KINDLE PROMO ready for Mother’s Day this Sunday for only £1.99/$1.99. So why not treat your mum or yourself?
It’s available from Amazon in eBook, Paperback, and stunning Hardcover, as well as a beautifully atmospheric Audiobook from Audible.
REMEMBER TO LOVE ME is a best-selling gothic romance of ghosts and reincarnation. A modern and Victorian timeslip love story of family secrets, loss, grief, and new beginnings, all set against a rural Suffolk and Norfolk landscape.
It has… Ghosts ~ Family Secrets ~ Loss & Greif ~ Romance ~ Victorian & Modern ~ Reincarnation
‘Captivating’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ ‘Emotional and heartbreaking’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ ‘A rich tapestry of emotions’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Christmas and ghosts go hand in hand. The tradition of sharing tales of spooks and spectres during midwinter goes way back. With the Victorian fascination for spiritualism, Dickens’ A Christmas Carol and the brilliant M.R James ghost stories have become part of our culture. Even some scaredy-cats enjoy the hint of haunting this time of year.
So, are you looking for a Ghost Story to chill your bones? A Haunting to make you check under your bed? Or maybe something Festive and Romantic? Why not try one of mine?
Available in Kindle, Paperback, Hardcover & Audiobook where applicable.
I’m proud to announce the new Audiobook of Remember to Love Me is now available just in time for the festive season. This Best Selling romantic ghost story is set in 1900 and modern-day. It’s a tale of ghosts, family secrets and reincarnation. The audiobook is narrated by the wonderful actress Joanna Swan.
When death comes suddenly, and grief sits thick, secrets hide, and ghosts remain.
After moving back to her ancestral home with her parents, April finds more than just her beloved grandmother waiting for her. For more than a century, the rural Suffolk house has been waiting, guarding its secrets.
Discovering a lost photograph of a mysterious young woman, fate draws April deep into her family’s history and the life of her great-great-grandmother, Annabelle.
Through visions, dreams, and Annabelle’s diary, April finds grief, secrets and family loyalties that stretch beyond even love’s limits.
Piecing together memories and her connection to the past, April must unfold the mystery of her family legacy and lay the ghosts to rest.
A little Christmas gift from me to you, wishing you all the Merry Christmas. A festive ghost story.
Remember to Love Me, Kindle edition is on sale at only 99p/99c – Who doesn’t love a book sale!
Offer runs from Friday 14th – Sunday 16th. Available worldwide fromAmazon.co.ukandAmazon.com
Remember to Love Me
1900 – Annabelle yearns for nothing more than motherhood and her duty to provide an heir to devoted husband Richard Hardwick, successor to a wealthy family fortune. Her younger sister Emily, engaged to Lance Corporal James Wright, imagines only wedded bliss, but as darkness falls in the shape of War, James is deployed to South Africa, leaving her alone with an uncertain future. As melancholy festers, Emily escapes taking solace by the sea. As the distance stretches between the sisters, so too does the life-thread of family.
1997 – As her 21st birthday approaches, April reluctantly moves closer to her Grandmother Sarah, to her mother’s childhood home of Bury St Edmunds, in the heart of the Suffolk countryside. As she struggling to adjust, pining for her seaside upbringing, she takes solace in the bond she shares with her grandmother. In a visit to the attic one December afternoon, she discovers more than just dusty tea chests and old suitcases. She encounters an ancestor that has remained, a ghostly apparition whispering secrets in the shadows.
Confronted with visions and dreams; memories of a lost time, grave secrets, sisterly love, romance and family loyalties that stretch beyond even love’s limits. April is thrown into turmoil, living moments in two eras, experiencing love and loss in both. Piecing together snippets of another life, giving peace back to the house and laying ghosts to rest; she unfolds the mystery of her family’s Supernatural legacy.
“A brilliant novel full of romance and heartbreak, that pulls tight at your heartstrings and ensnares you with magical prose and lyrical beauty.”★★★★★
“A delicious, sensitive story that brought tears to my eyes, and wanting more!”★★★★★
“Wright came to the literary world with a wonderful book, that I could honestly read again… and again!” ★★★★★
“I just couldn’t stop thinking about this book when I wasn’t reading it. When I was reading it, I couldn’t put it down.” ★★★★★
Remember to Love Me by Becky Wright, available worldwide from Amazon.
Hey, how are you? Good to see you back. Sit, sit, pull up a chair. Here *offers steaming mug* coffee’s ready.
So, I have a question for you. Have you ever pondered on the quirksome parallels between a delicious dish and a really good book?
No? Oh, just me then…?
Well, I am married to a Chef, a damn fine one too *swells with pride* It’s quite usual for us to while away long evenings in deep conversation, talking food, constructing dishes, especially if he’s writing a new menu, and likewise, books. It’s become quite apparent over the years, that writing is much like cooking. Our personalities are very similar, our creative brains work in much the same way.
My hubby has often said, “some great dishes start with an onion,” (of course, if its a dessert, maybe sugar, but let’s not get into the depths of pastry as that’s his forte, not mine. Though I make a mean bread pudding – Oh, I feel a foodie blog on the horizon.) *inspiration strikes* I digress. It happens. But let’s get back to those onions. When it comes to creating something to delight and digest, writing a book can be much the same as creating a dish.
Can choosing the right onion make or break a story? Perhaps. Let’s take that onion. A writer will peel it, layer after layer getting to the root of the plot until it’s ready, giving the story a well-seasoned, perfectly cooked base to add further ingredients – believable characters, realistic dialogue, atmospheric location. To be topped with the perfect garnish – a plot twist. Then serve it up on a well-chosen plate, the book cover. Voilà, bon appétit
I’ve spoken to many fellow writers over the years, and their ‘onion’ can vary greatly. Inspiration can come from anywhere, an overheard conversation, a location, a memory, a dream. All that’s needed to ignite that tiny spark, providing that starting point for the journey, taking it down a long winding path. Whether a cosy mystery with a variety of curious characters weaving the mystery plot among them or a 1940’s fast-paced, action-packed noir crime thriller, all their creators start with a base. This varying creative process is what makes writing so personal, so unique. Each writer works with their own personal method and style, in turn, allowing their individual voice to be heard, filling bookshelves with a diverse range of books.
So, this had me thinking, what’s my onion?
For me, it’s emotion, no matter what genre I’m writing. I am by nature an emotional soul, wearing my heart on my sleeve. What you see if what you get, as they say, *blushes*
My debut novel, Remember to Love Me, has a far gentler romantic taste than my later works, nevertheless, beneath the instant romantic essence, the emotions are darker, deep-rooted – need, desperation and grief. Again, with The Manningtree Account, and later with the extended edition, Daughters of the Oak, it’s the deep-seated character’s emotions that drive the story – fear, loathing, revenge. Without these emotions giving the characters dimension, drive and purpose, as plot-lead stories they could have easily wound-up bland and more ‘historical docudrama’ than fiction.
Is it the same for a reader?
I think so. Though most of us will read a spectrum of genres, it’s probable that most of us have our favourite go-to genre, maybe even a couple depending on our mood. That feast to nourishes our appetite, knowing it will satisfy, yet leaving us hungry for more. Our ‘comfort food’ books. Perhaps a favourite author with an ability to tantalise our taste buds, a writer who really ‘knows their onions’, presenting us with a perfectly ‘cooked’ book.
So, while you finish your coffee *takes a long sip*, I leave you to ponder, what’s your onion?