Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Beyond the Dark Oceans by Alison Huntingford


Beyond the Dark Oceans

By Alison Huntingford


Publication Date: March 31st, 2026
Publisher: Lupin Publications
Pages: 386
Genre: Historical Fiction

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.


Buy Link:
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:
Website • Twitter / X • Bluesky • Facebook • Instagram • Threads • Pinterest



Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Escape of the Grand Duchess by Susan Appleyard


Escape of the Grand Duchess
By Susan Appleyard


Publication Date: 27th July 2025
Publisher: Ingenium Books Publishing Inc.
Page Length: 412
Genre: Biographical Historical Fiction 

Escape of the Grand Duchess by Susan Appleyard is a gripping historical novel that shatters the notion that royalty is synonymous with privilege and ease. At its heart is Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, the youngest sister of Tsar Nicholas II—a Romanov who defied a doomed destiny and survived.

Unlike her ill-fated brother and his family, Olga’s story is one of resilience, sacrifice, and daring escape. Trapped in a loveless marriage to a reckless gambler—who harbours secrets of his own—she finds hope in the arms of a dashing army lieutenant. But before she can claim her own happiness, she must first endure the brutal realities of World War I, where she serves as a nurse on the frontlines.

As the Russian Empire teeters on the brink of collapse, the infamous Siberian mystic Rasputin tightens his grip on the imperial court, setting the stage for revolution. With the Bolsheviks seizing power and the Romanovs marked for death, Olga faces an impossible choice: risk everything to stay or flee into the unknown with her true love and their children.

Rich in historical detail and driven by an unforgettable heroine, Escape of the Grand Duchess is a sweeping riches-to-rags tale of survival, love, and the strength it takes to forge a new life in the face of unimaginable upheaval.

Excerpt

It was a fine day, with the grass in the English Garden of the Pavlovsk Palace turning green and spikes of new growth poking through the saturated soil. I sat beside Nicky on the horse Misha had bought me, wearing my Akhtyrsky uniform. Surrounded by high military officers, I watched as the regiments marched by in their colourful uniforms: Hussars and Cossacks, Guardsmen and Marines, each company in precise formation, each button winking in the sun, each boot polished and scuff-free. Each manoeuvre delighted the watchers with its perfect symmetry. When my own regiment marched by, I held my fingertips to my brow in the prescribed manner. 
Later, when the review was over, I was talking to some of the officers of my regiment when I saw Misha with a tall, blond man in the uniform of the Blue Cuirassiers who caught my attention. I think it was the pleasant surprise when a smile warmed his handsome but solemn face, and two dimples appeared. But it was more than that. It really was. On that day, I learned that love at first sight did exist. I wanted to know that man; I wanted that smile to warm me.
Misha was a colonel of the Blue Cuirassiers, so at the first opportunity, I asked him about the man who’d had such an impact on me. “That’s Nikolai Kulikovsky. Caught your fancy, has he? And you a married woman.” He grinned, his eyes dancing. 
I ignored his teasing. “What do you know about him?” 
“He’s an excellent horseman and has extraordinary skill in riding and training Arabians.” To Misha, those were admirable attributes. When it seemed he would say no more, a discreet poke in the ribs elicited more information. “He’s from a military family in the south—actually, I believe they’re from the Voronezh area. Now there’s a coincidence. They also have property in Ukraine. He’s only recently joined the Blues. His fellow officers call him God Apollo. That’s about all I know.” 
God Apollo—he was that. Goose bumps rose on my arms. “I can see why. Is he married? Engaged?” 
“No. Olga—” 
I turned to him and laid a hand on his gold-braided sleeve. “Misha, no lectures, please. I would like to meet him. Why don’t you invite me to your luncheon tomorrow and arrange for us to sit together? Could you do that?” 
He weighed the alternatives: morality and possible scandal against my barren marriage and his big-brother desire to please me. Finally, he said, “He’s a lowly lieutenant. I hope you know what you are doing.” 
“The male version of a ballerina, perhaps?” I said with a giggle. “I just want to get to know him. Perhaps we’ll become friends. Perhaps not. We shall see.” 
The following day, I put aside my dolman and dressed in a white chiffon gown with a pale green sash at my waist. I wore only simple pear-shaped pearl earrings and a fresh rose from a bouquet in my bungalow pinned to my breast. Mimka had learned to style my hair and took particular care that day. 
Despite his misgivings, Misha had arranged my seat beside the lieutenant’s. When I slid into the chair, he rose, bowed, making a good attempt to hide his surprise, and said, “Good day, Your Imperial Highness.” 
“Good day, Lieutenant.” 
He reclaimed his own seat. At the same time as he looked my way, I looked at him, admiring his sculpted lips beneath a shapely moustache, and eyes: brown, warm, velvet, surrounded by thick, dark lashes. He had the figure of an athlete, slim but muscular. 
“Would Your Imperial Highness permit me to introduce myself? I—” 
“I know who you are. I asked my brother.” 
He smiled, and the dimples bracketed his mouth, and I smiled back. There it was. An instant connection. I can describe it no other way. Warmth wound its way through my veins to my fingertips and toes, and I felt sure I was blushing. I had never felt that way before. I wanted to kiss those dimples. No, what I really wanted was to kiss his mouth. Lips and moustache, two different textures against my lips. I felt sure it would be thrilling. Did he know what I was thinking? Did I look like a besotted schoolgirl? I knew the colonel on my other side had asked me a question, but I couldn’t look away until Nikolai did, releasing me to respond to my neighbour. The spell was broken but the feelings it awoke had not. I thought, This is so unlike me, to behave so with a stranger. 
After speaking briefly with the colonel, I turned back to Nikolai so that I could further admire that lovely profile. Lunch was smoked salmon and caviar with early greens, washed down by champagne. I barely tasted the food and drank only in sips. I was amused to see that Misha was keeping an eye on me and raised my glass to him as a thank-you. 
“My brother tells me you are a keen horseman.” 
“Horses,” he said in the tone of voice another man might have said, ‘Sweetheart.’ “Very intelligent creatures. You can talk to them, and they listen and obey.” 
“Unlike women?” I teased.
“Um …” he said, embarrassed. “I didn’t mean …” 
“No, of course you didn’t. I have a wicked sense of humour. What else do you like about horses?” 
“They are loyal, brave, full of grace and dignity, and they dance prettily. Like a woman.” We both smiled—oh, those dimples. Captivating—and I was pleased to know that he had a sense of humour. 
“Does Your Imperial Highness ride?” 
“I learned to ride at Gatchina when I was a girl. My brother and I rode around the estate and sometimes had races. He always won.” 
“His Imperial Highness is an excellent horseman.” 
“He said the same of you.” 
I took a bite of the salmon, and the colonel spoke to me again. I supposed he might be annoyed that I was giving most of my attention to a subordinate. A rather attractive lady was on his other side, whom he was ignoring, so I suspected she might be his wife. After giving him the requisite attention and laughing at a bad joke, I turned back to Nikolai, who, to my vexation, was engaged with his neighbour. The colonel addressed me again. When Nikolai and I were both free, I quickly captured his attention. 
“I understand you come from a military background. Is that why you became a soldier?” 
“It was preordained. My grandfather fought in the army that defeated Napoleon. I’ve been riding since I was a small boy. I went to the Nikolai Cavalry College, where I earned a degree before joining the Blue Cuirassiers. I’m now studying marksmanship and light machine-gun shooting.”
How extraordinary. He might have joined any of the many regiments, but he chose the Blues, bringing him here on this day when I had joined my brothers to watch the review. We spoke no words of love, exchanged no tokens, and I did not tell him about my unhappy marriage. But after speaking with him throughout most of the luncheon, I knew that something had been set in motion—something that I felt was intrinsically good—and I was not willing to let it end. 


