#PublicationDayPush A Train from Penzance to Paris by Laura Briggs

Today it’s the Publication Day Push  for A Train from Penzance to Paris by Laura Briggs.

About the Author

Laura Briggs is the author of several feel-good romance reads, including the Top 100 Amazon UK seller ‘A Wedding in Cornwall’. She has a fondness for vintage style dresses (especially ones with polka dots), and reads everything from Jane Austen to modern day mysteries. When she’s not writing, she enjoys spending time with family and friends, caring for her pets, gardening, and seeing the occasional movie or play.

Follow @PaperDollWrites on Twitter, on Facebookon Goodreadson Amazon, Visit paperdollwrites.blogspot.comBuy A Train from Penzance to Paris

About the book

When Maisie accepts a celebrated author’s invitation to mentor her, she finds herself leaving Cornwall behind on train tracks bound for the glitter city of Paris. Instead of making beds and serving coffee at the Penmarrow hotel in Cornwall, she’s making notes on her manuscript while sitting in a French cafe, meeting famous writers at private dinner parties, and trying to ferret the secrets behind the author’s unfinished future novel. It’s glamorous, it’s breathtaking … but it’s also an ocean channel away from the place that she loves, and, more importantly, the person to whom she just recently confessed her deepest feelings. Separated from Sidney by distance and circumstances, Maisie fears that their connection will be lost despite her words to him – and maybe because of those words, and the ones she didn’t allow him to say in return.

Meanwhile, there are plenty of things in her new life trying to distract her – the professional editor hired to critique her novel, the eager young literary agent who sees pie-in-the-sky potential for Maisie’s talent, but Maisie finds solace in the eclectic group of amateur writers into whose midst she finds herself by accident. Their critique and advice is fast becoming as important as the editors – maybe even more important than the published author Maisie believed held the keys to refining her skill.

But it’s missing Sidney that fills Maisie’s thoughts the most, along with her life back in Port Hewer, and she can’t stop wondering whether his feelings are the same as her own. His unspoken answer has become one of the most important pieces of her life, even as she struggles to match the pace of her new life and keep her dreams in sight. And when she unwittingly becomes privy to a seeming literary conspiracy, she must decide what to do in light of its truth – and decide what’s most important in her quest to become a professional writer.

Review

In this book I think Maisie drifts away from the Maisie we met in the previous books. This is book five in the A Little Hotel in Cornwall series and can be read as a standalone novel, but I would recommend reading the others to get the full gist of the characters and their stories.

Maisie is living the life of luxury after meeting the famous author Allie, who opens the doors to many different worlds and opportunities to her. Travel, luxury and more importantly very good contacts in the publishing world. People who can help her get a foot on the ladder when it comes to publishing her first novel.

It’s part five of a chick-lit series which wanders into a more serious tone.

This is more a trip of self discovery, whereas the earlier books are charming and more romcom in substance, perhaps even purely a story about publishing a book. I miss the Maisie who was up for a challenge and happy to get involved in everyone’s business. Kind, quirky and looking for fulfillment. This Maisie is obsessed to the point of everyone else, especially everyone at home, having to take third place. We see a more driven character, but not always in a good way.  And the story takes on a one-dimensional feel.

I thought Briggs made an interesting point about editing and changing your written work based on expert opinions. When major points are being changed is it still the story you wrote? If, aside from structural and technical edits, so much is changed by others that you don’t recognise your story or the entire gist of it is it now the idea that has sprung forth from someone else – is it really still your work?

Interesting points to make in a world full of opportunities for both traditional and indie published authors.

Buy A Train from Penzance to Paris at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer. Publication pub date 8 April 2020. Buy at Amazon com.

Read my review of The Cornish Secret of Summer’s Promise and A Wedding in Cornwall by Laura Briggs.

#BlogTour Ring Fenced by Zach Abrams

Today it’s my turn on the BlogTour Ring Fenced by Zach Abrams.

Ring Fenced is on an Amazon Countdown  Promotion – selling at 99c /99p  from  11-15 Sept 2019

About the Author

Having the background of a successful career in commerce and finance, Zach Abrams has spent many years writing reports, letters and presentations and it’s only fairly recently he started writing novels. “It’s a more honourable type of fiction,” he declares.

Writer of the Alex Warren Murder Mystery series, set in Scotland, Zach has also written the psychological thriller ‘Ring Fenced’ and the financial thriller ‘Source’, as well as collaborating with Elly Grant on a book of short stories.

Zach is currently producing a non-fiction series to help small businesses -using the collective title ‘Mind Your Own Business’. The first, ‘So, You Think You Want to be a Landlord’ is already available.

Follow @Authorway on Twitter, on Facebook, Visit zachabrams.wixsite.com

About the book

Sex. Money. Power. Control. Benjamin wants it all.

He is Bennie, a loving husband and father; Benjie, a beloved son. He climbs the ladder as Ben, a corporate banker, and rakes in money as a bestselling author. And when he wants to escape it all, Benjamin styles himself as Jamie — the lover of a beautiful musician.

His life, in a word, is perfect. But after years of keeping his separate personae a secret, cracks begin to appear in the façade.

When an unexpected series of events topples Benjamin’s carefully crafted world, his separate lives collide with dire consequences.

