Author Q&A | Songs of Love and War, Santa Montefiore

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Today, as part of Simon and Schuster Canada’s #TimelessTour blog tour of historical fiction, I’m interviewing Santa Montefiore, author of Songs of Love and War.

1. If you lived during the time period in your book, how do you think you would have fared and why?

 It’s very hard to know how one would behave in unfamiliar situations. One can imagine cowering in the trenches in fear in WW1, but perhaps one would suddenly acquire great courage and climb over the top with gusto, who knows? It would also depend on whether I was rich or poor. Living life in poverty would be very hard. People like the Doyles struggled to survive. Many left Ireland for better lives in America. Many died of starvation and disease. It was punishing. Obviously, if I was a Deverill, I’d have a better chance. Whichever the case, I think one can endure more than one imagines. You don’t know whether or not you are courageous until your courage is tested. I’d like to think I’m a coper, whatever my situation. I’m practical, accepting and patient and I have a strong philosophy that carries me through the tough times. But I think it’s hard imaging life without all the modern luxuries we all take for granted – especially our independence as women. On reflection, I wouldn’t like to be a woman in 1910, rich or poor!

2. If you lived in the future and were to write historical fiction about 2018, what do you think you would write about and why?

I think that would depend very much on what my life was like in the future, because the fun is writing about a time that is very different to our own. For example, writing about 1910 is interesting to me because of the way women dressed and behaved and what was expected of them. It’s a wonderfully romantic time before email and texts, when lovers had to sneak notes to each other – there were also many reasons why two people couldn’t be together: class, wealth, religion, to name a few. Now, in my culture at least, it’s acceptable to marry anyone. Also, Ireland in the nineteenth century was such a turbulent time with the War of Independence and the Civil War that followed. Now we have the Republic of Ireland – in 1910 that was unimaginable. It’s hard to imagine what will be interesting about 2018 to someone living in the year 3000. I don’t find the present day very inspiring right now as it is, but perhaps in the future it will appeal because it will be different!

3. The ghosts in your story are treated not with fear but with love, and it seems almost a privilege to be able to communicate with them. What inspired this portrayal of what’s typically a fairly scary trope?

Ghosts are simply spirits coming to visit the living or stuck in a limbo and unable to pass on into what we call Heaven. Most come and go at will because they like to be around the people they love who are still here. I’m not afraid of them, nor surprised by them because I have seen spirits all my life. I can’t remember a time when I didn’t see them, moving about my room at night and hearing their voices. The closest comparison I can make is to holograms. That’s what they look like. I know they’re not material, so I’m not afraid an intruder has come into the room, but they are, at the same time, very real. Of course, there’s the misconception that they come out at night, like owls! They don’t, they’re around all the time, it’s only that most people see them when their sleep is disturbed and they glimpse that finer vibration because their chattering conscious minds go quiet and their sixth sense is allowed to come to the fore. They then gasp, turn on the light and sigh with relief that the ghost has gone. But the ghost hasn’t gone. They’ve just shifted out of tune, like turning the dial on a radio, and can no longer see it. During the day, most of us are unaware that we even have the ability to be psychic as we are so focused on what we can perceive with our five senses. I have written about spirits in a lot of my novels – Secrets of the Lighthouse was the first book I wrote that really explored the subject of life after death. I believe in it without doubt – life goes on, only in a different way, so it’s natural for me to write about it. And I love writing about it. Obviously, in The Deverill Chronicles, I have embellished the truth. I’m not sure curses really work! But, I mixed truth with fiction to make a good story.

Celebrate historical fiction with the Timeless Tour, from April 16 – May 4!

For more information, visit www.timelesstour.ca.

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Thank you to Simon and Schuster Canada for the invitation to participate in this blog tour.

Review | Love at First Run, Angel C. Aquino

LoveAtFirstRunCoverGraphic designer Diana can’t even run a block without tapping out, but when her office crush Paul invites her to join his running club, she figures it’s worth a shot just to get closer to him. To her surprise, she finds that she grows to enjoy running, and while the idea of running a half-marathon still feels daunting, training actually turns out to be fun, especially with running buddy Josh at her side. Her heart races whenever she’s with him, but that’s just what they call runner’s high, right?

I absolutely loved Love at First Run. The romance is super sweet, and Angel C. Aquino is a master at the slow burn kilig, a Filipino term that refers to the giddy thrill of romance. I often found myself screaming at my iPad for the characters to just kiss already, dammit! Or yelling at Diana to just admit her feelings already, because dear god, she shouldn’t risk this guy getting away. The characters had adorable chemistry right from the start, and I love how their friendship developed almost effortlessly, because it shows how perfectly they fit together as friends beyond the initial attraction. The sizzle between them going unfulfilled for so much of the book made me want to skip to the end at times, but I admit the ending was worth the wait.

