Book and a Brew with Ritu – The Gingerbread Christmas Village by @KileyDunbar @HeraBooks #NewRelease #BookReview

Aren’t you loving these posts? I am!

Oh, how exciting to have another of my wonderful guests come back for a repeat visit! Today the wonderful Kiley Dunbar is here with me to chat about her latest release, The Gingerbread Christmas Village!

Welcome back to But I Smile Anyway, Kiley! How lovely to have you back here with me! We’d better get a drink sorted first, so let me know what you are craving, be it a hot drink or cold… or since we will be chatting Christmas, maybe mulled wine might be more appropriate.

And, I have even baked some gingerbread men as a nod to a certain book. 😊

It’s so nice to be back. Thanks for inviting me. I’m happy with a brew to dunk my gingerbread man in, thanks lovely. Cheers!

Since I saw you last you’ve released the gorgeous Straight As A Jalebi. Congratulations!

Thank you so much, Kiley! I have been so nervous about it, but the release went extremely well.

I think we need an update on all things Kiley, before we start! What have you been up to, since your visit last year?

I’ve been writing non-stop and lecturing at the Manchester Writing School, as well as running my ‘Write Your Romance Novel in 2023 with Kiley Dunbar’ online webinars. It’s been a LOT! Phew! But you know all about it, teaching, writing, blogging and somehow still finding time to read and review!

You need to tell me all about your new garden and writing space! It looks amazing!

Thanks, Ritu! Since we’re not off on holidays this year, I decided to make my garden a relaxing spot where I can take a break. We knocked down two little sheds and revealed a lovely big border where I dug a pond, and we planted trees and shrubs and even some veggies. It’s so nice to sit there on my ridiculously big lounger and watch the fish swimming. There’s a little arbour seating area with a table where I can write on warm days too. It’s added so much to our quality of life. I’m very lucky!

Your writing room always looks so calming! How do you keep your workspace so tidy? Mine ends up cluttered with mugs and paperwork! Haha!

I think it is because I don’t get to use it as much during term time, because of work stress and exhaustion! However, I am a typical Virgo, and I need organisation and calm around me to work well!

Totally not book related, but I love all the pics of your vintage finds that you post. What inspired your love of vintage pieces, be it clothing or accessories?

Oh, I LOVE a rummage in a charity shop or on eBay or Etsy looking for vintage clothes and houseware. I especially love 1980s clothes and accessories, and I share pics of how I style them on my Instagram account @kileydunbarauthor

Are you a magpie for vintage stuff?

I don’t tend to go out looking, however I do like to recycle wonderful things that my mum has squirrelled away! She has some gorgeous Indian outfits that were barely worn, and I used to wear them loads, when I was slightly smaller. (They came from an era when she was slightly smaller too! Probably would fit my daughter, now!)

Now, back to the writing side… You’ve written a few books with Christmas at the core of them. Is Christmas a favourite time of year for you? Can you share a special memory from a Christmas past?

I was brought up in Scotland and my favourite memories of Christmases past are of the heavy snows in the 80s and of spending Christmas day at Gran and Grandads with their Scottish country music records playing and me twirling in my Christmas dresses! And then there was New Year’s Day at my great aunt’s (she was a wonderful home cook), I loved going there. And my birthday is on the 29th, and wedding anniversary on the 16th of December, so all our celebrations are at Christmas. It’s a big deal for me. Plus, I just love the darkness! I think it’s my Scandinavian roots! Hehe!

I was lucky enough to read an early copy of The Gingerbread Christmas Village, and I absolutely loved it! But books with food at the heart don’t half make me hungry! Are you a good Gingerbread baker?

I’m not bad but not a gifted baker. I’m better at cakes than biscuits. Luckily there’s a very famous bakery where I live (Chatwins) who make the best gingerbread men! My kids were raised on them!

Mind you, your gingerbread men are giving them a serious run for their money, Ritu. These are delicious! Thank you!

Something I loved about The Gingerbread Christmas Village was that your main character, Margi, was an older woman. The majority of romance novels tend to have younger heroines, and even when there is a second chance romance, they might be in their 30s or 40s, but you chose a woman in her 60s, and portrayed her so well. Sixty is not old at all, and that really echoed positively in me. Why did you choose for her to be a much older woman?

I’m so glad you loved Margi! Yay! Lately, I’ve been thinking so much about ageing, since I stopped dying my hair, letting my greys shine, and since I started HRT. There’s so much we don’t talk about when it comes to ageing, and one of those things is how older people fare romantically. I don’t see why characters in their 20s and 30s should have the monopoly of happy ever afters.

I love this, being a full embracer of the greys, too, and on that HRT journey! yay for more relatable heroines, for us!

Your cast of side characters were, as ever, an entertaining bunch! Do you ever base your characters on people you know?

Never ever! Haha! That wouldn’t be very fair. But I do notice and remember traits, quirks and little habits of speech and behaviour and they all go into my brain’s big writing scrapbook to draw upon when I need them.

As I mentioned above, I have read and reviewed this fantastic book, already, and I will share my review, below, but as always, I must ask you, what can we expect next from Kiley Dunbar?

I was so touched by your review, thank you so much, Ritu!

What’s next? Well, I’m just finishing the fourth ‘Borrow a Bookshop’ novel. So far, it doesn’t even have a title or cover art, but I’ll be able to share that soon enough. Then, after that, there’s a fifth book in the series. I ADORE writing about my Devonshire bookshop Airbnb and could write these stories literally forever!

I am SOOOOO excited, and I cannot wait!

Shall we have another brew and gingerbread man and you can tell me your writing plans for the rest of the year, Ritu? I need a good catch-up on all the gossip!

I’ll never say no to another cuppa, Kiley!

So, my plans are that I need to get WORDS written over this summer break, for book three which is due out in June next year! It is going to be my tightest turnaround, so I have tried to factor in writing time over the Summer break, and I have signed up for Anita Faulkner’s Autumn Writer’s retreat, in September, which is a virtual weekend filled with encouragement! So, the hope is to get the manuscript finished before the end of year in order for the pre-reading and editing to get done!

Thank you so much for coming over again, Kiley. It has been a pleasure! 🥰

Thank you Ritu. 😊

Now, as I mentioned before, I was lucky enough to read an ARC of The Gingerbread Christmas Village, so let me share the blurb and my review.

The Blurb

Everyone deserves a Christmas treat…

The annual Wheaton gingerbread exhibit (a model village made of gingerbread) and grotto has been an important part of the sleepy Cotswold hamlet’s Christmas celebrations for decades. For years the gingerbread exhibition drew visitors from across the region and each year the model town grew more elaborate and ambitious but recently, interest has been dwindling.

