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The Broken Vow by Luisa A. Jones
Published: 22nd January 2024
Showing posts with label Sheila Riley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sheila Riley. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 January 2025

REVIEW: Family Ties on Beamer Street by Sheila Riley



Family Ties on Beamer Street (Beamer Street #3) by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas
Read: 5th January 2025
Published: 3rd January 2025

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Set against the backdrop of The General Strike difficult lines have to be crossed…

Liverpool May 1926

Peggy and Dar Tenant’s dream for security and respectability has been their driving force since they married. Just as they prepare to buy their own home, tragedy strikes, when Dar is involved in a devastated accident at the docks and Peggy’s world crashes around her.

With Dar seriously ill in hospital Peggy’s reduced to scrimping and saving to keep a roof over her family’s head having to revisit the hardships of her youth that she dearly wanted to escape from.

As summer days turn to winter the overwhelming struggle begins to take its toll and Peggy is forced to swallow her pride, as the good people of Beamer Street come to her rescue. She also seeks help from her formidable sister, Violet, little knowing that Violet holds a dark secret that has cast a shadow over Peggy’s whole life.

Love, lies and recriminations will be uncovered as Peggy tries to pick up the pieces of her shattered life, and finally reconcile the shadows of her past?

Perfect for fans of Chrissie Walsh, Katie Flynn and Dilly Court.


MY THOUGHTS:

Dreams of a better life...

The third book in the Beamer Street series sees 1926 and Peggy Tenant face a new wave of challenges leading to different way of life she never thought possible. Marrying the love of her life, Dar Tenant, when she was just sixteen years old, Peggy and Dar endeavoured to put a little money away each week to save up and buy the house in which they have lived for the past seventeen years since they were wed. Dar has a good job as a stevedore on the docks with Huttons Logistics even if Henry Hutton himself was a stingy toff. 

But now the day has come when this afternoon, all the money they had saved for the past seventeen years stashed in a suitcase under the bed, Peggy and Dar were off to buy their own home. At last, their family would have the security they could only dream of. 

And then tragedy strikes. On the very day they are to buy their house, Dar has a nasty accident at work leaving him with a fractured skull and femur. And the cause of the accident is nowhere to be seen, having scarpered drunk on job before he could be found out. Miles Houseman, Hutton's spoilt and entitled nephew, was operating the crane hauling hessian sacks of sugar when it was clear the load was going to spill. Everyone tried shouting to warn Houseman who was oblivious and Dar jumped in to save the young lad who was in danger of being knocked flying. The end result was Dar's injuries seeing him in hospital and rehabilitation for months. But Dar assured her all would be well when his sick pay comes through, to which he'd been contributing for the past eight years against such an occurrence.

With four mouths to feed and rent to pay, Peggy  refused to accept any kind of charity, no matter how well meant it was. And so she had no choice but to take up her elder sister Violet's offer of ship cleaning. It was hard work but the money was more than Dar brought home from the docks. And she found she actually enjoyed the work and the banter with the women. It even gave her a new appreciation for Violet.

For better or worse, Peggy refuses to give up and is determined to restore their home to what it was before Dar's injury. So that when he came home, he would have the home comforts once again and the family ties that bind them together.

Another heartwarming quick read that I devoured in a day. I enjoyed meeting up with the folk of Beamer Street again though it has been a while. And I look forward to meeting up with them again soon.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #Netgalley and #BoldwoodBooks for an ARC of #FamilyTiesOnBeamerStreet in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Monday, 13 May 2024

REVIEW: A Safe Haven on Beamer Street by Sheila Riley




A Safe Haven on Beamer Street by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas
Read: 3rd May 2024
Published: 9th May 2024

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Liverpool 1924

Trapped in an abusive marriage to Lord Caraway with her beloved daughter Melissa, 24-year-old Lady Elodie Caraway knows she has to escape before her deepest and darkest secrets are revealed giving her husband every reason to seek his revenge. But time is of the essence, if she is to save herself and Melissa.

With the help of lifelong friend Aiden Newman, they swiftly leave Oakland Hall for a new life in Liverpool's docklands. On arrival, Elodie and Melissa are welcomed as lodgers by Molly Haywood’s family, Aiden's aunt – no questions are asked.

Changing her name, Ellie dreams of following in the footsteps of her ancestors, setting up an apothecary to help heal those less fortunate and soon Ellie’s talents are called upon to help Mary-Jane Everdine bring her unborn child safely into the world.

But is Ellie’s tragic past about to catch up with her? Can she save herself and her young daughter from the cruel hands of Lord Caraway?

The next thrilling instalment in Sheila Riley’s Beamer Street series.


