Indie Champion 2023

It was with some trepidation that I set out for London and the Romantic Novelists’ Association’s Industry Awards on the 13th of November which were being held at the the Leonardo Royal Hotel London City. Having been shortlisted for the Indie Champion of the Year Award, twice, I wondered if 2023 would be my year.

Dear Reader, I’m please to say it was.

Accompanied by Adrienne Vaughan (who came up with the idea of the RNA Industry Awards when she was editor of Romance Matters ) we soon arrived in London. St Pancras had a wonderfully appropriate Christmas display waiting for us and Adrienne and I felt right at home among all the books.


Upon arrival, photographs were taken in the ‘green room’ where a glass of nerve-calming prosecco was on hand. After that, we headed for the dining room for the ceremony. It looked fabulous, all the tables laid out with white napery, candles and complimentary bottles of wine and water. The Leonardo staff brought round an array of canapes – which I was too nervous to eat – and we settled down for the ceremony itself. Nervously clutching my pre-prepared acceptance speech, I waited for my category – Indie Champion 2023 to be called.

Thanks to everyone who has nominated or voted for me in this category. The RNA has been fundamental to my achieving the goal of becoming a published author.  As a former teacher it’s second nature to help and inspire others and, since joining the RNA in 2006, I’ve striven to give something back. Not only to help indie authors write the best book they can, but to champion and encourage others to keep going; even when the going gets tough. To this end I formed the Belmont Belles and Beaux which now has over sixty members, organised workshops and co-presented a talk on indie publishing at last year’s conference. Indie authors plough a lone furrow: writing, editing, finding proof readers and cover designers, having their work professionally formatted and relying on social media to get word of their novels out there. If I’ve been able to lighten the load for even one indie author, I feel that I will have earned this trophy.  

The trophy is mine to keep and is sitting in pride of place on my bookshelf next to my seven published novels- leaving just enough space to fit the Christmas novella I plan to publish in 2024. Will it feature a man in a kilt? You’d better believe it.

and the winners are . . . .

Then, just when I thought life couldn’t get any better, there was a knock on the door a few days later. My husband Dave came through with a parcel and asked, “Are you expecting anything from Amazon?” I opened the package to discover that my dear writer friend Madalyn Morgan – who has just had ten of her novels published by Storm Publishing – had generously sent these brownies. In case, you’re wondering, they are delicious. Thank you, Maddy. It seemed a shame to eat them, but we did.

It just remains for me to say a big thank you to everyone who’s supported me on my journey to becoming a successful indie author. I like the freedom being an indie affords me and I will carry on writing and helping others for as long as I can. Have a great Christmas everyone and a Happy New Year. Once I’ve published this blog post I’m heading back to the pc . . . after all, I have a novel to write.

(offical photos taken by Katie Hipkiss Visuals)

New Cover – new price – Black Friday week only

I felt that the time had arrived to update all the covers of my novels. My two latest novels Dark Highland Skies and Harper’s Highland Fling came with new covers, obviously, so all that remained for me was to work through all the others. This sounds easier than it is because the perfect cover for a novel is hard to settle on. Luckily, Sarah Houldcroft of Goldcrest Books, who formats all my novels and uploads them onto Amazon for me, introudced me to Gail Bradley. Gail and I have got on famously and so, it is with much pleasure that I reveal the new cover for Girl in the Castle – a novel I particularly enjoyed writing.

The starting point, not only for writing the novel but for selecting a new cover, is one of my favurouite places in the Highlands of Scotland – Castle Stalker on Loch Linnhe. We’ve camped in Port Appin many times and when we raise the caravan blinds every monring Castle Stalker is the first thing we see. This is me standing on the jetty looking across towards the castle. Gail used one of my photographs for the background of the cover, the rest was up for discussion. And what fun we had.

A bit like Goldilocks and the three bears (!) we discussed the cover ideas at length. Although I loved #1, I didn’t like how/where the heroine’s hands were placed. With #2, I felt that her hair was too dark, her jacket too white and I think that the luggage labels added something to the final cover so they were reinstated. Gail added a rucksack and more labels until I felt that #3 was just right. After that, it was simply a case of Gail brightening up the colours and then working on the back cover of the paperback.

Gail added the blurb, new photo of author; then I uploaded it onto my KDP page (with more than a little help from Sarah at Goldcrest Books) and Amazon did the rest.

