Sunday, 25 July 2021

BOOK SPOTLIGHT! - The Queen of the Citadels (The King’s Germans, Book 3) by Dominic Fielder #HistoricalFiction #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub @Kings_Germans @maryanneyarde

 


 

The Queen of the Citadels

(The King’s Germans, Book 3)

By Dominic Fielder

 

October 1793: The French border.

Dunkirk was a disaster for the Duke of York’s army. The French, sensing victory before the winter, launch attacks along the length of the border. Menen is captured and the French now hold the whip hand. Nieuport and Ostend are threatened, and Sebastian Krombach finds himself involved in a desperate plan to stop the Black Lions as they spearhead the French advance. Werner Brandt and the men of 2nd Battalion race to Menen to counterattack and rescue Erich von Bomm and the 1st Grenadiers, whilst von Bomm struggles to save himself from his infatuation with a mysterious French vivandière.

Meanwhile, dark and brooding, the citadel of Lille dominates the border. The Queen of the Citadels has never been captured by force. The allies must now keep Menen, which guards Flanders, and seize Lille to open the road to Paris. All of this must be done under the watchful eyes of a spy in the Austrian camp. Juliette of Marboré is fighting her own secret war to free Julian Beauvais, languishing in the Conciergerie prison, and waiting for his appointment with the guillotine, as the Terror rages in Paris.

 

If you would like to read this click on the book's name - The Queen of the Citadels - and it will take you nearest Amazon store. This novel is also avaliabel to read with #kindleUnlimited

 

Dominic Fielder has had careers in retail and the private education sector and is currently working as a secondary school Maths teacher. He has a First-class honours degree in history and a lifetime’s interest in the hobby of wargaming. The King's Germans series is a project that grew out of this passion He currently juggles writing and research around a crowded work and family life.

 

Whilst self-published he is very grateful for an excellent support team. The Black Lions of Flanders (set in 1793) is the first in the King's Germans' series, which will follow an array of characters through to the final book in Waterloo. He lives just outside of Tavistock on the edge of Dartmoor. where he enjoys walking on the moors and the occasional horse-riding excursion as both writing inspiration and relaxation.

 

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Sunday, 18 July 2021

Read my #BookReview of The Girl from Venice by Siobhan Daiko #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub @siobhandaiko @maryanneyarde

 

 


⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 

The appeal, I think, of WW2 novels is the sense of realism, and the fact that despite the years rolling on, it still does not seem that long ago. As one would expect, there are scenes in this book that really tug at your heartstrings, but there are also lighter moments, hints of happiness even. While this book technically follows two timelines, both focus on Lidia, in WW2 Italy. The second timeline follows Charlotte, in 2010, as she attempts to uncover her Gran’s past. Lidia, being a Jew during the Second World War, faces some desperate challenges. She desperately wants to stay with her father, but as living in Venice starts to become more and more dangerous, and with him refusing to listen to her and leave while they still can, Lidia’s path takes an unprecedented turn with both emotional and physical hardships.

With two storylines, you get double the joy and love, but also double the sadness. Charlotte doesn’t feel like she belongs anywhere, and Lidia must leave where she knows and belongs to stay alive and safe. Lidia ends up with a wonderful family, who, when she asks, point her in the direction of the partisans, with whom they work, and support. With both women, we get to watch a love story unfold, and both bloom so similarly that the two women seem to be alike in more than just looks, but in personality as well.

There are some distressing scenes in this book, and they make your heart wrench. The outcome, as well, is equally heartbreaking.

This book is so utterly riveting, I simply could not put it down. This is the sort of book that I could read again and again.

 


Lidia De Angelis has kept a low profile since Mussolini's racial laws wrenched her from her childhood sweetheart. But when the Germans occupy Venice in 1943, she must flee the city to save her life.

 

Lidia joins the partisans in the Venetian mountains, where she meets David, an English soldier fighting for the same cause. As she grows closer to him, harsh Nazi reprisals and Lidia’s own ardent anti-fascist activities threaten to tear them apart.

 

Decades later in London, while sorting through her grandmother’s belongings after her death, Charlotte discovers a Jewish prayer book, unopened letters written in Italian, and a fading photograph of a group of young people in front of the Doge’s Palace.

 

Intrigued by her grandmother’s refusal to talk about her life in Italy before and during the war, Charlotte travels to Venice in search of her roots. There, she learns not only the devastating truth about her grandmother’s past, but also some surprising truths about herself.

 

A heart-breaking page-turner, based on actual events in Italy during World War II

 

Trigger Warnings:

Death, Miscarriage, PTSD, Rape.

