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Friday, 17 April 2026

My Coffee Pot Book Tour Guest: Deborah Swift The Enemy's Wife



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Wander through worlds real and fictional,
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About the Book
Book Title: The Enemy’s Wife
Series: Survivors of War Series
Author: Deborah Swift
Publication Date: 6th April 2026
Publisher: HQ Digital
Page Length: 380
Genre: Historical Fiction 

Trigger warnings: Murder and violence in keeping with the era.




'A fast-paced, beautifully written, and moving story. Refreshing to read a book set in a different theatre of war. Wartime Shanghai jumped off the page' CLARE FLYNN

A poignant story of the impossible choices we make in the shadow of war, for fans of Daisy Wood and Marius Gabriel. 

1941. When Zofia’s beloved husband Haru is conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army, she is left to navigate Japanese-occupied Shanghai alone.

Far from home and surrounded by a country at war, Zofia finds unexpected comfort in a bond with Hilly, a spirited young refugee escaping Nazi-occupied Austria.

As violence tightens its grip on the city, they seek shelter with Theo, Zofia’s American employer. But with every passing day, the horrors of war and Haru’s absence begin to reshape Zofia’s world – and her heart.

Can she still love someone who has become the enemy?



Readers love The Enemy's Wife:

'A gorgeous novel that will truly pull at your heartstrings' CARLY SCHABOWSKI

'I loved The Enemy’s Wife – a gripping, fast-paced and evocative story about the Japanese occupation of Shanghai during WW2 – and really rooted for the brave and selfless central character, Zofia. Highly recommended' ANN BENNETT

'Such an emotional and moving read, grounded in immaculate research that never overshadows the heart of the story' SUZANNE FORTIN


Buy Links: 

Universal Buy Link: mybook.to/EnemysWife

Amazon UK:  

Amazon US: 

Amazon CA: 

Amazon AU:  

Kobo: 

Audio: 


Author Bio:

Deborah used to be a costume designer for the BBC, before becoming a writer. Now she lives in an old English school house in a village full of 17th Century houses, near the glorious Lake District. Deborah has an award-winning historical fiction blog at her website www.deborahswift.com.

Deborah loves to write about how extraordinary events in history have transformed the lives of ordinary people, and how the events of the past can live on in her books and still resonate today.

Her WW2 novel Past Encounters was a BookViral Award winner, and The Poison Keeper was a winner of the Wishing Shelf Book of the Decade.

Author Links:

Amazon Author Page:
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read an excerpt
THE ENEMY’S WIFE (Extract 5)

Shanghai, 1941

Haru pinched his nose against the stench of rotting vegetation as he and the rest of the men rattled south through the countryside by train. The vast interior of the country had been flooded by the Chinese to stop the Japanese advance. The water had engulfed Henan, and Jiangsu, changing the course of the Yellow River, shifting it hundreds of miles to the south. Four thousand villages underwater, hundreds of thousands dead, and millions of peasants searching for somewhere to go. Talk about China shooting itself in the foot.

The railway line ran through this desolate land of stinking slurry, and still after all this time, the floating bodies of their Chinese enemies were a common, nauseating sight.

Haru thought of Japan, of its peaceful cherry-blossom lined gardens, of its Zen temples and onsens. He dreamt of those bathhouses, of the scouring of hot springs, of clean sweet-smelling skin, of jasmine soap and clean cotton yukatas. He thought of Zofia too, waiting for him in Kobe, of how they would start a family together once this war was over. If it was ever over. Impossible to imagine his shaking hands on her naked body. He gripped his fists as the train swayed, until the nails cut into his palms.

He'd had no concept of the vastness of China until coming here.

‘How much longer?’ his companion Yoshio asked.

‘Another hour.’

‘Do you know why we’re being deployed in Jinan?’

Haru shrugged. He’d learned never to question orders. ‘No, but I heard Chinese raiders keep trying to take the city back. We’re to be its defence.’

When he got off the troop train at Jinan he saw a city in ruins. The railway station was intact, but almost two thirds of the place was uninhabitable from earlier Japanese bombing. He wasn’t surprised; every city was indistinguishable from the next – each one a grey pile of rubble and dust, with shuttered streets where you had to step carefully, and you didn’t dare look too closely at the piles of rags on the ground, in case they were people.

Their barracks had been newly constructed but looked as if they had been there forever, so ingrained were they with grime blown off the streets.

Haru’s superior officer approached him after only one night in these desolate bunks. Haru shrank back but then found his backbone and stood straight. He’d been kicked until he bled by that same man.

‘Our commanding officer gave his life for the Emperor last night,’ he announced. ‘I am taking command in his place. You are therefore promoted to be my deputy.’

It hit Haru in the guts like a grenade. A shock wave that rippled up his spine. Best not to ask questions. He saluted as was expected, but knew this change in position would mean he’d have to inflict terror on his fellow men. Seasoned recruits were expected to beat new ones harshly, NCOs had to beat privates senseless, and officers were expected to beat NCOs unconscious. 

His commanding officer wasn’t done yet. ‘You will get your ration of amphetamines, too, a perk of the promotion.’

‘Thank you, sir.’ It was well known the officers got meth. Haru wondered if it helped, or whether it made everything brighter and more vivid. That he couldn’t bear.

‘Dismissed.’ 

Haru crumpled as soon as he’d gone. As it was, his body was already divorced from his mind. His former self was closed like a scroll in a cabinet, whilst his body was here in this hell on earth.

At night he would occasionally let his old self loose, to write to his mother.

Last night I went out to a field of Chinese milk vetch and lay down, thinking about home. It smelled like you, Mother. It was the only beautiful thing I have seen in weeks. The delicacy of flowers reminds me of you.

