Archive | August 2025

Beer Run

Book Link

From Amazon:

It is the year 2538 in the Democratic Union of Planets. While many promising young men aspire to join the Intergalactic Navy and explore the universe, Bill Stiltson, son of the inventor of the artificially intelligent android, just wants to run a microbrewery on the moon. This is why he illegally buys an abandoned android, whom he dubs Cassandra, and covertly puts her to work behind the bar. However, Bill is thrown into a mystery when his old commander flies his ship into the sun, killing everyone on board, and Bill becomes a part of the investigation. Bill and Cassandra, along with Bill’s adopted android brother, Isaac, get drawn into a Luddite conspiracy.

My Review:

I knew what this book was about, yet I never saw what the novel read as anything remotely what I’d thought in my poor little human brain. The novel is entertaining. Just as it’s also scary. Who knows who or what and where humanoid robots have already taken over planet Earth? Think about it. We have robots that perform high tech surgery on people and much more. Who can say that they know for a fact that they haven’t come across any robot in their lives? Sure, not everyone has dined at places with robot food servers, but I have more than once. Humans are becoming obsolete.

This entry was posted on August 17, 2025. 2 Comments

The Moonshine Murders

Book Link

From Amazon:

In this young adult mystery set in 1970, a family tragedy prompts Christi, a shy and studious teenager, and her mother to travel to rural Roselyn, Mississippi. Christi’s Uncle Bill, the county jailer and a deputy sheriff, is critically wounded while investigating a moonshine still that a local farmer found on his property. As the deputies approach the scene, they are ambushed by four assailants, resulting in the death of the farmer, then vanish without a trace.

Convinced the history of local mistrust of ATF federal agents will hinder the investigation, Lily, the jailer’s daredevil teenage daughter, is determined to find the culprits who shot her daddy. She just needs to persuade Christi, her scaredy-cat cousin, and her best friend Troy, the son of the investigating detective, to join the hunt. Living in a house connected to the jail, Lily thrives on excitement and pushing boundaries. Rule abiding Christi and Troy have been entangled in Lily’s misadventures before and suffered the consequences of lying, spying, and sneaking into forbidden place. With Uncle Bill’s life on the line, Lily manages to convince them this time will be different. What harm can a few questions and a little information gathering do?

Lily’s first assignment brings them face to face with a bootlegger brandishing a shotgun. Christi and Troy quickly realize Lily has once again left out critical details of her plan. When the trio meet Jake, the undaunted teenage son of the murdered farmer, he offers to take them to the location of the ambush. The horrifying scene they stumble upon has them running for their lives. The deeper the foursome digs to uncover the truth, the more the danger escalates, and the threats become personal. Will they back off and let the authorities handle it? Or will their stubborn doggedness result in another disaster?

This fast-paced southern mystery also has a coming-of-age theme. In their efforts to find justice, the four teens discovered the importance of loyalty, being their genuine selves, trust, and taking responsibility for their actions. There is also a sweet romantic first love theme to the story. Adult mystery lovers will enjoy the many twists, turns, and surprises that will keep them guessing. The historical elements of the 1970 setting will also give a nostalgic feel of a time past for some adult readers.

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Teenage mystery and crime novel

Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2025

Verified Purchase

This book is a teenage murder, mystery, crime, moonshine novel set back in the day when many counties were dry. I remember some counties being dry as a young child, but never saw a still or moonshine being made. No one is the same at the end of the book as all lives are changed in many ways, some to death. Murdered actually, and the story weaves around a smallish town, and the countryside. Tack in some people from Chicago, bad men, dangerous men, and mix that with four teenagers and you have a plot in which the teenagers are in more danger than they realized.

Braving the Wild Elements

Book Link

From Amazon:

People tend to do crazy things under weird circumstances. Imagine a major hurricane threatening the shore during the July Fourth holiday – will those without souls betray their friends? Or will the tenderhearted prevail during Mother Nature’s wrath?

Two softhearted sisters throw caution to the wind and rescue a stranded hitchhiker during a mandatory evacuation. Add a homeless veterinarian for good measure and learn the secret of how all four weather the elements during an unexpected hurricane – especially behind closed doors when they face the passionate storms brewing in their hearts.

