12 December 2024

Ashes on the Wind by Brandy Purdy! Smashwords runs December 12th through January 1st!

 Go get your copy for Smashwords sale runs December 12th through January 1st! Half price!!

Price

 $9.99 $4.99 USD. (50% off until Jan. 1, 2025!)

 Words

 247,470. 

Language

 English. Originally Published: April 17, 2024 by Brandy Purdy.

 Categories

 Fiction » BiographicalFiction » Historical » GeneralFiction » LGBTQ+ » GayFiction » Themes & motifs » Crime

Smashwords sale runs December 12th through January 1st and the book will be available at smashwords.com for half price


Ashes on the Wind

The love story behind the 1924 Crime of the Century, Leopold and Loeb.

Nathan "Babe" Leopold was a socially awkward genius who used arrogance as a shield. He cultivated a philosophy of absolute selfishness cherry-picked from his reading of Nietzsche and indulged himself with vivid sexual fantasies about kings and slaves. Richard "Dickie" Loeb was the brightest of the bright young things, a social butterfly as fragile as glass inside, hiding his insecurities behind a dazzling smile and a mouthful of lies. He found escape in thrilling tales and fantasies of crime. They were two brilliant and privileged boys, each harboring secrets it would have been social suicide to reveal in their 1920s world. When Babe met Dickie, it was like his favorite fantasy had stepped out of his dreams into real life. When Dickie met Babe, he thought he had found the accomplice who would help make his criminal dreams come true. Dickie was willing to give Babe what he wanted, if Babe would give him what he wanted. Quid pro quo. Until Dickie wanted something more, leaving Babe desperate and willing to do anything to hold onto his dream. Even if it led down a dark path to the Crime of the Century and infamy as the thrill killers Leopold and Loeb.

 The Story Behind the Novel: An Interview With Brandy Purdy

Just in time for the 100th anniversary of the murder of Bobby Franks comes a new novel by author Brandy Purdy: Ashes on the Wind: The Love Story Behind The Crime of the Century.

This, Purdy’s 10th novel, focuses on the relationship between the killer duo of Leopold and Loeb, how it began, grew and changed over the years. Ashes can be ordered from Amazon in either paperback or ebook format here.

I was happy to talk with Purdy about her interest in the case, her research, and to dive into some details of the novel itself.

ER: Do you remember when you first heard about the case and what interested you about it?

BP: It was in A Pictorial History of American Crime by Allen Churchill. My mother used to take me to the library when I was a little girl and they kept all the coffee table size books in one area, and I found that book and I was just fascinated by it, I loved seeing all the vintage illustrations. Leopold and Loeb was one of the cases in that book that just stuck with me and that I would look for more information about throughout the years as I got older and understood better. 

It was the relationship between these two young men that always intrigued me the most as well as their psychological issues.

ER: Have you read or watched other fictional adaptations of the story before?

BP: Oh yes, I try to keep up with everything, I love seeing how different novelists and filmmakers and playwrights are inspired by the story. The movie Swoon was always my favorite, I used to want to rent it every time we went to the video store, and it was one of the first DVDs I bought. And I love listening to the soundtrack of Thrill Me.

ER: What gaps did you see in those other stories that you wanted to fill?

BP: Most books tend to focus on the crime and the trial. I wanted to focus on the relationship, how it began and developed through the years. 

And the prison years, their lives didn’t end when they went to prison just changed drastically. And it’s the one part of their story I wish we had more information about especially in regard to Richard Loeb.

ER: Can you tell me about your research process for this project?

BP: I love doing research.  Even though I write historical fiction and put my own interpretation and creative spin on things, I love having the opportunity to research and explore stories that fascinate me.  I read most of the nonfiction books that were available at the time I started writing, and I did some newspaper research, though admittedly not as much as I would have liked to, and a little archival research that I was able to do by mail or online since I can’t travel. My interviewer here, Erik Rebain was also immensely helpful to me in so many ways.

ER: Your book is a work of fiction, can you discuss the line you walked between historical accuracy and creative license?

BP: I always start with a factual framework and embroider upon that as I’m inspired to as I go along. And sometimes the decision to use creative license is a more practical one, for example I try to avoid multiple characters having the same first name, like in this novel Leopold and Loeb’s friend Dick Rubel is called Richie, and sometimes I reassign actions or dialogue if I didn’t develop the actual speaker / performer as a character, or as in the case of the trial in my novel to streamline the psychiatric testimony.

ER: Did the book surprise you at all once you started working on it?

BP: Oh yes, it definitely surprised me! I’m trying to avoid giving any spoilers here, but one character who I wasn’t even sure would be more than a brief mention, evolved in a very unique way and changed the course of the rest of the story. It completely surprised me, I didn’t see it coming till it happened. It made more work for me, but I wasn’t sorry a bit.

