Archive | September 2025

Psalms of Calm

Book Link

From Amazon:

We are in uncertain times – the world seems troubled and people seem troubled. A cloud of angst looming over head.

I wanted to write a book of poems to create a sense of peace and belonging. A sense of calm. The front cover of this book is an unedited photograph taken by me. I too search for peace and calm. I find it in the sea and the setting sun.

My Review:

Calm. We all need that in life and this poetry book is full of calm and beautiful poetry that brightens anyone’s day. Each poem was a fresh breathe of air, a sweet breeze, the scents that are fresh and soothing. I’m so happy to have had the chance to read this book.

Perspective

Book Link

From Amazon:

Everything in this book is designed to lighten the load, uplift the spirit or otherwise aid in shifting one’s perspective on life. Because the only thing we have going for us sometimes is our outlook. May you always believe that something wonderful is about to happen and that something good will come out of every situation you are experiencing. It really IS all about replacing one thought with another!

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome

Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2025

Format: KindleVerified Purchase

This book of poems is truly awesome. The poetry is so uplifting that the reader becomes lifted up from their worries or issues they may be dealing with. Out of sadness, worry, loss, and more, comes the beauty of words so tangible one can see, hear, and feel.

This entry was posted on September 29, 2025. 2 Comments

Raw Justice

Book Link

From Amazon:

In a world ruled by darkness, justice becomes their deadliest weapon.

Jack Slade is no ordinary hero. Consumed by the brutal murder of his beloved wife and partner, he embarks on a mission to provide closure to families left behind by an ineffective system.
Teaming up with Selina DuVay, a streetwise prostitute with an indomitable spirit, and the relentless FBI Special Agent Trent Morelli, Jack plunges into darkness to bring down the vile criminals behind the rape and mutilation of a young Native American woman. This is not a quest for redemption but an unyielding pursuit of raw justice in its most unforgiving form.


Will they succeed in their relentless pursuit or succumb to the shadows that threaten to destroy them all?

My Review:

This book addresses many topics such as raper, murder, visions, paranormal visions, the plight of Native Americans and the color of one’s skin to name a few. This book is different from her others in not so sublte ways. When a spirits visits and converses with a real life person, paranormal takes on new meaning when Prater writes about it from different view points. Toss in corrupted senator and his black hearted son, men with power and money, the FBI with one character doing wrong, men who try to help others or figure out who did what to whom with multiple “whoms” involved in a murder mystery is tops in this dark murder mystery.

The Man in the Stone Cottage

Name:  Stephanie Cowell

Book Title: The Man in the Stone Cottage: a novel of the Brontë sisters

Series: N/a

Publication Date: September 16th, 2025

Publisher: Regal House Publishing

Pages: 258

Genre: historical fiction

Any Triggers: no

Twitter Handle: @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handles: @cowell.stephanie @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #Brontë #Yorkshire #Victorian #EnglishLiterature #WomenWriters #HistoricalFiction #TheCoffeePotBookClub #BlogTour

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-the-man-in-the-stone-cottage-by-stephanie-cowell.html

Book Title and Author Name:

The Man in the Stone Cottage: a novel of the Brontë sisters

By Stephanie Cowell

Audiobook by Brilliance Audio

Blurb:

“A haunting and atmospheric historical novel.” – Library Journal

In 1846 Yorkshire, the Brontë sisters— Charlotte, Anne, and Emily— navigate precarious lives marked by heartbreak and struggle.

Charlotte faces rejection from the man she loves, while their blind father and troubled brother add to their burdens. Despite their immense talent, no one will publish their poetry or novels.

Amidst this turmoil, Emily encounters a charming shepherd during her solitary walks on the moors, yet he remains unseen by anyone else.

After Emily’ s untimely death, Charlotte— now a successful author with Jane Eyre— stumbles upon hidden letters and a mysterious map. As she stands on the brink of her own marriage, Charlotte is determined to uncover the truth about her sister’ s secret relationship.

The Man in the Stone Cottage is a poignant exploration of sisterly bonds and the complexities of perception, asking whether what feels real to one person can truly be real to another.

