The History Behind A Soldier of Substance by D.W. Bradbridge

Unless you are either an expert on the English Civil War or were brought up in the town of Ormskirk in Northern England, it is unlikely that you will have ever heard of Lady Charlotte de Tremouille, the Countess of Derby.

In itself, this is perhaps not surprising, for, in the grand scheme of things, her role in the Civil War was of minor importance both strategically and politically. Nonetheless, the dramatic nature of her valiant defence of Lathom House during the Spring of 1644 with only three hundred men against a vastly superior parliamentary force, is a story well worth telling.

Not that I am the first to think this. Until the end of the 19th century, the tale of Lady Derby’s exploits retained a much more prominent position within the British national consciousness, spawning a number of popular books and poems, just about none of which have stood the test of time. The best known of these is William Harrison Ainsworth’s novel The Leaguer of Lathom.

Historically, it suited many of those writing about the siege to portray Lady Derby as a defenceless woman, who loyally defended her husband’s house against evil and heartless oppressors, as this fitted in closer with prevailing views on morality and the role of women. It is, however, clear that Lady Derby was nothing like this. She was clearly a woman of steel with impressive negotiating skills, who proved herself able to run rings round the parliamentary officers with whom she crossed swords. In his 1991 book on the siege To Play the Man, Lancashire historian Colin Pilkington describes her as being ‘as devious as Elizabeth I, as inflexible as Mrs Thatcher and with the physical presence of an Amazon.’ Lady Derby, who was a granddaughter of William of Orange (William the Silent) and a cousin of Prince Rupert, was most certainly not a woman to be trifled with.

Lady Derby’s strength was certainly recognised at the time of the siege. She was eulogised by those on the royalist side, and readily compared in the newssheets with her husband, the Earl of Derby. The Perfect Diurnall, for example, described her as being “of the two a better souldier”, whilst the Scottish Dove newspaper famously pointed out that she had “stolen the earl’s breeches”.

Most of the eye witness accounts of the siege were written by royalists, so it is easy to be misled. However, the overriding impression given by these documents is of a supremely confident woman holding court, whilst being ably aided by a team of efficient professional soldiers and wise strategic advisors, such as her personal chaplain Samuel Rutter, who was responsible for fooling the besieging forces into thinking that the thing Lady Derby most feared was a siege, whereas the Countess was perfectly well aware that only a direct assault on the garrison would be likely to succeed. It is no surprise that Sir Thomas Fairfax, initially in charge of the siege, and notoriously unable to deal with women in the strict manner necessary in a military negotiation, took the first opportunity to return to Yorkshire, leaving the siege in the hands of the inept Colonel Alexander Rigby.

Over the last hundred years, the details surrounding the First Siege of Lathom House (there were, in fact, two sieges) have gradually drifted into the backwaters of history. This is a shame, because the events which took place between March and May 1644 make up a captivating adventure story. Given the abject incompetence of the parliamentary forces at times, they would also, in my opinion, form the basis for an engaging comedy film – but that is another story. In any case, I make no apologies for purloining this piece of history as the basis for A Soldier of Substance.

About the D.W. Bradbridge

D.W. Bradbridge was born in 1960 and grew up in Bolton. He has lived in Crewe, Cheshire since 2000, where he and his wife run a small magazine publishing business for the automotive industry.

“The inspiration for The Winter Siege came from a long-standing interest in genealogy and local history. My research led me to the realisation that the experience endured by the people of Nantwich during December and January 1643-44 was a story worth telling. I also realised that the closed, tension-filled environment of the month-long siege provided the ideal setting for a crime novel.

“History is a fascinating tool for the novelist. It consists only of what is remembered and written down, and contemporary accounts are often written by those who have their own stories to tell. But what about those stories which were forgotten and became lost in the mists of time?

“In writing The Winter Siege, my aim was to take the framework of real history and fill in the gaps with a story of what could, or might have happened. Is it history or fiction? It’s for the reader to decide.”

For more information please visit D.W. Bradbridge’s website. You can also find him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter

About A Soldier of Substance

1644. The smoke of parliamentary musket, cannon, and mortar fire is in the air around the royalist stronghold of Lathom House. Though guards still stand atop its walls, it is besieged on all sides, and it is only a matter of time until the house, along with its embittered and unwavering countess, Lady Charlotte de Tremouille, falls to Parliament’s might. Yet somehow, a royalist spy still creeps, unseen, through its gates, and brings the countess Parliament’s secrets.

