#Extract The Lady in the Veil by Allie Cresswell

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Lady in the Veil by Allie Cresswell. The book continues the story of the Talbot family who featured in Tall Chimneys and The House in the Hollow but works equally well as a standalone. I’m delighted to be able to bring you an extract from The Veiled Lady but, before I do, let Allie explain a bit more about the inspiration for the character of Mrs Quince who features in it.

“My new novel, The Lady in the Veil, is set in the year 1835, post Regency but pre-Victorian. Its predecessor, The House in the Hollow, was set firmly in the Georgian era, and as such I delighted in emulating an Austenesque style. But it seemed to me that this later period called for the addition of the colour and exuberance demonstrated by later writers. Charles Dickens’ Sketches by Boz was published in 1836, with The Pickwick Papers following a year later. Dickens embraced characters of what Austen would call ‘low degree’ who are nevertheless charming, humorous, appealing and salutary. I came up with Mrs Quince, a lady who makes her living by letting rooms in her little house.”


The Lady in the VeilAbout the Book

What secrets hide beneath the veil?

When her mother departs for a tour of the continent, Georgina is sent from the rural backwaters to stay with her cousin, George Talbot, in London. The 1835 season is at its height, but Georgina is determined to attend neither balls nor plays, and to eschew Society. She hides her face beneath an impenetrable veil. Her extraordinary appearance only sets off gossip and speculation as to her identity. Who is the mysterious lady beneath the veil?

Format: ebook (270 pages)             Publisher:
Publication date: 13th June 2021   Genre: Historical Fiction

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Extract from The Lady in the Veil by Allie Cresswell

Mrs Quince was the lady of the house, the widow-woman to whom Arthur had earlier referred. Her husband had been the captain of a river boat, trading goods and passengers up and down the Thames. Whatever stories of seafaring adventure and distant shores the various mementoes of the room suggested, they had not been Captain Quince’s. He had never travelled beyond East Tilbury in pursuance of his trade and had died a relatively young man. For the twenty or so years since his demise Mrs Quince had supported herself by accommodating lodgers in her cottage – usually sailors – and it was to these guests that her collection of maritime accoutrements could be attributed.

That Mrs Quince had been, in her youth, a lady of remarkable beauty, was unarguable. Popular opinion in Rotherhithe reported it so and Mrs Quince herself was far from contradicting what her neighbours were so adamantly certain of. Indeed, if anything, she rather thought that their protestations did not go quite far enough, for to say that she had been a beauty in her youth almost suggested that her youth was a thing now ended. What’s more it did not, in her opinion, give sufficient recognition to the significant degree of her current beauty. It may be that her eyes were not as sharp as they had once been, or that the brilliance of her little square of looking glass had become somewhat tarnished, but where others now saw hair that was greying and thin, to Mrs Quince it was as thick and lustrous as it had ever been. Her skin, which an unkind observer might have described as mottled was, to her, as peach-like as could be. A very dull-eyed person may have discerned a little hairiness about the chin and upper lip, or mistaken a natural beauty-spot for a wart, and someone with no knowledge of the matter could have described the perfect plumpness of Mrs Quince’s figure as fat, but Mrs Quince could be compassionate about their errors, telling herself that swine could not help their nature and she would certainly not waste her pearls before them.

Part and parcel of Mrs Quince’s charming appearance was an ineffable elegance of manner and an unswerving pretention to being a lady. Whichever hand had been at work polishing and scrubbing during the day, beating carpets and brushing cushions, carrying coals, making stew and providing all the homely comforts that had greeted Arthur on his return from work, there could be no misapprehension of that hand belonging to Mrs Quince. She, it was to be inferred, spent her day at ladylike pursuits whilst a hired drudge did the donkey work. The drudge in the case was Pansy, a slip of girl, small-boned and big-eyed, timid and altogether understanding of her place.


Allie CresswellAbout the Author

Allie was born in Stockport, UK and began writing fiction as soon as she could hold a pencil. Allie recalls: ‘I was about 8 years old. Our teacher asked us to write about a family occasion and I launched into a detailed, harrowing and entirely fictional account of my grandfather’s funeral. I think he died very soon after I was born; certainly I have no memory of him and definitely did not attend his funeral, but I got right into the details, making them up as I went along (I decided he had been a Vicar, which I spelled ‘Vice’). My teacher obviously considered this outpouring very good bereavement therapy so she allowed me to continue with the story on several subsequent days, and I got out of maths and PE on a few occasions before I was rumbled.’

