Interview/Giveaway: Megan Easley-Walsh, author of Flight Before Dawn

Today’s guest on What Cathy Read Next is Megan Easley-Walsh, author of Flight Before Dawn. Megan has kindly agreed to answer some questions about the book, its inspiration and her approach to writing.

And…Megan is offering three lucky people the chance to win a digital copy of Flight Before Dawn. You can find the link to the giveaway below.  The giveaway runs until  22nd April 2017.


FlightBeforeDawnAbout the Book

Before there was D-Day… For over two years, she’s watched him. Now he’s on her doorstep. This is life in the Resistance. In Normandy in 1943, Victoire leads a band of the Resistance. When Leal, the man she’s had watched for over two years, arrives at her doorstep, she’ll have to face new challenges in war and in love. Robberies, a kidnapping and clandestine night adventures were not at all what Victoire planned for her life. And she most certainly never planned to be betrayed. But war — and love — are unpredictable. Joined by her friend Rainier who is mistrusted by Leal, the mysterious Voleta, and Father Pierre, Victoire and Leal must struggle for survival, the grounds of France, and the material of their souls. When Leal unearths a twenty-five-year-old secret, with Victoire at the center, her whole life is shaken. As the Allies approach, the past, present and future hang in the balance. Can anyone be trusted when the world spins upside down?                                              Watch the trailer here

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Interview with Megan Easley-Walsh

Hi Cathy and readers! Thanks so much for having me on the blog today.

Without giving too much away, can you tell us a bit about Flight Before Dawn?

Flight Before Dawn is the story of a female French Resistance leader, Victoire, in WW2, in Normandy France. History remembers D-Day on June 6, 1944, but Flight Before Dawn begins in the autumn of 1943 when there is still a lot of uncertainty about what will happen. In the opening chapter, Leal arrives on her doorstep. For over two years, the Resistance has watched him, but he believes that Victoire is a stranger. Victoire and her friends must navigate what they are willing to do for freedom and whom they can trust. Victoire believes that the Resistance is the biggest secret of her life, but when Leal unearths a twenty-five-year-old secret, with Victoire at its center, her whole life is shaken.

What made you choose WW2 Occupied France as the setting for the book?

I grew up in an Air Force family and lived in Germany from the ages of 9-18. I have firsthand experience of walking the beaches of D-Day and visiting the museums. I also participated in a yearly service project that decorated the largest American cemetery from WWII in Europe: the Lorraine American cemetery in St.-Avold, France, each May for eight years and so I was present with the veterans and history became incredibly palpable. At its heart, my writing through all of my novels is about hope. If there can be hope in the midst of war, there can be hope anywhere.

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

Part of my research came from my firsthand experience. In addition, I read several books. I still have the little yellow sticky notes stuck into them. My educational background is history-focused International Relations and I enjoy researching and piecing together why things happen. It was definitely difficult to read some of the research for Flight Before Dawn, as war is truly horrible. That’s also why I write about war, though, to encourage peace.

What was the biggest challenge you encountered when writing the book?

Flight Before Dawn was my first novel and so everything was new. I had previously written short stories, but never a full length novel. Adding in enough layers to make a full novel was interesting to learn.

You have explored many different periods of history in your books. If you could travel back in time to one of them, which would you choose and why?

Wow, that’s a great question! It might be fun to spend a day with Francesco, the painter in Renaissance Venice, from What Edward Heard. I love Venice and art! If I were to time travel to the characters in Flight Before Dawn, I’d want to rescue them and bring them out of the war with me!

If Flight Before Dawn was made into a film, who would you love to see play Victoire?

Another great question! I hadn’t thought of this before, but when I read the question Audrey Tautou immediately came to mind. One, she’s French. Two, she’s wonderful in the film The Very Long Engagement, which is actually in WWI rather than WWII, but tells a compelling story of perseverance and love. I also think she looks a bit like Victoire on the cover of Flight Before Dawn.

What is your favourite and least favourite part of the writing process?

I really love all of the writing process. Beginnings are thrilling, because it’s the start of something new. Ends are exciting, because the book reaches completion. Finding the perfect way to weave together the middle is also really interesting. I don’t think I have a least favourite part. I’ll say that the part I find the most challenging is that when I’m in the middle of a manuscript, the characters need to have their stories told and I feel bad if I leave them in peril for too long, so I tend to write a lot at once. (Which isn’t a negative thing!)

What other writers do you admire?