MY THOUGHTS:

Beginning in 1915, Elodie Kirrin and her mother Deborah are well known in the Lancashire village of Lavender Green as herbal healers, or "wise women", as their mothers before them. Unable to afford doctors, villagers seek them for their remedies for all types of maladies. Even the big man himself, Lord Silas Caraway, has Deborah make up his tincture of laudanum despite the law preventing her from doing so. After all, as a high court judge, Lord Silas IS the law.

After the death of his wife Lady Felicia and baby son, Silas blamed Deborah and her witchy ways for their untimely deaths. But Lady Felicia was ill with childbed fever after delivering a stillborn child.

A year later, it's 1916 and Elodie has reached her sixteenth birthday. Her one true love Aiden Newman now 18 had just received his papers to go and fight for King and country. But this birthday was to be one Elodie would remember for all the wrong reasons. Instead of the lemon cake her mother had planned on baking for her birthday, she arrives home instead to her mother having apparently taken her life, her world crashing down. Lord Silas offers Elodie a lifeline - marry him and want for nothing. All she has to do is bear him the son and heir he so desires. Grieving for her mother and for Aiden now away fighting, Elodie believes she has nothing left...especially when she receives news that Aiden is missing presumed dead. What has she left to live for?

When 1924 comes round, after six long torturous years married to Lord Silas, Lady Elodie Caraway must make her escape. And so she finds herself on Beamer Street in the Liverpool docklands with her six year old daughter Melissa, and a far cry away from the life she knew in Lancashire and the stifling one she had married to Lord Silas. But here in the docklands, Silas would never think to look for her there. Here, at least, she's safe.

Soon she makes friends with residents Molly Hayward and Mary Jane Everdine. Even little Melissa is coming out of herself and loving having a 'big sister' in Molly's youngest daughter Bridie, who has taken Melissa under her wing. Despite being a newcomer, Elodie makes friends amongst the women and opens her own apocethary across the street where she makes up tinctures and treats maladies to the working class who cannot otherwise afford medical treatment. Life is good on Beamer Street. But Elodie is always looking over her shoulder in case Lord Silas should find her and punish her for leaving him, taking his anger out on Melissa more than likely for not being the son and heir he so desires.

It has been a couple of years since the first Beamer Street book, I had been wondering when another was on the horizon and this one was worth the wait. Although it is the second in the series, the story is standalone and can suffice as such but these sagas are always best enjoyed when one reads them all, aren't they?

The characters are all well developed. From the gossipy women of Beamer Street to dastardly Lord Silas, a character we definitely love to hate. The story as it unfolds displays the resilience of those of their time and I just enjoy revisiting the faces of Beamer Street once again.

I can't wait for book 3. Maybe the new family that pitched up at the end has a story to tell in that one. I look forward to the next one in any case.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #ASafeHavenOnBeamerStreet in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Friday, 18 November 2022

REVIEW: Finding Friends on Beamer Street by Sheila Riley




Finding Friends on Beamer Street (Beamer Street #1) by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas
Read: 11th November 2022
Published: 16th November 2022

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Liverpool 1921

Pregnant, Mary Jane Starling's secret wedding to Paddy Redfern ends in disaster when her fiancé is murdered on the way to the church. Paddy’s wayward twin ‘Red’ intercepts Mary Jane and warns that they must flee Ireland for fear of reprisals from her family, never to return.

Too young and terrified to question Red’s motives, Mary Jane, is hurriedly escorted to Liverpool where she quickly discovers Red’s good Samaritan act is a sham when he abandons her homeless and destitute.

However, strength, fortitude and good luck save her when she catches the eye of reclusive Cal Everdine and is befriended by Molly Hayward’s lovable family.

But Mary Jane still has to live with the overbearing guilt of the secrets she holds.

Will she ever be able to follow her dreams and reconcile her past?

A brand-new series, set around Liverpool Docks, by bestselling author Sheila Riley


MY THOUGHTS:

Having thoroughly enjoyed Sheila Riley's previous two series - Reckoner's Row and the Mersey Mistress/Angels - I was excited to discover yet another new series on the horizon. FINDING FRIENDS ON BEAMER STREET is a delightful tale of betrayal, survival, courage and strength against all odds. I just love the characters who are either warm-hearted or nosey and opinionated, with the exception of one of course.

1921: Paddy Redfern is preparing for his secret wedding to Mary Jane Starling when he is accosted by his twin Christie 'Red' Redfern and a plea for money. But Paddy is done bailing his wastrel brother out of scrapes of his own making and refuses to give him what he asks, even when Red pleads that his creditor demands immediate payment or on his own head be it. But Paddy confides that he has no money to spare since he and Mary Jane are about to marry and board the night ferry to Liverpool where they will begin their new life.

