Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Editorial Book Review: Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow by Kelvin Ray Oxendine



As the year moves forward and the first hints of spring begin to stir, it feels fitting to turn to a story shaped by memory, endurance, and the quiet strength of those who refused to be forgotten. Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow by Kelvin Ray Oxendine draws its power from history that still resonates today.



Some novels recount history; others restore it, lifting it from the margins and placing it firmly where it belongs. “Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow” by Kelvin Ray Oxendine does precisely that. It is not simply a story about the past; it is about the living pulse of memory — how it travels through bloodlines, settles in the bones, and waits patiently for the moment it is needed again.

From the opening pages, where Henry Berry Lowrie speaks not as a ghost but as living memory, it becomes clear that this is a story shaped by inheritance. The swamp is not merely a landscape; it is a richly layered archive, steeped in memory and alive with the echoes of generations past. The trees bear witness, and the river remembers. Through prose that is steady and reverent, Oxendine draws us into a history too often overlooked — the enduring resilience of the Lumbee people and the legacy of resistance that refuses to fade.

Yet for all its historical breadth, the emotional heart of the novel lies with Cecil Lowery. It is in Cecil’s uncertainty that the story finds its deepest resonance.

Cecil carries the burden of comparison. The legend of Henry Lowrie looms over him like the shadow of the swamp itself, and he cannot help but question whether he possesses the same fire. He does not stride into the narrative ablaze with certainty. Instead, he enters it thoughtful and measured, keenly aware that legacy is easier to inherit than to embody. That hesitation is not weakness but honesty. Cecil understands that standing up carries consequences, and that defiance is rarely romantic when one is the person required to live it.

What makes Cecil such a compelling protagonist is that his strength is not instinctive bravado, but something cultivated over time. It is gathered slowly, borrowed at first from the stories of his father and grandfather, drawn from evenings spent listening to the past spoken aloud. He absorbs courage through memory and begins to understand that he is not being asked to replicate Henry Lowrie, but simply to stand in his own moment with the same integrity.

The gold medallion he carries — passed down from Henry Lowrie himself through his great-grandmother, Grandma Polly — becomes the quiet symbol of that inheritance. It is no pristine heirloom polished for display, but a worn piece of metal that has travelled through camps and conflict, carried through seasons of unrest and uncertainty. It has known hardship. It has survived. When Polly presses it into Cecil’s palm, the gesture is not grand or ceremonial; it is intimate, almost matter-of-fact, as though such acts of guardianship are simply what families do. Once it rests against his heart, the medallion feels weighted not merely with gold, but with the gravity of history itself. In its engraved surface lies more than ornamentation; it holds continuity. It speaks of battles endured and promises kept, of a lineage that has survived attempts at erasure. As the narrative unfolds, that small piece of metal assumes a deeper resonance, and inheritance ceases to be symbolic alone, becoming immediate and present. The boundary between past and present blurs, and Cecil’s connection to those who came before him is no longer something remembered at a distance, but something felt with startling clarity. That shift is quietly powerful.

Grandma Polly’s presence, though quieter than Henry Lowrie’s legend, is no less significant. It is through her hands that inheritance becomes tangible. As the daughter of Rhoda and Henry Lowrie, and the great-grandmother of Cecil, she stands within a lineage shaped as much by steadfast women as by defiant men. Rhoda’s courage did not end with her own generation; it carried forward through Polly’s quiet guardianship of memory. These are women who have delivered life in one room while grief waited in the next, who have buried their dead and still lifted their chins when threatened. Their strength is not theatrical. It does not demand applause. It is steady, rooted, and unyielding — a knowing of who they are even when others attempt to deny it. In Polly’s stewardship of the medallion and of memory itself, that same quiet defiance endures. Through her, the novel reminds us that resistance is sustained not only by those who fight in the open, but by those who stand firm in doorways, holding history and family in equal measure.

