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Tuesday 9 November 2021

My Coffee Pot guest today - Cryssa Bazos


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    Inspired by a song, by Cryssa Bazos

    It all started with a song. Music inspires my creative Muse, and the writing doesn’t entirely flow until I’ve settled on a soundtrack. This time, however, it wasn’t a soundtrack that got me dreaming of characters and the story that would become Rebel’s Knot. It was one particular song.

    I’ve been a fan of the Irish band The Pogues for years, but one day, I ran across a song of theirs I had never heard before called Young Ned of the Hill. The Pogues had based their song an old folktale about an Irish Robin Hood figure named Éamonn Ó Riain (Edmund or Ned O’Ryan), an outlaw who was active in late seventeenth-century Tipperary, during the struggle to restore the dispossessed Catholic James II and overthrow the crowned Protestant monarch William II.

    The Pogues improvised on the story and placed their Ned earlier in the seventeenth-century during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. In their version, Ned became a rapparree after the English killed his family and confiscated his land. One line always stood out for me: “Noble men with wills of iron who are not afraid to die.

    In the mid-seventeenth century, these Irish soldiers were referred to as Tories, from the Irish Tóraidhe, or pursued men (the term rapparees, meaning a bandit or irregular soldier, was more common later in the century). These Irish brigades employed strike-and-run tactics to wear down the English and were quite successful at evading the enemy. They knew the landscape and used it to their advantage, such as losing their pursuers by slipping into bogs. The local populace also supported these troops with shelter and valuable information. Despite being mostly cut off from other Irish brigades, they all doggedly fought the English until they could no longer.

    An image formed in my mind of such a character, a man of iron who was not afraid to die. I had just finished writing my second novel, Severed Knot, which started in Ireland when English marauders seized a manor after killing the lord and taking his family prisoner. I imagined the heroine’s brother, an Irish soldier, coming by to check on his family and instead finding his uncle and aunt killed and his sister and the other women gone. I pictured him seeing the charred remains of a byre and a single cairn in the centre of a courtyard and facing an empty manor house. I could taste the fear he had for his missing sister and the rage as he viewed the destruction. Niall O’Coneill then vowed to tear apart Tipperary looking for his sister and avenge himself on the English responsible for the tragedy.

    It didn’t take long for the heroine to take shape, the only survivor of the attack. Áine Callaghan is a dairymaid in the uncle’s household. She keeps to herself, and the other maids in the household consider her strange with a touch of the fey. In fact, being a loner and spending time on her own is the reason she kept hidden from the English and survive the attack.

    Now I had both main characters and a tragedy to bind them together.




    ABOUT THE BOOK

    Ireland 1652: In the desperate, final days of the English invasion of Ireland . . .

    A fey young woman, Áine Callaghan, is the sole survivor of an attack by English marauders. When Irish soldier Niall O'Coneill discovers his own kin slaughtered in the same massacre, he vows to hunt down the men responsible. He takes Áine under his protection and together they reach the safety of an encampment held by the Irish forces in Tipperary. 

    Hardly a safe haven, the camp is rife with danger and intrigue. Áine is a stranger with the old stories stirring on her tongue and rumours follow her everywhere. The English cut off support to the brigade, and a traitor undermines the Irish cause, turning Niall from hunter to hunted. 

    When someone from Áine's past arrives, her secrets boil to the surface—and she must slay her demons once and for all.

    As the web of violence and treachery grows, Áine and Niall find solace in each other's arms—but can their love survive long-buried secrets and the darkness of vengeance?

    Trigger Warnings:
    Violence, references to sexual/physical abuse.

    Buy Links:
    Universal Amazon Links:  http://mybook.to/RebelsKnot


    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Cryssa Bazos is an award-winning historical fiction author and a seventeenth century enthusiast. Her debut novel, Traitor's Knot is the Medalist winner of the 2017 New Apple Award for Historical Fiction, a finalist for the 2018 EPIC eBook Awards for Historical Romance. Her second novel, Severed Knot, is a B.R.A.G Medallion Honoree and a finalist for the 2019 Chaucer Award. A forthcoming third book in the standalone series, Rebel's Knot, was published November 2021.

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