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Monday, March 30, 2026

Review of The Scald Crow (Beyond the Faerie Rath Book 1) by Hanna Park

 



Calla left her life behind, haunted by a curse she cannot control. She seeks refuge in the land of a thousand hellos, Ireland, for a fresh start—a place where no one knows who or what she is.

Colm fled from Clonmara seven long years ago, but now it’s his father’s birthday, and the clan has gathered to celebrate the ould one. Each day brings back the memories that ruined him.

Saoirse dwells in the shadows of a lost love, unwilling to move on and unable to forget. The crystals say one thing, but the cold, hard truth tells another.

Ciarán walked away from the woman he loved for the fun, for the craic. He didn’t realize that one rash decision would impact the lives of so many, least of all his own.

Four broken hearts, brought together by the thread of love.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Desire Feels Inevitable and Love Refuses to Stay Innocent

I finished The Scald Crow with the lingering sense that some connections are never entirely chosen—that they exist before we recognise them, and once awakened, they cannot simply be set aside. What begins as a story shaped by grief and return gradually unfolds into something far more consuming, where attraction deepens into obsession and intimacy takes on a life of its own.

The novel wastes little time establishing the intensity between Calla and Colm. From their earliest interaction, there is a pull between them that feels immediate and instinctive, as though something has already begun before either of them fully understands it. Their first true moment together—occurring in a space that exists somewhere between waking and dreaming—captures this perfectly. Though neither moves in the physical world, what passes between them feels entirely real, setting the tone for a relationship that refuses to follow ordinary rules.

As the story progresses, that connection only deepens. The shared dreams they experience are not fleeting or symbolic, but vivid and emotionally charged, creating a space where restraint no longer applies. These encounters blur the boundary between reality and something more fluid, allowing their connection to grow in ways that feel both intimate and unsettling. When that same intensity carries into the waking world, it becomes more difficult to contain. Moments of closeness emerge suddenly, often in places or situations where they should not, giving their relationship a sense of urgency that feels almost beyond their control.

The narrative moves with a steady sense of escalation. What begins as attraction develops into something far more consuming, with each interaction carrying greater emotional and physical weight. The boundaries between control and surrender begin to blur, leaving both characters—and the reader—uncertain of where one ends and the other begins.

Beneath the intensity of the romance lies a deeper exploration of connection itself. The novel suggests that love is not always gentle or stabilising, but can be disruptive, transformative, and at times overwhelming. It raises the question of whether true connection is something we choose, or something that claims us regardless of our intentions.

The Scald Crow is of course more than a romance book, for their is wonderful fantasy element as well, which makes things all the more complicated for the protagonists! I enjoyed this book and I think it will certainly appeal to fans of this genre.


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Hanna Park


 I began my writing career in the pre-dawn of a winter morning while my husband snored like a train. We could call my husband the catalyst. If it weren’t for him, I would never have gone to the kitchen to make a pot of coffee, feed the cat, and sit on the loveseat in front of the fire. It was there, in those moments of wondrous quiet, that I did something I had never thought possible. I opened my laptop, and while the coffee went cold, I wrote a story. My husband had no idea that these sojourns to the loveseat in front of the fire would become a daily occurrence, that writing would become an obsession, but the cat knew. She knows everything.

I write stories that make you laugh, make you cry, and make you love. Thank you, friends, for reading!

In the beginning, there was an empty page.

I am a writer who lives in Muskoka, Canada, with a husband who snores, a hungry cat, and an almost perfect canine––he’s an adorable little shit.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Review of The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven (The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven trilogy) by Jennifer Ivy Walker

 


In this paranormal fantasy adaptation of the medieval legend of Tristan and Isolde, the rightful heir to the Irish crown must flee the wicked queen, finding shelter with a fairy witch who teaches her the verdant magic of the forest. Fate leads Issylte to the otherworldly realm of the Lady of the Lake and the Elves of Avalon, where she must choose between her life as a Celtic healer or fight to save her ravaged kingdom from the ruthless Black Widow Queen.

Tristan of Lyonesse is a Knight of King Arthur's Round Table who must overcome the horrors of his traumatic past and defend his kingdom of Cornwall against a Viking invasion from Ireland. When he becomes a warrior of the Tribe of Dana, a gift of Druidic magic might hold the key he seeks.