With child, Mary Jane is eagerly waiting Paddy's arrival when his no good brother Red intercepts her with warnings that they Paddy has been murdered and that they must flee Ireland for fear of reprisals from her three brothers should they catch up with her. Luckily Paddy had entrusted her with their ferry tickets (as well as their savings safely tucked away) which Red takes advantage of by hurrying Mary Jane across the Irish Sea to Liverpool, where he promised Paddy he would take care of her. 

But the moment they set foot on the docks, he leaves her stranded having to make her own way to somewhere safer than here. She spies a teashop and takes refuge there but not before almost being bowled over by a horse and trap. When Red catches up with her, he gives her rough directions to where they need to go before hurrying off once again. Mary Jane knows Red cannot be trusted which is why she never let on about the savings Paddy had entrusted her with, fearing he would just fritter it away on ale and gambling. 

With the help of Cal Everdine, Mary Jane finds her way to Beamer Street where Red has them booked into Cissie Stone's lodging house, which is filthy with grime and dirt. Esconced in the attic room under the guise of husband and wife, Mary Jane cleans the room from top to bottom before settling in there. She knows she will have to start earning to build up the savings she and Paddy put aside to escape this horrid place and awful landlady, not to mention the lazy wastrel Red who spends more time at the alehouse or in Cissie's rooms than working on the docks.

Mary Jane comes up with a plan to bake pies and pastries to sell at the market and soon has just enough to rent the empty shop premises across the street, below Cal Everdine's flat. She has had just about enough of Red's cadging and Cissie's filthy place. But then she discovers all her savings gone...every little bit she and Paddy had saved that she had hidden in various places...along with her carpet bag and Red's belongings. The scoundrel had fled with everything she had and not a penny left to pay the rent. 

But Mary Jane will not be beaten. Even when she returns the following day to find her belongings strewn on the doorstep of the lodging house, Cissie having turfed her out, Mary Jane will not be beaten. Her only friends since she came to Beamer Street have been Molly Hayward next door and the quiet Cal Everdine from across the street. Molly takes in Mary Jane and gives her a roof whilst Cal gives her his premises to bake her pies and pastries and soon, she has enough once again to rent out the premises below his flat. And it isn't long before her business is thriving and she has orders from all over, as well as the nosey busybodies from down the street who wouldn't give her the time of day when she first moved in. And slowly Mary Jane saves enough to put aside for when her confinement starts and the baby comes.

And then she arrives home one day to find Molly in tears, a letter in her hand. And their worlds come crashing down just as Christmas nears and Mary Jane's baby is due.

FINDING FRIENDS ON BEAMER STREET is a delightfully easy read that I thoroughly enjoyed and cannot wait to rejoin the Haywards and the Everdines on Beamer Street again soon. There is so much going on within this little family and their friends and I enjoyed every minute of my stay with them.

As with all of Sheila Riley's series, FINDING FRIENDS ON BEAMER STREET is a heartwarming tale of love, loss, courage and strength with a beautiful ending. I loved every minute of my stay there and cannot wait to rejoin them all again soon.

Perfect for fans of sagas.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #FindingFriendsOnBeamerStreet in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Friday, 22 April 2022

REVIEW: The Mersey Mother by Sheila Riley




The Mersey Mothers (Reckoner's Row #3) by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas
Read: 15th April 2022
Published: 19th April 2022

★★★★★ 4.5 stars (rounded up)

DESCRIPTION:

Liverpool 1953

January sees the dawn of the Queen Elizabeth’s Coronation year as the mothers of Reckoners Row unite in preparation for the celebration of the new Queen.

Meanwhile Evie Kilgaren is dreaming of her summer wedding to Danny Harris, but trouble looms for Skinner & Sons with a new rival trying to put them out of business, but no-one knows why....

Ada Harris is summoned to the bedside of her estranged husband, who, in his dying moment confesses to a deadly secret - he knows who really murdered Evie’s mam Rene all those years ago and the consequences are far reaching.

Has an innocent man been jailed and is there still a murderer walking carefree?

Will Evie get the happy-ever-after she so longs for with Danny? And will The Mersey Mothers unite and still be friends?


MY REVIEW:

I am so thrilled to be revisiting Reckoner's Row once again in this third installment of this delightful series. THE MERSEY MOTHERS picks up three years after the previous "The Mersey Girls" left off. And while each book can be read as a standalone, all three tie in together with the ongoing backstory that unfolds throughout them all. 

In THE MERSEY MOTHERS, not only do we revisit the residents of Reckoner's Row, but the original story in which Evie Kilgaren's mother Rene had disappeared during the coldest winter of 1947, her body later uncovered when the canal thawed. In the first book "The Mersey Orphan" (originally titled "The Orphan's Daughter"), after Rene's body was discovered, Evie's father Frank had been arrested for her murder and later imprisoned in a Mental Asylum for the Criminally Insane.