My characterization of Richard Loeb also surprised me a great deal throughout the novel.

ER: You include people who haven’t been represented in fiction about this case before, can you talk about widening the narrative around this story?

BP: Yes, when I write a novel, I don’t like to be cookie cutter, I like to try to give readers something different they may not have experienced before. I wanted to go wider and deeper than just the criminal activity and the trial. And it’s always important to me when

 I write a novel about a murder that the victim or victims be more than just names on the page, like when I wrote The Ripper’s Wife, it was important to me to develop each of the Jack the Ripper victims as an individual person.

 So while the relationships as depicted in my novel might be deeper or different than they were in real life, I hope I was able to give back life and personality at least in the pages of a novel so readers see a person not a corpse.

ER: Nathan Leopold is the narrator for your book. Can you describe what it was like to write from his perspective?

BP: A little intimidating at first, because of his genius, I had to make myself focus more on his emotions than on his accomplishments. If I let myself think too much about philosophy and languages I would get bogged down, a little scared and overwhelmed.

But I did become more interested in birds because of this book, I have bird feeders now and I love the cardinals that hang out around the camellia tree by my front porch, I love watching them they’re like a little soap opera. 

My Leopold is an unreliable narrator, which is my favorite kind to write, so ultimately it’s up to the readers to decide if or when to believe him.

ER: Not to give away too much, but it seems like some of the characters in your book were able to grow and change, while others got stuck repeating patterns. Can you talk a bit about that?

BP: Yes, that was one of the things that surprised me while I was writing this novel. Someone grew and revealed a greater emotional depth than I originally expected them to, while someone else got stuck, very stuck.

Sometimes bad habits or behaviors learned through childhood experiences or relationships can leave people stuck in an emotional rut, doomed to make the same mistakes, even when there’s an awareness of this and even sadness or frustration. And sometimes obsession blinds a person to everything else except the object of that obsession.

ER: The relationship between Leopold and Loeb is central to the narrative of your story, can you describe how you see this relationship and how it evolved over time?

BP: I think at first, at least on the surface, it looked like a good thing, they had enough similarities, and being in college at such a young age they were basically in the same boat, but the cracks started appearing almost at once and widening. In my novel,  Leopold sees Loeb as a fantasy come to life. But that fantasy figure and the real Richard Loeb are two very different personalities. And that’s a very big problem, and an even bigger one when Leopold just can’t let go of the fantasy.

ER: Your characters are all very distinct, did you have a favorite character you enjoyed writing dialogue for in this book?

BP: Yes, Loeb when I first read about his manner of speaking and suddenly changing subjects it reminded me of those old screwball comedies from the 1930s. So I visualized him, at least in the early years of my novel, as a sort of male version of Carole Lombard in My Man Godfrey.

There was another character I also enjoyed very much, but I’m afraid of saying too much and giving spoilers, so let me just say this person represented hope and what might have been. I know from personal experience what it feels like to live without hope, or at least to have that feeling, and I found this character very comforting, inspiring and peaceful but in a bittersweet way.

ER: Do you remember what it was that made you interested in Melvin Wolf and sparked him becoming such a central character?

BP: Of all the ABCD crimes, he stood out to my mind as the most interesting. Originally he was not intended to be a character, but it was the combination of the mystery surrounding his death, the family clothing business, his interest in charity and theater that just set the creative wheels of my mind turning. 

I still wish I knew more about him and what actually happened to him, and I became very fond of him while I was creating this character.  I unexpectedly had the chance to talk to one of his descendants, and while very little is actually known about Melvin, she told me it was a belief passed down in the family that he was gay.

She also told me there had been other gay men in the family who had been open and accepted in eras where that was generally not the case. I liked the idea of creating this mature and confident young man who was comfortable in his own skin, in being himself, and loved and supported by his family, to contrast the childishness, insecurities, and dysfunction of Leopold and Loeb, and the embarrassment and shame they felt whenever there were rumors about their relationship.

ER: What were the best and the worst things about writing this book?

BP: The best thing was definitely getting to delve so deeply into the subject. I got to explore and learn so much, not just about Leopold and Loeb, but about the times they lived in, the pop culture of the period, psychology, sexuality, just so many things. 

The worst thing was formatting the book, that was an absolute nightmare. So traumatic I’m not sure I will ever write another! 

And, on a more personal level, watching my father change and disappear into rapid onset dementia. But the hallucinations and delusions he experienced did help me create the hallucinatory scenes that Nathan Leopold experiences in my novel. Not in terms of the subject matter, my father’s were completely different, but the vividness and confusion. Ultimately, it’s up to the reader to decide what exactly Leopold’s hallucinations are, whether they are dreams, supernatural, psychiatric, or a manifestation of the conscience he rejects and claims not to have.