The gingerbread grotto needs to be rehomed or close forever.

Sixty-four-year-old Margi, the event’s founder, has had enough of village life (and its total lack of eligible men) and is planning to sell up and head to Birmingham to live closer to her niece. She has lost her spark and her Christmas spirit and decides this will be her last gingerbread village, but despairs when she finds her only support is her old friend, Izzy, her niece Lucy from Birmingham, and Fern, the shy young farmer’s daughter.

Oh, and Patrick, the gorgeous, reliable school caretaker.

As if this wasn’t enough, Lucy is determined to get her out dating again and persuades her to try some online dating apps but Margi’s had her heart broken too many times and wonders if she has just missed her chance.

Can they save the Gingerbread Grotto and can Margi get her old spark and her Christmas spirit back?

A cosy, totally feelgood seasonal read that will have you smiling. The perfect read to snuggle up and have you feeling festive! Fans of Jenny Colgan and Trisha Ashley will love this book. 

Buy it here! https://geni.us/3APDxAR

My Review

The Gingerbread Christmas Village: A totally uplifting and romantic seasonal read by Kiley Dunbar
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I love diving into Kiley Dunbar’s books, and I was looking forward to this latest one, and it didn’t disappoint.
Margi, our main character, is a 64-year-old woman who is in a bit of a dilemma in life. She feels like the laughingstock of Wheaton Village after a messed up shortest-ever marriage the previous year and wants to start afresh. Only she has a huge responsibility on her shoulders, in the form of a gingerbread village that she creates annually with the help of some friends. It is a tradition started by her mother and one she can’t bear to stop. However, circumstances seem to be pushing her in the direction of ending it.
I am not going to regurgitate the story as my review, as that won’t be fair on any prospective readers.
What I will say is that if you want a feel-good romance with heart, and a HEA, then Kiley Dunbar is definitely the author to turn to.
Kiley has also written a slightly different character as her main one, this time, in the form of an older woman, not quite in her twilight years but feeling past it.
Women in their 60s are not perceived as how they were a couple of decades ago. They aren’t all automatically a part of the blue rinse brigade and only fit for knitting, tea and low walks with zimmer frames. Margi, I feel, thinks she is not worthy of another shot at happiness, especially with someone younger than her, and I loved the morphing of her thinking towards the end of the book. (Even though doubt is never far away.)
And all the reading about gingerbread made me crave some, in the middle of the summer, too! I’d love to see a gingerbread village like the one Margi’s mum and then Margi created.
A wonderful festive read!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Hera Books for an ARC.

And here’s a little about Kiley and her other books.

Kiley Dunbar writes heart-warming, escapist, romantic fiction set in beautiful places.

One Winter’s Night is shortlisted for the RNA Romantic Comedy Novel Award 2021.

CHRISTMAS AT THE BORROW A BOOKSHOP COMING SOON

Take your pick from Kiley’s six novels (for author’s accompanying content/trigger warnings go to kileydunbar.co.uk):

Matchmaking at Port Willow (NEW FOR SEPT 2021) Beatrice is back in this sequel to Summer at the Highland Coral Beach, and she’s loved up and wanting other inn guests to experience the same magic she did last summer. Low-tech dating profiles, empty-nesters on a second honeymoon, and a lonely New Yorker in exile. With added puppies and Heiland Coos.

The Borrow a Bookshop Holiday (May 2021) Jude rents a tumbledown bookshop by the sea in Clove Lore, Devon, for a fortnight. When fellow bookseller-holidaymaker Elliot turns up unannounced, she discovers she’s not the only one running away from real life. Only one bed, bookselling and blossoming romance.

One Winter’s Night (September 2020) Return to Stratford-upon-Avon for a winter full of adventure, romance and family drama. Mystery, new neighbours, and a show-stopping theatrical procession. The sequel to One Summer’s Night.

Summer at the Highland Coral Beach (2020), the first in the Port Willow Bay Series, takes you on an impromptu crafting holiday in the Scottish Highlands and reminds us that after the storm comes the rainbow. Crafts, ceilidhs, coral bays and gentle recovery.

Christmas at Frozen Falls (2019) will fly you to snowy, remote Finnish Lapland over Christmas where Sylvie Magnussen is getting a second chance at love with an old flame – sexy Stellan Virtanen – the one who got away – well, he ran away actually, and Sylvie never understood why. Hot kisses in a cold climate, Northern lights and a stunning resort setting.

One Summer’s Night (2019) whisks you away on a working staycation in beautiful Stratford-upon-Avon during a sultry heatwave summer. A starting-over story, handsome actors, backstage passes, and a whole lot of drama in the Heart of England.

Twitter: @KileyDunbar

‘Kiley Dunbar Author Book Page’ on Facebook

Website and newsletter: www.kileydunbar.co.uk

Instagram: @kileydunbarauthor

Book and a Brew with Ritu – All Good Things by @MrsAmandaProwse #NewRelease #BookReview @AmazonPub

Loving this series!

Today, I can barely contain myself as I have got my dear, dear friend and hugely prolific author, Amanda Prowse visiting for a cuppa!

Hello, and welcome to But I Smile Anyway, Mandy! I am so happy you have popped over for a chat! Before we start, tell me what you’d like to drink. Tea? Coffee? Herbal? Whatever you fancy, I am sure I can magic it up!

Lil Princess made a gorgeous Victoria sponge if you fancy a slice, too.

I’ll take a coffee – black no sugar and of course a slice of cake – have you met me? Do you even have to ask?

Thank you so much for coming to visit the blog, today, Mandy. Actually, this blog is what brought us together, isn’t it? I remember, all those years ago, receiving an email from you asking if I would be interested in reading a pair of books with intertwined stories to feature here. That was in 2018, I think. And five years later, here we are, good friends and virtual sisters! Can you remember how we met?

It feels like longer than five years ago! Yes, I stumbled across your blog and loved it and thought you’d be a perfect place for the love story of Anna and Theo to be reviewed. I don’t remember us not being friends, you are one of those people who connected with my soul and that was that really – you can’t shake me off!

And I wouldn’t want to!

I know about your story from writing and publication. Care to share it with the readers here?

Always an avid reader, I didn’t dare try to write myself until I hit my 40s. My first novel Poppy Day was self-published, after which I got picked up by an agent and it was traditionally published – in the last ten years, I’ve published over 34 books and sold millions of copies all over the world in about 22 countries – and I’m still learning my craft and feel as if I’m just getting started.

