Thursday, April 30, 2026

Join us as acclaimed author Alison Huntingford introduces Georgy, real-life protagonist in her compelling novel Beyond the Dark Ocean #HistoricalFiction #FamilyHistory #RecommendedReading



Beyond the Dark Oceans


by Alison Huntingford



A family united, a family divided…

In 1906, the Huntingford family leaves England for a hopeful new life in Canada, but for eldest son Georgy, the promise of opportunity quickly becomes a test of endurance, responsibility, and fate. As he comes of age amid the hardships of immigrant life, the outbreak of the First World War pulls him back across the ocean and into a world forever changed by loss and sacrifice.

When Georgy’s brother disappears in the chaos of war, grief and uncertainty fracture the family he is fighting to hold together. Reunited with his cousin Nellie, Georgy finds solace in a love as powerful as it is forbidden—one that offers hope in the darkest of times while threatening to tear his family apart.

Based on true events, Beyond the Dark Oceans is a moving story of love, loyalty, and resilience, exploring how ordinary lives are shaped—and divided—by extraordinary moments in history.




A Family United, A Family Divided:
Exploring Beyond the Dark Oceans

The sub-title of my novel is ‘A family united, A family divided’, and Beyond the Dark Oceans is, at its heart, a family saga. The central character is the eldest son, Georgy. At the beginning of the story, he is just eight years old, living in England with his parents and younger brothers, William and Gilbert. He is also very close to his cousins on his mother’s side — Nellie, Billy and Charlie.

In 1906, the family’s life changes dramatically when they move to Canada. Georgy must adjust to a new country, new surroundings, and new friendships. Although he deeply misses the loved ones left behind in England, he does his best to settle and move forward. He is a thoughtful, kind, and patient boy who places great importance on family loyalty. However, he has a tendency to overthink and ask too many questions — something that often irritates his more hot-headed younger brother, William.

“‘You always have to know everything!’ exclaimed William.”

At its core, the novel is a coming-of-age story. We follow Georgy as he grows up — attending school, beginning an apprenticeship, falling in love, and experiencing the milestones of early adulthood. School life is not always kind to him; he is bullied due to lingering English / French tensions.

Georgy
 
Throughout his life, Georgy displays a quiet courage. Whether defending his brother from their troublesome cousin Ralph, searching through the forest for his missing sibling Arthur, or stepping up to manage the family business when his father is injured, he meets challenges with resilience. When confronted by his mother after a playtime fight with Ralph, Georgy refuses to betray others, showing a quiet but firm sense of integrity.

Often, he acts as the peacemaker, trying to calm disputes and ease tensions within his emotional family. Despite his efforts, he carries a lingering sense of loss for the relatives left behind in England, especially his cousin Nellie.

After leaving school, Georgy struggles with uncertainty about his future. His father arranges for him to join the family plumbing business as an apprentice, and although he agrees reluctantly, he commits himself fully. He works hard, forms friendships with his workmates, and tries to find purpose in his role, even as he quietly questions his path. Ultimately, his sense of duty to his family keeps him there.

First love arrives in the form of a beautiful French-Canadian girl, but traditional French family values and a culture clash mean that it cannot progress further. Georgy learns a valuable but painful lesson.

That night in bed, he reflected sadly on a love gone missing before it had even started. His mother had been right, he thought. What a fool he had been. He would be more careful with his heart in future.

When war breaks out, Georgy hesitates. Unlike William, he is not drawn by the promise of adventure or glory. He feels his responsibility lies at home, supporting his family. Yet, in time, he concludes that he must serve and enlists.

Military training brings him back to England, where he reconnects with long-lost relatives. This reunion profoundly affects both his life and his relationship with his family in Canada. Nellie, now grown into a young woman, captures his heart. Despite knowing his mother would disapprove, Georgy follows his feelings for the first time, creating inner conflict and guilt. Their relationship, condemned by the family due to their kinship, must remain secret.

The war leaves its mark. Georgy returns from the Western Front deeply affected — battle-weary and struggling with trauma. Nellie tries to help him heal, but recovery is slow. Meanwhile, the family faces further anguish as William goes missing, and the search for him brings emotional strain to them all.

Amid loss, love, and divided loyalties, Georgy is faced with his greatest challenge yet: finding the strength to stand against expectations and choose his own path.