The story begins with a Prologue detailing the lead-up and thus Rene Kilgaren's demise from a rather different perspective before moving forward to 1953 where the story picks up with the excitement of the upcoming coronation of the new Queen. Life in Reckoner's Row has moved on although it was deeply affected by WW2 with rationing and shortages still rife some eight years later.

After buying the haulage yard from his step-father, Danny Harris (Skinner) is now struggling to keep the yard running with the opening of a new more competitive rival on the dock road, Lenard's Haulage. Evie Kilgaren works hard at keeping the books but with the business beginning to fail, she secretly advertises for more account keeping work to keep their head above water. Evie doesn't know how Lenard's knows who their customers are or how they are undercutting them but if they continue, Skinner's & Son will not survive.

The woman Danny had known as his mother growing up, Ada Harris, takes centre stage in much of this story as word reaches her that her good-for-nothing husband she kicked out three years ago after it was discovered he had been blackmailing Danny's step-father, Henry Skinner, is nearing death's door. Ada doesn't believe it for one minute and takes her time in knocking on his boarding house's door. But the Bert Harris she knew was a shadow of the man he used to be; shrivelled up skin and bone laying on his bug-ridden bed. He directed Ada to a cupboard and a box that was hidden there but expired before he could confess much more. All he had told her was that he knew who really killed Rene Kilgaren. Ada was scared that the box would contain proof that Bert had done the deed so therefore was too frightened to open it herself and hid it away upon arriving home.

Meanwhile, there is plenty going on in the Row with the upcoming coronation as the community prepares while trying to get by as they do best. Evie and her 16 year old sister are worried for their brother Jack who was in Korea under the National Service and had been for two years, though it had been some time since they had heard from him. Lucy was no an apprentice at Madame Barbery's Coiffure and was taking part in the Apprentice of the Year Awards at the exclusive Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool.

While in the shadows, nefarious activities continue to play out behind the scenes with the blackmarket and a murder case to solve. And as always, there are some dubious characters which will make your skin crawl as you hope they get their comeuppance. Susie Blackthorn, a regular thorn (pun intended) in both Danny and Evie's side, is back with a vengeance. But will she finally win out?

There are several stories interwoven throughout this wonderful family saga and it seems almost fitting that everything appears to come full circle by the end. It would certainly make an appropriate end to the series but I would love to see more of the Reckoner's Row residents whom I have grown fond of. I love this style of fiction as it mixes historical with a bit of mystery, that probably isn't all that mysterious in fact, but makes for entertaining and compelling reading. THE MERSEY MOTHERS is indeed an addictive read I couldn't put down and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

While it can be read as a standalone, as there is enough backstory supplied so that the reader doesn't miss out, THE MERSEY MOTHERS is fully appreciated best in conjunction with the first two books in the series. I love Sheila Riley's style and I loved that she dropped a mention of Ruby's Emporium (from her other Docklands series) a couple of times into the story.

Another wonderfully addictive historical fiction saga, THE MERSEY MOTHERS is perfect for fans of feel-good family sagas such as Rosie Clarke and Nadine Dorries.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #BoldwoodBooks and #RachelsRandomResources for an ARC of #TheMerseyMothers in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Friday, 4 March 2022

REVIEW: The Mersey Girls by Sheila Riley



The Mersey Girls (Reckoner's Row #2) by Sheila Riley 
Genre: Sagas, Post-war, Historical fiction
Read: 4th March 2022
Published: 18th August 2020

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

The latest instalment in Sheila Riley's brilliant Reckoner's Row series

Liverpool 1950...

When Evie Kilgaren takes over the running of the back office at Skinner and Son's haulage yard, she has no idea she is walking into a hive of blackmail, secrets and lies.

Her fellow co-worker and childhood nemesis, Susie Blackthorn, is outraged at being demoted and is hell-bent on securing the affections of local heartthrob Danny Harris.

Grace Harris, a singer on the prestigious D’Angelo transatlantic ocean liners, is returning home engaged to be married. But Grace is harbouring her own shocking secrets and something valuable her fiancé very desperately wants back.

As we return to the lives and loves of those who live and work in the Mersey Docklands, not everything is as it seems and love and luck are rarely on the same side.


MY REVIEW:

After thoroughly enjoying the first in this series "The Mersey Orphan" - though I read before it underwent a title change from "The Orphan's Daughter" - I had been eagerly awaiting the next installment. But life has a way of getting in the way of all the books I want to read and some 18 months after publication I have finally revisited the lives and loves of Reckoner's Row and enjoyed every minute of it. Some I had even forgotten about so it was lovely to have my memory refreshed of all the loveable people and the nefarious characters in the Liverpool dockside community.

