#BlogTour #Extract Until We Can Forgive (The Derwent Chronicles 3) by Rosemary Goodacre @HeraBooks

Until We Can Forgive

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Until We Can Forgive by Rosemary Goodacre. Until We Can Forgive is the third and final book in The Derwent Chronicles series. Rosemary sadly died recently; you can read a tribute from her publishers, Hera Books, here.

I was looking forward to sharing my Q&A with Rosemary but instead I have an extract from the book for you to enjoy. My thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for inviting to participate in the tour. On behalf of Rachel and Hera Books, I’d ask you, if you can, to share this post and those of the other book bloggers taking part in the tour, in memory of Rosemary. If you are minded to purchase a copy of her book or the previous books in the series, even better.


Until We Can Forgive FINALAbout the Book

They survived the Great War, but will life ever be the same?

Spring 1919: WW1 is over and a fragile peace has descended over the country. Now living in Cambridge with husband Edmond, Amy Derwent is settling into her new life as wife and mother to little Beth. But the shadow of the Great War looms large, particularly as the injuries Edmond sustained at Ypres still take their toll on him today.

Edmond’s cousin, Vicky, has now grown into a fine young woman, eager to help her country. Throwing off her privileged background to train as a nurse, she spends her days tending to the many soldiers still suffering the after-effects of their time on the battlefield.

Meeting Maxim Duclos, a young Frenchman who has arrived in Larchbury, fills her heart with joy – but when it is discovered that Maxim may be hiding the truth about his past, Vicky is faced with an impossible choice. Follow her heart’s desire and risk her family’s disapproval or keep her family – but deny herself the chance of true love?

The war may be over, but Edmond, Amy and Vicky must all face a new battle, finding their own peace in a country wounded by loss.

Format: Paperback (336 pages)           Publisher: Hera Books
Publication date: 15th October 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

Find Until We Can Forgive (The Derwent Chronicles #3) on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon UK | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*link provided for convenience not as part of an affiliate programme


Extract from Until We Can Forgive by Rosemary Goodacre

‘Is this car all right?’ Amy asked as they set off for The Beeches for Easter.

‘It’s in good order,’ he assured her. ‘Don’t worry, darling! It’s all fixed and we can travel properly, with Beth and some luggage!’

‘You won’t need the motorbike any longer.’

‘Perhaps I should keep it for a while longer, just for emergencies.’ He had first ridden a motorbike in France, and she knew how he loved it.

There were around a hundred miles to travel, so they stopped the car at a modest inn just north of London for lunch. They continued, skirting the capital to the east and crossing the Thames by the Woolwich ferry before continuing into Sussex. By late afternoon they were driving into Larchbury. Now we’re back we’ll be staying with Edmond’s family, but we’ll be able to visit my parents too, Amy thought.

Soon Edmond was driving up the avenue of great beeches towards his family’s imposing stone house. On the hill ahead was the forest, mainly of pines, from which the family made their business. Back to The Beeches, Amy thought. How I used to long for us to leave there and get a home of our own!

For much of her married life Edmond’s mother and sister had been distant towards her. Not only was she not of Edmond’s class, but they disapproved of her pre-war involvement with the Suffragettes. She did not regret demanding the vote for women, but wished she had stopped short of joining friends in a provocative prank. They had broken into the cricket pavilion and scrawled slogans there, which had led to her having to serve a week in prison.

As Edmond parked the car in front of the house, Pa came out to greet them. Mr Derwent had encouraged Amy to call him Pa, and his wife Ma. He had been the first one of Edmond’s family to accept her, and she greeted him warmly as he said a smiling hello to Beth and looked over Edmond’s Ford car a little dubiously. It was clear that the bodywork had been patched up here and there, in some workshop where the mechanic was prepared to make a quick but adequate repair to keep costs down.

In the hall, Ma greeted them brightly.

‘You’re looking much better now,’ Amy said. She was no longer thin and drawn, as she had been after the influenza. However, her face still looked a little pasty.

‘I believe I’m almost recovered now.’

Beatrice, Edmond’s sister, smartly dressed as usual in a blouse and skirt which showed off her good figure, also hurried to greet them.

‘Auntie Bee-trice!’ cried Beth, happy to receive a cuddle from her.

Before long they were sitting in the wooden-panelled dining room and Cook was serving vegetable soup. In the middle of the table was a splendid arrangement of pink tulips, which could only be the handiwork of Beatrice.

‘Beth has grown so much since I last saw her,’ Ma said, smiling at the plump-faced little girl.


Until We Can Forgive Portrait Rosemary GoodacreAbout the Author

Rosemary Goodacre previously worked in computing and teaching. She had a novella published, entitled A Fortnight is not Enough, and a science fiction story in the anthology Telescoping Time.

Her father’s family came from continental Europe and Rosemary always loved languages and travel. In her spare time, she enjoyed country walking, bridge and classical music.