This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Alison Huntingford


Alison Huntingford is a writer with a deep passion for family history and storytelling. With a background rooted in the rich traditions of the Huntingford family, Alison seeks to honour the stories passed down through generations. She is the author of a successful series of works that explore historical and personal narratives. She is an only child of two only children and so has always felt a distinct lack of family. This has inspired her work.

After an upheaval in her personal life, Alison achieved a degree in humanities with literature through the Open University which helped to give her a new start. A teaching career followed which then led naturally to writing. She is now retired from full-time work, but busier than ever.

In her spare time, she enjoys spending time with her husband and their pets, listening to music, going to the cinema, and gardening on her allotment. She also runs the South Hams Authors Network, a local writers collective based in South Devon.

Connect with Alison:
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Book Review: The Line Uncrossed by Don McDonald





*Editorial Book Review*


THE LINE UNCROSSED 
By Don McDonald


Publication Date: 22nd May 2026
Publisher: Don McDonald Creative
Page Length: 296
Genre: Historical Fiction

In the autumn of 1860, Levi Anderson is thirteen years old, invisible in his own family, and happiest alone by the creek with a borrowed book. When the war comes, it takes his brothers first. What it leaves behind is worse than what it takes.

Beaten by the brother who stays, rescued by the sister who acts, Levi enlists in the 6th Indiana Infantry at fourteen, lying about his age to escape the only home he has ever known. He fights at Shiloh, Stones River, and Chickamauga, where a bullet tears open his face and Confederate soldiers take him prisoner.

What follows is Andersonville.

Thirty-three thousand men. A stockade. A creek turned to poison. A wooden rail called the dead line, beyond which the guards will shoot without warning. And a friendship with a man named Jim Dearborn that becomes the only thing worth holding on to — and the hardest thing to lose.

The Line Uncrossed is a novel about what a boy sees when everything is taken from him, and what he carries home when the war gives him back. Inspired by the true experience of a fourteen-year-old Indiana soldier who survived the worst place on earth and spent the next forty years teaching other people's children how to read.



There is a particular kind of historical novel that does not rely on spectacle to make its impact, and "The Line Uncrossed" belongs firmly in that category. Don McDonald approaches the American Civil War not as a sequence of grand set-pieces, but as a gradual narrowing of experience, where the individual is shaped—and ultimately reduced—by forces that do not announce themselves as dramatic, but as persistent. What emerges is not simply a story of conflict, but an examination of endurance, perception, and the quiet erosion of self.

What struck me most was the author’s control of time. The months pass quickly—almost disconcertingly so—not because events are rushed, but because of the deliberate repetition embedded within the prose. Actions recur: digging, marching, waiting, eating, counting. Words and rhythms echo one another, creating a sense of continuity that mirrors the soldiers’ own experience of war as something ongoing rather than episodic. Yet this repetition never becomes monotonous. Instead, it accumulates meaning. Each return to the same motion or image carries additional weight, so that the reader becomes aware not of redundancy, but of change within sameness. It is an extremely difficult balance to achieve, and McDonald manages it with remarkable precision.
The writing itself often approaches the quality of poetry, though it never abandons clarity. Sentences are pared back, direct, and carefully measured, but within that restraint, there is a rhythm that gives even the most brutal scenes a quiet resonance. The effect builds gradually. Moments are not heightened by dramatic language but by placement and cadence. A single image—a hand in the dirt, a line of men, a body left where it falls—can carry emotional weight without needing elaboration. This becomes especially noticeable in the later sections of the novel, where the language reflects the conditions it describes with increasing restraint.
Levi is not presented as a traditional protagonist. He does not dominate the narrative through action or voice, but through observation. His development is marked less by decisive moments than by incremental adaptation. At the Battle of Shiloh, he learns to separate himself from what he is doing; at the Battle of Perryville and later at the Battle of Chickamauga, he becomes increasingly mechanical in his responses. By the time he reaches Andersonville Prison, those earlier adaptations are no longer sufficient. The shift from movement to stasis—from surviving action to surviving condition—is where the novel finds its most unsettling ground.

Jim Dearborn’s introduction at Danville Prison provides an important counterbalance to Levi’s inward, observational nature. Where Levi retreats into silence and thought, Jim fills the space with voice, routine and presence. What develops between them is not simply a matter of shared survival but a genuine friendship. They come to rely on one another in a way that feels natural rather than stated, and it becomes clear that they do, in fact, like each other—something that matters in a setting where most human connections are stripped back to necessity.