It's 1950, three years after the end of the previous book, and Grace Harris has taken her singing to new heights as the lead cabaret act on the prestigious D'Angelo shipping line, mixing with celebrities and royalty alike. But you can take the girl out of Liverpool...and she longs to return home to see her family after so long abroad. Her mother is excited about her daughter's upcoming wedding and is eager to meet the man who has stolen her Gracie's heart. But when Grace disembarks at the Liverpool docks, it is not her fiance on her arm but the liner's heir, Bruce D'Angelo. The couple make exchange numbers and make arrangements to meet again soon. But then fate steps in...will she ever see Bruce again? Or is he just like every other man?

At twenty one, Evie Kilgaren has had her fair share of troubles. After her mother disappeared, later to be found in the river after the big freeze had thawed and her father tried for her murder, Evie has single-handedly brought up her two younger siblings, Jack (17) and Lucy (13). In the three years since her life was turned upside down, Evie has studied her way to earn a decent living as a bookkeeper at D'Angelo Shipping Lines. Although she had been forced to grow up quickly, she wants Jack and Lucy to enjoy their childhood and to get the education that would earn them decent livings. However, working at the shipping office is a fair way from Reckoner's Row and when she is offered the position of office manager at Skinner's haulage yard, less than a few minutes walk from her front door, Evie is quick to accept it despite knowing her nemesis is also employed there.

Flightly and fickle, Susie Blackthorn has always been the proverbial thorn in Evie's side. Her spiteful vindictiveness and selfish personality makes it difficult for anyone to like or sympathise with her. She thrives on gossip and skulking around dark corners in an attempt to uncover some juicy tidbits, lording her knowledge from the lofty heights of self interest. The fact that she is employed at Skinner's does not mean she does any work, as Evie discovers when she enters the disgraceful confines of the office, but spends most of her time filing her talons rather than invoices and gazing out the window for a glimpse of Danny. For the past three years, Susie has done her utmost to be seen by Danny Harris and attempting to worm her way into his affections. But Danny has only eyes for one woman...and it is not Susie Blackthorn!

As Evie works her way through the accounts she is shocked to discover that, not only has Susie never followed up on overdue invoices, but the owner of the haulage yard, Henry and his wife Meggie - both well respected members of their community - are being blackmailed. It is not her business why but it is her business to get the accounts in order and hopefully find out who is blackmailing their kindhearted friends. But to do that, she needs help. And so she takes Danny into her confidence.

Meanwhile there is something nefarious going on when Grace finds herself being followed and all has something to do with something valuable that that scoundrel Clifford Bracks gave her upon their engagement whilst they were still at sea. But what does he want with her when he has scores of other dancing girls to warm his bed at night? But things go awry for Grace in ways she could not imagine, as she harbours her own shocking secrets and knowing her life will never be the same again.

There are many more characters that get to have their share of the limelight throughout THE MERSEY GIRLS and Ada Harris would have it no other way. But it's the Connie McRaes of the story that bring a heartwarming cheer to my soul, for it is them who are the lifeblood of the community. They are far more genuine than the fickle nosiness of gossip-mongers who love to be the centre of attention when they have news to impart on someone else's misfortune but when it is them who are the subject of gossip, they wish to fade into the background.

I did so love Ada's misnomers as she attempted to give the impression she was something resembling middle class. Rest and reciprocation; about one being a social piranha; poisoning of the appendages (appendix); taking her son to the doctor's insulting room...the list goes on. She made me laugh on many occasion. And while Susie was the thorn in not only Evie's side but the readers, she does add that necessary adversary to the tale. And of course, there is seeing if she is rightly put in her place by one and all.

Although this is predominantly Evie, Grace and Susie's stories...it is Evie the reader admires more. Possibly because we have seen where Evie has come from in the first book and all she was dealt with back then. Grace's story was an intriguing one that didn't have as much page-time as as Evie but was one I was invested in all the same. I would have liked to have had a little more insight behind what happened after the incident at the tavern (no spoilers) but it just seemed to take place behind the scenes and readers were suddenly presented with the outcome along with the family. Susie...well, she is one character who we all love to hate. She is lazy and entitled, expecting everything to be handed to her while she does nothing to earn anything, all the while gloating in her vindictiveness she does not hesitate to lavish on anyone who gets in her path. Particularly Evie.

The other remaining characters - Henry, Meggie, Connie, Angus, Jack, Lucy and even Bobby - are all endearing ones and while they don't play as prominently as they had previously, they are still integral to the story.

