Category Archives: Guest Post

Location, Location, Location with Caroline James.

I’m pleased to welcome Caroline James to my blog, not least because her post is going to whisk us away for some Easter sun as she tells us all about her forthcoming novel, The Cruise, and the inspiration behind its exotic setting. Over to you, Caroline …

A Caribbean sunset.

‘Can you write a romcom, set in an exotic location, about three friends in their sixties, heading off on a luxury cruise?’

That was a question from my publisher when discussing the brief for my new novel, The Cruise. Yes, I most certainly could! It was a pinch myself moment when I heard the title and the subject matter. Here was an opportunity to set the novel in a place I knew well and to virtually revisit the Caribbean.

My characters are three friends in their sixties. Kath is widowed, Jane unmarried, and Anne is almost-divorced. They join the Diamond Star, a luxury ship for those of a certain age, to set sail on a Christmas cruise, little knowing how their troubled lives are about to change.

Jane, Kath and Anne.

The story gathered pace as I wrote, and the ladies journeyed through the islands. I relived a time when I, too, discovered the Caribbean, when, in my early twenties, I was married to a Bajan man. We’d met when we were both working in London.

I was a naïve young girl when I first experienced life in Barbados and the islands. Still, memories don’t fade, and my recollection of those days served me well when writing The Cruise. Characters that I saved in my story bank began to come to life. Here was an opportunity to enrich the narrative, for I was familiar with the setting. I could taste the smoky rum and feel the tropical sun on my skin. I remembered the beautiful tranquil Caribbean Sea lapping soft white sands, contrasting with the wilder Atlantic rolling over miles of empty beach, where the two seas meet at northern points on some islands.

The Caribbean Sea in Barbados.

It was a joy to take my characters to markets in Martinique or an aerial tour of Antigua. I joined them on the balcony of their cabin to witness a stunning sunrise and magical sunset where the flame-like sky was hypnotic.

The fish market women who feature in The Cruise.

My marriage didn’t last, but I had reason to revisit the Caribbean a couple of decades later when my son owned a business there. For several years I indulged in a way of life so different from my life in northern England, and Barbados became a second home.

In The Cruise, Kath, Jane and Anne take an island tour around Barbados, and I couldn’t stop smiling as I wrote the chapter. Suddenly, incidents that had amused me on the island helped shape their tour. From the taxi driver smoking whacky baccy in his weed wagon, eating chicken feet in a rum shop, then swimming unknowingly in shark-infested waters, my ladies experience it all!

Whatever location your travels take you to, take care, safe journeys and happy reading.

With love,
Caroline. x

Thank you so much for sharing your inspiration, Caroline. It was great to hear more about the location of your novel, which is my current read, and I am thoroughly enjoying it. As you would say, I am sure it is going to fly! xx

THE CRUISE

 
Three friends set sail on a luxury cruise…

Will they be able to catch a husband on the open seas?

When widowed Kath, unmarried Jane and almost-divorced Anne decide to set off on a Caribbean cruise, they have no idea how their lives are about to change! The friends leave behind heartache and disappointment and, determined to find Anne a new husband, swap Christmas turkeys and BBC reruns for crystal waters, white sandy beaches and smooth golden rum. Throwing caution (and tradition) to the wind, they begin to husband hunt on the luxurious cruise ship. But will Anne get her wish, and will the friends find the comfort and joy they seek aboard the Diamond Star? With a cast of colourful characters from naturist Bridgette, con-artist gigolo Dicky and Londoner Selwyn, who is letting his old life go as he too embraces the new – all is revealed in this sparkling new novel by Caroline James.

The Cruise – Publishing as an eBook on 20th April 2023 / Paperback July 6th 2023

Publisher: One More Chapter for Harper Collins UK

Links:  AmazonApple BooksKobo


 About the author: 

Best-selling author of women’s fiction, Caroline James has owned and run businesses encompassing all aspects of the hospitality industry, a subject that often features in her novels. She is based in Lancashire but has a great fondness for travel and escapes whenever she can. A public speaker, which includes talks and lectures on cruise ships, Caroline is a member of the RNA, the SWWJ and the SOA. In her spare time, Caroline likes to swim in a local lake or walk with Fred, her Westie.

