Archive | January 2025

Love’s Intuition

Book Link

From Amazon:

Early 1800’s – Montana Territory

Emelee Parker is on the run from Silas Grant who wants her as payment for her father’s debt. Drifter Bodie Daniels comes to Emelee’s aid. They engage in an extraordinary journey of dangerous circumstances, through harsh weather, and terrain few people have traveled.

Emelee and Bodie possess strong intuitions for survival. When their time together heightens a different kind of intuition, one regarding love, neither one wants any part of it…until it’s time for them to go their separate ways.

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Change of novel

Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025

Verified Purchase

This book is the first western romance I’ve read by this writer. Although used to reading contemporary novels by Romes, this was a nice change and this writer easily writes from a change in eras. A great western romance.

Meet Vanita Shukla

Please welcome Vanita Shukla Hork to my blog. Hello Vanita, wonderful to have you on here this morning. Have a seat and we will get started.

  1. Please introduce yourself to those reading this blog post.

Thank you for having me as your guest, Mary, I am delighted to have the opportunity to connect with your readers!

I started writing poetry in 1981 at the age of 13. Writing and sharing my poetry is my passion. I have a full-time job in the corporate world, so my poetry related work is done after work hours in the evenings and during weekends.

I launched my poetry blog in November 2021 and published my first volume of poems written as a young girl in November 2022. During the last three years, I have published five poetry books. All my books are available on Amazon in Kindle format and in paperback.

I’ve written about my writing journey in my blog. My mission is to make the voice of my younger self heard.

I come from India, but I grew up abroad, including in the United States, as my father was an Indian career diplomat. I have lived in Denmark since 1986 and am married to a Dane. Our son moved for college in 2022, so we are now empty nesters.

  • Has writing always been part of your life and when did you “know” that it was time to start writing your first book?

I started writing poetry in 1981 at the age of 13. I had returned home to live with my parents after a harrowing year at a very well-reputed girls’ boarding school in India. I did not realise it at the time, but I had been the victim of severe bullying at a very vulnerable age for a girl. It took me almost four decades to get over it, to regain my self-confidence and heal, and to step more fully into my power.

The trauma unleashed the poet in me. Needing an outlet to express my emotions, I started writing.

It came naturally. The topics I wrote about were very personal, private, and at times, dark – unrequited love, desire, pain, betrayal, and my budding sexuality. The catalyst for many of these poems seems to have been a deep pain of some sort, which needed an outlet, release, and ultimately, redemption. Many of my poems also have a spiritual undertone.

I wrote actively and copiously until the late 1980s, when I got married. I was now in my early twenties, and the everyday existence of being married, getting a university degree, and starting a career took over. After our son was born, motherhood became my primary focus, alongside a full-time career. The hand-written poems were forgotten, stored away in cardboard boxes, testimonies of another time, another identity.

A few years ago, I suddenly started writing again, after a hiatus of more than three decades. Even though pain was once again the catalyst, I was immensely relieved and grateful that I had not lost my inner voice. The poet in me was not dead.

During the corona lockdowns in 2020, I found myself with more time on my hands while working from home. Inspired by my most recent spell of writing, I decided the time had come to type my hand-written poems, before the papers disintegrated or got lost. My idea initially was to save the poems for our son and his future family, so they would know who their mother and grandmother had been.

At the back of my mind, I also had a hope of publishing my poems one day. My late father, who strongly supported my poetry writing, had tried to get them published in the ‘80s, but it was not meant to be. But now, with the advent of the internet and modern technology, this goal was within my reach.

I purchased a personal laptop and started typing the almost 40-year-old poems during our annual family holiday in France in June 2020. As I typed the poems, I marvelled at the wisdom and depth of the young girl I had been and how some of the emotions had not changed in the years between us. I was also confronted by her darkness and felt overwhelmed by the pain and intensity in my poems. They were mature beyond my years when I wrote them.

This young girl deserved to be heard, and I made this my mission.

I decided to start publishing my poems myself and launched my poetry blog in November 2021. The response was very positive, not least on social media.

Since then, I have published five volumes of my poems and more than 70 poems in my blog. I wish to make my poetry accessible to everyone.

  • How difficult was it writing your first book?

Very difficult, indeed! As I describe in my blog post from 2022, Making a dream come true, I was practically leaping out of my comfort zone, and it was extremely uncomfortable.

I quickly understood, that even though writing poems is a creative endeavour, publishing a book of poems is an entirely different matter! It requires structure, analysis, and discipline.