Praise for The Man in the Stone Cottage:

“A mesmerizing and heartrending novel of sisterhood, love, and loss in Victorian England.” – Heather Webb, USA Today bestselling author of Queens of London

“Stephanie Cowell has written a masterpiece.” – Anne Easter Smith, author of This Son of York

“With The Man in the Stone Cottage, Stephanie Cowell asks what is real and what is imagined and then masterfully guides her readers on a journey of deciding for themselves.” – Cathy Marie Buchanan, author of The Painted Girls

“The Brontës come alive in this beautiful, poignant, elegant and so very readable tale. Just exquisite.” – NYT bestseller, M.J. Rose

“Cowell’s ability to take readers to time and place is truly wonderful and absorbing.” – Stephanie H. (Netgalley)

“Such a lovely, lovely book!” – Books by Dorothea (Netgalley)

Excerpt 4:

Branwell, the only brother of the family and now thirty years old, has become an alcoholic and drug addict, in spite of the sister’s hopes that he would save the family.

Despite that conversation, bills from the Black Bull were once more presented weekly at the parsonage door. Over the next months, Branwell pawned some of the silver spoons for money for opium and drink; she and Martha went stone-faced to the pawnbroker in the poorest streets of the town and redeemed them. A month later, they found their brother collapsed in an alley.

Then all talk of his writing ceased.

He was well for a day, perhaps two. He was calm that night, they later said. No, he was not. Anyone can tip a candle; anyone too tired can fall asleep with one burning and a wind through the open summer window.

Charlotte sat up in bed at the sharp, piercing cry of Anne from the hall and hurried from her door. Emily in her nightdress was rushing toward Branwell, who was hardly dressed. Behind him, flames leaped and consumed the bed hangings up to the poles.

He waited unmoving. “Bedroom candle! Knocked it over.”

“How, by God?”

“I don’t know.”

“Stand away!” Emily had seized the full bucket of water they kept on the landing. Anne followed with a second. Charlotte ran down for more and struggled to carry it, back aching, bare feet leaving marks on the wet floor. In her brother’s room, water flooded every crack in the floorboard. By then, their father had come with his own bucket.

“Why was the candle lit?”

“Fell asleep reading… Very sorry…” Branwell muttered.

The clock struck four in the morning by the time the flames were out. Branwell was naked to the waist, his thin ribs pressed against his strained skin, blotched with soot and some kind of crawling rash.

“You must believe me,” he said.

As their father took his son back to share his own bed, the sisters remained shivering, white bare feet wet, hair wet. The sodden bed hangings from his room drooped down.

“Sorry.” They heard the fragment of their brother’s voice from behind their father’s bedroom door and their father’s voice sounding like it did so many years ago when they were very small. “Shh… God was watching… All’s well.”

Emily was silent. Then the words burst from her. “I wish he were dead,” she said. Everything poured out then. With her fist, she struck the doorjamb again and again. She shouted and yelled. Her fierce brown mastiff rushed up and down the stairs again, barking and howling as if he could not stop.

In the floor below, water dripped through the ceiling, seeping into the crate of copies of gift books sent from Charlotte’s publisher, dampening the pages, staining the cloth covers of the first few.

From that time on, their father made Branwell sleep on a cot at the foot of the paternal bed. Emily, now calmer, waited in darkness in the hall before her room. “Heal him,” she whispered. Deep within her body, she felt the old power that would let her stop a storm. “Heal him and I will be Yours only again, you elusive God to whom my father has dedicated his life. That is the price of my returning to You.”

Charlotte came from her room and held her. They stood together, clinging to each other.

Anne joined them; she had come softly, like a ghost.

Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/mqLV2d

Author Bio:

Stephanie Cowell has been an opera singer, balladeer, founder of Strawberry Opera and other arts venues including a Renaissance festival in NYC.

She is the author of seven novels including Marrying Mozart, Claude & Camille: a novel of Monet, The Boy in the Rain and The Man in the Stone Cottage. Her work has been translated into several languages and adapted into an opera. Stephanie is the recipient of an American Book Award. 

Author Links:

Website: https://stephaniecowell.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stephanie.cowell.14

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cowell.stephanie/

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/stephaniecowell

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/197596.Stephanie_Cowell

This entry was posted on September 26, 2025. 2 Comments

Heartless Intent

Book Link

From Amazon:

The only way three people can keep a secret is if two are dead.