Buy Link:

Susan Appleyard



Susan was born in England, which is where she learned to love English history, and now lives in Canada in the summer. In winter she and her husband flee the cold for their second home in Mexico. Susan divides her time between writing and her hobby, oil painting, although writing will always be her first love. She was fortunate in having had two books published traditionally. Since joining the ebook crowd, she has published nine books, some of which have won various awards.

Some Starry Night by Irene Latham



Some Starry Night

By Irene Latham



Publication Date: April 14th, 2026
Publisher: Historium Press
Pages: 264
Genre: Historical Fiction


Under the pale glow of a Parisian spring in 1886, two restless souls move toward the same horizon-unaware that their meeting will ignite a love as luminous and fleeting as the stars themselves.


Vincent van Gogh arrives in Paris with little more than paint-stained hands and an aching determination to create something worthy of the world. Living in the cramped apartment of his brother Theo, he struggles against poverty, doubt, and the relentless pull of his own restless mind.


Across the ocean in Amherst, Emily Dickinson receives news that changes everything. Faced with the nearness of death, the reclusive poet does the unthinkable: she leaves the quiet safety of the Homestead and sails for Paris, determined to taste life before it slips beyond her reach.


When Emily agrees to sit for Vincent's portrait, their worlds collide in a blaze of color, poetry, and dangerous intimacy. Through letters, poems, and whispered confessions, the two artists discover in one another a fierce, unguarded understanding-one that will shape their art, their faith, and the fragile hours they have left.


But love between stars is never simple. As time grows short and darkness gathers, Vincent and Emily must decide whether beauty is meant to last...or simply to burn bright enough to change the night forever.


Some Starry Night is a sweeping, lyrical imagining of the hidden story behind Vincent van Gogh's most iconic painting – an unforgettable tale of love, creativity, and the courage to live fiercely, even in the shadow of the end.


Excerpt


May 5, 1887


My dear Emily,


Forget Agostina. And forgive my careless words. In my

rush to share all I can with you, I sometimes do not

think about what effect my words will have when they

come so cold and dry on paper, and not from my

mouth.


If we were together, you would know it is not just a

portion of my heart that you occupy. My whole paint-

splattered soul is yours.


I’ve been in such a frenzy, trying to make the time

pass to the moment when we shall meet again, that I

fear I have run out of flowers. All the Paris greenhouse

keepers know me by name. Asters, dahlias, daisies,

geraniums, hollyhocks, lilacs, phlox, salvia . . . It’s a

shame I’m not a better gardener, and I only keep the

cuttings long enough to set them dancing on the canvas

in fields of blue.


I’d like to share a trick I use when painting trees or

flowers. I try to find the soul in them. Do you know

what I mean? Sometimes, a stand of willows might re-

semble a procession of weary, old men. Or I might find

a child’s face in a zinnia. It’s a special way of looking.


A poet’s way of looking.


Just a bit longer, mon petit oiseau. Every time I

read your words in your distinctive pen, it’s almost as

if the hand of God is upon my chest. The demons I

carry stop their chortling. You have that power, Emily.


Love,


Your Vincent




Buy Link:

Universal Buy Link

Historium Press Buy Link


Irene Latham


Irene Latham writes poems and stories from the Purple Horse Poetry Studio & Music Room in Blount County, Alabama. She is the author or co-author of many books for young people, including African Town, winner of the Scott O'Dell Award for Outstanding Historical Fiction.

This is her first novel for adults.



Beyond the Dark Oceans by Alison Huntingford

Beyond the Dark Oceans By Alison Huntingford Publication Date: March 31st, 2026 Publisher: Lupin Publications Pages: 386 Genre: Historical F...