Saturday, 16 July 2016

An Italian Home: Settling by Lake Como (Travel/Autobiography) by Paul Wright


Paperback:  Just what is it like for a foreigner to live and work in a northern Italian village and become part of the community?

How tough is it to leave your home country and settle in a new one?

What do you have to do to be accepted by the people who live in a village that has existed for over five hundred years?

Award-winning artist and stage designer Paul Wright and his partner Nicola found out the hard way, working, playing, laughing, eating and drinking alongside the residents of a beautiful lakeside village.

Enjoy Paul's dry Liverpudlian sense of humour as he conveys a vivid word picture of life beside the lake with their colourful and resourceful neighbours.

An Italian Home, Paul Wright's first book, was published in 2011.  His second book - An Italian Village - a sequel to An Italian Home, is available on 28 November 2016.

About the author:  Paul Wright is an award-winning English artist who specialises in large scale murals, Trompe l'Oeil painted furniture, contemporary oil paintings and watercolour landscapes.

In 1982, following a period spent designing theatre sets around the UK, Paul started his own art studio in Surrey, where he specialised in hand painted interiors for private homes and commercial premises.

In 1991, he moved to northern Italy with his partner, Nicola, where he continues to work from his studio and art gallery base in the beautiful medieval village of Argegno on the shores of Lake Como, and from where he travels to other European countries and to the USA.

Paul's work has been featured in many art exhibitions in the UK and on two programmes for Italian television, plus dozens of periodicals and newspapers worldwide, notably The Sunday Times, Architectural Digest, The Wall Street Journal and The Arts Review.

Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Secrets in Prior's Ford (The Prior's Ford Series) by Eve Houston


Paperback:  The Prior's Ford Books is set in Dumfries and Galloway, the southernmost county in Scotland, an area of some of the most beautiful countryside to be found in the UK.  It is rich in wildlife and its hills and valleys are scattered with farmland, attractive villages and towns of architectural beauty as well as abbeys, castles and great houses and gardens bearing witness to its long history.  It is a land of lochs, streams and rivers, and its southernmost border is the wild and magnificent Solway Firth.  Dumfries and Galloway, in short, has everything.  What better place to set a book?

There is consternation among the villagers of pretty Scottish Borders town Prior's Ford when a firm expresses interest in reopening an old granite quarry.  Almost overnight, neighbours and friends fall out, with some welcoming the work the quarry will bring while others are ready to fight to preserve the village's peace.

Publican Glen Mason organises a protest group but when a local newspaper takes an interest in him and the story, he starts to feel very nervous indeed.  And when Jenny Forsyth attends a protest meeting, she is shocked to discover the quarry surveyor is an unwelcome face from her past.

Clarissa Ramsay, newly widowed, is too preoccupied to care much about the threat facing the village.  She has discovered her husband Keith had a secret life and has resolved to make some radical changes to her own.

While up at Linn Hall, the impoverished Ralston-Kerrs, struggling to keep the estate that is their ancestral heritage from going under, find that the changes threatened by the quarry represent a test of loyalty to the village that regards them as its lairds.

Secrets in Prior's Ford (2008) is the first book in the intriguing and scandalous Prior's Ford series.  There are seven books in the series.

About the author:  A former journalist, Evelyn Hood is best known for family sagas mainly set in her home town of Paisley (Renfrewshire) and on the Clyde Coast, although she is also the author of 'Forward by Degrees', a history of the University of Paisley.  The history was commissioned to mark the University's centenary as a place of further education and was published in April 1997.

Evelyn has also published six one-act stage plays, a Scottish pantomime, a children's musical and a number of short stories and articles.  Unpublished but performed stage work includes a full length play, three pantomimes, six children's musicals, and a large number of monologues and sketches.

Her hobbies include reading and amateur drama, and she lives in West Kilbride, Ayrshire with her husband.  They have two grown sons.

Eve Houston is Evelyn's pseudonym.

Rating:  5/5

Lana Del Rey Lyrics


Pablo Neruda (1904-1973), The Pen Name and Legal Name of the Chilean Poet-Diplomat and Politician Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto


What Everybody Needs


Sunday, 10 July 2016

The Seafront Tea Rooms by Vanessa Greene


Paperback:  Water is the mother of tea, a teapot its father and fire the teacher. - Chinese proverb

The Seafront Tea Rooms is a peaceful hideaway, away from the bustle of the seaside, and in this quiet place a group of women find exactly what they've been searching for.

Charismatic journalist Charlotte is on a mission to scope out Britain's best tea rooms.  She knows she has found something special in the Seafront Tea Rooms but is it a secret she should share?

Kathryn, a single mother whose only sanctuary is the 'Seafront', convinces Charlie to keep the place out of her article by agreeing to join her on her search.

Together with another regular, Séraphine, a culture-shocked French au pair with a passion for pastry-making, they travel around the country discovering quaint hideaways and hidden gems.