He dared not write to Zofia. That part of him, the part that was in love, would be spoiled if it had to witness the killing machine he’d become. And now he’d have to hurt his own men. He pressed his uniform sleeve hard to his eyes and tried not to weep.

Haru’s days at the checkpoints to the city went slowly, his spine stiff with tension, fearing a Chinese dagger in the ribs every time darkness fell. One day, his friend Yoshio did not return from his patrol. 

Broken by losing his only friend, and brimming with rage, Haru found the next Chinese person and disembowelled him alive as a lesson to the others.



Follow the tour:
Twitter Handles: @swiftstory @cathiedunn
Instagram Handles: @deborahswiftauthor @thecoffeepotbookclub 

Hashtags: #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub #TheEnemysWife #HistoricalFiction #WW2 #Shanghai

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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!

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Rachel's Random Resources Book Tour of: No More Tomorrows by Olivia Lockhart

Rachel's Random Resources
Book Tours
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
No More Tomorrows

Two eras. One aching heart.
1917 – At Cambridge University, American scholar Harry Turchin never expects to lose himself to desire. But Annie Mackenzie—soft-spoken, grieving, and luminous—claims his heart from their very first kiss. Their love is swift, fierce, and intoxicating. Married just days before Harry is sent to war, their passion is ripped apart when the trenches claim everything he knows, and Harry is thrown into a future that should not exist.

1967 – The free-spirited sixties are alive with rhythm, rebellion, and possibility. Harry awakens to a world he doesn’t recognise—and to Annalise Taylor, as bold and captivating as the era itself. Brilliant, independent, and achingly alive, she rouses a desire he thought belonged solely to the past. 

Caught between the love he was ripped away from and the passion he cannot resist, Harry is torn between two women, two lives, and two versions of forever. Because time will not bend twice … Or will it?

Sweeping from the blood-soaked battlefields of World War One to the fevered nights of the swinging sixties, No More Tomorrows is a sensual time-slip romance about desire, devotion, and the devastating power of love that refuses to be bound by time.


About the Author
 Olivia Lockhart (Livvie to her friends) is an English author who can’t quite decide if she wants to write contemporary romance, historical romance, or paranormal romance. So she writes them all, because it HAS to be romance!

She loves to write about the underdog, the one who got away, the bits of love stories we can all relate to.

When not writing she can be found drinking wine, cuddling with her beloved pooch, or with her head in a book.

Social Media Links – 

Writing Feminism Into Historical Fiction

by Olivia Lockhart

When I started writing Annalise, I knew one thing about her immediately - she would be a feminist.

What I didn’t realise at the time was just how much researching her world in the 1960s would make me reflect on the women who came before us - including my own mother.

I’ve always considered myself a feminist, so from the moment I began planning Annalise as a character, I knew she would be someone who fought for women’s rights.

For me, feminism has never been about rejecting love, relationships, or men themselves. One of the things I enjoyed most while writing Annalise was exploring her growing realisation that feminism and loving a man can absolutely go hand in hand. Feminists don’t necessarily dislike men - we challenge the systems that oppress us. We push back against inequality, patriarchy, and the everyday misogyny that women continue to encounter.

Writing a character like Annalise meant looking closely at what life was actually like for women in the 1960s. The research was fascinating, but also incredibly eye-opening. In many ways, society has come a long way, yet sometimes, when you look at the world today, it can feel as though progress doesn’t always move in a straight line.

While writing No More Tomorrows, I did soften certain realities of the time to make Annalise’s story possible. If her life had followed the strict expectations of the era, some parts of her independence would have been far more difficult to imagine.

To help shape that world, I drew heavily on my parents’ experiences growing up during the 1960s.

My mum, for example, married at seventeen. It wasn’t unusual at the time, and in many cases, it was the only realistic way for young couples to live together. “Living in sin,” as it was often called then, carried real social consequences. My parents both remember the rare couples who chose to live together unmarried, and how they were whispered about, judged, or quietly excluded by others in their community.

Some of the social customs from that era feel almost unbelievable now. Many pubs had separate rooms for women, something that seems astonishing today but was entirely normal at the time. My mum told me that she and her friends would never have dreamed of going to a pub alone for a drink. That simply wasn’t done. If you went to the pub, it was usually because your husband or boyfriend had taken you there.

So, although the 1960s are often remembered as a time of cultural awakening - free love, music, rebellion, and social change —-the reality in many small towns across the UK was quite different. In places like the one I grew up in, women were still expected to remain firmly within traditional roles.

Financial independence was also far more limited than many people realise today. Women couldn’t apply for credit cards or mortgages, and access to contraception was restricted to married women.

One story my mum shared with me during my research has stayed with me ever since. She remembered being in the maternity ward after having her first baby and seeing a young girl in absolute hysterics as her newborn was taken away from her, simply because she was unmarried. Listening to that story was heartbreaking. It’s difficult to imagine the pain and injustice of a moment like that.

Because of those realities, I knew that Annalise’s life in the novel required a little creative flexibility. In truth, a young woman living independently and inviting men back to her home in the 1960s would likely have faced serious backlash in many communities.

Even the academic world revealed surprising barriers during my research. Cambridge University, for example, has a complicated history when it comes to women. Women were allowed to attend lectures and borrow books as early as the 1920s, but they weren’t granted full degrees until 1948. Even more surprising, the final all-male college at Cambridge didn’t begin accepting women until as late as 1988.

Perhaps the biggest historical adjustment I had to make involved Churchill College, where Annalise proudly studies in the novel. In reality, the college didn’t admit its first female students until 1972.

So, while Annalise exists in the past, the spirit behind her character still matters today.

If there’s one thing I hope readers take from her story, it’s this - channel your inner Annalise. Keep questioning. Keep pushing forward. And never stop fighting for equality.

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thank you!


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!