Books

War On Christmas

War On Christmas. Elle Campbell, 2023.

Itโ€™s almost Christmas, and Freya, Manager of The Sphere Theatre in Chicago, is going home to see her family after a few years away, as her niece asked her to. Coincidentally, The Good Twin, her twin brother Thad, texted her to tell her that Jeremy, a former friend and next door neighbour, is on his way back to their hometown too (he also lives in Chicago) but not for happy reasons – his stepfather Gary died so he’s actually due back home for the funeral. While this is not really welcome news as there is old bad blood between Freya and Jeremy, Freya is also on the verge of being totally broke, due to unexpected expenditures, so while home she will rent her apartment for a couple of weeks to tourists and make some cash.

The journey back to Northview is not the greatest: the conversation between Freya and Jeremy lingers, especially because they havenโ€™t seen each other since graduating high school, 15 years before, despite living both in Chicago. They – Freya, Thad and Jeremy – were inseparable as kids, living next door from each other. The fact that Gary wasnโ€™t the loving and caring stepfather the rest of the world believed him to be meant Jeremy spent a lot of time at the Nilsenโ€™s, where he could find temporary relief and some sort of adoptive family giving him the love and support he needed. And when children pastimes moved from the bedrooms to the attic to make space for first kisses and teenage love angst, the relationship between Freya and Jeremy transformed too, going from friends, to romantic interest, to hate. All in the timespan of a few weeks. Their reciprocal loathing continues during their high school years. And even now, 15 years later, when they are both two successful and confident grown ups, being in the confined space of a car is a struggle.
Once home, though, there will be time and space to unpack some of the wrongs of the past and discover some of the skills they have acquired over the years – for example, Freya is able to take care of a lot of little details around the funeral that Jeremy didnโ€™t even think about, while Jeremy asks no questions when Freya drags him to pick up her drunk niece from a friendโ€™s house in the middle of the night – and they are finally in the right mindset to talk instead of bickering. The results will be stunning.

The story Campbell presents to us is not just ‘nice’, it is actually very good. While it is fairly clear how it will end, given this is a romance novel, the narrative is great and proceeds flawlessly; the alternation of point of view (the traditional A-B-A-B is not fully respected, but itโ€™s quite close) makes the read dynamic and insightful and Campbell is very good at representing both characters’ distinctive voices.

While I personally do not read romance often, I have to say this is a very good book that ticks lots of boxes: humour, happy ending, romance, comedy, real-life challenges. It is well written, witty, insightful, relatable. Great if you are looking for escapism during the Christmas festivities.

Books

The Influencer Who Saved Christmas

The Influencer Who Saved Christmas. Mrs Amy Ripley, 2023.

Influencer Zander Maloney did not have the easiest start in life, his parents so caught up in their own issues that he was eventually adopted by his best friend’s parents. Knowing way to well what struggling to put food on the table means, and seeing today’s disparity between the rich and the poor getting wider, Zander wants to use his influence to reach out to businesses in his state to help him ensure nobody will go hungry at Christmas.
A project initially met with indifference by the establishment and all the organisations he engages with will gradually turn into a roaring success, thanks to the help of ordinary people and the online community. Zander’s journey from quasi-anonymity to influencer stardom (and the Christmas Lunch of Christmas Lunches) will be packed full of events: increasing media attention, a march on the White House to face the powerful, the rekindling of the relationship with his dying father and, most importantly, a life-altering love story with hotel owner Austin.

Well done to Amy Ripley for seizing the unique and rich storytelling opportunity Christmas offers, and for reminding us all whatโ€™s real and beautiful about humanity. This story, if you are open to it, surely evokes feelings of warmth and optimism, getting readers into the holiday spirit by dealing with themes such as togetherness, generosity, hope, and the overall magic of the season. The love/fairytale element is also a welcome addition. Ripley rightly sheds a light on what we often tend to forget: all those people who are struggling to make ends meet through no fault of their own and need as much help as they can get.

The novella itself flows well (117 pages do not make it a book), moving from one event to another with relative ease, but it does have a fundamental flaw: below par editing. Consecutio tempori is the most evident challenge of all. The story is narrated half in present tense and half in past tense, even though it all takes place within the same timeline. Unfortunately, this spoils the reading experience almost immediately. Besides, the use of CAPS when characters say something loudly or to highlight certain passages is completely unnecessary and equally bothersome. Overall, the writing is not poor as such, but it is not of the quality you would expect from a published author (this is not Ripley’s first book).

In terms of the themes within in the book, Ripley could probably have dealt with Zander’s discovery of his sexuality a little bit more effectively. Sentences like

sound alarmingly naive and do make you wonder if Ripley really chose the same-sex love story just because it’s trendy and may appeal to a wider public – it genuinely would not make any difference if the main character was a woman – or she really believes in the importance of sharing somehow more unconventional love stories, especially given the audience she is allegedly targeting is the 12 to 18 years old age bracket. If that is really her target market, I strongly believe it is the wrong one: sexuality aside, would such audience relate for example to the theme of Zander rekindling his relationship with a dying father? I felt this was unnecessary to the economy of the story and not even explored deeply enough to make it worth her time.
This book was written in a rush and unfortunately it shows.

However, if you are looking for a light-hearted, quick and easy read do give it a go. It will not rock your world but will surely keep you entertained.

Books

Happily Ever After?

Happily Ever After? Melissa John, 2023.

Cally Jackson is not happy. In therapy, on the brink of divorce, with her journalistic career also in jeopardy after quitting her job over a travel review that didn’t go down well with her editor. If this wasn’t enough already, she cannot stop thinking about the handsome Jisung, whom she met during her summer holidays (yes, romance blossomed between the two). When everything is on the line, things need shaking up.

