Today I am sharing my Feature Post and Book Review for HOME THIS CHRISTMAS by Sue Roberts on this Bookouture blog tour.
Below you will find a book description, my book review, the author’s bio, and the author’s social media links. Enjoy!
***
Book Description
Ruby hasn’t been back home since she made the heart-wrenching decision to leave her childhood sweetheart, Nathan, for a career in London. But when she’s invited to judge the charity gingerbread competition, she decides it’s time. And it seems there’s Christmas mischief at work. Because Nathan is joining her as a gingerbread judge.
But it’s clear he would rather she’d stayed away, from his icy silence when they are alone, to the snarky comments and his accusing glare as they prepare for the event with other members of the community. And all Ruby wants to do is get back to London.
Then bad weather leaves her snowed in the village until after Christmas, with nowhere to stay. And things go from bad to worse when she slips on the ice… And falls straight into the arms of Nathan.
The pain of her injured ankle is nothing when, her heart aflutter, Nathan surprises her. As he scoops her up and sweeps her off to the hospital, it seems like the frost between them is finally thawing. But could the magic of Christmas mean a second chance is possible? Or is it too little too late?
HOME THIS CHRISTMAS by Sue Roberts is a heartwarming Christmas women’s fiction/second chance romance mash-up featuring a young woman named Ruby who left her small village and first love behind to chase her dreams of success in London. Now she has attained many of her dreams, a beautiful flat in London and successful career as a food and restaurant critic and another Christmas is just around the corner.
Ruby is happy with her London life, but she is just out of a relationship and at loose ends. She has made plans with her girlfriend for Christmas but then receives a note from her hometown to be a judge for the charity gingerbread competition. She decides to accept and be in and out of the village in one day. When she shows up at the competition, she is surprised to discover her first love, Nathan, is the other judge.
Nathan is even more handsome than Ruby remembered, and she is surprised that their attraction is still strong. As Ruby gets involved in village affairs and makes new friends, she ends up staying longer and the attraction between them only grows. Ruby is afraid that she will have to leave Nathan behind again or can this second chance at romance be strong enough to keep her in the village?
This is an enchanting holiday read. The first half of the story is more focused on Ruby and her career and life in London, while the second half has her in her old hometown and the second chance romance begins to bloom with Nathan. The romance plot is sweet, charming, and believable. We get to see the village through Ruby’s eyes from her memories of her youth and how things have changed in the present. Ms. Roberts does a wonderful job of making the village and all its Christmas activities come to life on the page. This is a wonderful story to escape into over the holidays.
I recommend this delightful holiday HEA genre mash-up.
***
Author Bio
Sue Roberts lives in Lancashire with her long term partner Derek and has had a lifelong love of writing, encouraged by winning a school writing competition at the age of 11.
She always assumed that ‘one day’ she would write a book, always having a busy household and a job, the idea remained firmly on the back burner but never forgotten.
The inspiration for her first novel came to her on a holiday to a Greek village. Her daughters had left home and suddenly the time had come to write that book!
Surrey, England, 1938. After thirty devoted years of marriage, Ellie Endicott is blindsided by her husband’s appeal for divorce. It’s Ellie’s opportunity for change too. The unfaithful cad can have the house. She’s taking the Bentley. Ellie, her housekeeper Mavis, and her elderly friend Dora—each needing escape—impulsively head for parts unknown in the South of France.
With the Rhône surging beside them, they have nowhere to be and everywhere to go. Until the Bentley breaks down in the inviting fishing hamlet of Saint Benet. Here, Ellie rents an abandoned villa in the hills, makes wonderful friends among the villagers, and finds herself drawn to Nico, a handsome and enigmatic fisherman. As for unexpected destinations, the simple paradis of Saint Benet is perfect. But fates soon change when the threat of war encroaches.
Ellie’s second act in life is just beginning—and becoming an adventure she never expected.
***
Elise’s Thoughts
Mrs. Endicott’s Splendid Adventure by Rhys Bowen is a gripping novel. No matter what book Bowen writes, readers feel they are taking the journey with the characters and are transported into the setting. The descriptions of the town and its residents are very detailed.
Readers meet Ellie Endicott in Surrey, England during 1938. After raising two grown sons and having devoted her entire married life to catering to her husband’s needs, her husband wants a divorce. He has met a younger woman and tries to bulldoze Ellie into a favorable financial settlement. She will have no part of it and decides to hire her own lawyer who helps her obtain a fair settlement.
Deciding to take a trip to the South of France, she steals her husband’s Bentley and agrees to take two companions along. Mavis Moss, her loyal housekeeper who has an abusive husband, and Miss Smith-Humphries, a pillar of the community dying from heart disease but wants to revisit happy places of her youth. While stopping for gas they rescue a pregnant young girl, Yvette, who claims she is being kidnapped.