While I loved THE MERSEY GIRLS, the plot itself I found to be a little disjointed in places, sometimes erratic. In the middle of a chapter with one character, the author swiftly changes perspectives to another leaving the reader momentarily confused, even moreso when the perspective changes back again...all without a break between scenes. A few parts were repetitive even with the same word or expression is used for the same thing that is repeated a page or so later. It didn't detract my enjoyment of it but I did find it somewhat confusing in parts. However, that is my only complaint and I did thoroughly enjoy the book otherwise.

An enjoyable heartwarming saga that is an easy read, THE MERSEY GIRLS is filled with love, joy, sadness and a whole load of sassiness. I cannot wait to see where the third installment takes us when I read "The Mersey Mothers" next. 

Perfect for fans of "Call the Midwife", historical sagas, wartime and post-war fiction.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #Netgalley, #BoldwoodBooks for an ARC of #TheMerseyGirls in exchange for an honest review.


MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Sunday, 15 August 2021

REVIEW: The Mersey Angels by Sheila Riley




The Mersey Angels (Dockside Saga #2) by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Wartime fiction, WW1, Sagas
Read: 8th August 2021
Published: 10th August 2021

★★★★ 4 stars

DESCRIPTION:

1916 LIVERPOOL

Following the death of her father, Ruby Swift, and husband Archie finally move back into Ashland Hall.

As the Great War rages, fathers and sons take the King's Shilling and head off to fight the unknown enemy, not knowing what horrors lie ahead. 

With Ned Kincaid in the Navy, Archie signs up to the volunteer constabulary and nurses Anna Cassidy and Ellie Harrington enlist to do their bit for King and Country. 

Soon the true casualties of war are being brought home in droves, Ruby converts Ashland Hall into an auxiliary hospital for wounded servicemen.

It’s not long before the true cost of war is brought closer to home and Anna and Ellie enlist in the British Military Nursing Corp and soon find themselves in the battlefields of France in search of the truth.

But they soon discover more than they bargained for...


MY REVIEW:

Having previously enjoyed the author's Reckoner's Row series and then "The Mersey Mistress", which was the first in this new Docklands series set on the River Mersey, I was excited to meet up with Anna and Ruby once again. I thoroughly enjoyed their stories in the first book, their tragedies and heartaches along with their lives, loves and joys. The first book introduced us to a cast of characters we grew to love in Anna, Ruby, Archie, Ned, Izzy, Lottie, Sam and Ellie including the not so nice ones in Jerky, Giles and the priest Father Parsons. In THE MERSEY ANGELS we meet up with them once again as life takes a different turn in each of their lives.

When we left them at the end of "The Mersey Mistress", Ruby's father had passed away and she was finally able to marry her lifelong love Archie. Surprisingly her estranged father had left Ashland Hall and its estate to Ruby while his elder daughter May inherited Ashland Lodge within the grounds of the estate. Giles was so angered by the outcome that he packed himself and May back up and they returned to his parish in Scarborough, for he had been so sure the Hall was coming to May and therefore him and he'd already begun firing staff and making arrangements to move in.

Now Ruby was in the process of refitting Ashland Hall with electricity and making the necessary arrangements to open as an Auxillary Hospital for soldiers returning from the Front. With Anna and Ellie trained up as nurses, they handed in their notices at a nearby hospital and took up positions at Ashland to treat returning soldiers alongside Doctor Bea, a brash wiry haired Scotswoman who does not suffer fools.

Anna's story began in "The Mersey Mistress" also as a young girl who was made homeless when her house was burnt to the ground with her mother and twin brothers inside. Her ten year old brother Sam had been picking up a birthday gift for their mother he had saved for by carrying passengers' bags from the docks for them. But he had returned to find his home a pile of ashes and was taken to the vicarage where Father Parsons had taken him to the orphanage and nefariously arranged a passage for him to Canada and a new life, telling Sam that his sister Anna had died in hospital. But his new life was nothing like it was promised and Sam was beaten and abused before he managed to escape and was taken in by a kindly doctor. When war broken out in 1914, Sam signed himself up in the hope that he will one day return to Liverpool. He wrote a final letter home to Ruby and Archie asking them to put some flowers on Anna's grave for him, which is when they realised Sam believed her to be dead.

Now as a nurse in the Ashland Auxilliary Hospital, Anna works tirelessly alongside Ellie, Ruby's secret daughter who had been stolen from her and Archie ten days after her birth by Giles and her father. But Anna dreams of searching for her brother Sam and when young Nipper Woods is brought in as a casualty of war, he tells Anna that Sam says hi. Is he delirious? Anna isn't sure but one thing she is sure about...she wants to be posted overseas so she can find her brother. In his letter two years ago, he told Ruby and Archie that he was going off to war so where else would he be but at the Front? But for now, Anna knows she is needed here. Besides, when Ned comes home on leave she wants to be here to see him. The couple have grown closer over the years they have lived with Ruby and Archie, particularly when Ned rescued her from Jerky Woods' advances in a dark alley one night. The friendship then grew into something more and it is her fondest hope that he will return unscathed so that they may marry.

