Blog Tour/Guest Post: Tapestry of War by Jane MacKenzie

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Jane MacKenzie’s wonderful historical novel, Tapestry of War.  Described as a perfect read for fans of Victoria Hislop and Santa Montefiore – and don’t those two authors know how to bring the past thrillingly to life? – Tapestry of War is inspired by the author’s own family history.  During World War 2, Jane’s father-in-law disguised himself to rescue Allied servicemen in the Greek islands, and met his future wife in Alexandria.

I have a fascinating guest post from Jane in which she shares her thoughts on writing a book set in a place you’re familiar with, as indeed she is with the Scottish Highlands.

The tour schedule at the bottom of this post shows the other great book bloggers taking part in the tour where you will find reviews, interviews and book extracts.

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tapestry of warAbout the Book

Amidst the horrors of the Second World War, love and friendship bring two strangers together across conflict-ravaged continents.

In Alexandria, Fran finds her life turned upside down as Rommel’s forces advance on the idyllic shores of Egypt. In place of the luxury and stability that she is used to, she finds herself having to deal with loss, heartache and political uncertainty.

Meanwhile, on the Firth of Clyde, Catriona works day in, day out nursing injured servicemen. As the war rages on, the two women’s lives become entwined – bringing love and friendship to both.

Format: ebook, Paperback (320 pp.) Publisher: Allison and Busby
Published: 19th April 2018                  Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Publisher ǀ Amazon.co.uk ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Tapestry of War on Goodreads


Guest Post: ‘Setting Books Somewhere You’re Familiar With’ by Jane MacKenzie, author of Tapestry of War

It can be funny writing about a place you know from the outside in, that you feel and understand intuitively. It is in a way a gift, since you don’t have to fret over research and getting your facts right. But it brings its own difficulties too.

Tapestry of War is set in Egypt and in Scotland, and of course Scotland is my home. I live in the Highlands, and the whole way of life I describe in the book is one I am immersed in, bathed in, raised my children in. But then, when you come to write that down, you realise you have to take yourself out of it a little in order to find the words, and to describe what is so familiar.

It helps that it is so beautiful, and that we live so close to the forces of nature. You only have to stop and remember a wild night in December, the bitter winds of January, or a long, incredibly peaceful evening in summer. And once you have really embedded yourself in that act of remembrance then you can conjure up the little details, the birds that you see, the smells, how the hills look, the changing colours of the sea, and the description of them flows.

It helped that I was setting the book in the 1940s, during World War Two, because I’m a spectator of that era. But even then, the true Highland culture and social values haven’t changed that much. There are still women just like Aunt Sheila keeping their families together, baking, mending, visiting their neighbours, running village events. It’s a traditional place, is rural Scotland. In my own village of Plockton it can take half an hour to walk to our little shop, because you have to stop and talk to so many people on the way, check on someone who has been unwell, drop some soup into an elderly relative. I really wanted to evoke that, and I hope I’ve succeeded in passing on some of my love for my home country.

In writing about Egypt it was very different. I know Egypt, and have visited Alexandria, but it has changed so definitively since the war years that I relied much more on historical accounts, old pictures, some wonderful memoirs from the time. I do know what the elderly men look like as they sit over their little burners making tea in the streets, and I know how the heat smells, and how the sun rises over Alexandria harbour. But I can be freer in my descriptions of Egypt. I can imagine it and make it my own with much greater abandon.

Isn’t it strange that your own home, the place you live and breathe, should often be harder to write about? It is lovely, though, when your own people read your work and say ‘Yes, that’s it, you’ve captured it. That’s who we are.’               © Jane MacKenzie


Jane MacKenzieAbout the Author

Jane MacKenzie has spent much of her adult life travelling the world, teaching English and French everywhere from the Gambia to Papua New Guinea to Bahrain, and recently working for two years at CERN in Geneva. She now splits her time between her self-built house in Collioure, France, and the Highlands of Scotland, where she has made her family home. She is the author of the best-selling Daughters of Catalonia.

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Tapestry of War Tour Schedule

 

Blog Tour/Review: Suitors and Sabotage by Cindy Anstey

SuitorsAndSabotageTourBanner

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Suitors and Sabotage by Cindy Anstey.  I really enjoyed Cindy’s previous book, Duels & Deception, when I read it a while back.  And Suitors and Sabotage is more of the same – a lovely, light read with more than a few nods to that illustrious novelist, Jane Austen.  You can read my review of Suitors and Sabotage below.