A couples’ nude bodies swaying in the wind on the banks of the Chicago River. A gruesome murder with missing hearts and body parts. The word pedophile carved into the man’s forehead.

It seems like a simple crime for Detective Kacy Lang and her partner, Dave Capello, to solve. The man was a pedophile, his wife knew and kept his secret. But when the body of the second in command of the Brave Hearts’ gang is discovered with missing hands and the word thief burned into his forehead it sends a message they can’t ignore.

There’s a vigilante on their beat, and he isn’t finished yet. Tension increases with the local gangs in an uproar and the body count rising. A gang war is imminent. Dave is missing and Kacy has a price on her head. Can she uncover the truth before it’s too late, or will she become the next victim of the killer’s heartless intent?

My Review:

This murder, mystery, romance novel was intense. The pace moved right along and I was surprised by many instances when I thought things were one way, yet that was not the case. Prather writes the dark cases rather well.

Cobblestones – A New Orleans Tragedy

Book Title: Cobblestones

Series: n/a

Author Name: S.R. Perricone

Publication Date: July 30, 2025

Publisher: Historium Press

No. of Pages: 586

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any triggers: No triggers.

Twitter Handle: @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handle: @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #NewOrleans #TrueEvents #TheCoffeePotBookClub #BlogTour

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-cobblestones-by-s-r-perricone.html

Book Title and Author:

COBBLESTONES 

by S.R. Perricone

Blurb:

The turbulent history of Post-Reconstruction New Orleans collides with the plight of Sicilian immigrants seeking refuge in America.

Antonio, a young man fleeing Sicily after avenging his father’s murder, embarks on a harrowing journey to New Orleans with the help of Jesuit priests expelled from his homeland. However, the promise of a fresh start quickly sours as Antonio becomes entangled in a volatile clash of cultures, corruption, and crime.

In the late 19th century, Italian immigrants in New Orleans faced hostility, exploitation, and a brutal system of indentured servitude. Antonio becomes a witness to history as a bitter feud over the docks spirals into violence, culminating in the assassination of Irish police chief David C. Hennessy. The ensuing trial of nine Italians and the shocking lynching of eleven innocent men ignited international outrage, threatening to sever ties between the United States and Italy.

Caught in the crossfire of prejudice and power struggles, Antonio fights to survive while grappling with his own past and future. His journey weaves a gripping tale of resilience, betrayal, and the enduring hope for justice. Cobblestones: A New Orleans Tragedy is a poignant reminder of the human cost of intolerance and the courage it takes to rebuild a life from ashes.

“A phenomenal epic account of a forgotten slice of New Orleans history for fans of Scorsese / Coppola-type cinematic dramas such as Midnight Vendetta and The Godfather!”
~ HFC Reviews

Excerpt 2:

When Charles Dickens created his character, Samuel Pickwick, in The Pickwick Papers in 1837, he could have not imagined that twenty years later a group of soi desant elite white male Protestants in New Orleans would have appropriated his character’s name, and fictional club as inspiration for the formation of a secret society, which fostered white supremacy. Dickens was an ardent abolitionist. The club’s first president, Adley Hogan Gladden, wanted a means to celebrate the fledgling observance on the city’s Mardi Gras, while preserving New Orleans’ own variety of eugenics. Only the finest families from selected professions were selected to join. Most of the membership were attorneys, doctors, non-Jewish merchants, businessmen, and owners of the local newspapers. Most claim to be of an Anglo-Saxon pedigree, and refused to tolerate anyone whom they view as having an inferior social standing in a city carved from a cypress swamp by French Catholics, Indians, and African slaves. Every member, during the Civil War, swore allegiance to the Confederacy, and were inveterate Democrats. Indeed, Gladden, who joined the Confederate army, was killed on April 12, 1862, during the battle of Shilo, Tennessee. But the Pickwick Club endured. It endured the Union occupation of New Orleans, and the post-war Reconstruction.