My Review:

Hurricanes are scary. We’ll stocked on supplies is a must. It is in the worst of times, that we can have the best of times. Hurricane is bad, but love with the right one can be found amid the storm. Two couples did just that.

The Herb Knot

Book Title: The Herb Knot  

Series:  n/a

Author Name: Jane Loftus 

Publication Date: May 8th, 2025 

Publisher: HQ Digital 

Pages: 336 

Genre: Medieval Historical Fiction 

Any Triggers: Domestic abuse / violence (not much, but two short depictions), implied sexual assault, attempted murder, actual murder.

Twitter Handle: @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handles: @janeloftusauthor @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #medieval #Winchester #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/07/blog-tour-the-herb-knot-by-jane-loftus.html

Book Title and Author Name: 

The Herb Knot

By Jane Loftus

Audiobook Narrator: Matt Addis 

Blurb:  

The Hundred Years’ War comes to life in this spellbinding tale of love, betrayal and conspiracy … 

A quest born on the battlefield will change a young boy’s destiny… 

Rafi Dubois is five years old when his mother is murdered after the Battle of Crecy in 1346. Alone and lost, Rafi is given a token by the dying Englishman who tried to save his mother’s life: a half-broken family seal which he urges Rafi to return one day to Winchester. 

Years later, when Rafi saves a wealthy merchant’s wife from a brutal robbery, he is rewarded with the chance to travel to England, taking the seal with him. 

But when he reaches Winchester, Rafi finds himself in a turbulent world full of long-held allegiances, secrets and treachery. His path is fraught with danger and with powerful enemies working against him, Rafi falls in love with Edith, a market apothecary. But in doing so, Rafi unleashes a deadly chain of events which threatens to overwhelm them both… 

The Herb Knot is a sweeping and passionate novel set in one of the most tumultuous times in English history, from a powerful new voice.

Wot, no monarchs?

If, like me, you grew up on Jean Plaidy novels in the 70s, you’ll remember that she did a book for virtually every King and Queen of England, with a few extras thrown in. They seem very dated now although they did ignite that spark of interest in history which has never gone away.

Things have moved on, although there is still a focus on the main, high ranking characters in The Wars of the Roses, and of course, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn remain perennial favourites, and rightly so.

I had heard that publishers prefer a bit of name recognition if you’re positioned in the medieval era. It did give me pause for thought when I decided to write a novel without a single monarch or prince or princess in it (other than a very brief reference to an Earl, one I expect hardly anyone had any gossip on). But there are enough historical novels about ordinary people which are popular – the works of Karen Maitland, Carolyn Hughes – which convinced me to stick to my guns. I’d chosen ordinary people doing, on the whole, ordinary things and I didn’t want to change that and I was grateful that the book got taken up despite the lack of fancy characters.

Even so, novels about ordinary medieval life are still scarcer than Tudor or even Stuart ones and I realised I was taking a commercial risk. But since that was never the motivation for writing in the first place I decided not to care.

Why did I stick to the medieval era, despite having an academic background in Renaissance and Tudor / Stuart history? Well, it was a case of write what you love regardless (not that I don’t love Tudor and Renaissance novels, or Stuarts, or 18th Century, or ALL OF THE HISTORY, because I do!). Also, since I’d never studied the medieval period, I really wanted to learn something new and for that reason alone it was worth the effort. Even if the book had never seen the light of day, the research and the study, at my great age, was really fun. Yes, you heard that right from the woman who used to virtually live in the political history department as a student. Social history suddenly turned out to be, much to my surprise, fun.

I’d assumed that all the stereotypes presented in films and the more flowery novels of ye olden dayes must have a basis in truth. Poor hygiene, everyone drunk because they couldn’t consume water, dull, drab colours, yet none of this was the case. Schoolgirl error. I think the thing which most took me by surprise was the sheer amount of colour people threw on their walls. Obviously not if they were extremely poor, but a merchant or a trader with a few coins to spare would be flinging all sorts of crazy at the interiors of their living space, not to mention places of worship. I then spent far too much time peering at the sparse evidence of colour in churches and medieval houses whenever I got the chance, looking for any sign of red or green or yellow. I never got thrown out, thankfully.

