28 January 2022

The Coronation By Justin Newland Two Year Celebration Blog Tour! @matadorbooks @maryanneyarde @drjustinnewland @coffeepotbookclub

#HistoricalFantasy #Supernatural #Thriller #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub

Book Title: The Coronation

Author: Justin Newland

Publication Date: 28th January 2019 (Two Year Celebration Tour)

Publisher: Matador

Page Length: 216 Pages

Genre: Historical Fantasy, Supernatural Thriller


It is 1761. Prussia is at war with  Russia and Austria. As the Russian army occupies East Prussia, King Frederick the Great and his men fight hard to win back their homeland. 


In Ludwigshain, a Junker estate in East Prussia, Countess Marion von Adler celebrates an exceptional harvest. But it is requisitioned by Russian troops. When Marion tries to stop them, a Russian captain strikes her. His lieutenant, Ian Fermor, defends Marions honour and is stabbed for his insubordination. Abandoned by the Russians, Fermor becomes a divisive figure on the estate.

 

Close to death, Fermor dreams of the Adler, a numinous eagle entity, whose territory extends across the lands of Northern Europe and which is mysteriously connected to the Enlightenment. What happens next will change of the course of human history… 


Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Coronation-Justin-Newland-ebook/dp/B0827YLXRZ

 Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/Coronation-Justin-Newland-ebook/dp/B0827YLXRZ

Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/Coronation-Justin-Newland-ebook/dp/B0827YLXRZ

Amazon AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/Coronation-Justin-Newland-ebook/dp/B0827YLXRZ

Barnes and Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-coronation-justin-newland/1135273653

Waterstones: https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-coronation/justin-newland/9781838591885 

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/gb/en/ebook/the-coronation-6 

Authors Website (buyers can enter a dedication to be signed by the author): https://www.justinnewland.com/the-coronation~102 

Publishers Website: https://www.troubador.co.uk/bookshop/fantasy-and-horror/the-coronation/ 

Wordery (UK): https://wordery.com/the-coronation-justin-newland-9781838591885

Bookswagon (India): https://www.bookswagon.com/book/coronation-justin-newland/9781838591885 

Booktopia (Au): https://www.booktopia.com.au/the-coronation-justin-newland/ebook/9781838597849.html 

Saxo (Dk): https://www.saxo.com/dk/the-coronation_justin-newland_paperback_9781838591885 

Exclusive Books (SA): https://www.exclusivebooks.co.za/product/9781838591885

 

This is an excerpt from The Coronation by Justin Newland. 

It’s the closing scene of Chapter 2, The Fear of Famine. 

It’s from the point of view of Marion Grafin (or Countess) von Adler and takes place in her home in Schloss (or Castle) Ludwigshain.


Audio link: https://soundcloud.com/user-242536176/author-justin-newland-reading-an-excerpt-from-ch-2-of-his-novel-the-coronationrecording-10?si=e2cc79aceffe44509dae7464e157a5be


She found the officer in charge, a middle-aged, thickset man, with hair sprouting from his eyebrows, and his hands. “What are they doing?” she demanded. “Where are you going with all that food?”


Smart in his uniform, as well as his attitude, the officer replied, “The Russian Army needs transport and supplies. They are mine to requisition.”


“Not again,” she complained. “Two years ago, the Russian Imperial Army barracked an entire regiment on my estate and we’ve barely recovered.” 


“I know nothing about that,” the officer said. 


“You can tell your men to stop.” 


“I will not,” the officer said flatly.


She tried a personal approach and asked, “Who do I have the honour of addressing?”


“Captain Stepan Gurieli of the Guzinskiy Hussars at your service,” he said, clicking the heels of his boots. 


As she watched the Georgian soldiers load sacks of potatoes, wheat, corn and carrots onto the carts, Marion had an awful, sinking feeling. This was terrible. Without food, her people, her estate, could all crumble into dust. She tried again. 


 “This is the last day of the harvest. If you take everything, my people won’t survive the winter.”


