18 November 2015

Book Launch Guest Post ~ Kindling Volume II: A Writer's Edit Anthology


New on Amazon US and Amazon UK

Writer’s Edit is an online literary magazine and independent press, all about supporting and celebrating writers worldwide. From our supportive editorial team to the hundreds of articles featuring insightful writing advice, we seek to empower. We’re also on a mission to bring more beautiful books into the world.

The online literary magazine houses hundreds of fantastic articles about writing, industry news, tips on getting published and inspiration. As tea-loving bookworms and writers we understand the ups and downs of the writer’s life. Therefore, everything you see on the website seeks to provide advice, support and encouragement. We’re a platform for the writers, by the writers.

We try to make our editorial process as supportive, helpful and constructive as possible. Feedback from trusted fellow writers is an indispensable part of the writer’s life, journeying from novice to experienced wordsmith. We believe the writer’s life, though at times confusing and challenging, is rewarding and not necessarily one of solitude.

It’s our digital format that grants us the perfect environment to establish and cultivate a thriving online writing community. With new articles published weekly, there’s always more to enjoy! The strong social presence of our editorial team, contributing writers and readers also helps to cultivate conversations and a sense of community.

In 2014 we also becamean independent press. Our first book, Kindling Volume I, features inspiring works of fiction, nonfiction and poetry. Since the inception and publication of our proudest achievement, a number of our authors have gone on to release full-length books and win literary awards. We’re thrilled to be a part of their journey from pen and paper to publication.

This year, we decided to continue the Kindling legacy. On November 18th 2015 we’ll be launching our 2nd volume of Kindling, another literary feast of fantastic short stories, nonfiction essays, poetry and writing advice. Kindling is our way of bridging the gap between the modern digital world, and the traditional roots of writing – the print book.

Earlier this year, we launched two additional initiatives to celebrate the best of emerging talent: the Short Story of the Month and Poem of the Month. Winning submissions are published on our site, drawing in avid readers to incredible authors. Every piece is a testament to the endless talent of Australian and international writers. Without these inspiring individuals, Writer’s Edit wouldn’t be the creative online space it is today.

We also love to host regular giveaways, often featuring giftcards to Amazon and similar retailers. The writer’s life is by nature one of reading, so we’re always looking to spread the book love.

Writer’s Edit offers writers from all walks of life a supportive community and a platform for publication. If you’re ready to embrace an online space devoted to writers and created by writers, then it’s time to join the Writer’s Edit community. All writers, whether young or old, local or international, emerging or established, are welcome.

Bernadette Mung
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About the author:

Bernadette Mung is an Editorial Assistant at Writer’s Edit. She currently studies a Bachelor of Communications (Creative Writing) at the University of Technology, Sydney, and plans to complete a postgraduate degree in Editing and Publishing. Most of her days begin with a cup of earl grey tea. Since first reading Enid Blyton’s The Faraway Tree as a child, Bernadette has fallen all the more in love with the art of storytelling. Most days will find her reading and writing short fiction, though future plans involve several novels and a flourishing blog. You can find Bernadette on Twitter @BernadetteMung and also follow @WritersEdit.

17 November 2015

Historical Fiction Spotlight ~ Le Temps Viendra: A Novel of Anne Boleyn, by Sarah Morris


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

Anne is a young, 21st century woman in the midst of a life-long love affair with the 16th Century and the enigmatic Anne Boleyn. Whilst indulging her secret passion on an exclusive 'Anne Boleyn Connoisseurs' Weekend', she is taken seriously ill at Hever Castle. 

Falling into a deep state of unconsciousness, Anne becomes ensnared in a time portal that transports her back in time to England, 1527. She awakens to find herself in the body of her heroine, Anne Boleyn; at the time, a young woman on the brink of an historic love affair with the mighty King Henry VIII. 

Anne finds herself at the centre of Henry's world, yet increasingly vulnerable as the figurehead of the emerging and evermore powerful Boleyn faction. Whilst she learns what it is to walk in the footsteps of the woman who would change English history, she is also engulfed in mixed emotions and only too aware of how her relationship with Henry mirrors that of her 21st century relationship with Dan, her married lover.

