Blog Tour/Guest Post: London Spies by S. J. Slagle

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World War 2 London.  Spies.  Espionage.  Count me in!  As a lover of historical fiction and someone always on the lookout for a new historical mystery series, I’m thrilled to be kicking off the blog tour for London Spies by S. J. Slagle.

I’m delighted to say I have a fascinating guest post by the author about the real life exploits of amazing women who worked in military intelligence in World War 2.

WinPlus…there’s a giveaway with a chance to win a $5 Amazon giftcard. 

To enter, click here.

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London SpiesAbout the Book

Phyllis Bowden, a secretary at the American Embassy, is catapulted into the limelight when the Military Attache is arrested for espionage and her boss, the Assistant Military Attache, assumes the position.   The arrest throws suspicion on everyone at the Embassy, particularly the Military Attache’s secretary whose attempted suicide convinces Phyllis to be more curious about what really happened. With bombs still falling on a devastated city, Phyllis begins asking questions but she never imagined the dark underbelly of diplomacy. Entering a shadowy world of cryptic messages, secret rendezvous and dangerous men, Phyllis learns quickly that a safety net doesn’t exist and if she wants to survive, she better figure out the game fast.

Format: ebook, paperback (196 pp.) Publisher:
Published: 9th May 2017                      Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com ǀ Barnes and Noble ǀ Kobo ǀ iTunes ǀ Smashwords
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find London Spies on Goodreads


Guest Post: ‘Women in Military Intelligence’ by S. J. Slagle

Was my cousin a spy?

Women have long had varied positions with the United States military, but not much information has been forthcoming regarding women in military intelligence. What did they do? What sort of intelligence was collected?

While conducting research for a novel loosely based on the wartime experiences of a cousin, I uncovered the stories of three other women who made significant contributions toward the Allied efforts in World War II.

My cousin had, more than likely, been with the OSS, the Office of Strategic Services. My family learned of her involvement with the OSS after she had passed away. She had worked in the Pentagon and gone over to London at the end of the war to work as a civilian contractor with the War Department. She was placed in the Office of the Military Attaché at the American Embassy and later went on to Oslo, Norway when the war was over.  Her official title was stenographer, although she was upgraded to research analyst and later intelligence officer when she joined the CIG, Central Intelligence Group, which evolved into the Central Intelligence Agency. Her wartime experiences were cloaked in secrecy during her career and life. She didn’t speak of sensitive topics and took her oath of confidentiality to the grave.

Most people have heard of Mata Hari, but how many remember Claire Phillips, Virginia Hall and Amy Elizabeth Thorpe Pack?

Claire Phillips was never trained in military intelligence. A mother from Portland, Oregon, Claire (Clara Taste) grew up a devout Christian Scientist. An outgoing girl craving adventure, Claire ran away with a travelling circus passing through town. Her mother brought her home, but Claire was an entertainer who loved to sing and dance. She soon signed with a stock company touring the Far East eventually ending in the Philippines. In 1942, Claire witnessed American prisoners of war staggering by on the Bataan Death March and vowed she would try to help the prisoners. Hocking her jewellery, she started the exclusive Tsubaki Club in Manila frequented by Japanese officers and civilians. Claire’s code name in the smuggling business she conducted was “High Pockets” because she carried notes in her bra, notes containing intelligence pried from loose Japanese lips. She used her Manila contacts to smuggle money and medicine to the prisoners of the infamous Cabanatuan Prison, but eventually her time ran out. She was arrested, imprisoned, tortured and sentenced to twelve years in a women’s correctional institution on the island. Rescued when the camp was liberated in 1945, Claire went on to receive honors for her service to the military. “I was an American Spy” was a popular movie made in Hollywood about her. Claire Phillips lived out the rest of her life in Portland.

Virginia Hall Goillot was born in Baltimore. She was university educated with a desire to join the Foreign Service and was placed in the American Embassy in Warsaw as a clerk in 1940.  It was during her next assignment in Turkey when she lost part of her leg due to an accident. Still, Virginia continued her work wearing a prosthetic she affectionately named Cuthbert. When World War II broke out, Virginia joined the ambulance corps in France. Making her way to England, she volunteered to serve with British Special Operations, which trained her in weapons, resistance and communications. Virginia became a legendary intelligence officer with the OSS (Office of Strategic Services) and then CIA. Her exploits were well known and she was the only woman to be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. The “Limping Lady” continued her intelligence work with resistance groups in countries behind the Iron Curtain. Virginia Hall retired from the CIA in 1966.

Amy Elizabeth Thorpe grew up travelling the world with her family and U.S. Marine Corps officer father. Gorgeous and well bred, Amy attracted men like bees to honey. An illicit affair brought about her marriage to Arthur Pack, a British Embassy secretary and when Arthur transferred to Madrid on the eve of the Spanish Civil War, Amy became involved in covert operations such as smuggling rebel Nationalists to safety. When Amy and her husband moved on to Warsaw, she was recruited by British intelligence and began a career trading sexual favours for information. Some say Amy deserves credit with helping to give the Allies the edge over the Nazis with the Enigma cipher machine when she learned crucial intelligence from a Polish diplomat. She and Arthur travelled to New York where she was given the code name of Cynthia. Her cover was a journalist in Washington, D.C. where Amy gleaned information about the Italian Navy’s code and cipher books contributing to British victories in the Mediterranean.  In 1942, she worked with Bill Donovan, head of the OSS on her most famous mission. Working with a French press attaché and an expert safe cracker, Amy was able to steal French naval ciphers used to help the Allies in North Africa. She once said, “Wars are not won by respectable methods.”