“This is for the victorious Russian Army,” Gurieli said with a snarl. 


“Famine gnaws at the soul,” she pleaded with him. “At least leave us something!”


“These are my orders,” the captain snapped back. “If you don’t like them, take up the matter with the Governor General of Königsberg, or better still, Elizabeth Petrovna, Empress of all Russia.”


She kept her own counsel on that one. 


A younger officer – a lieutenant – joined them. He was the one Konstantin had been berating. He had a slight build and rounded shoulders. Marion particularly noticed his gleaming emerald-green eyes and, protruding from beneath his cap, strands of curly red hair. 


“Your report, Lieutenant Fermor,” the captain said. 


“The men have gathered everything they can,” the lieutenant replied.


“Good, then prepare the column to leave,” Gurieli said. He bestowed on Marion a smug grin and strode towards his dapple-grey horse. 


The monster was going to steal her people’s harvest. There was so little time to save her people. She had to stop him. She darted in front of him, arms outstretched, blocking his way. 


Mouth agape, the captain stepped back, evidently as surprised as she was by her impetuous action. 


“Get out of my way – or suffer the consequences.” 


Breathing hard, her heart pumping, she glared at him. “Please. Don’t steal our harvest!” 


The captain leaned forward and barked, “Don’t prevent me from following my orders!” 


She chose her next words carefully. “This is cruel, vindictive and contrary to the teachings of Our Lord!”


“Bah!” he scoffed. “I don’t care. The Lutheran Church is full of heretics anyway.” 


Silence gripped her round the throat. Fear bared its claws.


“What about the little ones?” she pleaded. “Don’t you have children, Captain Gurieli? Leave something for them, I beg you.” 


“Blame it on that odious King Frederick of yours,” the captain replied, tapping his riding whip against his thigh. “Because of his hubris, my countrymen – and yours – die horribly on the battlefield. I’ve seen hundreds lose their limbs. A whole generation is amputated. So many fatherless families. Don’t preach to me about children. Be thankful I’m leaving you your lives!” 


“I will not let you leave my people to starve!” Every word was like a peal of thunder.


“Get out of my way, you whore!” the captain hissed. 


Hans rushed forward, shouting, “How dare you address my mother like that!” 


“Who is this suckling babe?” Gurieli laid on the scorn.


“I’m not a child, I’m a man,” Hans snapped. 


What happened next seemed to do so in slow motion.


The glint of a blade in the sunlight. Hans’ overhead thrust parried by Gurieli. The dagger falling from her son’s hand spiralling through the air. Gurieli knocking the boy to the ground and plunging his foot on his chest, then lifting his riding whip above his head. 


She flung herself into the trajectory of the whip. 


It ripped her cheek and stung her with a shooting pain the like of which she had never experienced. Her knees trembled. With the sheer force of will, she urged herself not to move, nor wipe away the blood trickling down her cheek. 


Otto and the young lieutenant rushed towards the captain. 


“Stop right there!” One fiery glance endorsed her command. 


Defiant like a granite mountain before a storm, she stared into the captain’s eyes.


“Move out of my way, or I’ll have to…” Gurieli said.


The captain raised his whip hand and she winced, expecting another strike. A moment passed. Nothing happened. She opened her eyes. The captain and the young lieutenant were grappling and grunting like a couple of great bears. Hans got up from the ground and she flung a protective arm around him. The lieutenant twisted Gurieli’s hand, forcing him to drop the whip. 


Gurieli pulled away, shouting, “What on earth do you think you’re doing?” 


“You struck a lady! Call yourself an Imperial Russian officer? You’ve dishonoured the regiment!” the lieutenant replied. 


“This is the foreigner’s true colour!” the captain stoked the flames. “White – like the flag of surrender! You’d have our great mother country bow the knee to Prussians!”


 The lieutenant unsheathed his sabre and slashed it against the side of the captain’s head, severing his left ear in one swift, clean blow. The ear landed in the summer dust. Blood oozed down the captain’s neck, turning his crisp white uniform a sanguine shade of scarlet. The captain stroked the wound, examined the blood on his hand and licked it. His face transformed into one of unadulterated fury. 