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Find out more at www.anneboleynbook.co.uk and find Dr Sarah A. Morris on Facebook and Twitter @LeTempsViendra 

14 November 2015

Historical Fiction Spotlight ~ Da Vinci's Tiger, by L. M. Elliott


New on Amazon US and Amazon UK

For fans of rich and complex historical novels like Girl with a Pearl Earring or Code Name Verity, Laura Malone Elliott delivers the stunning tale of real-life Renaissance woman Ginevra de' Benci, the inspiration for one of Leonardo da Vinci's earliest masterpieces. 
The young and beautiful daughter of a wealthy family, Ginevra longs to share her poetry and participate in the artistic ferment of Renaissance Florence but is trapped in an arranged marriage in a society dictated by men. The arrival of the charismatic Venetian ambassador, Bernardo Bembo, introduces Ginevra to a dazzling circle of patrons, artists, and philosophers. Bembo chooses Ginevra as his Platonic muse and commissions a portrait of her by a young Leonardo da Vinci. 

Posing for the brilliant painter inspires an intimate connection between them, one Ginevra only begins to understand. In a rich and vivid world of exquisite art with a dangerous underbelly of deadly political feuds, Ginevra faces many challenges to discover her voice and artistic companionship—and to find love.

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About the Author

New York Times bestselling author L. M. Elliott is most known for Under A War-Torn Sky, the story of a B-24 bomber pilot and the French Resistance.  With New York Times best-selling illustrator Lynn Munsinger, she has also created five award-winning picture books. Twice a National Magazine Award finalist, L M. Elliott wrote often on women’s issues when a staff reporter for the WashingtonianMagazine, and authored two adult non-fiction books, one on domestic violence. She lives in Virginia with her family. 
Find our more at her website www.lmelliott.com and find her on Twitter @L_M_Elliott

12 November 2015

Special Guest Post ~ Longbow Girl, by Linda Davies


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

While out riding, schoolgirl Merry Owen finds a chest containing an ancient Welsh text that leads her into a past filled with treasure, secrets and danger. But it's her skill with the Longbow, an old family tradition,
that will save her future


I started my professional life as an investment banker, but I always wanted to be a writer. After seven years in the City, I quit to write Nest of Vipers, which, due to blessed serendipity, justified giving up the day job. I’ve written five more novels for adults.  The latest is Ark Storm, a thriller about weather-manipulation technology being harnessed to an atmospheric river, turning it into a terrorist-guided weather weapon used to attack the West Coast of the United States.  Scarily, it is based on real science (Google ARk Storm 1000 and rains in summer 2010 in El Ain).

I have also written one non-fiction book, Hostage, Kidnapped on the High Seas. It’s the true story of my detention and captivity in Iran. Weirdly, as I write this, it is the 10th anniversary of the day I was kidnapped.  

After writing Hostage and reliving the experience, I needed to do something different.  The core idea of Longbow Girl just seemed to pop into my head.  I think it had been waiting around in my subconscious for a long time.

The roots of Longbow Girl go back to my own childhood. When I was eight years old, growing up in Tylagarw, a little village not far from the Royal Mint in Llantrisant, my father gave me a longbow for Christmas. It was an unusual and imaginative present but not surprising in some ways, given my father’s outlook on life.  The late Professor Glyn Davies had fought in the Second World War in the Royal Dragoons.  This guided his belief that you needed to raise children able to look after themselves, armed with the knowledge and physical abilities to get themselves out of trouble, and to fight if absolutely necessary.

It also explains my long-term fascination with warrior girls.  I love reading about them and I love writing them.  I always make the heroines in my adult thrillers and now in my books for children into fighters!  Merry, the heroine of Longbow Girl, is a supreme archer.

The longbow that my father gave me when I was eight definitely inspired me to create Merry.  She wields her bow to save her family.  I just wielded mine for fun, but I always used to feel different whenever I picked up my bow.  There's something very satisfying about using a long slender piece of wood and a shorter pointed piece of wood with feathers and a bit of skill and strength to hit a target.  Longbows were and still are lethal weapons. They changed the course of history, they won unwinnable wars. In a weird way I felt like just by picking one up I was stepping back in time.

I would shoot it for hours, perfecting my aim, practising until my hands were covered in calluses. My older brother, Kenneth, also had a longbow.  We would shoot cans off walls and also, somewhat unfortunately, we would aim for the high wires on the electricity pylons. Happily, we missed!

In a strange co-incidence, mirroring one of the central plot lines from Longbow Girl which I dreamed up years earlier, I recently discovered that in 1346 the Longbowmen of Llantrisant fought for the Black Prince at the Battle of Crécy. They fought in the Black Prince’s own division and when he was knocked to the ground they formed a protective ring around him until he recovered. They saved his life. 

The grateful Prince granted them a piece of land to be held in perpetuity. To this day, nearly seven hundred years later, the direct descendants of these longbowmen hold this parcel of land in Llantrisant. 