I had to learn a lot about the technicalities of self-publishing, and there were critical decisions to make along the way: Which poems to select; which order to present them in; what to call my book series, so the name would be apt for all the titles in the series; and finally, selecting the perfect picture for the cover.

Memories from Another Lifetime: Pain is the first book in the series. Since pain has always been the catalyst for my poetry, I felt it apt that the first compilation of my poems should be on this theme.

  • Have you ever wanted to give up and what stopped you?

As I mentioned, writing that first book was a daunting task. To keep me going, my mantra for several months was: Feel the fear, and do it anyway!

The decisions I had to make were difficult. I also felt doubt along the way and asked myself if my poems were good enough to publish a book. It was one thing to appreciate my own poems as the poet, it was another to look at them with the impartial eyes of an editor and publisher. I was highly critical of them, and several poems did not make the final cut.

The process was challenging and protracted, and I was doing all of this on top of the demands of my corporate job and family obligations at home. I did feel like giving up or at least delaying my first book, but I decided to keep going.

I felt I owed it to my younger self and to all the wonderful people I had met on social media, who genuinely appreciate my poetry, and who encouraged me to keep at it. Several of them have become good friends, and they continue to support and encourage me in my mission.

Just a few days short of my 55th birthday, my younger self was given her voice and introduced to the world. After a journey of four decades, a dream became a reality, and my first book Pain was published on 26 November 2022.

The process has become easier with each subsequent book, although selecting the poems and putting them in the right order for a book still takes time and requires careful consideration.

Having said that, I have discovered that poetry is a very difficult genre to market, and most readers shy away from it. This feels quite discouraging at times. I am therefore grateful for all the positive reviews on Amazon and Goodreads, as they will hopefully help my poetry reach a wider audience.

  • Who is the most supportive of you and your dream to be a writer?

That is a difficult one to answer! There are three people who have played a key role for my dream as a writer.

My mother, Kusum Shukla, an accomplished artist and poet herself, whose love and talent for writing poetry has rubbed off on me. She has always been a role model for me in courage, strength, and grace. Her beautiful painting, In Search of Soul (1995), graces the cover of my books.

My father, late Ambassador (Rtd.) Ramesh Chandra Shukla, who believed in my poems and wanted to publish them all those years ago, when I was a young girl. I wish he could have seen my blog and my books. He would have been very happy and proud.

Finally, my sister, Vatsala Shukla, a career coach and published author herself, who has given me invaluable support and encouragement in setting up my blog and publishing my books. She has guided me as my coach through many years and has played a key role in helping me find my voice and step into my power again.

  • Anything specific you want to tell your readers?

I think I would like my readers to keep in mind my age when I wrote those poems. I was a teenager at the time. All my poems are dated.

I think it is difficult for some people to believe or understand that a very young person with limited life experience can write poems of such pain, maturity, and intensity. But, as I also write in the introduction to my books, I believe these poems are memories and messages from a previous life; that the initial trauma blasted open a portal to other lifetimes.

Hence the title of the series – Memories from another Lifetime.

  • What is the best advice given to you (book or otherwise), and by whom?

As a youngster, I was always extremely nervous before my school exams. My mother would tell me, ‘Do your best, and leave the rest to God.’ And it’s true – one should focus on things within one’s control and not worry about the outcome. We can waste a lot of time worrying, instead of just getting on with it.

I have passed on the same advice to our son. While he was in school, I would tell him, ‘I don’t expect you to be the best, I expect you to do your best. The rest will follow.’ Seeing the fine young man he has become, I know I was right!

  • What is your target audience and what aspect of your writing do you feel targets that audience?

I don’t have a specific target audience, although the nature and themes of most of my poems are more suited for grown-ups.

Having said that, I did a video in April 2022 on one of my latest poems, Positive Abundance, for Author’s Week at a middle school in Long Island, New York. My poem was received very well and touched the hearts of the youngsters, who reached out to me with their own thoughts and feelings! They had felt inspired by my poem and my story. They wanted to start writing themselves, and some of them wrote already. I could sense their sensitive hearts and, in some cases, feelings of being lonely. This is something I could relate to from my own teen years. I have written about this wonderful experience in my blog post from 2022, Reaching out to the next generation.

One of the things I have realised since I started posting my poems in my blog and on social media, is that my poems resonate with people in different ways. It’s fascinating to see how people relate to my poems and interpret them based on their own life experiences. The themes of my poems are universal to the human experience – love, desire, heartbreak, betrayal, hurt, and denial.