The novel is equally compelling in its quieter revelations. One of the most devastating moments occurs not on a battlefield, nor in open confrontation, but in something far more ordinary. Young Barbara asks for an ice cream and is told there is none left. The dismissal is delivered without hesitation, as though it were fact. And yet, almost in the same breath, another child — one who does not share Barbara’s heritage — is promptly served. There is no apology, no acknowledgement of the contradiction, only the smooth continuation of a transaction that makes clear what Barbara is only just beginning to understand. It is a small scene, almost fleeting, but it lays bare the architecture of prejudice with painful clarity. The humiliation does not arrive in shouting or spectacle. It comes instead in quiet deceit — in the deliberate erasure of a child’s worth. Barbara’s dawning awareness — that she has been denied not because of scarcity but because of who she is — lingers long after the page is turned. In that restrained exchange, Oxendine captures the insidious nature of discrimination, reminding us that injustice often resides in everyday moments that attempt to pass themselves off as ordinary.

Henry Lowrie himself is rendered with both reverence and grounding. He is legend — a leader who defied injustice — but he is also a husband, father, and son. His resistance is rooted not in mythic grandeur but in devotion to his people. By humanising him, Oxendine ensures that Cecil’s inheritance feels attainable rather than impossible, and that legacy becomes less about living up to myth and more about living with conviction.

The novel’s structure, weaving between the Lowrie War of the 1860s and the confrontation at Hayes Pond in 1958, reinforces the continuity of resistance. These are not isolated rebellions separated by decades, but echoes of the same promise — that injustice will be met not with submission, but with unity. The exploration of Robeson County’s layered racial history adds further depth, illuminating a community whose identity does not conform to simplistic binaries. The Lumbee struggle for recognition — cultural, political, and human — gives the narrative a resonance that extends well beyond the page.

By the time the narrative draws towards its close, the meaning of the title feels fully realised. The shadow beneath the swamp is not darkness, but shelter — memory held close and strength revealed in its own time. What lingers most profoundly is not merely the triumph of a single night, but the understanding that identity must be guarded, tended, and carried forward with intention, from one generation to the next.

In restoring this history to the foreground, “Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow” becomes more than historical fiction; it becomes an act of remembrance. Shaped in part by the memories of the author’s late Uncle Cecil Lowry — whose voice, as acknowledged in the dedication, echoes through its pages — the novel carries an authenticity that feels both intimate and deliberate. It honours those who stood firm, those who carried memory when others would have erased it, and those who continue to walk forward with that inheritance held close. Some legacies fade. Others endure in quiet strength. This is one that endures.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
Yarde Book Promotions

Check out the blurb:

From the legendary rebellion of Henry Berry Lowrie to the courageous stand of the Lumbee and Tuscarora communities at Hayes Pond, this is the remarkable story of a people whose voices refused to be silenced. Set in 1958 Robeson County, North Carolina, "Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow" follows twenty-two-year-old Cecil Lowery, a direct descendant of the renowned Lumbee hero Henry Berry Lowrie. Drawing strength from the fiery legacy of resistance passed down through generations, Cecil faces a new threat when the Ku Klux Klan invades Indigenous territory, wielding cross burnings, intimidation, and terror. But the Klansmen, concealed by white hoods and blinded by hatred, severely underestimate what awaits them—a fiercely united community, armed not only with weapons but with a deep, unyielding pride shaped by centuries of struggle and solidarity. In vivid, authentic detail, this story captures the tension-filled moments leading up to the historic confrontation at Hayes Pond, a pivotal night that would reverberate through the Civil Rights era. Intertwining ancestral tales with the intimate, everyday battles faced by Lumbee families, "Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow" stands as a testament to resilience, cultural pride, and the unwavering promise that a community rooted firmly in their heritage will never yield. This powerful narrative brings history vividly to life, honoring the unbreakable spirit of a people determined never to bow.

For those wishing to experience this powerful story of memory, legacy, and resilience for themselves, Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow is available now in #Kindle, paperback, and hardback, and can also be read through #KindleUnlimited. Pick up your copy HERE.