Review

Benjamin, Bennie, Benjie, Ben and Jamie – all one and the same person, and yet they all lead entirely different lives with their own separate personalities. They even have a specific way of dressing and being perceived.

Ben (insert any other of his names here) is quite smug about his duplicitous behaviour and basks in his secret success. It’s only a question of time before it all comes tumbling down around him. In fact he is actually quite condescending when it comes to the way he treats his family or rather his families. He keeps his wife and children away from his parents, because he doesn’t want to meld his Jewish heritage with his non-Jewish pretend personas.

Perhaps he isn’t really that different from everyone else in the sense that plenty of people pretend to be someone they aren’t or adapt their actions and personality to fit into a variety of situations. Do we ever know anyone completely or do we just know and see the person they want us to experience?

The transitions could be a smoother and the characters need more depth, and less is sometimes more. It could do with a good edit. Saying that, the premise had potential, although the main character wasn’t sympathetic at all.

It’s a fast-paced contemporary read about expectations, secret lives, ego and greed. If you’re so busy trying to press every bit of your own pleasure out of life then you might just find that it passes you by quicker than you think.

Buy Ring Fenced at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer. Buy at Amazon comBuy at NextChapterPub.

#PublicationDayBlogBlitz Knowing You by Samantha Tonge

Today it’s my turn on the BlogTour Knowing You by Samantha Tonge. It’s a story about mental health, body image, self-esteem and confidence.

About the Author

Samantha Tonge lives in Manchester UK and her passion, second to spending time with her husband and children, is writing. She studied German and French at university and has worked abroad, including a stint at Disneyland Paris. She has travelled widely.

When not writing she passes her days cycling, baking and drinking coffee. Samantha has sold many dozens of short stories to women’s magazines.

In 2013, she landed a publishing deal for romantic comedy fiction with HQDigital at HarperCollins and in 2014, her bestselling debut novel, Doubting Abbey, was shortlisted for the Festival of Romantic Fiction best Ebook award. In 2015 her summer novel, Game of Scones, hit #5 in the UK Kindle chart and won the Love Stories Awards Best Romantic Ebook category.

Follow @SamTongeWriter @canelo_co on Twitter, on Facebook, 

Visit samanthatonge.co.uk

About the book

An abrupt change; a new friendship; a dark secret…

Kind-hearted Violet has never fitted in, but despite being bullied at school is now content. She is dating ambitious Lenny, has her dream job in publishing and runs a book club at the local retirement home.

However, when her relationship with Lenny begins to falter, Violet, hurt and alone, seeks the advice of her new flatmate, Bella. She changes her image and with her head held high aims to show that she doesn’t need Lenny in her life to be happy and successful.

Her long-term friends Mable and Farah worry about Bella’s influence and slowly Violet starts to distance herself from them. When she was a child, her closest confidant and companion was a boy called Flint. Her mother didn’t approve of their closeness and he suffered a terrible end. She won’t let the same thing happen to Bella, no matter what anyone says…Review

Violet shares the love of a good story with her boyfriend. With her as a junior editor and Lenny working his way up to fully-fledged agent, they both enjoy finding the kind of book that will intrigue the masses. When she finds out Lenny is cheating she is distraught and feels as if she isn’t good enough for anyone.

She decides she has to change her image and become more like other women to catch the eye of someone worth the change she puts herself through.

It’s interesting how Violet is aware of the external change she has undergone, and yet appears to be completely unaware of her own physical body image. Her body dysmorphia is kept so well hidden that even she seems to be confused by the changes.

As the world around her starts to acknowledge the changes she has made, Violet confuses concern for criticism and becomes defensive when her colleagues try to step in and tell her that old Violet was enough.

What starts out as a story about betrayal and jealousy slowly melds into one about a young woman who still hides a frightened and traumatised little girl inside her. A young girl who finds the wrong kind of friends to support her, as a child and now again as an adult. The yay sayers, who condone her more manipulative actions and coerce her into being more pushy, are driving their own agenda. Young troublemaker Flint when she was a child and now the subtle and determined Bella.

It’s a story about mental health, body image, self-esteem and confidence. I liked the way the author begins on a completely different note and then uses one storyline to almost hide the second one, which is exactly what happens in real life. The furtiveness, the denial and need to hide her emotions and insecurities become almost like a second person living right inside her.

Buy Knowing You at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer. Publisher: Canelo; pub date 14 Mar. 2019  Buy Knowing You at Amazon comBuy at ItunesGoogle PlayKobo,

Read my review Forgive Me Not by Samantha Tonge.

#CoverReveal Knowing You by Samantha Tonge

Yes, I know it’s absolutely stunning!. It’s vibrant, sexy and a wee bit sinister too. I am just loving the colour combo! The #CoverReveal was well worth the wait. It is available to purchase on the 14th March 2019, but you can pre-order it right now. Pre-order/Buy Knowing You.

About the Author

Samantha Tonge lives in Manchester UK and her passion, second to spending time with her husband and children, is writing. She studied German and French at university and has worked abroad, including a stint at Disneyland Paris. She has travelled widely.

When not writing she passes her days cycling, baking and drinking coffee. Samantha has sold many dozens of short stories to women’s magazines. 

