Showing posts with label Stella Riley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stella Riley. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2024

Book Spotlight and Excerpt: A Splendid Defiance by Stella Riley; Audiobook performed by Alex Wyndham

 

For two years England has been in the grip of Civil War.  In Banbury, Oxfordshire, the Cavaliers hold the Castle, the Roundheads want it back and the town is full of zealous Puritans.

Consequently, the gulf between Captain Justin Ambrose and Abigail Radford, the sister of a fanatically religious shopkeeper, ought to be unbridgeable.

The key to both the fate of the Castle and that of Justin and Abigail lies in defiance.  But will it be enough?

A Splendid Defiance is a dramatic and enchanting story of forbidden love, set against the turmoil and anguish of the English Civil War.

 

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 Excerpt

News from the North

 Waving Cornet Anderson back into his seat, Sir Willliam said, ‘You’ve been at York with the Prince?’

‘Yes, sir.’  The boy squared his shoulders.  ‘He’ll be marching south again soon.  There – there’s nothing else to do.  York is lost.’

Incredulity and incomprehension registered in varying degrees on the faces before him. Then Lieutenant-Colonel Greene said, ‘Lost?  Irretrievably?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘How?  Didn’t Rupert get there in time?’

‘Oh yes, sir.  He did – and he relieved the city,’ said Cornet Anderson quickly.  ‘He made one of his fast marches round to the north and we got to York while the enemy must have thought us still at Knaresborough. Only …’

‘Yes?’ prompted Sir William.

The boy stared down at his hands.

‘Well, the rebels had us heavily outnumbered but everyone was saying that they wouldn’t attack because of the York garrison.’

‘And did they? Were you taken by surprise?’

‘No – at least, not then.  But the Prince said that we must engage them early next day and my Lord Goring went into York to tell Lord Newcastle to bring his men out to rendezvous with us. Only they were late and the whole morning went by and the Prince was fretting at the delay.’

‘I’ll wager he was,’ said Justin Ambrose grimly.  ‘Cursing all creation, was he?’

‘I don’t know, sir.  He marched us to Long Marston and deployed us for battle before the York men came up.  But by that time there was a storm brewing so His Highness said we could stand down and get something to eat.  It must have been nearly seven o’clock and, after all the delay and everything, it seemed he’d decided not to attack … and it didn’t look as if the enemy would because they’d been manoeuvring as if they expected us to strike south again.’  He paused and his hands suddenly tightened on each other.  ‘And then all hell broke loose.  They attacked and the storm came all at once.  The Prince was riding up and down the lines through the rain like a man possessed.  It wasn’t even his own horse.’  He stopped again and then said wearily, ‘It was horrible. The Prince’s cavalry just broke and scattered.  And Lord Newcastle’s men kept refusing quarter until – until they were all lying there in the mud.’

This time the silence seemed to close around each one of them like a fist.

‘So York could not be held and the North is lost,’ said the Lieutenant-Colonel at last, voicing all their thoughts.  ‘What is Prince Rupert doing?’

‘Rallying the men, sir.  Lord Newcastle,’ added the boy on a perceptible note of contempt, ‘is taking ship for France.’

‘And what of Rupert himself?’ asked Justin.  ‘It’s his first real defeat.  How has he taken it?’

‘It’s hard to say,’ came the slow response.  ‘But they killed his dog, you know … and that must have been near as bad as everything else.’

 


Winner of four gold medals for historical romance and sixteen Book Readers’ Appreciation Medallions, Stella Riley lives in the beautiful medieval town of Sandwich in Kent.

She is fascinated by the English Civil Wars and has written six books set in that period. These, like the 7 book Rockliffe series, the Brandon Brothers trilogy and, most recently The Shadow Earl, are all available in audio, performed by Alex Wyndham.

Stella enjoys travel, reading, theatre, Baroque music and playing the harpsichord.  She also has a fondness for men with long hair - hence her 17th and 18th century heroes.

