in between London and Oxford with her family.

You can follow Sarah on Twitter @SarahEFranklin.

There’s more with these other bloggers too.

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Staying in with Katie Lewington

Here Comes the Sun

One of the genres I don’t feel I feature nearly enough on Linda’s Book Bag is poetry, so I am delighted to welcome poet Katie Lewington to stay in with me today as she will be able to help me redress the balance.

Staying in with Katie Lewington

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Katie. Thanks for staying in with me. Which of your books have you brought along to share with me and why have you chosen it?

Here Comes the Sun

I have brought with me my travel poetry chapbook Here comes the Sun. I have chosen it because I want to share some sunshine with you, and your followers. If you’re in the UK (like I am) we don’t get a lot of the sun and it can dampen the mood somewhat, which I think is reflected in the poems in my book.

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(What a smashing concept. I love the sun, poetry and travel. I think I’m going to enjoy this evening, Katie!)

What can we expect from an evening in with Here comes the Sun?

Poetic insights, from the contemplative, to the less serious elements of summer, such as ice cream, and finding strands of grass in your bath. Here’s a poem from the book, which I wrote while in Brugge, and is the story of why I write.

I Capture an Image with my Pen

in Brugge

a group of three students

perform in

front of a parade of restaurants

and as it comes to

the music draws in

and the crowds

once swollen

disperse

as a hat is passed around for

loose Euros –

in way of payment

for the performance –

and this is why

i write poetry

to capture small  moments.

(I love that. The fragmentary nature of the lines really conveys the fleeting nature of the moment. You must be so proud of Here comes the Sun.)

What else have you brought along and why?

mateus

A portion of Here comes the Sun was written while I was in Portugal, and as Portugal is a wine country, I have brought along a bottle of Mateus. I would also like, before leaving you, to share some sentiments from Here comes the Sun:

Please  remember  the  sun  does  come  out. Sometimes  you  have to  search  for  it, but  it  is  there, and worth  looking  for.

That’s just lovely Katie. I think we all need to remember that at times. Thanks so much for staying in with me to tell me more about Here comes the Sun. You’ve really brightened my evening.

Here comes the Sun

Here Comes the Sun

Experience the thrill of summer, and travel with Katie Lewington through Europe, without needing to move from your seat.

It was a summer of reinvention and discovery: from leaving home, to travelling Europe. In 2016 football, politics, and airports dominated the life of Katie Lewington. Thankfully you won’t find any poems on Brexit in Katie Lewington’s poetry collection Here Comes the Sun. You will find one on the Euro’s, and the unexpected delights found in Airport baggage queues. Some of the poems in Here comes the Sun make good use of brevity, while others, such as Wi-Fi, are written in a prose style of writing. Here comes the Sun uses simple language in the poems that were written whilst travelling in the summer of ’16. The events in the poems mirror the places of their origins, such as in the Red Light District of Amsterdam, the market forecourt of Brugge, and the Brighton Pier.

Here comes the Sun is available for purchase here.

About Katie Lewington

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Born with a pen in her hand, Katie Lewington has continued to write since the year dot, and develop her unique style of writing. She has self-published several chapbooks of poetry on her travels, experiences of love, and humorous food themed pieces too. She works on her blog The Poetry Hub reviewing books, sharing poetry, and interviewing writers.

You can follow Katie on Twitter @lewingtonkatie and Instagram. If you’d like to support Katie’s writing you can do so here.

Discussing Dead Lock with Damien Boyd

Dead Lock

I’m delighted to be part of the launch celebrations for Dead Lock by Damien Boyd and would like to thank Gaby Drinkald at Midas PR for asking me to participate.

I’m also thrilled that Damien has agreed to stay in with me today to tell me all about Dead Lock – the eighth stand alone book in the DI Nick Dixon Crime Series.

Published yesterday, 31st May 2018, Dead Lock is available for purchase here.

Dead Lock

Dead Lock

Early on a cold Somerset morning, ten year old Alesha Daniels is reported missing by her father, a violent alcoholic. Her mother, a known drug addict, is found unconscious, but it’s her mother’s boyfriend the police are keen to trace.

As the hunt for Alesha gathers pace, a second local girl is taken, plunging another family into the depths of despair.

Cutting short his holiday, DI Nick Dixon races home to join the Major Investigation Team, but no sooner has he identified a network of local suspects than they begin to show up dead.

At odds with his superiors, Dixon is convinced the child abductions are anything but random, but nobody is prepared for the investigation to lead quite so close to home.