  • Did the cover evolve the same way, or did you work with someone to make it come together for you?

Choosing the cover for my poetry books was one of the key decisions I have made. My poetry can be very intense. I needed a unique picture for the cover of the book series. A picture that would complement the poems well. A picture as vivid, passionate, and intense as my poems.

While looking for the perfect picture, one of the paintings in our study at home caught my eye. It was a beautiful and haunting painting by my mother, the artist Kusum Shukla. I took the painting off the wall to see if there was any inscription behind it. And indeed, there was. The painting was from 1995, and my mother had named it In Search of Soul.

This was my cover!

Before I could use it, however, I needed to ask for my mother’s permission. As an accomplished artist, she is very particular about her paintings and the context in which they are used. She does not take such requests lightly. I am very grateful that she was generous enough to make an exception for me, and I am proud to have her painting as the signature look of my poetry books.

  1. What are you working on now? Can we get a peek, an excerpt?

I am currently taking a break from compiling new poetry volumes.

2024 was a very busy and important year for me. I set myself the personal goal of publishing the first four poetry volumes, Pain, Love, Desire, and Soul in paperback format. All four volumes had been released in Kindle format, as I wanted my poetry to be easily accessible to everybody.

But publishing paperbacks was no mean feat for me, and it took quite a lot of time and learning! Pain came out in paperback in April 2024, followed by Love, Desire, and finally, Soul in July 2024. I’ve written about this journey in my blog posts from 2024, Overcoming fear and obstacles and Making it to the finishing line!

Having met my goal for 2024, I found renewed energy and motivation to release a new volume of poems, and my fifth book, Friends, came out in September 2024.

Here is an excerpt from one of the poems in Friends, called The Saviour. I wrote The Saviour in 1983 at the age of 16, for a rather special and misunderstood person. He was very intelligent and warm-hearted but also terribly introverted. I believe he felt lonely.

‘I am the window

Through which sunshine

Can enter

The dark room of your Life –

If only you will hold

My outstretched hand of friendship

And lift the curtains

Of your mind.’

  1. Any last words before we wrap things up?

Once again, thank you so much for the opportunity to do this interview, Mary! My mission is to make the voice of my younger self heard, and I am very grateful for your kind and generous support.

I invite your readers to follow me on social media with the links provided. My books are often on promotion on Amazon, and I advertise this on Twitter/X, Bluesky, and Instagram. I also invite all to visit my poetry blog and sample a broad selection of my poems.

Author bio:

Vanita Shukla Hork started writing poems in 1981 at the young age of 13, following a deep personal trauma. She needed an outlet for her raw and powerful emotions, to find relief, release, and ultimately, redemption.

The topics she wrote about were very personal, private, and at times, dark – unrequited love, desire, pain, betrayal, and her budding sexuality. Many of her poems also had a spiritual undertone. The maturity and depth of her poems as a young girl belied her age.

After a hiatus of almost four decades, she started writing again and launched her poetry blog in November 2021. Memories from another Lifetime is a series of her poems written as a young girl. The first volume, Pain, was published in November 2022 and the latest volume, Friends, in September 2024. Vanita’s mission is to make the voice of her younger self heard, and she invites the reader to join her on this journey.

Vanita Shukla Hork lives in Denmark with her husband. They have one son.

Blog/website: https://vanitashuklahork.com/

Twitter/X: https://x.com/VanitaHork

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/vanitahork.bsky.social

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/vanitashuklahork/

Author page, Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Vanita-Shukla-Hork/e/B0BNZ5HXNC

Author page, Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/23219227.Vanita_Shukla_Hork

Author page, BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/vanita-shukla-hork

Book link, Amazon (Friends): https://www.amazon.com/Friends-Memories-another-Lifetime-Vanita-ebook/dp/B0DFX4WS77/

Harold The King / I Am The Chosen King

Book Title: Harold The King (UK) / I Am The Chosen King (USA/Canada)

Author: Helen Hollick

Publication Date: original edition first published in 2000

Publisher: Taw River Press (UK) Sourcebooks Inc (USA)

Pages: 640

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any Triggers: battle scenes

Twitter Handles: @HelenHollick @cathiedunn @MaryLSchmidt

Instagram Handle: @thecoffeepotbookclub

Bluesky Handles: @helenhollick.bsky.social @cathiedunn.bsky.social

Hashtags: #1066 #BattleOfHastings #NormanConquest #AngloSaxon #EnglishHistory #PublicationSilverAnniversary #BlogTour #BookBlast #TheCoffeePotBookClub 

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2024/12/blog-tour-harold-the-king-by-helen-hollick.html

Book Title and Author Name:

Harold The King (UK) / I Am The Chosen King (USA/Canada)

(same book – different titles)

Helen Hollick

Blurb:

First published in 2000 – Celebrating a Silver Anniversary!