Barely recovered from the trials of the last few months, Daniel Cheswis is torn from his family and sent north, to uncover the identity of the traitor; though before he can even begin, Cheswis finds himself embroiled in a murder. A woman has been garrotted with cheese wire in her Chester home, suggesting there is more than just the usual hatreds of war at play.

As lives are lost and coats are turned on both sides, Cheswis is tasked with finding the murderer, uncovering the traitor, and surviving his soldierly duty long enough to see Lathom House fall.

Q&A with Alan Topol, author of The Washington Lawyer

Is the Washington Lawyer one of those legal novels that deals with trials and witnesses?
 
It is  not.  There are no courtroom scenes in the novel.  Although one of the lead characters, Andrew Martin, is an influential Washington lawyer, it is a political thriller with espionage.  It involves a young woman’s death, her twin sister’s desire for revenge, and an inside look at the seedy aspect of Washington politics. 

At the heart of the Washington lawyer is a fateful Veteran’s Day weekend tryst involving a U.S. Senator, Wesley Jasper, and a Congressional staffer, Vanessa, who was a former runway model.  Does this kind of thing happen in Washington?
 
Absolutely.  I have  been a Washington lawyer myself for many years.  Periodically, events like this occur. Three examples:  One is Senator Ted Kennedy’s Chappaquiddick incident.  Another is stripper Fanny Fox out on a date with a powerful congressman, Wilbur Mills, and she dove into the tidal basin near the Jefferson Memorial.  And most recently, Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky.
 
You have been a partner in a powerful Washington law firm for many years.  Have you modeled the firm in the Washington Lawyer after your law firm?

The law firm in the Washington Lawyer is a composite of many law firms I have seen.  In addition to the thriller aspect of this novel, the reader will gain insights into the operations of powerful Washington based international law firms.

Chinese spies play a pivotal role in the Washington Lawyer.  Is this your creation or is Chinese spying a major factor in Washington?

Chinese spying in Washington is huge.  The Chinese are now doing what Russia and the KGB did during the Cold War days.  I wanted to shine a light on this Chinese conduct in the Washington Lawyer.
 
One of the major issues in the Washington Lawyer is the bond between Allison and her twin sister, Vanessa, as well Allison’s determination to find out what happened to Vanessa on that fateful weekend in Anguilla. Why did you decide to write about the bond between sisters?

I have three daughters and have observed them first hand.  I have seen my daughters’ strong bond and commitment to each other.  I know that many books dwell on the jealousy and backstabbing of sisters.  But in the Washington Lawyer, Allison and Vanessa always were proud and supportive of each other. 
 
Why did you make Allison an archeologist on an excavation in Israel?

I have always been intrigued by archeology and especially in Israel.  So this was a way to add another dimension and locale to the Washington Lawyer.  Also, archeologists dig and that’s what Allison does metaphorically to discover what happened to her twin sister Vanessa in Anguilla with Senator Jasper.

Why did you use the Caribbean island of Anguilla for the tryst between Senator Jasper and Vanessa?
 
I wanted to pick a peaceful and secluded island where the rule of law prevails.  I made several visits to Anguilla before writing the book.  When I decided to use it, I went back and did research.  When authors write about international locales, it is important for them to know the place.  Only then can the author make it come alive for a reader.
 
The Washington Lawyer is your eleventh novel.  How have you found time to write novels while being a Washington lawyer yourself?
 
I’m fortunate that I don’t need much sleep, so early mornings are perfect for writing.  I travel a great deal on business and am able to tune out noise around me.  That makes airplanes great for writing.  Also, being an international lawyer has complimented my novel writing.  It has enabled me to meet people, see places, and observe events which can go into the novels.
 
Do you have an agenda or objective in writing your novels? 
 
I want to entertain readers in the sense that I want them turning pages to find out what happens next. However, I also want to provide insights about world events and people.  In the Washington Lawyer, one of my objectives is to focus readers on the rivalry between the U.S. and China and the extent to which the Chinese are spying on the U.S.  At the same time, on a personal level I want to show people making critical decisions which lead to a chain of events out of their control, particularly Andrew Martin, the powerful Washington lawyer.  At the beginning of the book, Martin is a paragon of virtue.  He desperately wants to become Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.  The Washington Lawyer explores how far Martin will go, what he is willing to do on the dark side, to obtain his objective.  This parable is at the heart of the novel. 
 
