News: Sue Featherstone and Susan Pape at Ilkley Literature Festival

Ilkley banner 2

We’re thrilled to say we’ve been invited to take part in the prestigious Ilkley Literature Festival in October.

We’ll be featuring our debut novel, A Falling Friend, which centres around the friendship of two completely different female characters.

Ilkley Lit fest 3

We’ll also be discussing women’s friendship in literature.

And we’ll be answering the question we always get asked: how do two people write a novel together? Continue reading

Review: Grant and Nightingale – just magic as London’s newest crime-fighting duo

Peter Grant’s career as a probationary copper in the Metropolitan Police is plodding along nicely until a chance encounter with Inspector Nightingale, the last wizard in England.

Soon Peter is battling vampires in Purley, keeping the peace between warring river gods and goddesses and tracking down the murderous spirit of a malevolent Covent Garden thespian.  Continue reading

Review: Trouble for Slummy Mummy’s Good Girl in the age of YouTube

Teenager Romy Field may not be quite the good girl that everyone, least of all her mother, Ailsa, believes her to be.

But she’s not as bad as the rest of the world makes her out to be either.

In fact, she’s a straight-A student who soon learns that what ‘really sets you free is other people not knowing your shit’ and that, even in rural Norfolk, teenage mistakes are played out against a viciously viral social media backdrop. Continue reading

Review: New York Times bestseller by Swedish writer scores a global hit

I like Ove, who drives a Saab and believes only the self-employed and ‘other idiots’ drive Audis.

Yes, he’s single-minded and obsessive and completely lacking in the social graces.

But, scratch away at the surface and you’ll find a kindly bloke, who likes to do things by the book and who believes that ‘if men like him don’t take the initiative there’ll be anarchy’.  Continue reading

Review: A chic Mills and Boon romance from Prima Flirty winner

The lasThe Chic Boutique on Baker Stt time I dipped into a Mills and Boon romance was 20 plus years ago on a beach holiday.

I’d read all my own books and was reduced to reading whatever I could find on the apartment owner’s bookshelves, which just happened to be Mills and Boon.

Without exception, the books were frothy, undemanding reads.

But the repetitive plotlines – girl meets boy; initial attraction followed by misunderstandings; followed by happy-ever-after ending were just a little too formulaic for my taste.  Continue reading

Review: The Rosie Project marks a witty debut for Graeme Simsion

The Rosie ProjectIt’s most unlikely I’d make the shortlist as a possible love interest for geneticist Don Tilman.

He’s convinced love is an exact science and devises a questionnaire to help him find the perfect partner.

His friend Claudia warns he’s being far too picky but Don, who’s had plenty of first dates but never a second one, is determined not to waste time on unsuitable choices. Continue reading

Review: Sad Cypress crowns Christie as queen of detective fiction

Sad Cypress

There’s something fishy about the fish paste sandwiches that wealthy heiress Elinor Carlisle offers her guests at an impromptu picnic.

They’re laced with deadly morphine hydrochloride and before lunch is over, the youngest picnicker, beautiful Mary Gerrard is dead.

It’s too much of a coincidence – Elinor’s fiancé Roddy has recently broken off their long-standing engagement to pursue Mary, a protégé of Elinor’s recently deceased aunt.

And there are rumours too that aunt Laura, also a victim of poisoning, had planned to leave a substantial share of her fortune to the girl.  Continue reading

Our novels: Sue Featherstone and Susan Pape

Featured

Tags

, , , ,

A Forsaken Friend

A Forsaken Friend

The FRIENDS trilogy continues in this heart-warming and hilarious hoot as two best friends navigate men, careers and rock bottom in this brilliant sequel to A Falling Friend.

Published by Lakewater Press.

Available to buy on Amazon.

About the book:

No-one said friendship was easy.

Things can’t get much worse for Teri Meyer. If losing her job at the university and the regular allowance from her dad’s factory isn’t bad enough, now her ex-best friend has gone and stolen her ex-husband!

Well, to hell with them all. A few weeks in the countryside at her brother’s smallholding should do the trick – and the gorgeous and god-like neighbour might help. Continue reading

Review: Fantasy debut by Robin L. Martinez proves a magical mix

In the BloodDo you remember the scene towards the end of The Empire Strikes Back, second episode in the original Star Wars trilogy, when the charismatic mercenary Han Solo is frozen in suspended animation in a block of carbonite?

And realisation dawns that you’ve got to wait for the sequel to find out whether he’s dead or alive?

Thanks to the magic of the DVD player I can watch the next episode anytime I want.

Unfortunately, I’ve got at least 12 months, if not longer, before I can hope to read the follow-up to In the Blood, the debut novel of Robin L. Martinez. Continue reading