When Doctor Bea announces she is joining the Red Cross overseas, Anna and Ellie decide to go with her...much to Ruby and May's horror. But the two women are old enough and their services are needed at the Front to the many soldiers that come in by the hour. Both are excited by their new adventure but nothing prepares Ellie for the lack of facilities available, having been sheltered all her life. They meet and make fast friends with the effervescent Daisy Flynn who, as luck would have it, was shipped to Canada on the same passage as Anna's brother Sam.

But nothing could prepare Anna for the sheer joy she would feel when she finally comes face to face with her brother now all grown up at 17 and working as a medic. But just as quick as she found him comes the threat of her losing him all over again. And with not having heard from Ned in months, Anna fears she has lost the two men she loves the most in the world.

Back home in Liverpool, life goes on as normal for those left behind on the home front. And yet it has changed dramatically for so many in the years since war began. They said it would be over by Christmas...they just didn't define which Christmas!

As with the first book "The Mersey Mistress" , there are various stories running throughout involving each of the key players. There are still many secrets but they too come to the surface and bring everyone full circle. As this book begins in 1916, the war is well underway so a fair portion of it is devoted to the battlefield both in the trenches and the field hospitals. There are more losses along the way - some tragically cut short while others may not be so missed.

The reader will be taken through a range of emotions as we are left wondering who will return from the Front and who will not. THE MERSEY ANGELS is a delightful addition to the Dockside saga series and while there was an element of rounding off the stories by the books conclusion, I hope this isn't the end and that we hear more from Anna, Ruby and their extended families.

Thoroughly enjoyable, THE MERSEY ANGELS can be read as a standalone as there is enough backstory included to not leave the reader behind. But I do recommend reading "The Mersey Mistress" as it is a very different tale to this one that is emotional and tragic on a whole other scale. To better understand the characters in this one, I do recommend reading "The Mersey Mistress" first.

Enjoyable easy read, THE MERSEY ANGELS is perfect for fans of historical wartime fiction and sagas. I highly recommend.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley, #Netgalley, #RachelsRandomResources and #BoldwoodBooks for an ARC of #TheMerseyAngels in exchange for an honest review.



MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.


Wednesday, 7 April 2021

REVIEW: The Mersey Mistress by Sheila Riley



The Mersey Mistress by Sheila Riley
Genre: Historical fiction, Sagas, WW1
Read: 28th March 2021
Published: 6th April 2021

★★★★★ 5 stars

DESCRIPTION:

Brand NEW from Liverpool's very own bestselling author, Sheila Riley

1910 LIVERPOOL DOCKS

Ruby Swift is a hard-working, straight-talking woman of substance who does not suffer fools gladly,

But when tragedy strikes on a bitter Christmas Eve, Ruby and her beloved Archie take matters into their own hands when a trusted employee’s house is mysteriously engulfed by flames and lives are lost.

Orphaned by the fire, Ruby welcomes heartbroken sixteen-year-old Anna Cassidy, into her home and family but circumstances conspire against them and she is unable to save Anna's twelve-year-old brother Sam Cassidy, who is sent by the Church to Canada as a Homeboy.

Can Ruby help mend a broken heart and can these two children ever be reunited or is there another higher game in play?

The Mersey Mistress takes you on a journey to another time, another place. From the banks of the River Mersey to the frozen waters of the Canadian Saint Laurence River.


MY REVIEW:

I'm thrilled to be taking part in the #BlogTour for Sheila Riley's engaging new saga THE MERSEY MISTRESS.

Beginning in 1892, THE MERSEY MISTRESS sets the tone of this enthralling new saga when young lovers, Rowena Ashland and Archie Swift, banished from Rowena's family home of Ashland Hall when it is revealed she is with child.  But Rowena's father, Silas Ashland, forbids her to marry Archie and if she does so in his lifetime he will disinherit her. So together they set up home together and welcome their baby girl into the world. But unbeknownst to them, her father and her barren younger sister's husband conspired to steal away Rowena and Archie's little girl when she was barely ten days old for May and Giles to raise as their own, leaving Rowena distraught. She vowed to never forgive her father...or Giles Harrington.