Do you have any advice for aspiring novelists?
 
First, develop a compelling story because story, story, story are the three major ingredients of a good novel. Second, create vivid characters whom the reader will root for or despise.  Prepare a detailed outline—scene by scene.  Mine are typically around 50 pages.  Then sit down and write a first draft in a white heat.  Don’t read a word until you finish your draft.  Then read it and evaluate what you have.  Find a trusted reader.  Obtain input from that reader.  If you believe you have a possible book, begin the painstaking process of rewriting and polishing.  Nothing is more satisfying than seeing your book in stores or online.

About Alan Topol

Allan Topol THE WASHINGTON LAWYER is Topol’s eleventh novels of international intrigue. Two of them, SPY DANCE and ENEMY MY ENEMY, were national best sellers. His novels have been translated into Japanese, Portuguese and Hebrew. One was optioned and three are in development for movies. More recently, his books had focused on his Craig Page series, including THE ARGENTINE TRIANGLE, THE RUSSIAN ENDGAME, SPANISH REVENGE and CHINA GAMBIT.

In addition to his fiction writing, Allan Topol co-authored a two-volume legal treatise entitled SUPERFUND LAW AND PROCEDURE. A graduate of Yale Law School, he is a partner in a major Washington law firm, and an avid wine collector, he has traveled extensively, researching dramatic locations for his novels. He wrote a weekly column for Military.com and has published articles in numerous periodicals including the New York Times, Washington Post, and Yale Law Journal. He also has blogged for Huffington Post.     For more information, visit www.allantopol.com.

About The Washington Lawyer

Hard on the heels of The Argentine Triangle and also The Russian Endgame comes author Allan Topol’s next great thriller, THE WASHINGTON LAWYER. In the high-stakes world of Washington politics, hotshot lawyer Andrew Martin is being put to the test. When long-time friend Senator William Jasper calls, it’s with explosive news—and a favor to ask. A sex tryst at Martin’s beach house in Anguilla has gone awry and former model Vanessa Boyd is dead. Just how far will Martin go to protect the chief justice nomination on which he’s built his entire career?
 
Rife with sophisticated backdrops and hairpin plot turns that put Topol on the best-seller list, THE WASHINGTON LAWYER is a heart-stopping foray into human vice coupled with power accelerating towards catastrophe.
 
Topol, himself is a well-established partner at one of DC’s top law firms and author of 11 thrillers. THE WASHINGTON LAWYER is a penetrating glimpse into Capitol Hill’s seedy underbelly. Topol impresses again with this latest escapade into the intricate underpinnings of Washington’s influential power layers, drawing the reader into a new of questionable morals, deadly intrigues and treachery from which this is no escape.

Q & A with by Eric Giacometti & Jacques Ravenne

How did the two of you come together to write SHADOW RITUAL?

Many things led us into this adventure. First of all, Jacques is a Freemason, and Eric had investigated scandals linked to freemasonry. We had two different visions of this brotherhood. Second, Eric had already written a mystery and his French publisher was encouraging him to write another one. Thirdly, we had known each other since our teenage years together spent in Toulouse, in the south of France, when we shared a passion for esoteric mysteries and secret societies. At the time, while others were flirting, we were exploring Cathar castles and Templar outposts, certain we would find some lost treasure, perhaps even the Holy Grail. We always kept a bit of that feeling of wonder. All of this came together with the idea of a Freemason inspector. Two other inspirations fed Shadow Ritual: the little known story of Freemason persecutions in Nazi-occupied France, and the true story of French Freemason archives stolen by the Nazis in 1940, recovered by the Soviets in 1945 and only returned to France in 2000. What secret did they hold?

How does the fact that Jacques is a Freemason and Eric is a Profane affect the portrayal of the relationships between your characters?

It gives us a more balanced view of freemasonry: one that is not too indulgent and not too full of fantasy.

What was the inspiration for the characters Antoine Marcas and Jade Zewinski?

Antoine embodies an upright Freemason who believes in his ideals, but is aware that the brotherhood is not perfect. He is always doubting, and that is his strength. Jade is hostile to freemasonry and challenges Marcas, by asking him all the questions the Profane have about this secret society. 

The Inspector Marcas series is an international phenomenon! Has the success of the series changed your life?