Books by Caroline James: The Spa Break | Hattie Goes to Hollywood | Boomerville at Ballymegille | The Best Boomerville Hotel | Coffee Tea the Gypsy & Me | Coffee Tea the Chef & Me | Coffee Tea the Caribbean & Me | Jungle Rock

Discover more about her novels or contact Caroline here: Website | Twitter | Facebook | BlogAmazon Author PageNewsletter sign upBookBub Profile


Location, Location, Location with Francesca Capaldi.

Having lived in Littlehampton my whole life, I remember the Beach Hotel that once stood on the green at the seafront, and so I was intrigued to hear a radio interview in which Francesca Capaldi spoke about her historical novel, A New Start at the Beach Hotel, set in Littlehampton. Curious to know more, I invited Francesca to come on my blog and share the inspiration behind the setting of her latest novel.
Over to you, Francesca …

Thank you for inviting me, Carol. When I start a book, the idea begins with a certain character and something that has happened to them. But with A New Start at the Beach Hotel, set in 1914/15, the idea grew out of the setting.

I was coming to the end of the Wartime in the Valleys series and was keen to set the next one in Littlehampton in Sussex, where I grew up. I recalled the impressive-looking hotel on the common leading up to the beach, which had always fascinated me as a child and teenager, and it seemed the perfect setting. Luckily, my publisher, Hera Books, thought so too!

The Beach Hotel in the 1960s.

I’d never been inside the Beach Hotel and, sadly, it was pulled down in 1994; a crescent of flats was built in its place. All I had was several photographs of the outside, including some taken in the Edwardian era and one taken by my father, plus a list of staff in the 1911 census. In a way, that was better, as I was able to set it out inside in the way I wanted it, the dining room, conservatory, ballroom and so on, along with the staff quarters.

A New Start at the Beach Hotel doesn’t only take place in the hotel, of course, but in other parts of Littlehampton too. Edie, Charlie and Lili often go for walks by the beach and River Arun. Photos reveal many more activities on the beach and promenade than you’d find today. And the bandstand has gone. The tiny pier is the same, but the buildings near it, a Kursaal (later Casino Theatre), a windmill, tearoom and coast guards’ cottages, were pulled down in the early 1930s to make way for a Butlins indoor funfair. It’s now an outside amusement park. The path running past the river back in the 1910s was still level with the river’s shore, which was fully accessible, but that would be changed only a decade or so later. The warehouses, along both sides of the river in Edie’s time, are all long gone, though I do recall a few from my childhood.

The Littlehampton riverside in the early 1960s.

The characters sometimes have afternoon tea at the Harbour Tea Rooms. This did exist, sitting among the row of fisherman’s cottages next to the riverside on Pier Road, which was filled with fishermen, nets and boats. Fifteen-odd years later, that row was completely rebuilt, and many of the buildings became cafés. My father’s café was in the approximate location of the Harbour Tea Rooms, which I felt rather chuffed about when I realised.

Many parts of the town today would be instantly recognisable by somebody from 1914. The houses in the area behind the beach (what was known back then as Beach Town) are nearly all still there. The shopping streets retain many of the same buildings. The railway station, however, has been rebuilt twice since Edie’s day, whilst the Electric Picture Palace opposite (later the Regent), where she goes to see films, was pulled down in the early 1960s. I can just remember it.

Panorama of Littlehampton river and beach, taken from West Beach.

It has certainly been interesting, setting my new book in a place that is familiar, and yet at the same time, very unfamiliar. I’ve already written the second book,  All Change at the Beach Hotel, and started the third, so look forward to getting to know even more of old Littlehampton.

Thank you for that wonderful insight into the setting of your novel. I loved reading your post, Francesca. So many of the places you have spoken about are familiar to me, either from my childhood or from stories told to me by my parents and grandparents. I am looking forward to reading A New Start at the Beach Hotel. xx

About the Book

June 1914. Edie Moore is a Governess living in comfort at the grand Downland House in Sussex. But, wanting more from life, she flees in secret to Littlehampton, the place where she spent many idyllic childhood holidays.

