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Wednesday, 8 July 2026

My Coffee Pot Book Tour Guest: The Making of Marigold McGrath by Carrie Hayes



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Wander through worlds real and fictional,
meet interesting people, visit exciting places
and find good books to enjoy along the way!


About the Book

Book Title:  The Making of Marigold McGrath
Series: Freed (Marigold is book one- and Freed is a title which is still TBC)
Author Name:  Carrie Hayes
Publication Date:  April 29, 2026
Publisher:  HTPH PRESS
Pages: 332
Genre:  Historical fiction

Any Triggers: grief, war, loss

New York City, 1937. Seventeen-year-old Marigold McGrath is coming undone.

Her mother is dead. Her father is drawn to dangerous politics. The only place she feels joy is behind a camera — where she can frame the world on her own terms.

After a series of her own missteps, she reinvents herself in London: mentored by a celebrated émigré photographer, photographing Kindertransport children, working alongside Edward R. Murrow. She falls in love with Joop, a charming Dutch student, and shrugs off the war gathering around her.

Then the Blitz begins.

Joop vanishes into the Dutch Resistance. And Marigold — who has always preferred to photograph the world as she wishes it were — must finally decide what kind of woman, and what kind of witness, she is willing to become.

A sweeping WWII coming-of-age novel set in wartime London.

For readers of Kristin Hannah, Kate Quinn, and SL Beaumont's The War Photographers

Praise:

"I read a lot of historical novels ... this one was one of my favorites. From the characters to the setting to the actions depicted I thoroughly enjoyed the journey—I really didn’t want it to end!" 
~ Netgalley Review 5*

"The Making of Marigold McGrath by Carrie Hayes is the tale of a well to do American seventeen year old sent to Europe just prior to World War II. The book is exquisitely written with a well paced dialogue. The characters are well formed and interesting. Sprinkled throughout the book are bits from news outlets that help set the larger context for the reader - they are well timed and helpful. Great read, well worth it!" 
~ Goodreads Review 5*

"The Making of Marigold McGrath explores a rarely examined aspect of WWII: the complex journeys to maturity of young adults in war-torn Europe as they seek human connection and meaning. Marigold finds both, using her skills as a photographer to document the stories of refugee children. With gobs of historical references and vivid imagery, interlaced with intrigue and romance, The Making of Marigold McGrath is a great read!" 
~ Goodreads Review 5*


Buy Links:

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This book is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.


Author Bio: 

Carrie’s first two novels, Naked Truth or Equality and Well Dressed Lies, follow the lives of the iconoclastic suffragist sisters, Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin.

Carrie lives with her husband and two spoiled dogs in a rambling Victorian house just outside of New York City. 


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read an excerpt

1936 WINTER NEW YORK CITY

The cinema was nearly deserted, and the two girls took the best seats in the house. They opened their bags of peanuts and chocolate covered raisins, silently munching until the movie got to their favorite part.

Marigold mouthed along with the woman on the screen who spoke first. “Not because I love England, but because it will pay me better.” She continued, The very brilliant agent of a certain foreign power on the point of obtaining a secret vital to your air defense.

Trude whispered, “I tracked two of his men to that music hall. Unfortunately, they recognized me.” The two girls took bites of their candy. Trude continued, “That’s why they’re after me now.

Marigold smiled from ear to ear. She loved this part. “You ever heard of a thing called persecution mania?

Trude’s eyes grew wide and she said, “You don’t believe me?” As if from nowhere, the usher came over and shushed them.

Marigold scowled at him and turned back to Trude. “Frankly I don’t. 

They had been doing this for days now. Rather than go to math class, they skipped school instead. How it was that nobody reported them must have been because they were the kind of girls who were rarely in trouble. They did well enough that their absences didn’t seem to matter. So, for two weeks running, they faithfully bought tickets for the 2:55 show and watched The 39 Steps until they knew it cold.

Afterwards, they stood by the window outside the ladies’ room, where one could see the traffic below.

Trude stopped Marigold and said, “Go and look down into the street then.” She always said this with a campy accent, like her father’s. Trude’s father was Swiss. Her late mother had been British and Marigold thought everything about Trude was glamorous in the most spectacular way.

Marigold pretended to be afraid. “Are they there?

Trude looked terrified. “Yes. I’d hoped I’d shaken them off. I’m going to tell you something which is not very healthy to know. But now that they have followed me here, you are in it as much as I am.

Then she grabbed Marigold’s hand and they bolted down the stairs, out through the back door gasping and chuckling on the short walk to the pharmacy.