The events that led to the Battle of Hastings and the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 – told from the English point of view.

Two men. One crown.

England, 1044. Harold Godwinesson, a young, respected earl, falls in love with an ordinary but beautiful woman. In Normandy, William, the bastard son of a duke, falls in love with power.

In 1066 England falls vulnerable to the fate of these two men: one, chosen to be a king, the other, determined to take, by force, what he desires. Risking his life to defend his kingdom from foreign invasion, Harold II led his army into the great Battle of Hastings in October 1066 with all the honour and dignity that history remembers of its fallen heroes.

In this beautifully crafted tale, USA Today bestselling author Helen Hollick sets aside the propaganda of the Norman Conquest and brings to life the English version of the story of the man who was the last Anglo-Saxon king, revealing his tender love, determination and proud loyalty, all to be shattered by the desire for a crown – by one who had no right to wear it.

Praise for Helen Hollick:

“Helen Hollick has it all! She tells a great story, gets her history right, and writes consistently readable books”

~ Bernard Cornwell

“A novel of enormous emotional power”

~ Elizabeth Chadwick

“Thanks to Hollick’s masterful storytelling, Harold’s nobility and heroism enthral to the point of engendering hope for a different ending…Joggles a cast of characters and a bloody, tangled plot with great skill”

~ Publisher’s Weekly

“Don’t miss Helen Hollick’s colourful recreation of the events leading up to the Norman Conquest.”

~ Daily Mail

“An epic re-telling of the Norman Conquest”

~ The Lady

“If only all historical fiction could be this good”

~ Historical Novel Society Review

Buy Links:

Universal eBook Link, Harold The King: https://books2read.com/u/4jOdYj

Harold the King (UK): https://viewbook.at/HaroldTheKing

I Am the Chosen King (US): https://viewBook.at/ChosenKing

This title is available on #KindleUnlimited, excerpt in US & Canada.

Author Bio:

First accepted for traditional publication in 1993, Helen became a USA Today Bestseller with her historical novel, The Forever Queen (titled A Hollow Crown in the UK) with the sequel, Harold the King (US: I Am The Chosen King) being novels that explore the events that led to the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Her Pendragon’s Banner Trilogy is a fifth-century version of the Arthurian legend, and she writes a nautical adventure/supernatural series, The Sea Witch Voyages. She has also branched out into the quick read novella, ‘Cosy Mystery’ genre with her Jan Christopher Mysteries, set in the 1970s, with the first in the series, A Mirror Murder incorporating her, often hilarious, memories of working as a library assistant. The fifth in the series, A Memory Of Murder, was published in May 2024.

Her non-fiction books are Pirates: Truth and Tales and Life of A Smuggler. She is currently writing about the ghosts of North Devon, and Jamaica Gold for her Sea Witch Voyages.

Recognised by her stylish hats, Helen tries to attend book-related events as a chance to meet her readers and social-media followers, but her ‘wonky eyesight’ as she describes her condition of Glaucoma, and severe arthritis is now a little prohibitive for travel.

She lives with her family in an eighteenth-century farmhouse in North Devon with their dogs and cats, while on the farm there are showjumper horses, fat Exmoor ponies, an elderly Welsh pony, geese, ducks and hens. And several resident ghosts.

Author Links:

Website: https://helenhollick.net/

Amazon Author Page: https://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/helen.hollick

Blog, supporting authors & their books: https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/helenhollick.bsky.social

Twitter / X: https://x.com/HelenHollick

Monthly newsletter: Thoughts from a Devonshire Farmhouse:

Start Here:January 2024 https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.com/2024/01/thoughts-from-devonshire-farmhouse.html (posted on her blog)

This entry was posted on January 7, 2025. 2 Comments

Oahu to You

Magazine Link

From Amazon:

