Showing posts with label Domestic Abuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Domestic Abuse. Show all posts

Monday, May 29, 2017

Diane Noble @dianeanoble1 Author of Oppression #Adventure #Egypt #Kidnapping




Welcome Dianne A. Noble. Instead of our usual interview, Dianne talks about her books…

OPPRESSION

The first time I saw Egypt I was seven years old and sitting on the deck of the troopship Dunera with my head buried in Enid Blyton’s Ring-o-Bells Mystery. I looked up when we docked in Port Said to see the gully-gully man. He was an Egyptian magician who fascinated everyone, young and old alike, and accentuated the other world atmosphere of this exotic country. As we sailed down the Suez Canal—much narrower than expected—Lawrence of Arabia figures seated on camels appeared on the desert banks. I can truly say Egypt was the first place interesting enough to get my head out of a book.

Three years later, in December 1957, the Canal had been closed, and we flew back from Singapore in an RAF Hermes plane. The journey took almost three days, stopping in several countries to re-fuel and de-ice the wings. This time there were no hot and vibrant sights and I didn’t see Egypt again until I reached my early forties, when I travelled by train from Cairo to Aswan, glued to the windows as we passed by villages which looked like they’d come straight from the pages of the Bible. My lifelong love affair with Egypt had begun, and I’ve been back many times. The last time, I visited the City of the Dead in Cairo, a necropolis which features in Oppression and houses many poor people.

This novel is the story of Beth who prevents the abduction of a young girl in a North Yorkshire town, but is powerless to stop her subsequent forced marriage. In time to come Beth travels to Egypt to search for the girl, Layla, and finds her living in the City of the Dead. Oppression is the tale of two very different women, both of whom are oppressed in their lives, and how they triumph despite the odds.

Outcast and A Hundred Hands

Ten years ago I volunteered to spend a winter teaching English to street children in Kolkata, formerly Calcutta, in India. While there I realised what it is I love about the country—it’s the people. Despite great deprivation they laugh and are joyful. This time in Kolkata proved to be the hardest thing I have ever done. Broken, crumbling buildings sit amid lakes of raw sewage; filthy children encrusted with sores are homeless; families live on a patch of pavement so narrow they take it in turns to lie down. They give birth—and die—there. Yet their indomitable spirit shines through.

I feared I couldn’t do it, felt my resolve dying daily amid the horrors and hardship, but I started writing a journal and it saved me. Every night, no matter how dirty and exhausted I felt, I recorded one child’s progress with the alphabet, another’s disappearance, how many times I’d been hugged. It was a form of de-briefing but also cathartic. It got me through and these diaries formed the basis for A Hundred Hands and Outcast.

India remains my favourite place in the world, and I re-visit whenever I can afford it. I have often thought about living there and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel rekindled that desire!

OPPRESSION

The Plot:

When she tries preventing the abduction and forced marriage of 16-year-old Layla, Beth defies her controlling husband, Duncan, and travels to Cairo where she finds the girl now lives in the vast necropolis known as The City of the Dead. She’s hiding from her abusive husband, and incites fellow Muslim women to rebel against the oppression under which they live. Beth identifies with this and helps her.

Cairo is in a state of political unrest, and Beth gets caught up in one of the many protests. She’s rescued by Harry, who splits his working life between Egypt and England, and they fall in love. When Harry returns home and Layla vanishes, someone stalks Beth, and threatens her with violence. And then Duncan turns up...

Excerpt

She woke in a fretful tangle of sheets, head thumping, hair plastered to her head, wet night shirt moulded to her body. Where am I? Her gaze moved from the window to the puddle of discarded clothing and she remembered. Of course. Egypt. Leaning over the side of the bed to retrieve her slippers, she held them at arm’s length and shook them, then pulled them on and got out of bed.

Sitting on the toilet with her feet in the air, she kept a watchful eye on the floor tiles but there were no more insects to be seen.

The shower worked first time. Maybe they turned the supply off at night because of water shortages. She let it run over her, washing away the stale perspiration and dirt, rubbed shampoo into her hair, rinsed it out and stood longer. How wonderful to be clean again. With a sigh of pleasure she eventually turned off the water and looked round for the towels. There were none. She sighed. Looked like nothing was going to be simple. She dripped her way into the bedroom and dried herself on a couple of T-shirts.

By the time she’d dressed, sweat again bubbled out of every pore. Looked like she’d have to learn to live with the noisy A/C as well as permanent electric light. Her clothes smelt of mothballs after a night in the wardrobe. Pity they didn’t work for cockroaches. She looked in the small mirror over the basin and ran a comb through her hair. The lump on her temple had receded leaving a swirl of purple and yellow.

Right, almost ready for breakfast. Her stomach rumbled in agreement as she walked to the window. The shutters were stiff, the catch rusty, reluctant. Perhaps they weren’t meant to be opened, but kept closed against the sun. With a small explosion of dust and rust flakes, she pushed them free and felt heat on her face, smelt donkey dung as she looked down on the heads of a hundred people milling round, women in headscarves, men bareheaded, black hair gleaming in the sun.

