14 April 2022

The Brantford Wagers (The Brantford Series, Book 1) By Nadine Kampen @cookiebuxton @maryanneyarde @nadinekampenauthor @coffeepotbookclub : #HistoricalFiction #RegencyRomance #TheBrantfordWagers #CoffeePotBookClub

 


Book Title: The Brantford Wagers

Series: The Brantford Series, Book 1

Author: Nadine Kampen

Publication Date: 20th January 2022

Publisher: Birdsgate Publishing

Page Length: 358 Pages

Genre: Historical Fiction/Regency Romance



Is Clara Vincent ready to risk it all for love?


Clara Vincent is the artful dodger” when it comes to marriage, especially when her father is bent on match-making. Will her attitude change when she meets two eligible suitors and is drawn into the lives of intensely competitive families? Clara falls unexpectedly in love, but when fortunes are reversed and relationships up-ended, she needs to decide whether to trust James Brantford, who is seeking retribution, or accept the love of the man everyone else 

believes is her ideal match. 


As the Brantford wagers unfold and lay bare the history of past relationships, will Clara be able to learn the truth and finally follow her heart?


Universal Link (Amazon):

Amazon UK:

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Excerpt #4

From Chapter 8 – The Lady Plays Her Hand 


Isabelle, coming into the room, brought a change in topic. ‘I have just

come from seeing Clara.

She is unwell and says she cannot accompany us this evening.’


‘Heavens, are we all to be sick now?’ complained Catherine.


Mrs Stancroft hurried to Clara’s room. ‘My dear girl, you cannot be ill today!

I am planning to introduce you this evening.’


‘Madam, truly, I must excuse myself. My throat is sore, and I have a headache.

An evening’s rest will repair me.’


Mrs Stancroft gave Clara’s hand a kindly squeeze and sighed. ‘I shall stay with you.’


‘No, no!’ protested Clara, laughing gently at Mrs Stancroft’s crestfallen face.

‘I am perfectly comfortable. Go; I insist. You need not sacrifice your pleasures

to the sick room. I will meet your neighbours soon enough.’


Mrs Stancroft decided Clara’s absence was not such an unhappy arrangement.

She could show Catherine and Isabelle to advantage without including this cousin,

who was not so very plain after all.


The family soon left for the Drinscols. What they did, ate, drank, and said

would not be known by Clara for a few days, as she became quite ill and

remained in bed. The only visits were by a physician early the next day and by

Mrs Simpson bringing bowls of hot broth. News of the soirée, when finally disclosed, lost none of its import through delay.


‘Do not ask me about the evening at the Drincols’, Clara,’ said Mrs Stancroft,

settling herself into the bedside chair. ‘I cannot bear to discuss it.

We were dressed in our finest, you know. And what did Mrs Drinscol do?

She seated us on that dreadful sofa. Everybody else sat near one another,

with her daughters close to the gentlemen, whilst we were at the outermost edge

with those awful draperies behind us. Do you want to know what those silly

Drinscol girls wore?’ She neither waited for, nor received, any confirmation

from Clara, who was struggling to remain awake. ‘Sprigged muslin.’


‘I beg your pardon?’


‘In the most abominable shades. Ah,’ she clasped her hands together,

‘it was a sweet victory. We have outdone them this time.

We did make an especially grand entrance. Mr Drinscol said he did not

know how we ladies managed to look so grand. The gentlemen nodded

and such. Mr Brantford was there—he admired my girls especially long,

and so did one of Mr Ashton’s guests, a Mr Hangtree fellow, of all the

unfortunate names. It makes you wonder about the family history.

Descended from a sheriff, likely, or perhaps the family had a large oak

on the property. He was a handsome man, however. Oh!—and

Mr Brantford asked after you—it was he who sent the physician,

which was very kind. Our man in Finstead, Mr Bibbs, is not reliable

these days.’


There was more. ‘Mr Brantford came again last evening—such a

polite man, enquiring after your health. Mr Ashton came by earlier today;

he is still courting our Catherine, of course, but I think he begins to

understand his place. What a triumph for our Catherine that evening.

She wore her hair piled high, the way it is shown in the magazines.

Mr Hangtree was most attentive, which Mr Ashton did not like.

As for Margaret and Agnes, I am sure no one even looked their way.’


Clara, who was having trouble keeping her eyes open, found herself

smiling over the scenes painted by Mrs Stancroft. ‘I saw Isabelle before

you left. She looked very pretty,’ said Clara.


‘Yes, well, it was an extravagant waste for the girls to sit in their best

dresses playing cards. Mrs Drinscol placed her girls with Mr Brantford

and Mr Ashton. “It does the heart good to see so many handsome young

people at one table,” she says to me with that annoying laugh. Catherine

sat in the corner where there is no light, with her back to the room.’