The success of the series has allowed us the freedom to write and earn a living from it, which is a real luxury.

How did you decide to write a series with a freemason as the protagonist?

We though thrillers are an excellent way for readers to discover the world of freemasonry. Then, we were doubly lucky: at the time, nobody in France had had the idea of creating a positive Freemason protagonist, and Dan Brown published his Da Vinci Code a year before we brought out the first Antoine Marcas mystery in French. We were the first French authors to benefit from the Dan Brown effect.

SHADOW RITUAL deals with actual Freemason history and the potential implications of a breach; has SHADOW RITUAL ruffled some feathers? 

At first, Jacques’s brothers were a little thrown off. But over time, freemasons have become fervent supporters of Inspector Marcas. The rituals and meetings described in the books are genuine, and readers can understand a little bit more about the brotherhood.

How much research do you have to do, which are the most difficult types of scenes to research, and have you ever had to go to extreme or unusual lengths to research a scene?

We spend a lot of time in libraries, often in Freemason libraries, which have many rare books. We also meet with scholars. This is a fascinating part of the work, but it’s important not to get lost in the research or to recount too much of what we found in books. The hard part is building a plot and adjusting the mechanism to work like clockwork.

What are you reading now?

The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a fascinating book about the unforeseeable events that change the destinies of nations.

Who or what has influenced your style of writing?

Jacques’s influences are very literary, as he was a French professor and a Paul Valery scholar. Eric’s are more thrillers (both books and movies).

What’s up next for you, Eric?

I’m heading to New York for Thrillerfest in July. I can’t wait to meet other thriller writers. And next year, there will be another Antoine Marcas thriller in English, one with surprising Freemason information about the Statue of Liberty and the Eiffel Tower.

What’s up next for you, Jacques?

Las Vegas in August to celebrate my son’s twenty-first birthday, and shared impatience with Eric for the next Marcas adventure.

About the Authors

Jacques Ravenne is a literary scholar who has also written a biography of the Marquis de Sade and edited his letters. He loves to explore the hidden side of major historical events. Eric Giacometti was an investigative reporter for a major French newspaper. He has covered a number of high-profile scandals and has done exhaustive research in the area of freemasonry.

About the Book

Ritual murders. Ancient enemies. A powerful secret.

An electrifying thriller about the rise of extremism. Two slayings—one in Rome and one in Jerusalem—rekindle an ancient rivalry between modern-day secret societies for knowledge lost at the fall of the Third Reich. Detective Antoine Marcas unwillingly teams up with the strong-willed Jade Zewinski to chase Neo-Nazi assassins across Europe. They must unravel an arcane Freemason mystery, sparked by information from newly revealed KGB files. Inspired from the true story of mysterious Freemason files thought to hold a terrible secret, stolen by the SS in 1940, recovered by the Red Army in 1945 and returned half a century later.

A Day in the Life of Izzy Archer, heroine of Murder, Mystery & Dating Mayhem by D.E. Haggerty

Hi! I’m Izzy. I’m a 40-year-old widow who just went on this crazy adventure revolving around my grandma’s death. If you haven’t yet read my story in Murder, Mystery & Dating Mayhem then I won’t spoil the fun by telling you what happens. But I may be tempted to give you a couple clues, just because I’m an awesome investigator now. That’s my boyfriend Noel snorting in the background. Just ignore him.

So what’s my life like when I’m not running around having fun-filled yet frustrating adventures? I’m a freelance graphic designer so no two days look alike for me. Because I’m a freelancer and I still have to pay my mortgage and fuel my Ben & Jerry’s addiction, I need to take all the assignments that come my way. This means that I’m sometimes working around the clock and at other times have nothing to do.

When I don’t have any graphic design projects, I’ll often help my BFF Jack out at his store. Jack has a clothing store downtown, which is unique as unique can get. He and his business partner (an ex-boyfriend – how the two of them manage to work together is beyond me) started up a clothing store for cross-dressers. Then one day a tall woman stepped into the store and went bananas because she could finally find clothes that fit.

The guys decided to expand their store from clothes for only cross-dressers to clothes for cross-dressers and women who have difficult sizes from the overly tall to the overly curvy. The store took off like no-one’s business. Women come from all over Oklahoma to have a look. The guys have even been approached by investors asking them to consider starting up a chain. They’re not interested. They have a lot of fun with the store and make good money. What would I do with more money is how Jack tends to respond to the potential investors. I secretly think he’s just lazy because I could totally help him with the too much money problem.

