Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Blog Tour: Margery and Me by Maryka Biaggio



Join The Coffee Pot Book Club on tour with…


Margery & Me


by Maryka Biaggio


April 28th - 30th, 2026

Publication Date: April 21st, 2026
Publisher: Regal House Publishing
Pages: 292
Genre: Historical Fiction


In the 1920s, Margery Crandon captivated both Boston society and psychic researchers with her astonishing seances. At her gatherings, her deceased brother Walter regularly appeared, entertaining the circle with his witty and cheeky remarks.

Margery's abilities earned her the admiration of luminaries, including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and William Butler Yeats. But one man stood in opposition: Harry Houdini, the legendary magician, who was determined to expose her as a fraud.

Margery and Me tells the true story of the medium who mystified scientists, challenged skeptics, and sparked a sensation across America and Europe. As Houdini and Margery clashed in a battle of wits and wills, the question remained:

Could the master illusionist unmask her, or would her extraordinary powers be enough to convert even the most resolute of doubters?


Buy Links:

Amazon UK

Amazon US





Maryka Biaggio



Maryka Biaggio is a psychology professor-turned-novelist who brings forgotten lives back into the light. Specializing in historical fiction inspired by real people, she crafts emotionally resonant narratives anchored in careful research.

Her debut novel, Parlor Games (Doubleday, 2013), launched a distinguished career that includes Gun Girl and the Tall Guy and Margery and Me. Her work has earned numerous accolades, including the Willamette Writers Award, Oregon Writers Colony Award, Historical Novel Society Review Editors' Choice, La Belle Lettre Award, and a Publishers Weekly pick.

Biaggio is celebrated for illuminating overlooked historical figures with psychological depth and narrative grace.


Connect with Maryka:

Website • Facebook • Pinterest • TikTok




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Blog Tour: Bride of the Devil by J.P. Reedman



Join The Coffee Pot Book Club on tour with…


Bride of the Devil:
Agnes, Wife of Robert de Belleme


Medieval Babes

by J.P. Reedman




April 23rd, 2026

Publication Date: August 4th, 2025
Publisher: independently published
Pages: 248
Genre: Historical Fiction / Medieval Fiction


She is a great heiress; he is the wickedest man in Normandy.


Known to men far and wide as 'The Devil,' Robert de Belleme terrorises France alongside his equally fearsome mother, Mabel the Poisoner. But even a Devil needs an heir, and Mabel chooses the wealthy heiress Agnes of Ponthieu to be her son's bride. The marriage is unhappy, though the longed-for son and heir is eventually born...but when Robert is away on one of his military campaigns, Agnes flees back to her father's castle.

She is not safe; her young son William is not safe.

The Devil will seek to claim his own.

BOOK 13 IN THE MEDIEVAL BABES SERIES.



Praise for Bride of the Devil:


"A very interesting, well written novel..."

~ Amazon Reviewer, 4*



This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.





J.P. Reedman



Born in Canada, J.P. Reedman has been a UK resident for over 30 years. She has been writing since the age of 5, and preferred genres are fantasy and historical (or a mixture of both.) Interests are British history and prehistory, especially the neolithic and bronze ages, archaeology, anthropology and features of the countryside.

She is author of the STONEHENGE SAGA a novel that places the legends of King Arthur back into the bronze age, and a number of works about King Richard III, including the epic, I RICHARD PLANTAGENET, which, with both parts combined, is over 250,000 words long and written from Richard's first person perspective. She is also the author of the bestselling medieval novel, MY FAIR LADY, about the little known Queen, Eleanor of Provence which is first in an ongoing series about lesser-known medieval noblewoman.


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Book of the Month: Beguiling the Baron by Elizabeth Keysian



Beguiling the Baron


by Elizabeth Keysian



Publication Date: March 12th, 2026 (2nd Edition)
Publisher: Elizabeth Keysian Books
Pages: 247
Genre: Regency Historical Romance / Gothic Romance


A brooding baron.
A fearless governess.
And a secret hidden in the tower.

Beware reclusive barons. They are more hot-blooded than you’d expect…

A man who lurks day and night in an eerie tower must have something to hide. So thinks Galatea Wyndham, governess to Lord Ansford’s lonely young daughter.

Galatea’s new employer is infuriating, stubborn, generous-hearted, devastatingly handsome—and very much in need of saving from himself.

When sparks begin to fly between them, their shocking encounters ignite a passion neither of them can resist. But just as the barriers between them begin to crumble, the secrets hidden inside the tower threaten to destroy everything.

The tower collapses.

With Lord Ansford trapped inside.

And Galatea may lose the man she has only just begun to love.