‘At least she escaped comparison with the draperies,’ said Clara.


‘And the dinner—can that even be the proper name?’


‘Did not you enjoy the food?’ asked Clara.


‘We had nothing to eat until eleven o’clock!’ Mrs Stancroft looked wildly

distracted for a moment, the number eleven scattering her thoughts.

‘Had I known, I would have warned Uncle Stancroft to take a midday meal.

It is always hard on his constitution to drink early and eat late, and now I

am to suffer for it! He threatens to reduce my allowance, while he still

comes over and eats my groceries. Oh, and I must tell you, Mr Brantford

postponed his dinner invitation to the next week, because of your being ill—

I am so glad he did not include the Drinscols. It is a good thing that woman

does not have a son old enough to be dangling after my daughters. It is

wrong of me to say it, Clara—and you are kind to hear me out—but she

is forever prying into our affairs. She is a useful neighbour in some respects,

but whatever she has to say is, of course, the most important thing and

everyone has to listen.’


Mrs Stancroft fell silent, exhausted by her own tirade. ‘Oh dear!

You cannot keep your eyes open. Rest now, Clara. You cannot achieve

anything of consequence lying here in bed.’


If, by consequence, Mrs Stancroft meant raising interest towards

Clara among the eligible suitors, she was mistaken. Clara’s absence

produced results of an unexpected kind. Mr Brantford, for one, had

been exceedingly troubled to learn of Clara’s being ill. His concern,

in turn, piqued the curiosity of Mr Ashton’s houseguest, the Hangtree

fellow, as Mrs Stancroft had called him. The man’s actual name was

Mr Robert Langley, nephew and heir to Lady Melbourne of Wells.

Mr Langley took a keen interest in hearing more about the mysterious

and unnamed Stancroft cousin.



                                                               


In her début novel, The Brantford Wagers, Nadine Kampen draws on her passion for stories that bring a smile and warm the hearts of the reader. The author immerses the reader in the fictional world of traditional historical romance, set in the memorable Regency England period, sharing the hopes, schemes, and antics of her characters. 


Prior to her career as an author, Nadine served as a regional marketing manager with an international consulting firm and as a communications and marketing director on university campuses. Earlier in her career, she worked in public relations and journalism, and was co-author and project lead for five non-fiction books comprising The Canadian Breast Cancer Series, published in 1989.


A resident of Winnipeg in Manitoba, Canada, Nadine loves relaxing with family and friends, reading and walking, playing tunes on her 1905 Bell piano, and gardening. 

 

 

Social Media Links:


Website: www.nadinekampen.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/cookiebuxton

LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/nadine-kampen-b6828765

Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/Nadine-Kampen-and-The-Brantford-Wagers-107540071714536

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nadinekampenauthor/?hl=en

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Nadine-Kampen/e/B09GS6975W

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/the-brantford-wagers-the-brantford-series-by-nadine-kampen

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/142891393-nadine-kampen






Book 2 in the Kisses of Sorrow series by @mhb.author #XpressoTours @XpressoTours

 

Master of Death
M.H.B.

(Kisses of Sorrow, #2)
Publication date: April 28th 2022
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

One night.
Two futures.
Almost three years of repair.
Four beating hearts healing from pain.
Five lives forever tied.

Falling for my boss, Damon Dreygon, was never part of the plan.

I was meant to seek from him what my boyfriend, Harvey Stark, refused to give me–someone to kiss me, someone to touch me, and maybe even someone to heal my wounds.

Instead in Damon, I found a mentor. I found a dark prince minus the charming part. Most importantly, in Damon, I found my voice coupled with my own strength.

This was never supposed to hurt Harvey.
Damon and I were never meant to be together.

With each choice, an entirely different future greets me, yet a few things remain the same: we’ve all known pain, we’re all in need of healing, and we’ve all hurt each other in very different ways.

All I wanted was for this melancholy to disappear so that I could find peace.

But peace is hard to reach when you’re too busy chasing secrets.

Secrets I wish would’ve stayed buried.
Secrets that meddle with my dreams.
Secrets I’ll be taking to the grave . . .

Add to Goodreads

Sequel to:



M . H . B . graduated law from a Canadian University. She loves spending time with her partner and her German Shepherd Dog. She has a passion for animals and enjoys the simple things in life: books, music, chocolate, sunny days, and overall wellness. When she is not writing, her mind is in another world, with a book in hand.

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13 April 2022

When The Mermaid Sings (A prequel story to The Sea Witch Voyages) By Helen Hollick @HelenHollick @maryanneyarde @coffeepotbookclub Blog Tour!

