Friday, 12 December 2025

Potted History! by Apple Gidley


Today, author Apple Gidley is dropping by to chat about her new book.

Potted History! by Apple Gidley

September 3rd, 1939 - Prime Minister Robert Menzies’ voice over the radio announces that Australia had joined the war.

…Annie remembered her father almost biting off the end of his pipe when the government had followed Britain’s 1939 policy toward Nazi Germany and declared war, after Hitler had invaded Poland in September. She could still recall fragments of Prime Minister Menzies’ speech. The first and last bits anyway. Any speech starting, ‘Fellow Australians, it is my melancholy duty’ was never going to be good when it ended, ‘Australia is also at war.’ 

February 15th, 1942 - Singapore, the citadel Churchill considered impregnable, falls to Japan.

…The Empire Star loomed ahead. In peacetime, a refrigerated cargo ship with only a handful of cabins, but now hundreds were waiting to board. Whispers heard along the queue had already told Annie, Verna and Florence that the captain did not want women and children aboard. Particularly Australian women, believing them to be troublesome. 
“Superstitious sod,” Annie muttered. “The anger of the sea gods is nothing compared to the bloody Japs. Or an Aussie nurse!” 

August 10th, 1942 - With the second battle of the Kokoda Trail over, the powers-that-be decided servicewomen would be permitted from October to serve in New Guinea.

…Annie, Verna and Florence itched to get back to the war. With the situation less volatile on the Papuan side of New Guinea, and servicewomen now being permitted to serve in the islands north of Australia from October 1942, rumours swirled around the camp as to when a move would happen. 
The stepping stone for their unit—now renamed the 111th CCS—was Queensland. 
“I thought Kingaroy was meant to be humid, subtropical. This is bloody freezing,” Annie complained, her hands like icicles as she lit a cigarette. 

September 7th, 1943 - at 17 Mile Camp outside Port Moresby in New Guinea, a US Air Force B-24 Liberator ploughed into truckloads of Australian troops waiting to be ferried across the mountains in a bid to retake Lae on the northern coast.

…The boom woke Annie. It didn’t sound like the usual crump of a bomb or gunfire from the hillside, or even the growl of planes taking off and landing. It seemed splintered, a series of blasts followed by an acrid smell. A glow at the far end of the camp indicated dawn, and she checked her watch. Just after four. It wouldn’t be sunrise for another couple of hours. Groping for her uniform, Annie nudged Verna in the cot next to her. “Wake up, ducks, I think something’s happened. Come on, we might be needed. Don’t forget your gas mask.” 

December 21st, 1943 - Gladys Moncrieff, known as Australia’s Queen of Song, or Our Glad, entertains the troops at 17 Mile Camp.

…Turning her hand into his, Annie, smiled. “A while will do nicely, thank you, Major.” 
Cheers and catcalls erupted as the doors opened and without any words, Gladys Moncrieff started singing, as if, Annie thought later, she knew time was limited. 
“Do you like opera?”
“Not the heavy stuff,” replied Annie, “but this is wonderful.”

August 6th, 1945 - An atomic bomb is dropped on Hiroshima, then three days later another over Nagasaki.

…The radio in the nurses’ Common Room at Concorde, switched on morning and evening for the news, reported that Japanese installations continued to be destroyed as the Americans continued their island hop ever closer to Japan, whose cities were being firebombed… It took another five days, as images of the horror appeared on the front pages of newspapers around the world, for Japan to surrender and for the Pacific war to end.

August 15th, 1945 - Japan surrenders and the Pacific War is officially over.

…Annie swayed between relief that the war was over, and outrage at the barbarity of the bombs. Flo, as always, proved a measured sounding board. “Terrible things happened, on all fronts, ducks,” Flo said, as they walked back up the hill on their day off.
“How much more terrible can it get than those two bombs?”
“That’s blacking and whiting things, Annie. You can’t do that. Anytime, but especially in war.”

June 24th, 1948 - The Berlin Blockade began when the Soviet Union attempted to wrest power from the Western Allies. Stalin turned off the power, and cut land and sea access, thereby encircling the Western sectors of Berlin.

…Planes, mainly C-47 Dakotas, had roared overhead before the blockade, supplying the western sectors of Berlin with over 13,000 tons of essentials. Most of them battered remnants of the war, so Edmund Armstrong had told Annie…
…“What’s going to happen, Ed?” He and Annie smoked a cigarette and watched the children digging up the flowers. “How can those ropey old Gooney birds supply Berlin now?” 
“Don’t knock ’em.” 
“I’m not,” Annie insisted. “But I’ve seen them flying over. They’re held together with tape and prayers.” 