So what is Girl in the Castle about? Here’s the blurb –

Her career in tatters, Henriette Bruar needs somewhere to lay low, plan her comeback and restore a tarnished reputation. Fate lends a hand, taking her to a remote castle in the highlands of Scotland to auction the contents of its ancient library to pay the laird’s mounting debts. The family are in deep mourning over a tragedy which happened years before, resulting in a toxic relationship between the laird, Malcolm Mackenzie and his son and heir, Keir. Add a phantom piper, lost Jacobite treasure, scheming cousins and a cast of eccentric characters to the mix and watch Henrietta encourage the MacKenzies to confront the past and move forward with their lives. However – will the Girl in the Castle be able to return home once her task is completed and leave gorgeous, sexy, Keir MacKenzie behind?

read more reviews on Amazon

If you’d like to read the first few chapter of Girl in the Castle, click on ‘READ SAMPLE’ on its Amazon page and you’ll be able to judge if Girl in the Castle is for you. To tempt you further, the kindle version will be reduced from £1.99 to £0.99 during Black Friday Week –

Friday, November 24, 2023, 8:00 AM GMTFriday, December 1, 2023, 8:00 AM GMT

Breaking News . . . I was voted Indie Champion of the Year 2023 by the Romantic Novelists’ Association

and the winner is …
Lizzie Lamb

New novel from Adrienne Vaughan!


A captivating novel from the pen of talented author, Adrienne Vaughan.

As the crisp autumn breeze rustles through the golden-hued leaves, there’s nothing quite like cosying up with a delightful novel that takes you on a magical journey. And for fans of Adrienne Vaughan, who have been waiting eagerly the companion novel to SUMMER OF SECRETS, the wait is over.

The author – Wicklow Harbour

Introducing SECRETS OF THE SHELL SISTERS a breathtaking tale designed to captivate your imagination and leave you spellbound as Adrienne weaves together vivid characters and captivating plotlines that transport you to the Atlantic Coast Ireland for this heart rending, other-wordly tale.

In this mesmerizing novel, you will be introduced to a diverse cast of characters whose lives intertwine in unexpected and profound ways. Each page is infused with a palpable sense of emotion, drawing you deeper into their joys, their sorrows, and their triumphs. From the rolling hills of the countryside to the bustling city of Dublin, Ms Vaughan’s vivid descriptions bring every scene to life, enveloping you in a rich tapestry of sights, sounds, and sensations.

With a masterful blend of heartwarming moments, tantalizing mysteries, and unexpected twists, Secrets of the Shell Sisters and its companion novel – Summer of Secrets – will keep you eagerly turning the pages, desperate to unravel the secrets that lie within. Every chapter is filled with intrigue and suspense, leaving you yearning to uncover the truth about the sisters and their beginnings.

So, dear reader, as the days grow shorter and the nights grow longer, embrace the enchantment of this autumn season by immersing yourself in the pages of this novel. Get swept away by a tale that will linger in your heart long after you’ve reached the final page. And, to be honest, I was so keen to learn the truth about the Shell Sisters that it took every ounce of self control not to skip to the end to see how it all turned out. Here’s what some reviewers have said about the novel.

“This is romantasy at its best and I loved it.”

“This is a fascinating tale full of Irish magic and mysticism.”

“This is a contemporary novel with an otherworldly twist; don’t miss it.”

“Secrets are hinted at and disclosed (I’m still searching for answers) as the story unfolds, twists, turns, leaves you completely mesmerised and deciding you don’t want to leave.”

“That’s like believing in Father Christmas,” he said. “Or mermaids,” she replied gravely.

Meet the Morgans. Three very different sisters, who each blame themselves for their mother’s mysterious disappearance. Now, over forty years on, they are in crisis.

Cassandra – the eldest – runs the family’s quirky, cliffside hotel. But the business is in trouble, and it seems a secret from the past is determined to resurface and destroy all she’s worked for. Greer – the youngest – walked away from a glittering career to live in London. The mistress of a powerful man, she’s left stranded on the day they were to start a new life together. Now she has no choice but to return to the family home – but what kind of welcome can she expect? And Orla – the middle sister, whose obsessive shell collecting and messages from the ‘sea- people’ dominate her life. But Orla knows things. She knows Greer is coming home to a new future, that Cassandra’s dark secret will change their lives and that their mother never really left at all.

And there’s another secret, something they all share… but of course nobody’s telling.

Extra! Extra! Read all about it (me, that is) 🥴

Here is the link to an interview I gave recently sharing everything I’ve learned in over ten years as an indie author.

This is me (middle, front row) and some members of the author group I organise – The Belmont Belles and Beaux. We meet on the first Friday of the month at The Belmont Hotel, Leicester to discuss writing, new novels and give help and support each other.


I chiefly write Scottish themed Romance . . . after all, who can resist a kilted hero?

I have written two contemporary novels too –

Boot Camp Bride and Take Me, I’m Yours

In case you have never read one of my romances, here’s a link to my Amazon author page where you can find out more about me and my books. Do search me out on Social Media, I love talking but to my readers.

Summer of Secrets

GUEST BLOG – Adrienne Vaughan

Award winning Author & Poet

Adrienne Vaughan writes spellbinding, page-turning romantic suspense.