She went on to do a BA in English Literature at Birmingham University and an MA at Queen Mary College, London. She has been a print-buyer, a pub landlady, a book-keeper, run a B & B and a group of boutique holiday cottages. Nowadays Allie writes full time having retired from teaching literature to lifelong learners.

She has two grown-up children, two granddaughters and two grandsons, is married to Tim and lives in Cumbria.

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#BookReview The Secret Keeper of Jaipur (The Henna Artist 2) by Alka Joshi @RandomTTours @Harper360UK

Secret Keeper Jaipur BT Poster

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Secret Keeper of Jaipur by Alka Joshi, the follow-up to the best-selling The Henna Artist. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to Mira Books for my digital review copy.


The Secret Keeper of JaipurAbout the Book

It’s the spring of 1969 and Lakshmi, now married to Dr. Jay Kumar, directs the Healing Garden in Shimla. Malik has finished his private school education. At twenty, he has just met a young woman named Nimmi when he leaves to apprentice at the Facilities Office of the Jaipur Royal Palace. Their latest project: a state-of-the-art cinema.

Malik soon finds that not much has changed as he navigates the Pink City of his childhood. Power and money still move seamlessly among the wealthy class, and favours flow from Jaipur’s Royal Palace, but only if certain secrets remain buried. When the cinema’s balcony tragically collapses on opening night, blame is placed where it is convenient. But Malik suspects something far darker and sets out to uncover the truth. As a former street child, he always knew to keep his own counsel; it’s a lesson that will serve him as he untangles a web of lies.

Format: ebook (384 pages)             Publisher: Mira Books
Publication date: 22nd June 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction

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Bookshop.org
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Hive | Amazon UK
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My Review

Readers who, like me, have not read The Henna Artist need not fear because the author has done everything possible to ensure The Secret Keeper of Jaipur can be enjoyed as a standalone. There’s a comprehensive character list and background information about events in the lives of the main characters from the first book is subtly woven into the story. This includes the henna artist herself, Lakshmi, now married to a doctor, Jay Kumar.

With her ward, Malik, dispatched to Jaipur to learn the construction trade, Lakshmi offers a role working alongside her in the Healing Garden at the hospital where her husband works to a young widow, Nimmi. Initially I was rather suspicious of Lakshmi’s motives in sending Malik away, thinking it was all about her trying to exercise control over his life and her ambitions for his future. However, I came to believe her concern for Nimmi and her children was sincere and that her actions were a desire to provide Nimmi with a source of income and the independence that comes with it, an independence that Lakshmi herself has fought to secure. As it happens, although separated, both Nimmi and Malik in different ways uncover a web of illegal activity that ranges from nepotism to corruption, and worse.

Moving between Shimla, the Himalayas and Jaipur in the months before the dramatic event that opens the book, the story unfolds from the points of view of Lakshmi, Nimmi and Malik. The sights and sounds of India are vividly evoked, whether that’s the steep trails through the Himalayas or the streets of Jaipur, the so-called Pink City. It was also fascinating to learn about the lives and customs of nomadic mountain tribes like the one to which Nimmi belongs and to get a glimpse of life for those higher up the social order. And you can add tastes and scents to the sensory experience because, in addition to the extensive glossary at the end of the book, the author has included a favourite family recipe and the instructions for making a very special cocktail.

All in all, The Secret Keeper of Jaipur contains all the ingredients for a deliciously engaging read.

In three words: Atmospheric, intriguing, immersive

Try something similar: The Inside City by Anita Mir

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Alka Joshi Author PicAbout the Author

Alka Joshi is a graduate of Stanford University and received her MFA from the California College of the Arts. She has worked as an advertising copywriter, a marketing consultant and an illustrator. Alka was born in India, in the state of Rajasthan. Her family moved to the USA when she was nine, and she now lives on California’s Monterey Peninsula with her husband and two misbehaving pups. The Secret Keeper of Jaipur is her second novel.

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Secret Keeper Graphic 1