Two parallel lives, interwoven by fate. Haunted and hunted by the same Black Widow Queen.

Can their passion and power prevail?

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Legend Breathes and Destiny Begins to Stir

I finished The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven with the sense that I had stepped into the opening movement of something vast—an Arthurian tale where ancient forests, restless seas and uneasy thrones all seem to carry their own memories. This isn’t a quiet retelling of familiar legend. It hums with Celtic magic and political tension, as though the land itself knows that history is beginning to shift.

The story moves between courts, battlefields and hidden sanctuaries with an easy confidence. One moment we are among kings and rival knights, where loyalty and ambition collide beneath banners and steel; the next, we slip into the deeper world of Avalon and the old ways, where healing, prophecy and the whisper of ancient power linger just beyond the visible. The narrative never feels hurried, allowing each thread—political intrigue, personal destiny and mythic heritage—to gather its own quiet momentum.

At the heart of the novel stand two figures whose paths feel destined long before they fully cross. Issylte begins as a princess surrounded by courtly expectations and hidden dangers, yet there is always the sense that something older and stronger calls to her. Tristan’s journey, by contrast, is forged through discipline, honour and the sharp edge of betrayal. His rise as Cornwall’s Blue Knight carries both promise and shadow, reminding us how easily reputation and truth can be separated in a world shaped by power.

What gives the book its atmosphere is the way myth seeps into every corner of the story. The presence of Avalon, the quiet influence of prophecy and the lingering echo of Celtic magic create a world where destiny feels less like an idea and more like a current pulling the characters forward. Even moments of courtly ceremony seem to exist beside something older and wilder—something that remembers long before kings claimed their crowns.

Despite the sweep of legend and history, the emotions remain immediate. Alliances fracture, loyalties are tested and characters must decide whether they will follow duty, ambition or the deeper call of fate. The women in particular carry a quiet resilience, navigating power structures that would rather define them than listen to them while gradually discovering the strength of their own voices.

The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven is lush, atmospheric and layered with mythic promise. It feels like the first turning of a much larger wheel—one where love, prophecy and ancient magic will reshape the fate of kingdoms. I closed the final pages with the sense that destiny had only just begun to awaken.


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Jennifer Ivy Walker is an award-winning author of medieval Celtic, Nordic, and paranormal romance, as well as contemporary romance, historical fantasy, and WWII romantic suspense.

A former high school teacher and college professor of French with an MA in French literature, her novels encompass a love for French language, literature, history, and culture, including Celtic myths and legends, Norse mythology, Viking sagas, and Nordic lore.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

An excerpt from Quetzalcoatl: Time Stones Book II by Ian Hunter

 


Jessie Mason lives with her nose in the pages of history. But she is discovering that the past is a dangerous place where she doesn't belong, and knowledge alone is not going to save her.

Jessie’s life has become a series of terrible challenges. Now she must lead her friends in the hopeless task Grandfather set them: hunt down and destroy the Time Stones. But her leadership has already failed. Tip has left them and Abe has simply disappeared, while she and Kes are trapped in the heart of an ancient empire in turmoil.

Thrust into a fractured, threatened Mexica nobility, Jessie is immersed in a way of life, fascinating and disturbing in equal measure, yet powerless before the approaching Conquistadors and the impending clash of cultures.

Even as the fabulous city of Tenochtitlan descends into savage violence, Jessie’s determination to succeed is undiminished. But with world history taking a new, bloody direction before her, she is finally forced to decide which is more important: continuing the task or simply surviving.


Excerpt


Advancing slowly along the avenue was a procession of splendour and colour. Barefooted, in a bright red cloak and tunic, a man walked at its head, holding a golden staff in his outstretched arm. Following him were a dozen drab road sweepers. Jessie chuckled quietly. It didn’t seem to register that the dust and dirt they were sweeping, ended up in the faces of the kneeling crowd, who evidently weren’t allowed to move or protest. The street sweepers moved along, but Jessie’s attention had already been grabbed by what followed. She stared, enthralled, at the starburst headdresses of gold, flamboyant cloaks and tunics with dazzling feather work and animal furs. There was more gold: the greaves on their shins, armlets and bracelets, labrets in their lips, nose and ear rings. The lords, the princes, the kings of the empire, blinked yellow gold and they walked barefoot, in two silent, dignified columns, with their emperor Moctezuma between them. He sat upon a litter of silver and gold, studded with precious stones, and decorated with flowers. Four bearers, one on each corner, great nobles in their finest clothes and jewels, bore the emperor and his throne upon their shoulders. But all Jessie could see of the great man were his golden sandals and bare shins. A shimmering canopy of feathers shielded him from the sun, like one huge wing of the most fabulous bird. The litter swayed gently in time to the steps of the bearers, and the feathers gleamed green, gold and blue, outshining the manufactured decoration of the nobles.

