Mastodon The Writing Desk

15 April 2026

Blog Tour Review: Fool: A Tudor Jester's Reckoning in the Court of King Henry VIII, by Mary Lawrence


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Appearances are not what they seem... Kronos is a fool in the court of King Henry VIII. Jeered for his dwarfism, lauded for his juggling...and discreetly desired by noble ladies. One dangerous moment of eavesdropping nearly costs him his life. Brutally maimed and abandoned, he is rescued by an apothecary and nursed back to health. When his rescuer learns of Kronos's import, he contrives to make himself a rich man.

Mary Lawrence’s latest novel, ‘Fool’ is an epic journey from being abandoned as a malformed infant on a midden heap to the court of King Henry VIII.  Told mostly in retrospect, our unreliable narrator is named ‘Kronos’ by his rescuers, with typical irony. 

I enjoyed the well observed details of his early life at a monastery, although it is hard to think of a character less well suited to monastic discipline.

This story builds on the author’s excellent ‘Bianca Goddard Mystery’ series, exposing the harsh and dangerous realities of life for the lower levels of Tudor society. I also liked the inventive use of language, enough to convey an authentic sense of time and place.

Not for the squeamish, there are some disturbing details of cruelty and injustice, yet these are plausible and typical of the period.

I hope Mary Lawrence will consider a sequel, as like all the best stories, ‘Fool’ leaves the reader wanting to know more. Highly recommended.

Tony Riches

# # #

About the Author

Mary Lawrence lives in Maine and is the author of five Bianca Goddard Mysteries set in Tudor London featuring a cast of commoners. Bianca uses her wits and a smattering of alchemy to solve murders in the slums of Southwark. Suspense Magazine named The Alchemist’s Daughter and The Alchemist of Lost Souls "Best Books of 2015 and 2019” in the historical mystery category and each mystery has been a top 100 best-selling historical mystery. Her articles have appeared in several publications most notably the national news blog, The Daily Beast. Fool is a standalone Find out more at www.marylawrencebooks.com and find her on FacebookInstagram and Bluesky @marylawrence.bsky.social

14 April 2026

Book Launch Spotlight: 'Fool: A Tudor Jester's Reckoning in the Court of King Henry VIII, by Mary Lawrence


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Kronos is a fool--mocked for his dwarfism, prized for his juggling, and underestimated by everyone who matters. But in a court ruled by paranoia and whispers, invisibility is its own kind of power.

When Kronos overhears a secret that could destroy Queen Katherine Howard, he becomes a liability the crown cannot afford. Silenced, mutilated, and left for dead, he survives--barely.

Rescued by an ambitious apothecary, Kronos soon realizes he has not escaped danger--he has merely changed masters. His secret is worth a fortune...and powerful men are willing to kill to control it.

But Kronos has spent his life being overlooked and he's ready to use that to his advantage.

As rival factions circle and scheme, Kronos sets a plan in motion--one that could topple the mighty, rewrite his fate, and force his foes to reconsider which of them is truly...the fool.

See Book Review: 'Fool' by Mary Lawrence

# # #

About the Author

Mary Lawrence lives in Maine and is the author of five Bianca Goddard Mysteries set in Tudor London featuring a cast of commoners. Bianca uses her wits and a smattering of alchemy to solve murders in the slums of Southwark. Suspense Magazine named The Alchemist’s Daughter and The Alchemist of Lost Souls "Best Books of 2015 and 2019” in the historical mystery category and each mystery has been a top 100 best-selling historical mystery. Her articles have appeared in several publications most notably the national news blog, The Daily Beast. Fool is a standalone Find out more at www.marylawrencebooks.com and find her on FacebookInstagram and Bluesky @marylawrence.bsky.social

13 April 2026

Special Guest Interview with Melissa Addey, Author of The Flight of Birds (The Colosseum Book 4)


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

A dangerous emperor brings darkness close to home…  Rome, 83 AD. At last, Althea and Marcus are married, dreaming of a peaceful life in the country, far from the blood and chaos of the gladiatorial Games. But Emperor Domitian has other plans. His erratic demands grow darker with each passing day, and the couple – alongside their loyal backstage team – must navigate three final tasks that test 
courage, loyalty, and survival itself.

I'm pleased to welcome author Melissa Addey to The Writing Desk:

Tell us about your latest book

My latest historical fiction series is the Colosseum series, four books which follow the backstage team of the Colosseum as they first inaugurate it in 80AD and then have to keep up with the demands of the emperors they serve to put on ever more spectacular events, including flooding the amphitheatre for naval battles. Each book focuses on one element – fire, water, earth and air. 