Kelvin Ray Oxendine
is a proud member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, an Air Force Senior Noncommissioned Officer, and a passionate historian dedicated to preserving the stories of his people. With nearly two decades of military service and a lifelong commitment to Native American advocacy, Oxendine combines discipline, deep research, and powerful storytelling to bring Indigenous history to life.

He is the author of several acclaimed works including Beneath the Swamp’s Shadow, a gripping historical novel based on the 1958 Battle of Hayes Pond, A Lumbee Night Before Christmas, Direct Descendants of Henry Berry Lowery, and Seven Generations – Ancestors of the Present Day Lumbee, which traces Lumbee lineage through documented family histories. His writing captures both the pain and perseverance of Native communities, weaving together fact, memory, and heart.

Through Native KRO Books, Oxendine continues to educate, inspire, and empower readers of all ages to reconnect with Indigenous resilience, identity, and truth, one story at a time.





Both Sides of the Pond: My Family’s War, 1933–1946 by Barbara Kent Lawrence.



Today in the Spotlight: Both Sides of the Pond: My Family’s War, 1933–1946 by Barbara Kent Lawrence.

A powerful and deeply personal account of one family’s experience during the Second World War, this richly researched memoir follows love, loss, and courage on both sides of the Atlantic. Illustrated with photographs and documents, it brings to life the extraordinary journeys of ordinary people in remarkable times.


✓ A deeply personal Second World War memoir

✓ From Dunkirk to Burma and beyond

✓ A transatlantic story of love and duty

✓ Ordinary lives in extraordinary times

✓ Carefully researched and richly illustrated







Check out the blurb:

In January of 1939 when Barbara Greene, a beautiful
young British actress, met Joe Kennedy, Jr., son of the American Ambassador, she could not have expected that their relationship would lead to her emigrating to the United States and learning to pilot a plane. Neither could her brother, Kent, have foreseen his bitter retreat from Dunkirk when he left England in January 1940 to fight in France, or his subsequent service on the frontlines in Cornwall, North Africa, Sicily, and Burma.

In this intensively researched war story of the author’s family, we also hear the stories of other ordinary people who survived extraordinary circumstances. Richly illustrated with photographs and documents, “Both Sides of the Pond, My Family’s War: 1933 – 1946” is a captivating book.


This book is available in paperback & hardback at Amazon UK & Amazon US


Barbara Kent Lawrence



Dr. Lawrence is the author of many articles and nine books, including an award-winning dissertation about the influence of culture on aspirations in Maine. Her new book, Both Sides of the Pond, My Family’s War: 1933 - 1945, is available in book stores and on Amazon.


A former professor, she has taught courses in anthropology and sociology, research, and writing non-fiction and memoir. Lawrence grew up in New York City and Washington D.C., then earned a BA in anthropology from Bennington College, an MA in sociology from New York University, and an Ed.D. in Administration, Policy and Planning from Boston University.


In addition to teaching, Lawrence has worked for the Department of Social Services and the Housing Development Administration in New York, directed a small museum in Maine, co-run a brokerage and construction company, consulted for the Rural School and Community Trust and KnowledgeWorks, and started four non-profit organizations supporting the environment and students.


When not working she loves to garden, knit, and go for walks, pastimes she learned from her British mother. She lives in Maine and is working on the third novel in her Islands series.


LinkTree

Website

Facebook

Instagram

Amazon Author Page

Goodreads



Catherine by Essie Fox

 



Today, in the spotlight is Catherine by Essie Fox — a haunting retelling of Wuthering Heights that dares to let Catherine Earnshaw speak for herself. Rising from beyond the grave, she recounts a story of fierce love, obsession, jealousy, and choices that echo long after death. Gothic, atmospheric, and beautifully reimagined, this is a bold new take on one of literature’s most tragic romances.


