Showing posts with label Siobhan Daiko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siobhan Daiko. Show all posts

Monday, January 23, 2023

Book Spotlight: The Flame Tree by Siobhan Daiko

 


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In the spring of 1939, dashing young William Burton and the beautiful Constance Han set sail from London on the same ocean liner to Hong Kong.

Romance blossoms while they enjoy games of deck quoits and spend sultry tropical evenings dancing under the stars. Connie is intrigued by Will’s talent for writing poetry, and she offers to give him Cantonese lessons to help him with his new job— a cadet in the colonial service.

But once in Hong Kong, Connie is constrained by filial duty towards her Eurasian parents, and their wish for her to marry someone from her own background. She can't forget Will however and arranges to meet him in secret under the magnificent canopy of a flame of the forest tree—where she fulfils her promise to teach him to speak Chinese.

Before too long, trouble looms as Japanese forces gather on the border between Hong Kong and mainland China. Will joins a commando group tasked with operating behind enemy lines, and Connie becomes involved in the fight against local fifth columnists.

When war breaks out, they find themselves drawn into a wider conflict than their battle against prejudice. Can they survive and achieve a future together? Or do forces beyond their control keep them forever apart?

Based on a little-known true story, The Flame Tree is a tale of love and survival against all the odds.

PRAISE FOR SIOBHAN DAIKO

“Siobhan Daiko will tug at your heartstrings, and leave you desperate for more…”

~ Ellie Yarde, The Coffee Pot Book Club.

“Daiko is an author you’ll want to add to your historical fiction favourites.”

~ Netgalley Reviewer

 


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Siobhan Daiko

Siobhan Daiko is a British historical fiction author. A lover of all things Italian, she lives in the Veneto region of northern Italy with her husband, a Havanese dog and a rescued cat. Siobhan was born of English parents in Hong Kong, attended boarding school in Australia, and then moved to the UK—where she taught modern foreign languages in a Welsh comprehensive school. She now spends her time writing page-turners and enjoying her life near Venice.

Her novels are compelling, poignant, and deeply moving, with strong characters and evocative settings, but always with romance at their heart. You can find more about her books on her website www.siobhandaiko.org

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Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Book Spotlight and Excerpt: The Girl from Bologna (Girls from the Italian Resistance) by Siobhan Daiko

 

 

Bologna, Italy, 1944, and the streets are crawling with German soldiers. Nineteen-year-old Leila Venturi is shocked into joining the Resistance after her beloved best friend Rebecca, the daughter of a prominent Jewish businessman, is ruthlessly deported to a concentration camp.

In February 1981, exchange student Rhiannon Hughes arrives in Bologna to study at the university. There, she rents a room from Leila, who is now middle-aged and infirm. Leila’s nephew, Gianluca, offers to show Rhiannon around but Leila warns her off him.

Soon Rhiannon finds herself being drawn into a web of intrigue. What is Gianluca’s interest in a far-right group? And how is the nefarious head of this group connected to Leila? As dark secrets emerge from the past, Rhiannon is faced with a terrible choice. Will she take her courage into both hands and risk everything?

An evocative, compelling read, “The Girl from Bologna” is a story of love lost, daring exploits, and heart-wrenching redemption.

Trigger Warnings:

War crimes against women

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EXCERPT

I went to visit Rebecca the afternoon after my parents left. I remember climbing the stairs to the piano nobile and following her into the Matatias’ living room. It was such a beautiful place. Intricate glass and ironwork chandeliers hung from the centre of the coffered ceiling. Thick carpets the colour of whipped cream stretched over darkly lustrous parquet. I loved the nineteenth-century paintings—landscapes and portraits—covering the walls, and the fact that there were books, most of them rebound, in rows behind the glass doors of huge, dark mahogany bookcases. Despite it being spring already, mammoth radiators released heat on a scale which at home PapĂ  would have declared plain crazy—a heat redolent of a luxury hotel rather than a private dwelling, and of such intensity that, almost immediately, breaking out in a sweat, I’d had to take off my cardigan.