 


If you would like to read this click on the book's name - The Girl from Venice - and it will take you to your favourite online bookstore.

 

 

 Siobhan Daiko is an international bestselling historical romantic fiction author. A lover of all things Italian, she lives in the Veneto region of northern Italy with her husband, a Havanese puppy and two rescue cats. After a life of romance and adventure in Hong Kong, Australia and the UK, Siobhan now spends her time, when she isn't writing, enjoying the sweet life near Venice.

 

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Sunday, 11 July 2021

Read my #BookReview of Mendota and the Restive Rivers of the Indian and Civil Wars 1861-65 (The Simmons family saga) by Dane Pizzuti Krogman @dekester09 @maryanneyarde

 


 

⭐⭐⭐⭐
Have you ever seen a history documentary where the historian tells you what happened and then there is a reenactment depicting what the historians just spoke about? I love these types of documentaries and strangely that is exactly how this book read.  I have never read a book using this approach before but it worked really well. It felt like I was being given a history lesson while reading a very compelling story at the same time.


Mendota and the Restive Rivers of the Indian and Civil Wars 1861-65
follow the fortunes and the misfortunes of the Simmons family. Through their eyes, we witness the horror of the American Civil War and the Dakota Sioux uprising. Dan, the head of the household, is a likeable character. His journey brought home the realities of what life was like during this era in history. Life was hard for a soldier, so terribly hard. With inadequate supplies and a war that seemed neverending, it was miraculous that there was anyone left to fight by the time it was over. Disease ran riot through the ranks, so if a bullet did not get you there was a high chance that dysentery would. 


Likewise, Krogman has depicted the desperate situation the  Dakota Siouxs' faced. Everything was in short supply—the war ensured that, but for the Dakota Sioux, it meant watching your family starve to death. reading this novel, from a modern perspective, I concluded that the past really is a very foreign county. I find it, even in context, very difficult to understand how anyone could justify starving anyone. The hatred on both sides is evident throughout this novel. When the Sioux finally took matters into their own hands, they targeted a defenceless family. The dilemma that Little Crow faces to defend and try to get justice for his people whilst trying to hold onto his position and keep the respect of his people was written with a great deal of understanding of the situation faced. I thought the depiction of Little Crow was fabulous.

At times this book did make for some very difficult reading—this was, after all, a very brutal time in American history, but I also felt it was a very honest one.

There is a great deal to love about this novel, and I came very close to giving it a full five stars but the editing has really let this book down. There are inconsistencies, not in the writing, but in the editing. There are many instances where the characters all speak in the same paragraph which made it difficult to figure out which voice belonged to whom. I think with a more thorough edit, this book could be something very special indeed.



This is the fictional story set in Mendota, Minnesota of the Simmons family who are faced with the consequences of the Dakota Sioux Uprising of 1862 that swept across the state as well as the Civil War.

 

The father, Dan enlists in the 1st regiment of Minnesota volunteers as a teamster. His two sons, who are both underage join the 2nd Regiment. John, aged 16 becomes a bugler and William, aged 15 becomes a drummer. Their sister, Sara is left behind with their mother, Louise to fend for themselves. Dan is sent east to fight with the Army of the Potomac while his sons are sent to the western theater to serve in the army of the Cumberland. Back in Mendota, their neighbor and close friend, Colonel Henry Sibley is ordered to stay in the state to control the Indian uprising.

 

Dan will see action up through the battle of Antietam. He will later find himself in the hospital in Washington DC where he befriends a comrade also from the 1st Regiment. His sons barely miss the action at Shiloh but after, are engaged in all the major battles in the West. While they are passing through Louisville, William falls for a young woman, Mary who works as a hospital nurse. Back in Mendota, Sara befriends a young Chippewa native boy while her mother struggles with the breakup of her family. After Colonel Sibley defeats the Sioux, he is promoted to General and ordered to round up all the Dakota and push resettle them in the Dakotas.

 

This leads to the punitive expeditions that he and General Sully will command up until 1864. William is captured at the battle up Missionary Ridge and then sent to the prison camp at Belle Isle, VA. and then onto Andersonville. GA. John receives a 30 day furlough and returns to Mendota before he re-enlists. Louise and Sara wait for the wars end so the family can be reunited, but events may not turn out as anticipated.