In 2013, she landed a publishing deal for romantic comedy fiction with HQDigital at HarperCollins and in 2014, her bestselling debut novel, Doubting Abbey, was shortlisted for the Festival of Romantic Fiction best Ebook award. In 2015 her summer novel, Game of Scones, hit #5 in the UK Kindle chart and won the Love Stories Awards Best Romantic Ebook category.

Follow @SamTongeWriter @canelo_co on Twitter, on Facebook Visit samanthatonge.co.ukBuy Knowing You

About  – Knowing You 

An abrupt change; a new friendship; a dark secret…

Kind-hearted Violet has never fitted in, but despite being bullied at school is now content. She is dating ambitious Lenny, has her dream job in publishing and runs a book club at the local retirement home.

However, when her relationship with Lenny begins to falter, Violet, hurt and alone, seeks the advice of her new flatmate, Bella. She changes her image and with her head held high aims to show that she doesn’t need Lenny in her life to be happy and successful.

Her long-term friends Mable and Farah worry about Bella’s influence and slowly Violet starts to distance herself from them. When she was a child, her closest confidant and companion was a boy called Flint. Her mother didn’t approve of their closeness and he suffered a terrible end. She won’t let the same thing happen to Bella, no matter what anyone says…

Knowing You is about friendship and knowing who to trust with your deepest secrets; it’s about taking control of your life and not being afraid to stand out. Perfect for fans of Ruth Hogan, Gail Honeyman and Amanda Prowse.

Pre-order/Buy Knowing You at Amazon Uk

Pre-order/Buy Knowing You at Amazon com

Buy at ItunesGoogle PlayKobo, or via Goodreads

Publisher: Canelo; pub date 14 Mar. 2019

#BlogTour The Poppy Field by Deborah Carr

I missed the Publication Day Push (12th October 2018) for The Poppy Field by Deborah Carr, so I am just going to sneak myself onto the end of the BlogTour instead.

About the Author

Deborah Carr lives on the island of Jersey in the Channel Islands with her husband, two children and three rescue dogs. She became interested in books set in WW1 when researching her great-grandfather’s time as a cavalryman in the 17th 21st Lancers.

She is part of ‘The Blonde Plotters’ writing group and was Deputy Editor on the online review site, Novelicious.com for seven years. Her debut historical romance, Broken Faces, is set in WW1 and was runner-up in the 2012 Good Housekeeping Novel Writing Competition and given a ‘special commendation’ in the Harry Bowling Prize that year. The Poppy Field is her second historical novel.

Follow @DebsCarr @HarperImpulse on Twitter

About the book

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War.

Young nurse, Gemma, is struggling with the traumas she has witnessed through her job in the NHS. Needing to escape from it all, Gemma agrees to help renovate a rundown farmhouse in Doullens, France, a town near the Somme. There, in a boarded-up cupboard, wrapped in old newspapers, is a tin that reveals the secret letters and heartache of Alice Le Breton, a young volunteer nurse who worked in a casualty clearing station near the front line.

Set in the present day and during the horrifying years of the war, both woman discover deep down the strength and courage to carry on in even the most difficult of times. Through Alice’s words and her unfailing love for her sweetheart at the front, Gemma learns to truly live again.

This is a beautifully written epic historical novel that will take your breath away.

Review

This is a story about a woman finding herself via the medium of a voice from the past. A stranger’s love story helps Gemma to acknowledge that she needs to take what she wants with both hands and to live life with no regrets.

Gemma finds a metal box full of letters from Alice, a VAD during WW1, written to her paramour. My great-grandmother was a VAD in France in the Great War, and now and again she would speak of a Canadian love she met and lost there, so the read had sentimental value for me. The love letters become a path of discovery and make Gemma more aware of her own needs and desires.

The connection to the farmhouse, the area, and a very handsome contractor, make Gemma feel even more as if she has found a place to call home. Instead of seeing the content of the letters as Gemma reads them the reader is taken into the past to WW1 and the life of Alice Le Breton. There are parallels between the lives of the two women, which is what fascinates Gemma, despite the many years that separates them.

I have to give Carr her dues for combining fact with fiction, especially when it comes to the more harsh realities of WW1. Facts such as; the short life expectancy of a pilot, the flimsy material the planes were made out of and the fact the pilots couldn’t see where they were going or flying, and the vicious use of gas as a weapon. How frightened the soldiers were by the noise, the brutality and hopelessness of the situation, and how limited the medical professionals were when it came to saving lives.

Carr reminds us how brave both the volunteers and the enlisted were, and how many lives both in the UK and abroad were devastated by the Great War.

It’s an emotional combination of historical fact and fiction with romance and love at the very core of both tales.

Buy The Poppy Field at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer.

Publisher: HarperImpulse  Pub. date 12 Oct. 2018

#BlogTour Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife by Sun Chara

This BlogTour offers emotional turmoil and a fight to keep a child as part of the story of Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife by Sun Chara. A couple fighting against their real feelings and focusing on their pain and anger instead. Don’t forget to enter the Giveaway below to Win an e-copy of Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife and a Greek style bracelet (Open Internationally)

About the Author

Sun Chara, an Amazon top 100 bestseller, writes sexy, hip ‘n fun contemporary romance for HarperImpulse. JABBIC winner, Manhattan Millionaire’s Cinderella launched her writing career, spinning the ‘global millionaires’ series’. She makes her home in southern California, and has appeared on stage/film to rave reviews in How the Other Half Loves, General Hospital, and McGee and Me. With a Masters Degree in Education, and membership in SAG/AFTRA and Romance Writers of America, she enjoys sipping Frappuccinos topped with whipped cream/sprinkles, and dancing on the beach…making everyday a celebration!