The procession passed, the onlookers got to their feet and whispering voices steadily grew in volume.

“Look,” Jessie pointed to the lake, where an armada of canoes jostled for space along the causeway.

The leading conquistadors, four armoured horsemen, with banners on their lances, were almost at the end of the causeway. The two groups closed on each other until stately Mexica royalty and hardened Spanish adventurers finally came face to face on the edge of the island. It was still too far and too crowded to see anything of the meeting from the rooftop. Jessie drummed her fingers on the wall impatiently. She guessed there were words of welcome, perhaps gifts to be exchanged. Eventually, after what felt like an interminable time for pleasantries, the emperor’s litter rose again, turned, and with the two columns of nobles reformed, began its return journey. The crowd knelt once again. But Moctezuma’s passing wasn’t greeted by the silence it had commanded earlier. A low whisper continued and bowed heads turned to view the strange sights which followed.

Large, powerful dogs led the Spanish into Tenochtitlan. They crossed and re-crossed the street, investigating the unfamiliar scents. One barked, another growled, and the startled spectators edged back as far as the surrounding throng allowed.

Horseshoes rang sharp and loud, on the flagstones.

“What are they?” Tonauac whispered fearfully at her shoulder, hands over his ears.

The armour-clad horses were nervous with the tightly packed crowds on both sides. Their flanks were flecked with sweat and more than one snapped and snorted at the alarmed Mexicans.

“Those are horses,” Jessie replied.

The conquistadors had to fight to control their mounts, which they did with calm, confident authority. Jessie remembered Tip describing her first experience of horses. She appreciated how terrifying they must seem, and how astonished they would be to see the horses controlled so skilfully. Perhaps, she thought, command over these fearsome beasts was precisely the impression the Spanish wished to convey.

A single standard bearer followed. He swung the standard to the left and right, so the large white cloth snapped loudly open, before he launched it high and caught it cleanly when it fell back. He tossed it from left hand to right hand, and back again, and each time, the banner unfurled to display the large red cross of St James above an appreciative audience.

In steel helmets, shining breast plates, and drawn swords, a company of foot soldiers followed the banner. They marched eight abreast, crowding the avenue from one side to the other. Jessie saw scrapes and dents in their cuirass chest armour, repaired clothing still stained with the blood of battle, and bandages covering healing wounds. Unkempt hair and scruffy beards couldn’t hide their gaunt faces. But their eyes were clear, fixed and determined. They were rough, experienced fighters, and the silence which descended as they passed suggested the crowded spectators recognized the nature of these unwelcome visitors.

“What is this they wear?” Tonauac whispered. “It shines like silver.”

“Steel,” Jessie answered. “Much harder and sharper than silver.”

Another squadron of horses clattered past with jingling harness. The riders had steel helmets but dressed in simple shirts and jerkins of padded cotton. Each carried a long, steel tipped lance. Then came the last of the infantry, with crossbows, swords and muskets. Jessie noticed the conquistadors ignored the crowd who had come out to see them. She’d not seen any wave, not one gesture of greeting. Their attention was instead fixed on the buildings, the side streets and the canals: wary and on their guard.

A final group of horsemen brought up the rear. Alone, at the head, was a rider Jessie knew, beyond doubt, was Malinche: Hernan Cortés. It wasn’t the gold chain and medal which hung round his neck, or the gold tracing which decorated his armour, or that his horse’s steel skirts were more brightly polished. He was unremarkable in appearance, medium brown hair, minimal red-tinged beard and average height. It was the smile he wore, a smile of satisfaction, of success, which he bestowed upon the crowd with friendly confidence. Cortés engaged with the crowds as none of the others had. He was a leader, and he had accomplished his goal.