✓ The greatest tragic love story — retold in Catherine’s own voice
✓ A haunting confession of obsession, madness, and undying love
✓ A bold reimagining of Wuthering Heights
✓ Passion, jealousy, and revenge on the wild Yorkshire moors
✓ A love that defies death itself
✓ Gothic atmosphere with beauty and intensity
✓ Catherine Earnshaw as you’ve never heard her before
✓ An immortal classic brought thrillingly back to life
✓ Dark romance with a fierce, untamed heroine
✓ Redemption from beyond the grave


Check out the blurb:


The greatest tragic love story ever told – but this
time, Catherine tells it herself. In Catherine, Essie Fox breathes new life into Wuthering Heights, transforming a gothic

masterpiece into a haunting confession of obsession, madness and love that even death cannot end.


With a nature as wild as the moors she loves to roam, Catherine Earnshaw grows up alongside Heathcliff, a foundling her father rescued from the streets of Liverpool. Their fierce, untamed bond deepens as they grow – until Mr Earnshaw’s death leaves Hindley, Catherine’s brutal brother, in control and Heathcliff reduced to servitude.

Desperate to protect him, Catherine turns to Edgar Linton, the handsome heir to Thrushcross Grange. She believes his wealth might free Heathcliff from cruelty – but her choice is fatally misunderstood, and their lives spiral into a storm of passion, jealousy and revenge.

Now, eighteen years later, Catherine rises from her grave to tell her story – and seek redemption.

Essie Fox’s Catherine reimagines Wuthering Heights with beauty and intensity – a haunting, atmospheric retelling that brings new life to a timeless classic and lays bare the dark heart of an immortal love.


This book is available in ebook, paperback, hardback, and audiobook. You can find your copy HERE.



Essie Fox was raised in Herefordshire, on the borders of Wales. After studying English Literature at Sheffield University she worked in magazine and book publishing, before developing a career in commercial illustration. 

Always an avid reader, Essie now writes gothic novels. Her debut, The Somnambulist, was shortlisted for the 2012 National Book Awards, and featured on Channel 4’s TV Book Club. This was followed by Elijah's Mermaid, and then The Goddess and the Thief. The Last Days of Leda Grey was selected as The Times Historical Book of the Month.The Fascination became an instant Sunday Times bestseller.

Coming in April 2025 is Dangerous - a dark mystery set in Venice and based on the life of Lord Byron. 

Essie has been a guest on UK radio stations, including Woman's Hour. She has lectured at the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the National Gallery in London, as well as appearing at many literary festivals and events.





Tuesday, 3 March 2026

West of Santillane by Brook Allen

 


I am delighted to be hosting West of Santillane by Brook Allen as part of The Coffee Pot Book Club tour. Set against the untamed backdrop of early nineteenth-century America, this richly detailed historical novel follows Julia Hancock as she navigates love, conscience, and courage in a rapidly changing world. With a determined heroine and a sweeping frontier setting, West of Santillane promises a compelling story of conviction, romance, and resilience.


✓ Inspired by the world of Lewis & Clark
✓ A courageous heroine ahead of her time
✓ Forbidden convictions. Dangerous secrets.
✓ Love tested by politics and slavery
✓ A marriage strained by hidden truths
✓ Set in early American frontier St. Louis
✓ A woman fighting injustice in a man’s world
✓ Historical romance with depth and heart



Desperate to escape a mundane future as a Virginia
planter’s wife, Julia Hancock seizes her chance for adventure when she wins the heart of American hero William Clark. Though her husband is the famed explorer, Julia embarks on her own thrilling and perilous journey of self-discovery.

With her gaze ever westward, Julia possesses a hunger for knowledge and a passion for helping others. She falls in love with Will’s strength and generous manner, but, like her parents, he is a slave owner, and Julia harbors strong opinions against slavery. Still, her love for Will wins out, though he remains unaware of her beliefs.