The Pickwick Club had a companion club, which had many of the same social aspirations—the Boston Club. It took its name from a popular card game of the time, but some viewed its membership a social notch below the Pickwick Club, though both clubs shared and welcomed each other’s members. And both enforced and enjoyed the caste system, which controlled New Orleans. Despite some political differences, however, the clubs sometimes found their members supporting different candidates for mayor and other elected and appointed offices, which, sometimes, caused contused feelings.  The Pickwickians self-identified as Bourbonist and more sophisticated than their Bostonians counterparts, who self-identified as The Ring or the Regular Democratic Organization. Every election found candidates in heated campaigns between the Bourbonist and The Ring, and often the mayor’s office and city council would switch sides every election. Since the end of Reconstruction, no republican dared to run for public office in New Orleans.  In fact, the last Republican mayor of New Orleans, Benjamin Flanders was voted out of office in November 1872. The insular city despised republicans, and avoided them like yellow fever. Though it had been twenty-three years since the end of the Civil War, many nativists recalled vividly the Union yoke of Reconstruction. Long memories have long knives.

Buy Link:

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

Author Bio:

Sal Perricone, a graduate of Loyola University of New Orleans with a BA (1975) and JD (1979), has dedicated his career to law enforcement, legal practice, and public service. Beginning as a sergeant with the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Department, he progressed to detective with the New Orleans Police Department before practicing law privately in New Orleans. In 1985, he joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a Supervisory Special Agent, specializing in financial crime investigations and organized crime.

In 1991, Sal Perricone transitioned to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Louisiana, where he served as Chief of the Organized Crime Strike Force and Senior Litigation Counsel until retiring in 2012. Over his illustrious career, he prosecuted significant cases involving La Cosa Nostra, public corruption, and white-collar crime. He earned numerous accolades, including multiple Director’s Awards and the Attorney General’s Award for his role in establishing the Katrina Fraud Task Force.

An adjunct professor at Tulane University and the University of New Orleans, Sal Perricone has trained law enforcement professionals across the nation. Post-retirement, he has authored two novels with positive Catholic themes, Blue Steel Crucifix and The Shadows of Nazareth. A Brother Martin alumnus, he continues to inspire with his dedication to justice and ethics.

Author Links:

Facebook Profile: https://www.facebook.com/sal.r.perricone/

Facebook Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/srperricone

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/S.-R.-Perricone/author/B00RKH1OP6

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/57777507.S_R_Perricone

This entry was posted on September 24, 2025. 1 Comment

Finnegan and Schmidt Take Gold

Finnegan and Schmidt Take Gold

Reader’s Favorite announced their chosen books for medals September 1, 2025. Local Solo Gold medal winners include Willa R. Finnegan for her debut book, Snow: Cursed, in the Young Adult Mythology/Fairytale Category. Mary L. Schmidt won her gold medal for Shadow, in Children’s Pet Books. Reader’s Favorite is on hiatus so the awards in Miami will be in November 2026 for both years. 

This entry was posted on September 23, 2025. 6 Comments

Flash Flooding

We were dumped on with water and the town flooded in low lying areas. Pictures are not perfect as they are drive by.

This entry was posted on September 22, 2025. 6 Comments

Justifiable Death

Book Link

From Amazon:

Pawns in a game of greed…

Sacrificed and tossed aside…

Detectives Kacy Lang and Dave Capello team up with newly promoted Detective Greg Stevens in a perplexing case of cat and mouse. Why would three happy teenage boys with everything to live for hang themselves? And why does someone believe their deaths are justified?

With nothing more than cryptic clues from a disturbed mind, Kacy must play the game to rescue the maiden, and find the queen. A chilling mantra echoes in her mind…The queen is evil—don’t listen to her voice.

An addictive crime thriller for those who love detective stories!

My Review:

Mary Schmidt

5.0 out of 5 stars Kacy Lang is on it

Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2025

Verified Purchase

Another book in the Kacy Lang series. She must have quite the adrenaline running around to hardly get much sleep in these twisted murder mysteries she works on solving. Caffeine just isn’t enough. Just when one thinks they have part of the novel figured out, boom! Another twist to twist the twisted or evil person’s in the story.

The Price of Loyalty

Name: Malve von Hassell

Book Title: The Price of Loyalty: Serving Adela of Blois

Series: n/a

Publication Date: August 21, 2025

Publisher: Historium Press

Pages: 376

Genre: Historical Fiction

Any Triggers: Some violence, some references to rape [not graphic]

Twitter Handles: @MvonHassell @cathiedunn @marylschmidt

Instagram Handles: @mvonhassell @thecoffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #medieval #France #crusades #AdelaofBlois #WilliamtheConqueror #StephenHenrydeBlois #BlogTour #TheCoffeePotBookClub

Tour Schedule Page: https://thecoffeepotbookclub.blogspot.com/2025/08/blog-tour-the-price-of-loyalty-by-malve-von-hassell.html

Book Title and Author Name: 

The Price of Loyalty

by Malve von Hassell

Blurb:

In a time of kingdoms and crusades, one man’s heart is the battlefield.