But what none of them expect is for their journey to surprise them with discoveries of a different kind.  Full of romance and friendship, tea and cake, The Seafront Tea Rooms (2014) is a heart-warming, quintessentially British tale about the strength found in true friendship.

About the author:  Vanessa Greene hosted her first tea party at eight, to a select gathering of stuffed bears.  Since then she has trawled antiques markets from Portobello to Paris, Brighton to Buenos Aires, to build her teacup collection and feed her addiction to all things vintage.  She still loves an excuse to bring friends together - but nowadays her guests are less shy about trying the cake.  Her perfect weekend would feature chocolate muffins, good friends and of course a perfect cup of tea.  Vanessa is in her thirties and lives in north London with her partner. The Vintage Teacup Club (2012), her first novel, was published to rave reader reviews and won an instant place in their hearts.  Her latest book, The Little Pieces of You and Me (2016), a story about old friends and new beginnings, is out now.  She loves to hear from readers so drop her a line on Twitter (@VanessaGBooks) or Facebook (VanessaGreeneBooks).

Rating:  3/5

The Privilege


A Society In Monologue


Saturday, 9 July 2016

I Pray


#LoveOneAnother


"This lady saw me parked at a City park this morning and decided to stop.  She exited her vehicle with her two children and approached me as I was seated in my patrol car.  She simply stated that she wanted to pray for me.  Specifically for my safety.  I expressed my gratitude the best I could, but she really has no idea how much that meant to me.  Her little boy handed me a wilted flower that looked as if it had been in his pocket for a week.  At that moment, it was the most beautiful flower I'd ever seen.  My prayer is that sharing this encounter will encourage many to give people a chance, regardless of race or profession.  You simply cannot judge an entire group of people because of the actions of some.  Don't hate evil more than you love good."

Source - https://www.facebook.com/Panchoandleftyforlife/

Pancho and Lefty

Tuesday, 5 July 2016

Failure of Justice: A Brutal Murder, An Obsessed Cope, Six Wrongful Convictions (True Crime) by John Ferak


Paperback/Introduction:  In the spring of 2006, a terrorizing double murder happened along a gravel road inside a two-story farmhouse.  Blood was sprayed everywhere and several red ammunition shells were left at the scene.  Everybody near the tiny town of Murdock, Minnesota, knew the victims, a middle-aged farm couple who were slaughtered in their upstairs bedroom on Easter Sunday night.  About a week later, the local Cass County Sheriff's Office arrested two relatives for the shotgun slayings.  There was great relief across the region and people expressed their gratitude toward the sheriff and his fast-working handful of investigators.

Six months later, the author drove to the historic Cass County Courthouse in downtown Plattsmouth to report on a stunning development.  The prosecutor was dismissing double murder charges against the public defender's indigent client, Nick Sampson.  Charges against co-defendant Matt Livers were dismissed weeks later as well.  Those two cousins who had been dished up by the sheriff's office were not the real killers at all.

Until the double-murder case debacle occurred in Murdock, most of Nebraska had been in a state of denial when it came to social justice topics such as false confessions, wrongful convictions and DNA exonerations.

Sometime in 2008, something huge was brewing behind the scenes of Nebraska's criminal justice system.  It was a history-in-the-making episode.  Three men and three women, dubbed the "Beatrice 6," were having their long-ago murder convictions set aside in the 1985 murder of a widow.  The public defender involved in the case helped achieve exonerations for not just one, but an astonishing six people in a lone murder case.  DNA tests revealed that Nebraska had a colossal FAILURE OF JUSTICE on its hands.  What would that mean for the Beatrice 6?

It was a remarkably tragic story.  Helen Wilson, a widow, did not have an ounce of meanness inside her body.  On 5 February 1985, one of the coldest nights on record, the unthinkable happened.  The sixty-eight-year-old resident was raped and murdered inside her second-floor apartment.  The trail of evidence turned frustratingly cold until an astonishing breakthrough occurred four years later.  The news of six arrests was absolutely stunning to the locals in this easy-going, blue-collar community of 12 000 residents.  Why were six loosely connected misfits who lived as far away as Alabama, Colorado and North Carolina being linked to the brutal crime?

As they sat in jail, the constant threat of Nebraska's barbaric electric chair scared the daylights out of these troubled souls except for one of them.  Joseph White remained defiant in his fight to prove his innocence.  At the time it did not matter;  all six were convicted of murder and sent to spend the rest of their lives in prison.  Six people in their prime whose lives were ruined, all caught up in a web of deceit, all because of a series of faulty assumptions by one man, a former Nebraska police officer, with a burning desire to solve the murder himself.  Innocent people became brainwashed into believing they shared some blame, thanks to the help of a psychologist who moonlighted as a sheriff's deputy.