May 12th, 1949 - The Berlin Blockade ends.

Dear Verna, James and Ruthie,
It’s over! Berlin survived! The bloody Russkies have their tails between their legs. But I’m sure they’ve something else up their sleeves—if that isn’t mixing metaphors, or something! Trisha and I stayed up, smoking in the dark, just to wait for the lights to come on at 0001 so we could turn them off. How’s that for nuts? 

May 3rd, 1951 - The Festival of Britain begins as a way to boost morale after the deprivations of the war, even though food rationing was still in place. 

…Stepping off the boat an hour later, Annie said, “Let’s find the Guinness Festival Clock. I read that it strikes on the quarter hour with all sorts of moving parts, and a toucan pops out of the doors.” 
“A South American bird in a Swiss cuckoo clock advertising an Irish drink!” David’s laugh turned heads. “Perhaps I should have a Guinness to go with it.” 



Annie's Day

By Apple Gidley



Publication Date: November 18th, 2025
Publisher: Vine Leaves Press
Pages: 300
Genre: Historical Fiction / Women's Fiction


War took everything.

Love never had a chance.

Until now.


As an Australian Army nurse, Annie endures the brutalities of World War II in Singapore and New Guinea. Later, seeking a change, she accepts a job with a British diplomatic family in Berlin, only to find herself caught up in the upheaval of the Blockade. Through it all, and despite the support of friends, the death of a man she barely knew leaves a wound that refuses to heal, threatening her to a life without love.


Years later, Annie is still haunted by what she’d lost—and what might have been. Her days are quiet, but her memories are loud. When a dying man’s fear forces her to confront her own doubts, she forms an unexpected friendship that rekindles something she thought she’d lost: hope.


Annie’s Day is a powerful story of love, war, and the quiet courage to start again—even when it seems far too late.


Praise for Annie’s Day

"Moving and enlightening..."

~ Deborah Swift, bestselling author

"This is a story of courage and love, and it lingers long after you turn the last page."

~ Caroline James, author, 5* Goodreads review


"I love the lyrical writing of this author. The descriptive prose and humor made this book a joy to read."

~ Louise, reviewer, 5* Goodreads review



Buy Links:

Universal Buy Link



Apple Gidley


Anglo-Australian, Apple Gidley's nomadic life has helped imbue her writing with rich, diverse cultures and experiences. Annie’s Day is her seventh book.

Gidley currently lives in Cambridgeshire, England with her husband, and rescue cat, Bella, aka assistant editor.

Author Links:

Website  Facebook  Bluesky • Twitter / X  Instagram


Monday, 8 December 2025

The Diva’s Daughter by Heather Walrath


The Diva’s Daughter

By Heather Walrath


Publication Date: November 28th, 2025
Publisher: The Book Guild
Pages: 320
Genre: Historical Fiction / Historical Women's Fiction


Munich & Vienna, 1932.


Aspiring opera singer Angelika Eder thought she had it all — a cultured life in Vienna, along with the guidance of her glamorous mother, a world-famous soprano. But when tragedy strikes and her mother dies amidst a swirling family scandal, eighteen-year-old Angelika finds herself uprooted to Munich, where civil unrest is rife and leaders of the increasingly powerful Nazi Party seek to use her voice as propaganda.


When a figure from her mother’s past offers Angelika the chance to study and sing at an elite Viennese university, she decides to fight for her dream while evading the vile Nazis she despises. But the Nazis aren’t relenting in their demand that Angelika support their party and sing for Hitler himself.


Can Angelika find her voice and stand against evil, even if it means risking not only her dreams of fame, but also the safety of herself and everyone she loves?




Buy Link:

Heather Walrath


Heather Walrath is an author crafting new stories while celebrating the release of her debut historical novel, The Diva’s Daughter.

Whether they are standing against evil in fractious 1930s Europe or solving a sticky bootlegging mystery in Prohibition-era America, Heather’s relatable heroines make the past accessible and engaging for modern readers.

She holds a master’s degree in publishing and a bachelor’s degree in journalism.

Author Links:

Website • Twitter / X  Bluesky  BookBub  Instagram





Sunday, 7 December 2025

Five minute history with J.R. Powell



Paoletta: An Eye for an eye

By J.R. Powell



Publication Date: November 28th, 2024
Publisher: independently published
Pages: 421
Genre: Historical Thriller


Exiled to a Caribbean island, Paoletta Cadoville and her family cling to the hope of one day returning to their Parisian home. But in a single, devastating moment, that dream is shattered. Alone and horrifically scarred, Paoletta embarks on a perilous quest to uncover the truth behind her family’s tragic fate, only to become entangled in a web of political intrigue, secret societies, and dangerous alliances.