By the time they reach Andersonville, that bond has deepened into something essential. They stay together, not out of convenience, but because neither would choose otherwise. Jim’s persistence and ability to keep talking, to keep imagining a future, holds Levi in place when he might otherwise withdraw completely. In return, Levi’s steadiness gives Jim something to anchor himself to when that forward-looking instinct begins to fail. Their relationship becomes the emotional centre of the novel, not through dramatic declaration, but through the simple, consistent fact that they choose each other, again and again, in circumstances that offer very little else.

The portrayal of Andersonville is handled with the same restraint that defines the rest of the book. There is no reliance on exaggeration. Instead, the emphasis is on systems: rationing, space, routine, the arithmetic of survival. The environment is presented as something that operates independently of intention. Suffering is not dramatised; it is processed. This approach allows the reader to understand the conditions not as isolated horrors, but as the logical outcome of a structure that continues without interruption.
The later stages of Levi and Jim’s relationship, particularly within the prison, are handled with notable care. There is no sentimentality, only a gradual recognition of change. When that change resolves, it does so with a clarity that is both inevitable and deeply affecting, precisely because the narrative has avoided preparing the reader through overt emotional cues.
The final sections of the novel, which return Levi to his home in Indiana, do not offer a conventional resolution. The contrast between expectation and response is deliberately understated. The landscape is familiar, but its significance has altered. The farm remains unchanged, yet its weight has shifted. This refusal to impose a restorative conclusion is consistent with the novel’s broader approach: experience alters perception, and that alteration cannot simply be undone.
A deeply considered and quietly powerful novel, "The Line Uncrossed" by Don McDonald leaves a lasting impression through restraint rather than declaration. It is, in every sense, a must-read for those seeking emotionally charged historical fiction set against the backdrop of the American Civil War.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
The Coffee Pot Book Club


Buy Link


Don McDonald



Don McDonald is the author of The Line Uncrossed, a forthcoming novel of the Civil War loosely based on his great-great-grandfather, John B. Anderson, who survived Chickamauga, Andersonville, and the long walk home to Indiana. A second novel, centered on the 1865 trial of Henry Wirz, is underway.

When he isn't writing novels, he's writing fiction for the ear. Through his Short Storyverses podcast network, Don writes, narrates, and produces original stories for New Tales Told, along with sister shows Litreading, FRIGHTLY, Readastorus, and Season's Readings, the last of which is one of the world's most popular seasonal fiction podcasts. His bass-baritone has also spent decades for hire, voicing corporate videos, commercials, video games, and the occasional voice of god.

He spent forty years in broadcasting and he still co-hosts Talking Real Money with Tom Cock, a podcast about investing that tries very hard not to sound like one. He also wrote Financial Fysics, a visual guide to investing that pairs nicely with the show and nothing else on this page.

Don lives in Celebration, Florida, where he and his family were among the first residents.

Author Links:
Website • Linkedin • X



Blog Tour: Daughter of Mercia by Julia Ibbotson – Publication Anniversary



Join The Coffee Pot Book Club on tour with…


Daughter of Mercia


Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries #1

by Julia Ibbotson


*First Book Anniversary Blog Tour*


June 5th, 2026

Publication Date: June 6th, 2025
Series: Dr Anna Petersen Mysteries
Publisher: Archbury Books
Pages: 301 ebook / 392 pb
Genre: Medieval Dual-Timeline Mystery Romance


A brand-new Anglo-Saxon time-slip full of mystery and romance.

Echoes of the past resonate across the centuries as Dr Anna Petersen, a medievalist and runologist, is struggling with past trauma and allowing herself to trust again. When archaeologist (and Anna's old adversary) Professor Matt Beacham unearths a 6th century seax with a mysterious runic inscription, and reluctantly approaches Anna for help, a chain of events brings the past firmly back into her present. And why does the burial site also contain two sets of bones, one 6th century and the other modern? 

As the past and present intermingle alarmingly, Anna and Matt need to work together to solve the mystery of the seax runes and the seemingly impossible burial, and to discover the truth about the past. Tensions rise and sparks fly between Anna and Matt. But how is 6th century Lady Mildryth of Mercia connected to Anna? Can they both be the Daughter of Mercia?

For fans of Barbara Erskine, Elena Collins, Pamela Hartshorne, Susanna Kearsley and Christina Courtenay.