Can Dixon and his team crack the case before all the suspects are silenced? And will he find the missing girls before it’s too late?

Staying in with Damien Boyd

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag, Damien. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me. I know you’ve brought Dead Lock to share with us but why have you brought it?

Dead Lock

Thanks Linda. I’ve brought my latest book – Dead Lock – because it’s my favourite, but then my latest book is always my favourite until I’ve finished the next one, I suppose. It may be number 8 in the DI Nick Dixon Crime Series, but each book is a standalone, with a beginning, a middle and an end, so they can safely be read out of order.

(That’s great to know that each book is a stand alone Damien as blog readers often ask.)

It’s also something of a rollercoaster ride for several of the recurring series characters and the ‘romance’ between Nick Dixon and his partner, Jane Winter, takes a step forward as well. Oddly enough, it was only at a recent event that I found out I was writing a romance series when audience members pointed it out. ‘We love the romance between Nick and Jane’, they said. I must confess that it happened by accident really, but now I nurture that sub-plot!

(Brilliant! I love it when characters take over from a writer and lead the way!)

What can we expect from an evening in with Dead Lock?

One early reviewer has been very kind enough to describe Dead Lock as a ‘…a tense read with some amazing twists…’ I’m still buzzing from that one! The same reviewer also went on to say, ‘I’m impressed at Mr Boyd’s ability to draw the reader in and hold them captivated.’ That was most kind of her 🙂

(I’m sure it wasn’t kindness, Damien. We reviewers tend to say what we really think!)

Dead Lock is something of a departure for me in that Nick is on the trail of two children who have been abducted, rather than a serial killer. Yes, there are murders, but as the same reviewer pointed out, they are almost incidental to the hunt for the children. I’m hoping that the reader will experience a rollercoaster of emotions, both the tension as they follow the frantic police investigation, and the anxiety and panic of the families plunged in to their worst nightmare.

Tension, yes; ‘heart in mouth’ moments, I hope so; and even a few tears maybe. I will admit to tears streaming down my cheeks when I wrote some of the scenes. There’s a even some humour in there to make you smile and lighten the atmosphere a bit.

(I adore books where I can have a good cry and this description has made me even more determined to get Dead Lock to the top of my TBR pile. It sounds fantastic.)

What else have you brought along and why? 

choc

If my wife’s not going to be joining us then I’ll bring chocolate. Lots of it! Shelley is diabetic, which is where Nick Dixon gets it from, but it does mean that chocolate is not allowed in the house. Strawberries and cream too; cake. And a glass of beer or three. Music would have to be U2 or Adele. An odd mix perhaps, I know.

stawbs

(I love your music choices, though is it selfish of me to say I’m glad Shelley can’t come so that we can have chocolate?)

What about other guests?

Guests? Now that’s a tricky one. Most of my preferred guests are no longer with us, sadly. I’d love to have met Agatha Christie and Colin Dexter, to name just two. From the living, I’d love to meet Felix Baumgartner — I’m still mesmerised by his jump from the edge of space. But, if we are sticking with authors, then Val McDermid, if she’s free, and Dr Geoff Garrett. Cause of Death, his memoirs of a Home Office pathologist, was fascinating and I’d love to question him on the stuff he couldn’t print!

(That sounds a fascinating set of guests – and you’re allowed those no longer with us too. I notice you’ve brought a photo too. What is it?)

canal

It’s one of the old Somersetshire Coal Canal. Abandoned locks loom out of the trees as you walk up through the woods behind Combe Hay, testament to a way of life long since consigned to history. There’s a ‘dead lock’ in those woods too…

Thanks so much for staying in with me Damien, to chat all about Dead Lock. I think it sounds a cracker of a read and I’m very much looking forward to it.

About Damien Boyd

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You can find out more by visiting Damien’s website and you can find him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter @DamienBoydBooks.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

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Staying in with Dina Glouberman

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Regular Linda’s Book Bag readers will know I’ve had some tricky times over the last three or four years with my husband having had a mini-stroke and developing cancer, my beloved Dad dying, as well as our full term still-born great-niece, suffering some weird illness that left me hallucinating and passing out at random for most of last summer and my Mum currently frequently ill and in and out of hospital.

I thought I’d had a tough time but Dina Glouberman has had her fair share of difficulty too and I’m thrilled that as part of the launch celebrations for Into the Woods and Out again she is staying in to tell me more today and help me put my own life in perspective!