I love reading. I really believe that the more you read, the better you write. I’m a Shakespeare fan and have read all of his works. Some of my novels (although not Flight Before Dawn) feature a Shakespeare allusion. I also like Sherlock Holmes. For more contemporary, I recently began reading Jacqueline Winspeare’s Maisie Dobbs series. I also read a lot of non-fiction, for research and just for personal interest. I really enjoyed reading Margaret MacMillan’s historical works, Paris 1919: Six Months that Changed the World and The War that Ended Peace: The Road to 1914. As mentioned previously, my degrees are in history-focused International Relations, so I love understanding why things that happened continue to impact the world today.

What’s your favourite way to engage with your readers?

I love hearing from readers. Emails at Megan@MeganEasleyWalsh.com are great. You can also connect with me on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Youtube, Goodreads, my blog and my websites. Basically, I’m happy to hear from you! And if you’ve read something that I wrote and enjoyed it, I greatly appreciate if you write a review on a retail website, so other readers can find me.

What are you working on next? Will it be more historical fiction?

More historical fiction, yes, definitely! I have several books in the works that I’m looking forward to sharing with my readers. I also continue to be a writing consultant and editor at www.ExtraInkEdits.com.

My best to you all, Megan.

Thank you so much, Megan, for such fascinating answers. I’m really excited to start reading Flight Before Dawn

WinNow, enter the giveaway by clicking on this link….a Rafflecopter giveaway

 


MeganEasleyWalshAbout the Author

Megan Easley-Walsh is an author of historical fiction, a researcher, and a writing consultant and editor at www.ExtraInkEdits.com. She is an award-winning writer and has taught college writing in the UNESCO literature city of Dublin, Ireland. Her degrees are in history-focused International Relations. She is American and lives in Ireland with her Irish husband.

Connect with Megan
Websites http://www.meganeasleywalsh.com/
http://www.newhistoricalfiction.com/
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#BlogTour #BookReview Duels & Deception by Cindy Anstey

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I’m thrilled to be today’s stop on the blog tour for Duels & Deception by Cindy Anstey and to bring you my review of this lively, fun and entertaining book.

duels


About the Book

Miss Lydia Whitfield, heiress to the family fortune, has her future entirely planned out. She will run the family estate until she marries the man of her late father’s choosing and then she will spend the rest of her days as a devoted wife. Confident in those arrangements, Lydia has tasked her young law clerk, Mr. Robert Newton, to begin drawing up the marriage contracts. Everything is going according to plan. Until the day Lydia is kidnapped—and Robert along with her. Someone is after her fortune and won’t hesitate to destroy her reputation to get it. With Robert’s help, Lydia strives to keep her family’s good name unsullied and expose whoever is behind this devious plot. But as their investigation delves deeper and their affections for each other grow, Lydia starts to wonder whether her carefully planned future is in fact what she truly wants…

Format: eARC (368 pages)         Publisher: Swoon Reads
Publication date: 11th April 2017 Genre: Young Adult, Historical Fiction, Romance

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My Review

This was a hoot. The author perfectly captures the style of Jane Austen down to the chapter summaries (‘In which a carriage should not have been ordered and an apology has unseen consequences’), the period phrases (such as ‘doing it up too brown’ to mean doing something well) and the sly wit and humour:

‘With a gasp, Lydia sat up in a dizzy stupor and came perilously close to issuing a most undignified scream. Had her training at Miss Melvina’s Finishing School for Young Ladies been anything buy exemplary, she might have done so…’

Lydia is a plucky and resourceful heroine and Robert an able and likeable hero. Together they seek to find out who is behind the abduction of Lydia and the attempt to ruin her reputation. For as any fan of Jane Austen knows, a lady’s reputation must be maintained at all costs:

‘A ruined reputation would affect the entire household. Society would look askance at all the ladies of Roseberry should news of Lydia’s disappearance be made known. Worthy marriage prospects for Elaine, Ivy and Tessa would vanish on the strength of Lydia’s immoral influence.’

The book has a cast of characters worthy of Jane Austen including scatty mama and unlucky in love friend. So if you want reticules, spencers and curricles and a Regency romp involving bonnets, butlers, duels at dawn, light-hearted intrigue, tender romance, interspersed with tea in the drawing room, then this is the book for you.

Well done to the author for this accomplished pastiche and respectful homage to her literary heroine, Jane Austen. Although it is categorised as Young Adult, I think it would make a fun, light read for readers of any age.

I received an advance reader copy courtesy of the author and publishers, Swoon Reads, in return for an honest review.

In three words: Lively, fun, engaging

Try something similar…The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde


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. Love, Lies and Spies is her debut novel.

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