“You’ve done it now, little Lieutenant,” Gurieli snarled. “You are under my command. Your precious uncle isn’t here to cosset you.” 


The cut on her cheek seared right through her. Waves of pain beat against her legs. She felt dizzy and leaned against Hans. 


The lieutenant took a step back and bowed his head. He seemed to have realised the gravity of his action. In a grovelling tone, he said, “I-I’m sorry, Captain.” 


“You will be. Here, bite on this!” The captain pulled out his sabre and drove at the lieutenant, who tried to parry the thrust, but Gurieli ran the lieutenant through the side. She cringed at the squishing sound of the sword piercing his flesh. Gurieli withdrew the sabre and blood spurted in an arc, colouring the sandy ground in a hot crimson stream. 


The lieutenant slumped to his knees, clutching his side, blood squelching through his fingers. The captain walked round him, planted a boot on the lieutenant’s back and kicked him to the ground, face first.


No one moved. Everyone was in shock. 


The lieutenant lay in a pool of blood oozing into the yellow sand, as flies descended on the banquet. Nearby, the captain’s horse, feeling the ambient tension, deposited a large volume of stinking excrement onto the forecourt.


“There, Gräfin.” The captain’s voice ascended the heights of mockery. “There’s food for your people. From the horse’s arse!”


Marion clung onto Hans’ arm, to prevent him from going back into the fray and stop herself falling over in a heap.


The adjutant stumbled over to where the lieutenant lay stricken on the ground, his life oozing out onto the gravel. 


The captain barked at him, “Leave him!”


“He’ll die, Captain Gurieli,” the adjutant replied. 


“He struck a superior officer, an offence that bears a grave punishment. Do you want to suffer the same fate?”


The adjutant frowned and shook his head. 


“Then pick that up!” Gurieli pointed to his bloody ear. 


“Yes, Captain,” the adjutant murmured.


“And that.” Gurieli pointed to his whip. “Now let’s leave this accursed place.”


Gurieli led the column off – taking with them most of their horses, carts and wagons carrying the bulk of the estate’s winter food supplies. They left behind fear of famine, a pile of steaming horse shit and a mortally wounded Russian officer. 


Once she made sure Hans was unhurt, Marion acted quickly. “Find the doctor. This wound needs cauterising. Bring the lieutenant inside.” 


Otto picked him up by the armpits while Konstantin grabbed the boy’s feet. They hauled him as far as the entrance of the Schloss, where a barrel of a man with a face pitted like the full moon, stood on the steps. Few survived the smallpox, but he had. Arms folded, he blocked their way.


“Alexander,” she said to him, “let them pass.” 


The huntsman ignored her and lanced the boil of his opinion. Pointing to the stricken lieutenant, he snarled, “Him, he’s Russian scum. They raped our women and our land. They left him here to die. If it were me, I’d do the same.”


“We’re trying to save his life,” she replied. 


“What life? He’s not worth it. His soldiers stole our food and our peace of mind. What we gonna feed him on? Berries? Grass? Nah. I see real life in the woods. The beasts of the forest knows the way of things. They’d leave him to die. Not thee, though, Your Excellency. You wanna feed our enemy with food we ain’t even got!”


She glared at him like a Prussian Medusa, willing him to turn to stone under her gaze. “Listen to me! That man doesn’t even know who I am, yet was prepared to lay down his life for me and my son. What more can you ask of a friend, so how can he be an enemy? Now move!” 


While the huntsman beat a calculated retreat, she knew it was a temporary respite. The fear of famine crawled into people’s lives like vermin and was as equally hard to remove. 


Justin Newland is an author of historical fantasy and secret history thrillers - that’s history with a supernatural twist. His stories feature known events and real people from history which are re-told and examined through the lens of the supernatural. He gives author talks and is a regular contributor to BBC Radio Bristol’s Thought for the Day. He lives with his partner in plain sight of the Mendip Hills in Somerset, England. 