MELE KALIKIMAKA
The Hawaiian
greeting for
“Merry
Christmas
Hau Kea Na Pu’u
Shaka Santa & Tutu Mele
THE SONG Mele Kalikimaka
THE LADY OF Leilani
STORIES OF CHRISTMAS
SAINT NICHOLAS
CHRISTMAS IN THE KEY OF G
WHO ARE YOU
10 FACTS ABOUT CHRISTMAS
PRESENTS PRESENT’S PRESENTS
A DAILY PRESENT
I KNEW YOU WOULD COME
CHRISTMAS STORIES
NEW BOOK RELEASES
THE WEE ONES
BY DARRYL HUGHES
A CHRISTMAS HEARTH FOR IVY
BY SUSAN JEAN RICCI

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Christmas

Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2025

Verified Purchase

I was pleasantly and joyfully surprised by this book. It’s full of Christmas in many ways. From Hawaiian words in speaking Merry Christmas to classic stories about Christmas, to those who are homeless on the island and what the state is doing to help. Heartfelt stories of men fighting in a conflict, one spouse is MIA, one is KIA, and one comes home for Christmas. Yet it could be his last as he would go back to the battle. Remember the lonely, invite them in, share a meal, it’s the little things that add up and make huge things. Each little thing is most important. Humanity needs to keep that in mind all year long.

Hunted Book One

Book Link

From Amazon:

Secrets can kill you…

For twenty-five years, Alice Quinn, believed she was human. That was until a fire demon killed her mother, and her father walked back into her life. As a vampire, being dead is not an acceptable reason for staying out of Alice’s life.

Forced to accept her heritage and the dormant power she possesses as half-vampire and witch, Alice becomes submerged into a world of danger, where deadly forces threaten to strip away her humanity.

Stuck with a newfound family that doesn’t understand her. A ghost who doesn’t want to be dead, and a grumpy gnome, sent by her grandfather from Faerieland, to spy on her, life is more than challenging.

Alpha werewolf, Ethan Jefferies, has a choice, bring Alice back from the Ghost Plane or allow her to die. Ethan’s wolf has its own agenda, claiming Alice, he binds them together. But Alice wants more—she wants the man.

My Review:

This was a unique read for me and this book is perfect for those who like reading otherworldly type of book. The pace is frenetic pace. Alice thought she was normal as a human, then it is thrust upon her that she is a combination of several things including vampire and witch. Without training and not knowing her powers, life turns deadly for those who are of mixed blood such as Alice. This is otherworldly racism. There are those set out to kill all mixed blood leaving a clean lineage of each being. Danger is everywhere. Alice is very angry when her true self comes out. She must learn how and when to use powers she possesses. Love finds her and Alice grows into becoming the one she was meant to be.

Jaggy Little Babies

Book Link

From Amazon:

All children have the occasional nightmare and think there are monsters in the closet or under the bed. Derek R. King and Julie L. Kusma offer your children a unique perspective to calm those fears.

They’ve written a book that turns the monsters of the night into playful child-like pranksters who only want to be your night-time buddy.

Each page and verse in Jaggy Little Babies presents a vivid scene of silliness and fun. Jaggy Little Babies are sure to create mischief from stuffed animals to building blocks and bedtime baths.

If you remember sneaking up on your siblings and scaring them from behind, you’ll love the references in this book to those sibling practical jokes. Tickling feet and poking holes in your socks are only a couple of the sneaky pranks the Jaggy Little Babies pull.

This book ultimately helps children see those imaginary monsters as their playful protectors rather than the dangerous and mean creatures in the corner.

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Jaggy critters

Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2025

Verified Purchase

This is a fun book to read to kids. Jaggy little high jinks in a story that rhymes with lovely watercolor illustrations to complete this entertaining story. Five stars.

Mambo and Murder

Book Link

From Amazon:

Three ballroom dancers had been murdered over forty-years ago. Wow, that’s one old cold case. What’s more, the murderer thought to have been killed during a police chase has resurfaced in Pittsburgh. Yikes! How can that be?Worse, ballroom dancing simply isn’t Detective Nathan Landry’s forte. After weeks of practice, Nathan still has two left-feet. Can Fiona step in to guide Nathan through this dancing debacle or will it take forty-years for the detective to find his footing? Double yikes!Join Fiona and Detective Landry in this high-stepping whodunit!

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Dance competitions and more

Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2025

Verified Purchase

This book was a fun read. I’ve read many, many books by Ms. McDonald and none in the order they were written. That said, I love not reading them in order. Once you know a bit of backstory, the rest falls into place. That said, I loved the antics with the ballroom dancing and the murder aspect with an Italian connection was great. Another great read.