Cerdic, a Saxon knight, serves Count Stephen-Henry of Blois with unwavering loyalty-yet his soul remains divided. Haunted by memories of England, the land of his childhood, and bound by duty to King William, the conqueror who once showed him mercy, Cerdic walks a dangerous line between past and present, longing and loyalty.

At the center of his turmoil stands Adela-daughter of a king, wife of a count, and the first to offer him friendship in a foreign land. But when a political marriage binds him to the spirited and determined Giselle, Cerdic’s world turns again. Giselle, fiercely in love with her stoic husband, follows him across sea and sand to the holy land, hoping to win the heart that still lingers elsewhere.

As the clash of empires looms and a crusade threatens to tear everything apart, Cerdic must confront the deepest truth of all-where does his loyalty lie, and whom does his heart truly belong to?

Excerpt 1:

Bayeux Cathedral

Here Harold has sailed the sea, and with sails filled with wind has come into Count Guy’s territory. — Here they have given Harold the king’s crown. Here sits Harold as King of the Angles. — Here Angles and Franks have fallen together in battle. Here Bishop Odo holding his staff encourages the younger soldiers. Bayeux Tapestry

1077 Bayeux

Adela’s feet itched. She was tired of standing still. “Stop wiggling,” she murmured, kicking Henry in the side with her elbow.

“You are wiggling too,” he hissed.

At least they stood in the front row on one side of the cathedral. Adela craned her head to watch her father and mother with her father’s closest advisors on the opposite side.

The new cathedral was massive. Despite the hot summer day, the cavernous expanse felt damp and chilly. There was only one large round opening and several smaller ones allowing sunlight into the interior. Candlesticks set up along the perimeter made the stone pillars and niches and the high ceiling appear even more imposing. Gilded candelabras illuminated the dais. The cathedral wasn’t finished; there was still scaffolding in some areas. The workers had set up temporary wooden stakes all along the outer wall for displaying the tapestry, one segment on the left, another segment on the right, and two others flanking the entrance.

“I expect you to be still and to refrain from talking,” Adela’s mother had told Henry and Adela, fixing them with a stern look. “Bishop Odo will bless the church with holy water on the outside. He must walk around the entire building three times and then repeat the blessing inside.”

A loud knock reverberated through the hall. Nobody moved. Another knock. Silence. At the third knock, the wide double doors opened, and the procession filed in, the monks chanting as they moved along. The chanting grew louder, drowning out all sounds from the people inside the church. “Let this temple be sanctified and consecrated,” the monks intoned. The bishop circled the interior three times, followed by other priests and monks. He sprinkled holy water on each section of the wall. After that, he anointed each of the crosses along the walls with oil.

Adela pressed her lips together to keep from giggling. It made her think of maids at home wandering around with dusters and polishing the silver. Then she sobered as the chanting of the Benedictus washed over her. “O how fearful is this place; truly this is no other than the house of God, and the gate of Heaven.”

She glanced at her father, tall and heavy next to her mother. His reddish curls were hidden under his crown; his beard had lately acquired a new shade of gray and yellow. He was frowning, his lips pursed as if something about this ceremony irritated him.

Maybe her father was annoyed with his brother, the bishop. She’d worm it out of him later. When he was in a good mood, he liked to explain things to her. Only, when he went on too long, sounding just like her tutor, her mind wandered. Noticing her abstraction, he’d laugh and pull on her hair as if she were a horse. “I’m glad you are asking questions, but run along now.”

Bishop Odo held his head and chin high, glancing down his nose at the scene in front of him as he made his circuit around the interior of the church, resplendent in his vestments and miter. The gold threads along his long sleeves glinted as he continued to sprinkle holy water on the walls. He certainly appeared prominently on the tapestry. In one scene during the battle of Hastings, he wore full armor and a helmet and held a huge mace in his hand. Adela hadn’t thought that bishops would go to war. But it did look impressive.