Here’s another personal link that goes all the way back to the Battle of Crécy. During the battle, the Black Prince and his army defeated the King of Bohemia and the prince claimed the Bohemian King’s emblem of three ostrich feathers for his own.  This emblem has been adopted by every Prince of Wales since. I was given a ‘Royal’ ring bearing the crest with the three ostrich feathers when I was a little girl when our current Prince Charles was invested as Prince of Wales.  My father was involved in the Investiture and gave me the ring to mark the occasion.  I still wear it now!  I have never taken it off.

The other connection and inspiration for Longbow Girl was the black Welsh Mountain Section B pony, Jacintha, my parents gave me when I was nine.  She came from the renowned Ceulan Stud near Miskyn, owned by the wonderful Dr Wynne Davies.  I would roam the nearby hills for hours on end riding Jacintha and daydreaming. I relished that freedom. I think it's what helped turned me into a writer.  I could explore both geographically and in my head during those long hours alone.

It has been quite emotional as well as intensely satisfying writing a story that is set so close to home.

Longbow Girl is set in the Brecon Beacons and in the Black Mountains.  We would regularly go on forced family marches up Pen Y Fan in all weathers.  I used to grit my teeth until we got to the top, and then ran all the way down to the Storey Arms with my brothers. I never thought that I would write about it, but I love that journey back in my head to the mountains of my youth. It’s my very own form of time travel!

Longbow Girl was published in September by the wonderful Chicken House, set up by Barry Cunningham (it was he who discovered Harry Potter whilst at Bloomsbury).  It will be published next February in the United States, and is already published in Australia and New Zealand and will be translated into German.

I'm also thrilled that it is the first book I have ever written that has been translated into Welsh!  It will shortly be published by Atebol Press. I just wish my father could have seen it.

Linda Davies
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About the Author

Linda Davies is an Oxford University economist by training but a novelist by nature.  She spent seven years working as an investment banker in London, New York and Eastern Europe, being exposed to more potential plots than was decent.  She escaped and wrote the international bestseller, Nest of Vipers.  She has written multiple books since, Financial Thrillers and Young Adult thrillers.   She spent three years living in Peru and more recently eight years living in the Middle East. In 2005 she and her husband were kidnapped at sea by Iranian government forces and held hostage in Iran for two weeks before being released after high-level intervention by the British government. She has written about her experiences in her first non-fiction book, Hostage.  Her latest thriller for Young Adults, Longbow Girl, has just been published by Chicken House.  The Daily Telegraph picked it as one of their best children’s books of 2015.  Brought up in South Wales, Linda now lives with her husband and their three children near the sea in England, where she swims all year round, but chooses not to sail.  Read more about Linda on www.lindadavies.com and www.longbowgirl.com.  To her surprise she enjoys Twitter and would love to be found @LindaDaviesAuth.
Linda will be speaking about Longbow Girl, the connection with Wales (specifically Welsh archers at Crécy and Agincourt), and the sense of history and place in writing at the Hay Winter Festival on Saturday 28th November? Here’s the link: https://www.hayfestival.com/p-10330-linda-davies.aspx

11 November 2015

The King is Dead, by Suzannah Lipscomb @sixteenthCgirl


New on Amazon UK and Amazon US

On 28 January 1547, the sickly and obese King Henry VIII died at Whitehall. Just hours before his passing, his last will and testament had been read, stamped and sealed. The will confirmed the line of succession as Edward, Mary and Elizabeth; and, following them, the Grey and Suffolk families. It also listed bequests to the king's most trusted councillors and servants.
Henry's will is one of the most intriguing and contested documents in British history. Historians have disagreed over its intended meaning, its authenticity and validity, and the circumstances of its creation. As well as examining the background to the drafting of the will and describing Henry's last days, Suzannah Lipscomb offers her own, illuminating interpretation of one of the most significant constitutional documents of the Tudor period.
Illustrated with portraits of key figures at Henry's court, including the executors named by Henry in his will, THE KING IS DEAD is a Tudor gift book to cherish, as authoritative as it is beautiful.

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About the Author

Dr Suzannah Lipscomb MA, M.St., D.Phil. (Oxon), FRHistS is an historian, author, broadcaster and award-winning academic. Suzannah was educated at Epsom College (where she is now a Governor) and Lincoln College, Oxford. After taking a double first in Modern History and a distinction in her Masters in Historical Research, she won the Jowett Senior Scholarship at Balliol College, Oxford, to read her D.Phil. in history, which she was awarded in 2009. Suzannah’s most recent TV work was Witch Hunt: A Century of Murder, a two-part series that she wrote and presented, which aired on Channel Five on 13 and 20 October 2015. Find our more at her website suzannahlipscomb.com and find her on Twitter @sixteenthCgirl.