I am in awe of you! You have written soooo many books. In excess of 25, now, and each one has been progressively better than the next. (If that is possible since even your first ones were brilliant!) Is there a favourite of your stories?

I always love the book I’m about to write! I have the attention span of a gnat once a book is finished – I never look at charts or sales etc. I just want to beaver away on the next. I literally send off a final edited version to my editors (one in the UK and one in the US) and after a quick loo break and a cuppa, I start the next. Which is precisely what I am doing today!

I don’t know how you do it, Sis!

And over the last 11 years of your writing, has there ever been a time you felt writer’s block?

Nope. Never. I always know the next two or three books I’m going to write.

You are so lucky! I have ideas floating around in my head, but I focus so dee[ly on what I am writing at the time, I can’t think too much about others!

You have written two books that are biographical in nature, one, The Boy Between, with your son Josh, and Women Like Us, which is your memoir. Were they therapeutic to write or painful? I can only imagine what it felt like to relive some of the journey you and Josh went through.

Both of these were painful and cathartic. I find writing helps me make sense of otherwise complex situations, particularly when it came to my son’s mental health – Josh kind of unravelled in his late teens and as a family, we went through some pretty dark times. My memoir, I hope, serves as a reminder that no matter where you come from or your background, you can achieve your dreams. I never thought a woman like me would get a book published, let alone find the success I have. But if I can do it, you can do it!

I understand what you mean about being cathartic. Though I would never publish them, I find writing thoughts and events out helps me to process the feelings and emotions they evoke.

You’ve co-written a series of books where different authors contribute stories about a fictional small town in the USA called The Wishing Tree. I imagine writing something like that is quite complex as you each have your own styles, but you need your stories to link with each other, too. Do you think you could ever co-write a fiction book with someone? (If so, maybe one day we can try!)

I loved the collaboration as it was different authors with very different styles that created this whole world, and of course, the different styles and unique author voices make the characters entirely believable – it was a great experience and I love how the stories all knit together with lovely cross over, to create the place that feels real. I write in a unique way and so I don’t know how I’d collab with one person. I can’t imagine any other author wanting to put up with my speedy, three-in-the-morning idea sessions!

Ha ha, I see what you mean!

Switching the tone a bit now, can you share a little about where you like to write? I know you have quite a unique way of formulating your stories. I remember you said that they run like a movie in your mind, and you just write them! Does that mean you can write pretty much anywhere? And do your pups, Beau and Dotty, help or hinder the process?

I do indeed write anywhere – waiting rooms, buses, planes, on a beach but my favourite place to write is on a sofa curled up with the pups, who definitely help the process as they keep me calm and insist on regular breaks for snacks and wee’s in the garden – I do of course mean them, not me! My stories come into my head fully formed in about twenty seconds, as if they’re downloaded into my head like a film, and then all I have to do is write what I see – and all the detail is there, beginning, middle, end, twists, turns, characters – hence how I can write so quickly!

It’s the ability to fully form your story that is a gift, Sis!

Talking of writing, let’s get back to your new release! All Good Things is a bit of a departure from your usual stories, isn’t it, with the different points of view? How did it feel writing something so different to usual?

 I love this book! It takes place in twenty-four hours which is very different for me and the pace was thrilling to write! I also like the idea that each character reveals a little bit more of the story – until we have a full picture of how two families live, and I think it’s fair to say that the end picture is very different to what we first thought… as it often is when you get to know someone.

Daisy and her situation is exactly that of people thinking the grass must be greener on the other side, but pretty often, that isn’t the case, as you demonstrate in All Good Things. What inspired this story?

My husband and I went out to dinner a couple of years ago and I was, as ever, watching the families all around us (I am the nosiest person on the planet).

I think that goes for all writers!

There was a large family who were loud and treating the restaurant as their own personal performance space. I was fascinated and concentrated on the people who weren’t shouting, taking in their facial expressions, their micro gestures of discomfort etc and POW! All Good Things came into my head on the drive home.

What with there being so many characters we get to know through the book, which one was your favourite?

My favourite was probably Julie, who is married to Lawrence, daughter-in-law of Bernie and Winnie. I loved her as I related to her background and the way she describes trying desperately to fit in and not sure if she is accepted or not – it’s hard to talk about without giving away any spoilers, but let’s just say I really admire her courage and her personal growth. I LOVE this story and hope readers will too.

Oh, I know they will! I certainly did!

And think of it as a sneak preview, but what is in store for us readers after All Good Things? What has been playing in Amanda Prowse’s movie mind, ready to pour out on a page?

The next book is “Very Very Lucky”, which is out in January 2024 – a fabulous tale of human connection in the face of loss. Then comes “Swimming to Lundy”, which is out in summer 2024 – a story of love at first sight and reconciling how life doesn’t always turn out how we think it might. Then “A Pocket Full of Sunshine”, out in Jan 2025 – a story of a woman overcoming adversity to reach the highest heights, but not without paying a heavy emotional price. All very different but all fab!

Wow! I am so excited to know there are at least three coming out soon after!!!! (Hence the multiple exclamation marks!)

Thank you so much for popping over, Mandy, it has been a pleasure to have you here on But I Smile Anyway. 😊

Thanks for having me, Ritu!

The Blurb

“Gripping…I couldn’t put it down!” -bestselling author Katie Fforde

In this captivating story from the bestselling author of Picking up the Pieces , Daisy has always envied the perfect family next door. But will a weekend of unexpected drama prove that the grass isn’t always greener? Daisy Harrop has always felt like she exists in the background, and since her mother stopped getting out of bed, her life has come to a complete standstill. Daisy would give anything to leave the shabbiest house on the street and be more like the golden Kelleways next door, with their perfectly raked driveway and flourishing rose garden… Winnie Kelleway is proud of the beautiful family she’s built. They’ve had their ups and downs―hasn’t everyone? But this weekend, celebrating her golden wedding anniversary is truly proof of their happiness, a joyful gathering for all the neighbours to see. But as the festivities get underway, are the cracks in the ‘perfect’ Kelleway life beginning to show? As one bombshell revelation leads to another and events start to spiral out of control, Daisy and Winnie are about to discover that things aren’t always what they seem.