Author Links:

Website: https://stellarileybooks.co.uk

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RileyStella

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stellariley.books

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stellarileybooks/

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.co.uk/riley9631/stella-riley-books/

Book Bub:  https://www.bookbub.com/authors/stella-riley

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Stella-Riley/e/B0034PB7UU/

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40487661-a-splendid-defiance

 


Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Book Spotlight and Excerpt: The Shadow Earl by Stella Riley - Audiobook narrated by Alex Wyndham

 

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At the end of his Grand Tour, somewhere between Athens and Constantinople, Christian Selwyn, the young Earl of Hazelmere, vanished - seemingly without a trace.

Time passes.  In London, his uncle and cousin move into his home … while his unofficial fiancĂ©e, Sophia, is left desolate and in limbo.  Finally, his friends – loyal and close as brothers – set out to search in person. 

Christian’s startling re-appearance at a grand ball takes society by storm and fuels endless speculation. Where has he been during these three missing years? What happened to him? 

And more importantly, how did it happen? 

Only one thing is clear.  The earl who left England five years ago, has returned a changed man.  A man with secrets.


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EXCERPT

London; Kit’s mental turmoil in the wake of his reappearance

That hour – the first Christian had spent in his own home for five years – had exhausted him.  The effort required to say no more than was necessary and to control the wolf that howled inside him had left him physically and mentally drained. 

Or perhaps, he thought, it wasn’t just that. Perhaps it was a combination of tonight and everything that had gone before it.  The gradual growth of despair during those three years; the almost unbearable resurgence of hope when one of the gardeners whispered that two Englishmen, accompanied by a Consulate official were asking about him in the city; and then the terror that nothing would come of it – that whoever was out there would go away without finding him and that he’d be trapped here forever.

Then had come the days he’d been confined to his rooms and no one would tell him what was happening.  His nerves at full stretch, he’d swung between a very frail thread of hope he was afraid to trust and absolute dread.  If these Englishmen had traced him to the palace but were thereafter convinced that they were mistaken and persuaded to leave, Christian suspected that his immediate future wasn’t going to be pleasant.

But they hadn’t given up.  They and the Consulate official had persisted with their questions, between dire threats of what the English government would do should it learn that an English aristocrat was being held against his will by a Turkish citizen.  And so, eventually, Christian had been summoned to the Divan with no idea what awaited him there. 

When he’d seen Daniel and Anthony, relief had sent him to his knees … and when they’d drawn him to his feet and into their arms, he’d cried.

 Stella Riley

Winner of four gold medals for historical romance (Readers' Favourite in 2019, Book Excellence Awards in 2020, Global Book Awards in 2022 and Book Excellence Award in 2023) and fifteen B.R.A.G. Medallions, Stella Riley lives in the beautiful medieval town of Sandwich in Kent.

She is fascinated by the English Civil Wars and has written six books set in that period. These, like the 7 book Rockliffe series (recommended in The Times newspaper!) and the Brandon Brothers trilogy, are all available in audio, narrated by Alex Wyndham.

Stella enjoys travel, reading, theatre, Baroque music and playing the harpsichord.  She also has a fondness for men with long hair - hence her 17th and 18th century heroes.

Social Media Links:

 

Website:  https://stellarileybooks.co.uk

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RileyStella

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stellariley.books

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stellarileybooks/

Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.co.uk/riley9631/stella-riley-books/

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/search?search=Stella%20Riley

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Stella-Riley/e/B0034PB7UU

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/171405852-the-shadow-earl

 


 



Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Book Spotlight and Excerpt: The Black Madonna by Stella Riley


 Follow the tour HERE

As England slides into Civil War, master-goldsmith and money-lender, Luciano Falcieri del Santi embarks on his own hidden agenda. A chance meeting one dark night results in an unlikely friendship with Member of Parliament, Richard Maxwell. Richard’s daughter, Kate – a spirited girl who vows to hold their home against both Cavalier and Roundhead – soon finds herself fighting an involuntary attraction to the clever, magnetic and diabolically beautiful Italian.

Hampered by the warring English, his quest growing daily more dangerous, Luciano begins to realise that his own life and that of everyone close to him rests on the knife-edge of success … for only success will permit him to reclaim the Black Madonna and offer his heart to the girl he loves.