Until We Can Forgive Full Tour Banner

#BookReview The Second Marriage by Gill Paul @AvonBooksUK @RandomTTours



Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Second Marriage by Gill Paul. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to participate in the tour and to Avon for my digital review copy. Do check out the blog post by my tour buddy for today, Debbie at Inked Book Reviews.


About the Book

Jackie – When her first marriage ends in tragedy, Jackie Kennedy fears she’ll never love again. But all that changes when she encounters…

Ari – Successful and charming, Ari Onassis is a man who promises her the world. Yet soon after they marry, Jackie learns that his heart also belongs to another…

Maria – A beautiful, famed singer, Maria Callas is in love with Jackie’s new husband – and she isn’t going to give up. Little by little, Jackie and Maria’s lives begin to tangle in a dangerous web of secrets, scandal and lies.

But with both women determined to make Ari theirs alone, the stakes are high. How far will they go for true love? 

Format: Paperback (464 pages)                Publisher: Avon
Publication date: 17th September 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find The Second Marriage on Goodreads

Purchase links*
Amazon UK | Hive (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

From the book’s UK title and blurb, readers could be forgiven for thinking the main focus of the novel is the relationship that develops between the widowed Jackie Kennedy and Aristotle Onassis. In fact, that part of the story takes up only the final section of the book. Instead, Gill Paul commences the story much earlier, giving the reader an insight into the events that shaped the lives of Jackie and Maria. Some of these events, especially those played out in the public eye, may be familiar to many readers. Others less so. And, of course, there are always gaps in historical fact that have to be filled from the author’s imagination or, as Gill Paul freely acknowledges in her afterword, that have to be reshaped to meet the demands of a fictional narrative. Gill has recently written about the delicate balancing act involved in this in an article for Historia magazine.

It’s no coincidence the book is structured in five parts – Acts 1 to 5 – because there is certainly an operatic quality to the story. It’s like watching a performance playing out at length in front of an audience with moments of both high drama and tragedy. Indeed, during one scene in which Maria delivers an ultimatum to Onassis, she reflects, “In an opera, there would have been drumrolls, cymbals clashing.

Starting in 1957 with the first meeting between Maria Callas and Aristotle Onassis in the Hotel Danieli in Venice, the cast of characters making up the chorus (to continue the opera analogy) is a Who’s Who of the rich and famous: Princess Grace of Monaco, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Marilyn Monroe, Winston and Clementine Churchill, to name just a few.

The author vividly and movingly depicts the human stories behind the glamour and luxury. Witnessing through Jackie’s eyes the fateful events of November 1963 is still shocking to read despite knowing what’s going to happen and I found the description of Jackie’s fortitude at her husband’s funeral particularly poignant. Maria’s desperation to have a child was also heartbreaking to witness.

Although from very different backgrounds, I was struck by the similarities between the experiences of the two women. They both had to endure infidelity by the men they became involved with – and, as it turns out, by the same man. They both experienced tragedy in their lives and rifts with family members. And they both had to live under the intense scrutiny of the press and public with every word, every gesture subject to speculation.  They were often vilified for what they did, who they met and their lifestyles. Of course, their positions in society meant there was always going to be interest in their lives.

As presented by the author, I felt neither woman deserved the treatment they received from Aristotle Onassis. Though undoubtedly possessing charisma, he seemed to be motivated more by acquisition than genuine love, as if they were rare items to be added to a collection, not fellow human beings – and fragile ones at that. As Maria wisely observes, “He thrived on conquest” and was a man who “collected celebrity notches on his bedpost“. Yet she still ignored his flaws and forgave his betrayals time and time again. For instance, I couldn’t understand how Onassis could have so little interest in opera or music when it was clearly the central passion of Maria’s life and the thing that brought her the most joy and satisfaction. It was Maria I felt most sympathy for and whose story most engaged me. As she observes to her friend Mary, “Some people are born to be happy but I was not one of them. I am destined always to be the tragic heroine”.

The Second Marriage is an absorbing story of love, loss and betrayal.

In three words: Emotional, intimate, dramatic

Try something similar: The Secret Life of Mrs. London by Rebecca Rosenberg

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About the Author

Gill Paul’s historical novels have reached the top of the USA Today, Toronto Globe & Mail and Kindle charts, and been translated into twenty languages. They include The Second Marriage (titled Jackie and Maria in the US), two bestselling novels about the Romanovs – The Secret Wife and The Lost Daughter -as well as Women and Children First, which was shortlisted for the 2013 RNA Epic Novel of the Year award, No Place For A Lady, shortlisted for a Love Stories award, and Another Woman’s Husband, about links you might not have suspected between Wallis Simpson and Princess Diana.

Gill also writes historical non-fiction, including A History Of Medicine in 50 Objects, and she speaks at libraries and literary festivals on subjects ranging from the Titanic to the Romanovs. Gill lives in London, where she is working on her tenth novel, and she swims daily in an outdoor pond.

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