Praise for Daughter of Mercia:

Ibbotson’s prose immerses you in the vivid world of the Anglo-Saxon era, richly layered with sensory detail that brings both the past and present timelines to life. I could feel the atmosphere—the cold stone and the wind on the hills. Her writing weaves the two eras seamlessly, connecting people across time and creating a mysterious, slow-building tension that keeps you turning the pages.
~ Alis Page, Reviewer, 5*

“... an atmospheric, and wonderfully immersive, novel that has it all: characters with their own conflicts, both in the past and the present; a mystery that links the eras; the intrigue of Mildryth's fate and Anna's secrets; and all within the fascinating setting of archaeology.
~ Ruins & Reading, 5* Review


Buy Link:


This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Julia Ibbotson


Julia Ibbotson is fascinated by the medieval world and the concept of time. She is the author of historical mysteries with a frisson of romance. Her books are evocative of time and place, well-researched and uplifting page-turners. Her current series focuses on early medieval time-slip / dual-time mysteries.

Julia read English at Keele University, England, specialising in medieval language / literature / history, and has a PhD in socio-linguistics. After a turbulent time in Ghana, West Africa, she became a school teacher, then a university academic and researcher. Her break as an author came soon after she joined the RNA’s New Writers’ Scheme in 2015, with a three-book deal from Lume Books for a trilogy (Drumbeats) set in Ghana in the 1960s.

She has published five other books, including A Shape on the Air, an Anglo-Saxon timeslip mystery, and its two sequels The Dragon Tree and The Rune Stone. Her latest novel is the first of a new series of Anglo-Saxon dual-time mysteries, Daughter of Mercia, where echoes of the past resonate across the centuries.

Her books will appeal to fans of Barbara Erskine, Pamela Hartshorne, Susanna Kearsley, and Christina Courtenay. Her readers say: ‘Julia’s books captured my imagination’, ‘beautiful story-telling’, ‘evocative and well-paced storylines’, ‘brilliant and fascinating’ and ‘I just couldn’t put it down’.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Blog Tour: Queen of Shadows by Anna Belfrage



Join The Coffee Pot Book Club on tour with…


Queen of Shadows


by Anna Belfrage



June 22nd - 26th, 2026

Publication Date: May 21st, 2026
Publisher: Timelight Press
Pages: 400
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Romance



She should have stayed in the shadows—but Leonor de Guzmán yearned for the sun


Castile in the 1330s is a place of constant turmoil. King Alfonso must contend with the incursions from the Muslim Marinids eager to reclaim Al-Andalus while struggling with repeated rebellions against his firm rule.


When Alfonso needs respite, he finds it in the arms of his Leonor—the most beautiful woman in the realm. But while he may love Leonor over all others, his lawful wife, Maria of Portugal, is tired of being constantly displaced by the fair Leonor.


Leonor loves her man. She gives him healthy sons, a place to be himself. But she is only a mistress, even if Alfonso treats her like a queen. Leonor’s enemies watch and hate.


Flying too close to the sun comes at a high price. How much will Leonor’s love cost her?


Based on the true story of Alfonso XI and his complicated relationships to wife and life-long mistress.



Buy Link:


Universal Buy Link


This title will be available to read on #KindleUnlimited.




Anna Belfrage



Had Anna been allowed to choose, she’d have become a time-traveller. As this was impossible, she became a financial professional with three absorbing interests: history, romance and writing.

Anna has authored the acclaimed time travelling series The Graham Saga, set in 17th century Scotland and Maryland, as well as two equally acclaimed medieval series; The King’s Greatest Enemy which is set in 14th century England, and The Castilian Saga, which is set against the medieval conquest of Wales. She has also published a time travel romance, The Whirlpools of Time, and its sequel, Times of Turmoil, and is now considering just how to wiggle out of setting the next book in that series in Peter the Great’s Russia, as her characters are demanding...

All of Anna’s books have been awarded the IndieBRAG Medallion, she has several Historical Novel Society Editor’s Choices, and one of her books won the HNS Indie Award in 2015. She is also the proud recipient of various Readers’ Favorite medals as well as having won various Gold, Silver and Bronze Coffee Pot Book Club awards.

A master storyteller

This is what all historical fiction should be like. Superb.

Find out more about Anna, her books and enjoy her eclectic historical blog on her website, www.annabelfrage.com where you will also find her post about Alfonso and Leonor.


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Tour Schedule

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