My Review

All Good Things by Amanda Prowse
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I am a firm Amanda Prowse fan and have read all her books.
All Good Things was every bit as good as all her other ones, with a difference.
I feel it was a different way of storytelling from her usual.
This time, the whole story revolves around the happenings of one evening and the fallout the morning after.
Daisy lives in a neglected house with her depressed mother, hermit brother and a father she doesn’t see much as he is out working when she is home.
She’s embarrassed about how they live, considering the area. And she craves the life of the Kellaways: The neighbours who seem to have everything she craves.
They are a tight-knit family with a successful business funding a glittering lifestyle. Winnie and Bernie, the couple living there, are glossy and filled with the joys of having everything they want. Their children are settled happily, and the grandchildren are the perfect addition to a picture-perfect family. Especially Cassius, the grandson, who has a special place in Daisy’s mind and heart. However, he doesn’t know it.
A chance evening spent with them all, celebrating a key moment in their lives, makes her wish to be a part of their lives even more.
The thing is, there is nothing truer than this adage: The grass isn’t always greener on the other side.
All Good Things demonstrates this perfectly.
We, as readers, get to experience the same situation from the eyes of all the characters. I won’t say one is the main, as they are all important in their way.
I loved peering into the minds of everyone, and I felt a mixture of sadness and relief for Daisy as she comes to terms with the fact that life really isn’t perfect for anyone.\
There are characters who I rooted for, applauding the backbones they displayed as the story unfolded and frustrated at the ones who were unable to change, despite everything that was happening.
It was a fantastic book, and I highly recommend it!

Buy links
https://bit.ly/_AllGoodThings

Author Bio

Amanda Prowse is an International Bestselling author whose twenty-eight novels, non-fiction title and seven novellas have been published in dozens of languages around the world. Published by Lake Union, Amanda is the most prolific writer of bestselling contemporary fiction in the UK today; her titles also consistently score the highest online review approval ratings across several genres. Her books, including the chart topping No.1 titles ‘What Have I Done?’, ‘Perfect Daughter’, ‘My Husband’s Wife’, ‘The Girl in the Corner’ and ‘The Things I Know’ have sold millions of copies across the globe.

A popular TV and radio personality, Amanda has appeared on numerous shows where her views on family and social issues strike a chord with viewers. She also makes countless guest appearances on BBC national and independent Radio stations including LBC, Times Radio and Talk FM, where she is well known for her insightful observations and her infectious humour. Described by the Daily Mail as ‘The queen of family drama’ Amanda’s novel, ‘A Mother’s Story’ won the coveted Sainsbury’s eBook of the year Award and she has had two books selected as World Book Night titles, ‘Perfect Daughter’ in 2016 and ‘The Boy Between’ in 2022.

Amanda is a huge supporter of libraries and having become a proud ambassador for The Reading Agency, works tirelessly to promote reading, especially in disadvantaged areas. Amanda’s ambition is to create stories that keep people from turning the bedside lamp off at night, great characters that ensure you take every step with them and tales that fill your head so you can’t possibly read another book until the memory fades…

Social Media Links

https://www.facebook.com/AmandaProwseAuthor

https://www.youtube.com/user/AmandaProwseAuthor

https://www.instagram.com/mrsamandaprowse/

Book and a Brew (Bubbles!) with Ritu – The Prosecco Pact by @KiltieJackson #NewRelease #BookReview

Loving this series!

Today, Kiltie Jackson has returned to my blog to talk all about her latest release, The Prosecco Pact.

Hello, and welcome back to But I Smile Anyway, Kiltie! I’m sure you know the drill, but we need to get some drinks first!

Good day, thank you for having me back a second time to visit – you are very kind.

Now, we could start with the usual brews, but if you prefer, in honour of the book we could always pop open a bottle of Prosecco!

I think a couple of glasses of bubbles would go down very well.

A few weeks ago, I had prosecco catch up with another author, and was reliably informed that savoury goes well, so would you like pakoras, or samosas? If not, I can always heat up a pie, like the ladies in The Prosecco Pact!

While I love both pakora and samosas, they’re less fond of me and can make me feel a bit ick afterwards so, if it’s not too much trouble, a wee steak pie would be perfect.

I am sure I can rustle something up!

Since this is your second visit, I don’t want to be sending you the same old questions, so can you give us a glimpse of your life since we last met. How did the release for The Bay of Lost Souls fare?

Life has been busy with editing for the last few months and the release for The Bay of Lost Souls went very well, thank you. People have been enjoying their visits to the seaside without leaving the comfort of their armchairs.

Did you do any special events for the release?

Unfortunately, Bay of Lost Souls was released on a Thursday when I am busy with my day job so it was a bit low-key. It did enjoy a great blog tour the following week, however, which made up for that.

I also know you have had a new addition to the family, too. (Kiltie does love her cats. That’s why Sonu Singh is more than happy for her to be here. Kiltie, he’s not always this welcoming!) How is Rocky settling in with the rest of the Moggy Crew? And how did you come to have him join your family?

Hang on a minute… (Kiltie moves Sonu Singh into a more comfortable position on her lap) Claws! Right, that’s better. Rocky is settling in very well with most of the Moggy Posse. Unfortunately, Charlie, the Ginger Whinger, is still being a grump but as he’s like this with Henry after two years, we all just ignore him. Including Rocky! How he came to join our household is a mystery, even to us. One day, he appeared outside our kitchen door and more or less refused to leave. We’d never seen him before, we don’t know where he came from, if he had been abandoned or was lost. I put him on a website for lost pets in our area but no one claimed him. Finally, after a few months of mind games, he won, we took him to the vet and began the process of bringing him into the fold. He now has his paws firmly in the door and has taken ownership of my favourite footstool. He kindly allows me a small corner for my toes to rest upon. You are a true Kitty Lover, Kiltie!

Now, The Prosecco Pact is a bit different to The Bay of Lost Souls. Where did the inspiration for that come?

I genuinely do not know! I was lying awake in bed at silly o’clock in the morning, weird stuff going around my head as it’s inclined to do in the wee small hours and somehow the title ‘The Prosecco Pact’ popped up. I thought it sounded like a great title and proceeded to try and come up with a story line worthy of it.

Having been a member of your Facebook group, Kiltie Jackson – Books, Bits & Bobs, I know you lovingly referred to this one as The Screaming Banshee for a while! Care to elaborate??

Happy to! (lol) When I had the initial idea, it was November and I’d already written two books that year so the plan was to make notes and go back to write the book at a later date. Unfortunately, my brain / the story had other ideas and kept going around and around my head, coming up with more and more things to add. Now, normally, this kind of thing happens until I make my initial notes, consign them into the notebook and my brain will then rest until I return to it. In this case, however, it was having none of that and would not be quiet until eventually, I caved and began writing the story. It took four weeks to write, from beginning to end, and I have never written a book so quickly either before or since! This was a story screaming to come out hence it became fondly known as ‘The Screaming Banshee’!