There’s not a lot to be done for fun and excitement in a small town in Oklahoma, which means that Jack and I usually spend our evenings together watching movies and drinking wine. He has no qualms whatsoever about watching romantic comedies. I actually think he likes them more than I do.

Jack and I used to spend a lot of time with my grandma as well. We’d have lunch nearly every weekend together; followed by a drive out in the country, which was anything but leisurely. My grandma was a total speed addict. Gosh I miss that woman! Luckily, grandma’s friends are still around. They come over once a month to sit on the porch and pretend to knit. Mostly they gossip and drink adult lemonade like it’s going out of style.

Oh and I have a boyfriend now. I didn’t forget him, really I didn’t, but I’m still surprised that a man like Noel could be interested in a girl like me. It’s not like I’m ugly or anything, but I may be just a tiny bit klutzy and also have trouble keeping my mouth shut when there is a slight possibility that maybe I should have just kept it shut.

I started volunteering with this local environmental group as well. Except for what I learned about conservation during my recent adventures, I know next to nothing about the environment, so I usually stick to what I do know – graphic design. When I first met the group, they kinda freaked me out with how nice and enthusiastic they were. In the meantime I’ve grown to like the volunteers, although I still won’t be hugging any of them.  

So that’s it. That’s a day in the life of Izzy Archer – when things are calm at least. It looks like things might be getting interesting again though. Jack is worried about some problems at the store and the members of the gray-haired lady gang are already stretching their Jessica Fletcher muscles. I can’t wait!

About D.E. Haggerty

I was born and raised in Wisconsin, but think I’m a European. After spending my senior year of high school in Germany, I developed a bad case of wanderlust that is yet to be cured. My flying Dutch husband and I have lived in Ohio, Virginia, the Netherlands, Germany and now Istanbul. We still haven’t decided if we want to settle down somewhere – let alone where. Although I’ve been a military policewoman, a commercial lawyer, and a B&B owner, I think with writing I may have finally figured out what I want to be when I grow up. That’s assuming I ever grow up, of course. Between tennis, running, traveling, singing off tune, drinking entirely too many adult beverages, and reading books like they are going out of style, I write articles for a local expat magazine and various websites, review other indie authors’ books, write a blog about whatever comes to mind and am working on my fifth book.

You can connect with D.E. via her: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Google + | Pinterest | Goodreads

About Murder, Mystery, & Dating Mayhem

My name is Izzy. I drink too much, am clumsier than a newborn foal, and my brain-to-mouth filter often malfunctions. My daredevil husband killed himself in a parachuting accident five years ago and my best friend Jack has decided it’s time I jump back in the dating pool. He’s perfectly happy to throw me in if I don’t listen. Just when things in the dating world start to heat up, my grandma dies. Only her knitting group of Jessica Fletcher wannabes is sure it’s murder. I’m not convinced but I’m always up for a bit of excitement as long as it doesn’t lead to a night in jail. Well, more than one night anyway. Will I miss my chance at love because I’m chasing imaginary killers? Did someone really kill grandma or am I and my merry band of geriatric thieves imagining things?

Q & A with author M.J. Rose

Why were you drawn to the 1890 period in Paris?

Belle Epoch Paris was a mélange of many different styles of art and poetry and philosophies. The old guard still ran the salons. Impressionism battled for wall space with symbolism. Cults sprang up around occultism, spiritism and inspired artists and writers. All that diversity fascinated me. I spent a long time at the Gustav Moreau museum, looking not just at his masterpieces, but examining the hundreds of sketches hidden away. I searched out art nouveau buildings and visited museums to look at the work of the Nabis whose name itself which came from the Hebrew word for “prophet,” evoked both their mysticism and determination to develop a new artistic language.  

What inspired this book?

I was in Paris and visited an exhibition of a late sixteenth century female painter, Artemisia Gentileschi. She was a rarity and anomaly: A woman artist who succeeded despite enduring so much. While there was no suggestion she dabbled in the occult, her resilience and determination inspired me to create a woman named La Lune, a sixteenth century courtesan, the muse of a great artist who becomes a great artist herself. 

While she isn’t the main character in the book, she is at its heart.  It’s her descendant, Sandrine, who three hundred years later, comes to Paris and has to overcome society’s rules and mores in order to live out her passions — as a woman and an artist.