Desperate for work, Edie begins working as a chambermaid at the prestigious Beach Hotel, even if the menial tasks are a far cry from her previous job.

Edie works hard and soon is in favour with Helen Probert, the manager’s wife, who sees that Edie is destined for bigger things.

But as she navigates her new life and finds friendship with fellow maid Lili Probert, she also grows closer to charming, cheerful porter, Charlie Cobbett.

However, what none of her new friends know is that Edie is hiding a secret from her past, one that would change the way they view her, forever. When the truth comes out, will Edie be able to keep her new life and remain in the place she loves so much?

Purchase  A New Start at the Beach Hotel here.

Other books by Francesca Capaldi:

World War 1 sagas set in the Rhymney Valley: Heartbreak in the Valleys (nominated for the Historical Romantic Award in the RoNAs 2021) | War in the ValleysHope in the ValleysTrouble in the Valleys

Murder Mystery set in the Farne Islands: Danger for Daisy


About the author:

Francesca Capaldi has enjoyed writing since she was a child, largely influenced by a Welsh mother who was good at improvised storytelling. She is a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association and the Society of Women Writers and Journalists.

The first novel in the Wartime in the Valleys series, Heartbreak in the Valleys, was shortlisted for the Romantic Novelists’ Association Historical Award 2021. Both the Valleys series and her new Beach Hotel series are published by Hera Books.

Francesca was born and brought up on the Sussex coast but currently lives in Kent with her family and a cat called Lando Calrission.

Follow Francesca on social media here: WebsiteFacebookTwitterInstagram |Tiktok


#WritingWednesday with Chris Penhall: Writing Characters.

My #WritingWednesday guest this week is fellow Ruby Fiction author Chris Penhall, talking about the benefit of writing characters as if they are in a film.

Over to you, Chris …

One of the best tips I ever had was to think about your characters and scenes as if they were in a film.  It may seem obvious, but it was a game-changer for me. I’d written my first novel, The House That Alice Built, and had some good feedback for it, but it wasn’t quite there, so I invested in a mentor who helped me get it to the finish line (i.e., it won the Choc-Lit Search for a Star Competition and was actually published).

And that was one of the things she told me to do.

I honestly think I thought that’s what I was doing. But once I really started closing my eyes and began to think about what my characters actually were doing when they were talking or where they were sitting when they were thinking, what they could hear, see and even smell,  I realised I’d been paying lip-service to it as I typed away.  (I do love the sound of a tap tap on the keyboard, especially if it’s fast, so can get carried away with volume rather than quality…)

I love watching films as much as I love reading books, so once I began to really picture each scene in my head, I enjoyed the process of writing even more.

What could Alice Matthews see when she was driven along The Avenida on the Lisbon coast in Ignacio’s yellow Rolls Royce for the very first time? As a heads up, the section of the film The Yellow Rolls Royce starring Shirley MacLaine and Alain Delon on the Italian Riviera is one of my favourite pieces of cinema – oh, the romance, the colours, the feel of it …. Alice had come from a rather grey London, and what she saw from the window of that car was full of colour and vibrancy. What was it like sitting in Ignacio’s yellow Rolls Royce at the beginning of the sequel New Beginnings at the Little House in the Sun? Another spoiler alert – there were many balloons. Why were they there?  That was easy – but also, what did they look like, what did they do, what did the car look like as it drove away?

It’s very easy to slip into writing banter when characters are having a conversation, and I have to discipline myself to slow down and think about what people do when they are talking to each other – smile, take a sip of a drink, glance out of a window – and, although I may not use all of that on the actual page, the fact I’m thinking of it as a film or television scene allows me to see it in 3D and somehow helps bring the characters to life in my mind.

Now I’m working on my sixth novel, I have already closed my eyes and plonked my main characters in the area where most of the action is set. I can see them walking around, exploring their new surroundings, having conversations and gazing out to sea (my characters always gaze somewhere…) I am seeing them in 3D, and that is what helps me to write. Even though I haven’t put any words on paper yet – my hands are poised above the keyboard so I can start next week – I am ready to move them around and start them on their new adventure.

