Saturday, December 6, 2025

The Coffee Pot Book Club Book of the Year Awards 2026 are now open to submissions!



*We are now open to submissions for our Book of the Year Awards 2026*


We're thrilled to share that The Coffee Pot Book Club is now open to submissions to our prestigious Book of the Year Awards 2026.

If you are an author of historical fiction, or its various sub-genres, you may submit your book to our awards. Our categories cover fiction, non-fiction, and audiobooks.


Please find all the details here:

https://www.thecoffeepotbookclub.com/book-of-the-year-awards/


The deadline for all direct submissions is
October 31st, 2026.


Books featured on our popular blog tours (start date prior to the deadline) and in our Editorial Reviews are automatically entered into one category of the awards, free of charge.


We're looking forward to your exciting submissions,
and wish you all best of luck!

Cathie & The Coffee Pot Book Club Team xx





Friday, December 5, 2025

Book Review: One Summer at Helgeveld Farm by John Blois



*Editorial Book Review*

One Summer at Helgeveld Farm
 By John Blois 


Publication Date: 5th September 2025
Publisher: John Blois
Page Length: 324
Genre: Historical Fiction

In 1949, Will Parlor glimpses a woman across a crowded Chicago street and is carried back to the summer that changed him forever. In 1917, at seventeen, he took a job as a worker on an Illinois farm. There, he’s drawn into the Dutch-American Helgeveld family, especially daughters Vlinder and Corrie.

Will also befriends Moses and Isaiah Butler, African American brothers up from Alabama, seeking freedom and opportunity in an America still rumbling after the Civil War. Together they navigate the racial and social tensions of a country on the brink of transformation. Will falls in love with Vlinder, but a sudden tragedy threatens the harvest and the future of the farm. Despite a promise to return the next year, misfortune and family duty keep him home in Pittsburgh.

Thirty-two years later, that chance encounter on a Chicago street rekindles the summer that shaped his life and brings back the love, the loss, and the weight of promises he made in youth.

Set against the backdrop of a changing America during World War I, One Summer at Helgeveld Farm is a coming-of-age historical novel that travels alongside a forgotten piece of early twentieth-century America: a time when automobiles and horse-drawn wagons battled for space on city streets, and where families faced war, grief, and the stirrings of social change.

One Summer at Helgeveld Farm is rich in period detail and told with emotional warmth, humor, and quiet resilience. It invites readers into the rhythms of rural life and into the lives of those searching for purpose in a country edging forward.


This was their home until the crops were harvested and the farm was buttoned down for the season. 

In 1949, a brief sighting on a Chicago street pulls Will Parlor back to the summer of 1917—the summer that defined him. At seventeen, he worked on the Helgeveld farm in Illinois, where he was welcomed into the Dutch-American family and fell quietly, deeply in love with Vlinder Helgeveld. There he also befriended Moses and Isaiah Butler, brothers who had journeyed north from Alabama in search of opportunity in a still-divided America.

But as the nation stood on the edge of World War I, the young men faced the weight of change, hardship, and a tragedy that threatened the farm’s future.
 
“One Summer at Helgeveld Farm” by John Blois is a touching coming-of-age story that is sure to resonate with readers. Engaging with this book feels less like following a straightforward narrative and more like wandering through a vivid memory shared by the characters and anyone who has experienced moments when time seems to pause and change.
 
From the opening pages, the narrative draws you in with an almost magnetic allure. The protagonist, Will, caught in the grip of a haunting memory, glimpses a familiar figure across the street, and in that instant, it takes him back to the long-ago summer. Blois handles this transition between the present (1949) and the past (1917) with remarkable finesse. Rather than jarring the reader with abrupt shifts, he creates a gentle slide into another era, where the creak of horse-drawn wagons competes with the rumble of early motor cars. This blend of sensory detail conjures a setting both richly nostalgic and remarkably immersive. It is a world poised between tradition and transformation.
 
What makes this historical environment so compelling is not merely the accuracy of its details but the emotional resonance beneath them. Blois invites the reader to feel the moment when rural life, once predictable and firmly rooted in generational rhythms, begins to tilt toward something new. 