Follow @sunchara3 and @HarperImpulse on Twitter

Or connect with suncharaauthorpage on Facebook

Buy Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife

About the book

A tempestuous fling…a marriage…a betrayal?

When Michalis Leonadis’ bride jumps ship at the first sign of rough waters, he’s annoyed. When she costs him a marriage and a billion-dollar deal, he’s furious; but when he discovers she ditched him whilst harboring a secret…he’s out for revenge.

Ex-model, Julia Armstrong gave up everything for Michalis but when she catches him with another woman, crushed, she jets out of his life. The proud Greek blasts back into her world seeking retribution—in exchange for a divorce, he demands she relinquish the one thing she cannot. Her daughter. Only one other bargaining chip remains…Julia herself.

Review

Julia and Michalis seem to be the perfect couple on the surface, but that image crumbles when she catches him with his mistress. In response she takes herself and her secret, and hightails it out of town. Over a year later her husband turns up supposedly wanting to settle their divorce.

Instead he is determined to take their child, the secret she has been coveting and taking care of by herself. Every instinct she has is telling her to run and hide, if it wasn’t for that pesky physical attraction she has to him. The two of them are drawn to each other like magnets.

The character of Michalis has a whiff of romanticised misogyny, which is perfectly normal in this genre and type of story. Come with me now and do anything I want you to do for thirty days or I will take from you what you love the most. Caveman tactics and blackmail to convince the woman you subconsciously love, but openly despise to ‘help’ her to make the right decision.

The focus of the story is a series of misunderstandings, which lead to a heartbreaking crevice in the relationship of a couple who love and lust for each other, and yet are afraid to admit it.

Chara brings back the passion and whirlwind of emotions of 80’s bodice-rippers, but in a modern day setting. It’s perfect for readers looking for a little romance mixed with titillating sexual attraction, and a tug-of-war of emotions.

Buy Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer. Publisher: Harper Impulse

Enter the Giveaway below to – Win an e-copy of Greek Millionaire, Unruly Wife and a Greek style bracelet (Open Internationally – The design of bracelet will vary depending on where in the world you live.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

(*Terms and Conditions –Worldwide entries welcome.  Please enter using the Rafflecopter box above.  The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then I reserve the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time I will delete the data.  I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.*)

#BlogTour Cuttin’ Heads by D.A. Watson

Today it’s a time for a bit of the gruesome and scary, the unexplained and unexpected, as we finish off the BlogTour for Cuttin’ Heads by D.A. Watson. Don’t forget to enter the giveaway at the end to win a signed copy of Cuttin’ Heads!

About the Author

Prizewinning author D.A. Watson spent several years working in bars, restaurants and call centres before going back to university with the half-arsed plan of becoming a music teacher. Halfway through his degree at the University of Glasgow, he discovered he was actually better at writing, and unleashed his debut novel, In the Devil’s Name, on an unsuspecting public in the summer of 2012. Plans of a career in education left firmly in the dust, he later gained his masters degree in Creative Writing from the University of Stirling.

He has since published two more novels, The Wolves of Langabhat and Cuttin’ Heads, a handful of non-fiction pieces, several short stories including Durty Diana, which was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2016, and the Burns parody Tam O’ Shatner, which in 2017 came runner up in the Dunedin Robert Burns Poetry Competition, and was a competition winner at the Falkirk Storytelling Festival.

He lives with his family in Western Scotland.

Buy Cuttin’ Heads

About the book

Aldo Evans is a desperate man. Fired from his job and deeply in debt, he struggles to balance a broken family life with his passion for music. Luce Figura is a troubled woman. A rhythmic perfectionist, she is haunted by childhood trauma and scorned by her religiously devout mother. Ross McArthur is a wiseass. Orphaned as an infant and raised by the state, his interests include game shows, home-grown weed, occasional violence and the bass guitar.

They are Public Alibi. A rock n’ roll band going nowhere fast.

When the sharp-suited, smooth talking producer Gappa Bale offers them a once in a lifetime chance to make their dreams come true, they are caught up in a maelstrom of fame, obsession, music and murder. Soon, Aldo, Luce and Ross must ask themselves: is it really better to burn out than to fade away?

Review

‘Tell me, my friend, have you ever danced with the devil in the pale moonlight?’

The band members of Public Alibi get the chance to do so, albeit unknowingly and perhaps not exactly completely of their own free will.

If you were given the chance to fulfil your wildest ambition, would you be willing to make a deal with an ancient evil being to get what you want? Fame, fortune, infamy and the adoration of the people? To do so you would have to forget about everything and everyone important to you though. With that in mind, would you still want to sign on the dotted line?