Also – I’d love my novels to be made into films. Any producers out there? Just thought I’d ask…

Definitely worth an ask 😉 Thank you for sharing another great writing tip, Chris. xx


Books by Chris Penhall:

The House That Alice Built

Home is where the heart is … Alice Dorothy Matthews is sensible. Whilst her best friend Kathy is living it up in Portugal and her insufferable ex Adam is travelling the world, Alice is working hard to pay for the beloved London house she has put her heart and soul into renovating. But then a postcard from Buenos Aires turns Alice’s life upside down. One very unsensible decision later and she is in Cascais, Portugal, and so begins her lesson in ‘going with the flow’; a lesson that sees her cat-sitting, paddle boarding, dancing on top of bars and rediscovering her artistic talents. But perhaps the most important part of the lesson for Alice is that you don’t always need a house to be at home.

Discover more or purchase here.

New Beginnings at the Little House in the Sun

Follow your yellow brick road …. Alice Dorothy Matthews is on the road to paradise! She’s sold her house in London, got rid of her nasty ex and arranged her move to Portugal where friendship and romance awaits. All that’s left to do is find a place to call home. But Alice’s dreams are called into question when complications with friends, work and new relationships make her Portuguese paradise feel far too much like reality. Will Alice’s dream of a new home in the sun come true?

Discover more or purchase here.

Finding Summer Happiness

You won’t find happiness without breaking a few eggs …Miriam Ryan was the MD of a successful events and catering company, but these days even the thought of chopping an onion sends her stress levels sky rocketing. A retreat to the Welsh village of her childhood holidays seems to offer the escape she’s craving – just peace, quiet, no people, a generous supply of ready meals … did she mention no people? Enter a cheery pub landlord, a lovesick letting agent, a grumpy astronomer with a fridge raiding habit – not to mention a surprise supper club that requires the chopping of many onions – and Miriam realises her escape has turned into exactly what she was trying to get away from, but could that be just the thing she needs to allow a little bit of summer happiness into her life?

Discover more or purchase here.

The House on the Hill – A Summer in the Algarve

Layla is calm, in control and is definitely not about to lose her serenity for the man next door!
Surely it can’t be hard to stay peaceful at one of the oldest yoga and mindfulness retreats in the Algarve, surrounded by sea, sun and serenity? Mostly, owner Layla Garcia manages it – with the help of meditation and plenty of camomile tea, of coursekeeping her grandparents’ legacy alive is stressful, and Layla has become so shackled to the work that, for her, The House on the Hill is fast becoming ‘The Fortress on the Hill’.
Then writer Luke Mackie moves to the villa next door, bringing with him a healthy dose of chaos to disrupt Layla’s plans, plus a painful reminder of a time when she was less-than-serene. But could his influence be just what Layla needs to ‘dance like no-one’s watching’ and have the fun she’s been missing?

Discover more or purchase here.


About the author:

Chris Penhall won the 2019 Choc-Lit Search for a Star competition, sponsored by Your Cat Magazine, for her debut novel, The House That Alice Built. The sequel, New Beginnings at the Little House in the Sun was published in August 2020. They are both part of her Portuguese Paradise series of novels.

Her third novel, Finding Summer Happiness, is set in Pembrokeshire in South-West Wales and her fourth – The House on the Hill – A Summer in the Algarve, is another in her Portuguese Paradise series.

All are available in e-book, audio and paperback.

Chris is a writer and freelance radio producer for BBC Local Radio. She also has her own occasional podcast – The Talking to My Friends About Book Podcast in which she chats to her friends about books. Good title!

A lover of books, music and cats, she is also an enthusiastic salsa dancer, a keen cook, and loves to travel. She is never happier than when she is gazing at the sea.

You can find out more about Chris and her work here: Website | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook 


My Writing Space by Morton S Gray.

My inquisitive mind loves a glimpse into the writing world of other authors. Today, my good friend, Morton S Gray, shares her writing space, over to you Morton…

Thank you for inviting me to your blog to talk about my writing space, Carol. I actually found myself laughing when I thought about writing about this subject, as I can write anywhere and ironically often find it easier to write away from my dedicated writing space at home.

