Blog Tour/Book Review: Island on Fire by Sophie Schiller

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I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Island on Fire by Sophie Schiller, set in the Caribbean island of Martinique.  Having been lucky enough to visit Martinique, albeit only for a day as a port of call on a Caribbean cruise, I simply couldn’t resist the invitation from Amy at Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours to read and review the book.  You can find my review below.

On the tour page, you can check out the other great book bloggers taking part in the tour with links to their reviews of Island on Fire.  For example, Stacie at Pursuing Stacie described it as ‘an enjoyable, fast-paced historical fiction’, praising the author’s ‘impeccable research’.  Ashley at Oh, October described the book as ‘unique, well researched historical fiction’ and Briennai at Bri’s Book Nook loved the beautiful setting.

WinIf those comments have piqued your interest and you’re a US resident then, good news, as there’s a giveaway with a chance for one lucky person to win their very own copy of Island on Fire. Enter via the Gleam form at the bottom of the tour page.  Don’t hang about though as entries close on 14th August 2018.


Island on FireAbout the Book

In the lush, tropical world of Martinique where slavery is a distant memory and voodoo holds sway, Emilie Dujon discovers that her fiancé, a rich sugar planter, has been unfaithful. Desperate to leave him, she elicits the aid of a voodoo witch doctor and is lured into a shadowy world of black magic and extortion. When the volcano known as Mount Pelée begins to rumble and spew ash, she joins a scientific committee sent to investigate the crater. During the journey she meets Lt. Denis Rémy, an army officer with a mysterious past.

At the summit, the explorers discover that a second crater has formed and the volcano appears to be on the verge of eruption. But when they try to warn the governor, he orders them to bury the evidence for fear of upsetting the upcoming election. As the pressure builds, a deadly mudslide inundates Emilie’s plantation and she disappears. With ash and cinders raining down, chaos ensues. Left with no choice, Lt. Rémy deserts his post and sets off on a desperate quest to rescue Emilie. But with all roads blocked, can they escape the doomed city of St. Pierre before it’s too late?

Format: ebook, paperback (270 pp.)    Publisher:
Published: 15th March 2018          Genre: Historical Fiction, Historical Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Island on Fire on Goodreads


My Review

In Island on Fire the author creates a picture of a society where, much like the volcano, a lot is going on underneath the surface, whether that is commercial and political machinations or continued belief in voodoo practices in an age of modern science and rationality.

Despite evidence to the contrary, those in authority choose to believe that there is no threat from the volcano, having more regard to the consequences of panic by the population than the possible risk to life and property. This will prove to have disastrous consequences.

The book’s heroine, Emilie, whilst in all other respects an intelligent, independent-minded young woman, reflects the dichotomy in Martinique society. As a result she acts in a way that seems out of character but which reflects the desperation she feels at the situation in which she finds herself.

Whilst the book description reveals much of the story (a little too much to my mind), the author creates a credible sense of melodrama as events unfold in dramatic fashion.

I really enjoyed the evocative portrayal of the island’s lush landscape, vegetation and wildlife. ‘Everywhere he looked, the island was teeming with life. Mango trees, sprawling bougainvillea, flaming flamboyant, majestic palm trees, and endless plantations dotting the hillsides like a parchwork quilt of sumptuous beauty.’ Plus, as regular followers of this blog will know, I can’t resist delicious descriptions of food and there are plenty of the local cuisine in the book.

Island on Fire reveals a fascinating aspect of the history of Martinique that was new to me as well as being an entertaining, if slightly melodramatic, story of betrayal, honour and love

I received a review copy courtesy of the author and Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours, in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Romance, melodrama, adventure

Try something similar…Fireburn by Apple Gidley


Sophie SchillerAbout the Author

Sophie Schiller was born in Paterson, NJ and grew up in the West Indies. She loves stories that carry the reader back in time to exotic and far-flung locations. Kirkus Reviews called her “an accomplished thriller and historical adventure writer”. Her latest novel is Island on Fire, a thriller about the worst volcanic disaster of the 20th century. She was educated at American University, Washington, DC and lives in Brooklyn, NY.