Giulia served us with tea on a silver tray, and we sat on leather chairs, eating homemade cupcakes while we chatted about the essay which we were due to hand in the following week. ‘Let’s go up to my room and listen to records,’ Rebecca suggested after we’d eaten our fill.

A radiogram held pride of place by her bedroom door—a Philips as chance would have it, like the cassette recorder I’m using now. Rebecca had eclectic tastes and her collection consisted of a bit of everything: Monteverdi, Scarlatti, Bach, Mozart, Beethoven. But it was her jazz records which thrilled me most. Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Fats Waller, Benny Goodman. I didn’t have any records of my own in those days, and relished listening to hers.

We tapped our feet to Ellington’s It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing). I didn’t speak any English—I still don’t—but not even the happy-go-lucky sentiment conveyed by the music could dispel the disquiet preying on my mind, a sense of impending doom. Ever since the Germans had occupied Bologna, they’d been rounding up Jews. I’d mentioned my fear for her family to Rebecca before, but she’d assured me that her father had covered all traces of their origins.

I fixed her with a concerned look as the song came to an end. ‘Did you hear that the Germans have been arresting Jews?’ I reached across the space between us and held Rebecca’s hand in mine. ‘Shouldn’t you and your parents go into hiding?’

She scoffed and squeezed my fingers. ‘We’re Bolognese. We haven’t done anything wrong. Father’s factory is manufacturing car parts. It’s important work and, much as he hates it, the Nazis buy them from him and send them to Germany. We’ll be fine, Leila. No need to be concerned.’

I took Rebecca at her word. What else could I do? We decided she should come to my place the next day, Sunday, so we could go for an afternoon hike along the porticoes leading to the Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Luca on a hill overlooking the city. It was our favourite passeggiata and we loved to walk under the winding vault arcades, over six hundred of them, almost four kilometres leading from the Saragozza gate at the edge of the old part of the city.

Rebecca saw me to the door and kissed me on both cheeks. ‘See you tomorrow.’ She paused and added with a blush. ‘I hope to see Dani too.’

‘You might well do so,’ I laughed. ‘I’ll ask him to come along with us.’

The next day, after lunch, I waited for her. The second hand on my watch ticked on into minutes, and the minutes ticked into an hour. I knew something was terribly wrong. Daniele offered to go and see what had happened. I insisted on going with him, a sick feeling in my stomach.

‘All will be well, don’t worry.’ My brother’s words were optimistic but I could see he was concerned. He ran a shaky hand through his thick, dark brown, wavy hair.

It only took us five minutes to get there, we ran so fast. We rang the bell and Giulia answered straight away. ‘They’ve been taken,’ she said, tears rolling down her face. ‘The SS came at dawn. Oh Dio,’ she sobbed, twisting her hands in her apron. ‘And now the Germans will move in here. I’ve been given a choice. To serve them or leave.’ She lifted her chin. ‘I will stay and look after things for my signori until the Allies get here and liberate us from those Nazi swine.’

Cavolo, I’m crying. I will have to stop recording now. Sorry, but I can’t go on…

I press the off switch and put down the microphone. Romeo, my big ginger cat, jumps up onto my lap. I stroke him and the action soothes me. My heartrate slows, my sobbing ceases and my breathing steadies. Romeo meows hungrily. ‘You’re a fickle lover,’ I tell him with a sad smile. ‘You only give me affection when you want to be fed.’

I go through to the kitchen and top up his bowl with kibble. On the table is Rhiannon’s application form. I glance at the girl’s photo. She’s a redhead sporting a hairstyle like Lady Di’s. Wide blue eyes. Very Celtic looking. Rhiannon wrote me a letter introducing herself, which I received last week. I’m looking forward to meeting her and, holding onto that realisation, I go to get ready for bed.