She craned her neck to see small wooden shop fronts looking like cabinets with shelves. The noise was ferocious: people shouting, donkeys braying, a motorbike backfiring. Across the alley, on the roof of a narrow ochre-coloured building a woman pegged out washing, her small child playing perilously close to the unguarded edge. Beth’s arms prickled with heat as she watched, until a triumphant bluebottle shot through a hole in the insect mesh and she quickly pulled the shutters closed, remembering just how many flies there were in Egypt. She’d have to buy a swat today.

Fastening on her wristwatch, she checked the time. Ten to nine. She hoped that she wouldn’t be too late for breakfast. It was going on for seven o’clock at home and she was glad not to be there. Instead she was happy to be starting out on her first day in Cairo.

Contact Dianne At:

Twitter: @dianneanoble1







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Monday, January 02, 2017

Trace from "Once & Forever" by M.S. Kaye



It’s rather—interesting—hosting Trace from Once & Forever by M.S. Kaye here. I don’t think I’ve ever hosted a convicted murderer who wasn’t eager to proclaim his innocence and talk all about it. But, well…

RW:        What’s your story/back story? Why would someone come up with a story about you?

T:           I reckon no one would be real interested in my side of the story, why I served prison time for murder. And I don’t much want ta talk about it anyway.

RW:        Can you tell us about your heroine

T:           I certainly can’t call her “my” heroine; it’s not right for me to want her like I do. She’s been through hell, and she’s still somehow the gentlest person I’ve ever known. But she doesn’t take any shit either.

RW:        Where do you live?

T:         Southern Georgia, hick town in the middle o’ nowhere.

RW:       During what time period does your story take place?

A.                              Current.

RW:        How are you coping with the conflict in your life?

T:           Work my ass off in the fields and try my best not ta kill the Beaufort brothers. Yet to be seen if I’m gonna succeed with tha’.


RW:        What’s is your secret guilty pleasure?

T:         I watch Eden. I stay away, but when I watch her walkin’ down the street, I feel better. Even in her nun’s habit, she’s the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen.

RW:        If you came with a warning label, what would it say?

T:           Back the fuck off.

RW:        Satin sheets or Egyptian cotton?

T:           Really don’t care.

RW:        Party life or quiet dinner for two?

T:           Solitary dinner of Ramen noodles.

RW:        You’d never be able to tell, but…

T:           I have a Masters’ Degree in American History.

RW:      Those are all the questions I have for you today, Trace. Thanks so much for visiting my blog.


M.S. KAYE

M.S. Kaye has several published books under her black belt. A transplant from Ohio, she resides with her husband Corey in Jacksonville, Florida, where she tries not to melt in the sun. Find suspense and the unusual at www.BooksByMSK.com.
To receive news on upcoming releases, sign up for email updates on her website.
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ONCE & FOREVER

The Plot:

Who is the mysterious Santa who leaves toys on the convent steps?

After a twelve-year separation, Eden is finally reunited with her brother, Thomas, but why hadn’t she reached out to him in all those years? Eden, a nun, is constantly struggling against her dark past of living on the streets, and her attraction to Trace, an ex-convict farm worker. As Eden and Trace confess their pasts to each other and grow closer, how will they be able to resist getting too close?

Excerpt:

“You know what he did to git sent to prison?” one of the convenience store clerks murmured to the other.
Trace could just hear them over the horrible rendition of “Jingle Bells” playin’ through the speakers. He ignored them, like he always did. He tried to come into town late in the evening to avoid people as much as possible, but that also meant it was quiet enough that he could often hear what people murmured about him. Once he’d grabbed some protein bars and a can of beer, he headed up to the counter to pay.
The clerk with a buzz-cut told him the total, and Trace handed him some cash.
Neither of the clerks made eye contact with him, but they both hovered over the cash register as if he might snatch it and run.
Buzz-cut closed the cash drawer right quick and handed Trace’s change back.
“Thank you.” Trace stuffed the change in his pocket, took the bag of protein bars in one hand and his beer in the other, and walked out of the store.
He headed for the back lot toward the alley. He could get through most of downtown by way of the alley. This late at night it was almost too dark to see where he was goin’, but that was part of what he liked about it.
“Bitch,” someone growled. And then the sound of something—or someone—smacking into the brick wall of the back of the convenience store.
Trace moved more quickly and turned the corner, and he caught sight of a skinny, young woman punching a man in the face. His head snapped back. But then another man slammed his fist across her jaw. She looked so frail that the punch seemed like shooting a cannon ball at a piece of notebook paper.
“Hey!” Trace roared and ran at them. “Git away from her.”


Contacts:

Author Website:  www.BooksByMSK.com
Facebook:  Facebook
Twitter:  Twitter
Amazon Page:  Amazon

Buy Links:

Amazon:  Amazon
BN:  Barnes&Noble 
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