The novel’s strength lies not only in its landscape but also in its cast of characters. Each young man—Will, hesitant but eager; Owen, earnest and unworldly; Isaiah and Moses, resourceful siblings from a harsher South; Elmer, whose difference makes him vulnerable; and Roy, fiery and defiant—emerges with clarity. Blois gives them such nuance that they feel real, as if we’ve known them, their voices echoing long after the story ends.
 
These young men inhabit a period of life where possibility, uncertainty, and intensity collide. Blois captures those in-between years—when friendships can feel like they would last forever, and a single summer can shape the contours of a lifetime—with sensitivity and wisdom. The young men's interactions, whether teasing, competing, or confiding, form a rich emotional truth. Their differences enhance the narrative, but it is their shared longing—for belonging, for understanding, for a place in an often unforgiving world—that gives the story its heartbeat.
 
And yet it is not the main protagonist, but Moses, who captures the heart most fully. From the moment he appears, Moses exudes a liveliness that radiates across the page. His infectious singing, generous spirit, and uncanny ability to navigate Pastor Jannsen’s long, meandering sermons with humour and grace render him unforgettable.
 
The dialogue throughout the book shines effortlessly, revealing the voices of youth while hinting at the broader social tensions of a nation on the cusp of profound change. Conflict emerges with understated precision. Rivalries flare; loyalties are tested; the precariousness of farm life reveals itself in unexpected moments. Even a broken wagon wheel becomes a crucible for character, exposing courage, resilience, fear, and the bonds that deepen when hardship is shared. These moments never feel contrived; instead, they arise naturally from the characters’ circumstances, offering insight into the pressures and prejudices that shape their lives.
 
The Helgeveld farm is beautifully depicted, with its barns, fields, and the majestic sycamore, poplars and white oak trees whose branches stretch over decades of family labour, loss, and renewal. Vlinder Helgeveld’s family history deepens this sense of grounding, linking the personal story of the young men's summer to a larger narrative of immigration, settlement, and perseverance. The land becomes more than a backdrop—it is the connective tissue binding together past and present, memory and experience.
 
The novel’s greatest accomplishment lies in its ability to balance tenderness with tension. Blois does not shy away from the harsh realities of the era, including racial tension — such as Isaiah and Moses being unable to open a bank account where the other young men have — simply because of the colour of their skin. Despite this, the story maintains a sense of hope that is hard-earned rather than naïve. Moments of laughter, shared work, unexpected heroism, and quiet reflection serve as reminders that even in difficult times, especially grief, human connection can create pockets of grace.
 
“One Summer at Helgeveld Far,” by John Blois, with its vivid setting, complex characters, and attentive weaving of conflict and tenderness, is a novel that lingers in the mind long after the final page.

I Highly Recommend.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
The Coffee Pot Book Club


Universal Buy Link


This title is available to read with #KindleUnlimited.



John Blois


John Blois is the author of One Summer at Helgeveld Farm, a coming-of-age historical novel set in 1917 Illinois that explores friendship, family, race, cultural touchstones, and promises made across generations. The novel explores Midwestern history and Dutch-American heritage and gives a picture of the quiet resilience of farm life, the complexities of identity, and the enduring power of love and community.

His work blends historical research and captures the voices of disperse characters in a time of war, loss, and unexpected joy. With a background in storytelling, writing, and personal history projects, John brings a human touch to his fiction.

John lives in Maine, where he has two sons and teaches writing and Comparative Religions at a local community college. He continues writing and researching stories connected to the Helgeveld family and the changing American landscape of the early 20th century. A companion novel regarding the Helgeveld family and characters in the first novel is in the works.

Author Links:




Thursday, December 4, 2025

Delve into the fourteenth century with A Woman's Lot by Carolyn Hughes #MedievalFiction #HistoricalFiction #WomensFiction #WomenInHistory #RecommendedReading



A Woman’s Lot
🎧 Audiobook 🎧



Meonbridge Chronicles, Book 2

by Carolyn Hughes




How can mere women resist the misogyny of men?

1352. In Meonbridge, a resentful peasant rages against Eleanor Titherige’s efforts to build up her flock of sheep. Susanna Miller’s husband, grown melancholy and ill-tempered, succumbs to idle gossip that his wife’s a scold. Agnes Sawyer’s yearning to be a craftsman is met with scorn. And the village priest, fearful of what he considers women’s “unnatural” ambitions, is determined to keep them firmly in their place.