Aldo, Luce and Ross all have their weaknesses, which makes them vulnerable to the proposition of a record deal presented to them by Gappa Bale. Bale draws them into his web and preys on their inner fears and worst nightmares. At the same time his charming snake tongue speaks to their most intimate desires and deepest emotions. He plays with them like a cat in a room full of confused mice.

Although this is based on the age-old tale of evil vs good and the temptations we tend to succumb to, Watson has infused it with his own brand of menacing wickedness and his in-depth knowledge of music, the world of musicians and instruments. The reader can almost taste the passion, the need and the desire that courses through the veins of dedicated musicians.

It is a compelling tale that makes you wonder how much of it is based on the fictional meanderings of the writer and how much is so close to reality that it bites, just like a sharp intake of breath in a smoky room. It may be horror, but it is also a close uncomfortable look at the lengths some of us will go to, to achieve what they want, even if it’s at the expense of others.

Buy Cuttin’ Heads at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer. Kindle edition

Enter the Giveaway below to win a signed copy of Cuttin’ Heads

a Rafflecopter giveaway

**Terms and Conditions –Please enter using the Rafflecopter link above. The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then I reserve the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time I will delete the data.  I am not responsible for dispatch or delivery of the prize.**

#BlogTour The Picture by Roger Bray

picblogfin

Today it is my pleasure to host the BlogTour for The Picture by Roger Bray. Featuring a fantastic Q&A with Roger Bray and my review. The premise presents an interesting moral conflict and speaks to the need to be famous, to gain celebrity status and a greed of almost epidemic like proportions.

Roger Bray Author Pic

About the Author

Roger Bray  -“I have always loved writing; putting words onto a page and bringing characters to life. I can almost feel myself becoming immersed into their lives, living with their fears and triumphs. Thus, my writing process becomes an endless series of questions. What would she or he do, how would they react, is this in keeping with their character? Strange as it sounds, I don’t like leaving characters in cliffhanging situations without giving them an ending, whichever way it develops.

My life to date is what compels me to seek a just outcome, the good will overcome and the bad will be punished. More though, I tend to see my characters as everyday people in extraordinary circumstances, but in which we may all find our selves if the planets align wrongly or for whatever reason you might consider.

Of course, most novels are autobiographical in some way. You must draw on your own experiences of life and from events you have experienced to get the inspiration. My life has been an endless adventure. Serving in the Navy, fighting in wars, serving as a Police officer and the experiences each one of those have brought have all drawn me to this point, but it was a downside to my police service that was the catalyst for my writing.

Medically retired after being seriously injured while protecting a woman in a domestic violence situation I then experienced the other side of life. Depression and rejection. Giving truth to the oft said saying that when one door closes another opens I pulled myself up and enrolled in college gaining bachelor and master degrees, for my own development rather than any professional need. The process of learning, of getting words down onto the page again relit my passion for writing in a way that I hadn’t felt since high school.

So here we are, two books published and another on track.

Where it will take me I have no idea but I am going to enjoy getting there and if my writing can bring some small pleasure into people’s lives along the way, then I consider that I will have succeeded in life.”

Connect with Roger Bray:

Follow @rogerbray22 on Twitter or RogerBray/Author on Facebook

Visit rogerbraybooks.com

To Buy The Picture go to Amazon com

Buy The Picture on Smashwords

Buy The Picture on Amazon Uk 

picture45About the book

A warehouse in Japan used as an emergency shelter in the aftermath of the 2011 Tsunami. A distraught, young Japanese woman in dishevelled clothes sits on a box, holding her infant daughter. Ben, a US rescue volunteer, kneels in front of her offering comfort. They hug, the baby between them. The moment turns into an hour as the woman sobs into his shoulder; mourning the loss of her husband, her home, the life she knew. A picture is taken, capturing the moment. It becomes a symbol; of help freely given and of the hope of the survivors. The faces in the picture cannot be recognised, and that is how Ben likes it. No celebrity, thanks not required.

But others believe that being identified as the person in the picture is their path to fame and fortune. Ben stands, unknowingly, in their way, but nothing a contract killing cannot fix.

picture2Q&A with Roger Bray

Before we get down to business (i.e. talking about your book) I would like to ask a set of questions I call ‘Breaking the Ice.’ (readers love to get to know all about their favourite and new authors)

The last book you read? (Inquisitive bookworms would like to know) The last book I read was a re-reading of Sebastian Faulks Birdsong.

Books or authors who have inspired you to put pen to paper? Orwell -1984, Tom Sharpe – Any of them but the Throwback is a favourite, Leo Uris – Exodus and Armageddon.

The last book you read, which you felt left a mark (in your heart, soul, wallet…you name it) The reboot / continuation call it what you will of the Stieg Larssons Millenium series – what were they thinking?

Are you more of a movie night, series-binger or curl up with a good book kind of guy? A bit of all of them really, my wife and I like to do a Lord of the Rings Marathon once in a while, harder once we bought the extended version and then the Hobbit trilogy came out.  So more of a weekend event now.

Which famous person (dead, alive, barely kicking) would you most like to meet? Stieg Larsson – see above. Give me a clue, what was the fourth book going to be about (apparently a lot of the fourth manuscript exists but family dramas have caused issues.)

All of the above questions are actually a pretty elaborate pysch evaluation disguised as random questions. Have no fear here come the real ones. Let’s talk about The Picture!