Fun fact, I always try to include a ghost story in each of my novels because it was a book of ghost stories that first inspired my interest in history. So to anyone who reads any of my books, happy ghost hunting!

Thank you to Ms. Purdy for talking with me about her new book!

To learn more about the book go to:

This interview was originally posted at the below site.

https://loebandleopold.wordpress.com/


Vincent’s Women: The Untold Story of the Loves of Vincent Van Gogh by Donna Russo Book Tour! @SilverDaggerBookTours #VincentVanGogh #HistoricalFiction #VincentsWomen @AuthorDonnaRusso

What if everything we think we know about Vincent van Gogh is all lies?

Vincent’s Women:

The Untold Story of the Loves of Vincent Van Gogh

by Donna Russo

Genre

 Historical Biographical Women’s Fiction

Donna Russo's 'Vincent's Women' is the untold story of Vincent's loves: how they shaped his life, his art, and his death. It writes against the 'myths, ' exploring the possibility that none of them are true. It is the only novel to bring into question his sexuality, how he lost his ear, who he lost it for, and how he might have died, all through the eyes of a woman. We learn of Her; we learn all of it through Her.

The story is guided by Johanna van Gogh Bonger, Vincent's sister-in-law, as she decides to reveal the truth about Vincent to her son. We are then taken on a journey through Vincent's life, each section bringing a pivotal moment of Vincent's life alive while showing us the part she played in bringing it about. Between each woman, our guide, Johanna, gives us the transitional periods, right up to his death, which is now in question.

Hundreds of the nearly thousand letters between Vincent van Gogh and his brother Theo, now considered one of the greatest documents of the human experience, were used to help construct this novel, its narrative, and dialogue, especially the dialogue of Vincent himself.

Vincent van Gogh is one of the most well-known artists of all time. The world knows of his madness, traumas, and suicide. But what if all that we know isn't true? What if this knowledge is based on rumors and nothing more? What if his true story is vastly different when based on factual material and forensic information? What if the truth of Vincent's life-his madness and his genius-is defined by his never-ending search for love?

Advance Praise:

“Arresting…masterful…  a provocative and compelling look at one of history’s most enigmatic artists.”  -Publishers Weekly

 “A symphonic novel that sheds new light on an elusive genius.” -Kirkus Reviews 

“Vincent’s Women represents historical fiction at its best…astute, thought-provoking, and revealing.” -Midwest Book Review

“One of the most wonderful books about an artist I have ever read." -Stephanie Cowell, Author of Claude and Camille: a novel of Monet, and Marrying Mozart. Recipient American Book Award.

“A powerful and satisfying read." -Lynn Cullen, Bestselling Author of The Woman with the Cure and Mrs. Poe

“The writing and dialogue are all so well done, and the use of a fictional narrative makes it all feel authentic. Very highly recommended.” -Readers' Favorite 5-star Review

“This novel is not just a book; it is a masterful painting in itself, portraying the vibrant, volatile, and often tragic life of one of history's most renowned artists.” -5-Star Amazon Review

“This is historical fiction at its best…a tour de force!” -5-Star Goodreads Review

“This is easily the best book I’ve read this year!” -5-star NetGalley Review

A Foreword Reviews Editorial Selection 

FINALIST Next Generation Indie Book Awards

Amazon * Apple * B&N *  Kobo * Bookbub * Goodreads

She held the squalling baby in her arms, one not of this world for more than seconds. Her grasp loose and low. Its warmth like that of the March wind.

“A fine, healthy baby you have there, missus.” The plump midwife wiped her hands of the blood and fluid upon a rag. “What will you be calling him?”

Anna looked down at her second-born son wiggling in her arms. The fuzz upon his head the red clay color of the Carbentus family. 

“Vincent. It is Vincent.”

“But—”

“Anna, are you sure?” Her husband stood in the doorway, his first glimpse of wife and son in his eyes. The white collar of his profession encircling his throat. “Is it wise, for you, for our son? This one lives. Should it bear the name of the one that did not?”

“It is Vincent,” Anna said. That and no more.

*

Months later the house echoed a repetitive refrain. 

“Missus, the babe needs you.”

“I am needed elsewhere at the moment.”

2

Dorus had thought it too soon. He’d agreed with the doctor. The midwife. 

The first Vincent had only been in the ground three months when Anna asked for the resumption of marital relations. She did not ask for the pleasure of it. She rarely thought of the pleasure. It was her duty. 

Anna never spoke of her pain. The depth of it. Her melancholia a family trait. One that slayed her stoicism. Dared to tremble her stiff upper lip. She need not speak of it. She could not. Emotions, especially dark ones, were meant to be hidden. Locked away inside. It was what she had been taught. It was what she would teach. 

No one ever taught her how to deal with the death of a child. 

In the three months after the birth and death of the first Vincent, Anna paid little attention to visitors. Made few visits.