The effort made to make soap, too. I spent hours watching videos of scientists turning ashes into lye and then into soap, amazed at how they’d worked it out. Whilst I’d also known a little about herbalism, and that some herbal remedies have since lent themselves to the pharmaceuticals of the modern age, I had no idea as to the extent of it.

Suddenly I began to haunt medieval fairs, talking to virtually every single person at Evesham, for instance, feeling their clothing (they didn’t seem to mind) and fully intend to keep doing so.

I think what this means is that I’m going to keep reading novels of a more political history slant. I very much enjoy them, there are some great writers out there and I devour historical novels of all periods and hope never to stop. But I’m not sure I’ll be writing them, unless it’s about someone very obscure.

But next time I pick up that novel about Edward IV and watch him ride off to Tewkesbury, I’ll be wondering if he’d washed behind his ears with lye soap that morning.

Buy Link: 

Universal Buy Link:  https://books2read.com/u/bzN6Z2

Author Bio: 

Jane Loftus gained a degree in 16th Century European and British history from Surrey before taking a postgraduate degree in modern political history. As a lone parent, she worked in Winchester Waterstones before returning to IT once her son was older.

Hugely passionate about the Middle Ages, she drew inspiration for this novel from the medieval layout of Winchester which has been painstakingly documented.

Jane is originally from London but has lived in Winchester for over twenty years. When not writing, she is usually out walking or watching costume dramas on Netflix – the more medieval the better. She also plays far too many rpgs.

Author Links: 

Website: https://janeloftus.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61577760507961

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

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

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0F3Q52X9Y

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/29357528.Jane_Loftus

This entry was posted on August 13, 2025. 4 Comments

Everything We Thought We Knew

Name: Carolyn Niethammer

Book Title: Everything We Thought We Knew

Series: n/a

Publication Date: May 1st, 2025

Publisher: Booklocker

Pages: 254

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any Triggers: n/a

Twitter Handle: @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handles: @carolynniethammer @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #1970s #PoliticalProtest #Peace #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

Tour Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-everything-we-thought-we-knew-by-carolyn-niethammer.html

Book Title and Author Name:

Everything We Thought We Knew

by Carolyn Niethammer

Blurb:

In 1970, Christie left behind the comforts of L.A. and joined a New Age commune in rural Arizona. With the Vietnam War raging and the counterculture movement in full swing, she hoped to find a community to create a better society. But building a new culture is no easy task, especially when free love, psychedelics, and a war protest gone horribly wrong are thrown into the mix. Important secrets follow them beyond the commune.

Put on your tie-dyed shirt and come to Bella Vida as the friends try to change the rules of modern society, then face the repercussions of when middle age sets in.

Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/3GZ6ra

Author Bio: 

In the 1970s Carolyn Niethammer visited communes throughout the West and settled in an Arizona artists’ community for many years. Those years were important to who she became as she learned to gather wild foods and wrote several cookbooks centered on edible plants.

In “Everything We Thought We Knew” she hopes to shed light on an important part of American history where young people were advocating for peace in Vietnam War protests and fled to communes, seeking a lifestyle apart from the commercialism and isolation that had overtaken society.

Author Links:

Website: www.cniethammer.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/carolyn.niethammer  / https://www.facebook.com/CarolynNiethammerAuthor 

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

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

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Carolyn-J.-Niethammer/author/B001H9XDNE

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/265163.Carolyn_Niethammer

This entry was posted on August 12, 2025. 4 Comments

Sold By My Brother

Book Link

From Amazon:

If you’re looking for your next exciting read, look no further…

Not every older brother will protect you…some are the reason you’re battling to survive.

Since Jake left the family farm in Vermont at age twelve to live with his uncle in New Orleans, he has seen Mason four times in the past twenty-three years. The first cost him two hundred grand and a trip to Colorado. The next dragged him to Turkey, where he had to cover up three murders. Africa almost killed him. And the fourth? It’s 2004, and Mason has sold Jake, his skills, and his freedom to the highest bidder. Now Jake is trapped in Costa Rica, working for a man he despises, caught up in a business he hates.

Jake’s freedom hinges on surviving the last seven days of a brutal contract orchestrated by Mason. But in Costa Rica’s dark underbelly of organised crime, survival hour by hour is far from guaranteed.