Julia finds St. Louis to be a rough town with few of the luxuries to which she is accustomed, harboring scandalous politicians and miscreants of all types. As her husband and his best friend, Meriwether Lewis, work to establish an American government and plan to publish their highly anticipated memoirs, Julia struggles to assume the roles of both wife and mother. She is also drawn into the plight of an Indian family desperate to return to their own lands and becomes an advocate for Will’s enslaved.

When political rivals cause trouble, Julia’s clandestine aid to the Indians and enslaved of St. Louis draws unwanted attention, placing her at odds with her husband. Danger cloaks itself in far too many ways, leading her to embrace the courage to save herself and others through a challenge of forgiveness that will either restore the love she shares with Will or end it forever.


Excerpt


Christmas passed with no sign of Will, and for me there was a saturating profusion of whens.

When would he arrive? When would the wedding be? When would we depart for St. Louis?

For nearly all of December, I listened for riders approaching the house. Whenever I heard hoofbeats, I ran to the window. When that happened on a blustery, chilly late afternoon, I set Master Shakespeare aside, scrambling to the window and wiping frost from the pane.

Not him. Not yet.

Instead, it was an armed soldier with a padlocked saddlebag, making me wonder what sort of official business he had at Santillane. By the time I reached the front door, he had dismounted and was busy unlocking the bag, drawing out a small parcel, neatly wrapped. 

While I swung open the front door, Mama was calling for Megg to warm some tea on the stove for the traveler. 

“Greetings, miss,” the young man said. “I’m looking for Miss Julia Hancock.”

My heart thudded. “I’m Miss Hancock.”

“Miss Hancock, I’ve ridden from Washington City to convey warmest regards from President Jefferson,” he announced, climbing the stairs. “This here is a wedding gift from the president himself.” 

He presented the parcel, and I accepted. Utterly astonished, I wandered into the library’s privacy with it.

“Please,” Mama invited, bustling to the entrance toward the soldier. “It’s freezing outside. Do go around the side of the house to the kitchen. We’ve warmed some tea for you, and my woman Megg will see you’re given a hot meal before you continue on.”

“Many thanks, ma’am. That’s greatly appreciated.”

Once she’d shut the door, Mama came up behind me, where I was admiring the packaged gift. “What is it?” she asked, insistently peering over my shoulder.

“I don’t know—”

“Well, open it, child!”

I peeled away the outer layer of wrapping carefully to find a smoothly sanded and polished flat-latched box of walnut with a crisp note of official presidential stationery attached. 

“Oh, Julia, he’s written you a private note.”

Blinking at my own disbelief, I lifted the folded stationery, feeling the raised print under my fingertips. It was engraved with the presidential seal and Jefferson’s name. Beneath was his message—the author of our Declaration of Independence had written me in his own bold script: 

My dearest Miss Hancock,

I’m sure there are hardly words to express the delight and happiness you must feel as you celebrate the advent of your marriage. If William Clark has chosen you as his bride, then I can only assume what an upright and purposeful woman you must be. Therefore, I beg you to accept this small gift, representing the sentiments I hold, not only of your worthy person, but of Clark’s esteemed service and character—all of which I hold dear. May your days together be many and full of joy.

I am indeed in your service and in the service of our beloved country,

Th. Jefferson, President of the United States

“Oh, Julia—open it!” Mama fussed again.

In disbelief, I set the note aside upon one of our library tables. Using my finger, I slid the box’s delicate brass latch up to the right. The lid released, and I opened it the rest of the way, gasping. Beneath a protective flap of emerald satin was a magnificent brooch of carnelian and gold, and on either side were displayed matching earrings. They were exquisite, and not even my parents had ever gifted me with such extravagance. 

I stared at Mama, shaking my head, stunned. “How can I accept this? It’s far too rich for me.”

Ever so gently, she placed her hands upon my face and whispered, “Daughter, you are marrying into greatness, and even our president recognizes that fact. You will accept it with humility, with dignity, and wear these baubles in St. Louis with pride, where people will be amazed that the president sends you such.”

I was humbled. 

What an incredible time this was—a year full of newness, a year of firsts. 

Like receiving gifts from the president.