To give you a few examples, I have written on the park and ride bus into town, on trains, in cars (not whilst driving I hasten to add) and on airplanes. I wrote most of my earlier novels in local coffee shops. I’ve written my way through my son’s swimming and piano lessons, in airport lounges, in doctor’s and dentist’s waiting rooms and even one time when I was waiting to be taken down to the operating theatre for an operation, as I thought my feelings and fears might be useful for one of my characters at some point.

The advantage of writing when you are out and about is that you hear and see things that can act as a stimulus to the writing. I’m a terrible eavesdropper in cafes, especially if I’m searching for a new character name – just a fragment of overheard conversation can often supply the solution – e.g. ‘Our Owen is a right tearaway.’

These days and particularly during the covid era, I write mainly in my study at home and feel really very lucky to have one. It was a must for the purchase of our current house that there was separate study space for both my husband and I. He works upstairs and I work downstairs, often communicating by text message.

Indeed, during the Covid lockdown, I was in my study, hubbie was in his, teenage son was doing online lessons in his bedroom and my son and his fiancée, who had moved in temporarily (they were with us ten months in the end) were homeworking either side of the dining room table. Thank heavens for good internet I say!

My study is full of books and files and I’ve covered the walls with pictures that inspire me. I have cuddly toys, family trees and loads of pens and crystals around me. I’m forever buying birthday cards and then can’t part with them and they end up on my wall!

If you actually looked closely at my bookshelves you would be forgiven for thinking that I’m a historical fiction writer – maybe one day – as most of my books are about history particularly the English Civil War which fascinates me.

I find the main problem with working at home is that there are too many distractions, washing that needs to be done, the dog to be walked, meals to be cooked and the garden is calling me. It’s amazing I’ve ever finished one novel let alone the six published by Choc Lit so far.

I love the look of your office, Morton. Though I also like to avoid distractions and write outside my home.


Books by Morton S Gray:

The Girl on the Beach | The Truth Lies Buried | Christmas at Borteen Bay | Sunny Days at the Beach | Christmas at the Little Beach Café | Summer at Lucerne Lodge. You can find details of her books on her Choc Lit Publishing author page here or her Amazon author page here.


About the author:

Morton lives with her husband and Lily, the tiny white dog, in Worcestershire, U.K. She has been reading and writing fiction for as long as she can remember, penning her first attempt at a novel aged fourteen. She is a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association and The Society of Authors.

Her debut novel ‘The Girl on the Beach ’was ePublished in January 2017, after she won The Choc Lit Publishing Search for a Starcompetition. She has now published six books in The Borteen Secrets Series.

She enjoys crafts, history and loves tracing family trees. Having a hunger for learning new things is a bonus for the research behind her books.

You can find out more about Morton and her work via: website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Apricot Plots


A Sense of Setting with Angela Petch.

Welcoming Angela Petch to my blog as she shares the settings from The Postcard From Italy, her latest historical novel, released this week. 

Over to you, Angela …

In Writing Down the Bones, Natalie Goldberg states: “When you are not writing, you are a writer too.” 

My senses are constantly on alert and if a setting captivates me, I will use it. This happened in Puglia three years ago. I was enchanted by this beautiful region in southern Italy. As it was also where an uncle, my mother’s only brother, had been based with the RAF for a while during World War Two, I was further driven to use it as the background for a new book. Sadly, my uncle’s plane was shot down but I imagined Uncle Billy into a story where he survived.

The Apulian coastline around the Gargano peninsula, full of hidden coves, is where I had him arrive in The Postcard from Italy. He washes up like the driftwood and sea glass that my heroine scavenges. But she didn’t expect to find human flotsam.

I haven’t been faithful geographically: I’ve selected features that do not truly belong in Gargano and used artistic licence to transpose them. So, the trabucchi – or fishing platforms: strange wooden structures, have been moved further down the coast, but I absolutely needed them for my book.

Similarly, the characteristic conical stone buildings called trulli needed to appear in my story.