Siobhan Daiko

Siobhan Daiko is a British historical fiction author. A lover of all things Italian, she lives in the Veneto region of northern Italy with her husband, a Havanese dog and a rescued cat. After a life of romance and adventure in Hong Kong, Australia and the UK, Siobhan now spends her time indulging her love of writing and enjoying her life near Venice.

 Social Media Links:

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Amazon Author Page   Goodreads



Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Book Spotlight and Excerpt: The Girl from Portofino (Girls of the Italian Resistance: A collection of standalone novels set in Italy during World War 2) by Siobhan Daiko

 


In 1970 Gina Bianchi returns to Portofino to attend her fathers funeral, accompanied by her troubled twenty-four-year-old daughter, Hope. There, Gina is beset by vivid memories of World War 2, a time when she fought with the Italian Resistance and her twin sister, Adele, worked for the Germans.

In her childhood bedroom, Gina reads Adeles diary, left behind during the war. As Gina learns the devastating truth about her sister, shes compelled to face the harsh brutality of her own past. Will she finally lay her demons to rest, or will they end up destroying her and the family she loves?

A hauntingly epic read that will sweep you away to the beauty of the Italian Riviera and the rugged mountains of its hinterland. The Girl from Portofino” is a story about heart-wrenching loss and uplifting courage, love, loyalty, and secrets untold.

Trigger Warnings:

The brutality of war, death, war crimes against women.

 

Buy Links

 Available on KindleUnlimited.

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EXCERPT

Gina heaves a sigh and turns to the next page. Her sister’s voice is so compelling. She can almost hear her speaking. She grits her teeth and reads on.

10th November 1943

Dear Diary

It has been over a month since I first wrote to you. A lot has happened, and I hardly know where to begin.

We have new residents in Portofino. Germans! A couple of weeks ago, they requisitioned the Nazionale Restaurant as a canteen for officers, billeted men in the villas of the wealthy, and have even taken over Castello Brown. The entire Portofino headland is being armed with antiaircraft and anti-naval batteries. It’s disgusting! Our beautiful Mount Portofino Park, created only eight years ago to preserve our unique flora, fauna, and landscape, has now become a place for aggression.

Oh, Dio buono, good Lord, it’s not just here in Portofino that we are suffering from the effects of the occupation. My entire country has turned into a war zone. Our King and the government have fled to Brindisi in the far south, which is in Allied hands. Italy has officially declared war on Germany. British and American forces have liberated Naples, but the Nazis have halted their advance south of Rome. It’s a complete and utter disaster.

Even worse, Hitler has made Mussolini, whom we’d thought we’d got rid of last summer, the ruler of “The Italian Social Republic”. He’s now based in Salò on Lake Garda, near Verona in the north. The Baroness told me that il Duce has become a puppet dancing to Germany’s tune. I grew up under his regime—we were indoctrinated into the cult of Mussolini at school—but I’d always thought him pompous and his cosying up to Hitler despicable. And now he has dropped Italy into an even deeper mess than he did when he sent our unprepared young men off to fight in North Africa and Russia. It's heart-breaking.

Some of the leading government figures who voted Mussolini out of power last July have been tried by a Fascist court and then executed by a firing squad. The Baroness said such a dreadful act is just the beginning of dark times ahead, and I’m afraid she’s right. Not only has our country become a battleground between Germany and the Allies, but also home to a war of national liberation.

Today, in the quiet of her study, the Baroness told me about the resistance movement. Anti-Fascist civilians are joining the partisan formations, established by soldiers from disbanded units of the Royal Italian Army, who’d evaded capture by the Germans after the armistice. And now a Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale, Committee of National Liberation—also known as the CLN—has been set up behind enemy lines. So exciting, I said to her, catching the glow in her eyes, but to be honest, I’m worried. Anti-Fascist Italians will be fighting Fascist Italians as well as Nazis. If the Allies don’t get here soon, I fear that a lot of blood will be shed.