The Bentley breaks down in the inviting fishing hamlet of Saint Benet. They’re aided by handyman, Louis; Nico, a mysterious fisherman; and welcomed by other villagers including a resident gay English couple. While exploring the small town of Saint Benet they find an abandoned villa in the hills and decide to fix it up and rent it from the owner. The simple paradiseof Saint Benet is perfect until fate plays a role and WWII looms over their heads.
The three women blossom and enjoy the beautiful setting of their second chance lives, having a splendid adventure, until the German troops move into the village in 1942-43. The women and the villagers face hardships, betrayals, danger, uncertainties, and retaliations. When the war comes to an end readers realize these women were resilient, inquisitive, caring with strong minds, hearts, and souls.
This book captivates readers from chapter one and never lets up. It shows the strong bond between friends as well as how a middle-aged woman can find true love with Nico, a villager.
***
Author Interview
Elise Cooper: Idea for the story?
Rhys Bowen: There were driving forces behind this story. We were on this lake, and I saw a villa that must have been abandoned for years. It was beautiful once but now the shutters were hanging off and the grounds were full of leaves. I thought who could walk away from something as gorgeous as this and why were there no heirs? I wanted to bring it back to its formal glory. It stayed with me, so I had a character do that, vicariously. I loved giving these women this close bond and second chances in life.
EC: Is this a woman’s adventure story?
RB: It is a story about invisible women. Middle-aged women can be conceived as no longer physically attractive. I noticed this many times in my own life after I became a certain age. Miss Marple is invisible with her knitting as nobody notices her. She sees and hears everything. I wanted to write how women were not treated well by life or had lived someone else’s life. I also wanted to write the strength of women bonding and how they could blossom into the people they should be. These three women were not treated well and has a sense of belonging.
EC: How would you describe Ellie?
RB: She never lived her own life and is now a middle-aged woman. There is this book quote how she feels all alone, “It was fine when I had my friends with me, but now I find myself alone. I had everything I desired, people I loved and who loved me. And one by one they have been taken away. I have this lovely big house and beautiful view but nobody to share it with.” I wanted to give her everything she wanted: friends, a beautiful house, a love interest, and a baby. Then all those were taken away. I wanted to explore how strong she was when once again everything was taken away from her. I think she is a survivor, optimistic, is willing to take risks, and resilient by the end of the book. But in the beginning, she was broken, angry, resentful, the perfect housewife, and feels hopeless at times. Throughout she is sensible, passionate, vulnerable, and reasonable.
EC: How would you describe Miss Theodora Smith-Humphries?
RB: She is critical, sickly, formidable, smug, blunt, organized, faithful, and a good listener. We never really know her. She gave the world the face she wanted them to see, that of an efficient smart spinster who runs everything, and who people are slightly scared of. But no one knows she had a great romance. She was not sweet, attractive, and submissive so she never had that good marriage. She had a romance that could never be, after both her married employer and she fell in love. She accepted the role of the mistress.
EC: How would you describe Ellie’s former maid, Mavis?
RB: She is scared, street smart, loyal, and has a great relationship with Ellie. She is closest to a friend and confidant Ellie has ever had. In England people don’t say something if they see something because of the stiff upper lip attitude. Yet, Ellie realizes Mavis was abused and she must save her. When Mavis gets to France she blossoms. She becomes a strong person in the community. Yet, she lives the first half of this book in fear of her husband, always having walked on eggshells.
EC: How would you describe Yvette?
RB: Young, pregnant, sacred, and a shadow figure. She plays the part well of a vulnerable person. Mavis realizes she is not who she says she is. Mavis has good instincts.
EC: What is the role of WWII in this book?
RB: I wanted to show the brutality of the Germans, and how Ellie and company tried to save Jewish men. Ellie took a big risk by staying in France, but she is so happy there she decides to stay. Then she becomes an enemy alien, unable to get a ration card or identity card. The first years of the war are not bad for the South of France. Everything is fine for her until the Germans become stationed in her village in 1943. There was a resistance cell in Marseille that smuggled out Jewish people.
EC: How come the Germans ignored the villa?
RB: They did not know it existed until quite late in the story. It was not visible from the village, up in the hillside hidden away. As long as Ellie and company stayed quiet, she was safe until the Germans found out they were smuggling Jewish men out.
EC: What about the relationship between Nico and Ellie?
RB: It was confusing to both, but they did love and respect each other. In the end they found a soul mate in each other. I wanted Nico to be an enigmatic figure. People thought of him as a local fisherman, yet he never fished that much. Ellie thinks he is a smuggler and although attracted to him does not want much to do with him because she thinks he does things against the law because he has plenty of money. The moment the war starts he helps the resistance cells by bringing in weapons and gasoline. I wanted him to be the classic bad boy in the beginning, attractive to Ellie, but dangerous.
