3 June 2026
Historical Fiction Spotlight: What the Ocean Brings, by Tonya Ulynn Brown
2 June 2026
Guest Interview with Eric Fisher, Author of Buried Alive: Four Ways to Free Yourself from the Dirt
My latest book is called Buried Alive: Four Ways to Free Yourself From the Dirt. The book tells the true story of my father being accidentally buried alive during an expedition to find Native American artifacts, narrated from the perspectives of the three men present on that fateful day.
The chapters alternate between excerpts from the interviews and the self-help sections, showing how these suggestions can be applied to real life. I was also able to follow-up with my dad 24 years later for an interview that is also included in the book. The four self-help sections cover finding balance in life, the CIA acronym (curiosity, introspection, and agency), the importance of connection and community, and a mysterious "W" concept for approaching life's challenges.
What is your preferred writing routine?
I generally prefer to write as consistently as possible, yet sometimes that can be easier said than done! I'm usually writing in the evening time and don't usually have music going simultaneously. If I do have music, the tracks don't have vocals; I listen to ambient, electronic, and atmospheric bands like Hammock. I don't set a specific amount of time for writing. I start when I start and stop when I stop without much structure for duration.
What advice do you have for new writers?
Don't be afraid to kill off your darlings. A Hollywood agent gave me this advice when I was pursuing screenwriting. This means not feeling married to any material. Believe that you can remove material if the story is better served by removing it.
I've seen the same with the screenplays I've written where I really wanted to keep a piece of dialogue. In the end, I realized the scene was better suited with the dialogue taken out completely or trimmed. The same can be seen with books.
I would also say don't be afraid to follow your gut with a plot point, characterization, character motivation, ending, etc. Sometimes the gut gives us information that our analytical brain would not. Also, congratulate yourself on finishing a first draft. Even though more work may be needed to achieve the final manuscript, most people don't even complete that first draft.
What have you found to be the best way to raise awareness of your books?
I'd say podcasts help. General conversation and word of mouth are also beneficial. The person I speak with may then mention the book to someone else, and awareness grows along that line. Posting on social media also helps, which can involve collaborating with other local authors to help raise awareness for their book and vice-versa. I collaborated with one local author and it was a great experience.
Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research
One of the chapters in my recent book involves a discussion on the impacts of social media. In the second quarter of 2023, over three billion active users were documented as having Facebook accounts. Wow. I was astounded. That's approaching half the world's population!
What was the hardest scene you remember writing?
A heartfelt letter to a baby my wife and I experienced as a miscarriage, whom we named Eden. That was tough and brought back painful memories.
What are you planning to write next?
I have a book that's recently been edited and I'm going through the final changes right now. It's my last non-fiction book, at least for now. The book details my experiences as a seasoned mental health counsellor and what I've learned along the way.
Eric Fisher
29 May 2026
Special Guest Interview with Filippo Iannarone, Author of The Toscanini Conspiracy
26 May 2026
Book Review: Anne Boleyn's First Love: The Life of Henry Percy, by Jan-Marie Knights
Jan-Marie Knights proves Percy’s life was more complex, tragic, and influential than this single, thwarted romance. The book recreates the youthful affair between Anne and Henry, proposing a genuine affection that threatened Wolsey’s political scheming.
Henry Percy was banished into the dangerous world of border politics as Lord Warden of the Marches, defending England against Scottish raids while battling illness and financial ruin. In a cruel twist a broken Percy was later forced to sit on the jury that condemned Anne Boleyn to death.
This book achieves a balance between historical fact and narrative empathy as we explore the life of a man caught between duty, a tyrannical king, and an unforgettable love. Accessible yet rich with interesting detail, drawing heavily on contemporary letters, we glimpse a deeply human Henry Percy, a man flawed, physically ailing, yet loyal to his family’s legacy despite what might have been.
I recommend Anne Boleyn's First Love for anyone who appreciates an empathetic look at the human collateral of the Tudor court. Jan-Marie Knights has given the earl the dignified biography he has long deserved.