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Blog Tour/Q&A: Blood and Ink by D. K. Marley

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I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for historical mystery, Blood and Ink by D. K. Marley.  I have a fabulous interview in which, amongst other things, the author shares her fascination with research, the challenges of achieving historical authenticity and her own favourite authors.

WinThere’s also a giveaway (open internationally) running until the end of the tour with a chance to win one of two copies of Blood and Ink. To enter and view the rules, visit the tour page here and complete the Gleam form at the bottom of the page.

On the tour page you can also see the other fantastic book bloggers taking part in the tour and follow links to reviews of Blood and Ink.

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Blood and InkAbout the Book

Blood and Ink tells the story of Christopher “Kit” Marlowe, the dark and brooding playwright of Queen Elizabeth’s court. Marlowe sells his soul to gain the one thing he desires: to see his name immortalized.

Inspired at an early age on the banks of the Stour River, his passion for a goose quill and ink thrusts him into the labyrinth of England’s underworld – a secret spy ring created by the Queen’s spymaster, Sir Frances Walsingham.  Kit suffers the whips and scorns of time as he witnesses the massacre of Paris, the hypocrisy of the church, the rejection from his ‘dark lady,’ the theft of his identity as a playwright, and wrenching loss breathing life into many of his unforgettable characters.

As he sinks further into the clutches of Walsingham, a masque is written by his own hand to save his life from shadowing betrayers, from the Queen’s own Star Chamber, and from the Jesuit assassins of Rome, thus sending him into exile and allowing an unknown actor from Stratford-upon-Avon, William Shakespeare, to step into his shoes.

And so begins the lie; and yet, what will a man not do to regain his name?

Format: Audiobook, paperback, ebook (438 pp.)    Publisher: The White Rabbit Publishing
Published: 28th March 2018  Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Blood and Ink on Goodreads


Interview: D. K. Marley, author of Blood and Ink

Without giving too much away, can you tell me a bit about Blood and Ink?

Blood and Ink is the story of the playwright, Christopher Marlowe, and his association with the underground world of Walsingham’s spy ring, how he became a playwright, the possibility he did not die in 1593 and is the suspected true author of Shakespeare’s plays.

How did you get the idea for the story?

In 2000, I visited the Globe Theatre in London. At the time, there was a display in the museum about the different men who might have written or co-written the plays of Shakespeare. One of them was Kit Marlowe. When I got back home from that trip, I started researching since it was always my desire to write a historical fiction novel. Something about the idea struck me as an incredible premise for an alternate history, so I spent the next few years researching and plotting out my novel.

How did you approach your research for the book? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I love the process of research, but sometimes I have to remind myself that I am a writer, or else I get really absorbed in history. My process is: 1) read and read and read; 2) take lots of notes and start arranging them on note cards or files; 3) plot out my story and characters and see how to fit in the history; 4) start writing.

What was the most surprising fact you came across during your research?

So much! Even though I am a staunch Stratfordian and believer in William Shakespeare as the author, I was surprised at how much of the sonnets reflected Marlowe’s life. I found myself baffled at times at the evidence of Marlowe’s death – the inquest, the grave, the suspicions, the trumped-up charges against him, and the secret identity of Monsieur LeDoux. Very intriguing!!

What do you think is the key to creating an authentic picture of a particular historical period?

To me, to take a reader back to the time period, you must stay true to the setting, the language (as far as it does not turn your reader off), the clothes, the smells, the poor living conditions, everything! Tudor England or Medieval England was not the romantic setting so often portrayed today on television or film…especially to the poor. Even to the nobility, you were dealing with dark, dank, sometimes sweltering, sometimes frigid estates or castles; so to stay authentic to historical fiction, all of these elements give your reader honesty.