Wars are won by every method possible and every soldier who helped the Allied powers win in World War II deserves to be credited openly. So thank you to the women in military intelligence. All your exploits are not currently known, but perhaps one day they will be. If not, thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

Sources

“Claire Phillips: Forgotten Hero,” 1859, Oregon’s Magazine, Sig Unander, January 1, 2016 Virginia Hall: The Courage and Daring of the Limping Lady, http://www.cia.gov, October 8, 2015 “Amy Elizabeth Thorpe: WWII’s Mata Hari, www.historynet.com, June 12, 2006.

Teaser - London Spies by SJ Slagle


S J SlagleAbout the Author

S. J. Slagle is the celebrated author of the Sherlock and Me series and the Phyllis Bowden series. A teacher and nonfiction writer for part of her career, she taught in Florida, California and Nevada. She also writes western romances as Jeanne Harrell including the bestselling series Rancher, The Westerners and These Nevada Boys with picturesque settings in the wild west of Nevada.

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Blog Tour/Review: The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen, Vol.1 by Collins Hemingway

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I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Volume 1 of Collins Hemingway’s trilogy, The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen.   (Volumes 2 & 3 are also available to purchase.) You can read my review below but safe to say it’s perfect for fans of Jane Austen’s books or lovers of historical romances (even those who’ve never read Jane Austen).

WinI’m pleased to say there is a giveaway (INTL) with a chance to win one of two paperback copies of The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen.  To enter and view the giveaway rules, visit the tour page here and scroll down to the bottom of the page.

But get your skates on, as entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on January 12th 2018.


The Marriage of Miss Jane AustenAbout the Book

Everyone should marry once for love – even Jane Austen.

Jane Austen, single and seemingly comfortable in the role of clergyman’s daughter and aspiring writer in the early 1800s, tells friends and family to hold out for true affection in any prospective relationship. Everybody, she says, has a right to marry once in their lives for love.  But when, after a series of disappointing relationships, the prospect of true love arrives for her, will she have the courage to act?

The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen re-imagines the life of England’s archetypal female by exploring what might have happened if she had ever married. It shows how a meaningful, caring relationship would have changed her as a person and a writer.  It also takes her beyond England’s tranquil country villages and plunges her info what the Regency era was really about: great explorations and scientific advances, political foment, and an unceasing, bloody war.  In such times, can love – can marriage -triumph?

Praise for The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen

“What if Austen, who penned so many classic love stories, found her own romantic match? Ashton Dennis fits right into the Austen universe, while this Jane remains true to life, an intelligent and determined young woman. The writing is Austen-ian, and Hemingway has a talent for witty banter and wry observations that would make Elizabeth Bennet proud. An enjoyable first novel in an imaginative, well-researched series.”  (Kirkus Reviews)

“A skilful portrayal of a…literary icon takes this historical romance on an imaginative journey of the soul. … Insight and intuition, along with meticulous research, have created a believable version of her character in this tender story of Ashton and Jane. … Excellent character development enhances the plausibility of the scenario. Background, motivation, eccentricity – everything that constitutes a personality allow these fascinating people to step off the pages in lifelike form.” (Julia Ann Charpentier, Foreword CLARION Reviews, 4 stars)

“All readers of Jane Austen wonder what Jane’s life might have been like had she married, or had money. The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen explores these intriguing possibilities. It also depicts Austen in a rapidly changing world, connecting her to important aspects of the era-war, slavery, industrialization, and new modes of travel. Hemingway’s book raises many ‘what if’s’ in his thoughtful and thought-provoking portrayal of Jane Austen falling in love.” (Susannah Fullerton, author of A Dance with Jane Austen and Happily Ever After: Celebrating Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice)

“[An] engaging and remarkably convincing romance. …Wry, observant, laconic – much like Jane Austen herself, without ever dipping into pastiche or mimicry. … Hemingway, with the lightest touch, builds up a thoroughly convincing alternative history for Jane. …[A] thoughtful re-imagining of Austen’s love life.” (Joceline Bury, Jane Austen’s Regency World)

Format: Hardcover, eBook, paperback (200 pp.)  Publisher: AuthorHouse
Published: 20th June 2015                                          Genre: Historical Fiction

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

Find The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen, Vol.1 on Goodreads


My Review

The author has created a fun, light and affectionate tribute to Jane Austen alongside speculating on how her life might have turned out had she married, and delivering an engaging historical romance.   The book captures the spirit of Jane Austen’s appraising eye of society, its foibles and – to modern day eyes – its bewildering rules of etiquette.