Have you ever made a pact, like the ladies do in The Prosecco Pact?

Not that I can recall.

You tackle quite a few issues within this book, from domestic abuse and misogyny in relationships, to work-life balance, and even look at sizeism. That is a lot to cover, but it was done so well. Each of the characters has something they need to overcome. Do you identify with any of these women?

At different times in my life, I have but I think that can be said for most women. These are not unique situations and we’re all having to cope with at least one of them on a daily basis.

That is so true, Kiltie…

I’ve noticed that London appears in most of your books, in some way or another, are you fond of this city?

I’ll be honest, I LOVE London! I had my first proper visit there in 1984 and when I stepped off the coach, the vibe hit me immediately and I fell in love. I adore the long history of the city and it does appear in most of my books. I did have the pleasure of living there for thirteen years and only moved because I was growing out of my one-bed flat and couldn’t afford to move up the property ladder due to the expense. This is something I refer to in ‘The Prosecco Pact.’

This time you had a canine in the mix, Perfectly Frank. (Love the name!) Were the cats jealous at all, that they weren’t centre stage?

Not in the slightest. They’re happy with the ratio of more cats in my books than dogs so were happy to take a back seat on this occasion. 🙂

That is two releases in one year so far! Any more you are planning on popping out before year’s end? If not, what is there in store for Kiltie Jackson in the near future?

I am planning on re-releasing my novel from last year – Radio Ha Ha. It’s had a bit of a tidy-up, errors rectified and will hit the cyber bookshelves around October with a new title and cover. My next new release after that will be in January 2024 and is the second book in my ‘Since Forever…’ series.

I read Radio Ha Ha before and it was a great read, so excited for your re-release, too, and you still have so much more to come!

Thank you so much for popping over to chat books again, Kiltie! It was a pleasure to pop a cork with you to celebrate your newest release!

Thank you for having me, Ritu! 🙂

The Blurb

Three Women, Three Promises, One Pact!

Lydia Beaumont married the boy of her dreams but he has since become the man of her nightmares.
She needs to find a new life.

Grace Mitchell has dedicated her life to her career, losing friends along the way to her ambition.
She needs to get a life.

Debbie Stanford has been engaged for a year but is no closer to setting her wedding date.
She just wants to start married life.

On a cold, blustery January night, they each promise to change their lives and seal the deal over their glasses of Prosecco.

However, the best made pacts of mice and women have been known to go awry…

Buy Here!

My Review

The Prosecco Pact: The Must-Read Book of the Summer. by Kiltie Jackson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Just finished this, and I LOVED it!
I have to say that I love Kiltie Jackson’s versatility as an author, and having read three pretty different books, now, from her, I can say with conviction, that she is a fantastic storyteller, no matter what the story!
So, The Prosecco Pact.
Loved the title from the off.
Who doesn’t love those bubbles?
Now, this story revolves around three women who met at a course and kept in touch, meeting for Prosecco and Pie nights weekly, or as close to weekly as possible.
Each woman is fighting her own battles.
Lydia is a respected hairdresser with her own business, carrying on her grandmother’s salon as her own. But her home life leaves much to be desired, with a husband and adult son with views stuck in the past, filled with misogyny.
Debbie is a curvaceous woman, running a relatively successful vintage clothing business and eagerly waiting for her fiance to set a date for their wedding.
And Grace, the final of the three, a solicitor, is working hard to make a partner at her firm, often forfeiting her life to edge closer to a promotion.
All three are at a crossroads in their lives, and after a pretty disappointing Christmas, they make a vow, a Prosecco Pact, at their next gathering to make some serious changes in their lives.
Though they aren’t necessarily conventional, each woman alters their life paths in different ways, and their friendships flourish.
I loved the way these three women stuck up for one another in ways that meant something. They may have been friends at the beginning, but they became life-long soul sisters after the goings on in this book.
And what of romance? Oh, it is there, but slow-burning, and the build-up is worth it!
There are layers to this story, three stories tied together, that you keep on peeling to find more and more depth to the characters and their lives.
I read this in an afternoon, so engrossed was I in the story!

Author Bio

Kiltie Jackson spent her childhood years growing up in Scotland. Most of these early years were spent
in and around Glasgow although for a short period of time, she wreaked havoc at a boarding school in
the Highlands.
By the age of seventeen, she had her own flat which she shared with a couple of cats for a few years
while working as a waitress in a cocktail bar (she’s sure there’s a song in there somewhere!) and
serving customers in a fashionable clothing outlet before moving down to London to chalk up a
plethora of experience which is now finding its way into her writing.
Once she’d wrung the last bit of fun out of the smoky capital, she moved up to the Midlands and now
lives in Staffordshire with one grumpy husband and another six feisty felines.
Her little home is known as Moggy Towers even though, despite having plenty of moggies, there are
no towers! The cats kindly allow her and Mr Mogs to share their home as long as the mortgage
continues to be paid.
Since the age of three, Kiltie has been an avid reader although it was many years later before she
decided to put pen to paper – or fingers to keyboard – to begin giving life to the stories in her head.
Her debut novel was released in September 2017 and her fourth book was a US Amazon bestseller in
Time Travel Romance.
Kiltie loves to write fiery and feisty female characters and puts the blame for this firmly on the
doorsteps of Anne Shirley from Anne of Green Gables and George Kirrin from The Famous Five.
When asked what her best memories are, Kiltie will tell you:

  1. Queuing up overnight outside the Glasgow Apollo to buy her Live-Aid ticket.
  2. Being at Live-Aid.
  3. Winning an MTV competition to meet Bon Jovi in Sweden.
    (Although, if Mr Mogs is in earshot, the latter is changed to her wedding day.)
    Her main motto in life used to be “Old enough to know better, young enough not to care!” but that has
    since been replaced with “Too many stories, not a fast enough typist!”

And click below to find Kiltie on Social Media!

Social Media Links

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kiltiejackson/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/KiltieJackson
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kiltiejackson/
Website: https://www.kiltiejackson.com/

Book and a Brew with Ritu – A Month In Provence by @GillPlusFive #NewRelease #BookReview @BoldwoodBooks

Loving this series!

Peeps, I am extremely excited to have another fabulous author and interweb friend come to visit and have a chat! Gillian Harvey is here to chat about all things writing, and her newest release, A Month In Provence!

Hello, and welcome to But I Smile Anyway, Gillian! Let’s get you set with a drink, first.