From the machinations within Parliament to the last days of the King’s cause, The Black Madonna is an epic saga of passion and intrigue at a time when England was lost in a dark and bloody conflict.

 

(Audiobook narrated by Alex Wyndham)

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*Only £1.95 / $1.95 for the duration of the Blog Tour*

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EXCERPT

On his way to find the first of the men who had condemned his father, Luciano is taken prisoner and gets caught up in the first military action of the war.

After almost twenty-four hours of polite captivity that had included a very uncomfortable night, Luciano was beginning to lose his temper.  It was Friday and he’d expected to be at Callow End by now, confronting Thomas Ferrars – not sitting in a field at Powick under constant guard while the citizens of Worcester came in their droves to gape at the military side-show.

‘This,’ he announced savagely, ‘is bloody ridiculous.’

Selim looked at him.

‘I still have my knife,’ he said hopefully.

‘Don’t be a fool.  How many of them do you think you can kill? And our horses are back there with the rest.  We can’t do a thing until they decide to move – and, on present showing, that could take till Doomsday.’

There being no real answer to this, they sat in silence for a further hour until the air of rising excitement around them culminated in a mêlée of activity and a youthful lieutenant arrived, leading their horses.

‘Mount up,’ he said cheerfully. ‘We’re going.’

Luciano rose slowly.  ‘Going where?’

The fellow hesitated and then shrugged.

‘Worcester.  Byron’s on the move and we’re off to stop him.  But don’t worry.  Captain Fiennes says you’re to be fully protected at all times.’

The men fell in on a large meadow just below the village and then indulged themselves with a heartening psalm.

God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.

Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed

Luciano looked on beneath faintly amused brows.

‘A goodly clutch of Puritans, no doubt.  But I wonder if they fight as well as they sing?’

Selim sniffed.  ‘Singing is for women.’

‘You’re missing the point.  Why would Byron choose to leave today of all days, knowing as he does what’s out here waiting for him?’

Selim cast his mind back and then, finding the answer, opened his mouth to deliver it.

‘Exactly,’ said Luciano softly.  ‘But if dear Nathaniel hasn’t worked it out for himself, I don’t think we’ll help him.  Just keep your eyes and ears open and be ready for any confusion.  I imagine we can rely on these gentlemen not shooting the golden goose.’  He paused and met his henchman’s eye with a sudden smile.  ‘But, in case those are famous last words, you’d better get ready to duck as well.’

The cavalcade made its ponderous way along the lane towards the bridge that would take it across the River Teme. Luciano knew that bridge moderately well.  It was old, brick-built and no more than twelve feet wide – which meant that the troops would have to break formation to cross it.  And on the far side of the river lay an equally narrow lane bounded by straggling hedges which wound up into a large field from where one could see Worcester.  So if a surprise lay in store this, presumably, was the place to look for it.

Rather less alert than his Italian captive, Nathaniel Fiennes led the column over the bridge and down the lane into Wickfield – aware but undismayed that, behind him, his force was being squeezed into a long thin ribbon.  And then he stopped dead, staring at a sight too incredible to be believed.

On the other side of the field, four or five hundred Royalist cavalrymen were taking their ease on the grass. Some had disarmed and lay dozing in the sun, some were still eating their noon-day meal and others were grouped about their officers in the shade of a thorn tree.  All appeared totally oblivious to the presence of the enemy.

Nathaniel stared and stared again, still unable to take it in while, at his back, the entire troop came to a shuddering stop as each man’s horse cannoned unwarily into that of the man in front.  And then everything changed as a tall Royalist officer surged to his feet and alerted all the others by throwing himself astride the nearest horse.

‘Boot and saddle!’ he roared.  ‘Charge!’

The spell shattered..

‘God rot it!’ swore Nathaniel.  ‘Rupert!’

And then all hell broke loose.

Somewhere towards the back of the column, Luciano and Selim were barely over the bridge.

‘Christ,’ muttered Luciano, as they ground to a halt.  ‘Already?’

He dropped one hand on Selim’s bridle and strained his ears.  Then, as the first shock waves rippled through the ranks, ‘Now!’ he said.  And, dragging the Turk from the saddle as he dropped from his own, took a sort of flying dive at the hedge.