Determined to resume her career as a freelance journalist, Cally leaves for a Christmas holiday to a far-away Winter Wonderland with her daughter Lexi, with the plan to write a new travel review and attempt to rekindle her romance with Jisung. Will he still be thinking about her? Will returning to the Palace Hotel for a fabulous winter holiday turn out to be as magical as the summer just past? But most importantly: will Cally finally find her happily ever after? Spoiler alert: she will, but will also have to overcome numerous hurdles – misunderstandings, sticky situations, and most importantly her own self-sabotaging skills.

For full disclosure: I am not a fan of romance novels and do not read them regularly. Having said that, I do recognise a good romance novel when I read one.
Four things Melissa John did really well: firstly, this is a romance novel through and through. The evolving relationship between the main characters is the red thread that holds the book together from beginning to end. It is not the sole focus, as the author skilfully manages to also deal with the topics of being a newly single mother, having to manage several relationships in addition to a romantic one and working hard to reinvent oneself and building a career out of a great passion. Let’s be honest though: readers approach a romance novel with the expectation that two characters that want to be together will be able to get there in the end, after facing adversity. Romance is by nature escapist, so accuracy/truthfulness are not the point: you do not ask yourself if certain situations really happen in real life, all you look for is a feel-good story, something on which Melissa John certainly delivers.
Secondly, the perfect depiction of a Winter Extravaganza: Melissa John takes the ‘Christmas Winter Wonderland’ theme and rolls with it from beginning to end, creating a Disney-like backdrop to our characters’ actions that shows impressive imagination. Thirdly, the relatability and familiarity of some aspects of the story: while not having experienced them directly, I did recognise some of the patterns and behaviours people over forty especially might go through when dealing with new relationships, such as teenage-like insecurities that have no need to exist, irrational behaviour and soul-crushing self-doubt. Finally, the author’s attention to secondary characters within the story, to create the caring, solid support system Cally needs to finally break through and achieve happiness. Diane’s story in particular is very touching (you’ll have to read the book yourself to find out more!).

There are a few elements, however, that perhaps could have done with a little more attention. While the main character Cally does get what she wants in the end – a breakthrough in her career, the man of her dreams and more – I would have liked to see this positive progress matched by a personal growth also, and a more ‘feminist’ approach to character development. It’s not that Cally does not change at all, but it would have been great to see her really taking charge of her destiny and become a stronger person because of the obstacles she has overcome, evolving from a woman at the mercy of her own misadventures to one that does not have to rely on the validation of others to be happy. As a reader, there is so much fragility and insecurity you can take from a main character before it becomes too much to bear. You would think that after all this romantic ordeal she does find the strength in herself to hold on to what really matters. Her accomplishments, however, are too often wiped away by a holiday romance that might not turn into anything else (except it will, being the genre it is).

All in all, a well-written (closed door) romance novel with a language that is direct and easy to understand, the right amount of steam and enough twists and turns to make it intriguing, leading up to the happy final we all expected from the very beginning.

short stories

Crossroads

For as long as anybody could remember, the town of Bellindu had simply been known as Crossroads. Wealth flowed into the country of Forl as it grew in importance, a trade stop on the burgeoning baritheum route between those nations fortunate enough to have the precious ore beneath their ground and those nations desperate enough to pay vast sums for it. Exotic goods from other lands arrived at Seaport, destined for the major cities. Baritheum flowed east to Seaport from the interior of Forl, and the money that merchants paid for it flowed west, back to Werllan, the capital city.

Nobody raided the bullock carts as they trundled east. The heavy ore did not appeal to raiders, but the money chests that headed west did, and the raids increased in frequency. At the crossroad between the main route from Werllan to Seaport and two smaller roads used mainly by farmers and a handful of locals to move between markets, the Chamber, the governing body of Forl, decided to station a small group of soldiers, and a military camp sprang up. Raids dwindled, Chambermen grew wealthier, and Crossroads, as it became known, attracted residents and businessmen.

Jenโ€™s parents built the stable before Burgher Bellindu formally decided to rename Crossroads in his own honour, and they made a handsome living from the provision of horses to the military and stabling for folks passing through, east or west. In time, the military camp closed, too expensive to maintain, replaced by mercenary guards who travelled with the bullock carts that still rolled through the town, which had grown large enough to support itself without the camp.

Then somebody found baritheum in the town. The miners came, dug their tunnels, and the mining company built a big house on the top of a knoll to the south near the mine, called it Hummock, and moved the mine boss into it. The town flourished, Jenโ€™s parents with it. But the seam turned out to be shallower than anybody had thought, and it ran dry within seven years. The miners left, their money left, and the mine boss left. Hummock stood empty, the town grew a sense of despondency, and people stood in the street, grumbled about the good old days, and watched the bullock carts pass them by.

Jen ran the stable alone now, her parents dead. Bellindu had gone too; drank himself to death, the old fool. The new Burgher, Orl Vanster, took over, elected unopposed by the townsfolk. Jenโ€™s quiet life suited her, her days filled with the care of the horses that she loved, her nights often spent in the Bellinndu, the tavern that some wag opened years earlier, combining the town name with the word โ€œinnโ€ in a way that made Jen cringe whenever a traveller asked her where they could get a room, a meal, and a pot of ale.

When the rumours began, Jen paid them no mind. If somebody moved into Hummock, so what? She would carry on, and nothing would change for her. Sold to a rich widow from Werllan, the stories said. Jen could not imagine why a rich woman, alone by all accounts, would move from her glamorous life in the capital to Crossroads. Like her parents before her, Jen still called the town Crossroads. The widow would be bored to death here and would return west within a year, she predicted.

For once, the rumours proved correct. The woman did move into Hummock, and Jenโ€™s life changed more than she had expected, because the new owner had never ridden a horse but wanted to learn how. Somebody suggested that Jen could teach her, usually had a few spare horses that she looked after for locals who didnโ€™t need them much, so they stabled them with Jen. Jen rode them out, kept them fit, so maybe she would help the new resident learn to ride.

Dynnah, her name. Jen thought she might have been thirty and five, perhaps, not much older. Young to be a widow, but Jen didnโ€™t pry. โ€œCan you teach me?โ€ Dynnah had explained it all, and Jen had listened to it all.