“Your uncle supported the production of the tapestry; most of the work was done at the embroidery school of Cambridge,” her mother had told Adela the day before. “So he deserves a place on it.”

She had taken Henry and Adela to a visit to the cathedral for a private viewing of the tapestry. “Tomorrow, during the ceremony there won’t be time.” She told them how much work it took to create all these scenes. “Just imagine how many women had to sit there for many hours over many days placing the individual stitches in accordance with a drawing.”

“If women did all this work, why aren’t there more women shown in the tapestry?” Adela asked.

“War is fought by men.” Matilda studied her daughter from the side. “You should know that by now. Women act on another stage.”

Adela had stopped listening. “Look, there is a woman next to someone on a bed. Who is that?”

Matilda stepped closer and peered at the lettering. “Oh, that’s Edith, the wife of King Edward, at his deathbed.”

Adela pursed her lips. She loved all the animals along the edges, some unlike any she had ever seen. There were wild beasts from Africa and from the East, lots of horses, dogs, and all manner of birds.

“What’s that?” she asked, mesmerized by a bright blue bird with a huge multicolored long tail that fanned out like a carpet.

“That’s a paon. The English say ‘peacock,’” her mother explained.

“Oh, a paon,” Adela said dismissively, as if she had known that all along while she repeated the strange word to herself.

“Why isn’t that man wearing any clothes?” Adela pointed and then quickly pulled her hand back. She had been chewing her nails again, and her mother would scold her.

“No clothes?” Matilda peered at the edge of the tapestry. Then she laughed. “I suspect someone might have put this in as a joke.” She pondered the skillful embroidery. “Come to think of it, there are several scenes here where I am not sure of the intended meaning.”

“Look, mother!” Henry pointed at another section. “Here they are cooking!”

“Well, soldiers need to be fed.”

“Why did that house get burned down?”

“It’s a battle, silly.” Adela poked him in the side. “Things get burned.”

“You wouldn’t like it if it happened to you.” Henry made a face at his sister, while poking her back.

“Remember where you are. You shouldn’t argue inside a house of God.” Matilda led them to the end of the tapestry. “Any battle is hard and full of bitter loss for many. But that doesn’t mean these battles shouldn’t be fought.”

Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/bpo2vg

Author Bio:

Malve von Hassell is a freelance writer, researcher, and translator. She holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from the New School for Social Research. Working as an independent scholar, she published The Struggle for Eden: Community Gardens in New York City (Bergin & Garvey 2002) and Homesteading in New York City 1978-1993: The Divided Heart of Loisaida (Bergin & Garvey 1996). She has also edited her grandfather Ulrich von Hassell’s memoirs written in prison in 1944, Der Kreis schließt sich – Aufzeichnungen aus der Haft 1944 (Propylaen Verlag 1994).

Malve has taught at Queens College, Baruch College, Pace University, and Suffolk County Community College, while continuing her work as a translator and writer. She has published two children’s picture books, Tooth Fairy (Amazon KDP 2012 / 2020), and Turtle Crossing (Amazon KDP 2023), and her translation and annotation of a German children’s classic by Tamara Ramsay, Rennefarre: Dott’s Wonderful Travels and Adventures (Two Harbors Press, 2012).

The Falconer’s Apprentice (namelos, 2015 / KDP 2024) was her first historical fiction novel for young adults. She has published Alina: A Song for the Telling (BHC Press, 2020), set in Jerusalem in the time of the crusades, and The Amber Crane (Odyssey Books, 2021), set in Germany in 1645 and 1945, as well as a biographical work about a woman coming of age in Nazi Germany, Tapestry of My Mother’s Life: Stories, Fragments, and Silences (Next Chapter Publishing, 2021), also available in German, Bildteppich Eines Lebens: Erzählungen Meiner Mutter, Fragmente Und Schweigen (Next Chapter Publishing, 2022).

Her latest publication is the historical fiction novel, The Price of Loyalty: Serving Adela of Blois (Historium Press, 2025).

Author Links:

Website: https://www.malvevonhassell.com/

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

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/malvevonhassellauthor/

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

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

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/malve-von-hassell

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Malve-von-Hassell/author/B0CTGLDQ7P/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/471746.Malve_von_Hassell

This entry was posted on September 18, 2025. 6 Comments