Liverpool 1910: Emma Cassidy is a proud widow bringing up 4 children since the death of her husband at sea before her five year old twins were born. Pregnant and widowed, she knocked on the door of Ruby Swift's Emporium begging for work to feed her family. Ruby took her in and gave her a job in which Emma thrived. Now five years later, as she makes her way to the Emporium on Christmas Eve, she trips over a broken gas lamp and twists her ankle. She manages to hobble home where her 16 year old daughter Anna settles her in with the twins to rest by the fire, assuring her that she will work her mother's job for the day so she will not miss out on her much-needed wages.

Known as "her ladyship" to some, Ruby Swift did not come from humble beginnings like those who frequented her stores. But life has taught her to be humble since her father forbade her to marry the man she loved and stole their child in the night. Born Rowena Ashland, Ruby took on the name of Archie's beloved aunt and long-serving housekeeper at Ashland Hall and that of Archie's, living together as married despite the fact they are not. Ruby was good to the people of Liverpool's dock area and was revered amongst many, as well as charitable in her donations. But Ruby believed in an honest day's work and never begrudged anyone trying to do their best for their family. When she took on Emma Cassidy, she also became a friend as well as an employee, and a trusted one at that. So when Emma failed to show up at work on Christmas Eve she knew it was not like her at all...and then Anna came knocking, offering to do her mother's job in her place.

Anna Cassidy was brought up to be respectful of others but to also stand on her own two feet. She had no qualms in working her mother's job in her place if it meant giving the twins a memorable Christmas. She took her 12 year old brother Sam along with her to collect the rents for Miss Ruby, but when on her own she found herself cornered by the unpleasant and bullying Jerky Woods, who tried forcing himself on her as well as stealing her takings. A swift kick sent Jerky reeling in pain, giving her the chance to escape, but Anna knew she would need to be on her guard after that as Jerky would not let such a humiliation lie. It was not to be her last encounter with him that day either...but it was one that would change the course of her life forever.

Tragedy rocks Anna's world when Ruby tells her that her house is on fire and she races back to Queen Street to save her mother and little brothers...but arrives too late. After watching her house crumble into charred remains, the firemen carried out the lifeless bodies of her family. But where was Sam? Whilst Ruby faces off with the unscrupulous Father O'Connell, Anna steals away in the night to search for her only surviving brother. She searches all night to no avail and the following morning Archie and Ned, the young man he and Ruby too in, find Anna frozen and unconscious by the docks. 

Meanwhile, Sam was discovered by a policeman in the charred remains of his house and taken to the priest who vowed not to let the sinful harlot Ruby Swift get her claws into the child. So he sent him off to the orphanage before Ruby could discover his subterfuge, signing Sam's life away to Canada in one fell swoop. It was to be a new life for Sam...but what was really in store?

Although Anna remained in hospital for many weeks, she was taken in by Ruby and Archie upon her recovery where she started work in the Emporium alongside the woman who had saved her life. Too late, she discovered Sam had been sent to Canada and all she could do was hope she would one day see him again. In one night, Anna had lost everything - her home, her family. All she had left was the silver locket her brother had saved for all year to buy their mother for Christmas.

Life is harsh on the docks, but Anna has been given a second chance. But is it enough? Can Ruby help Anna mend her broken heart? And will Anna and Sam ever be reunited? Or is there something sinister keeping them apart?

An addictive tale that sweeps you back to the early 20th century in this wonderful story of love, family, betrayal, loss and tragedy. THE MERSEY MISTRESS is truly heartbreaking but also wonderfully charming that will warm your heart as well as make you cry. 

The grittiness of poverty to the opulence of the middle class, this book has it all. I thoroughly enjoyed it and didn't want it to end. My only complaint is that it ended. I wanted it to go on and on and never have it end. But the story is left open to continue to a second book, which I hope won't be too far away. 

Perfect for historical fiction and saga fans, THE MERSEY MISTRESS will tug at your heartstrings and have you reaching for the tissues. Be warned, you will need them.

I would like to thank #SheilaRiley#RachelsRandomResources#Netgalley and #BoldwoodBooks for an ARC of #TheMerseyMistress in exchange for an honest review.




MEET THE AUTHOR:

Sheila Riley sets her gritty family sagas around the River Mersey and its docklands. Born in Southport and raised not far from the river, she was a hairdresser for over thirty years before her love of writing encouraged her to put away the scissors and take up the pen. As a ghostwriter, she previously wrote four bestselling novels under the name Annie Groves, a pseudonym inherited from saga legend Penny Jordan.

Married to her knight in rusty armour, Tony, she has three grown-up children, five adored grandchildren, a majestic German Shepherd called Max and an insatiably energetic Siberian Husky called Louis and an ancient cat called Missy. 

Social Media links:

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads


PUBLISHER:


Stay up to date with upcoming releases from Boldwood Books by following them on these social media accounts.