10 November 2015

Capering on Glass Bridges, by Jessica Hernandez


Available on Amazon UK and  Amazon US

The Utdrendans have spoken. Sixteen-year-old Kaia Stone is amongst the two whom they have named. If she accepts the task presented to her and succeeds, it will be made possible for the accursed Kingdom of Mar to be freed.

Although the assignment itself is simple, the path to success is sure to be anything but; not all is as it seems, and forces determined to work against Kaia are gathering—for many will stop at nothing to ensure that Mar remains forever cursed.

Will Kaia choose to abandon the only life she’s ever known—perhaps indefinitely—in pursuit of the greater good…in pursuit of her purpose?



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About the Author

Jessica Hernandez was born and raised in the beautifully sunny state of Florida. She attended the University of Miami, where she spent more time than she cares to admit daydreaming of a faraway land called Acu. Upon graduating with a degree in English and Political Science in 2014, Jessica put pen to paper and brought Acu to life—so was born “Capering on Glass Bridges.” Currently, Jessica is working on a second novel and welcomes new followers on Twitter @jessy_marie77.



9 November 2015

Pardon Me: A Victorian Farce, by James Roberts


Available on Amazon UK and Amazon US

The year is 1896 and following a brief, if lively, spell in the diplomatic corps, Madagan Rùn is being executed for Treason. The prima facie case against him is compelling. Madagan coerced the normally temperate Dr Jameson into raiding the Boer Republic, then tipped off the Boers and pocketed a cheque for 30,000 Krugerand. 

Now here's the pity of it. All his unfathomable schemes have been driven by a selfless devotion to Queen, Country and Empire. Trouble is, to save himself he must perforce lay bare the grievously stained undercarriage of Victorian high-society: starting with fantastical revelations vis-à-vis the making, lending and subsequent mislaying of the world's first ever celebrity sex celluloid. 

No less an august triumvirate than Cecil Rhodes, Joseph Chamberlain and Prince Victor Albert have reason aplenty to pray Madagan takes his secrets with him to the gallows. Sadly for them the florid and faintly familiar Mr Melmoth has just posted a typewriter to the Tower and instructed his chum Maddy to tell the old Queen everything. Pardon Me. 

Pardon Me will appeal to lovers of comic farce and anyone who likes their bedtime reading to transport them to a world where gravity is not so damnably unforgiving and a gentleman can get his glans penis scarified and still go on to enjoy a (brief) career in the Diplomatic Corp. 

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About the Author

James Roberts is a forty-something indie author and misanthrope who currently resides in the remoter outreaches of the Highlands of Scotland. He states his profession as 'freelance copywriter', being far too vain and supercilious to admit to being 'mostly out of work'. He has previously found gainful employment as a cocktail waiter, a vendor of cleaning cloths, a lecturer in modern history, a car salesman, a private tutor working with the financially advantaged, a care assistant working with the mentally disadvantaged and a fruiterer’s assistant. Some of these jobs he was properly qualified for. The epitome of the hermetic scribbler, James describes the content of Facebook, Twitter and Instagram as "nauseatingly narcissistical dribble" and litters his correspondence with pidgin Latin aphorisms ad adsurdam omne ignotum pro terribili (as he would say), solely to annoy the younger generation. His website, www.jamesroberts.scot, where he can be found hiding behind the absurd nom de plume 'The Proprietor', is a study in self-marketing suicide; eschewing the potted author biog, giveaways and blog tours expected of the serious indie author, and instead treating his unfortunate browsers to an outré discussion on the merits of the French post-structuralists and offering some surprising advice on how to sex the Oryctolagus cuniculus (or rabbit to you and me). Even more disturbing, extensive research into the author's background turns up the following entry on Google: James Roberts was the best-selling author of over a hundred books on topics as diverse as railway signalling and marital sex and his work had been translated into seventy three different languages including Welsh. In 2007 James was jailed for copyright infringement and serial plagiarism and having sex with a miner {a Welsh one}. Recent telegraphic communiqués with the author have, however, elicited the assurance that James is now fully rehabilitated and divides his time between performing highly situational street theatre with live rabbits and lying to the nice people at Job Centre Plus. Pardon Me: A Victorian Farce is his first novel. Or so he says....

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