The British and Americans seem to be having more luck in the air than on land. There have been four major bombardments of Genoa by Allied planes since the Germans occupied the city. The aircraft fly low over Portofino. When they’ve dropped their bombs on their targets—the railway marshalling yards of the city, apparently—the sky turns red above us.

One piece of good news. We received a letter from my brother, Tommaso, yesterday. After being conscripted into the army, he was captured in Tunisia by the Allies last March. They sent him to a prisoner of war camp in England. But now, because Italy isn’t at war with Britain anymore, he has been given the chance to work as a “co-operator”. He mixes with local people in Yorkshire and is learning to speak English. I’m happy for him; it will broaden his horizons and help him make something of himself. (Tommaso has always been the apple of Mamma’s eye and she’s spoilt him rotten.)

Dio buono, I can hear Gina coming down the corridor to our bedroom so I’d better stop writing. She mustn’t know about you, dear diary. Mustn’t know about the Baroness. I’ll hide you quickly and try and share more secrets with you soon.


Siobhan Daiko

Siobhan Daiko is a British historical fiction author. A lover of all things Italian, she lives in the Veneto region of northern Italy with her husband, a Havanese dog, and two rescued cats. After a life of romance and adventure in Hong Kong, Australia, and the UK, Siobhan now spends her time, when she isn't writing, enjoying her life near Venice.

 Social Media Links

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BookBub   Amazon Author Page   Goodreads




Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Spotlight on Siobhan Daiko, author of The Girl from Venice

 


Lidia De Angelis has kept a low profile since Mussolini's racial laws wrenched her from her childhood sweetheart. But when the Germans occupy Venice in 1943, she must flee the city to save her life.

Lidia joins the partisans in the Venetian mountains, where she meets David, an English soldier fighting for the same cause. As she grows closer to him, harsh Nazi reprisals and Lidia’s own ardent anti-fascist activities threaten to tear them apart.

Decades later in London, while sorting through her grandmother’s belongings after her death, Charlotte discovers a Jewish prayer book, unopened letters written in Italian, and a fading photograph of a group of young people in front of the Doge’s Palace.

Intrigued by her grandmother’s refusal to talk about her life in Italy before and during the war, Charlotte travels to Venice in search of her roots. There, she learns not only the devastating truth about her grandmother’s past, but also some surprising truths about herself.

A heart-breaking page-turner, based on actual events in Italy during World War II

Trigger Warnings: Death, Miscarriage, PTSD, Rape

 


Buy Links:
 
Available on Kindle Unlimited.

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 Siobhan Daiko


Fun Facts
(Stuff you may or may not already know!)

 

The first time I visited Italy, I was six years old. My parents rented a house in Positano on the Amalfi coast for the summer. I remember swimming in the sea, the hundreds of steps down to the beach, and picking figs from the tree in our garden. 

 


When I lived in Hong Kong, I was privileged to be able to ride ex-racehorses at the Jockey Club’s Bees River stables and take part in show jumping competitions. I fell off on more than one occasion as the horses could be a handful; but I always got back on as riding was my passion. 

 


I love to dance and, for my 50th birthday, friends and family got together for a Salsa disco after a meal in a restaurant near where we live in Italy. Here I am, “strutting my stuff”. 

 


I wore a cat mask and a tricorn hat at the Venice Carnival a few years ago just for a laugh.

 


When I need inspiration for my writing, all I need to do is look out of the window in my study. On the horizon, if it’s a clear day, I can see the Euganean Hills near Padova, the Berici Hills near Vicenza, and, in the middle, very distant, the start of the Apennines behind Bologna. 



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Siobhan Daiko

Siobhan Daiko is an international bestselling historical romantic fiction author. A lover of all things Italian, she lives in the Veneto region of northern Italy with her husband, a Havanese puppy, and two rescue cats. After a life of romance and adventure in Hong Kong, Australia and the UK, Siobhan now spends her time, when she isn't writing, enjoying the sweet life near Venice.

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