Art plays an important part in The Witch of Painted Sorrows— did you ever study painting?

Yes. I was six when I took my first art class. It was at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. And I’ve never stopped studying or wanting to be painter. When I visit a city the first place I go to is the museum. I am more at home looking at paintings and sculpture than doing anything including reading. Of every subject I am always drawn first to art and artists.

Why are you interested in the occult?

Being interested in and writing about the mystical and magical is in my blood. My great grandmother, who was French, hailed from a long line of Jewish gypsies. Grandma Berger read cards and used a crystal ball for decades to tell fortunes. She was the one who gave me a Ouija board when I was ten.

As I grew up my great grandmother’s card and crystal ball readings continued as did my interest in the paranormal and spiritual. Shortly before she died, and left me her own magical crystal ball, my great grandmother tried to save my life.

I was nineteen, and studying painting at Syracuse University. One morning Grandma Berger called my mother.  In an urgent voice, she told my mother that I was going to be in a fire that afternoon and she needed to warn me. 

My mother called, told me what Grandma Berger had said and asked me please, wherever I went that day, to stay near an exit. 

I did. But nothing happened. 

Or so I thought. 

At nine that night my boyfriend, who went to Cornell, called. He sounded terribly shook up. His apartment had burned down that afternoon. He was all right, but all his clothes, books and records were destroyed. 

And along with them fifteen canvases I had painted. 

Through my paintings, I had indeed been in

Name one place in Paris that Sandrine visits that readers can visit still.

Café de Flores
Café de Flore opened its doors at 172 Boulevard Saint-Germain in 1885 and has been one of the best people-watching cafes in Paris ever since.  It’s not only one of the oldest but one of the most prestigious coffeehouses in Paris. Even though it’s next door neighbor is Les Deux Magots, frequented by Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, and others, Flore is the more prestigious and less touristy of the cafés. It’s worth waiting for a table on the terrace but the art deco interior with its red seating, mahogany and mirrors transports you back in time to pre-World War II.  They also serve one of the best fromage and jambon omelets that can be had in Paris.

About M.J. Rose

M.J. Rose grew up in New York City mostly in the labyrinthine galleries of the Metropolitan Museum, the dark tunnels and lush gardens of Central Park and reading her mother's favorite books before she was allowed. She is the author of more than a dozen novels, the co-president and founding board member of International Thriller Writers and the founder of the first marketing company for authors: AuthorBuzz.com. She lives in Greenwich, Connecticut. Visit her online at MJRose.com.

About The Witch of Painted Sorrows

Possession. Power. Passion. International bestselling novelist M.J. Rose creates her most provocative and magical spellbinder yet in this erotic, gothic novel set against the lavish spectacle of 1890s Belle Époque Paris.

Sandrine Salome runs away to her grandmother’s Parisian mansion to escape her dangerous husband, but what she finds is even more menacing. The house, famous for its lavish art collection and elegant salons, is mysteriously closed up. Although her grandmother insits it’s dangerous for Sandrine to visit, she defies her and meets Julien Duplessi, a mesmerizing young architect. Together they explore the hidden night world of Paris, the forbidden occult underground and Sandrine’s deepest desires.

Among the bohemians and the demi-monde, Sandrine discovers her erotic nature as a lover and painter. Then darker influences threaten – her cold and cruel husband is tracking her down and something sinister is taking hold, changing Sandrine, altering her. She’s become possessed by La Lune: A witch, a legend and a sixteenth-century courtesan, who opens up her life to a darkness that may become a gift or a curse.

This is Sandrine’s “wild night of the soul,” her odyssey in the magnificent city of Paris, of art, love and witchery.

Pages: 384
Publisher: Atria Books (March 17, 2015)

Top 10 Favorite Books and Why by Janice Wills Kingsbury

Books are like songs in some ways.  Each one reminds of a place and time that you were when you read the book or heard the song. Each of my favorite books have a commonality; I took something away from the reading that stayed with me, something I needed at the time.  The books were my friends that I remember fondly. My favorite books have never left my bookshelves for library donations or garage sales because I just couldn’t part with them. Here are my top 10 pics (with a few runner-ups) :

Little Women (Louisa May Alcott)
Little Women was my first “coming of age” book.  It was a Christmas gift from my mother.  I read it 5 times.  I was 11 years old and loved books.  I loved the four sisters who took care of each other with their mother’s guidance while their father fought the Civil War.  My favorite character was Jo who is strong and devoted to her sister Amy, who battles Scarlet Fever.  Jo abandons the promise of a better life with the boy next door in favor of new adventures and moves to New York.  Her suitor then marries Amy, one of Jo’s sisters.   Full of adventure; and drama, and tales of an ordinary family’s struggles with life’s challenges.