Many men hold fast to the teachings of the Church and fear the havoc the “daughters of Eve” might wreak if they’re allowed to usurp men’s roles and gain control over their own lives.

Not all men in Meonbridge resist the women’s desire for change – indeed, they want it for themselves. Yet it takes only one or two misogynists to unleash the hounds of hostility and hatred…

If you enjoy immersive historical fiction with a strong authentic feel, set in a time of change and challenge, especially for women, you’ll love A Woman’s Lot, the second MEONBRIDGE CHRONICLE. Find out for yourself if Meonbridge’s “unnatural” women stand up to their abusers!


Praise for A Woman’s Lot:

This book exceeded all my expectations. I did not read this story. I lived it!
~ Mary Anne Yarde, The Coffee Pot Book Club

“A treat for all the senses…totally true to its time and setting…”
~ Being Anne

“I didn’t so much feel as if I were reading about medieval England as experiencing it first hand.”
~ Linda’s Book Bag

“An absorbing account of the times.”
~ Historical Novel Society



How can a woman stand up to the misogyny of men?

That is the tag line of the second Meonbridge Chronicle, A Woman’s Lot. The storylines (for there are several threads) are about marital discord, women’s thwarted ambitions, and the quest for love, and also about the tensions between the poorer in society and the richer, and the ups and downs of rural life in medieval Hampshire.

But especially about the particular attitude held in the Middle Ages by men – or at least some of them – towards women.

The novel begins in the spring of 1352, about two years after the end of the first Chronicle, Fortune’s Wheel. In Fortune’s Wheel, after the devastation wrought by the Black Death in 1349-50, society as a whole began to change. Feudal lords lost their former power in the face of resistance by their tenants, who were no longer willing to be confined to a single manor or to be paid less than they could obtain elsewhere.

The Black Death.
Wikimedia Commons.

It seemed as if women’s lot might also change. When so many people – perhaps as many as a third or even a half of the country’s population – had died from the plague, it seemed logical that everyone, including women, might have to turn their hand to whatever needed to be done. And perhaps, at first at least, this was what happened. Women saw opportunities for themselves to break out of the old mould and take on new occupations, and indeed to be a little more independent. (Sadly, it didn’t last. By the fifteenth century, everything had returned more or less to the status quo: male dominance reasserted itself and women were put back in their place…)

So, underpinning the storylines of A Woman’s Lot is the status quo of male dominance, thwarting – or attempting to thwart – women’s struggle to improve their lot. Medieval women were, for centuries, subjugated to men (some, of course, still are). Men generally wielded control over their wives, daughters and servants, sometimes directly in the form of overt misogyny, sometimes in less overt but nonetheless powerful assertions of male authority. This is by no means to suggest that all medieval men were misogynistic. But such an attitude in just one or two individual, influential men could have disastrous consequences.

In some contemporary medieval literature, we find a contrast between the chivalric idealisation of the noble lady, based on the cult of the Virgin Mary, and a misogynistic contempt for women as the inheritors of Eve. Women were seen as “second class”, expected to devote themselves to their domestic functions, and refused any sort of public office. The restriction of women’s rights was justified on the basis of their supposed limited intelligence, wiliness and avarice. Indeed, all sorts of weaknesses were often ascribed to women as a class, including vanity and greed, wantonness and volatility. Some men despised women, or feared them perhaps, as the dangerous “daughters of Eve”. Others perhaps simply believed women were neither very bright nor trustworthy, and felt they had to be kept in their lowly place. (I’m aware that this attitude is probably not entirely confined to the Middle Ages!)

Adam & Eve. Wikimedia Commons.

Men’s control over women was perhaps strongest amongst the upper classes, where power and money lay in the making of beneficial marriages and the production of heirs, although the peasant classes, too, were interested in making useful alliances. However, I suspect the clergy – or some of them – were especially eager to keep women under strict control, fearful perhaps, and therefore critical, of their alleged wickedness and frailty. There’s no doubt that the function, role and social position of women in fourteenth century England was heavily influenced by religious dogma and the teachings of the Church, and all men of every class would believe in their “God-given” right to dominate and chastise their wives.