The first book is From the Ashes, which got Editor’s Choice by the Historical Novel Society. It starts with the destruction of Pompeii when Vesuvius erupts and includes a fire in Rome and an outbreak of fever which killed thousands. 

Lots of hot fiery events and amongst it all they have to inaugurate the Colosseum with 100 days of Games, a bit like staging the Olympics nowadays, a huge undertaking. It’s a lot about found family and plebian life – no fancy villas, rather a shabby apartment block in a rough part of Rome.  

What is your preferred writing routine?

My rule with research is – if I can write an ordinary average day in that era without looking at my notes, then I can start writing. Then I try to write 2,000 words a day over two one-hour stints, any more and my brain hurts. I use music relevant to that era to help me get in the mood. The rest of my day is marketing, research and endless life admin that seems to creep in there somehow despite my best efforts!

What advice do you have for new writers?

Read a lot in your genre – and in others. It’s enjoyable anyway, but it also constantly updates your brain with how other writers have tackled writing about certain subjects, emotions, how they have used structure and words, etc. It’ll make you a better writer – and it also makes you aware of what readers in that area enjoy, which is very important if you start writing in a new genre – you can subvert their expectations as well of course, but knowing what they are in the first place will make you better at that genre. 

What have you found to be the best way to raise awareness of your books?

A good website is a fundamental aspect. I also love making book trailers, which my readers seem to enjoy, it helps them visualise places and clothing if they are unfamiliar with a particular era, since I tend to era-hop. 

Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research

Gladiators were more like prize boxers: a lot of time and money went into training them up, so they weren’t all ‘to the death’ fights, most of them had referees involved. I spent time with a professional boxing promoter as part of my research, and his stories helped me develop two gladiator trainers – one upright and ethical, the other a real showman with very little in the way of ethical concerns! We like to think the Romans were brutal for watching gladiatorial games – but we still watch boxing, knowing full well that it can cause brain damage so…

What was the hardest scene you remember writing?

For From the Ashes, a scene where two characters return to Pompeii after the eruption of Vesuvius – this hardly ever appears in fiction, it’s always the buildup and never the aftermath. I had to get myself ready emotionally, so I wrote quite a lot of the book so that I really knew and cared about the characters before returning to that point and looking at a lot of upsetting images from nuclear bombings, volcanic eruptions and other devastations. I think I wrote the whole scene in one sitting, which I rarely do for quite a long section. But I’m proud of it, I think it’s an important scene and readers have told me it made them emotional.

What are you planning to write next?

I’m working on a book set in Regency England where a young Indian ayah (nanny) is abandoned by her British family with no money to get home. This really occurred so often that eventually there was a Home for Ayahs set up in Victorian times. I was very shocked you could do that to anyone but especially someone who raised your children. I’m currently researching and having to read a lot of unpleasantly racist material, which can be a bit depressing, 

I find it’s going a lot slower than usual because I feel sad or angry after reading, rather than curious and interested which I usually do when researching. I’m about to go to Amsterdam to see one of the only ships left where you can still get on board that is close to the one my characters would have used to travel from India to England (about six months on board!), so I’m looking forward to that, I’m very fond of immersive research – eating the food, wearing the clothes, being in locations. It makes history come alive for me and I hope I then transmit that to my readers.

Melissa Addey

# # #

About the Author

Melissa Addey writes richly researched historical fiction inspired by what she calls “the footnotes of history” – forgotten stories and intriguing lives from the past. Her 15 novels span Ancient Rome, medieval Morocco, 18th-century China, and Regency England. She has a PhD in Creative Writing, was Writer in Residence at the British Library, and lives in London with her family. Discover her books (and get a free novella) at www.melissaaddey.com and follow Melissa on Facebook, Instagram and Bluesky @melissaaddey.bsky.social

12 April 2026

Special Guest Interview with Naomi Kelsey, Author of The Darkening Globe: A haunting historical thriller


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

1597, London. When Beatrice’s husband returns from exploring the New World, he comes home with unexpected a mysterious woman, and an enormous painted globe. As Hugh refuses to explain who their female guest is, Beatrice’s foreboding grows. The unwieldy globe now strikes her as sinister – a reminder of the world of secrets pervading her household.

I'm pleased to welcome author Naomi Kelsey to The Writing Desk:

Tell us about your latest book

My latest novel, The Darkening Globe, is out now in paperback. It’s an Elizabethan psychological thriller about the so-called Golden Age of exploration and how it may not have been quite so golden for all concerned… The book emerged from a serendipitous collision of several things: firstly, I’d been wanting to write about Bess Throckmorton, intrigued by what it must have been like for her to be left behind when Raleigh sailed off on his many adventures. 

Secondly, I was also teaching creative writing to my Year 10s during lockdown, using a Twitter thread between various museums sharing images of their creepiest objects as inspiration when the National Trust magazine landed through my letterbox, containing a piece on the Petworth Globe, with its intricate cartouches of mermaids and sea monsters. 


Perfect, I thought, I’ll use this to model the lesson’s exercises; my students weren’t particularly keen to share their ideas via Teams without a bit of encouragement, so to avoid any silent tumbleweed moments, I’d write alongside them and share my suggestions first. I had so much fun crafting responses to the globe that I just … continued! 


The themes I’d wanted to explore in that fledgling story about Bess ended up absorbed into The Darkening Globe: female independence, colonialism, resourcefulness and resilience. Bess, along with Raleigh, the Earl of Essex and his sister Penelope Rich, and Queen Elizabeth I all make appearances in the finished book, but creating my own central characters gave me far more freedom to experiment with Gothic tropes – and inflict whatever fates I wanted onto them! 
 
What is your preferred writing routine?

I love this question for all the imaginary versions of my life I can conjure up! My preferred routine is the extremely rare one when my kids are in holiday club: drop them off, get back home, have a cup of tea, write for several hours, have a leisurely lunch, more tea, write some more, then pick them up. I had 4 days of this last summer, and finished my third novel.

However, as a full time English teacher and a mum, my writing routine is about carving out little pockets during the week, whether it’s an hour in the evening on a not-too-draining day at work, or a Friday afternoon where I take myself off to the local library at the end of school, or a spell in a coffee shop while my daughter goes to art class. I’ll have mulled over my story and characters throughout the interim periods, so I’m usually raring to go when I finally manage to get pen to paper. I always write by hand – it’s a great excuse to buy beautiful notebooks, plus it separates my creative writing from my teaching: computers feel like data and PowerPoints to me! 

What advice do you have for new writers?

Persevere. During the writing itself, chipping away at your book in snippets of time, inching your way towards the ending: it’s a long process, particularly if you have other responsibilities, and you need to keep going, one word at a time. You’ll need even more perseverance when it comes to getting published too – rejection is inevitable, even for books that go on to become bestsellers. 

Always keep writing: if your first book doesn’t get past the query trenches, or submission to editors, write another book. Then another book. It’s rare for a writer’s first published novel to be the first book they ever actually wrote.

What have you found to be the best way to raise awareness of your books?

I’m not particularly social media-savvy, and I really wish I knew the answer to this. My most popular Instagram post isn’t about my books at all, but about how much I loved The Other Bennet Sister. I think it’s important to be reciprocal online though: I aim to talk about other people’s books as much as about my own. The book world is a lovely community, and I feel it’s vital to support others in their writing journeys, especially debut authors.

Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research

I was absolutely horrified by Francis Drake’s actions. I knew him largely by his dashing, heroic reputation (I can still picture the History textbook with Elizabeth knighting him on board The Golden Hinde), but in Miranda Kauffman’s Black Tudors, his treatment of a Black woman called Maria was awful. 


Somehow she ended up on board his ship after a clash with a Spanish vessel – it’s not clear whether she was a captive, an enslaved woman, or someone who came aboard semi-willingly. We do know that she was pregnant, and that Drake, rather than taking her to safe harbour, decided to abandon her on an island with two Black men. Did she know them? Were either of them the baby’s father? Did any of them survive, or make it off the island? We don’t know, and it’s appalling that he treated her so callously, and that history doesn’t give us any more record of her life.

What was the hardest scene you remember writing?

Emotionally, I can’t say, as it’s a massive spoiler! But I had to do some cruel things to my characters… What I found technically challenging was concealing what I knew about some of my villains: I had to write them in such a way that Beatrice didn’t guess, and the readers didn’t guess, but in hindsight, all the hints were there. That was a really tricky balance to strike. 

What are you planning to write next?

My next book is out in July – Pale Mistress is a retelling of Othello from the perspective of Bianca, the only named female character in Shakespeare’s major tragedies who doesn’t die… Book 4 will be a novel about Northumbrian dragon legends set during the English Civil War. I love dragon books, and thus far (three chapters in), I’m having a great time!

 Naomi Kelsey

# # #

About the Author

Naomi Kelsey's debut novel, The Burnings, was published by Harper North in 2023, followed by The Darkening Globe in 2025. Her next book, Pale Mistress, a reimagining of Shakespeare's 'Othello', will be published in July 2026. She is the winner of two Northern Writers’ Awards and of the HWA Dorothy Dunnett Competition 2021. Her fiction has been published in Mslexia magazine and shortlisted for several further awards including the Bridport Prize and the Bristol Prize. She posts about books, history, and the chaos of writing around small children and teaching English on Instagram as @naomikelseybooks and on X as @naomikelsey_ and writes a monthly-ish newsletter on Substack at @naomikelsey

11 April 2026

Historical Fiction Spotlight: Annie's Day, by Apple Gidley


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

War took everything. Love never had a chance. Until now.