They are generally further inland, but I wanted my heroine to live in one. An ordinary stone house would not do.

In his chapter ‘What are you looking at?’ from The Creative Writing Course book edited by Paul Magrs and Julia Bell, he writes:

“As writers, we really need to slow down a little, take stock, and really think about why our direction is drawn in this direction or that.”

I use details that attract me to embellish my stories and to, hopefully, attract my readers too. Some might know Puglia really well and query my geography, just as some people do not like abstract art or a painter’s individual interpretations.

My husband and I have stayed twice in a particular B & B which I adore. The owner, Isabella, only has two rooms and I’d love to return (11) B&B Alla Canale, Guest House sul mare – Vasto – CH alone for a writing week when I can afford to. Hidden down a dirt track, it sits on the cliffs with an infinity view over the sea. The sunsets are spectacular and I feel emotional even thinking about it.  I used this setting for a particularly poignant part of the story.

Similarly, a converted masseria (fortified farmhouse) typical of the area is my main Apulian setting, which appears both in the past and contemporary timelines. I changed very little of the quirky décor and unusual details and I needed this setting to reflect a sense of mystery. Discover more here: Home – Masseria Barone Gambadoro.

I wrote The Postcard from Italy during both lockdowns, when we were unable to travel, but I travelled vicariously back there whilst writing. I hope my readers will lose themselves in my settings and escape for a while.


More about The Postcard from Italy:

Italy, 1945. ‘Where am I?’ The young man wakes, bewildered. He sees olive trees against a bright blue sky. A soft voice soothes him. ‘We saw you fall from your plane. The parachute saved you.’ He remembers nothing of his life, or the war that has torn the world apart… but where does he belong?

England, present day. Antique-shop-owner Susannah wipes away a tear as she tidies her grandmother’s belongings. Elsie’s memories are fading, and every day Susannah feels further away from her only remaining family. But everything changes when she stumbles across a yellowed postcard of a beautiful Italian stone farmhouse, tucked away in Elsie’s dressing table. A message dated from World War 2 speaks of a secret love. Could her grandmother, who never talked about the past, have fallen for someone in Italy all those years ago?

With Elsie unable to answer her questions, Susannah becomes determined to track down the house and find a distraction from her grief. Arriving at what is now a crumbling hotel by the sparkling Italian sea, she feels strangely at home. And after an unexpected encounter with handsome wine waiter Giacomo, she can’t tell if it’s his dark eyes or his offer to help solve her mystery that makes her heart race.

Together they find a dusty chest tucked in a forgotten corner of the building. The white silk of a World War 2 parachute spills out. And the Royal Air Force identity tag nestled in the folds bears a familiar name…

With Giacomo by her side, and before it’s too late for her grandmother, can Susannah discover the truth behind a shocking wartime secret at the heart of her family? Or will it tear her apart?

Discover more about Angela Petch’s novels: The Tuscan House | The Postcard From Italy |  A Tuscan Memory |The Tuscan Girl | The Tuscan Secret |

And, while not based in Italy, don’t forget Angela’s wonderful charity novel, Mavis and Dot. All proceeds from this novel go to vital research into Cancer.

Thank you so much for the wonderful post, Angela. It is always a pleasure to have you on my blog. xx


About the author:

Published by Bookouture, Angela Petch is an award winning writer of fiction – and the occasional poem.

Every summer she moves to Tuscany for six months where she and her husband own a renovated watermill which they let out. When not exploring their unspoilt corner of the Apennines, she disappears to her writing desk at the top of a converted stable. In her Italian handbag or hiking rucksack she always makes sure to store notebook and pen to jot down ideas.

The winter months are spent in Sussex where most of her family live. When Angela’s not helping out with grandchildren, she catches up with writer friends.

Angela’s gripping, WWII, Tuscan novels are published by Bookouture. While her novel, Mavis and Dot, was self-published and tells of the frolics and foibles of two best-friends who live by the seaside. Angela also writes short stories published in Prima and People’s Friend.

You can discover more about Angela Petch and her writing here: Facebook | Twitter | website | Amazon | Apricot Plots