Praise


'"West of Santillane" is not just an account of historical events but also a story of love, resilience, and self-discovery. Brook Allen successfully blends romantic, historical, and adventurous elements, offering readers a captivating and memorable reading experience. The book is a warm recommendation for those who appreciate well-documented historical fiction and engaging life narratives.'

The Historical Fiction Company


'Brook Allen’s novel West of Santillane is guaranteed to tug at your heartstrings, so have some tissues nearby. This book is so captivating that it begs to be adapted into a movie. Seeing these characters brought to life on the big screen would be amazing. This book will definitely be remembered as one of my favourite reads of the year.'

The Coffee Pot Book Club


'West of Santillane by Brook Allen is a novel that will evoke strong emotions, so make sure you have tissues nearby. While there are moments of horror and intense passion, this story also explores life in Louisiana during this era and has breathed new life into Julia Hancock Clark. Once you have read it, this story will stay with you forever.'

Yarde Book Promotions


Ready to discover Julia’s story? West of Santillane is available now in #Kindle and paperback formats, and can be read free with #KindleUnlimited. Pick up your copy HERE.


Author Brook Allen has a passion for history. Her newest project, West of Santillane, spotlights history from a little closer to home in Botetourt County, Virginia. It’s the story of Julia Hancock, who married famed explorer, William Clark. Each character of this thrilling, adventurous period was researched throughout southwest Virginia and into Kentucky, Missouri, Montana, Idaho, and North Dakota. It launched in March of 2024.

Brook belongs to the Historical Novel Society and attends conferences as often as possible to study craft and meet fellow authors. In 2019, her novel Antonius: Son of Rome won a silver medal in the international Reader’s Favorite Book Reviewers Book Awards, then won First Place in the prestigious Chaucer Division in the Chanticleer International Book Awards, 2020. West of Santillane garnered international attention in Summer 2025 by becoming a Silver Medalist in the Independent Publishing Book Awards for best Mid-Atlantic Fiction. Also, it was a finalist for the Virginia Romance Writers Holt Medallion. Most recently, Brook appeared in Season 8 of Blueridge PBS’s WRITE AROUND THE CORNER.

Though she graduated from Asbury University with a B.A. in Music Education, Brook has always loved writing. She completed a Masters program at Hollins University with an emphasis in Ancient Roman studies, which helped prepare her for authoring her award-winning Antonius Trilogy.

Brook recently retired from public education and her personal interests include travel, cycling, hiking in the woods, reading, and spending downtime with her husband and big, black dog, Jak. She lives in the heart of southwest Virginia in the scenic Blue Ridge Mountains.




The Blood of Others by Charity Eleson

 


Today, in the spotlight is The Blood of Others — a haunting historical novel set against the true events of the 1857 Mountain Meadows Massacre.


✓ Inspired by real events that changed the American West

✓ A hidden truth buried beneath Mountain Meadows

✓ A boy forced to choose between survival and conscience

✓ A community bound together by silence

✓ History, loyalty, and the cost of belonging

✓ A coming-of-age story set against a devastating massacre

✓ Secrets that could cost everything


Check out the blurb:

On September 11, 1857, nearly 140 unarmed men,
women and children are slaughtered in Mountain Meadows, Utah. Those killed were part of the Fancher wagon train on its way from Arkansas to California. They had stopped in Mountain Meadows to rest their animals before the final trek over the Mojave Desert. After the massacre, Mormon families living and farming in the region rapidly coalesce around a story perpetuated by church leaders that a clan of Paiutes in the region is responsible for the murders. But, Malachi—a 15-year-old Shoshone boy bought and owned by a local Mormon farmer—knows the truth of what happened and realizes he can never reveal it if he wishes to live. Concealing that truth becomes increasingly difficult as events spin beyond his control, endangering him and those he loves. He is pushed to the breaking point when his two friends, a Paiute boy and a Mormon girl, imperil their own lives by trying to help him. It is then that he discovers strength he did not believe he had. The Blood of Others is set against the backdrop of true events. It explores the fatal compromises humans make to be accepted, and the courage that the power of love bestows.