She often sat at the piano for hours. Often playing the same gloomy tune. Again, and again.

Dorus,  a reverend three years her senior, knew. She could see the knowledge of her in his eyes. He knew her want was not of him but what he could give her.

Anna thought of another child not only as a panacea to her pain but as a replacement for what she had lost. 

If only it had worked.

*

“Vincent,” Anna called to her young son from the shadows of the open front door. Nicely. Others could hear. She hid in the darkness of the threshold. She hid her darkness.

“How many times have I said that you are not allowed to play with the street children?” Inside the parsonage, door closed, she spoke as she pleased. “Do you refuse to listen, or do you not understand?”

Five-year-old Vincent stared up at his mother. Did she see fear or anger in his eyes? He said not a word.

“You will ruin the family name associating with those dirty urchins.”

Their good name; a cross high up on a main wall. 

Vincent remained mute. Silence was an argument in itself.

Anna loved all her children. What mother did not? She did not love them all the same. She did not deny it. She did not apologize for it. She mothered them all, nonetheless. But not the same. Did she see him as a child much like the child she had been? Anna was one in this world that saw only what she wished to. She saw Vincent grow sullen and solemn, an unremitting challenge.

“If we could do whatever we wanted,” she warned him as she warned all her children, “unharmed, unseen, untroubled…wouldn’t we stray further and further from the right path?”

The child gave her not a word to whip him with.

“To the kitchen, Vincent,” she instructed. The words hissing out between her teeth. “You will scrub the floor. With your hands. On your knees.”

Vincent went without complaint. If only he had complained.


Donna Russo is the bestselling author of historical fiction, women’s fiction, and fantasy including the international bestselling Novels of Newport: Gilded Summers and Gilded Dreams as well as her latest release, Vincent’s Women.

 Her critically acclaimed work has been praised with multiple awards and has received a starred review in Publishers Weekly. (For more awards and reviews, please visit https://www.authordonnarusso.com/books). 

Additionally, Donna worked as a model and actor since the age of seventeen, working on such projects as Martin Scorsese’s The Departed and Showtime’s Brotherhood. Donna is also an award-winning screenwriter, ghostwriter, and painter. She holds two degrees from the University of Rhode Island. Her two sons Devon, an opera singer; and Dylan, a chef—will always be her greatest works.  

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Courting the Sun: A Novel of Versailles by Peggy Joque Williams Audiobook narrated by Mallory Fuccella Blog Tour! @peggyjoque @thecoffeepotbookclub @cathiedunn

#HistoricalFiction #Versailles #LouisXIV #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

 

Book Title

  Courting the Sun: A Novel of Versailles


Author

  Peggy Joque Williams


Publication Date

  May 9th, 2024


Publisher

Black Rose Writing


Pages

  389


Genre

Historical Fiction


Any Triggers

Rape Scene, Spousal Abuse



“A rich journey through 17th century France in all its aspects—its bucolic countryside, the still-unmatched splendor of the court of Louis XIV, and the struggling French colony in Canada.”
~ Margaret George, New York Times bestselling author of Elizabeth I, The Autobiography of Henry VIII & The Memoirs of Cleopatra


France, 1670. On her sixteenth birthday, Sylvienne d’Aubert thinks her dream has come true. She holds in her hands an invitation from King Louis XIV to attend his royal court. However, her mother harbors a longtime secret she's kept from both her daughter and the monarch, a secret that could upend Sylvienne’s life.


In Paris, Sylvienne is quickly swept up in the romance, opulence, and excitement of royal life. Assigned to serve King Louis's favorite mistress, she is absorbed into the monarch's most intimate circle. But the naïve country girl soon finds herself ill-prepared for the world of intrigue, illicit affairs, and power-mongering that takes place behind the shiny façade of Versailles.


This debut historical novel from Peggy Joque Williams captures the vibrancy and quandaries of 17th century life for a village girl seeking love and excitement during the dangerous reign of the Sun King.


Universal Buy Link

https://books2read.com/u/mqk0r9 


Barnes & Noble

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/courting-the-sun-peggy-joque-williams/1144842024?ean=9781685134129 


Bookshop.org

Black Rose Writing

https://www.blackrosewriting.com/historicaladventure/courtingthesun  


This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Peggy Joque Williams is the author of Courting the Sun: A Novel of Versailles and co-author of two mystery novels, On the Road to Death’s Door and On the Road to Where the Bells Toll, written under the penname M. J. Williams.


She is an alumnus of Michigan State University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 


A retired elementary school teacher and avid researcher, Peggy's fascination with genealogy and her French-Canadian, European, and Native American ancestry inspires her historical fiction. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin.


Website

https://peggywilliamsauthor.com/ 

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https://www.amazon.com/stores/Peggy-Joque-Williams/author/B0CV7S8M24 

Goodreads

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4900279.Peggy_Joque_Williams  


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