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Wartime Arrivals at Harbour House by Fenella J Miller #Review
I am delighted to be on the tour to celebrate a new series by Fenella J Miller. Wartime Arrivals at Haebour House is the first in a historical fiction series which begins in July 1939, just before the outbreak of the Second World War. It was published by Boldwood Books on November 29th.
London July 1939
Elizabeth Roby lives a content and privileged life in London
with husband Jonathon and children, Emily and George. But with the outbreak of
war, everything changes.
Jonathon informs his family that they have to move from
their smart London home to the riverside town of Wivenhoe and their new home
Harbour House, where Jonathon will do his duty for his country as part of the
Admiralty at the shipyards.
But Elizabeth is devastated. How will she start a new life
in a place she hardly knows, surrounded by strangers? And how will her children
cope allowed to run wild in the countryside with urchins? Elizabeth is sure it
will be a disaster!
But with the threat of German bombs hanging over London, she
knows they must follow Jonathan and start a new life. Even if it means disaster
for them as family.
Will the Roby family survive this turmoil? Or will Harbour
House provide them with a second chance to start again?
My Thoughts
This is a very promising start to a new series, which shows you all classes of people were evacuated from London and how they settled to their new lives – or not. I found it hard to warm to Elizabeth for most of the story, as she seemed such a brittle character who wanted life to be always on her terms. However, as the story progressed, you glimpsed how her upbringing had shaped her and how hard she found it to open up to people. In contrast, her husband, Jonathan, seemed to have the patience of a saint with her and was determined to press on with his plans to get his children to safety and to a place where they could make friends and settle. It didn’t all go as he planned.
Elizabeth and Jonathan and their family were not the only new arrivals to Wivenhoe and some newcomers turned life at Harbour House upside down. You were introduced to a variety of people, not all of them likeable and there was snobbery and superiority on show as well as a more warm, welcoming side to human nature.
Having set up the series, with the onset of the war, I look forward to what happens next on the Home Front.
In short: Major life changes for all
About the Author
Fenella J. Miller is the bestselling writer of over eighteen
historical sagas. She also has a passion for Regency romantic adventures and
has published over fifty to great acclaim. Her father was a Yorkshireman and
her mother the daughter of a Rajah. She lives in a small village in Essex with
her British Shorthair cat.
You can follow Fenella here:
Facebook | Twitter | | Instagram | Newsletter Sign Up | Bookbub
Thanks to Fenella J Miller, Boldwood Books and Rachel of Rachel’s Random Resources for a copy of the book and a place on the tour.
Check out these great bloggers!
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King George IV’s Visit to Ireland

King George IV of the United Kingdom in Coronation Robes by Thomas Lawrence – 1821 – Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Kingstown, which features in A Stark Prediction: The Fitzgeralds of Dublin Book Nine, was once known as Dunleary, but in August 1821, the newly-crowned King George IV decided to visit Ireland, becoming the first British monarch to do so since 1690 – and the first to arrive without an army.
George had planned to visit Ireland since the early days of his reign. Not even the worsening health of his estranged wife, Caroline of Brunswick, could derail his plans. The two had been at odds for years, with George attempting to divorce her for alleged infidelity and even barring her from his coronation.
Excitement grew in Dublin as word spread that George’s yacht would dock at Dunleary’s new pier on August 12th. A grand welcoming party, led by the lord lieutenant, gathered to greet him but George disembarked at the West Pier in Howth instead.

The landing of his Majesty, George the Fourth, at Holyhead, August 7th 1821 (the day of his wife’s death) by Hugh Hughes – Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
George’s voyage to Ireland had been an eventful one. He sailed to Holyhead in Wales on his yacht, Royal George, but news of Caroline’s death forced him to switch to the Lightening, a post office steamboat, to cross the Irish Sea. In the words of his friend, the secretary to the Admiralty, John Wilson Croker, ‘the King was uncommonly well during his passage and gayer than it might be proper to tell’ and ‘partook most abundantly of goose pie and whiskey’ while Lady Glengall noted that George was in fact ‘dead drunk’ and ‘could hardly stand’.

A view of his Majesty King George the Fourth Landing from the Steam Packet, on the Pier of the Harbour of Howth, on Sunday, the 12th of August, 1821. Dublin (Nassau St.) : McCleary, 1821.
Despite there being no one to officially greet him at Howth, a carriage was found, and George settled into the Viceregal Lodge in the Phoenix Park. He wore mourning attire at a private reception on August 15th and a black crepe armband for his official public entry into Dublin on the 17th and for the remainder of his visit. ‘It was not easy, I learn, to persuade him to this,’ Croker noted.

Robert Havell senior: George IV’s Public Entry into the City of Dublin on August 17th 1821 – Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
George embarked on a whirlwind tour: visiting Trinity College, the Bank of Ireland (formerly the Irish Houses of Parliament), the Albany Theatre, the Boyne battlefield, and attended receptions at Dublin Castle, a dress ball at the Rotunda, and a military review in the Phoenix Park. He also attended the races at the Curragh in Co Kildare on August 31st, joined by 120,000 spectators.