Jane and her sister, Cassandra, despite neither of them being that old, find themselves on the way to being consigned to the ranks of spinsterhood.  ‘She was in her own clique, of course, along with Cass, that of women who were stylish, if overly stale.  Her invitations no longer came from young men who were on their way up in society but from older men who had stalled or were in decline: unmarried clergy from poorly endowed parishes or lately widowed men of middle age and anxious finance.’

It doesn’t help that their branch of the family is relatively poor and dependent on the support of more well-off relatives for both money and accommodation, moving from house to house of acquaintances and distant family members.  As Jane writes, ‘Like travelling minstrels, we earn our victuals by entertaining our hosts and helping with the odd family tasks.  One afternoon chasing the children around, two witty rejoinders, and three darned stockings will earn a meal, by my estimation.’

In fact, Jane and Cassandra have begun to think that love and marriage is something they will never experience since both have suffered the tragic loss of men for whom they had felt affection.  ‘Cassandra’s expression shaded from thoughtfulness to entreaty and finally pain. “Shall we never find love?” she asked.  “Is it over?  Are we never to be happy?  Never to embrace the kindness of a man, the blessings of a child?”’

However, Jane does have an admirer: Ashton Dennis, a wealthy young man.  But although she likes him, she can feel no romantic affinity with him as he has little interest in literature or the arts.  His focus seems only to be on the business of running his family’s estate.  And Jane could never love or consider marriage to a man like that could she?

When Ashton goes abroad to “find himself”, as we might describe it these days, he and Jane strike up a lively, witty correspondence, which makes up Part 2 of the book.   Jane provides him with news from home about current affairs and scientific developments.  This provides the opportunity for the author to give the reader a fascinating insight into important events of the time such as the Louisiana Purchase (the sale of Louisiana by Napoleon to America), the progress through Parliament of the Anti-slavery Bill, and the latest scientific and technological discoveries.  Over the months he is away, as she reads Ashton’s letters in response to hers, Jane gradually starts to see a different side to him.  How this will be resolved is the subject of Part 3 of the book.

As well as the story of Jane and Ashton, there is much for lovers of Jane Austen’s novels to enjoy with many scenes alluding to plot lines, characters or events in her books (although at the time this book is set, she has yet to be published).  So, for example, we have Ashton’s mother warning off Jane from any marital interest in him, much in the way Lady Catherine de Burgh tries to do with Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice…and taking possession of the most famous line from that book to boot.  “A single man in possession of a good fortune does not automatically need a wife – not from your class.  It is a misconception from which both you and your mother suffer.”

The author also captures the witty, acute observations readers have come to expect in Austen’s novels.

On being asked her view of a potential match for Ashton: “She is the sort of person who professes a love of books without reading, and who is lively without wit. Yet – Mr Dennis – I am not the person to ask about marriage.  I live on the corner of Old and Unattached.”

On dealing with marriage proposals: ‘Every polished young woman has a dozen stratagems to deflect the purpose of an unwelcome suitor.  One practices firm but gentle rebuffs in front of the mirror almost as often as one practices coquettish ways of saying yes to the proper man.’

I also loved this little joke about writing a book as Ashton reacts in amazement that Jane has written a novel that has been accepted for publication: ‘To think that you have spent – what, a year, more? – to compose a work on a single topic, about a set of characters, is beyond my ken.  I salute you, madam!’

This was a fun, engaging, well-written book that captured the spirit of Jane Austen’s books and which I really enjoyed.  I received a review copy courtesy of Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours in return for an honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Light, affectionate, romance

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


Collins HemingwayAbout the Author

Whether his subject is literature, history, or science, Collins Hemingway has a passion for the art of creative investigation. For him, the most compelling fiction deeply explores the heart and soul of its characters, while also engaging them in the complex and often dangerous world in which they have a stake. He wants to explore all that goes into people’s lives and everything that makes them complete though fallible human beings. His fiction is shaped by the language of the heart and an abiding regard for courage in the face of adversity.

As a non-fiction book author, Hemingway has worked alongside some of the world’s thought leaders on topics as diverse as corporate culture and ethics; the Internet and mobile technology; the ins and outs of the retail trade; and the cognitive potential of the brain. Best known for the #1 best-selling book on business and technology, Business @ the Speed of Thought, which he co-authored with Bill Gates, he has earned a reputation for tackling challenging subjects with clarity and insight, writing for the non-technical but intelligent reader.  Hemingway has published shorter non-fiction on topics including computer technology, medicine, and aviation, and he has written award-winning journalism.

Published books include The Marriage of Miss Jane Austen trilogy, Business @ the Speed of Thought, with Bill Gates, Built for Growth, with Arthur Rubinfeld, What Happy Companies Know, with Dan Baker and Cathy Greenberg, Maximum Brainpower, with Shlomo Breznitz, and The Fifth Wave, with Robert Marcus.

Hemingway lives in Bend, Oregon, with his wife, Wendy. Together they have three adult sons and three granddaughters. He supports the Oregon Community Foundation and other civic organizations engaged in conservation and social services in Central Oregon.

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