What was your inspiration for The Picture? I had an idea for a book highlighting the cult of celebrity in which we live.  This has always been around but with social media it is a lot easier for people to reach a large number of people.  I never have a problem with people who have a talent in something, music, art, acting, anything where some sort of input and effort is required.  I find the current situation of these people who believe they are celebrities and believe they should be because they merely exist but offer absolutely nothing to society absurd.   I then had an idea for a picture being taken in circumstances of suffering and / or hope and how that could be manipulated by the aforementioned oxygen thieves for their own aggrandizement.  The two elements started as different ideas which melded together quite nicely.

Ben’s character and choices as a person play a pivotal part in the story. Kindness and compassion, as a lifestyle choice. Is it your way of saying a little kindness and even a small gesture can go a long way? Of course, absolutely. A little kindness, a gesture can make all the difference to someone’s day or even their life.  Often you don’t realise that the small gesture has made a difference, but I recall an incidence when I know it did.  I was in a shop and there was a harried looking mother pushing a wheel chair.  She was behind me at the checkout.  I wasn’t taking much notice but I looked down at the pushchair.  The young boy, 3 or 4 years old, had a severe case of (I think) Treacher Collins syndrome.  He looked up at me and I smiled and gave him an Laural and Hardyesque exaggerated finger wave and said something like ‘how are you going buddy, having a good day with mum.’  He started smiling and I looked up at mum and she was beaming as well.  I went through the checkout and was heading towards my bike when they caught up with me.  The mum couldn’t thank me enough although I didn’t think I had actually done anything.  Apparently most people recoil when they see him, or ignore him.  My treating him as a normal kid meant everything to her.

Little things do go a long way and normally cost you absolutely nothing. I wrote a short piece on kindness on my blog

Do you think parental alienation (Ben and Anna) is becoming more frequent and perhaps isn’t dealt with the way it should be by the courts, thereby leaving many broken parent-child relationships in its wake? In The Picture I directed the story of Ben and Anna in a particular direction for the narrative of the story.  I only touched on the idea of courts getting involved in family breakups and custody fights.

I am not an expert in this but I do know usually Courts and social workers try to do the right thing, sometimes parents do the right thing with out court involvement and if an amicable arrangement can be reached outside the Court system it is probably best all around.    There are many reason why relationships break down as you have suggested. The Courts are an attempt by society as the last chance to reach some accord.  Once people get to Court the situation is dire anyway and to blame the Courts is too simplistic, they are trying to deal with human emotions which are often totally illogical    Without jumping on a soap box, moral direction, personal responsibility and a little selflessness on the part of parents may go a long way to fix some of the issues.  But some just cannot be fixed, with or without the Courts.

Greed, and an obsession with fame and celebrity, seems to be the bane of our existence in this day and age. Do you think the expansion of social media and a general lack of boundaries exacerbate these traits in people? Yes.  As described above I think the whole thing is absurd.  Of course, as individuals, we can choose to engage or disengage with this but it is difficult, it is all pervading.   Think back thirty years and consider the type of people who were role models and those who were not.  The whole thing has been reversed and those who were not considered role models now are.  No wonder the youth are confused being bombarded with the beautiful, morally bankrupt people day in day out.   And rock music was better when ugly people made it. :o)

These snapshots in time and history often take on a life of their own. What is more important, the image and the situation or moment it represents, or the image and knowing who is in the image? That would very much depend on the image and the situation. For example in June 1963 a Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc,  sat in the centre of an intersection in Saigon.  He poured petrol over himself and set himself on fire.  The picture of the event is world renown taken by Associated Press photographer Malcolm Browne.  JFK said “No news picture in history has generated so much emotion around the world as that one.”  Look at it today, search ‘Burning Monk and there he is Quang Duc sitting serenely as he self immolated.   That picture changed world events, it changed US foreign policy.  One picture.  Even today it promotes awe at Quang Duc’s sacrifice.  Ask people ‘what was the specific reason for Quang Duc’s actions’ and I doubt many would know.  So the picture has survived while the reason for it has been lost to general knowledge.   Some images and events are linked intimately, some take on a general impression of what occurred, but the full reason, are not always apparent.  A difficult question to definitively answer beyond that.

Ben doesn’t make a big deal out of his act of compassion or the fact he has helped during an extreme time of despair. There are plenty of nameless and faceless heroes, why do the majority choose to stay nameless, faceless and unknown? Instead of using their acts to become famous or infamous? Because it is their job.  They do what needs to be done and move on to the next one. Police officers, fire fighters, doctors nurses, paramedics, rescue volunteers,  social workers the list is endless.  They do it because they believe they are doing good in their communities.  Unfortunately we don’t often hear anything about them unless something goes wrong in which case the press is there to pillory them.   You don’t hear stories of police officers who have had to deal with a SIDS death, then go home to their own young families, or a doctor crying because they have lost a patient or firefighters carrying victims from a house blaze.  It is their job, they get up each morning and do it.  Most emergency service workers would be deeply suspicious of someone trying to use a tragic event to their own advantage.

