Guest Post & Giveaway: Dancing in the Rain by Lucy Appadoo

DancingintheRainI’m delighted to host today’s stop on the spotlight tour for Dancing in the Rain by Lucy Appadoo, an emotional family drama set in Italy. Dancing in the Rain is the latest title in Lucy’s The Italian Family Series. I’m also pleased to say that Lucy has shared the real-life inspiration for the series in her guest post below.

WinThere’s also a giveaway (INTL) with a chance for one lucky person to win a $50 Amazon gift card. The giveaway closes on 1st July. You can enter via the Dancing in the Rain tour page by clicking here

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About the Book

Publisher’s description: Fifteen-year old Valeria Allegro works diligently on the family farm in Italy, where she is torn between her duty to her family and her desire to find freedom from her strict, domineering father. She finds solace in Dario, a young student who provides a blissful escape—until a neighbour’s son, Gregorio, decides he wants her for himself. This raises an alarm for her father, which leads to family conflict and aggression. When Dario is threatened and her family is plagued by a series of suspicious accidents, Valeria is desperate to keep her loved ones safe. Can she end the turmoil and escape the firmly built trap to find the freedom she craves?

Book Facts

Format: ebook Publisher:   Pages: 274
Publication: 24th May 2017 Genre: Adult Fiction    

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

Find Dancing in the Rain on Goodreads


Guest Post: “My true inspiration to write The Italian Family Series” by Lucy Appadoo, author of Dancing in the Rain

“I was inspired to write The Italian Family Series after reading Adriana Trigiani’s The Shoemaker’s Wife, which was a heartfelt and sad story with the beautiful backdrops of Italy with its amazing history and culture. I wanted to write a story about my own Italian background; the history and richness of the culture. The way to do that was to interview my parents about their childhood experiences and explore how they eventually ended up in Melbourne, Australia.

I interviewed my father first, asked him specific questions, and jotted down notes. Then I interviewed my mother and did the same thing. I first had the idea to write about their impending marriage and the challenges around that experience of Italian immigration. From that idea, came my novella, A New Life.

Later I decided to expand on A New Life by going back to my parents’ childhood experiences. The Beauty of Tears was inspired by my father’s childhood experiences whilst Dancing in the Rain was inspired by my mother’s childhood experiences. Hence, the birth of The Italian Family Series.

As I wrote their stories, I was able to admire them even more for all the hardships they had endured. They didn’t mind that I embellished their stories. My parents had lived challenging lives in a poverty-stricken Italian world and never got a chance to be children. They were breadwinners through and through; my father managing a herd of sheep and other farmyard work whilst my mother planted crops, cooked freshly baked bread, and learned to make tomato sauce, sausages, and wine. A great many skills to have.

I am proud of my Italian heritage and feel that both Dancing in the Rain and The Beauty of Tears is a testament to my parents’ rich lives. My parents deserve only the best, given their constant struggles and heartaches. I do hope you enjoy reading Dancing in the Rain, and my other books in the series.”


LucyAppadooAbout the Author

Lucy Appadoo is a registered counsellor and wellness coach with a part-time private practice. She also works as a rehabilitation counsellor for the Australian government. In her spare time, she self-publishes or writes nonfiction and fiction. She previously worked as a rehabilitation consultant, caseworker, English as a second language teacher and proofreader. Lucy has postgraduate diplomas in psychology, education, and English as a Second Language teaching, as well as specialised qualifications in grief counselling and hypnosis. She has also completed wellness coaching courses (levels 1-3) at Wellness Coaching Australia.

Lucy enjoys reading romantic suspense, romance, thrillers, crime novels, family/historical drama, and sagas. She writes in the genres of romantic suspense, historical fiction, and romance. She has enjoyed travelling to exotic places such as Madrid, Mauritius, and Italy, and draws on these experiences in her creative writing. Lucy’s favourite authors include Kendra Elliot, Christiane Heggan, Theresa Ragan, Tara Moss, Nicholas Sparks, Adriana Trigiani, Erica Spindler, and James Patterson (to name a few).

Lucy’s interests include meditation, playing tennis, journal writing, reading fiction and non-fiction texts about writing, coaching, and counselling, ongoing professional development, spending time with her husband and two daughters, and socialising with friends and family.

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Blog Tour/Guest Post: Widdershins by Helen Steadman

Widdershins blog tour

I’m thrilled to be kicking off the blog tour for Widdershins by Helen Steadman. Click here to read my review of this atmospheric, chilling and compelling story inspired by the 17th century witchcraft trials in Newcastle.   Below you can read Helen’s fascinating article about the attempts of the real life witch-finders to justify their actions. It seems ‘spin’ was alive and well even as long ago as the 17th century!