 

If you would like to read this book then there are several shops where you can purchase the novel. They are as follows:

Amazon UK

Amazon US 

Amazon CA 

Amazon AU 

The Indie BookStore 

 

Dane Pizzuti Krogman was educated in the fine arts at the University of Minnesota, receiving BFA and MFA degrees. He also specialized in Asian art history, with a concentration in textile and surface design. After graduation, he worked as a freelance designer creating fashion samples for women’s athletic wear. He eventually relocated to California and taught at Cal-Poly Pomona in the Environmental Design program then moved on to work as a pictorial artist for outdoor advertising. Moving back to the Twin Cities in 1981 he formed a scenic design company call Artdemo which in 10 years did over 1000 designs and productions for sets, props, and special effects for television commercials and feature films. In the early 90’s he relocated to Charleston, SC to work as a spec writer for feature film scripts. Six of his screenplays have won major writing awards and two of these have been optioned for production. During this time he also taught scene design at the College of Charleston. This position led to an adjunct teaching position at Virginia Commonwealth University where he taught art direction for filmmakers. In 1998 he took a full time teaching position at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts where he taught art direction, life drawing, set construction, and Asian film studies, eventually becoming chairman of the department.

 

The common thread through all of this has been his passion for Japanese design, art, and fashion. He has lived in Kyoto, Japan for the past 20 summers studying Japanese kimono and obi design of the Heian and Edo periods. In 2002 he won the Grand Prize for the best graphic novel at the Hiroshima manga competition. His graphic Novel Skeleton boy was selected for inclusion into the Hiroshima peace memorial library in 2007.

 

He was most recently an adjunct faculty member in the Graduate Program in Digital Filmmaking at Stony Brook Southampton. He is also an award-winning screenwriter. His screenplay, The Schooner was produced as the Australian film, AUSTRALIA in 2008. He has other award-winning films that have been optioned for production or are in production.

 

As a Civil War historian he has worked as a technical advisor for the films, Dances with Wolfs, Gettysburg, and Glory. He currently has one Civil War novel in pre-publication; MENDOTA, AND THE RESTIVE RIVERS OF THE CIVIL AND INDIAN WARS 1861-65.

 

He also works part-time as a crew member on a Grand-Am Rolex series race team. The team won the national championship in 2008

 

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Saturday, 10 July 2021

Quote of the Day! #amreading

 

 


 "You know you've read a good book when you turn the last page and feel a little as if you have lost a friend."

Paul Sweeney 

Monday, 5 July 2021

An incredibly emotional and gripping story that I know I am going to read again and again!

 
Sisters at War
By Clare Flynn

 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Sisters at War brings a whole new level of emotion that I am not sure I have experienced in a book before. This book follows the story of Hannah Kidd, as well as her family and friends. Hannah and her sister Judith have had a very traumatic upbringing, with an abusive father who forced Hannah into an illegal marriage. When he killed their mother, Hannah and Judith sought refuge with Hannah’s previous husband, a man called Sam. With Judith emotionally closed off after her mother’s death, and Hannah taking on the weight of looking after the household while her husband, Will, is away at sea.

This is an incredibly emotional read. I know I have said that before, but this takes it to an extreme. Hannah’s intense fear over Will’s life is heartbreaking, and her joy every time she sees him walking down the road towards her is enough to make you hope he will never leave again. Unfortunately, it is his job, and Hannah’s joy is quickly quashed every time Will must walk away from her again.

Judith’s love story is one of equal heartbreak. I must admit, I did not know of how the English government ordered all the Italians in the country to be rounded up, in case they posed a threat to the country, and it was chilling to read about the conditions they were forced to live in, many of the men who had lived in England their whole lives and had done nothing wrong. Judith’s love is Italian, and he is shipped away from her much like Will is from Hannah.

This is an incredibly gripping story, which is next to impossible to put down, and I am so incredibly glad that I have read this book. You have to read it!



Sisters at War
By Clare Flynn

1940 Liverpool. The pressures of war threaten to tear apart two sisters traumatised by their father’s murder of their mother.

With her new husband, Will, a merchant seaman, deployed on dangerous Atlantic convoy missions, Hannah needs her younger sister Judith more than ever. But when Mussolini declares war on Britain, Judith's Italian sweetheart, Paolo is imprisoned as an enemy alien, and Judith's loyalties are divided.

Each sister wants only to be with the man she loves but, as the war progresses, tensions between them boil over, and they face an impossible decision.

A heart-wrenching page-turner about the everyday bravery of ordinary people during wartime. From heavily blitzed Liverpool to the terrors of the North Atlantic and the scorched plains of Australia, Sisters at War will bring tears to your eyes and joy to your heart.

If you would like to read this book then you need to head over to your favourite ONLINE BOOKSTORE!