When they arrived, Trude stopped short. “Oh, mein Gott!”

“What is it?”

“It’s Will Carrington!” Trude pointed to the counter.

“I love him.” Marigold spoke with as much gravity as she could muster. It was part of their shtick. Whenever Trude saw a boy they knew, Marigold would simply say, “I love him.”

These declarations of love always made Trude laugh, then respond by either sticking something up her nose, or putting her spectacles on sideways. Anything, anything to make Marigold laugh back and Trude look like a freak.

Silently, they went to the counter. “Oh hi, Will,” Marigold said, in her most modest, simple style. Trude looked away.

Will was blonde, handsome, an athlete. He was in the boys’ section at school, so they rarely saw him outside of class. “Hi.” He leaned past Marigold. “Hi Trude,” which didn’t surprise Marigold. All the boys were in love with Trude, who was beautiful, smart, and kind.

Trude turned to face Will. She’d stuck a raisin into each nostril, so they hung out just the smallest amount. “Will, hi!”

Will stopped short of recoiling. He paid his tab and said, “See you.” Then gestured to his own nose, discreetly, for Trude’s benefit.

She continued to smile, oblivious. “See you tomorrow.”

“Girls.” Home was on Riverside Drive, where Marigold’s mother stood in the foyer, surrounded by boxes. Some were on the floor, others stacked upon the table, which normally held only letters and an orchid. On top of the boxes were large oblong tickets indicating their contents. The tickets were stamped with round and dashed holes, like eyelet made of cardstock.

Marigold opened one of the boxes. “What are they?”

There had to be thousands inside. She passed a dozen cards over to Trude, who fanned herself with them.

“These could be dollahs, thousands of dollahs, nicht so, Schatze,” Trude said. 

“Jahwohl, they could.” Marigold held up a card to the chandelier, examining the tiny square holes in the light. She held it over the face of her friend and it created dashes and dots upon Trude’s skin. She moved to look through the dashes at her mother. Cool and elegant in her grey silk dress, with her creamy colored pearls and her white, white skin.

“They’re some sort of punch cards, darling,” her mother said. “They’re for your father.”

“I love them,” Marigold said.

Trude raised an eyebrow. “Even more than Will Carrington?”

Marigold bit her lip to keep from laughing. Her mother didn’t know about her silly crushes. “Yes, even more than he.” Marigold spread the cards out upon the table. They looked vast and impersonal, like in that film. What was it? Metropolis. Oh, yes, she thought, just like Metropolis. “Say, Moms, how about I take some pictures of you and Trude with these cards?”

“Aren’t you girls supposed to be doing your algebra or something?”

“Yes, but let me take your picture first, Moms, and you should wear that dress, you know, with the print just like these cards.”

“Marigold.” She loved the way her mother folded the R in the word Marigold. It was always under the tongue with a delicate precision used by those whose English is flawless albeit foreign.

“Come on, Momsy. You’ll be the living embodiment of industry, and Trude will be the future. It’ll be fun!”

Her mother chuckled and left the room, only to reemerge in her dress with the printed dashes and circles just like the punch cards. In her hand was a large silk scarf printed with the same design.

“We’ll stack them like this. Then Trude, lean on them here and look up at Momsy, like so.”

Marigold opened her camera case. She looked through the lens and adjusted the aperture. Her models struck a pose. The light in the foyer was bright, bright. Her mother was cool, aristocratic, and Trude simply brimming with life. Both of them were beautiful. Marigold wound the film and pressed the button.

“Perfect,” she said and wound the film again.

Suddenly, her mother waved an arm and the scarf fluttered outward, like a wing. Trude moved her own arms upward.

“Wonderful!” Marigold pressed the button. “Wonderful!”

She did it again, then her models adjusted their poses in varying degrees, leaning away and toward each other.

“Fabulous!”

“What are you doing? Put those down.” Marigold’s father stood in the doorway. “Don’t touch those. Put the camera down.” Suddenly, he roared, “I said put the camera down!”

“Sorry.” Marigold looked down at the ground. There was a tense silence It was the same silence which often occurred when Marigold’s parents were in the same room.

Her mother said, “She was merely experimenting.”

“Not with my cards, she’s not. Stupid girl.”

Ta gueule, Arnold.” Her mother had been from Arlon, in Belgium. But she rarely spoke French. “Don’t talk to her so.”

Marigold watched her mother go into the kitchen as Trude gathered her coat and slipped out of the apartment.