The clock is ticking, and the stakes couldn’t be higher. If Jake is to make it out alive, he must rely on all his uncle taught him. But is it enough? Will Jake cross a line no other dares to tread and do the unthinkable to hold Mason accountable?

My Review:

Gripping

This book was a gripping read. From the atrocities life can throw your way, to the psychological aspects piled on top of other psychological aspects is alot to take in. Good thing this bok is fiction. Trueshan has written a frightning novel set in different places in the world. Each page goes deeper into how and why Jake is Jake. Deep emotions and betrayal in every chapter. How could Jake trust anyone? It is reasonable to think that Jake won’t survive this story. Will Jake live? A sharp mind and deadly accuracy come ingo play. Who is betraying who? A true thriller, and unimaginable cruelty awaits the next reader.

The Winding Dirt Road

Book Title: The Winding Dirt Road

Series: n/a

Author: Jiu Da

Publication Date: May 2025

Publisher: Historium Press

Pages: 391

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any Triggers: n/a

Twitter Handles: @JiudaLog @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handles: @jiuda99 @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #TheWindingDirtRoad #HistoricalChineseFiction #PoliticalFiction #HistoricalFiction #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/07/blog-tour-the-winding-dirt-road-by-jiu-da.html

Book Title and Author Name:

The Winding Dirt Road

Jiu Da

Blurb:

Written as an antithesis to all first-hand and second-hand propaganda written by both Chinese and foreign writers for China in the good part of the 20th century in a fictional form, this collection, through different times and lands, gives insights into how human docile nature and characteristics are manipulated and brought about cultural and social corrosion over the century. The outcome thus sees “a monumental loss breathtakingly massive than any period that preceded it.” Subsequently, it foreshadows a system that “would bring out not the best but the worst in people, against people, any people.” (Event Horizon)

The first story is written as an introduction in addition to the prologue. From there, the collection proceeds with interrelated subjects or topics, building up causes and factors. At every turn, it gathers momentum and convenes halfway through the book to form the major components of critical perspectives at a juncture.

Hoarded in the depth of memories of the past decades, this has been a work long overdue.

Excerpt 1:

“[The follower] stated that what made a club function depended not entirely on its thick end but on the shaft that formed the handle. This nation’s tasks or ideology was the main element that formed the thick end, but it would need the handle to wield that power effectively. It required bruteness, loudness, and grip to make the club applicable.”

~ Ashes Of Aggravation

Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link: https://geni.us/VwB3xZ

Author Bio:

For years, Jiu Da has been intrigued by the question of whether the environment makes us who we are or whether we are the ones that shape our environment. For the good parts of early years, he stubbornly believed that motivation, talent, and effort could change the outcomes. It did not.

It was not until the virus hit while finding himself perching at home that he came to accept that the environment is indeed the hand that shapes human behavior.

It was during this time that he began his first work, drawing from his love in literature, history and a lifetime of seemingly useless yet fascinating knowledge hoarded in the depth of his mind.

Author Links:

Author Page on Publisher’s Website: https://www.historiumpress.com/jiu-da

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

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jiuda99/

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

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Jiu-Da/author/B0F63SL22K

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/55530207.Jiu_Da

This entry was posted on August 8, 2025. 2 Comments

Meet Tristan Peterson

Please welcome Tristan Peterson to my blog.

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

My name is Tristan Peterson. I write under the names T. A. Peterson, for the Fantasy Meta-Series “Vingt”, but for this particular project, I write under the name Netta Stirs-Peron. Which is an, admittedly lazy, anagram of my name.

Other than that, I don’t consider myself all that interesting a person, so I try to make my writing interesting instead. I love both Heavy Metal and Classical music, I’m a fan of old school Fantasy, such as Elric of Melnibone, and riding my motorcycle. I am, pretty much, just a nerd in a leather jacket.

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

Writing been a fixture in my life since I was a child. I’d say from the age of nine and on wards. I wouldn’t say I knew that it was time to write my first book, as I’d completed a number of manuscripts before. I just didn’t consider pursuing a career as a writer until I was in my thirties.

3. How difficult was it writing your first book?

Writing my first book wasn’t difficult at all. It was an idea I’d been kicking around for a long time, with characters I’d had percolating in my mind for just as long. It was all a matter of putting it all together. The truly difficult part was completing it – insofar as making sure those pieces were cohesive.