 


Book Title: When The Mermaid Sings

Series: The Sea Witch Voyages

Author: Helen Hollick 

Publication Date: 21st June 2021

Publisher: Taw River Press

Page Length: 190 Pages

Genre: Historical/Nautical Fantasy



A prequel short read story to the Sea Witch Voyages of Captain Jesamiah Acorne


When the only choice is to run, where do you run to?

When the only sound is the song of the sea, do you listen?

Or do you drown in the embrace of a mermaid?


Throughout childhood, Jesamiah Mereno has suffered the bullying of his elder half-brother. Then, not quite fifteen years old, and on the day they bury their father, Jesamiah hits back. In consequence, he flees his Virginia home, changes his name to Jesamiah Acorne, and joins the crew of his father’s seafaring friend, Captain Malachias Taylor, aboard the privateer, Mermaid.


He makes enemies, sees the ghost of his father, wonders who is the Cornish girl he hears in his mind – and tries to avoid the beguiling lure of a sensuous mermaid...


An early coming-of-age tale of the young Jesamiah Acorne, set in the years before he becomes a pirate and Captain of the Sea Witch.



Praise:


Ms Hollick has skillfully picked up the threads that she alludes to in the main books and knitted them together to create a Jesamiah that we really didn't know.” Richard Tearle senior reviewer, Discovering Diamonds


Captain Jesamiah Acorne is as charming a scoundrel as a fictional pirate should be. A resourceful competitor to Captain Jack Sparrow!” Antoine Vanner author


Helen Hollick has given us the answer to that intriguing question that Jesamiah fans have been aching for – how did he start his sea-going career as a pirate?” Alison Morton, author


I really enjoyed the insight offered into Jesamiah's backstory, and found the depiction of our teenage hero very moving.” Anna Belfrage, author


I loved this little addendum to the Jesamiah series. I always had a soft spot for the Lorelei stories and enjoyed that the author cleverly brought her over from the Rhine valley to fit into the story.” Amazon Reviewer



Trigger Warnings:

Sexual content, adult language.



A DISPATCH FROM THE AUTHOR


Today, 13th April, is my birthday. (I can’t believe that I’m 69!) so the excerpt I have chosen for today – although a different date – is also my pirate’s birthday. But his is slightly more adventurous than mine!


A brief bit about the Sea Witch Voyages

I wrote the first Voyage (Sea Witch) back in 2005 after thoroughly enjoying the first Pirates of the Caribbean movie. Like most avid readers, however, I wanted more than just the movie, I wanted to read something that was as entertaining and as exciting. A nautical adventure with a charming rogue of a pirate captain, written for adults (with adult content) but with a dash of supernatural fantasy as well – elements of which had made that first movie such fun to watch. I found many nautical-based novels, but they were all ‘serious stuff’ – Patrick O’Brian, Alexander Kent, C. S. Forrester ... all good reads but without the fantasy fun, and barely a female character in sight. I simply could not find the book I wanted to read. So, I wrote my own.


The first Voyage led to more books in the series, and also generated several emails from fans who wanted to know how Jesamiah had become a pirate in the first place.


When the Mermaid Sings answers that question.


* * *

(Excerpt 9)

December 4th 1708


Four months of plying up and down the east coast of North America, from the Chesapeake to Charlestown, South Carolina. Routine: load a cargo, take it to where it had to go, unload, reload…

The monotony was broken by the challenges of the weather, from hot, sultry days where the heat-scorched breath and the deck ran with sticky tar, to downpours of rain ushered in by the tail end of the hurricane season. As autumn slid into winter and the Anna ploughed her way northward to Boston the bitter north-east winds blew in, with the rigging rimed by ice, and hands, faces and feet forever cold. Returning south, they were heading towards the sun of the Caribbean, short-handed by two men. One had died from blood loss after severing his hand, the other had fallen from the masthead, breaking his neck. Both were not missed by Captain or crew.


Jesamiah sat cross-legged beside the longboat, taking advantage of the shade and shelter from the sun and the wind, busy about mending a sail. He paused, sucked at a new spot of blood as the needle stabbed his finger. His hands were calloused, tar-grimed and rough, his skin sun- and wind-tanned and his hair was plaited into an unruly queue. His youth was changing into manhood, his voice losing its uncertain pitch to become deeper and huskier, and his face sprouting hair. He had not washed for several days. He was fifteen today, although only he knew it. When he had signed on as a foremast jack, he had told the Captain, Nathanial Parker, that he was seventeen. Whether he had been believed or not was immaterial, for he was here, aboard Anna, with no further questions asked. There would be no birthday treats, no hug and kiss from his mother. Thinking of his mother, after sucking the blood from his finger, Jesamiah touched the gold acorn earring dangling from his right earlobe. She had intended the trinket for his birthday today, though she would not have envisaged the day was to be spent aboard a merchant ship bound for Port Royal.