Make amends, Marigold warned herself. “Excuse me, Dad.” She stacked the cards and returned them to their boxes. “I just thought—”

“Don’t think. They’re not for you.”

“Sorry.”

“They’re for my German clients.” He glanced at himself in the mirror, his reflection confirming his golden hair and hazel eyes were still handsome, still distinguished.

“Sorry,” she said again. “What are they used for?”

“These cards store information. Who is doing what and how much of it they’re doing. Like who’s buying how many apples, or how much money is withdrawn from a bank. Who lives where in what part of town. It’s the latest technology, Marigold. They revolutionize how records are kept. And they come from IBM. They’re the future. Not props for a childish fashion show.” With a small nod, he took a lapel pin out of his pocket. “Help me with this.” He held it out to her and Marigold obliged, fastening it behind the worsted wool as he added, “I’m going to present them at tonight’s dinner.”

She turned the pin. The black lines echoed themselves as they had when the symbol meant good fortune, in Asian religions, long, long before it was used by the German government. Marigold rotated the pin the other way, so the black lines inside the white circle with the red background appeared in a more upright position.


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via https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/

(Helen might not have read this title yet)

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https://mybook.to/COURAGE-Anthology

You might also like books written by Helen Hollick 


cosy mysteries : historical fiction
nautical supernatural adventure 
1066 : King Arthur
ghosts : non-fiction
 anthologies 

2025 annual award winner

THANK YOU!

Monday, 6 July 2026

My Coffee Pot Book Tour Guest: Rose Ann Woolpert - Mrs R. Pacheco



Welcome to my Blog!
Wander through worlds real and fictional,
meet interesting people, visit exciting places
and find good books to enjoy along the way!




About the Book
Book Title: Mrs. R. Pacheco: The Untold Story of Playwright and California First Lady Mary McIntyre

Author Name: Rose Ann Woolpert
Publication Date: May 26, 2026
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 252
Genre: Historical Fiction / Literary Fiction

Mrs. R. Pacheco is a sweeping story of love, ambition, and colliding cultures in the American West, inspired by the actual life of playwright, novelist, and California first lady Mary McIntyre Pacheco. 

It is 1859, and the glittering promise of the California Gold Rush has faded into dust, leaving behind a land suspended between ambition and uncertainty.

Into this shifting world steps Mary Catherine "Molly" McIntyre, a young woman newly unmoored by loss, carrying both the weight of family duty and the quiet, persistent call of her own dreams.

Based on the remarkable life of Mary McIntyre Pacheco, Mrs. R. Pacheco unfolds as an intimate portrait of a woman caught between cultures, expectations, and the fragile hope of self-determination. When Molly marries Romualdo Pacheco, a Californio statesman destined to become California's first Hispanic governor, her life is swept into a world both foreign and exhilarating, where love must contend with tradition, and identity is shaped by forces beyond her control.

As Molly navigates the complexities of marriage, society, and a rapidly changing California, she discovers within herself a fierce creative spirit that refuses to be silenced. Her journey from grieving daughter to pioneering novelist and playwright becomes a testament to resilience, illuminating the quiet strength required to carve a voice in a world not yet ready to hear it.

Rich in historical detail and alive with emotional depth, this novel evokes the textures of nineteenth-century California, from its sunlit landscapes to its deeply rooted cultural divides. Through Molly's eyes, readers are drawn into a story of longing, reinvention, and the delicate balance between belonging and becoming.

Both sweeping and deeply personal, Mrs. R. Pacheco is a story of love shaped by circumstance, ambition tempered by sacrifice, and the enduring courage it takes to stand between worlds and claim a life as one's own.


Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link: 




Author Bio:
Rose Ann Woolpert is drawn to questions history leaves unanswered. As an author whose work is grounded in fact and shaped by imagination, she writes stories that explore how individuals navigate change, loss, ambition, and identity.
Her writing is often inspired by California history, particularly the lives of women whose stories risk being lost to memory. Family recollections, historical records, and careful research inform her work, while fiction allows space to imagine motives, choices, and inner lives beyond the historical record.

Author Links:

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Historium Press Author Page: 
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read an excerpt
Excerpt  2:

Not everyone reached California by prairie schooner. Molly and her family traveled by steamship and crossed the soggy jungles of the Isthmus of Panama by train.

The Carolina steamed across the Caribbean toward Central America and eventually reached the Panamanian coastline. There, the crewmen dropped anchor at Aspinwall, a tiny, waterlogged settlement at the eastern terminus of the Panama Pacific Railroad.