WinCheck out the tour schedule here for links to reviews by other great book bloggers, guest posts by Cindy, extracts and interviews with Cindy.


Suitors and SabotageAbout the Book

Two young people must hide their true feelings for each other while figuring out who means them harm in this cheeky Regency romance from the author of Love, Lies and Spies and Duels & Deception.

Shy aspiring artist Imogene Chively has just had a successful Season in London, complete with a suitor of her father’s approval. Imogene is ambivalent about the young gentleman until he comes to visit her at the Chively estate with his younger brother in tow. When her interest is piqued, however, it is for the wrong brother.

Charming Ben Steeple has a secret: despite being an architectural apprentice, he has no drawing aptitude. When Imogene offers to teach him, Ben is soon smitten by the young lady he considers his brother’s intended.

But hiding their true feelings becomes the least of their problems when, after a series of “accidents,” it becomes apparent that someone means Ben harm. And as their affection for each other grows—despite their efforts to remain just friends – so does the danger…

Format: ebook (331 pp.)           Publisher: Swoon Reads
Published: 17th April 2018       Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Romance, YA

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Suitors and Sabotage on Goodreads


My Review

‘In which a young lady finds her attention is drawn to her charming but rather serious suitor’s hotter younger brother.

Apologies to Cindy Anstey for my rather poor attempt to emulate her humorous chapter headings that playfully evoke the era of Jane Austen.  Some of my favourites include:

‘In which hands and fluff are subjects of a deep discussion.’
‘In which the words “dreadful” and “secret” are bandied about.’
‘In which a question about the question is questioned.’

Imogene (with that curious ‘e’ on the end) finds herself in a quandary.  She admires her suitor, the kind, charming, bookish Ernest, who lives up to his name in being serious and (whisper) at times perhaps a little dull.  As she confides to her best friend, Emily, ‘I never feel my heart race when our eyes meet.’  However, she knows her mother and father would strongly approve if she was to accept an offer of marriage from Ernest.

But….Imogene finds herself becoming more and more attracted to Ernest’s younger brother, Ben – a lively character, very easy on the eye and someone who shares Imogene’s interest in architecture and art, even if he’s no match for her on the sketching front.  Fortunately, Ben’s need to improve his drawing skills in order to progress in his architecture apprenticeship provides the pretext for him and Imogene to spend time together for some one-to-one tuition.

Imogene forces herself to fight against the attraction, especially once it appears it may test the bonds of friendship. ‘Ernest had so many stellar qualities that Imogene had made a list of them…a list she repeated every time her traitorous thoughts veered toward Ben.’ Keep repeating that list, Imogen!

Events take a darker turn when what start out as mischievous pranks progress to sabotage and acts that may endanger life or limb.  Uncovering the culprit provides a gentle secondary story line to the brotherly rivalry for Imogene’s affections.

I really enjoyed Cindy Anstey’s previous novel, Duels & Deception, and in this book again she provides insights into the social proprieties of the time.  For example, the contrast between ‘town manners’ and ‘country manners’, with the latter involving relatively more informality, much earlier hours of rising (except for those ladies who keep ‘town hours’ and rise late) and outdoor pursuits such as walks and picnics.  I was also glad to see a welcome return for the phrase ‘doing it up brown’.

Suitors and Sabotage was a lovely light read with some nice little touches of humour.  For example, I liked that the author has Emily remark, ’The wonderful aspect of books is that they wait for you…and are not in the least insulted if you deviated for a bit.’  How true!  Also, I loved the little in-joke as Emily comments, ‘I’m not at ease with the idea that someone under this roof has some sort of sinister intent.  That is something that happens only in novels, not in reality.’   

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of NetGalley, publishers Swoon Reads and Giselle at Xpresso Book Tours in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Light, charming, lively

Try something similar…Duels & Deception by Cindy Anstey (click here to read my review)


CindyAbout the Author

Whenever she is not sitting at the computer, throwing a ball in the backyard, gardening or reading, Cindy can be found – actually, not found – adventuring around the world with her hubby. She has lived on three continents, had a monkey in her yard and a scorpion under her sink, dwelt among castles and canals, enjoyed the jazz of Beale St and attempted to speak French.  Cindy loves history, mystery and… a chocolate Labrador called Chester.

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