In a Paris overshadowed by the guillotine, Paoletta must decide how much of her humanity she’s willing to sacrifice in pursuit of vengeance. Will she achieve justice for her family or lose herself to the darkness that threatens to consume her?


Paoletta – An Eye for an Eye is a gripping historical thriller set during the French Revolution and a stark reminder that in times of upheaval, innocence is the first to fall, and revenge demands a price paid in blood.



Paoletta opens in the spring of 1792, on the fictional French Caribbean colony of Île de Domaine, somewhere east of Dominica. Only three years earlier, France had been left virtually bankrupt, its finances strained in large part by its costly involvement in the American War of Independence, and its populace seething with discontent. 

At the start of 1789, French society was rigidly divided into three estates: the First comprised the clergy; the Second, the nobility; and the Third, everyone else, from the wealthiest educated merchant to the poorest beggar in Paris. The Third Estate held no real political power, no voice in how their country was governed, and bore the burden of taxation while the privileged estates above them paid none.

King Louis XVI called a meeting of the three Estates in May 1789 to drum up some cash for the country, primarily through new taxes, but the Third Estate had other ideas. Frustrated by entrenched inequality and a voting system that favoured the clergy and nobility, they broke away and proclaimed themselves the National Assembly. Tempers flared in the meetings, tensions grew, and, one day in June, the representatives of the Third Estate arrived to find themselves locked out of the meeting halls. They rallied in the royal tennis court near the Palace of Versailles and swore an oath to establish a constitution. The situation was not much better in Paris. Alarmed by the growing presence of the King’s troops deployed to maintain order, an anxious crowd looted the Hôtel des Invalides for muskets and other weapons before storming the Bastille in search of ammunition on the now infamous 14th of July.

Outside Paris, poor harvests across rural France stirred rumours that royalists and the clergy were conspiring to starve the populace into submission. Mobs of peasants attacked manor houses and burned documents affirming feudal rights. The unrest prompted the National Assembly to abolish feudal privileges in August and, a few weeks later, it issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, laying out the principles of liberty, equality, and national sovereignty.

In October, amid riots over soaring bread prices in Paris, a crowd of market women marched on Versailles and compelled the king and his family to move to Paris, further binding the monarchy to the revolutionary government. Over the course of 1790 and 1791, sweeping reforms reshaped the state – church lands were confiscated, and France’s administrative and legal systems were entirely remade. These changes, compounded by inflation and religious conflict, only deepened the political fractures already spreading through the country.

By June 1791, Louis XVI was ruling under a fragile constitutional monarchy, but his attempted escape with his family that summer would ultimately prove fatal. Caught in Varennes and escorted back to Paris, the royal family returned in disgrace. By autumn, the new Legislative Assembly had become dominated by factions increasingly convinced that war was necessary to defend the Revolution. International tensions escalated as émigré nobles sought aid from foreign monarchies, and Austria and Prussia issued threats of invasion.

And here we meet Paoletta in the spring of 1792. The King and his family are confined within the Tuileries Palace, and France stands on the brink of war with Austria. Like many families, by no means all of them noble, Paoletta and her kin languish in exile, uncertain of what the future holds.



Praise for Paoletta – an Eye for an Eye:

"A haunting tale of vengeance, survival and revolution - Powell's heroine grips you by the throat and never lets go"

~ Chris Riches, Daily Express


"Vivid, visceral, unforgettable. Powell's masterful storytelling plunges us into the heart of revolutionary Paris"

~ Will Barker, The Sun



Buy Link:

J.R. Powell


Originally from the UK, J.R. Powell lives in Germany, where he works as a translator and editor. His debut novel was published in 2024, marking the first instalment of a new historical thriller series.

Paoletta – an Eye for an Eye follows Paoletta Cadoville, a young woman driven by vengeance after the murder of her family during the French Revolution. Drawing inspiration from his time living in Paris, Powell immersed himself in the city’s rich and brutal history to craft a story that brings a lesser-explored period to life with the momentum and intensity of a gritty, modern thriller.

Author Links:

LinkTree • Threads  Bluesky  BookBub  Instagram





Potted History! by Apple Gidley

Today, author  Apple Gidley is dropping by to chat about her new book. Potted History! by  Apple Gidley September 3rd, 1939 - Prime Minister...