His Books

 

The Genes of Isis is a tale of love, destruction and ephemeral power set under the skies of Ancient Egypt. A re-telling of the Biblical story of the flood, it reveals the mystery of the genes of Isis – or genesis – of mankind. ISBN 9781789014860.

 

The novel is creative, sophisticated, and downright brilliant! I couldnt ask more of an Egyptian-esque book!” – Lauren, Books Beyond the Story.

 

The Old Dragons Head is a historical fantasy and supernatural thriller set during the Ming Dynasty and played out in the shadows the Great Wall of China. It explores the secret history of the influences that shaped the beginnings of modern times.  ISBN 9781789015829.

 

The author is an excellent storyteller.” – British Fantasy Society. 


Set during the Great Enlightenment, The Coronation reveals the secret history of the Industrial Revolution. ISBN 9781838591885.

 

The novel explores the themes of belonging, outsiders… religion and war…  filtered through the lens of the other-worldly.” – A. Deane, Page Farer Book Blog.


His latest, The Abdication (July, 2021), is a suspense thriller, a journey of destiny, wisdom and self-discovery. ISBN 9781800463950.  


“In Topeth, Tula confronts the truth, her faith in herself, faith in a higher purpose, and ultimately, what it means to abdicate that faith.” 

V. Triola, Coast to Coast.


Social Media Links:

Website: https://www.justinnewland.com/ 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/justin.newland.author/ 

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justin-newland-b393aa28/ 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drjustinnewland/ 

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/~/e/B06WRQVLT8 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52079518-the-coronation


Tour Schedule Page: https://maryanneyarde.blogspot.com/2021/09/blog-tour-coronation-by-justin-newland.html

 




Square Up: 50,000 miles in search of a way home by Lisa Dailey Book Tour Guest Review, Excerpt and Giveaway!

Square Up by Lisa Dailey



Square Up: 50,000 miles in search of a way home by Lisa Dailey

Publisher:  Sidekick Press, (March 30, 2021)
Category: Memoir, Travel, Family Travel, Adventure Travel, Grief
Tour dates: January 17-February 18, 2022
ISBN: 978-1734494556
Available in Print and ebook, 272 pages

  Square Up

Description Square Up by Lisa Dailey

Have you ever wished you could run away and leave your life behind? Born on the “Day of the Wanderer,” Lisa Dailey has always been filled with wanderlust. Although she and her husband had planned to take their family on a ’round-the-world adventure, she didn’t expect their plans to come together on the heels of grief, after losing seven family members in five years.

Square Up shows us that travel not only helps us understand and appreciate other cultures, but invites us to find compassion and wisdom, heal from our losses, and discover our capacity for forgiveness, as well as joy.

Guest Review Square Up by Lisa Dailey

Guest review by Katy

In the short span of five years, Lisa Dailey experienced more loss than many of us will see in decades. In that time, the deaths of seven family members, including both parents and her younger brother, clouded her mind and her ability to process her own emotions. Lisa began experiencing negative mental health issues, including the onset of what she worried might be agoraphobia.

In answer to this, she and her husband decided to take their two teenage sons on an adventure that they'd always planned, but never actually had the guts to carry out. The trip began in Hawaii and extended to places like Guam, Okinawa, Singapore and Vietnam, where her husband had volunteered to work in a dental practice for one month as well as many other countries like Spain and Ghana.

During the trip, Lisa's perspective on her life began to change and she soon realized how much she was letting her grief control her life and ruin her relationship with her children and her husband.

In Guam, Lisa spent time with her uncle and through watching his grief for his sister and nephew and the way that it had driven him to stop taking care of himself, she saw what she was headed toward.

The writing in this memoir is top notch, and deeply emotional. I can only imagine the vulnerability it took for Dailey to record her thoughts during one of the darkest times in her life, but I could definitely see why she struggled to escape those lines of thinking.

Reading about her coming out of that and realizing all that she had to be thankful for is something that I could see being vastly helpful to many readers who are dealing with grief and loss. 'Square Up: 50,000 miles in search of a way home,' is a transformative read in many ways and a stunning memoir to dive into. 

Excerpt Square Up by Lisa Dailey

Namo Buddha, Nepal

When the day arrived for my trekking adventure with the boys, my husband and I said goodbye, our hug lingering, both of us knowing we would not be able to communicate until we returned to the guesthouse in a few days. We had barely been apart for months, and I had come to rely on our closeness, our shared decision-making and planning, but this felt like the right time to step out on my own with my sons.

“Have a great time,” he said. “You’ll be fine.”

I nodded. “We will be fine as long as we don’t get lost.”

Shortly after breakfast, RJ, Tyler, and I took a familiar trail, tackling the thousand stairs to Kali Temple. Further along, we found wooden signs with faded lettering pointing the way to Namo Buddha. Along the dusty path, we passed houses in all states of disrepair. Homes constructed of dried mud and sticks had been so damaged by the earthquake and aftershocks that, in many cases, entire walls were still missing from the structures.

As we passed houses with young children, they ran to the edge of their property shouting, “Chocolate?” Our guesthouse host, Meen, told us before we left that trekkers hiking through the villages of Nepal used to carry chocolate and pass it out to children along the way. The practice had long since been discouraged, although not entirely forgotten. The boys and I would shake our heads apologetically and wave as we passed, hoping a smile and a “Namaste” would suffice. The children smiled back, waving us on our way.

We continued along the terraced landscape covered in a blanket of small yellow wildflowers. We climbed for long stretches, often catching views of the snow-covered Himalayas to our left. Prayer flags were strung from tree to tree across the path, like they were in the streets of Kathmandu. The only sound was the fall of our footsteps and the rustling of the trees. The flags swayed in the light breeze, some bright yellow, red, blue, and green, others so sun-faded their original color was indistinct. The flags imparted a sense of calm and serenity, as if Buddha were watching over us. I was reminded of being in the shadow of the stupas in Myanmar. Could it be true that by simply standing in their presence, calm was restored? I decided it was.

By early afternoon, we arrived at our destination. Ingrid, a middle-aged German woman who owned the resort, welcomed us. After checking us in and calling for lunch to be prepared, she served hot tea and sat with us on the patio. Several cats prowled around seeking our attention, which the boys were more than happy to provide. From the patio we had views stretching to the north and south, even to the Himalayas—less than seventy miles away.

After lunch, I had visions of a short rest and a hot shower. Meen had mentioned that the resort had a generator, so hot water and heat were available all day. Ingrid had other plans for us, however.

“You should walk over to the monastery for evening prayers,” she said. “It’s a beautiful place to visit and they will serve you bread and tea. When you return, you will have time to rest before dinner at seven.”

“Is it okay for us to watch their ceremony?” I felt like we would be intruding on something sacred, something private.

“Oh, yes. It’s an amazing experience,” she replied. “I’m sure you’ll see other travelers there, too.”

We said goodbye and hiked the two miles to the monastery, once again up and down the terraced landscape. Walking up a winding road to an enormous complex on top of a hill, we didn’t notice any other tourists. In fact, we didn’t see anyone on the grounds at all. Surrounded by mountains and now large buildings, we were alone.

“Is this the place?” RJ asked. He, too, had noticed we were the only people walking toward the monastery.

“This has to be it. It’s the only building around here,” I said.

“Mom, let’s turn around,” Tyler said.

I glanced at him and could tell he felt worried about not seeing anyone.

“No, let’s go a little farther. I’m not ready to give up quite yet,” I said.

I knew what Tyler was feeling all too well; I’d let it control me too often. I wasn’t afraid to make a mistake anymore. I wanted to demonstrate to my boys that not achieving the intended outcome was okay.

We wandered further into the complex and began to see an occasional saffron-robed figure walking toward a building in the center.

“That must be where we’re supposed to go. C’mon,” I said.

“Mom, how do you know?” Tyler asked.