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Books have been an important part of my life as long as I can remember, and at 54 years old, that’s a lot of books. My earliest memories of reading are CS Lewis’, “The Horse and His Boy” – by far the best of the Narnia books, the Adventures series by Willard Price, and “Goalkeepers are Different” by sports journalist Brian Glanville. An eclectic mix. My first English teacher was surprised to hear that I was reading, Le Carré, Ken Follett, Nevil Shute and “All the Presidents’ Men” by Woodward and Bernstein at the age of 12. I was simply picking up the books my father had finished.

School syllabus threw up the usual suspects – Shakespeare, Chaucer, Dickens, Hardy, “To Kill a Mockingbird” – which I have reread often, and others I don’t immediately recall. By “A” level study, my then English teachers were pulling their hair out at my “perverse waste of talent” – I still have the report card! But I did manage a pass.

During a 35 year career, briefly in Banking and then in IT, I managed to find time, with unfailing family support, to study another lifelong passion, graduating with an Open University Bachelors’ degree in History in 2002. This fascination with all things historical inspired me to begin the Time Stones series. There is so much to our human past, and so many differing views on what is the greatest, and often the saddest, most tragic story. I decided I wanted to write about it; to shine a small light on those, sometimes pivotal stories, which are less frequently mentioned.

In 1995, my wife, Michelle, and I moved from England to southern Germany, where we still live, with our two children, one cat, and, when she pays us a visit, one chocolate labrador. I have been fortunate that I could satisfy another wish, to travel as widely as possible and see as much of our world as I can. Destinations usually include places of historic and archaeological interest, mixed with a large helping of sun, sea and sand for my wife’s peace of mind.


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Sunday, March 8, 2026

My Five Star Review of The Missing by Kiersten Modglin

 

The Missing by Kiersten Modglin


They disappeared...

That was just the beginning.

When five strangers are abandoned on an island without any idea where they are or whom to trust, their nightmarish new reality begins to unfold.

Someone is lying.

Someone is hiding a terrible secret.

They'd all do anything to get home... Wouldn't they?

As the group struggles to uncover the truth about their mysterious whereabouts, only one thing is certain: every choice they make on the island will affect the others.

And when they uncover a strange note with a chilling revelation, the group begins to question everything they thought they knew. If they want to make it off the island alive, they'll have to discover who brought them there and why...before it's too late.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Isolation Reveals Truth and the Past Refuses to Stay Silent

I finished The Missing with the uneasy sense that the most dangerous places are not always wild or unfamiliar—but the ones where people are forced to confront who they truly are. What begins as a baffling disappearance gradually unfolds into a tense psychological puzzle, where every character carries shadows from the past and each revelation unsettles the fragile balance of trust.

The story wastes little time placing its characters in a situation that feels both surreal and deeply unsettling. Strangers find themselves cut off from the world with no clear explanation as to why they have been brought together. At first there is confusion, then suspicion, and finally the creeping realisation that their presence may not be random at all. The isolation presses in from every side, forcing them to search not only for a way out but for answers among the very people standing beside them.

The narrative moves with a quiet but relentless tension. Conversations that appear ordinary on the surface carry an undercurrent of doubt. Alliances begin to form, only to fracture when new clues emerge. Each small discovery feels like a piece of a larger design, hinting that someone, somewhere, has carefully arranged the circumstances that brought these lives together.

What gives the novel its gripping atmosphere is the way uncertainty lingers in every interaction. No one feels entirely trustworthy, and the reader is left constantly reassessing motives and memories. As the story unfolds, fragments of hidden histories begin to surface, revealing that each character may be connected to the mystery in ways they never expected.

Beneath the suspense lies a deeper exploration of consequence. The past, long ignored or buried, has a way of resurfacing when least convenient. As tensions rise and the truth begins to draw closer, the characters must confront the uncomfortable possibility that escaping their situation may require facing what they have spent years trying to forget.

Despite the darkness of its premise, the story remains deeply engaging because of the human emotions at its core. Fear, guilt, determination and the instinct to survive shape every choice. In a place where secrets are slowly stripped away, each person must decide what they are willing to reveal—and what they are prepared to risk.

The Missing is sharp, suspenseful and difficult to step away from for long. It unfolds like a carefully constructed game of truth and consequence, drawing the reader deeper with each chapter until the final pieces fall into place and the full weight of the story becomes clear.



Sunday, March 1, 2026

Review of Love Lost In Time by Cathie Dunn

 


A reluctant daughter. A dutiful wife. A mystery of the ages.