Praise for Beguiling the Baron:

"Beguiling the Baron is what Regency Historical Romance is all about. Prepare to fall in love. I highly recommend."
~ The Coffee Pot Book Club, Gold Medal Winner Book of the Year Awards 2019 in Historical Romance

"An awesome read! The Gothic actmosphere is perfect, and there are some funny bits which made me laugh out loud.."
~ Barbara Monajem, award-winning author




“Good God, what’s digging needles into my leg?” Lord Ansford jumped up in alarm as a small, dark object propelled itself from his lap to the ham on his plate. With impressive speed, he seized the silver cover from the sideboard and clamped it down on top of Polly’s kitten, which mewed its resentment.

“What,” he inquired in icy tones, “is this?”

Seeing his furious face but also aware of the sounds of feline eating coming from beneath the cover, hysteria threatened. “I fear it is Polly’s kitten,” Tia gasped.

An aristocratic eyebrow arched upward. “Indeed? Aldergate!”

At the footman’s almost immediate appearance, her amusement was doused by a wash of fear. What did the furious aristocrat plan to do with Polly’s pet?

Ansford handed both plate and cover to the bemused servant. “There is a live animal beneath here. Deal with it, if you please.”

Tia watched in horror as the hapless creature was whisked out of the breakfast room. She turned anxiously to Ansford, who was glowering at the unwelcome interruption to his breakfast.

She couldn’t bear it. “You won’t kill it? Please, my lord, don’t. It has given Polly such pleasure.”

The look he turned on her froze her to the marrow. With the briefest of nods, he turned his back on both her and Mama and stalked out of the room.

A lofty silence descended. Eventually, Mama exclaimed, “Well, I never!”

“I thought he was improving. But I was wrong—the baron’s as hard-hearted and rude as ever.” Tia’s temper rose.

Mama shot her a worried look. “What do you think he’ll do?”

“I’d like to say he’ll eventually see the humor in the situation, but I fear Ansford would choke and suffocate if he attempted to laugh, he’s so unused to it. He’ll probably have the kitten drowned.”

“Oh no, you don’t think so? Polly will be devastated.”

Of course, she would. Tia would be too. “I don’t believe Lord Ansford understands about tender feelings.” She heaved a heartfelt sigh. “His own died with his wife.”

“I hope you’re mistaken, but he seemed excessively angry with us. Do you think he’s a bit peculiar in the head?”

“That wouldn’t surprise me at all. Now, I’d best hurry up and see how many French verbs I can get Polly to conjugate before she learns of her kitten’s demise. When that news reaches her, we’ll have to abandon the curriculum for at least a week.”

Unless, of course, she was brave enough to tackle Lord Ansford. Again.

But in his present mood, how could she do so without risking the fate of all those she cared about?



This title is available to read on #KindleUnlimited.



Elizabeth Keysian


Elizabeth Keysian is a USA TODAY bestselling author of heart-pounding Regency romances, set mostly in the West of England. She has just completed a series for Dragonblade Publishing called Trysts and Treachery, which is set in the Tudor era. Though primarily a writer of romance, she loves to put a bit of mystery, adventure, and suspense into her stories, and refuses to let her characters take themselves too seriously.

Elizabeth likes to write from experience, not easy when her works range from the medieval to the Victorian eras. However, her passion for re-enactment has helped, as have the many years she spent working in museums and British archaeology. If you find some detail in her work you’ve never come across before, you can bet she either dug it up, quite literally, or found it on a museum shelf.

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Have a sneak peek between the pages of The Twisted Road by A.B. Michaels #HistoricalFiction #Mystery #RecommendedReading



The Twisted road


A Barrister Perris Novel

by A.B. Michaels



Jonathan Perris Can’t Save His Clients

…Until He Saves Himself


1907


Rising from the devastation of a massive earthquake and fire, San Francisco is once again on the move. But a strike by streetcar drivers threatens to halt the Golden City in its tracks. Protests turn to violence and violence leads to death. Soon a young guard is convicted of willfully killing a protester and the public is out for blood.


Jonathan Perris, an immigrant attorney from England, has opened a law firm with an eye toward righting wrongs, and the guard’s conviction may fall into that category. But the talented barrister soon finds his newfound career shaken by a tragic event: the gruesome murder of the beautiful and mysterious Lena Mendelssohn—a woman he’s been squiring around town. It’s difficult to run a law firm when you’ve been arrested for murder.




Chapter Seventeen


“The Incomparable Miss de Bretteville”


“Jonathan, you young buck, come here and give us a bloomin’ hug!” Alma de Bretteville, ravishing as always, took Jonathan’s face between her hands and noisily gave him what the Scots might call a smoorich. He knew her to be intelligent and insightful, despite the fact that she’d left school at the age of fourteen and her manner was delightfully shameless. He grinned at her.


“Careful, old girl; I’d hate to get on Adolph’s bad side so early in our acquaintance.”