“I don’t know for sure, Tyler, but let’s find out,” I said, trusting we were in the right place, even if it was the wrong place. I smiled to myself. I was confident, able to move beyond my own worries.

We walked into the entryway and at once noticed an area filled with shoes and a small sign asked for all footwear to be removed.

“This is the place,” I said, giving Tyler a reassuring smile.

“How do you know?” he asked.

I pointed to the pile of shoes in front of us. “Look at those shoes, Ty. Columbia, Merrell, Nike. I don’t think this is monks’ footwear.”

We removed our dusty socks and shoes, and I led the way up a flight of stairs, the cold marble making my bare toes ache. At the entrance to the large room, a monk greeted us silently with palms pressed together and a small bow, but no words. We reciprocated the greeting and followed him to pillows set along the wall, where he extended his hand and invited us to sit. As my eyes adjusted to the dim lighting, I noticed there were several other groups of onlookers seated near us. I gave Tyler a little nudge to make sure he saw them.

“I feel really uncomfortable, Mom,” Ty said.

I heard a familiar ring of anxiety in Tyler’s voice, reminding me of myself in similar moments. I knew this was a moment in which I could either confirm his uneasiness or demonstrate how to move beyond the anxiety.

“I know, hon’, but we’re okay. Let’s see what happens.”

We watched as monks entered the dimly lit room and sat at long tables stretching the entire length of the room. Some monks held instruments, others carried trays of cakes. Several monks served warm milk tea to the guests, followed by slices of sweet bread. Once everyone had eaten, the monks played a variety of instruments and chanted. The beating of large drums and bellowing of conch shells made a deep, resonating sound that vibrated through my body.

I glanced over at Ty. He seemed to be interested in the ceremony, so I closed my eyes and let my body relax. My breath synced to the rhythm of the music. I was also proud of myself for not giving up on this adventure. 

Square Up by Lisa DaileyAbout Lisa Dailey

Lisa Dailey is an avid traveler and writer. In her time abroad, she unearthed new ways of looking at her life through her discoveries in remote corners of the world and she continues to enrich her life through travel. She is currently working on a recipe anthology as well as her first work of fiction. A native Montanan,

Lisa now makes her home by the ocean in Bellingham, Washington, but returns to her roots every summer for a healthy dose of mountains and Big Sky.

Lisa is the owner of Silent Sidekick and Sidekick Press where she helps guide authors through their publishing journey.

Author Website: https://lisa-dailey.com/
Travel Blog: https://northwestrambles.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwrambles
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lisadailey1724
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lisad1724/  & https://www.instagram.com/nwrambles/
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/nwrambles/

Buy Square Up by Lisa Dailey

Amazon
BarnesandNoble
Indiebound
Powell’s

Giveaway Square Up by Lisa Dailey

This giveaway is for 3 print copies One for each of 3 winners. This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on February 12, 2022 midnight, pacific time.  Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.
  a Rafflecopter giveaway

Follow Square Up by Lisa Dailey

Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Jan 17 Kickoff & Interview

Becky Life as Rog Jan 18 Review

Gud Reader Goodreads Jan 19 Review

Andy K. Amazon Jan 20 Review

Lu Ann Rockin’ Book Reviews Jan 21 Review

Denise D. Amazon Jan 25 Review

Betty Toots Book Reviews Jan 26 Review & Excerpt

Jas International Book Promotion Jan 27 Review

Katy Celticlady’s Reviews Jan 28 Guest Review & Excerpt

Am Goodreads Jan 31 Review

Lynn Goodwin Writer Advice Feb 1 Review & Guest Post

Suzie M. My Tangled Skeins Feb 3 Review & Guest Post

Laura Lee Bound 4 Escape Feb 4 Guest Review

Bee Book Pleasures Feb 7 Review & Interview

Karen T. Goodreads Feb 9 Review

Michael L Amazon Feb 10 Review

Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Feb 11 Review 

Square Up by Lisa Dailey

View My Stats!

View My Stats

Pageviews past week

SNIPPET_HTML_V2.TXT
Tweet