I have tea, coffee, hot chocolate, or masala chai, here. I must admit I am not the best coffee maker, so my trusty Tassimo will have to do!

Coffee, please!

And what would you like to nibble? I have all the usual, biscuits, carrot cake, and even samosas, but I did pop over to the supermarket to grab a few pastries, in case you preferred them!

Ooh, a bit of everything, thank you!

Gillian, I have read a few of your books now, and they have all been based in France. Tell me, did your writing journey start before you moved out there? What or who inspired you to start writing?

I always loved reading as a child, and can remember having the ambition to be an author when I was around five years old! I loved writing short stories and poems as a child – and still remember the thrill when a poem of mine was read out in assembly when I was about seven.

The Arctic

It’s big and cold,
With snow and ice,
I wouldn’t think
It’s very nice
Not much sun
Too much snow
I’m glad I’m not
An Eskimo

Despite having this ambition, I never really ‘believed’ I’d become a published author. It seemed to be the sort of thing that happened to other people. I finished my first book aged 24, but it was when I moved to France aged 31 that things really started to take off.

I had PND after having twins in 2012 (I have five children now, so busy times) and wanted to do something to engage my brain. I took a freelance writing course, not really expecting to get anything published.

A couple of years on, I had established a career as a freelance writer – and now regularly write for national publications. The course also helped me to understand more about my potential readers and shape my work accordingly.

I finally landed an agent in 2016, only for my first book to be published slap bang in the middle of the pandemic in May 2020. I released my second a year later.

But it was when I started to write for Boldwood last year that things really took off. ‘A Year at the French Farmhouse’ released in September 2022 has – to date – sold over 100,000 copies, and I’m so excited for what the future holds.

This is all so exciting, and inspirational!

I can tell that living in France has inspired your last few books, heavily. Do you go visiting all these place for research before you write?

I’ve lived in Limousin, France for over a decade now, and my first ‘French set’ book ‘A Year at the French Farmhouse’ was set in my local area. ‘One French Summer’ – my second read, was set close to Bordeaux – an area I’ve been on holiday a few times. So those ‘research’ journeys took place long before the books took shape!

Now I’m starting to explore areas of France to set my new novels, and I try to visit in person or set novels in places I’m familiar with from holidays or trips to give that authentic feel. Google Earth is also very helpful to refresh my memory!

God bless Google Earth!

I always ask this one, but do you have a special place where you write? An office, a writing nook? Or are you one of those writers who can grab their notebook or laptop and write pretty much anywhere?

I just need a bit of peace and quiet. Sadly, this can be a rarity! At the moment I write in my office in the eaves of our house. I used to have a lovely room downstairs set up, but as the children grew, I got shunted upstairs (my choice, but it doesn’t mean I don’t regret it sometimes!). I can sympathise, especially in the lats house we lived in!

Still, my little nook has become a haven for me to sit and think and write when I get the chance.

Do you have a favourite out of all your books written, so far? Do you have any finished manuscripts that you think would never see the light of day?

I find that each book I write I love more than the last. I never know whether that’s because my writing is improving and evolving all the time, or just because the latest one always seems exciting, shiny and new!

I have several manuscripts that almost made it but didn’t quite. I used to think I’d try again with them one day, but now I enjoy writing so much and feel my writing is better with each novel – I see them as part of the learning process. Although at the time, rejection was TOUGH!

Let’s get back to the book of the moment, A Month in Provence. Your main character, Nicky, has been through a lot, and sacrificed so much for the decade leading up to when we as readers, join her. What was your inspiration for her story?

I’m fascinated by the idea of second chances. When I first started writing for women’s magazines back in 2012, I was in my early 30s. At the time, like many people, I had rather fixed ideas of what women at ‘midlife’ were like. But interviewing so many people for real lives, I discovered so many women that changed my perceptions! Women seem to get a rebirth at this age – perhaps because kids have flown the nest, or there’s been a change in their lives.

It made me realise I had fixed ideas about this life stage.

When I started writing, it was all about women in their 30s, and I was even encouraged by one editor at a former publisher not to stray into the 40s. But I believe that the world needs to wake up to how brilliant these years can be. I don’t think I fully ‘knew’ myself until I was 40. Maybe the old adage that ‘life begins’ at this age is true. Being a woman of that certain age, too, and an avid reader, it makes my heart happy to have main characters I can relate to, so thank you!

Nicky is someone who’s ‘frozen’ in time after a trauma a decade before. Her world shrank as she focused solely on her children and making sure they had a good childhood. Now they’re independent adults, she hasn’t realised she’s still ‘stuck.’ It takes a chance offer from a friend to shake up her world and make her realise it’s time for a brand new life.

I loved the idea of her becoming a reality TV star! (I do love a bit of reality TV to help forget life, sometimes…) Is this something you have ever envisaged yourself getting involved in?

Like many people I’m fascinated by reality TV. I used to love it when it first became a ‘thing’ (Big Brother 2). But over the years I think some of it just plays for the ratings. And we all know now how much ‘reality’ TV is shaped and staged. There’s a bit of that in ‘A Year in Provence.’ Oh, gosh, yes. Loved the early Big Brother shows, but now I am being forced to watch Love Island with my daughter, and it is quite painful!

But I also love the fact that certain shows (Britain’s Got Talent, etc) can take someone from zero to hero – give someone a chance that maybe they’ve missed out on in life. ‘The Great B&B Rescue’ in ‘A Month in Provence’ is that kind of show – it forces Nicky out of her comfort zone and gets her to tap into her talents in a way she may not have done without the pressure of the cameras.

Robert was one of those slow-burn heroes who you begin to love more and more as you read the book, and peel away layers. He also needed that make over, along with his business. Did you enjoy writing his transformation?

I loved writing Robert. It was a challenge to make him a likeable character without giving too much away at the start. I used his dog, Buster, to give hints that he must be quite a nice guy. He’s always affectionate to the dog, and the dog is fiercely loyal. It’s just humans he struggles with at times.

His transformation in the book was great fun to write – and the makeover chapter is one of my favourites!

Another one of my standard questions… what is next on the horizon? Any tidbits you can share with my readers, about what is coming next, from you?

I’m just working on edits for my next novel – also set in France – about Mark and Emma, a couple who buy a chateau but bite off more than they can chew. They are also struggling with infertility (something I’ve been through myself). When Mark falls down the stairs and ends up in hospital all seems lost. Can Emma find the strength to save the chateau alone?

Another one I can’t wait to read when it’s ready! And, since the topic of my next book is infertility, I am extra interested!

Thank you so much for popping over for a visit, Gillian!