Thank you for answering all my questions, even the odder ones! Thanks very much Cheryl for having me.  I really enjoyed the questions, especially the odder ones. Sorry if I ranted a bit, I’ll slip the soap box back under the desk now. :o)

The Picture (1)

Review

The story is split into two sections, although that is probably unintentional and both story-lines do link up. The first half of the book is all about how Ben reconnects with his past, in particular with the daughter he has never met before. Like many other families who are torn apart by separation, the children often hear one-sided accounts of their own history, and of their parents relationship.

In this case Ben’s daughter believes he made a conscious choice to abandon his child. With those kind of negative emotions it is hard to try and build a new relationship, which is exactly what Ben’s ex-police partner asks her to do when Ben is seriously injured in an armed robbery. She finds it difficult to just bury her anger and become the doting daughter. There are some things that are unforgivable.

Paul spends a lot of time filling Anna in on the past. Explaining what he thinks happened between her parents and trying to give her an idea of what kind of man Ben really is. To demonstrate how selfless Ben is, Paul tells her the story of how Ben helped a young woman in her most vulnerable moment by acknowledging what she needed most at that moment in time. That moment of humanity was captured on photograph, and has since become a viral and global sensation. It’s now synonymous for the pain, loss and destruction during the Japanese tsunami. A young woman and her baby in the aftermath of chaos and death. This leads the reader to the focus of the second half of the book.

Another man takes credit for the kind actions in the photo, and gains both money and celebrity through this fraudulent association. This is the core point of The Picture. The lengths people will go to to become famous, to make money and gain celebrity in our society. There is no sense of guilt, just a brazen attitude of privilege and self- preservation. The fraudster doesn’t care about the girl in the picture or how the picture came to be, he is only interested in maximum profit and not being discovered for the criminal he is.

Bray brings two quite different topics to the table, the emotional upheaval and one-sided narrative of parental alienation and the endless need for attention and validation by the masses, in our 21st century society, especially in the era of social media and instant gratification. The premise presents an interesting moral conflict and speaks to the need to be famous, to gain celebrity status and a greed of almost epidemic like proportions.

Buy The Picture at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer.

Read Psychosis by Roger Bray

Read Blood Ribbon by Roger Bray

The Picture Full Banner

#BlogTour Game Show by Allie Cresswell

It’s my pleasure to host the BlogTour for Game Show by Allie Cresswell today. This story is a sign of the times and it takes a frank look at human nature. It is brutal and unforgiving.

About the Author

I have been writing stories since I could hold a pencil and by the time I was in Junior School I was writing copiously and sometimes almost legibly.

I did, however, manage a BA in English and Drama from Birmingham University and an MA in English from Queen Mary College, London. Marriage and motherhood put my writing career on hold for some years until 1992 when I began work on Game Show.

In the meantime I worked as a production manager for an educational publishing company, an educational resources copywriter, a bookkeeper for a small printing firm, and was the landlady of a country pub in Yorkshire, a small guest house in Cheshire and the proprietor of a group of boutique holiday cottages in Cumbria. Most recently I taught English Literature to Lifelong learners.

Nowadays I write as full time as three grandchildren, a husband, two Cockapoos and a large garden will permit.

Connect with Allie Cresswell on Facebook: alliescribbler/

Visit allie-cresswell.com

Buy Game Show

About the book

It is 1992, and in a Bosnian town a small family cowers in their basement. The Serbian militia is coming – an assorted rabble of malcontents given authority by a uniform and inflamed by the idea that they’re owed something, big-time, and the Bosnians are going to pay. When they get to the town they will ransack the houses, round up the men and rape the women. Who’s to stop them? Who’s to accuse them? Who will be left, to tell the tale?

Meanwhile, in a nondescript northern UK town a group of contestants make their way to the TV studios to take part in a radical new Game Show. There’s money to be won, and fun to be had. They’ll be able to throw off their inhibitions and do what they want because they’ll all be in disguise and no-one will ever know.

In a disturbing denouement, war and game meld into each other as action and consequence are divided, the words ‘blame’ and ‘fault’ have no meaning and impunity reigns .

Game Show asks whether the situation which fostered the Bosnian war, the genocide in Rwanda, the rise of so-called Islamic State in Syria and the ethnic cleansing in Myanmar could ever happen in the West. The answer will shock you.

Review

I adore the kind of premise that explores human nature. The contestants for this game show are a mixed bunch of individuals, so the choices they make and the reactions they have are bound to differ. A privileged wealthy housewife seeks the thrill, as opposed to the love deprived exhausted multiple mother on a tight budget, who may be willing to be more cut-throat to win the show.

At the beginning of the book the show is set to the topic of Native Americans. The scenes are bloodthirsty, wild and barbaric, so aside from the obvious cultural appropriation going on, there is also the aspect of depicting the stereotype and misconceptions of their culture. Very much a privileged white man’s idea of amusement, and another indicator of the ‘do anything for high ratings’ mentality of our era.

The West has already experienced the Holocaust, so the answer to the question in the blurb is yes it can happen in the West. In Western European countries the far right is sitting in governments once more, swastikas and hate crimes are in abundance. In the US the alt-right marches with Tiki torches.Today, at this moment in time, Western society is being forced into a similar scenario, a division between Muslims and non-Muslims, caused by the terrorism of fundamentalists and radicals.