Tall and slender, Dynnah. Dark hair combed back meticulously and gathered into a ponytail bound by an extravagant red barrette. Attractive, with full lips painted dark red, green eyes, dainty hands. Attractive, but not breathtaking, not that Jen had any right to judge. โ€œI can teach you.โ€ Why not? Money is money, after all. Jen had never taught anybody to ride before, but if the woman had half a brain, it should not prove too difficult.

โ€œCan we start now?โ€

Impatient. Not a trait that Jen suffered gladly, but she had been thinking of a ride today anyway. Overnight rain had left a damp smell in the air, like old leaves as they decayed, and she loved to ride in that beautiful aroma. โ€œFollow me.โ€

Jen led Dynnah out into the small yard at the side of the stable where her own horse, Gilpin, stood tethered to a post. She had Dynnah throw the blanket over him, pick up the saddle and cinch it. She watched the beads of sweat break out on Dynnahโ€™s forehead, unused to such labour, Jenโ€™s best guess.

With a lead rope tied to his halter, Jen showed Dynnah how to mount Gilpin, then brought a small box over to make the task easier for her pupil. If a person could not ride Gilpin, they could not ride. He could walk all day, as placid as the snow is cold, but he had a fiery heart and loved to be ridden hard. He would put his ears back and gallop faster than the wind, but Dynnah would have to enjoy that experience another day. For now, Jen taught her the correct posture, how to hold the reins, how to turn him, how not to squeeze her legs against his body in panic, helped her to her feet when she forgot, and he trotted on. Jen didnโ€™t even laugh.

Dynnah took to it better than Jen expected, and she proved to be easy company. She rained down praise for Jenโ€™s patience and clear explanations, and after little more than an hour, she could turn him, stop him, even make him trot, although she bounced atop him like a doll on a spring, and strands of hair threw themselves out of her ponytail in protest.

Jen suggested a short ride across a couple of nearby fields, and Dynnahโ€™s eyes lit up with excitement, so Jen fetched one of the neighbourโ€™s horses, another placid mount in case she needed to intervene in some trick that old Gilp played on his new rider. Dynnahโ€™s wide-eyed joy as she guided Gilpin across the field brought a permanent smile to Jenโ€™s lips, and when they returned, Jen felt that she had rarely spent a more enjoyable two hours for many months.

Dynnah insisted on taking off Gilpinโ€™s tack and brushing him. The old faker had barely even known heโ€™d had a walk, but he loved a good brush, and he didnโ€™t complain, so neither did Jen.

โ€œHow long have you lived in Bellindu?โ€ Dynnah seemed keen on some small talk as she swept the brush along Gilpinโ€™s flank.

โ€œI was born here, for my sins.โ€

โ€œSins? Do you believe, then?โ€

โ€œIn the Twain you mean?โ€ Dynnah nodded. โ€œNo, I donโ€™t believe.โ€

โ€œWhy is that?โ€ Jen chewed at the inside of her mouth. She had not expected such a personal question and didnโ€™t quite know how to answer, and Dynnah apparently sensed her reticence. โ€œOh, Iโ€™m so sorry. What a rude question. I apologise. Your faith is your own concern. I donโ€™t know what came over me. Forget I asked.โ€

What harm could it do to explain? None, Jen supposed. โ€œI have always thought it nothing but a story my mother told me to scare me into behaving, when all else had failed.โ€ She laughed as she remembered her motherโ€™s sombre expression, her doom-laden voice as she threatened the childhood Jen with the repercussion of the Twain if she didnโ€™t behave. โ€œTwin gods, born of a father who lay with a beast? It does defy belief, donโ€™t you think?โ€

โ€œI am afraid to doubt, if Iโ€™m honest.โ€

โ€œAfraid? Of what?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. That theyโ€™ll strike me dead, I suppose. The repercussion of the Twain.โ€ Her brush lay stationary on Gilpinโ€™s hind quarter, her eyes looked into the distance at something only she could see, then she shook her head and laughed, the soft tinkle of water as it dripped from a leaf in the sunshine after a summer shower. Jen decided she liked Dynnahโ€™s laugh, liked the sparkle in her eyes, the dimples in her cheek that the laughter deepened. If talk of the Twain caused the older woman to laugh, then Jen could stand to debate them all day.

Jen looked down, guilty. Such thoughts were not proper. โ€œThe woman is a widow.โ€ She hoped that Dynnah did not grasp the reason Jenโ€™s cheeks had turned red and burning hot. โ€œYou ride well. I did not expect you to take to it so quickly.โ€

โ€œThank you. I enjoyed it. I would like another lesson if thatโ€™s possible.โ€

โ€œI can think of no reason not to, can you?โ€

Dynnah laughed again. โ€œI canโ€™t. Tomorrow?โ€

โ€œI have some time later in the day. In the morning, I have a mare to deliver to a farm. They keep her here much of the time, but they want her home for a few days.โ€

โ€œLater tomorrow then. Thank you for the lesson.โ€

Dynnah put down the brush and rubbed Gilpinโ€™s face. โ€œHeโ€™s a lovely horse. I think he knew that I had never ridden before and tried to make me look good.โ€

Jen laughed. โ€œYou can ride him again tomorrow. He is a good horse to learn on.โ€

Dynnah looked at her feet, mumbled something that Jen didnโ€™t quite catch. โ€œIโ€™ll see you tomorrow, then.โ€ Jen stared after Dynnah as she walked alongside the building, turned the corner, and disappeared.

Jen breathed out, a long, slow breath that she had held captive inside her as she hoped Dynnah would turn and wave goodbye. The day wound on, and Jen put all the horses into the stable, fed, watered them, closed the doors and went up to the small living quarters above them.

She rode out to the farm with the mare on a rope in the morning, rode back. The sun shone, but the wind blew and carried some menace on it that Jen could not identify, the smell of bad weather to come, perhaps.