It parted unwillingly to let them through but took its toll on skin and clothing. Without pausing either to assess the damage or heed the pandemonium breaking out on the other side of the hedge, the Italian said, ‘Across the river – before Nathaniel’s lads start dropping on our heads.’

Shouts and screams of escalating panic and confusion rose from the lane as those in front turned and rode down those behind in an attempt to retreat; while further away pistol shots and the clash of swords bore witness to the fact that at least some of Captain Fiennes’ men were staying to fight.

‘What now?’ asked Selim as, soaked and muddy to the armpits, they gained the far bank.  ‘We run?’

‘No.  We hide.  That clump of willows ought to do,’ replied Luciano, already squelching towards it in boots full of water.  ‘We need horses.  Preferably our own – but any will do.  Either way, we stay out of sight until the gentlemen over there complete their business with each other. And then we try to keep our rendezvous at Callow End.’

Selim resisted the impulse to say, Like this? but could not forgo a gloomy ‘InĹźallah.’

‘Quite.  But just now I  prefer “God helps those who help themselves”.’

The skirmish taking place on the opposite bank turned out to be brief but remarkably unpleasant.  Long before the Royalists appeared, the lane was a seething mass of confusion as Fiennes’ men rode over each other in their efforts to escape the damnably restricted space.  They swarmed back on to the bridge where John Fiennes tried to turn and rally them – only to find himself driven aside by the terrified stampede.  And then the Royalists were upon them from behind; cutting men down, forcing them into the river and trampling others beneath their horses as they swept on in relentless pursuit.

The whole thing probably lasted less than twenty minutes, thought Luciano grimly – but it was as comprehensive a rout as anything he could have imagined.

‘Tenant-farmers versus gentlemen,’ he murmured. ‘What chance have they got?’

Efendim?’

‘Nothing.’  Luciano pulled off his boots to empty them.  There was no use in letting the scene he’d just witnessed touch him.  It was nothing to do with him, after all.  ‘Let’s get out of here.  It would probably be safer to wait till the Cavaliers give up the chase and head back to Worcester … but, if we do that, they’ll round up all the loose horses and we’ll be left to walk.  So we’ll risk it.’

Selim, who disliked being wet, said persuasively, ‘And then we find an inn?’

‘Perhaps.  But let’s take one thing at a time, shall we?’

He had not bargained for the nightmare on the bridge. Dead, dying or wounded, men and beasts lay tangled in grisly carnage; the very air was filled with sounds of pain and terror.  Never having been near a battlefield before, Luciano smelled blood and instantly felt bile rising in his throat.  He did not think his life had been particularly cushioned; poverty, fear, gruelling work and the disease and desperation of the back-streets – he knew all these things.  But nothing had prepared him for what lay on Powick Bridge; and for the first time he found himself wondering how many people in sleepy, self-satisfied England were prepared for it either.

Sickened, he said, ‘What a bloody mess.’

‘Yes.  But we can do nothing, efendim.  There are too many.  And soon the King’s men will return – so we must cross the bridge.’

At the back of his mind, Luciano could see the sense in this; and so, although it was the very last thing he wanted to do, he pulled himself together and began picking his way through the human wreckage at his feet.  The necessity of looking where he was going brought nausea several steps closer … and the sight of a man whose skull had been virtually split open all but undid him.  Then a hand grabbed his ankle.

 

 Stella Riley

Winner of three gold medals for historical romance (Readers’ Favourite in 2019, Book Excellence Awards in 2020, Global Book Awards in 2022) and fourteen B.R.A.G. Medallions, Stella Riley lives in the beautiful medieval town of Sandwich in Kent.

She is fascinated by the English Civil Wars and has written six books set in that period. These, like the seven-book Rockliffe series (recommended in The Times newspaper!) and the Brandon Brothers trilogy, are all available in audio, narrated by Alex Wyndham.

Stella enjoys travel, reading, theatre, Baroque music and playing the harpsichord. She also has a fondness for men with long hair – hence her 17th and 18th century heroes.

Social Media Links:

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