Languedoc, France, 2018

Historian Madeleine Winters would rather research her next project than rehash the strained relationship she had with her late mother. However, to claim her inheritance, she reluctantly agrees to stay the one year required in her late mother’s French home and begins renovations. But when she’s haunted by a female voice inside the house and tremors emanating from beneath her kitchen floorboards, she’s shocked to discover ancient human bones.

The Mediterranean coast, AD 777

Seventeen-year-old Nanthild is wise enough to know her place. Hiding her Pagan wisdom and dutifully accepting her political marriage, she’s surprised when she falls for her Christian husband, the Count of Carcassonne. But she struggles to keep her forbidden religious beliefs and her healing skills secret while her spouse goes off to fight in a terrible, bloody war.

As Maddie settles into her rustic village life, she becomes obsessed with unraveling the mysterious history buried in her new home. And when Nanthild is caught in the snare of an envious man, she’s terrified she’ll never embrace her beloved again.

Can two women torn apart by centuries help each other finally find peace?

Love Lost in Time is a vivid standalone historical fiction novel for fans of epoch-spanning enigmas. If you like dark mysteries, romantic connections, and hints of the paranormal, then you’ll adore Cathie Dunn’s tale of redemption and self-discovery. 

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Memory Stirs and Time Refuses to Stay Silent

I finished Love Lost in Time with that lingering, unsettled feeling you get when a story seeps under your skin rather than simply ending. This isn’t a gentle time-slip romance that drifts politely between eras. It pulls—through stone, earth, scent, and memory—until past and present are no longer willing to stay separate.

The dual timelines move with quiet confidence. One moment you’re in modern-day southern France, dealing with grief, inheritance, and a stubbornly uncooperative house; the next, you’re deep in eighth-century Septimania, where marriage is politics, faith is power, and a woman’s knowledge can be both a gift and a death sentence. The transitions feel inevitable, as if the story itself has decided these lives must touch, whether the characters are ready or not.

At the heart of the novel are two romances that mirror and challenge each other. Hilda and Bellon’s relationship is shaped by duty, fear, and an undercurrent of desire neither quite knows how to name. Their connection doesn’t bloom easily—it’s restrained, tense, and charged with what remains unsaid. In the present, Maddie and Léon’s slow-burn attraction is grounded, hesitant, and deeply human, unfolding amid renovation dust, village gossip, and emotional scars that haven’t quite healed. In both timelines, love isn’t a safe haven; it’s a vulnerability.

What gives the story its power is its atmosphere. The past doesn’t announce itself loudly—it seeps in through lavender-scented air, shifting ground, flashes of vision, and the uneasy sense of standing somewhere that remembers more than it should. History here isn’t confined to books or ruins; it’s alive, watching, and waiting to be uncovered. Sometimes literally from beneath the floor.

Despite spanning centuries, the story never feels distant or academic. Emotions are immediate, choices feel heavy, and consequences loom. The women at its centre are navigating worlds that would rather define them than listen to them, and their struggle for autonomy—across time—gives the novel its quiet, relentless drive.

Love Lost in Time is rich, immersive, and emotionally layered. It’s a story about inheritance in every sense of the word: land, memory, love, and the things that refuse to stay buried. I closed the book with the understanding that the past was far from finished—and that it could not be ignored forever.

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Cathie is an Amazon-bestselling author of historical fiction, dual-timeline, mystery, and romance. She loves to infuse her stories with a strong sense of place and time, combined with a dark secret or mystery – and a touch of romance. Often, you can find her deep down the rabbit hole of historical research…

In addition, she is also a historical fiction book promoter with The Coffee Pot Book Club, a novel-writing tutor, and a keen reviewer on her blog, Ruins & Reading.
 
After having lived in Scotland for almost two decades, Cathie is now enjoying the sunshine in the south of France with her husband, and her rescued pets, Ellie Dog & Charlie Cat. 

She is a member of the Historical Novel Society, the Richard III Society, the Alliance of Independent Authors, and the Romantic Novelists’ Association.

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The Enemy’s Wife (Survivors of War Series) by Deborah Swift

Publication Date: April 6th, 2026 Publisher: HQ Digital Pages: 380 Genre: Historical Fiction ' A fast-paced, beautifully written, and mo...