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Tuesday, 9 November 2021

My Coffee Pot guest today - Cryssa Bazos


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Wander through wonderful worlds
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meet interesting people,
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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.

    Social Media Links:





    FOLLOW THE TOUR

    Twitter Handle: @CryssaBazos @maryanneyarde
    Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #historicalsuspense #TheKnot #StuartAge #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub



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    Monday, 8 November 2021

    Heidi Eljarbo and Hidden Masterpiece my Coffee Pot Guest

    Let's start the week with a mystery...



    [Helen] Hello Heidi - what are you going to share with us today?

    [Heidi] Today, I’d like to talk about mysteries. Unsolved problems. Questions about who, where, when, how, and why? Strange and not known things that we try to explain or even understand. 

    [Helen] Ooh, that sounds interesting..!

    [Heidi] There’s a feel of several mysteries in my novel called Hidden Masterpiece.

    · Where is the baroque painting hidden? How is our heroine Soli going to find it? And if she does, how will she preserve the old artwork?
    · Who is the model in the painting? What happened to her? In what way is she connected to previous paintings Soli and her friends in the resistance group have already found?
    · What is the significance of the word chiaroscuro in this series? How does the old Italian term for a painting technique using a strong contrast of light and dark compare with the effects of war…of good and bad?
    · The Ruber family has kept a ledger of their acquisitions since the end of the sixteenth century. What is special about this old journal, and why does it become a focal object for both German and Norwegian leaders in Norway during WWII?

    These are some of the things that keep us flipping pages. We want to know what happens. We want a satisfactory solution.

    I’d like to tell you a little more about the ledger I mentioned above.

    Ever since the first book in the Soli Hansen Mysteries, Soli has been concerned about an old book connected to the artwork she’s trying to preserve and keep away from the enemy. For three hundred and fifty years this book of personal assets and investments has been kept by the head of the Jewish-Italian Ruber family. The Rubers were wealthy merchants with strong family ties. Because of their demanding business and the looming threat of religious persecution, they were forced to move several times. We first meet them in Malta, then in Antwerp, and in Hidden Masterpiece they end up in Amsterdam. The ledger is carefully kept and follows the generations.

    [Helen] But Hidden Masterpiece is a WWII story, isn’t it? 

    [Heidi] Yes, the novel takes place in Norway in 1944, but it also has a dual timeline. Five sections of the book are woven into the storyline and takes the reader back to the seventeenth century and the dealings of the Ruber family, especially the main character Annarosa. And because the ledger is still intact in 1944 and has important information about hidden masterpieces, it becomes a vital but also dangerous tool for those who try to find the paintings. Along with the entries of purchase—and shrouded in mystery—clues and riddles are written throughout the pages of the ledger in hopes that one day someone trustworthy will find and take care of the hidden treasures.

    I’ve left one mystery unsolved. It emerges during the last few pages of Hidden Masterpiece. But that’s a tale for the next book in the series.

    So, enjoy! I certainly loved writing this story for you.



    About the book:

    In this riveting third book in the Soli Hansen Mysteries series, a woman’s courage to follow her conviction during a horrible war leads her to the portrait of a young Jewish heiress painted three centuries earlier.

    Norway 1944. Art historian Soli Hansen has gone undercover to rescue masterpieces and keep them from falling into the hands of Nazi thieves. Working with a small resistance group led by her best friend Heddy, Soli will stop at nothing to thwart the efforts of the invaders of their scenic country. Trust and loyalty mean everything when working against a merciless enemy.

    Riddles and clues lead the way to a mysterious work of art. It’s a race against time, but Soli and her network refuse to give up. However, when news arrives that her sweetheart Nikolai is missing in action, she strives to concentrate on the demanding quest.

    From the streets of Oslo to the snow-covered mountains and medieval churches of Nume Valley, Soli takes risks larger than her courage, trying to preserve and hide precious art. But she must decide if it’s all worth losing the man she loves.

    Antwerp 1639. Fabiola Ruber’s daughter, Annarosa, wants to honor her mother’s last wish and have her portrait done by a master artist who specializes in the art of chiaroscuro. Her uncle writes to an accomplished painter in Amsterdam and commissions him to paint his beloved niece.

    Struggling with religious and social persecution, the Jewish Ruber family uproots once again and travels northward. On the way, they will sojourn in Amsterdam for Annarosa’s sitting in the master painter’s studio. But will they make it there? None of them can foresee the danger of such a journey.

    Buy Links: 
    This novel is available to read for free with #KindleUnlimited subscription. 




    About the Author:

    Heidi Eljarbo is the bestselling author of historical fiction and mysteries filled with courageous and good characters that are easy to love and others you don't want to go near.
    Heidi grew up in a home filled with books and artwork and she never truly imagined she would do anything other than write and paint. She studied art, languages, and history, all of which have come in handy when working as an author, magazine journalist, and painter.
    After living in Canada, six US states, Japan, Switzerland, and Austria, Heidi now calls Norway home. She and her husband have a total of nine children, thirteen grandchildren—so far—in addition to a bouncy Wheaten Terrier.
    Their favorite retreat is a mountain cabin, where they hike in the summertime and ski the vast, white terrain during winter.
    Heidi’s favorites are family, God's beautiful nature, and the word whimsical.

    Social Media Links:



    Follow the Tour

    Twitter Handle: @HeidiEljarbo @maryanneyarde
    Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #HistoricalMystery #DualTimeline #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub #solihansenmysteries



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