Into the Woods and Out Again is published today, 1st June 2018, and is available for purchase here.

Into the Woods and Out Again

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1971 was the year Dina Glouberman went mad.

Now, for the first time, Dr Dina Glouberman, renowned psychotherapist and author, co-founder of the world-famous Skyros Holidays, creator of Imagework therapy, and author of The Joy of Burnout, writes with candour and humour about a spell in a psychiatric ward. Indeed, she describes it as enlivening and enlightening, a catalyst for her rich and creative life.

This memoir traces the journey from those wild and intense weeks in the Middlesex Hospital through five years of “normal life” and then on to twelve years of extraordinary creativity, when she had two babies, co-founded Skyros Holidays on a Greek island, pioneered her Imagework approach to therapy and personal development, had a life-changing spiritual experience, faced the loss of her father and brother, and wrote her first book.

At the end of this book, a new cycle is just beginning, as she burns out, dismantles her marriage and her life, and discovers what is next. This remarkable memoir is a revealing meditation on the behind-the-scenes world of therapy and psychoanalysis in the 1960s, as well as on marriage, mothering, madness, imagination, aloneness, community and spirituality. Into the Woods and Out Again captures the inner life of a woman who has played a major role in the contemporary holistic and therapeutic world.

Staying in with Dina Glouberman

Welcome to Linda’s Book Bag Dina. Thank you for agreeing to stay in with me. Tell me, which of your books have you brought along to share this evening and why have you chosen it? 

Into the Woods and Out Again: A memoir of Love, Madness and Transformation (Sphinx 2018). This is my latest book, it’s different from all the others because it’s a memoir that ranges from madness to miracles. It’s very personal and honest and funny, and I’m excited about it, and want everyone to read it!

(I love the concept of madness to miracles!)

What can we expect from an evening in with Into the Woods and Out Again: A memoir of Love, Madness and Transformation? 

This is a memoir about the inside story of about 18 action packed years of my life, ranging from a breakdown and time on a psychiatric ward, to an intensely creative period of setting up Skyros Holistic Holidays on a Greek island, creating an imagery based approach to therapy and self help, and having spiritual breakthroughs. There’s also marriage, mothering, learning to be single but not alone, and an insight a day to help me keep going and keep growing.  The book generally describes the inner path of a woman who wants to listen to her inner voice, and to make her dreams into a reality.

(My goodness. You’ve certainly managed to pack a lot in Dina!)

I’ve always written self help books.  This book shows what I’ve done and how I’ve done it in my own life. And hopefully I’ve been through so much, and learned from every bit of it, that there will be something for everyone who is reading it.

There’s a foreword by the late Sue Townsend, who read an earlier draft of the book, and I’ll quote a bit of it:

Dina has enabled many people, including me, to validate their lives.  She has the gifts of empathy, wisdom, high intelligence and humour, and this book is never less that seriously entertaining (and entertainingly serious) I hope you enjoy this brilliant and funny book and find something in these pages that reminds you that it is still wonderful to be human.

I have lot of other quotes, but I love this especially.

(I’m not surprised. What a lovely endorsement. It certainly entices me to read Into the Woods and Out Again: A memoir of Love, Madness and Transformation.)

What else have you brought along and why?

greek food

I’ve brought along a Greek salad, a bottle of Greek wine, and a whole table of ample and wonderful  Greek food right by the sea in Skyros, where we started our holiday centre in 1979.  And the memory of a young girl, daring to do all that she is doing, because she loves community so much, and because she is so excited by the idea of creating a world that gives people loads of happiness and a chance to reboot their lives.

Dina and Yannis contemplating Atsitsa in 1984

And what could be better than doing it on a Greek island with her handsome Greek husband, Yannis.

What better indeed. Dina. That’s a smashing photo of you both too. Thank you so much for staying in with me. Congratulations on today’s publication of Into the Woods and Out Again: A memoir of Love, Madness and Transformation.

About Dina Glouberman

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Dina Glouberman is the visionary co-founder of Skyros Holistic Holidays, in Greece and worldwide, author of the classic books Life Choices, Life Changes, The Joy of Burnout, and You Are What You Imagine, and an international trainer, coach, and psychotherapist. She has been a pioneer for over thirty years in creating, teaching and practising the use of Imagework to tap into the imagination that guides our lives, and make creative life choices and profound life changes.

You can find out more about Dina by visiting her blog and following her on Twitter @dinaglouberman. You will find Dina on Facebook and there’s more with these other bloggers:

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