EC: What about the village of Saint-Benet, is it based on Cassis?
RB: It is a little town outside of Marseille, an area where there are fields surrounded by high cliffs. It has a pretty waterfront with cafes surrounding it. I went there last year to make sure I had all the details correct. I did not want to call the village Cassis because I wrote things that did not happen there. It was much easier to make it the fictional town of Saint-Benet, very much like Cassis.
EC: Next books?
RB: The next book comes out in November, titled, From Cradle to Grave, a Royal Spyness novel. Georgie is given the nanny from hell is one part of the story. The other part has a possible serial killer getting rid of aristocrats.
The next Molly Murphy book comes out in March, titled Vanished in the Crowd. It focuses on the role of women. A woman scientist is working on the polio virus but gets no credit and has the findings published in her husband’s name.
The next historical novel has a working title, From Sea to Sky, coming out next July. It is about an elderly famous writer who is suffering from dementia and cannot finish her last book. A young writer is hired to finish it for her. The young writer sees things that makes her believe the story is not fiction.
THANK YOU!!
***
BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.
When Charlotte Sitterly’s husband is arrested for a white-collar crime, she and her daughter Iris are locked out of their house by the FBI and—what’s potentially even worse—thrust into the spotlight of @JuniperShoresSocialite, the town’s snarky anonymous Instagram account. Cut off from her bank accounts and feeling desperate, Charlotte takes up an acquaintance’s offer to stay at a beachfront former bed-and-breakfast that’s home to a community of single mothers and draws plenty of gossip in the small coastal North Carolina town.
Charlotte and Iris find solace and are surprised by how much fun they’re having with the other families despite their circumstances. But when the women discover a secret link between them, it changes everything they thought they knew about the unconventional family they’ve created and leaves them wondering whether their coming together was a coincidence at all. Will the skeletons in the mommune closets help Charlotte and Iris reclaim their place in the Juniper Shores community—or shatter the sisterhood forever?
BEACH HOUSE RULES by Kristy Woodson Harvey is one of my favorite women’s fiction books so far this year. It is a small-town southern women’s fiction book full of family, both the ones we are born into and those that we make, love, second chances, friendship, and a bit of a mystery. Set in a former bed-and-breakfast turned “mommune” in an affluent small North Carolina beach town, a community of women come together as their personal world’s turn upside down.
Charlotte Sitterly’s husband is arrested for a white-collar crime and she and her daughter, Iris, are shut out of their home and have all their bank accounts frozen. Down to her last few dollars, the town’s alleged Black Widow offers her a place for herself and her daughter in the former beachfront bed-and-breakfast turned mommune. The single moms and their children are the source of gossip throughout their small community.
Charlotte and Iris, to their surprise, find a sense of comfort and community at the mommune with the other women and children. As Charlotte works to get back their old life and prove her husband’s innocence, she and Iris discover their coming together may not have been by accident after all and secrets could destroy the new group of friends.
This book is beautifully written and pulls you right into the lives, trials, and tribulations of the mommune. The characters could walk right off the page. I enjoyed looking at the situation from both the adult women’s fears and triumphs and the teenager’s way of dealing with all the adult drama and their own high school drama. The mystery of Charlotte’s husband’s guilt or innocence had me guessing throughout and surprised me at its resolution. The addition of the on-line @JuniperShoresSocialite interspersed posts added a fun bit of laughter as well as intrigue as we tried to figure out the identity of the anonymous author. I feel this should be the top summer read this year.
I highly recommend this small-town southern women’s fiction! This is the first book I have read by this author, but it definitely will not be the last.
***
About the Author
Kristy Woodson Harvey is the New York Times, USA Today and Publisher’s Weekly bestselling author of eleven novels including The Summer of Songbirds and The Peachtree Bluff Series. Many of her books have been optioned or are in development for television and film and have received numerous accolades, including Good Morning America’s Buzz Pick, Southern Living’s Most Anticipated Reads, Katie Couric’s Featured Books, and Joanna Garcia Swisher’s The Happy Place Read. Kristy is the winner of the Lucy Bramlette Patterson Award for Excellence in Creative Writing and a finalist for the Southern Book Prize.
A Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s school of journalism, her writing has appeared in numerous publications, including Southern Living, Parade, Traditional Home, USA TODAY, and many more. She also holds a master’s in English, with a concentration in multicultural and transnational literature.
Kristy is the cocreator and cohost of the weekly web show and podcast Friends & Fiction with fellow New York Times Bestselling authors Mary Kay Andrews, Kristin Harmel, and Patti Callahan Henry. She is also the co-founder of the interiors site Design Chic, with her mom, Beth Woodson.
She lives on the North Carolina coast with her husband, son, and dog, Salt, where she is (always!) working on her next novel.