Molly stepped out onto the flat, soggy island at the mouth of the Chagres River, and her heart sank. Before her lay a cluster of sorry buildings perched on rotted wood pilings.

“What in the world?” She lifted a hand to cover her nose, but the oppressive heat and humidity made it impossible to escape the stench of mud and decay. “It smells terrible here.”

“Oh, my goodness, what a miserable place,” Lizzie said.

“This heat is unbearable,” Joanna said. “And can you believe all the insects?”

The air was alive, and the bugs were after blood. Molly tried shooing away the clouds of sand flies and mosquitoes but met with little success. Thankfully, she’d draped her face and neck with gauze netting so that her long cotton skirt, sunbonnet, gloves, shoes, and thick cotton stockings covered every inch of skin.

“That must be our train.” Mother was pointing toward a small engine at rest on a set of narrow iron rails. “Let’s hope we board soon.”

Rusty tracks led to a tin-roofed depot building next to an expanse of wet, marshy mudflats. A few workers were covered with sweat, hard at work transferring heavy bundles of mail. Others loaded baggage from the steamship onto the waiting locomotive. Some of the westbound passengers were growing impatient.

“When will we board our train?” asked a rotund, red-faced fellow. Sweat dripped off his face, his clothes were soaked with perspiration, and he looked highly uncomfortable. “We deserve better than this, considering the cost of our tickets.”

“We all want to be away from this place,” said an older man with a thin, graying beard and droopy mustache. “It appears there’s a shortage of labor. Unless you wish to pitch in and help load the freight, there is nothing to be done for it but to sit and wait.”

Another traveler pulled a damp linen kerchief from his pocket and began wiping away the water beading on his forehead and dripping from his nose.

“Yes, sir,” he said. “He’s absolutely right. Complaining won’t help a bit. Besides, you should be grateful for the train. I reckon you never heard ’bout all it took to cross this isthmus before it was finished.”

“Charlie and me, we crossed here in fifty-one,” said a man who was using a ragged canvas hat to swat at a swarm of flies. “It was risky business back then. All we could think of was getting to the gold, and the only way upriver was to paddle yerself and yer gear in a dugout canoe. Ain’t that so, Charlie?”

His companion squinted and spit a mouthful of tobacco juice into a muddy puddle next to his nearly worn-out boots. “Yep, then ’twas over the mountains on the back of a mule. Had to fight off bandits, didn’t we? Barely escaped with our skins.”

“’Sides them robbers, poisonous water snakes and hungry gators wanted nothin’ more than havin’ us for dinner.”

Charlie nodded and scratched at his scraggly, juice-stained yellow beard. “Glad we’re goin’ through the jungle by daylight this time. Too many ghosts in there. Hundreds, maybe thousands, died puttin’ in them rails. Swore I’d never cross through there again. But this train ain’t so bad. It’ll get us to Panama City lickety-split. Be there in just a few hours.”

He gave a toothless grin and spit again.

Molly turned and went to stand with Mother. She wasn’t sure if she believed in ghosts, but the place felt eerie enough to be full of them. Mossy vines draped the mangrove trees like weird, shadowy veils, and the air itself seemed haunted. Seasickness or not, she looked forward to reaching the Pacific Ocean as soon as possible.

Mother was also growing impatient. She decided to go inside the depot to ask when they might expect to board. A few minutes later, she emerged from the building with one of the railroad officials.

“Girls,” she said, “we’re ready to depart. This gentleman promises to find us a place where we can sit together.”

They boarded the train, the conductor showed them their seats, and they settled in as best they could.

Lizzie was growing peevish. “This metal bench is not at all comfortable,” she said.

“Upholstery would rot in this humidity,” Molly snapped irritably. “Be glad you have somewhere to sit.” She considered reminding Lizzie of their good fortune. They could be following a Conestoga wagon across the prairies, blistering the soles of their feet on the Oregon Trail.  



Follow the tour:

Twitter / X Handle: @cathiedunn
Instagram Handle: @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #BiographicalFiction #LiteraryFiction #AmericanHistoricalFiction #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

Tour Schedule Page:


(Helen might not have read this title yet)

scroll down to leave a comment...


https://mybook.to/COURAGE-Anthology

You might also like books written by Helen Hollick 


cosy mysteries : historical fiction
nautical supernatural adventure 
1066 : King Arthur
ghosts : non-fiction
 anthologies 

2025 annual award winner

THANK YOU!