Thanks for having me, Ritu!

The Blurb

Interior designer Nicky always used to know how to make the best of things. Ever since she lost her husband though, things haven’t been easy. She’s had to raise her two daughters alone and she’s so proud to see them all grown up, and she knows that’s down to her. But she can’t help but feel like she doesn’t know what to do with her life now… But then her best friend begs her to help out. Jenny is a TV exec and her new renovation show is in peril. Only Nicky can help. The catch – Nicky needs to fly to Provence… tomorrow. To renovate a tumbledown B&B. Jenny doesn’t mention the fact that the grumpy B&B owner Robert seems to need a makeover too. Or that the budget is next to nothing… Will Nicky be able to turn the B&B’s fortunes around, save her friend’s job, and maybe even find some happiness for herself, under the blazing hot French sun this summer…? Totally gorgeous, escapist, uplifting fiction that lets you escape to sun-soaked Provence. Perfect for fans of Sarah Morgan, Jennifer Bohnet and Debbie Macomber

My Review

A Month in Provence by Gillian Harvey
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Gillian Harvey is fast becoming one of my must-read authors, so I snapped up the chance to read her latest release, A Month In Provence.
I always love it when characters are of a certain age, where I feel I can relate to them all the more, and our MCs are exactly that in this book.
Nicky is a woman who has been grieving for ten years, always putting her daughters first and never allowing them to feel the gap created when they lost their father. Her best friend offers her the opportunity of a lifetime. A way to reclaim some of the dreams she dared to dream before her world was rocked to the core.
She finds herself in Provence for a month as a business advisor and interior designer and, most importantly, a TV presenter, as she heads a reality TV style project to do up a floundering B & B Business.
Robert is the owner of said business. In the beginning, he is a bit grumpy and stand-offish, but with layers to peel, giving us a glimpse of a much more sensitive soul with a story as tragic as Nicky’s.
I loved how they built a tentative friendship over the month that she resides in his ailing B & B, and all the misdemeanours as they attempt to get things ship shape for the TV crew that keeps surprising them,
The cast of side characters is also a joy to get to know, from the local business owners to Nicky’s two daughters, and not forgetting Buster the dog!
Honestly, I loved this story so much. It is filled with hope, and there are emotional moments as well as some giggles, too. I read this within a few hours and wished there was more to come!
Many thanks to NetGalley and Boldwood Books for an ARC.

Author Bio

Writer  Journalist  Author

Freelance writer and author Gillian Harvey lives in France with husband, Ray and their five children. She regularly pens articles and short stories for UK magazines including Woman’s Weekly and People’s Friend. She also writes opinion pieces and has been published in Independent, Guardian, Metro.

Gillian started her career in the teaching profession working at secondary school level. After moving to France in 2009, she started freelance writing for publications in the UK, France and the US.

Gillian has written a monthly column in Writing Magazine since 2020. She has previously been columnist for Prima Baby and Living France magazines.

Gillian’s first novel ‘Everything is Fine’ was published worldwide with Orion in May 2020. Her second, ‘Perfect on Paper’ was published in UK May 2021. She has since moved to Boldwood Books where she published the best-selling ‘A Year at the French Farmhouse’ and, most recently ‘One French Summer.’

And click below to find Gillian on Social Media!

Social Media Links

https://linktr.ee/gillianharveyauthor

Book and a Brew with Ritu – What Would Jane Austen Do by @lcorbettaauthor #NewRelease #BookReview @0neMoreChapter_

Loving this series!

Today, I am thrilled to welcome Linda Corbett, a fantastic author, and writer friend of mine, to chat about her latest release, What Would Jane Austen do?

Today, I am thrilled to welcome a dear friend and relatively new to publishing author, Linda Corbett on my blog for a cuppa and a bit of a chat about all things bookish, but especially her latest release, What Would Jane Austen Do?

Hello, and welcome to But I Smile Anyway, Linda!! Let’s get you set with a drink, first. Tea, coffee, hot chocolate, or maybe a masala chai. I know our hero loved a coffee. I do have a Tassimo if you prefer a fancy coffee?

Thank you, Ritu, for inviting me to your blog! I’m one of those odd people that don’t do hot drinks even though I invented a coffee-drinking hero, so if you’ve got anything in the cold drinks line, that would be fabulous. Or is it too early for a celebratory glass of Prosecco as we both have books coming out in the same month?

I think that Prosecco may be in order in that case!

We can do some lovely homemade biscuits, or my daughter, Lil Princess made fairy cakes! If you’re feeling adventurous, I can get out the chevda, too. It’s a type or Bombay mix!

Homemade fairy cakes sound delicious, thank you!

Now, I know that your latest release brings you up to a tally of two (very good!) published books. Tell us more about your journey to become a published author.

It’s been rather a rollercoaster of a journey over the last ten years. I wrote my first (not very good) attempt at a novel back in 2012, and that’s definitely staying in the drawer! Two years later, I wrote another book that got one full request from an agent. Then another two books followed that got a couple of full requests in between all the rejections. The problem with getting lots of boilerplate rejections is that you have no idea where you’re going wrong: you don’t know what you don’t know. At one point, I paid for a manuscript appraisal – very informative but obviously a significant cost. I missed out on joining the RNA’s New Writers’ Scheme in 2017 but joined in 2018, and getting detailed critiques as part of the membership fee was enormously helpful. Then in 2020, I was awarded the Katie Fforde Bursary, which gave me a massive boost of confidence and the impetus to write what became book five. However, it was on the sixth attempt, after 221 rejections, I got that magic yes!

What a journey! That YES was absolutely magic!

Do you have a favourite out of the two that have been published? I know that with your love of guinea pigs, your first book, Love You From A to Z, must be extra special!

Ooh, that’s a tough question! As you know, I’m ever so slightly obsessed with guinea pigs and anything piggy-related, so of course, Love You From A-Z holds a special place in my heart, and it was also my debut novel. However, over the course of writing What Would Jane Austen Do? I’ve become very attached to those characters too, so I don’t think I could possibly choose. Do you have a favourite?

I think I’m a bit like you. It’s hard to choose one, isn’t it? I suppose, with my two so far being linked, I have lived with these characters for a long time, and writing book three too, means that they are all forever in my mind! But Marriage Unarranged is definitely special because that’s where it started!

I always like to ask about your writing space, if you have one. Is it somewhere peaceful, or are you overrun with your fur babies?