Readers (me included) seem fascinated with the Tudor period of English history.  Why do you think this is?

I love it, as well. Tudor history is fascinating because it represents a time of incredible change, in thinking, in art, in religion, and all backed by one of the most interesting Queens in history. True, the history has been glamorized in television and film, but for me, there is something so relatable, as well as fantastical, about these people’s lives. Love, passion, betrayal, greed, suffering, ambition, death, marriage, feminism, bullying, machismo, friendship, lust, secrets, politics, religion… the stuff of life, even our life today, except flavoured with grand gowns, men with swords, and imposing castles. Somehow, I think (speaking as a reader myself) we imagine the aforementioned list manageable if we wore a corset and our hero swept in wearing a doublet. We seek to escape and what better century to escape than the seemingly magical world of the Tudors!

Were there particular scenes in the book you found especially challenging – or rewarding – to write?

I found the scenes of the massacre in Paris difficult to write. I rewrote the scene several times, sometimes more violent, sometimes less violent, but ended with trying to focus more on how the scene affected Kit as a young boy instead of the gory details of what happened in the streets of Paris. I loved writing the scene between Marlowe and the Countess of Pembroke. When I first read Venus and Adonis, I thought to myself…”this happened, the writer of this poem is speaking from experience, just the same as when he wrote the poem of a young shepherd boy to his secret love”… so the entire scene developed from the poem. Mary Herbert was an incredible poetess in her own right and very well could have been a match for Marlowe, so the entire scene just flowed from my mind as I wrote.

Do you have a favourite place to write or any writing rituals?

This may sound funny, but I have a loveseat covered with a Toile slipcover where I sit to write. The scenes on the slipcover depict English country scenes with women in flowing skirts and men on horseback, so maybe it gives me inspiration. Plus, my daughter, who was killed 3 1/2 years ago by a drunk driver, used to sit in this very seat and read her favourite books when she would come to visit me. She was my reading buddy, so I feel close to her when I sit here.

Which authors do you admire and enjoy reading?

I have so many and continue to add to my collection. My first and foremost is Carlos Ruiz Zafon, who wrote The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel’s Game. Next in my list is in order: William Shakespeare (of course), Ken Follett, Jane Austen, Rosalind Miles, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Toni Morrison, and Margaret George.

What are you working on next? 

My second novel, Prince of Sorrows, a historical fiction adaptation of the play Hamlet is now available on Amazon. I am working on a breakaway novel, meaning breaking away from my normal Shakespearean vein, with a historical novel titled Child of Love and Water set in the islands of Coastal Georgia in the 1700s, involving a Creek Indian warrior, a Gullah slave girl, a British soldier, and an Irish immigrant girl, due out in December of 2018. My next in the Shakespeare series is A Winter’s Fire which adapts the story of Lady Macbeth and is set for release in the spring or summer of 2019.

Thank you for those fascinating answers and insight into your busy writing life!


DK MarleyAbout the Author

D. K. Marley is a historical fiction writer specializing in Shakespearean themes. Her grandmother, an English Literature teacher, gave her a volume of Shakespeare’s plays when she was eleven, inspiring DK to delve further into the rich Elizabethan language. Eleven years ago she began the research leading to the publication of her first novel Blood and Ink, an epic tale of lost dreams, spurned love, jealousy and deception in Tudor England as two men, William Shakespeare and Kit Marlowe, fight for one name and the famous works now known as the Shakespeare Folio.

She is an avid Shakespearean/Marlowan, a member of the Marlowe Society, the Shakespeare Fellowship and a signer of the Declaration of Intent for the Shakespeare Authorship Debate. She has travelled to England three times for intensive research and debate workshops, and is a graduate of the intense training workshop “The Writer’s Retreat Workshop” founded by Gary Provost and hosted by Jason Sitzes.

She lives in Georgia with her husband and a Scottish Terriers named Maggie and Buster.

Connect with D. K. Marley

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