Wifely Duties. Wikimedia Commons.

I daresay it’s true that medieval women generally accepted their lot in life. That’s not to say that they believed that they were either especially wicked or frail, but it perhaps didn’t occur to most that there was much they could do to change the way things were.

However, there’s also evidence that many medieval women weren’t down-trodden chattels at all. Competent manor chatelaines, wealthy peasant housewives and business women were strong and capable and very far from either the feeble-minded or the saintly creatures portrayed in much of the literature. Chaucer’s Wife of Bath is a fine example of a woman who was more than a match for the men in her life! And I somehow doubt that all men held women in contempt: many – well, at least a few – surely loved and respected them, and understood what they were capable of?

The main drivers, then, for the story of A Woman’s Lot are the misogynistic attitudes of some Meonbridge men, which set in train events that lead to tragedy or almost tragedy. But, countering their misogyny are other men, and women, who recognise the injustice that those attitudes can engender.

A Woman’s Lot is narrated in the voices of four women, Eleanor Titherige, Susanna Miller, Agnes Sawyer and Emma Ward, all of whom had a role in Fortune’s Wheel.

Eleanor, left orphaned by the plague, inherited her father’s substantial flock of sheep and, after initial worries about her own abilities to cope, decided to make a go of it. In A Woman’s Lot, her flock is thriving, but her path won’t continue smoothly, either on a business level or in her love life.

Sheep in a pen. Wikimedia Commons. 

At the end of Fortune’s Wheel, Susanna had just married the miller’s younger brother, Henry, and seemed very happy. Two years later, she’s still mostly content, but has a nagging worry that will lead her into disaster.

Agnes went missing before the start of Fortune’s Wheel, and the reason for her disappearance, and her brother John’s efforts to find her, were a constant thread throughout that novel. In A Woman’s Lot, Agnes is one of those women who’d like to break the conventional mould a little and grasp what she perceives as the new opportunities brought by the plague.

Emma, too, believes there are more opportunities “out there” for her and her family, and is eager to pursue them.

Of course, such misogynistic attitudes to women as I portray aren’t without parallels in our own time, but I’m not attempting to draw comparisons. My tale is one of the fourteenth century, one that doesn’t try to make Meonbridge’s women “feminists”. Their stories aren’t about women’s rights and liberation, but about them trying to make the best of opportunities within the context of the society they live in.

Although she’s a successful farmer, Eleanor isn’t happy about being unmarried: she has the usual desires for love and family life but, more importantly, she believes that social mores, as well as practicalities, really do require her to be wed.

Susanna is a good medieval wife – she doesn’t wish to throw off the bonds of marriage but wants to make her marriage better, in the medieval way that she understands. Agnes and Emma, too, are not seeking to overthrow society, just to make, in their eyes, a more worthwhile contribution.

It’s an interesting time to write about, and I do hope you feel you’d like to explore the world of fourteenth century Meonbridge…

The audiobook version of A Woman’s Lot is narrated by Alex Lee, who brings the world of Meonbridge and its inhabitants beautifully to life. 



This series is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.

🎧

Audiobook Buy Links:




Carolyn Hughes


CAROLYN HUGHES has lived much of her life in Hampshire. With a first degree in Classics and English, she started working life as a computer programmer, then a very new profession. But it was technical authoring that later proved her vocation, word-smithing for many different clients, including banks, an international hotel group and medical instruments manufacturers.

Although she wrote creatively on and off for most of her adult life, it was not until her children flew the nest that writing historical fiction took centre stage. But why historical fiction? Serendipity!

Seeking inspiration for what to write for her Creative Writing Masters, she discovered the handwritten draft, begun in her twenties, of a novel, set in 14th century rural England… Intrigued by the period and setting, she realised that, by writing a novel set in the period, she could learn more about the medieval past and interpret it, which seemed like a thrilling thing to do. A few days later, the first Meonbridge Chronicle, Fortune’s Wheel, was under way.

With eight published books (with more to come), Carolyn does now think of herself as an Historical Novelist. And she wouldn’t have it any other way…

Carolyn has a Masters in Creative Writing from Portsmouth University and a PhD from the University of Southampton.


Connect with Carolyn: