Mastodon The Writing Desk: March 2026

5 March 2026

Book Review: Missing... Rose Malone, by Linda Huber


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

Josiane Kent is worried. Her friend Rose has posted zero photos on social media all week, despite being on holiday in Edinburgh, the most photogenic city ever. Not only that, she isn’t answering her phone. Something isn’t right. Josiane, along with Rose’s on-off boyfriend Matt and Val, Rose’s boss, starts investigating.

Linda Huber’s new thriller Missing… Rose Malone is a psychological suspense mystery with emotional depth – and a steadily tightening sense of unease. 

The story is full of clues to keep readers guessing, and explores how a single traumatic event ripples through interconnected lives and relationships. 

Strong characters and authentic realism strengthen the impact, as readers become invested in the outcome of the mystery and the personal arcs within the narrative.

Missing… Rose Malone is an engaging and well-constructed thriller that will appeal to readers who appreciate character-driven mysteries with strong psychological elements. Does it end with a surprising twist? You will have to read it to find out.

Tony Riches

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About the Author

Linda Huber grew up in Glasgow, Scotland, but went to work in Switzerland for a year aged twenty-two, and has lived there ever since. Her day jobs have included working as a physiotherapist in hospitals and schools for handicapped children, and teaching English in a medieval castle. Linda’s writing career began in the nineties, when she had over fifty feel-good short stories published in women’s magazines. Her newest project is a series of feel-good novels set in her home area on the banks of Lake Constance in N.E. Switzerland. She really appreciates having the views admired by her characters right on her own doorstep! Find out more at Linda's website https://lindahuber.net/ and find her on Facebook, Twitter @LindaHuber19 and Bluesky @lindahuberauthor.bsky.social



4 March 2026

Special Guest Interview With Cathie Dunn, Author of Love Lost In Time: A gripping dual-timeline mystery


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

AD 2018: Languedoc, southern France

Madeleine Winters discovers ancient female bones under her kitchen floor. How did the woman end up buried, all alone, in that particular spot in the Cabardès hills? And why was her back broken?

AD 777: Septimania, on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea

Seventeen-year-old Nanthild must marry Count Bellon of Carcassonne, a Visigoth, as part of his peace agreement with Charlemagne. As a wise-woman, she continues to visit those in need of her help during Bellon's frequent absences. But dangers lurk on her journeys...


Thank you very much, Tony, for hosting me today. I’m delighted to share a glimpse at my work.

I write historical mystery and romance. My novels span several genres: historical fiction, adventures, murder mystery and romantic fiction. I love including historic events, something I always enjoy as a reader. It makes me read up about places and events I didn’t know about, and it’s something I’d like to convey to my own readers: the excitement of discovering something new.

After many years in Scotland, I’m now fortunate to live in Carcassonne, in the Occitanie region in southern France. I’ve always enjoyed living near or in historic places, as it makes research so much easier. Exploring castles and ruins is one of my passions, and I love the sense of time those ancient walls give you. You can imagine people and animals milling about, but also attacks and fights. Both sides of the coin.

Carcassonne
Readers have mentioned that my stories take them to these places, that they get a real sense of the setting. This makes me so happy. And visiting historic sites isn’t exactly a chore, is it?

Now to your questions:

What is your preferred writing routine?

I don’t have one! I probably should have a routine, but I’m not very disciplined. I write mostly in the afternoons, either downstairs in our conservatory overlooking the front garden, or upstairs in the office, from where I can see the walls of the old cité of Carcassonne! Once I start, I find it hard to stop, though.

Before I start a new project, I research the overall timeline, to include some pointers. Then I search for events to add as I go.

What advice do you have for new writers?

Keep writing! Oh, and build up your brand. Yes, an author is a brand, so we need to make sure readers know about us and our writing. And learn as you go. As authors, we never stop learning.

Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research

The idea to Love Lost in Time came to me during a visit at neighbours in a village where we first lived after our arrival in France from Edinburgh four years ago.

It was late in the evening. The village’s annual fireworks on 14th July had just ended. We joined our neighbours for a nightcap (which took three hours, but that’s a different story…). As I was chatting about my love of history, Marie came in with a bundle. She unwrapped what turned out to be a cranium and a couple of other bones, likely from an arm and fingers! They were over 1000 years old! My neighbours had them checked.

You can imagine how intrigued I was. They had found the bones under their kitchen floor during renovations.

There had been a Visigoth graveyard nearby, now beneath allotments, but a little further on, not where our houses stood. So how did those bones end up outside the old graveyard? The plot for Love Lost in Time was born.

What are you planning to write next?

I’m working on a murder mystery series called the Loup de Foix Mysteries set in the Languedoc area, although the first instalment begins in Rome during the Lateran Council of 1215. My main character is Loup de Foix. He was the illegitimate son of Count Raymond-Roger of Foix, a well-known orator and supporter of the Cathars.

I’m also working on the long-overdue sequel to Dark Deceit, and I’m plotting a novel set in Paris during the infamous Affair of the Poisons.

Cathie Dunn

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About the Author

Cathie  Dunn has been writing for over twenty years. She studied Creative Writing, with a focus on novel writing, which she now teaches in the south of France. She loves researching for her novels, delving into history books, and visiting castles and historic sites. Cathie's stories have garnered readers' awards and praise from reviewers and readers for their authentic description of the past. is a member of the Historical Novel Society and the Alliance of Independent Authors. After many years in Scotland, Cathie now lives in south-west France with her husband, two cats and a rescue dog. Discover more at Cathie's website http://www.cathiedunn.com and Blog https://cathiedunn.blogspot.com and find her on FacebookTwitter: @cathiedunn and Bluesky @cathiedunn.bsky.social

Blog Tour: Both Sides of the Pond, My Family’s War, by Barbara Kent Lawrence


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US

In January of 1939 when Barbara Greene, a beautiful young British actress, met Joe Kennedy, Jr., son of the American Ambassador, she could not have expected that their relationship would lead to her emigrating to the United States and learning to pilot a plane. 


Neither could her brother, Kent, have foreseen his bitter retreat from Dunkirk when he left England in January 1940 to fight in France, or his subsequent service on the frontlines in Cornwall, North Africa, Sicily, and Burma. 

In this intensively researched war story of the author’s family, we also hear the stories of other ordinary people who survived extraordinary circumstances. Richly illustrated with photographs and documents, “Both Sides of the Pond, My Family’s War: 1933 – 1946” is a captivating book.

Praise for Both Sides of the Pond:

"Author Barbara Kent Lawrence weaves a rich tapestry of the lives of her British mother and uncle from 1933 to 1946, before, during, and just after World War II. War stories are very personal. This is such a story, and it offers insight into how two young people navigated difficult years that altered the trajectories of the lives they thought they would live. It is a worthy read, written beautifully. Don’t miss it." ~ Patricia Walkow, Military Writers Society of America

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About the Author

Dr. Lawrence is the author of many articles and nine books, including an award-winning dissertation about the influence of culture on aspirations in Maine.  A former professor, she has taught courses in anthropology and sociology, research, and writing non-fiction and memoir. Lawrence grew up in New York City and Washington D.C., then earned a BA in anthropology from Bennington College, an MA in sociology from New York University, and an Ed.D. in Administration, Policy and Planning from Boston University. When not working she loves to garden, knit, and go for walks, pastimes she learned from her British mother. She lives in Maine and is working on the third novel in her Islands series.  Find out more at https://barbaralawrence.com/  and find Barbara on Facebook and Instagram.

3 March 2026

Blog Tour Excerpt: West of Santillane by Brook Allen


Available from Amazon UK and Amazon US


Desperate to escape a mundane future as a Virginia planter’s wife, Julia Hancock seizes her chance for adventure when she wins the heart of American hero William Clark. Though her husband is the famed explorer, Julia embarks on her own thrilling and perilous 

journey of self-discovery.


Excerpt:


Our journey began by flatboat, crossing the Mississippi from St. Louis to docks near Cahokia. From there, we’d head toward Louisville, where we’d enjoy sweet respite with Jonathan, Sarah, and family.

    Built for carrying people and freight, flatboats offered reliable transport down the Ohio in spring and summer and back and forth on the Mississippi and downriver from St. Louis to New Orleans. Still, I always eyed them with a certain trepidation, making sure I was safe in the central part of the boat since they had no guardrails. 

    Halfway across the river, a cold crosswind blew up, so Chloe and I stayed inside the wagon, wrapped up tight together in a blanket while the men readied the mules and horses for debarking. Once off the boats, they’d be hitched to the wagons again. 

    As we approached Illinois, people gathered on the port side, their weight causing the craft to scour the river bottom along shoals near the docks. Chloe and I laughed, feeling the slight bumps accompanied by a scraping sound emanating from the shallow bottom.

    Suddenly, a male voice from the top of the small shelter bellowed, “Slave overboard!”

    Next came Scott’s voice, shouting to Chloe, “Mama, you got Rachel?”

    Chloe’s mouth dropped as she tossed aside our blanket and leaped from the buckboard. “No!” she cried, her voice wavering. “I figured she was with you . . .”

    I jumped down from the wagon too. Even more passengers had gathered portside, eager to get off, with yet more folk queued up on the Illinois dock, standing at the edge of the waterfront, some of them pointing down into the water.

    Dread gripped me.

    The same crewman who had first sounded the alarm shouted again, “Who’s missing a slave girl?”

    Scott and Chloe were fighting their way through the crowd, not making much headway. Most of the flatboat passengers saw that they were slaves and pushed them back, ignoring their distress.

    Chloe shrieked, out of her mind with terror, “Where is she? Rachel, where you at?” 

    To my horror, I saw Will near the edge of the boat, lifting his arm in the midst of all the people, calling, “She’s mine, sir.” Gradually, the crowd parted, allowing him through.

    Scott and Chloe were still caught up behind crowds of passengers, who were only now surging forward toward the gangplank. Bless Chloe, she was panicked, screaming and keening. “Master Clark, is it Rachel? Please, Lord Jesus, don’t let it be Rachel!” She glanced back, searching for me, eyes brimming with tears. “Our girl don’t swim none, Missus Julia…”

    Little Lewis was alone in the wagon, but he’d been asleep, so I sprang forward to comfort my friend. A fear I’d never known gripped my heart with steely fingers, making my breath shallow: a mother’s distress at the thought of losing a child, especially in such a chilling and unforeseen manner. My heart beat in rhythm with Chloe’s—both of us mothers and facing a terror for which no parent was ever prepared.

    Scott was finally at the edge of the flatboat with Will, and the sound that emanated from his throat was something from a nightmare. A moan, long and loud, pierced like that of a banshee over the confusion, carrying over people talking, stepping off the boat, greeting loved ones, calling for their bags, going about their business…

    How was it that life was carrying on in such normalcy when a little child was lost? 

    As tall as he was, I saw Will’s red head bobbing through the crowd toward us. Oh God—he was carrying her—Rachel! Drenched and dripping from her watery fate, she was limp as the cotton rag doll I remember Harriet losing as a child, left outside during a summer storm and hanging over the wrought-iron rail on our back stairwell, soaked and drooping.

    She was also still as stone, blood dripping from her head, staining Will’s cotton shirt. I willed her to lift her head and say something—anything. Still holding Chloe, I shielded her as long as I could, but when she finally saw her daughter, her scream clawed its way up my spine. She ran to Will, and I stood helpless, my emotion spilling its way down my face.

    Chloe snatched Rachel from Will, lowering her to the deck and holding the girl’s bloody head in her hands, swaying from side to side.

    Will crossed over to where I stood. “She must have gotten too near the edge. My best guess is that she lost her balance when we hit ground back there.”

    “She couldn’t swim,” I murmured. “Will—is she—”

    My answer came when arms encircled me, and it wasn’t the one I wanted. “I need to know. Did she drown?”

    His arms gripped me tighter as he spoke softly in my ear. “The boat was docking and crushed her head when she was flailing about. Let’s pray she went quickly.”

    Oh, Sweet Lord…

    “Nooo—” Chloe was on her knees, rocking Rachel’s lifeless form in her arms, her protest a guttural screech at the top of her lungs. Scott stood sobbing behind her, wiping both eyes with his worn, patched shirtsleeves and shaking his head in disbelief. 

    At the sound of their grief, other travelers crossing the gangplank to Illinois stared back at our group, heading on their way and leaving us in our shock. 

    Will released me, turning and walking slowly toward the wagon.

    “Where are you going?” I cried, balling my fists. My tone turned accusatory and bitter. “How can you just leave us to hitch the mules when this has just happened?”

    He stopped in his tracks and turned about to face me, patiently and quietly answering, “Julia, I’m going to the wagon to find something to wrap her in.”


Brook Allen

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About the Author

Brook Allen has a passion for history. Her newest project, West of Santillane, spotlights history from a little closer to home in Botetourt County, Virginia. It’s the story of Julia Hancock, who married famed explorer, William Clark. Each character of this thrilling, adventurous period was researched throughout southwest Virginia and into Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Idaho, and North Dakota. It launched in March of 2024. Brook belongs to the Historical Novel Society and attends conferences as often as possible to study craft and meet fellow authors. In 2019, her novel Antonius: Son of Rome won a silver medal in the international Reader’s Favorite Book Reviewers Book Awards, then won First Place in the prestigious Chaucer Division in the Chanticleer International Book Awards, 2020. West of Santillane garnered international attention in Summer 2025 by becoming a Silver Medalist in the Independent Publishing Book Awards for best Mid-Atlantic Fiction. Also, it was a finalist for the Virginia Romance Writers Holt Medallion. Most recently, Brook appeared in Season 8 of Blueridge PBS’s WRITE AROUND THE CORNER. Though she graduated from Asbury University with a B.A. in Music Education, Brook has always loved writing. She completed a Masters program at Hollins University with an emphasis in Ancient Roman studies, which helped prepare her for authoring her award-winning Antonius Trilogy. Brook recently retired from public education and her personal interests include travel, cycling, hiking in the woods, reading, and spending downtime with her husband and big, black dog, Jak. She lives in the heart of southwest Virginia in the scenic Blue Ridge Mountains. Find out more at https://www.brookallenauthor.com/ and find Brook on Twitter @1BrookAllenFacebook and Bluesky @brookallenauthor.bsky.social