4. Have you ever wanted to give up and what stopped you?

I have, honestly, never wanted to give up. I will take a few weeks off of a project, rarely will I completely shelf one, but I always come back. I’ll probably die at a desk, with a pen in my hand. Personally, I am fine with that.

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

That’s like asking a parent who their favourite child is! I have been fortunate enough to have friends, work colleagues, fellow writers, and even a few fans who have been nothing but supportive in my pursuit of a writing career. So, I feel I owe it to them all to give it my best shot and see how far down the path I can go.

6. Anything specific you want to tell your readers?

In terms of becoming an Author? Well, it would be to have an actual, paying job, first and foremost. Dreams don’t keep the lights on, or the fridge filled. Have a 9-to-5, to keep you self alive, feed the dream so you can live. If you truly want to make something of it, then you will find time for it. Even if its just half an hour a night.

In general? Listen to Motorhead. See Evil Dead The Musical. Live well, love free, and pay your artists.

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

For writing: “Anybody can write a book; but not everybody should.” – David Eddings.

For life: “Each day we should one should hear a little song, read a good poem, see one fine painting and – if at all possible – speak a few sensible words” – Goethe.

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

My usual target audience, at least in the case of the Vingt novels, has always been Young Adult – around the ages of eight to sixteen. This most recent book, however, was a departure from that. Leaning more New Adult/Adult, as its themes and language might be a little much for younger audiences.

In terms of what aspect of my writing hits that audience, I would put that largely on the dialogue and the main character’s internal monologue. I get the feeling that a lot of it – not all of it, mind – will resonate with quite a few people.

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

There’s actually a story behind that! The concept of this book didn’t begin as a novel. It was intended to be a comic book. I wrote up the scripts and storyboards and, since I cannot draw all too well, sought out a local artist whose work I was familiar with. He was keen to take up the task, and seemed to really like the concept, so we worked out pricing and schedules. Then, all at once, I lost my job, my then girlfriend, and my house. Since I wasn’t going to ask the artist to work when I couldn’t guarantee payment, I shelved the project.

Many years later, I came back to the concept and drafted it as a novel. When it came time to create a cover, I sought out that same artist again. He was more than glad to do the artwork.

I believe I made the right choice in that. I had worked with them before and I have always like their style and their instincts on things, such as poses, blocking, and overall dynamics.

When I told him the cover would be “In the tradition of comic book covers – where what you see on the cover had little, if nothing, to do with the actual plot of the story” he ran with it and produced some excellent work.

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

For this current project, I am working on an Audiobook – which will be coming soon. I am also in talks with another writer, who wants to produce a short Prequel Comic/Graphic Novel for this story. I am also kicking around a possible sequel to this story and some other books set in this world.

I am, however, currently more engaged in releasing further books in the Vingt series. Book 2 is in the hands of a publisher, and a few others are with Agents right now. So, I can only hope things work out on that front.

If you want an excerpt, then I will be glad to show you something from the next Vingt novel “Lizard Hands” (Release Date TBA)

            “Why don’t you pray for your gods to heal you?”

            She instantly regretted asking this, as she recalled just how angry he tended to get whenever May questioned his faith. Nari was surprised, however, to hear laughter. Surprised, and more than a little afraid, as she was almost certain she’d incur some of his wrath. But there was no mocking, or any warning in his laugh, if anything he sounded genuinely amused. Sitting at the foot of the statue, he relaxed his posture and answered Nari.

            “The gods do not grant such boons to a sinner, like me.”

            “Then why are you asking them for help?”

            “One can only ask the gods for little things. To remove the stones from your path, so you might conquer the mountain.”

11. Any last words before we wrap things up?

Do not seek out a career in writing purely for the Money or the Fame it can bring. Such writers are a dime a dozen. It is why the current marketplace feels mired in tepid, vapid, ultimately cookie-cutter stories, released en masse by publishers who spent far too much on marketing.

Write because you would feel as if a part of you would be unfulfilled if you did not. Don’t be “the next Stephen King” or “Author of the next Harry Potter”. Be the first you. Wear your inspirations on your sleeve and write – even if nobody will ever see it.

If all else fails, then avail yourself to my personal credo:

Passion. Patience. Perseverance.