The food aboard Anna was poor. Weevil-riddled hard tack, stews with more fat and gristle than meat, the water in the butts had turned green and foul within days of replenishing. His worn old clothes were constantly damp and the work was hard. Anna rolled as a strong gust of wind buffeted her. Jesamiah looked up, ready to assist in tending the mainsail if needed, but other men were already there, seeing to it. He fashioned another stitch and grinned as Captain Parker, standing on the quarterdeck, grabbed his felt hat which was about to be abducted by the wind. Life aboard a merchantman? Tough, relentless work. 

Jesamiah absolutely loved it.


“You finished that yet?” growled Stannis, the bosun, as he walked past, his gait rolling with the ship. No one knew his first name, or even whether he had one. General opinion was that, if he did, he was too mean-minded to use it.


“Nearly, sir – three more stitches an’ I will’ve done.”


“Providin’ you don’t take all day about it. When you’ve done,get yourself up that mast to relieve Markham. Your eyes are better ’n ’is. There’s a ship layin’ over t’starb’d. Cap’n as wants t’know what she be.”


“Aye, sir.”


Before Stannis had walked the length of the deck, Jesamiah had completed his task and was heading for the mainmast rigging. He hoisted himself up into the shrouds and began climbing, gripping on to the permanent rigging that supported the mast, not the ratlines, the smaller, tarred ropes stretching horizontally like the steps of a ladder; the bare, hardened soles of his feet scarcely feeling their coarseness as he climbed. Manoeuvring around the running gear that threaded its way through the rigging, he climbed on upwards. The view of the ship grew narrower beneath him, the great grey and tar-stained arcs of canvas billowing and cracking, banging and slapping, the roar of the wind, loud in his ears.


He reached the wooden platform halfway up and, ignoring the easier route through the lubber’s hole, swung outwards up and over the rim of the platform. A few agile steps and he was over. The sky was the purest blue, only a few puffballs of white cloud marring its perfection. The horizon plunged back and forth with the swaying, circular motion of the mast as the ship rolled and pitched, the distant line sweeping in an unbroken arc where sky met shimmering sea. The men working below on deck were minute from up here, Anna herself appearing long and thin, and so small compared to the vast blue of the restless ocean surrounding her.


Jesamiah grinned at Tom Markham, who was on his feet ready to go down. Markham pointed to the black shape of a topgallant sail north-east of their course.


“That’s her. She’s been with us since first light. I’ve a suspicion about her. A smell.”


Settling himself, as if unaware of the great drop below, Jesamiah answered, “Do you reckon she’s Spanish or French? Will they attack?”


“If she’s flying colours from either country we could be in trouble. Sing out if you spot what she is. If she’s an enemy, we’ll need every minute we can muster to get away from her. We ain’t no match for the Dons or the Frenchies, and once they see we’re a poorly armed merchant, well, I hope you know your prayers, young Acorne. The safety of English Port Royal is a good few hours away yet!”


Smiling to himself, Jesamiah shuffled his backside into a more comfortable position. Acorne. It had been the first name to come to mind when he was asked to sign his mark on Anna’s list of crew. He had not wanted his birth name, had not wanted anything more to do with his old home. He had decided to take on a new identity as well as a new life. The ‘e’ he had added with a flourish as he had signed. Jesamiah Acorne, foremast jack.


He was determined to turn that last into ‘Captain’ one day.



How I met Jesamiah Acorne (the tru-ish) story

https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/p/how-i-met-jesamiah-acorne.html



Buy Links:


Available on #KindleUnlimited.


Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0968RQ6FS

Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0968RQ6FS

Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B0968RQ6FS

Amazon AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B0968RQ6FS



HELEN HOLLICK


First published in 1994, Helen became a USA Today Bestseller with her historical novel, The Forever Queen (titled A Hollow Crown in the UK) with the sequel, Harold the King (US: I Am The Chosen King) being novels that explore the events that led to the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Her Pendragon’s Banner Trilogy is a fifth-century version of the Arthurian legend, and she writes a nautical adventure/fantasy series, The Sea Witch Voyages. She is now branching out into the quick read novella, 'Cosy Mystery' genre with her new venture, the Jan Christopher Murder Mysteries, set in the 1970s, with the first in the series, A Mirror Murder incorporating her, often hilarious, memories of working as a library assistant.


Her non-fiction books are Pirates: Truth and Tales and Life of A Smuggler. She lives in an eighteenth-century farmhouse in North Devon, runs Discovering Diamonds, a review blog for historical fiction, and occasionally gets time to write... 

 

Social Media Links:


Website: https://www.helenhollick.net

Twitter: https://twitter.com/HelenHollick

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/helen.hollick

Amazon Author Page: https://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick /

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/477847.Helen_Hollick

Newsletter: http://tinyletter.com/HelenHollick







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