The Blood of Others is available in both #Kindle and paperback. You can pick up your copy HERE.


Charity Eleson lives with her husband in the country just outside of Madison, Wisconsin. She is the author of Blessing's Key, Volume I of The Silver Thread Trilogy and Wayward Home. Wayward Home was awarded the Edna Ferber Fiction Book Honorable Mention in 2024. She is currently at work on completing the second and third novels in The Silver Thread Trilogy. When she is not writing, she spends much of her time outside gardening, hiking and enjoying the wonders of the earth. 


Monday, 2 March 2026

Editorial Book Review: A Woman Scorned by Marcia Clayton



As we step into March and leave the long shadows of winter behind, it feels fitting to begin the month with a story shaped by consequence, endurance, and quiet resilience. The Hartford Manor saga by Marcia Clayton has never shied away from exploring the complexities of family, pride, and power, and this latest instalment carries those themes forward with renewed intensity.



Grief has a way of reshaping a household, and within the imposing walls of Grantley Manor, it breeds something far darker than sorrow. With the death of Sir Edgar Grantley, the fragile balance that once existed between duty, resentment, and quiet endurance is shattered. For Lady Lilliana Grantley, widowhood does not bring grief — it brings opportunity.

In "A Woman Scorned", the fifth instalment in the Hartford Manor series, Marcia Clayton continues the narrative thread begun in "Millie’s Escape", drawing the reader once more into the complex and ever-expanding world of the Carter family. As with the previous volumes, this is not a story that begins anew; it deepens the tensions and grievances that have long simmered beneath the surface.

Lady Lilliana is consumed by bitterness. Years of living in a loveless marriage, overshadowed by Sir Edgar’s enduring attachment to Rosemary Gibbs, have left her pride wounded beyond repair. Though she sought independence through her own affairs, she remained unable to produce an heir, while her husband fathered children outside their marriage. That injustice, in her mind, is unforgivable. Now, with Sir Edgar gone, she is no longer restrained by appearances or obligation. Grievance hardens into resolve, and her attention turns with chilling clarity toward the destruction of the Gibbs family.

Clayton does not soften Lilliana’s cruelty, nor does she attempt to redeem her. Instead, she presents a woman ruled by vengeance and long-held resentment. While the reader may understand the roots of her anger, they cannot condone her actions. There is no gentleness in her pursuit of retribution, only a calculated determination to settle old scores.

In stark contrast stands the Carter family of Hartford. Once again, the reader is welcomed into a household defined not by wealth, but by loyalty and steadfast love. Betsey and Ned Carter offer stability in a world increasingly shaped by upheaval. Their modest home provides sanctuary to Millicent (Millie) and Jonathan, whose journey has already tested them beyond their years.

Millie continues to shine as one of the series’ most compelling young heroines. Though burdened by loss and uncertainty, she remains resolute. Her developing relationship with Willie Carter unfolds with quiet tenderness — a secret smile exchanged, a hand held a little longer than necessary. Their romance is gentle, hopeful, and profoundly emotional.

The lingering uncertainty surrounding Emily Gibbs — Millie’s grandmother — casts a long shadow over the narrative. Her absence deepens Millie’s vulnerability and intensifies the stakes. As Lady Lilliana moves with purpose against the Gibbs family, the sense of danger grows steadily rather than explosively. Clayton resists sensationalism. Instead, she allows tension to simmer, reminding the reader that cruelty often advances quietly and methodically.

Yet the novel is not without moments of relief. When Lord Robert Fellwood hears Millie’s story, there is a palpable shift in tone. For the first time, she is no longer standing alone against Lady Lilliana’s hostility. His willingness to listen — and to act — introduces a quiet but powerful sense of hope. In a narrative shaped by pride and retribution, this emerging support reassures the reader that Millie is no longer battling forces far greater than herself without allies.