Links:

Current Book: https://www.lulu.com/shop/netta-stirs-per%C3%B3n/doctor-malevolent/paperback/product-w4ydr86.html?srsltid=AfmBOooc0cszb1eXaFvvAmBNAutAwIM0rzbM6GgYEvJ8RAl7Kt0nHowS&page=1&pageSize=4

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com.au/stores/T.-A.-Peterson/author/B0CDZGFL2F?ref=ap_rdr&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true

Goodreads

As T. A. Peterson: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/30869911.T_A_Peterson

As Netta Stirs-Peron: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/49746705.Netta_Stirs_Per_n

Twitter: @LawfulEvilBard

When Secrets Bloom

Book Link

From Amazon:

Transylvania, 1463

Some secrets heal. Others kill.

Kate Webber, a 28-year-old Saxon healer, has long walked the line between reverence and suspicion. Trained in the healing arts under the guidance of Lord Vlad Dracula, she has learned that skill alone cannot protect a woman in a city ruled by fear. Her marriage to the powerful but secretive Magyar promised stability, yet left her silenced and watched. On a bitter Advent night, when a mother and her newborn face death, Kate defies her husband’s command and steps into danger — for life, not reputation.

When Kate succeeds, the city notices. Some with awe. Others with fury. The town physician, threatened by her talent and humiliated by her success, seizes his moment. And as rumors flare into accusations, old alliances stir. Iancu, Kate’s childhood friend and now captain of the Militia, comes to her aid during the perilous birth — rekindling memories of freedom, laughter, and trust, before marriage shackled her to duty.

Back in her workshop, a girl appears, pleading for a love potion. But Margit brings more than need. She leads a mob. Elsewhere in the city, Moise, a Jewish apprentice at the printing press, notices a cloaked figure drifting across the square: a Shaman whose presence draws whispers of Magyar’s hidden dealings. When a rare manuscript disappears from the press Moise begins to uncover a darker purpose: a sought-after book. On the day of execution Kate performs a final act of defiance, she saves another child, while Moise is framed for more than he could have ever imagined.

Kate and Moise’s fates, as well as the map’s legacy, unfold as some secrets must be read not in books, but in the hearts of those who hide them.

***
Kate is a fictional character, yet through her eyes When Secrets Bloom offers a vivid, textured glimpse into 15th-century life in Kronstadt, Transylvania (today Brasov). From the daily rhythms of a fortress ruled by Saxon and Szekler men to the endearing hopes of Vlach and Jewish communities; from the quiet power women wield behind closed doors to the looming shadow of the Church and to whispered fears of plague and heresy, this novel immerses the reader fully in a world both beautiful and brutal. The presence of Vlad the Impaler’s memory — observed not through myth but through Kate’s wary, intimate lens — adds a haunting tension to the tale. It’s the kind of historical fiction that doesn’t just tell a story, it transports you into its bones.

Fans of rousing historical fiction with a feminist bent will find much to love in When Secrets Bloom.

My Review:

This novel is woven tightly and in an intricate fashion full of 15th century Transylvania. Dark times were upon the land, with trades people, merchants, physicians, midwives, princes, and true hierarchies everywhere. A land where greed came first and foremost in those of higher standings.

We are introduced to Kate and Moise, and within the pages their stories connect often. Kate is a wonderful healer, she learned from the best, her mother, and she inherited wealth of her own. She is a gifted healer and men hated that. They were jealous that the physician could do nothing, nor the midwife really, in the birth of a baby in which Kate had to literally move the baby into a birthing manner, still feet first. Yes, she literally pulls the baby out one leg at a time, the body, then one arm and shoulder followed by the other, and finally its head emerged. The baby lived, so did the mother, but had it been left to the physician and midwife, both would have perished. Kate was not a witch, but a healer. A healer who traveled along with war, and she did the best she could in healing, yet her own husband was jealous of her.

Moise is a man of Jewish faith, and he prints books. He wants to find a stolen book that holds treasure map. He has his own share of travails, in a land that is cold as winter, literally, and his own anguish is expressed well by Ms. Furstenberg. Darkness prevails over the land and people, shadows of evil and good. Another book is forthcoming, book two in this series, and this book is chock full of historical information.