I’m absolutely not a runner, so I love that Diana starts off out of shape as well and can’t even run a block before she joins the club. At her first training session, she notices a heavyset middle aged woman and a man in his sixties matching her pace, and her pride pushes her to speed up even more despite her legs beginning to cramp. This of course does not end well, but it’s totally what I would do in her place, so of course I swooned when a hot guy comes to her rescue with a water bottle.

I also loved Josh and how caring and considerate he was for others’ needs. I loved that, even though he’s run marathons, he keeps pace beside Diana to keep her company during training. I especially loved that he never made a big deal about it, nor did he ever make her feel self-conscious about being one of the slower runners in the club. Instead, he pushed her to be a better runner while also encouraging her to take as many walk breaks as she needed to finish the race. He also made the time go by quickly by chatting with her about other subjects until she loses track of the time they’ve been running. What really made me melt was a race where Josh lets Diana run ahead so he can be with an older runner who was anxious about the rockiness of the terrain. While his kindness to Diana may be partly due to his attraction to her, this shows how much he’s a caring person in general, and I like how kind he is to others.

I also love how vivid Aquino’s descriptions are. Filipino food and scenery are almost as prominent in the story as the characters are; they feel so real. Take for example a passage after Diana and Josh go to a ramen place for dinner:

I tried not to think about how close he was, how safe and comfortable I felt beside him. I caught a whiff of peppermint and lavender mixed with the smell of ramen on his shirt. He gripped me tightly and I felt the muscles on his chest expand and contract with every breath. [p. 56]

Ramen isn’t exactly a romantic scent, but here it works really well because it recalls their date in a small, hole-in-the-wall ramen place. We can just feel the fragrant steam from the ramen permeating the humid Manila air and settling into their clothes, and Aquino brings this scene to life with a single line. I also love the muscles on the chest expanding and contracting because it makes us feel the tightness of their embrace, and you can almost imagine her breath falling into the same rhythm.

Finally, I love how the book isn’t just about the romance but rather about Diana’s growth as a person, which she comes to realize through her running. There’s a great passage where she reflects about the challenges she’s overcome while running and how this can be applied to her own life. This book could also be read as a love letter to running, and what a fun and fulfilling activity it is beyond just improving physical fitness. It reminds me of the time I was taking karate classes, how good it felt to push myself physically and how much the stuff I learned in the dojo I could apply in my real life. I found Diana super relatable, and I loved her story.

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Love at First Run is available in print in the Philippines and on Amazon Kindle internationally.

To learn more about the author, visit www.angelcaquino.com

Thank you to the author for an electronic advance reading copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Full disclosure: The author is a friend, and I’m super proud of her for writing a novel, but all views expressed on this blog are my honest opinions.

Review | Come from Away, Genevieve Graham

36183441In Come from Away, shopkeeper Grace Baker falls in love with a man she meets at a Christmas dance in Nova Scotia in the 1940s. When he shows up at her shop a few days later and tells her he’s a trapper come from away, she hopes they can pick up on the connection they both seemed to feel at that Christmas dance. What Grace doesn’t realize is that Rudi is actually a German soldier, whose U-boat was destroyed in an accident along the shores of East Jeddore and who is now struggling to survive in Canada. While he no longer has any desire to continue fighting for Germany, Rudi’s very presence is a threat and a painful reminder of Grace’s brothers and neighbours who are all risking their lives overseas to fight soldiers just like Rudi.

Come from Away is such a sweet love story. I love how Grace and Rudi get to know each other despite the language barrier, and I love how their relationship feels so fragile throughout. More than a romance, however, Come from Away feels like a family story. Grace is the youngest child and only daughter of Audrey and Danny from Tides of Honour, and the way the family comes together to deal with Rudi’s entry into their lives is heartwarming. I like how Grace and her parents are all mindful of Grace’s brothers’ experiences in the war, and how it might feel for them to see a German soldier welcomed into their family. But I especially like how Grace’s parents also realize that if it was their sons in Rudi’s situation, they’d want their sons to be treated with kindness. Even the purported villain, the girlfriend of one of the brothers who wants to turn Rudi in, has an understandable motive.

Come from Away is a fascinating glimpse into a period of Canadian history, and particularly a family in Nova Scotia who is doing their best to deal with the turbulent and difficult circumstances of war.

Celebrate historical fiction with the Timeless Tour, from April 16 – May 4!

For more information, visit www.timelesstour.ca.

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TimelessTour_BlogTour_1024x512

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Thank you to Simon and Schuster Canada for an advance reading copy in exchange for an honest review.