At the time of Failure of Justice's (2016) publication, the Beatrice 6 case marks the largest mass exoneration case in the country due to newly tested DNA evidence but not many people are familiar with the case.  Hopefully, readers of Failure of Justice will be more mindful that false confessions tend to be magnified in states where elected prosecutors and small-town sheriff's departments can run around using the death penalty as an interrogation threat.  As a consequence, weak-willed, mentally challenged people are sometimes prone to confessing to a brutal crime, even murder, with little regard as to whether their confession meshes with the actual crime.

Failure of Justice is dedicated to public defender Jerry Soucie, a true crusader for Nebraska's wrongly condemned.

About the author:  A native of Plainfield, Illinois, John Ferak's first true crime book, Bloody Lies:  A CSI Scandal in the Heartland (2014) was the runner-up in the 2014 Foreword Review for true-crime book of the year.  Ferak's first book for WildBlue Press, Dixie's Last Stand:  Was It Murder or Self-Defense? (2015) was an Amazon bestseller and Hot New Release.  Since 2012, Ferak has worked as an award-winning investigative team member for Gannett Wisconsin Media, based at The Post-Crescent in Appleton, Wisconsin.  He is the lead investigative reporter chronicling the Steven Avery case, the case featured in the Netflix documentary "Making a Murderer."

Sicily: A Short History from the Ancient Greeks to Cosa Nostra (Non-Fiction) by John Julius Norwich


Hardback:  Sicily is the key to everything. - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

The stepping stone between Europe and Africa, the gateway between the East and the West, at once a stronghold, clearing-house and observation post, Sicily has been invaded and fought over by Phoenicians and Greeks, Carthaginians and Romans, Goths and Byzantines, Arabs and Normans, Germans, Spaniards and the French for thousands of years.  It has belonged to them all - and yet has properly been part of none.

John Julius Norwich was inspired to become a writer by his first visit in 1961 and Sicily is the result of a fascination that has lasted over half a century.  In tracing its dark story, he attempts to explain the enigma that lies at the heart of the Mediterranean's largest island.

"I discovered Sicily almost by mistake...  We drove as far as Naples, then put the car on the night ferry to Palermo.  There was a degree of excitement in the early hours when we passed Stromboli, emitting a rich glow every half-minute or so like an ogre puffing on an immense cigar;  and a few hours later, in the early morning sunshine, we sailed into the Conca d'Oro, the Golden Shell, in which the city lies.  Apart from the beauty of the setting, I remember being instantly struck by a change in atmosphere.  The Strait of Messina is only a couple of miles across and the island is politically part of Italy;  yet somehow one feels that one has entered a different world...  This book, is among other things, an attempt to analyse why this should be," wrote John Julius Norwich in the Preface.

This vivid, short history covers everything from erupting volcanoes to the assassination of Byzantine emperors, from Nelson's affair with Emma Hamilton to Garibaldi and the rise of the Mafia.  Taking in the key buildings and towns, and packed with fascinating stories and unforgettable characters, Sicily (2015) is the book John Julius Norwich was born to write.

'We are old, Chevalley, very old.  For over twenty-five centuries we've been bearing the weight of superb and heterogeneous civilizations, all from outside, none made by ourselves, none that we could call our own.  We're as white as you are, Chevalley, and as the Queen of England;  and yet for two thousand five hundred years we've been a colony.  I don't say that in complaint;  it's our own fault.  But even so we're worn out and exhausted...'

'This violence of landscape, this cruelty of climate, this continual tension in everything, and even these monuments of the past, magnificent yet incomprehensible because not built by us and yet standing round us like lovely mute ghost;  all those rulers who landed by main force from every direction, who were at once obeyed, soon detested and always misunderstood.  Their only expressions were works of art we couldn't understand and taxes which we understood only too well and which they spent elsewhere.  All these things have formed our character, which is thus conditioned by events outside our control as well as by a terrifying insularity of mind.' - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (trans. Archibald Colquhoun), The Leopard.

About the author:  John Julius Norwich was born in 1929.  He is an English popular historian, travel writer and television personality.  After National Service, he took a degree in French and Russian at New College, Oxford.  In 1952, he joined the Foreign Service, serving at the embassies in Belgrade and Beirut and with the British Delegation to the Disarmament Conference at Geneva.

His publications include The Normans in Sicily, Mount Athos (with Reresby Sitwell), Sahara, The Architecture of Southern England, Glyndebourne and A History of Venice.  He is also the author of a three-volume history of the Byzantine Empire.  He has written and presented some thirty historical documentaries for television, and is a regular lecturer on Venice and numerous other subjects.

Lord Norwich is former chairman of the Venice in Peril Fund, co-chairman of the World Monuments Fund and a former member of the Executive Committee of the National Trust.  He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, the Royal Geographical Society and the Society of Antiquaries, and a Commendatore of the Ordine al Merito della Repubblica Italiana.  He was made The Right Honourable The Viscount Norwich, CVO, in 1993.