As a young Australian Army nurse, Annie endures the brutalities of World War II in Singapore and New Guinea. Later, seeking peace, she takes refuge in Berlin—only to find herself caught in the upheaval of the Blockade. Through it all, the death of a man she barely knew leaves a wound that refuses to heal, threatening to bind her to a life of loneliness.

Decades later, Annie is still haunted by what was lost—and what might have been. Her days are quiet, but her memories are loud. When a dying man’s fear forces her to confront her own doubts, she forms an unexpected friendship that rekindles something she thought was long gone: hope.

Annie’s Day is a powerful story of love, war, and the quiet courage it takes to start again—even when it seems far too late.

Praise for Annie’s Day:


"Moving and enlightening..." ~ Deborah Swift, bestselling author

"This is a story of courage and love, and it lingers long after you turn the last page." ~ Caroline James, author, 5* Goodreads review

# # #

About the Author

Apple Gidley's nomadic life has helped imbue her writing with rich, diverse cultures and experiences. Annie’s Day is her seventh book. Gidley currently lives in Cambridgeshire, England with her husband, and rescue cat, Bella, aka assistant editor. Find out more at https://www.applegidley.com/ and find her on  Facebook • Twitter / X and  Instagram

Historical Fiction Spotlight: The Crownless Queen: - a story of secrets, sacrifice and survival against the odds. by Elizabeth Chadwick


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

1360: Having left her days of rebellion behind, Jeanette of Kent has finally found contentment as a wife and mother. Then, she is delivered a new blow: her beloved husband, Thomas Holland, has died on duty overseas.

Though broken, Jeanette readies herself once more to fight to protect what is hers. And when Prince Edward, heir to the throne and her longtime friend, unexpectedly steps forward and offers marriage, she accepts for the sake of her family.

As their relationship deepens, love blossoms again for Jeanette, but it comes at a price. With great power comes great responsibility - not least bearing a future king - and, as the wheel of fortune climbs higher, it becomes harder and harder to hold on.

Jeanette has more to lose than ever before. But with the wolves gathering beneath her, can she survive the fall?

From the award-winning and bestselling author Elizabeth Chadwick comes the much-awaited second novel in the Jeanette of Kent duology, The Crownless Queen - bringing to a powerful conclusion the remarkable story of a woman who began life as a royal rebel and ended it behind the throne...

# # #

About the Author

Elizabeth Chadwick lives in a cottage in the Vale of Belvoir in Nottinghamshire with her husband and their 4 terriers, Pip, Jack, Billy and Little Ted. Her first novel, The Wild Hunt, won a Betty Trask Award and To Defy a King won the RNA’s 2011 Historical Novel Prize. She was also shortlisted for the Romantic Novelists’ Award in 1998 for The Champion, in 2001 for Lords of the White Castle, in 2002 for The Winter Mantle and in 2003 for The Falcons of Montabard. Her sixteenth novel, The Scarlet Lion, was nominated by Richard Lee, founder of the Historical Novel Society, as one of the top ten historical novels of the last decade. She often lectures at conferences and historical venues, has been consulted for television documentaries and is a member of the Royal Historical Society. For more details on Elizabeth Chadwick and her books, visit www.elizabethchadwick.com, follow her on Twitter,and Bluesky 

9 April 2026

Book Launch Spotlight: The Enemy’s Wife (Survivors of War, Book 2) by Deborah Swift


Available from Amazon UK

A poignant story of the impossible choices we make in the shadow of war, for fans of Daisy Wood and Marius Gabriel.

1941. When Zofia’s beloved husband Haru is conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army, she is left to navigate Japanese-occupied Shanghai alone.

Far from home and surrounded by a country at war, Zofia finds unexpected comfort in a bond with Hilly, a spirited young refugee escaping Nazi-occupied Austria.

As violence tightens its grip on the city, they seek shelter with Theo, Zofia’s American employer. But with every passing day, the horrors of war and Haru’s absence begin to reshape Zofia’s world – and her heart.

Can she still love someone who has become the enemy?


# # #

About the Author

Deborah Swift lives in North Lancashire on the edge of the Lake District and worked as a set and costume designer for theatre and TV. After gaining an MA in Creative Writing in 2007 Deborah now teaches classes and courses in writing and provides editorial advice to writers and authors. Find out more at Deborah's website www.deborahswift.com and follow her on Facebook and Twitter @swiftstory