Alma guffawed and blew a kiss to A.B., whom she referred to as her “sugar daddy.” Spreckles held his wine glass up to toast her and resumed his conversation with Fremont Older.


She wasted no time putting Jonathan on the spot regarding the Emmett Barnes appeal. “Pretty gutsy of you to take up that guard’s case. A.B. thinks you’re crazy, but crazy like a fox. He thinks you put your new gal on it, so if it goes south, you can blame her. Me, I think you’re smart to let her show you what she can do.” She winked at him. “Mark my words. She’s a woman, which means she’s gonna do more than just fine. I know Judge Fisher to be a fair man, so we’ll see. Me and A.B. got a bet going; I get a new fur coat if you win.” She poked Jonathan in the chest. “So, you better win.”


Spreckles’ insinuation regarding Jonathan’s motive for putting Cordelia on the case rankled, but he couldn’t help chuckling at the woman who had the mogul by the short hairs. “Your wager is well placed. I wouldn’t bet against Cordelia Hammersmith, either.”


After a few more minutes of artful chatter, he broached the topic he’d wanted to talk to Alma about. “No doubt you heard about … Miss Mendelssohn’s death. I understand you and she were art students together.”


Alma’s exquisite eyebrows rose. “Did she tell you that? I knew you two were burning up the sheets, but...”


Jonathan winced. Is nothing private in this town? “Ah, no. Your art instructor—”


“Ah yes. Miz Plotner. The miniatures class. Of course, she’d flap her jaw.” Alma took Jonathan’s arm and commenced the obligatory stroll around the grounds. “Lena and I did chew the fat quite a bit. She was smart as a whip and talented as all get out, poor thing. It didn’t take long to figure out she was playin’ some kind of game, but I sure didn’t expect it to end the way it did.” She patted Jonathan’s arm. “I’m damn sorry you got caught up in it.”


Jonathan knew to tread lightly; he wanted to find out what Alma knew without revealing Lena’s true identity. “It was shocking, to say the least,” he said. “Ironically, we had agreed to part company the very night she was attacked—in a brothel, no less.”


“I heard. But there’s no way she was a workin’ girl. I’m not one to judge, so she could easily have confessed that little peccadillo. We talked mainly about art, and of course she often mentioned ‘the handsome young attorney’ she was seeing. It was obvious she liked you.”


“And I liked her. But I had my own concerns. What game do you imagine she was playing?”


Alma lifted her shoulder. “Who can say? But I could tell from the get-go that she didn’t have the deep pockets she wanted others—like you, maybe—to believe she had. She rented some rooms on Fulton and that street’s not known for its fancy lodging. In fact, I think she mentioned once that she had a roommate, but I couldn’t swear to it.”


A roommate? On a street that’s lower on the social rung than Jonathan’s own? How did poor Lena/Sybil manage to lead two so completely different lives? “Do you know her address, by any chance?”


“Sorry. I only know it was Fulton because she talked about crossing the street to the park every day for her ‘morning perambulation.’ I mentioned I knew someone who lived on Fulton near Stanyan and she said she was staying a few blocks farther west. Didn’t the police find out where she lived?”


The police are stymied because they’re looking for a Lena Mendelssohn who never existed. He shook his head. “What about her school chums besides you? Did anyone stand out?”


“She spent a lot of time with some students who think they’re gonna change the world through their art. I call ’em the ‘Bolshevik Bullshitters’ but they call themselves the ‘Incendiaries.’ A few skinny young men with scraggly beards, living off some pitiful allowance or dead-end job. A few queers—you find a lot of them in the art world—and a smattering of female hangers-on. Lena found them amusing. ‘They’re always good for a laugh and a free glass of wine,’ she said once.”


“How can I find out more about them?”


Alma looked at him curiously. “Why? Why not let the police do their jobs and stay the hell out of it? Didn’t your stint in the hoosegow teach you anything?”


 Jonathan stopped walking to emphasize his point. “Because I came very close to being put on trial for her murder … and because she didn’t deserve to die like that. The police don’t seem to be making headway, and by God, someone should pay the price for what they did to her.”





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A.B. Michaels


A native of California, A.B. Michaels holds masters’ degrees in history (UCLA) and broadcasting (San Francisco State University).

After working for many years as a promotional writer and editor, she turned to writing the kind of page-turning fiction she loves to read.  She writes historical fiction (“The Golden City” series), historical mystery (the “Barrister Perris” series) and contemporary romantic suspense (“Sinner’s Grove Suspense.”). All three series are character-linked and all are stand-alone reads.

Michaels lives in Boise, Idaho with her husband and elderly wiener dog, Teddy, who cannot see or hear, but sniffs his way from one comfortable spot to another.

In addition to writing and dog-snuggling, Michaels is an avid reader, traveller, quilter and bocce player, as well as a mediocre but enthusiastic golfer.