Atlas Shrugged (Ayn Rand)
I read this book when I was 20 years old.  What an eye-opener.  I was interested in Philosophy at the time and happened to be dating a Philosophy major who introduced me to the book.  Ahead of her time with an ingenious mind, she writes about a near-future U.S.A whose economy is collapsing as a result of the disappearance of leading innovators and industrialists.  Her characters are like none other; her philosophy, objectivism.  Her famous opening line:  “Who is John Gaul?” 1,000+ pages, but I couldn’t put it down.

The Prophet (Kahlil Gibran)
Philosophical, spiritual, and inspirational.  His writings are timeless and I always found comfort when reading them.  Read as a young adult and have carried them with me.  Who can forget, “This too shall pass?”

She’s Come Undone (Wally Lamb)  
A great book that reminded me of my teens and my teenage friend.  A great read and character development.  My greatest disappointment was that there were no more books from this author published at the time.

One for the Money and all the Stefanie Plum series (Janet Evonovich)
These books provided endless laughter and entertainment.  They cheered me when I really needed it, and I always love them.

The Loved Dog (Tamar Geller)
I rescued my best buddy, Beau, from a puppy mill.  He was totally unsocialized with humans or animals and I was over my head trying to train him.  Although some things from Caesar were helpful, Beau was much to frightened to use many of his techniques.  People were coming up to Beau trying to help using Caesar’s methods and were scaring him to death.  Then I found this book, which is the best dog book on training that I have ever read.  It literally transformed Beau as a dog and of course my life as well.  I’ve lent it to many people, but always made sure it was returned.

Animals in Translation (Temple Grandin)
I learned a lot about how animals think, how autistic people think, and enjoyed the comparisons from her perspective.  At the time I worked as a School Psychologist and many of the children were autistic.  Additionally, I ‘m involved in animal rescue.

Dead Ringer (Lisa Scottoline)
Love all of her books and can always count on a good read packed with adventure, crime, and mystery, but one that doesn’t give nightmares and sleepless nights.

The Celestine Prophecy (James Redfield)
Loved the spiritual and inspirational content and have taken with me the power of positive thinking.

The Garden of Good and Evil (John Berendt)
Great characters and this book had it all.  Good vs. evil, perfect southern life and setting, great town!  Felt like you were there.  Keeps you spellbound until the end.

Runners Up
The Good Good Pig (Sy Montgomery)
An adorable story about saving a pig.  Who knew how smart pigs are?  Had to repress the urge to go out and adopt one!

The Old Man and the Sea (Hemmingway)
“Every day is a new day.  It is better to be lucky.  But I would rather be exact.  Then when luck come you are ready.” “But man is not made for defeat.” He said. “A man can be destroyed but not defeated.”   Says it all!

Sticks & Scones and the Diane Mott Davidson series
Light hearted mysteries combined with chef’s favorite recipes, which I have used.

The Portable Steinbeck –great writing and I love Travels with Charlie.

About Janice Wills Kingsbury

Janice Wills Kingsbury grew up in New Jersey.  She worked as a teacher and later as a School Psychologist for 18 years.  Janice also taught reading and has a love of children's literature.  Janice is also involved in animal rescue. Her children's books are written from the heart and portray her love of and knowledge about children and animals. The stories will capture children's interest and imagination.  Age 6-12, but suitable for all ages, even adults.

You can connect with Janice via: Website | Facebook | Twitter

About Lexi Goes on Vacation to the Outer Banks

Ms. Janice and Mr. Rob have vacationed in the seashore town of Duck in North Carolina for 10 years. Duck is a friendly place with sandy beaches where children and dogs romp to their hearts content. This year Lexi, a new addition to their dog family, will come too. But the vacation will be like no other and as the sun sets on the beach it promises to be a long night, one the family will never forget!

Full color illustrations appeal to children and make the book come alive. The action and adventure encourage children to read to the end and learn new vocabulary. Even reluctant readers will want to finish the story.

46 pages
Publisher: Create Space (October 22, 2014)