Cresswell mentions the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment, as one of her inspirations to explore the psychology of human nature, and indeed confirm what the majority of us already know through history or perhaps even personal experience.

Given the right set of circumstances and motivation the majority of people will show the base animal instinct of human nature. Survival of the fittest, and above all power and control over others. A certain number of us will lose all inhibition and show ourselves capable of extreme violence and of inflicting pain upon those we perceive to be weaker and deserving of it.

The background of the story is set in the 1990’s to the background of the Bosnian conflict. At this point I have to say that despite constant reminders that we all never forget the atrocities of the Nazi regime, we are probably all guilty of ignoring the genocides that have taken place since then, the Bosnian War being a perfect example of that.

There is an interesting rant by Piers (producer) given in the first half of the book, when he more or less denies responsibility for any actions or events that place during the show, because in his eyes any person unable to recognise right from wrong has no moral fibre anyway. Thereby placing the blame solely in the hands of the single perpetrators. Now, don’t get me wrong they are to blame, but the person inciting them is just as culpable, actually more so.

Our television screens are awash with game shows and reality tv shows nowadays. Japanese game shows are a prime example of the balancing act between fun and bizarrely extreme behaviour. Participants are asked to act this way, they are primed and rewarded for it, and viewers lap it up. There is a market for it, and the boundaries are becoming less visible as the years go on.

There are two storylines in Game Show, both of which could survive as a standalone plot. Combined the juxtaposition of these two storylines makes the reader aware of the parallels in human behaviour in either situation. Simultaneously it also highlights the ludicrous and frankly abhorrent fact that while the rest of the world is engaged in mundane daily chores, somewhere else men, women and children are being slaughtered.

Cresswell doesn’t intend for this to be an easy read. Unfortunately it reminds us of the chaos and violence of human nature. How easily the masses are led, and how fragile our masks of civility are. Given the right set of circumstances the most docile human being can turn into a sadistic killer, and the most brash could possibly crumble at the first sign of adversity.

Game Show is about life within the confines of societal boundaries, and also when it is void of any boundaries at all. Is there really any difference between the two?

Buy Game Show at Amazon Uk or go to Goodreads for any other retailer.

#CoverReveal The Picture by Roger Bray

I am thrilled to share the Cover Reveal for The Picture by Roger Bray and am looking forward to the Blogtour for The Picture, which kicks off on the 22nd of April.

About The Picture

A warehouse in Japan used as an emergency shelter in the aftermath of the 2011 Tsunami. A distraught, young Japanese woman in dishevelled clothes sits on a box, holding her infant daughter. Ben, a US rescue volunteer, kneels in front of her offering comfort. They hug, the baby between them. The moment turns into an hour as the woman sobs into his shoulder; mourning the loss of her husband, her home, the life she knew. A picture is taken, capturing the moment. It becomes a symbol; of help freely given and of the hope of the survivors. The faces in the picture cannot be recognised, and that is how Ben likes it. No celebrity, thanks not required.

But others believe that being identified as the person in the picture is their path to fame and fortune. Ben stands, unknowingly, in their way, but nothing a contract killing cannot fix.

About the Author

I have always loved writing; putting words onto a page and bringing characters to life. I can almost feel myself becoming immersed into their lives, living with their fears and triumphs. Thus, my writing process becomes an endless series of questions. What would she or he do, how would they react, is this in keeping with their character? Strange as it sounds, I don’t like leaving characters in cliffhanging situations without giving them an ending, whichever way it develops.

My life to date is what compels me to seek a just outcome, the good will overcome and the bad will be punished. More though, I tend to see my characters as everyday people in extraordinary circumstances, but in which we may all find our selves if the planets align wrongly or for whatever reason you might consider.

Of course, most novels are autobiographical in some way. You must draw on your own experiences of life and from events you have experienced to get the inspiration. My life has been an endless adventure. Serving in the Navy, fighting in wars, serving as a Police officer and the experiences each one of those have brought have all drawn me to this point, but it was a downside to my police service that was the catalyst for my writing.

Medically retired after being seriously injured while protecting a woman in a domestic violence situation I then experienced the other side of life. Depression and rejection. Giving truth to the oft said saying that when one door closes another opens I pulled myself up and enrolled in college gaining bachelor and master degrees, for my own development rather than any professional need. The process of learning, of getting words down onto the page again relit my passion for writing in a way that I hadn’t felt since high school.

So here we are, two books published and another on track.

Where it will take me I have no idea but I am going to enjoy getting there and if my writing can bring some small pleasure into people’s lives along the way, then I consider that I will have succeeded in life.

Connect with Roger Bray:

Follow @rogerbray22 on Twitter or RogerBray/Author on Facebook

Visit rogerbraybooks.com

To Buy The Picture go to Amazon com (The Picture will appear on the buy pages closer to the pub date. I will update the post as soon as the buy links appear)

Buy The Picture on Smashwords

The Picture on Goodreads

Read Psychosis by Roger Bray

Come back for my turn on the Blogtour for The Picture by Roger Bray on the 24th of April! There will be a fantastic Q&A with Roger Bray and my review. Follow the tour starting on the 22nd of April and read what my fellow bloggers have to say about #ThePicture.

Read The Picture by Roger Bray