King Henry IV, William Heath – George IV and his mistress Elizabeth, Marchioness Conyngham, with the title intended to echo a well known work by Henry Fuseli – Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Rumour had it that George’s real reason for visiting Ireland was to spend time with his mistress, Elizabeth, Lady Conyngham. George spent four nights with her at Slane Castle in Co Meath where she lived with her accommodating husband Henry, whom she ensured was raised in rank from Viscount to Marquess.
On September 3rd, George visited Viscount Powerscourt in Co Wicklow and then made his way to Dunleary. There, Daniel O’Connell presented him with a laurel crown on bended knee. O’Connell and other key Catholic leaders believed that showing loyalty to the king and advocating for unity could help their cause for emancipation.
After lavish farewells, George boarded his yacht, only to face unfavourable winds, and didn’t reach home until September 15th. Following the historic visit, Dunleary was renamed Kingstown, a title it held until 1920 when it became Dun Laoghaire. In 1823, an obelisk was erected in Kingstown to commemorate the visit. Author William Makepeace Thackeray later described it as ‘a hideous Obelisk, stuck on four fat balls and surmounted with a crown on a cushion.’ It has been damaged on a number of occasions but is still standing.
© Lorna Peel
Dublin, Ireland, June 1891. The Fitzgeralds are eagerly anticipating their summer holiday when Jerry Hawley’s mother dies unexpectedly. While Will travels to London to break the news to his friend, Isobel grapples with shocking incidents at Marianne Pearson’s school, setting off a chain of events that has tragic consequences.
When Margaret Simpson’s illness emerges, it serves as a stark prediction of what lies ahead. Caring for Margaret, both now and in the future, will exact a heavy toll, emotionally and financially. Heartrending decisions loom as Mrs Dawson confronts the possibility of living where she and her ailing daughter are not welcome. Will circumstances force them to take up residence where their presence is met with hostility?
When the time came for the eulogy, Jerry walked to the lectern and gripped its sides, visibly shaking.
“My mother lived in Kingstown all her life,” he began, his voice horribly high-pitched, and he cleared his throat. “Her father was a doctor,” he continued in a normal tone, “and she married a doctor here in this church at the age of twenty-one. My father purchased number 2 Victoria Terrace for its view and because it was large enough for him to practise medicine from and raise a family. But I was their only child, and my father died aged just forty-five. Mother found herself a forty-year-old widow with an eleven-year-old son who wanted to follow his father into medicine – but how would that be possible?
“Dr Patrick Bruen took over my father’s medical practice but practised from home, which left my mother with a large house and no income. Like my father, my mother adored the view from number 2 over the Royal Harbour and Dublin Bay. Sea bathing was popular, and the railway and mail boat brought tourists into Kingstown eager to spend time at the seaside. Kingstown already had hotels and lodging houses, but my mother decided to utilise number 2 Victoria Terrace and take in paying guests.
“Providing all the comforts of home beside the sea – not just in the summer months but all year round – worked wonderfully well, and she gained many friends and admirers but did not remarry. She devoted herself to raising me and running number 2. Many guests returned year after year, and Mother did not simply gain an income for herself and me; there was enough of an income to send me to what was the Wesleyan Connexional School and then to Trinity College to study medicine. I would not be Dr Jeremiah Hawley if it were not for my mother and her resourcefulness, and I will miss her more than I can express. May she rest in peace.”
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I’ve created a map with locations which feature in The Fitzgeralds of Dublin Series. As a few locations don’t exist anymore, some are approximate but I’ve been as accurate as I can. Tap/Click in the top right hand corner to open the map.
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Cosy Nights and Snowball Fights (Little Duck Pond Cafe) by Rosie Green. – BookLoverWorm
Today I’m reviewing the latest in the Little Duck Pond Cafe series. Many thanks to Rachel’s Random Resources for having me and sending me a copy of the book to review.
The Book: As the nights draw in, gingerbread lattes and festive hot chocolates are on the menu, and the Little Duck Pond Café girls are gearing up for the cosiest time of the year. But new recruit Laurel just wishes she could sleep through the whole jolly affair! It might be October, but she’s still haunted by the events of last Christmas. Could a new start in Sunnybrook help to heal her heart?
Purchase Link
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cosy-Nights-Snowball-Fights
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CR8BNTRL
The Review: I’ve read and reviewed pretty much all of the Little Duck Pond Cafe books and they are still as supportive, heart-warming and cosy as they were in the first few books. In this one we are back in Sunnybrook and back in the cafe itself. Laurel is trying to come to terms with, and recover from, something that happened to her just before Christmas last year, and isn’t keen on being reminded of the festive season again when it feels like it’s still too soon. Laurel has been through a lot and it’s understandable she wouldn’t feel at all like celebrating. As well as Laurel’s story we have some snippets of the run up to Maddy’s wedding (which is the next book in the series) and a few new characters to meet.
I loved this book, that’s probably to be expected since I know this series well and don’t read and review what I don’t enjoy. However I felt this one was a little different. There’s a lot in it for Laurel, as I’ve said she’s been through a lot, but she doesn’t dismiss what’s happened and move on quickly, which I liked. Also her past is told at various points throughout the story which was new and I liked that it was revealed in this way. There are some fun moments in the story such as fun with snowballs as the title suggests and some other creative use of snow, which I was quite impressed by.
As I’ve said these books are cosy and heart-warming and this one was no exception. There was a lot of snow and ice in the story and while it could have felt a little chilly because of this, the cosy factor was ramped up by some of the new characters, and the multiple hot chocolates that appeared. This is actually an ideal book to read with a hot chocolate, and a blanket if you have one. While it’s not especially cold here at the time of writing this, reading this book definitely made me feel warm and snug. Another brilliant read and one that you could read without prior knowledge of the series as there’s enough character explanation that you shouldn’t feel completely lost as to what is going on.
The Author:
Rosie Green’s Little Duck Pond Cafe series of novellas is centred around life in a village cafe and most can be read as stand-alone stories. (‘The Sunshine Sisters’ is a trilogy within the Little Duck Pond Café series and it would benefit from being read in order: Aurora, Skye and Blossom.) Look out for ‘Cosy Nights & Snowball Fights’, and ‘Maddy’s Christmas Wedding’, both out later this year in time for the festive season!
Follow Rosie on Twitter – https://twitter.com/Rosie_Green88
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