Dynnah arrived as Jen finished a piece of bread, seated on the box that she used to help people mount the horses. Dynnahโ€™s smile arrived before the rest of her, palpable excitement when she saw Gilpin saddled, ready. She wore a grey linen shirt tucked into black trousers, and she climbed from the box onto Gilpโ€™s back unaided.

They rode across fields, chatted idly. Dynnahโ€™s husband had been a banker involved in loaning vast sums of money to businesses, mostly in the baritheum industry. He had got up one day, sat at the table to break his fast, and fallen face down onto the tabletop, dead as an old rag. No explanation could be found, the doctors told her. He had loaned money to the mine that worked the baritheum here in Bellindu apparently, and had, in Dynnahโ€™s words, taken a bath on the place, so when she heard that Hummock could be bought cheaply, she decided that she had grown tired of city life and wanted to spread her wings, experience something different.

Once they had brushed the horses, put them into the stable, Jen thought she would close for the night and head upstairs, but Dynnah made a different suggestion. โ€œPlease, come to my home for dinner. I have not paid you anything yet for my lessons, and we need to arrange an appropriate fee. I live alone and would welcome the company.โ€ Jen tried to decline, anxious that she had ridden all day and would smell terrible. โ€œNonsense. That is the smell of honest work. Please come. I really would enjoy the company. Youโ€™re the only person I know in town so far.โ€

Reluctantly, Jen agreed, and they walked side by side up to Hummock. Jen had never been inside the house, and the true size of it could not be guessed from the end of the lane. It took her breath away. The parlour alone must have been bigger than her humble accommodations above the stable. A large kitchen with an iron range stood at one end of the house, reached through a long dining room with a table and eight chairs in it.

Dynnah lit some candles in baritheum holders that seemed to stand on every flat surface. Dynnah had a cold tenderloin in her pantry, and they boiled some vegetables together. They ate at the table, far too big for only two of them.

โ€œWhen will you try scran?โ€ Jen pushed her plate away, leaned her elbows on the table and rested her chin in her palms.

โ€œScran?โ€

โ€œIt is the local delicacy. Off-cuts of meat, shank, chuck and so on. Vegetables, potatoes, and the local secret ingredient. Boil for hours, all day if you can, to soften the tough cuts of meat. You have never heard of it?โ€

โ€œI havenโ€™t. It sounds like a broth, but tell me about the secret ingredient.โ€

Jen laughed and tapped the side of her nose with her index finger. โ€œI cannot tell you about it yet. You havenโ€™t lived among us for long enough.โ€

โ€œHow long is โ€˜long enoughโ€™?โ€ Dynnah laughed as she asked the question, but at that moment, a red glow against the dark night sky through the window caught Jenโ€™s eye.

Curious, Jen rose and went to the window. A fire burnt in the town in the area of old Elmaโ€™s store. She wrinkled her brow as she gazed across the town, then dark shadows caught her eye.

Jen wheeled toward Dynnah, who watched her in curiosity. โ€œOthers!โ€ Jen rushed over to Dynnah, grabbed her hand, and pulled her to her feet.

โ€œOthers? Theyโ€™ve been eradicated, havenโ€™t they?โ€

โ€œNo. We have to go. Come.โ€

โ€œWe are safer in the house, surely? They will not come up here. We arenโ€™t in the town.โ€

โ€œThey are already here. This is a perfect target for them. They love big houses. Lots of food, baritheum candlesticks, platters. Run. Back door.โ€

She tugged Dynnah behind her and heard the glass of the front door smash as they ran across the rear garden, overgrown and wild beneath the moon.

Dynnah ran behind her, sobbed softly. โ€œWhere will we go?โ€

โ€œTo the mine. Weโ€™ll be safe there, and itโ€™s close by. Hurry.โ€

Jen led her as fast as she could pull her along, stumbling over roots and uneven ground in the half-light from the moon. Finally, she saw the deeper black of the mine entrance against the dark cliff of the escarpment, and she dragged Dynnah into the dark tunnel. There she halted, and their ragged breaths disrupted the dark silence as they both sucked air into lungs that screamed for more of the precious commodity.

Jen felt around her, found a wall. โ€œDeeper in, thereโ€™s a room where we can hide.โ€ She pulled Dynnah along behind her, slowly testing each footfall before she trusted her weight to the step. The doorway of the small room opened on her right, and they ducked in.

โ€œHow do you know weโ€™re safe in here?โ€ Dynnah gasped the words, still presumably fighting for breath.

โ€œThey donโ€™t like tunnels. They wonโ€™t chase us down here.โ€

โ€œHow do you know? Are you sure?โ€

Jen bent down to search for something she could make some light from but came across nothing useful. โ€œBecause Iโ€™ve hidden from them in here before.โ€

Dynnah exhaled, loud in the darkness. โ€œWhen?โ€

โ€œA previous maraud, when I was younger. They killed my parents, but one of the neighbours brought me here. They followed us, but they wouldnโ€™t come into the tunnel.โ€

โ€œThey killed your parents? Thatโ€™s horrible.โ€

Jen nodded, then realised that Dynnah would not have seen the gesture. โ€œIt was. They used to maraud more in those days. They havenโ€™t been to Crossroads for a long time.โ€

โ€œCrossroads?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what the locals call Bellindu. Thatโ€™s all it used to be known as, before the Burgher, Bellindu, named it for himself.โ€ Jen had not found anything to start a fire with, and she felt around until she found Dynnahโ€™s legs. โ€œSorry.โ€ Dynnah had flinched at her touch. โ€œSit with me here. Weโ€™re safe now. They wonโ€™t stay long.โ€

โ€œI had heard stories of them, but Iโ€™d never seen one. I presumed they werenโ€™t real.โ€

โ€œOh, theyโ€™re real. They donโ€™t maraud into cities because of the soldiers. Where they come from, nobody really knows, only the stories.โ€

โ€œWhat stories?โ€ Dynnah shivered in the damp, cold air of the mines, and Jen put an arm around the older woman, who shook vigorously from the combined effects of the cold and the fear.

โ€œThe story goes that the Others are not from our world. They were summoned here from another world by a crazed acolyte in a secret temple somewhere. I donโ€™t believe that, of course, but theyโ€™re unlike anything else Iโ€™ve ever seen. Big, slow, covered in rough reddish-brown skin. Theyโ€™re very strong. The one that killed my mother only hit her once. She flew across the yard into the wall of the stable, fell to the floor, and never moved again.โ€

โ€œThe stable!โ€ Dynnah moved urgently in the darkness. โ€œYour horses are in danger.โ€

โ€œThe horses are fine. The Others are afraid of horses. If weโ€™d been in my home, we would have been safe. They wonโ€™t enter the stable.โ€

Dynnah chuckled. โ€œIโ€™m sorry to laugh, but these monsters are afraid of the silliest things. Horses, tunnels. How have they survived?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t think they have. Rumour has it that not many have, at least. This maraud may be desperate; starved, forced out of another town. Who knows?โ€

Dynnah did not speak for some time, but she continued to shake. Finally, she whispered, โ€œIโ€™m scared.โ€

โ€œI know, but weโ€™re safe here. Weโ€™ll go out in the morning.โ€

โ€œWill they be dead then?โ€

Jen shrugged, another futile gesture in the darkness. โ€œPeople say that they can only be killed if you cut their heads off. Or if a warlock kills them.โ€

โ€œWhat is a warlock?โ€

This time, Jen laughed. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Some kind of mystical man, I think. Why only a warlock can kill them, I canโ€™t tell you.โ€

โ€œI am glad you were at the house. They would have probably killed me otherwise.โ€

โ€œProbably. They wouldnโ€™t have eaten you though.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s reassuring.โ€ Dynnah laughed again, and Jen joined in.

Dynnah moved closer, laid her head on Jenโ€™s shoulder. โ€œThank you for saving me. How can I ever repay you?โ€

As her eyes adjusted to the darkness, Jen could see the white shape of Dynnahโ€™s face upturned, looking up at her. โ€œYou donโ€™t need to. I saved myself. You just followed me.โ€

Dynnah snickered, then her hand touched Jenโ€™s cheek, soft, the scent of an expensive fragrance on her wrist. Jen moved her head into the touch, the warmth, and Dynnahโ€™s lips found hers. They kissed, tender, unhurried. โ€œIs this wrong?โ€ Even in the silence of the mine, Dynnahโ€™s small whisper could barely be heard, a minute disturbance of the air.

Jenโ€™s heart fluttered in her breast. โ€œI donโ€™t know. It doesnโ€™t feel wrong, but Iโ€™ve never done it before.โ€

โ€œNor me. I didnโ€™t think a woman could feel this sort of attraction for another woman.โ€

Their lips met again, and they kissed for longer, Dynnahโ€™s hand holding the back of Jenโ€™s head. Dynnah moved her head back, one last tender kiss on Jenโ€™s lips, then laid her head against Jenโ€™s breast.

โ€œTry to sleep.โ€ Jen reached behind her, shuffled backward to the wall. Dynnah laid her head on Jenโ€™s lap, and Jen ran her fingers through the disarray of dark hair.

โ€œThat feels nice.โ€ Dynnah sounded sleepy, and soon her breathing became steady and rhythmical.

Jen sat in the dark and wondered how so much had happened in her life since Dynnah appeared at the stable yesterday. Jen had never kissed anybody, man or woman, until tonight. She found Dynnah easy company, funny and smart, but just an hour ago they had fled for their lives from the maraud, taken shelter here. Now they had kissed. What did it all mean? Some things are too complex to understand, she presumed. Her head fell forward, and she jerked awake. Dynnah shifted next to her, disturbed by the movement, presumably. Where could this go? Nowhere, probably. Still, the kisses had been exciting, exhilarating even. Tomorrow would take care of itself. For now, Dynnah slept on, her head in Jenโ€™s lap, and it felt so right, so comfortable, that Jen fell asleep, the fear and the Others forgotten.

She awoke stiff and half fallen to one side. Dynnahโ€™s head still lay in her lap, her soft breaths suggestive that she had not woken. Jen tried to sit in a more comfortable position, but disturbed Dynnah. โ€œWhat time is it?โ€

โ€œI see light from the tunnel. It is morning, I think. We can leave. We will be safe now.โ€

Dynnah raised herself quickly, kissed Jen. โ€œDo we have to? Canโ€™t we stay here?โ€

โ€œI think we can find somewhere more comfortable than this tunnel.โ€ Jen laughed, amused by Dynnahโ€™s unrealistic suggestion.

โ€œPerhaps we can.โ€ Dynnah sounded serious, resentful.

โ€œDynnah, how can we be together? We are two women. You are a widow.โ€

โ€œThat doesnโ€™t matter, does it? We can meet as often as we want. I will come to the stable, we can ride out. You can come to my house. We canโ€ฆโ€

Jen sighed. โ€œWe will see. We will see.โ€ The development frightened her. What would happen if somebody learned the true nature of their friendship? In her lifetime, she had never heard of two women together as a man and a woman might be. โ€œWe will see.โ€ The last time might have been said to herself, she thought.

The town had suffered terribly from the maraud. Three townsfolk had been killed and Elmaโ€™s store had burned down, a lantern knocked over in the panic and confusion. Burgher Vanster had sent for some soldiers from the city but held out little hope that they would come.

The Others had ransacked Dynnahโ€™s house. Her furniture lay scattered everywhere, the remains of the topside gone, along with most of the food in her pantry. Most of her baritheum candlesticks and platters had gone too, taken by the Others, who hoarded the precious ore for reasons that nobody really knew.

Dynnah stared at the mess of her kitchen in distress. โ€œDonโ€™t worry. I will help you fix everything up.โ€ Jen laid a reassuring hand on the older womanโ€™s forearm.

โ€œI am afraid to stay. What if they come back?โ€

Jen reached up, cradled Dynnahโ€™s cheek in her hand. โ€œI will send Gilpin to keep you safe.โ€

Dynnah did not smile, did not seem reassured. Her eyes swept across the devastation of her home, and she sighed.

Jen bent to pick up a chair, stand it upright at the table. โ€œAre you really afraid to stay?โ€

โ€œMaybe. Will they come back?โ€

Jen didnโ€™t turn to face her. โ€œI donโ€™t know. Maybe, if somebody doesnโ€™t kill them.โ€ She paused. โ€œWhat about us?โ€

Dynnah let out a long, slow breath. โ€œJen, what chance is there for us?โ€

โ€œYou did not seem so unsure this morning.โ€

โ€œYet you did. We were scared. I donโ€™t know, Jen. Letโ€™s take some time, think about it.โ€

Jen wiped at her eyes. โ€œI must feed the horses. If you want help with the house, let me know. Iโ€™ll be happy to help.โ€ She pulled the door closed behind her and headed for the stable. Her mind whirled with emotions. Whether she could ever love a woman, or a man, had never entered her head before as she focused on the stable, content to let the dice fall wherever they chose. Dynnah had awoken something inside her, then seemed to snatch it away with her next breath. How was she supposed to feel? Not as crushed as she did, surely?

For two days, Jen threw herself into her work, tidied all the tack around the stable, rode out on the two long-term horses, took Gilpin for a long, slow walk through the forest north of the town. Try as she might, she could not keep Dynnah out of her mind, the memory of those soft, tender kisses, the promises that lay beyond them. Should she walk to Hummock, confront Dynnah and demand that the older woman put her out of her misery? Even if Dynnah no longer wanted anything to do with her, Jen would know where she stood. Anything would be preferable to this torture of uncertainty.

When it came to it, she lacked the resolve, unsure that she could stand to hear the words that might rip her heart from her breast, dash it in pieces on the ground. She stood with her head on Gilpinโ€™s shoulder, tears wetting his brown hair. โ€œWhy am I like this, Gilp? I barely know her. She was right. What chance do we have? It is hopeless.โ€

From the doorway, a familiar voice interrupted her self-misery. โ€œI understand that you might be able to teach me to ride.โ€

Jen did not raise her head, but Gilpin flicked his upward. โ€œI have seen you ride. You are very awkward. I donโ€™t think anybody could teach you to ride.โ€

โ€œReally? My last tutor told me I had an exceptional talent for riding.โ€

Jen pushed her head away from Gilpin, turned to face Dynnah. โ€œHave you come to taunt me?โ€

Dynnah shook her head and smiled as a tear ran down her cheek, then held her arms out toward Jen. For a moment, Jen did not move. Then she ran into Dynnahโ€™s arms, smothered her face with kisses.

Dynnah stroked the back of Jenโ€™s head. โ€œI have no idea how any of this will end.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t care about that. You are here. Nothing else matters.โ€

Dynnahโ€™s laugh swept away all Jenโ€™s despair. โ€œWhat could I do? I missed Gilpin.โ€

Jen kissed Dynnah, took her hand, then led her past Gilpin toward the stairs.

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Self-promo 2023 (Ep. 41): Dennis Young

The Earthfleet Saga. Dennis Young, 2019 – 2023.

THE EARTHFLEET TIMELINE
The year is 2554 (Old Calendar). Earth continues its recovery from the most devastating wars ever waged. Half of the planet is uninhabitable. The other half is overrun with refugees, those ill from effects of fission and fusion weapon use, and the diseases that followed. The human population has been reduced by nearly 60%, radiation levels worldwide range from dangerous to lethal.
Somehow, in the western North American continent, a pocket of survivors is building a new future. Having commandeered the three remaining space stations orbiting Earth, the main Lunar military establishment, and partnered with the two friendly Martian colony strongholds, Earth Alliance arises. With the best and brightest, in the space of only 50 years following the war, they began to deal with the devastation and desolation that was left.
In the late 2300โ€™s, the Millennium Project and the Outward Presence Movement began. Generational ships, needing decades to cross the abyss of Space to the closest habitable planets, moved at less than the speed of light. Some never made their destinations, succumbing to the hazards of Space, or of humans confined too long in a limited, struggling, artificial environment. Yet some succeeded.
In the early 2400โ€™s, the greatest breakthrough in spaceflight was made, and the Lightspeed Barrier was breached. Ships built for sublight travel were quickly modified. New ships were designed and built. Launchings occurred once per year, on the day that became known simply as Naissance. Problems with artificial gravity, environmental systems, and weapons for defence were branched off from the
discoveries made by HyperLight Systems.
And while many colonies flourished, others did not. Some became ill-managed. Others simply decided their best course of action was piracy. Several became openly hostile toward Mother Earth. Because politics, as always, never died. It only hid for a while. Waiting. Watching. Planning. Earthfleet arose, growing in size and power. A dream for many decades, it became a force within the Earth Alliance, a loose alliance of planets colonised by humans. Again, politics came into play, but this time, with the strength of Earthfleet behind it. It was a benevolent ruling system for the most part, but with teeth. And to this day, still is.
There are five known alien species. Three are xenophobic, adversarial, and, in two cases, openly hostile.

Adventure and thrill are at the centre of this trilogy. For nearly a hundred years Earthfleet has dealt with small skirmishes and open hostilities. But as with any advancing and expanding culture, confrontations have become more frequent. Disagreements over territories (planets and other resources) have required skilful negotiations in many cases, and the application of the โ€œBig Stickโ€ in others.
It is an interesting time to be aliveโ€ฆ in the Olde Earth Chinese sense. And sometimes very, very dangerous. โ€‹

I worked a normal job all my life, from high school to my retirement in 2015. In 2005 I
began writing what likely turned out to be my Magnum Opus: The Ardwellian Chronicles epic fantasy adventure series. For thirteen years I wrote Ardwel; itโ€™s peoples, places, and saga. Now, the Saga is complete and I started working on other things. Iโ€™ve read Science Fiction since I was in the third grade. I enjoy a mystery from
time to time. I donโ€™t read horror, but I can write a pretty good tale of horror. Or dystopia. And Iโ€™m a First- Generation Trekker.โ€‹
With my current collections of Epic Fantasy, Military SF, SF Adventure, and Vampire
Urban Fantasy, I’m always on the lookout for a new project or topic. I don’t like to do the same type of stories over and over, and I’m certainly not adverse to researching a new genre. After all, learning new things is a good way to give your brain a workout and put that information to use in a good story.

They can find me on my website or contact me on Facebook.

Books

Future Proof

Future Proof. David Atkinson, 2023.


What if you could go back in time and correct that mistake you made that started a chain-reaction of successive events leading you to where you are right now?
Itโ€™s a question that Sam Harris would like to know answer to, sitting on a sofa bailiffs will probably take from under his arse in the next few minutes. The reason why bailiffs are taking any valuables out of his dirty apartment and heโ€™s sitting on the above mentioned sofa with a social worker is because heโ€™s a very depressed man who canโ€™t take care of himself. He might have a way out, though: his social worker says there is a programme he could take part in, a medical trial for depressed people, that will study which of his genes got damaged by traumatic events leading him to wrong choices and then help him to โ€˜switchโ€™ these genes back through an innovative epigenetic therapy.
He has nothing to lose after all, and accepting this offer means that he can have a roof over his head for the night, instead of sleeping rough. The sessions are divided into two parts: during part one he will receive an injection targeting the damaged genes, while during part two, another injection will provide a protein compound that supposedly heals the damaged genes, and he will wake up a better person. Once again: why not? Worse case scenario he will wake up with two pinches on his arm.
Instead, he wakes up skinnier, a lot skinnier than when heโ€™d been put to sleep, and despite his insistence, both the doctor and the nurse who administered him the treatment are positive that when they gave him the first injection a few hours before, he was already that skinny.
After the initial shock, Sam soon realises that every time he relives an episode of his past and, using his hindsight knowledge, changes a detail, he inevitably changes the future chain of events that brings him to the present time.

The journey that leads him to his happy ending is long, complex, full of peril and, at times, difficult and painful moments. But itโ€™s a journey that keeps you glued to the chair – and the page – and makes you wonder โ€˜whatโ€™s next?โ€™
We are not surprised that Atkinson won the Page Turner Awards 2022 – Genre Award because this book is simply great. It has everything: the mystery component, the romance, the inevitable โ€˜what ifโ€ฆ?โ€™ regretful question we all asked ourselves at least once in our lives, the happy ending, the rich prose, the spot-on narrative and an amazing control over the sci-fi element, something that, when it comes to time-travel is quite difficult to master.
A must-read book that comes with its own Spotify Playlist: each song has been specifically written to correspond to a key moment in the book, to enhance the overall reading experience.

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Self-Promo 2023 (Ep. 40): Devon Richards

Where All Roads Lead. The All Roads Adventures, 2022.

This entry into the growing epic/cozy hybrid sub-genre tells a rare tale in the realm of fantasy โ€“ One about the emotional lives of the people within the story. But wait! Arenโ€™t there kingdoms in peril, treasure being sought, an evil destructive curse that must be vanquished?! There certainly are, but those elements are presented within a story about the people who participate in the story, rather than the cold fulfillment of a prophecy that any character from Beowulf to Luke Skywalker could be plugged into. Our adventures begin while following a very-RPG party on their latest perilous quest, one that makes them realize something seldom ever explored in fantasy โ€“ The fact that they have perhaps grown too old to be living the risky life of the adventuring road. As our lovable rogues settle into โ€œretirementโ€ in a sleepy town, they find themselves urgently called back into action, and we are swept along with right alongside them. 
Filled with crackling romances, lovable characters and plenty of action, ‘Where All Roads Lead’ is at heart about the thing that we all seek โ€“ A place to call home.

The book breaks from the pack in that it is a very diverse and progressive entry into the fantasy genre. Persons of many colours and sexuality are positively represented throughout. Also, the characters donโ€™t live chaste lives, they have sex lives attached to their swooning romances. You know โ€“ like the grown adults actually reading the book. Apart from these glaring but welcomed differences, the book, and the series to follow, has what all fantasy fans crave โ€“ a fully fleshed-out, lived-in world that has an intriguing back history, is populated by a good many of our favorite fantasy peoples, a logical and easily understood new magic system that is fully incorporated into the world-building and a sense of humor that is both broad and wry peppered throughout. One reviewer called it, โ€œthe perfect blend of Lord of the Rings and Ted Lassoโ€. 

Iโ€™ve been writing since I was little โ€“ stories, songs, my own comic books โ€“ but it wasnโ€™t until I turned to screenwriting at 20 that I found a way to really express myself. A friend and I wrote a couple of Next Gen spec scripts while they where still in production and we got a nicely worded rejection letter on Star Trek letterhead. In the decades since, Iโ€™ve optioned screenplays and pilots in Hollywood and in Canada, garnered several accolades from screenwriting contests, all the while continuing to try my hand at long-form prose.
‘Where All Roads Lead’ fulfilled that lifelong dream of being a novelist, and there is certainly more to come on that front. My plan is to work across genres, to write a little in every category of fiction โ€“ something I realize most people donโ€™t do and likely I will only be able to get away with because of my screenwriting.
My next book is a hard-boiled detective thriller that takes place in a fictionalized version of the Toronto Goth community that I hang out in. Iโ€™m also working on a punk album that will likely record in the fall of 2024. I guess I can sum up by saying Iโ€™m left-handed, a Virgo, very much a cat person, a good dancer, can feed nearly 100 people in less than 30 mins (Chef-ing kept the roof over my head all these years), I say Who over Beatles or Stones when asked and Iโ€™m very, very glad I got to keep my hair.

Your readers can connect on Facebook, Instagram, X (Twitter), YouTube and visit my Author Page on books2read.com.

I’ve also recently opened a profile on Substack, where you can read of how I got a ‘Thank You’ letter from King Charles III after sending him a copy of my book!

self-published

Neurowned

Neurowned. Sean Gow, 2022.

‘Neurowned’ by Sean Gow is a fast-paced action adventure that asks some interesting questions about what a potential future with AI might look like.

Told in dual perspective, the story cuts between two female leads who exist on different sides of the law – a detective and an illegal racer – as their lives collide and merge into a quest to save humanity from a nefarious foe. The world we find ourselves in is a semi-distant future, where there are mega cities, fold-up bikes, and the internet is a thing of the past – the new, latest way to connect is through the v-net. This connection plugs directly into your brain, augmenting reality and also allowing the user to directly experience other’s sensations. In this world there are technophobes, underground resistance movements, and shady corporations, as you might expect to find in any dystopian novel. When people start dying mysteriously (and gruesomely) whilst accessing the v-net, a chain of events begins to unfold that ends with a frantic struggle to save humanity itself.

There are some interesting ideas in this book and it poses some valuable questions about AI and ourselves. The two female leads are brave and courageous, which is always great to see. The pacing is good and the story moves quickly from one incident and action scene to the next, not pausing for too long in between. I do think that the book would benefit from a further thorough edit – there are a number of grammatical and spelling errors, and some parts of the narrative, particularly some of the inner thoughts of the characters and their dialogue exchanges, that might have been improved with further editing.

Having said that, the story has some imaginative concepts and offers an engaging take on a dystopian future. The nods and references to existing stories are clear – for example, there is one character called Sudo Deckhard and a group called The Glitches – and the range of sci-fi influences that appear in ‘Neurowned’ are fun to pick out. Sean Gow’s play on ideas about how our futures might turn out is an enjoyable ride.

(Review by Robin Stevens)

Blog

A ‘Not for Vanity’ Christmas

Find It At: https://amzn.to/3STOkkz

About: A magician who can’t do magic, a very twiggy sorceress who does it rather well, and a wolf who can use a mobile phone but means to eat our heroine anyway… What begins as a fairly normal journey home from boarding school at Christmas, soon becomes a frightening and strange adventure as Britain is enveloped in the worst winter in living memory. Kitty joins up with her brother and sister but their journey goes completely wrong as roads and railways are blocked, electricity supplies fail and odd things begin to happen. The oddest things of all are some of the friends they meet who seem not to belong to the same century as the children or, indeed, as each other. And the enemies they encounter are the stuff of nightmare, driven by malice as old as the hills from which they come.

Find It At: https://amzn.to/40U3Leq

About: Freya Nilsen, the witchy black sheep of her sunshiny family, has one goal: survive the holidays in her hometown of Northview, Wisconsin, then jingle all the way back to her real life in Chicago. And she wonโ€™t let Jeremy Kelly, her childhood-best-friend-turned high-school-rival, get in her way. Jeremy, a swoony charmer, is sick of playing it safe. So when his mum invites him home to Northview for Christmas, itโ€™s the perfect opportunity to shake things up. And who better to turn his life upside down like a snow globe than Freya, his darkly compelling childhood neighbour? When Freya and Jeremy reunite, old tensions flare hotter than a solstice bonfire, and in true rival fashion, they embark on a holiday challenge. Freyaโ€™s goal? Seduce Jeremy into a fling that ends at Christmas. Jeremyโ€™s? Convince Freya that their deep connection is what they’ve both been missing. Is it all just a sexy game between rivals? Or as the countdown to Christmas begins, will Freya and Jeremy find that a second chance at love is the best gift of all?

Find It At: https://amzn.to/3Rhig96

About: Escape to an enchanting winter wonderland at a luxury fairy-tale-themed resort where Cally Jackson and her teen daughter are back for a magical Christmas getaway. With snowflakes falling and lights twinkling, they canโ€™t wait to make all their Christmas wishes come true. Top of Callyโ€™s Christmas list is rekindling her romance with Prince Charming, Korean heartthrob Han Ji-Sung, who captured her heart during her summer holiday. But this time, Cally is young(ish), free, and single, and ready for a second chance at love. The plan is simple: fall back into the arms of her perfect man for a perfect fairy-tale ending. What could possibly go wrong? Can Cally finally find her happily ever after?

Find It At: https://amzn.to/3RchABH

About: Zander Maloney is an influencer whose upbringing was challenging. He was taken in by his best friend’s parents, who adopted him. With the world on the edge of economic collapse and the divide between the rich and poor getting wider, Zander wants to use his powers as an Influencer to reach out to wealthy organisations and try to make sure everyone can have a magical Christmas meal. Will his dreams become a reality? Or will people go starving at the most charitable time of the year? Will he face other problems along the way? And does an encounter with a Hotel receptionist kindle any romantic spark?

Find It At: https://amzn.to/49Uf4at

About: Camila Morales is a hopeless romantic. Not that she thinks every couple is meant to be – she is a divorce lawyer, after all. But when her happy, married-thirty-years parents announce their own separation three weeks before Christmas, Camiโ€™s world is turned upside down, especially since sheโ€™s been trying to feel her way through her own marital slump for months. Sutton Davies is an imposter. At least, thatโ€™s what her therapist says. Or was it that she may have imposter syndrome? Same difference. With a promotion sheโ€™s not sure she deserves, a wife whoโ€™s definitely too good for her, and a best friend whoโ€™s always been in her corner, she should be fine. Perfect, even. But maybe thatโ€™s the problem – this unattainable quest for perfection – which is why sheโ€™s decided to focus on something she can control. Proving to Cami that this bout of spotty communication and dwindling intimacy is nothing but a blip. Every couple goes through it, right? Will Suttonโ€™s attempts to reconnect over the holidays reignite sparks, or is it all too little too late?