Clare Flynn

Clare Flynn is the author of thirteen historical novels and a collection of short stories. A former International Marketing Director and strategic management consultant, she is now a full-time writer. 

Having lived and worked in London, Paris, Brussels, Milan and Sydney, home is now on the coast, in Sussex, England, where she can watch the sea from her windows. An avid traveler, her books are often set in exotic locations.

Clare is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a member of The Society of Authors, ALLi, and the Romantic Novelists Association. When not writing, she loves to read, quilt, paint and play the piano. 


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Sunday, 4 July 2021

Read my #BookReview of Sigurd’s Swords (Olaf’s Saga, Book 2) by Eric Schumacher HistoricalFiction #Vikings @DarkAgeScribe @maryanneyarde

 

 


 

 

 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Sigurd’s Swords (Olaf’s Saga, Book 2) by Eric Schumacher is one of the most atmospheric novels that I have ever read. The harrowing sounds of a hundred horses charging towards you while you hid behind a shield wall must have been nothing short of harrowing. Reading this novel was like stepping through a portal in time. The sights, the sounds, the fear has been captured with an extraordinary amount of skill. Eric Schumacher is one of those authors that can, through the written word, quite literally, make history come alive.

What gives this novel even more clout is that it is written in the first person from Torgil's—he is honour bound to Olaf—point of view. Torgil is a Norse warrior, an exceptionally good one at that, but he finds himself caught in a power struggle, and he witnesses, and is part of, some of the most violent years in the history of the Rus. Torgil was a character that I instantly connected with. He is brave, loyal but above everything else he is extremely honest. He is, for want of a better word, an extremely likeable character and he would certainly be someone you would want on your side during a fight. I really enjoyed reading about him.

Another character I really enjoyed getting to know was Turid. Turid is a very brave and courageous woman who is determined to find her place in the world and she thinks that that place can be found in the heat of battle. Turid faces many challenges, but she approaches each one with a headstrong determination that I could not help but admire. She reminded me very much of Lagertha from Vikings.

Although the title suggests that this novel is about Olaf I found it rather surprising that he was very much a secondary character in the story. Saying that however, Olaf seems to have a nose for trouble and because Torgil is honour bound to keep him safe, he ends up getting into trouble as well. Olaf was a character I was in two minds about. He is incredibly arrogant, but that arrogance has something of a boyish charm about it. I liked him one moment, then I did not the next.

This novel is fabulous from start to finish. Having not read the first book, I was slightly concerned that I would not be able to catch up, but that was certainly not the case for the story stands very firmly on its own two feet. Saying that, however, I will certainly be reading Book 1 and I cannot wait to get my hands on Book 3. 

Thank you to The Coffee Pot Book Club for sending me an ARC of this novel. I was under no obligation to leave a review.


From best-selling historical fiction novelist, Eric Schumacher, comes the second volume in Olaf’s Saga: the adrenaline-charged story of Olaf Tryggvason and his adventures in the kingdom of the Rus.


AD 968. It has been ten summers since the noble sons of the North, Olaf and Torgil, were driven from their homeland by the treachery of the Norse king, Harald Eriksson. Having then escaped the horrors of slavery in Estland, they now fight among the Rus in the company of Olaf’s uncle, Sigurd. 


It will be some of the bloodiest years in Rus history. The Grand Prince, Sviatoslav, is hungry for land, riches, and power, but his unending campaigns are leaving the corpses of thousands in their wakes. From the siege of Konugard to the battlefields of ancient Bulgaria, Olaf and Torgil struggle to stay alive in Sigurd’s Swords, the riveting sequel to Forged by Iron

 

If you would like to read this book can you find it on Amazon.

This book is also avaliable to read with #KindleUnlimited subscription. 


 Eric Schumacher (1968 - ) is an American historical novelist who currently resides in Santa Barbara, California, with his wife and two children. He was born and raised in Los Angeles and attended college at the University of San Diego.

 

At a very early age, Schumacher discovered his love for writing and medieval European history, as well as authors like J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. Those discoveries continue to fuel his imagination and influence the stories he tells. His first novel, God's Hammer, was published in 2005.

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Saturday, 3 July 2021

Reading - Quote of the Day #amreading #Quotes

 

 


 "That's the thing about books. They let you travel without moving your feet."

Jhumpa Lahiri 

 

 

 

 

 

Queen of Shadows by Anna Belfrage

Queen of Shadows by Anna Belfrage Publication Date: May 21st, 2026 Publisher: Timelight Press Pages: 400 Genre: Historical Fiction / Histori...