Tony Riches
25 May 2026
Book Review: Queen of Shadows, by Anna Belfrage
Leonor de Guzmán emerges as an intelligent and emotionally resilient figures who understands the dangers surrounding her position. Every privilege granted by Alfonso’s devotion carries with it the threat of ruin, yet her strength is in her refusal to surrender her dignity in a political storm.
What makes Queen of Shadows especially compelling is the tension between tenderness and danger. Every exchange between Alfonso and Leonor unfolds beneath the shadow of suspicion and looming betrayal. Anna Belfrage sustains this atmosphere, ensuring that the quietest moments shimmer with unease.
The supporting cast deepen the emotional complexity, particularly through the characters of Alma and Rodrigo. Alma brings a grounded emotional perspective, offering moments of compassion, insight, and wisdom that counterbalance the ruthlessness of the court.
Rodrigo embodies the tensions of loyalty and survival in a fractured kingdom. His presence adds another layer to this exploration of the personal sacrifices demanded by power. Together, these characters ensure the narrative extends far beyond the royal couple at its centre.
Queen of Shadows succeeds because the characters are shaped by desire and ambition, yet doesn't shy away from the harsh reality of the time. The result is a historical novel of epic scale which leaves the reader with a sense of the humanity behind the legends of history.
Tony Riches
22 May 2026
Historical Fiction Spotlight: The Toscanini Conspiracy, by Filippo Iannarone
21 May 2026
Book Launch guest Post by Anna Belfrage, Author of Queen of Shadows
Back in 2016, I wrote a post about Alfonso XI and his lady love, Leonor de Guzmán. The consequences of this liaison were to be painful for the people of Castile, resulting in over a decade of civil war, but when Alfonso first met Leonor he was around seventeen, she a year or so older. Neither of them were probably thinking beyond a flare of attraction; after all, Alfonso was a king required to marry dynastically, and Leonor might be gorgeous, witty, high-born and rich, but he needed more in a wife. Which is why he married Maria of Portugal.
But Alfonso just couldn’t forget Leonor. He needed her, loved her. And so Leonor became the beloved mistress while Maria became the spurned wife.
The post I wrote stayed with me. Here was a very juicy story, and I wanted to tell it. So, since 2016, I have been working on the story of Alfonso, Leonor and Maria, but it has been a tortuous journey—especially because of my POV challenges.
POV – point of view – characters are the drivers of the story. They offer the subjective perspectives on the unfolding narrative, and a smart writer ensures the POV characters see things from different perspectives. In romance, there is often a he and she POV character, to ensure the reader experiences both sides of the love story.
In my case, I started writing with Alfonso and Leonor as POV characters. 12 000 words in, I realised this wouldn’t work. Not that they saw eye to eye on everything, but Alfonso and Leonor were essentially on the same side. Then I tried using Leonor and Maria as my POV characters, but it made me lose the overall historical context. Gah! I left Alfonso, Leonor and Maria to stew and wrote other stuff instead, but all the time, they were in the back of my head.
Some years ago, I sat down in front of my laptop and wrote :
The first time Alma saw Doña Leonor de Guzmán, the woman was half-naked and screaming invectives to the high heavens
“Normal,” Cesaria, Alma’s mother, said. “It hurts to give birth.”
Alma stared at the woman squirming on the bed and decided there and then to never, ever have any children.
And just like that, I had a new POV character that came with the added benefit of being invented and very observant. After eight years of wrestling with the story, the pieces began fitting together, with the equally invented Rodrigo becoming as close an observer to the king as Alma was of Leonor.
In Queen of Shadows, both Leonor and Maria get a voice—but it is Alma and Rodrigo that carry the story, all the way from that December day in 1332 to an August day in 1351.
“It’s not fair,” Don Alfonso grumbles. “Surely I should have had a voice in my own story?”
I pat his hand (figuratively: the man is dead since like seven hundred years!) “It still gets told,” I say. And what a messy story it is…
Anna Belfrage