Equally poignant is the closing image of Lady Eleanor Fellwood, watching from an upstairs window as Danny — the son she bore but did not raise — runs freely with the other children. It is a quiet yet devastating moment. Once unable to accept him because of his deformities, she now stands apart, a silent observer of the life she relinquished. Clayton captures the ache of consequence in a single reflective scene, allowing regret and unspoken emotion to linger without the need for dramatic confrontation.

The Hartford Manor series has always excelled in its portrayal of class and consequence, and this volume is no exception. Clayton once again captures the stark divide between privilege and poverty, revealing both kindness and cruelty across all levels of society. Yet it is within Hartford — among those who have known hardship — that compassion thrives most visibly.

As with the previous instalment, "A Woman Scorned" does not function as a standalone novel. The cast is extensive, and the emotional weight of the story depends upon familiarity with earlier volumes. Readers who have followed the saga from the beginning will find this continuation deeply rewarding, as long-standing conflicts evolve and relationships shift under mounting pressure.

Marcia Clayton once again demonstrates her ability to blend intimate domestic drama with broader social commentary. Themes of pride, inheritance, legitimacy, and power are woven seamlessly into the narrative, shaping both motive and consequence.

If you are already invested in the Hartford Manor saga, this fifth instalment will not disappoint. It delivers tension, moral complexity, and the continued evolution of characters who feel increasingly real with each passing volume. For readers who cherish sweeping family sagas set against a vividly realised historical backdrop, "A Woman Scorned" is a compelling and worthy continuation of this beautifully written series.

Review by Mary Anne Yarde
Yarde Book Reviews & Book Promotion

Check out the blurb:

1886 North Devon, England

Lady Lilliana Grantley has been seriously ill with typhoid, a disease that recently claimed her husband Edgar’s life and that of his long-time lover, Rosemary Gibbs. Now recovering at last, the lady wastes no tears on her husband but is determined to wreak revenge on his two illegitimate children.

Embarrassed for years by his affair with Rosemary, a childhood sweetheart living nearby, she has falsely accused Sir Edgar’s daughter, Millicent, of the theft of a precious brooch and wants to see her jailed or hung.

Fortunately for Millie and her little brother, Jonathan, their granny, Emily, insisted they leave home as soon as she heard of Sir Edgar’s death, for she knew his widow would seek revenge. The old lady was soon proved right, and Lady Lilliana, furious the two youngsters were nowhere to be found, evicted the old woman despite the fact she, too, was dangerously ill.

After a long and hazardous journey to North Devon, Millie and Jonathan were united with some long-lost family members who made them welcome and gave them a home. However, aware that Lady Lilliana has put a price on Millie’s head, they know they are not yet out of danger. Despite this, they are determined to find their granny, Emily, who seems to have disappeared.

Aided by her long-time lover, Sir Clive Robinson, Lady Lilliana is determined to find Millie and Jonnie and get them out of her life once and for all, but how far will the embittered woman go?

A Woman Scorned (Hartford Manor Book 5) by Marcia Clayton is available to purchase HERE.


A farmer’s daughter, Marcia Clayton, was born in North Devon, a rural and picturesque area in the far South West of England. When she left school, Marcia worked in a bank for several years until she married her husband, Bryan, and then stayed at home for a few years to care for her three sons, Stuart, Paul, and David. 

As the children grew older, Marcia worked as a Marie Curie nurse caring for the terminally ill and later for the local authority managing school transport. Now a grandmother, Marcia enjoys spending time with her family and friends. She is a keen researcher of family history, and this hobby inspired some of the characters in her books. Marcia and Bryan are keen gardeners and grow many of their own vegetables. 

An avid reader, Marcia can often be found with her nose in a book when she should be doing something else! Her favourite genres are historical fiction, romance, and crime books. Marcia has written five books in the historical family saga, “The Hartford Manor Series”, and is working on the sixth. Besides writing books, Marcia produces blogs to share with her readers in a monthly newsletter.