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WiddershinsCoverRevealAbout the Book

Did all women have something of the witch about them? Jane Chandler is an apprentice healer. From childhood, she and her mother have used herbs to cure the sick. But Jane will soon learn that her sheltered life in a small village is not safe from the troubles of the wider world. From his father’s beatings to his uncle’s raging sermons, John Sharpe is beset by bad fortune. Fighting through personal tragedy, he finds his purpose: to become a witch-finder and save innocents from the scourge of witchcraft.

Book Facts

Format: Paperback             Publisher: Impress Books         No. of pages: 250
Publication: 1st July 2017  Genre: Historical Fiction

To pre-order/purchase Widdershins from Amazon.co.uk, click here (link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)
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‘Witch-finders go on the record to defend their diabolical practices’, guest post by Helen Steadman

As part of the research for my novel, Widdershins, I read the diaries of two of the better known witch-finders in England.

In perhaps an early attempt at PR, or damage-limitation at the very least, the very famous witch-finder, Matthew Hopkins (more commonly known as the Witch-finder General) and a witch pricker, John Stearne, published their diaries. The decision to publish may have been in response to one vicar who had had enough. John Gaule, vicar of Great Staughton published his own book, Select Cases of Conscience Touching Witches and Witchcrafts, in which Gaule criticised the work of the witch-finders and led to them being questioned by the judiciary.

These are filled with fascinating (if troubling) insights into what might go through the mind of someone determining whether someone should live or die. In this short book, Hopkins sets out fourteen questions and replies to them. These questions range from whether he is a witch himself, through to whether witch-finders are simply fleecing people. In fairness to Hopkins, he appears to be rather better value than the Newcastle witch-finder. Hopkins states he charged only twenty shillings per town. This appears to be excellent value compared with the Newcastle witch-finder’s fee of twenty shillings per witch, and John Kincaid’s fee of six pounds for one witch in Scotland.

WiddershinsHopkinsSome of his justifications for finding people guilty of witchcraft are a little on the thin side. For example, he provides the names of some of the familiars of an accused witch. On her fourth night of being kept awake, the accused woman confessed to having several familiars and imps. Hopkins lists the imps’ names given by the woman as ‘Elemanzer, Pyewacket, Peckin the Crown, Grizzel, Greedigut &c. which no mortall could invent…’ So, this woman’s fate has been sealed by her having a vivid imagination and a knack for making up names.

While Hopkins’ book is short, to the point and easy to read, Stearne’s book overflows with so many biblical quotations, it is quite hard to get to the point of his defence. But he also refers to waking and mentions Elizabeth Manningtree from Essex, who was kept awake for three days and three nights and who then confessed ‘many things’.

Sleep deprivation has been used as a form of torture by many regimes. Menachem Begin, the Israeli prime minister from 1977-83, talks about being tortured by the KGB by being kept awake for three days and three nights. He says that ‘In the head of the interrogated prisoner, a haze begins to form. His spirit is wearied to death, his legs are unsteady, and he has one sole desire: to sleep…’

Despite using a range of terrible torture techniques to send dozens of (mainly) women to untimely and dreadful deaths, Stearne uses the bible as his defence and ends his book by reminding readers that he was doing God’s work: ‘And so I leave myself to the censure of the world, yet desire it might be left to the Almighty, who knoweth the secrets of all hearts: For, blessed are they that do his commandments, Revel. 22.14.’

Sources

Menachem Begin (1978) White Nights: The Story of a Prisoner in Russia. London: Futura Publications

John Gaule [1646] Select Cases of Conscience Touching Witches and Witchcrafts. London: Richard Clutterbuck. Accessed at: https://archive.org/stream/JohnGauleSermonOnWitches/John%20Gaule-Sermon-on-Witches#page/n5/mode/2up.

Matthew Hopkins ( 2010) [1647] The Discovery of Witches in Answer to Severall Queries, Lately: Delivered to the Judges of Assize for the County of Norfolk and Now Published by Matthew Hopkins, Witch-finder, for the Benefit of the Whole Kingdome. Qontro Classics

John Stearne (1973) [1648] A Confirmation and Discovery of Witch Craft. The Rota.


HelenSteadmanAbout the Author

Helen Steadman lives in the foothills of the North Pennines, and she particularly enjoys researching and writing about the history of the north east of England. Following her MA in creative writing at Manchester Met, Helen is now completing a PhD in English at the University of Aberdeen. When she’s not studying or writing, Helen critiques, edits and proofreads other writers work, and she is a professional member of the Society for Editors and Proofreaders. Her next novel will be about Grace Darling and she is carrying out research for a novel about the Shotley Bridge sword makers.

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Widdershins