I’d love to tell you I had a cosy writing nook or a desk with a fabulous view of the countryside, but that would be a total fib! Being very short means that conventional desks are the wrong height, so I write on my laptop – usually on the sofa, occasionally in the garden. The guinea pigs are in another room, although I can still hear them squeaking when they think they need more treats or attention. Or every time the fridge door opens!

And, has romance always been your favourite genre to read, and write?

I like to read a variety of books – something that makes me laugh out loud is always a tonic, and I enjoy a good mystery or cosy crime, but I always come back to romance. In today’s world where the news is often full of unrest and bad news, you can’t beat a happy ever after, can you? As far as writing is concerned, other than a few short stories, my previous novel attempts are firmly in the romance genre. However, I’d love to have a go at writing a cosy crime one day. Possibly with guinea pigs in…

Now, that I would pay to read!!

Before I go off on more of a tangent, let’s have a catch-up about your latest release, What Would Jane Austen do? I was lucky enough to get an ARC and I loved it! Thank you! (Review below!) What made you want to write a book that ties with the legendary Jane Austen? I can see that Maddy, your main character, takes much solace from her words.

I am a Jane Austen fan, but I can’t claim any credit for the title – that was the brainchild of my lovely editor. She suggested it and asked what I thought. Around the same time, my friend was telling me about her visit to West Horsley Place where they filmed the BBC series Ghosts. Have you been there? It’s a fabulous place! Anyway, the house had been inherited by Bamber Gascoigne from his great-aunt, the Duchess of Roxburghe. It clearly sparked my imagination and these two strands combined. So… Maddy is a massive Jane Austen fan and out-of-the-blue, she inherits a house in the country. Even after she’s lost her job, she takes comfort from Jane Austen’s advice and is very protective of Ms Austen’s reputation. I had great fun dropping in little hints, references and quotes from the Austen canon, but have been assured by readers that you don’t need detailed knowledge of Ms Austen’s works in order to enjoy the book.

Do you think it would be easy living with a writer as moody as our fictional Crime fiction author Cameron Massey (or Luke to those who know him well!)? I loved the irony of his pen first name being an anagram for Romance, though he seems to detest the genre!

I think you’d have to be a strong character to live with Cameron Massey! He enjoys a bit of verbal sparring and detests lukewarm opinions, but luckily my heroine, Maddy, has strong opinions of her own, even though in the early part of the story, the two of them don’t always agree! And of course, she gets to know the real man behind the snarky author image.

And, what would you do if you were to inherit a sprawling mansion, as Maddy does? Would you happily move there for a year, or say no thank you?

As long as it wasn’t completely falling apart, I’d jump at the chance! I’m married to an IT and DIY Expert so he’d have the house sorted in no time. However, had I been living there by myself as Maddy is, I’m not sure I’d have been quite so keen. Luckily for Maddy, she makes lots of new friends so she’s not lonely for too long.

And I’m sure my readers would love to know… what do you have in the pipeline? Is there anything up your sleeves, already?

I am currently tinkering with the book I wrote before Love You From A-Z, but at the same time I’m finding it hard to leave behind the villagers of Cotlington. They’ve been in my head for so long now that they feel like real people! Do you find that as a writer? I’m also tempted to start something new as I’d really like to write another book with guinea pigs in. Decisions, decisions…

I can absolutely relate to that! When I finished Marriage Uarranged, the characters wouldn’t leave me alone. The next two books were never planned, but there you go! And, I do have a few other ideas, including another partly written story that I’d love to complete!

Now, I hope the Prosecco was chilled enough, Linda! I can’t believe we’ve finished a bottle!

Thank you for inviting me, Ritu.

My pleasure 😊

Peeps, I can’t wait to read whatever Linda brings out, next, and the idea of popping back to Cotlington is tempting!

Purchase links follow.

The Blurb

It’s a truth often acknowledged that when a journalist and Jane Austen fan girl ends up living next door to a cynical but handsome crime writer, romantic sparks will fly! When Maddy Shaw is told her Dear Jane column has been cancelled she has no choice but to look outside of London’s rental market. That is until she’s left an idyllic country home by the black sheep of the family, long-not-so-lost Cousin Nigel. But of course there’s a stipulation… and not only is Maddy made chair of the committee for the annual village literary festival, she also has to put up with bestselling crime author –and romance sceptic – Cameron Massey as her new neighbour. When Maddy challenges Cameron to write romantic fiction, which he claims is so easy to do, sparks fly both on and off the page…

Available in ebook & paperback

mybook.to/WhatWouldJaneAustenDo

My Review

What Would Jane Austen Do? by Linda Corbett
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

You know when you read a book and want to start it all over to feel all the feels?
Well, that was my reaction to What Would Jane Austen Do?
I loved Linda Corbett’s debut and was excited to get my teeth into this second novel, and I was not disappointed.
Maddy Shaw is reeling after losing her agony aunt column, Dear Jane, in a national magazine. She attends one last interview commitment, meeting an extremely moody crime writer with an extremely simple view of romance. (Topical since so many out there have been trying to rubbish our beloved romance genre!)
Life is not going her way, considering she may have to move out of her flatshare with her best friend in London since she has no income until an unexpected bequest in the will of a deceased relative leaves her with rather a lot more than she could ever have expected, considering she never met the infamous Cousin Nigel.
Armed with her meagre belongings, Maddy moves into Meadowhall, a large house, for the requisite twelve months, fully intending to sell up and leave when the year ends, but you know what? You never know what the future will hold…
I loved everything about this book, from the fantastically appropriate Jane Austen quotes that started each chapter to learning more about the lodger she ends up taking in to keep herself financially afloat. Luke has a lot more about him that I won’t mention. You need to read about that yourself!
As the story unfolds, Cousin Nigel is also a dark horse, revealing secret after secret posthumously.
There is the literary festival, which I loved, ghost hunting, and a gorgeous canine hero who will steal your heart!
Many thanks to NetGalley, and Harper Collins, One More Chapter for an ARC.

Author Bio

Linda Corbett lives in Surrey with her husband Andrew and three permanently hungry guinea pigs. As well as being an author, Linda is a member and former Treasurer of Shine Surrey – a volunteer-led charity that supports individuals and families living with spina bifida and hydrocephalus. For many years she also wrote a regular column for Link, a disability magazine, illustrating the humorous aspects of life with a complex disability, and she is a passionate advocate of disability representation in fiction. When not writing, Linda can be found papercrafting, gardening, or cuddling guinea pigs. What Would Jane Austen Do is her second published novel.

Find Linda by clicking the following links!

Social Media Links

https://www.facebook.com/lindacorbettauthor

https://www.instagram.com/lindacorbettauthor

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