Her Heartfelt Series − The Hollow Heart, A Change of Heart and Secrets of the Heart – is set on an island off Ireland’s west coast and features a feisty investigative journalist, and her irresistible West Highland terrier. (Adrienne studied at the Dublin College of Journalism and loves animals, especially dogs.)

Her collection of short stories and poetry, Fur Coat & No Knickers was shortlisted for the Irish Carousel Prize for Anthology and her WWII short story, Dodo’s Portrait, was shortlisted for the Colm Toíbín International Short Story Award at the Wexford Literary Festival.

Summer of Secrets is the first in a series of sweeping family dramas, each with a touch of Irish magic.

All her books are heart-warming, uplifting reads, featuring her trademark gripping style, and laugh out loud moments.

Adrienne, husband Jonathan, and two cocker spaniels divide their time between rural Leicestershire, the Wicklow mountains, and coastal South Devon. Agatha Christie – the cat – (and Lorraine) take care of things while they are away.

Summer of Secrets – blurb

Mia Flanagan has never been told who her father is and, aged ten, stopped asking.

Now she keeps her own secrets.

But when the movie she’s working on ends in disaster, she flies home to discover her fiancé has a secret too; leaving her dreams crushed.

Broken-hearted, a lonely summer in London looms. Until, family friend, Archie Fitzgerald, invites her to stay at his fading mansion on Ireland’s ancient east coast.

For Archie also has a secret, and the longer Mia stays, the more she wonders if Archie really is her father after all.

Some images of Ireland so beautifully evoked by Ms Vaughan in Summer of Secrets

My review – Goodreads – This novel has it in spades: stunning Irish setting (a character in its own right), a grand but decaying family home (Galty House), glamour in the form of acclaimed actors Archie Fitzgerald and Fenella Flanagan, American hotel owner Ross and the cute, but not too cute, Pearl who melts your heart. The novel contains all of Ms Vaughan’s trademarks: glamour, secrets, intrigues, and adventure. How could it fail to please? At the centre of it is Mia, the wardrobe mistress whom I immediately bonded with and wanted to have a happy ending. However, life isn’t easy for Mia who lives in the shadow of her famous mother Fenella and, although she is surrounded by people who love her, is held back by long-buried personal secrets of the past. Is she Archie Fitzgerald’s daughter? The answer to that alone kept me turning the pages. I agree with other reviewers that Archie dominates every scene, and it isn’t until he vacates centre stage that Mia can have her moment in the spotlight and we learn the truth about who she is. There was a lot to absorb in this novel and many of the answers lay in the past and were the remit of some of the secondary characters who gave the novel a sense of community. I was particularly impressed by the authors use of flashbacks to give the reader the information they needed to understand the motivation of all the characters – and to guess the identity of Mia’s father. In the end, all is resolved and – without giving too much away, I was happy at the way the author tied up all the loose ends to bring the novel to a satisfying conclusion. I look forward to reading the sequel when it is published.

The perfect beach read this summer

The perect beach read this summer

Where to find Adrienne Vaughan on social media

Twitter: @adrienneauthor

Facebook: Adrienne Vaughan

Website:www.adriennevaughan.com

The one where I interview – or should that be interrogate? – Sharon Booth

A brilliant blog post by two expeprienced and talented authors. I wish I’d known half of this when I became an indie all those years ago. Great books and sound advice.

Jessica Redland Author's avatarJessica Redland Author

Anyone who reads my blog or follows me on social media will know that my bestie is also an author – Sharon Booth. We first met a decade ago and have navigated the (sometimes) crazy world of publishing ever since. Sharon’s books are absolutely gorgeous and I have read every single one of them so far, with her latest on my TBR pile for as soon as I’ve finished my current read.

I’ve been saying for ages (years!) that I’d have Sharon as a guest on my blog and I finally got my act together and sent some questions over to Sharon. I put something on my notes to her which she said I had to keep in because it’s funny so here we go…

Thank you very much for agreeing to appear as my first guest in what willnotbe a regular slot on my website as I…

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The Secrets We Keep

Jo Lambert’s latest novel

After her father’s tragic death, abandoning thoughts of university, Hayley has supported her mother with the day to day running of the Estuary House Hotel in Kingswater. Now, she is ready to return to her studies, but before that there’s a summer to enjoy.

Hayley has no idea how much the two young men she is about to meet will influence her future. Adam Davenport, wealthy and entitled,  arrives on his father’s luxury motor yacht, livening up the quiet town with his on-board parties. But it’s  photographer Nick Pallister, staying at the hotel while working on an assignment for the Cornish Tourist Board, who captures her heart.

As the end of summer approaches, Nick unexpectedly checks out, taking steps to make sure he cannot be traced, leaving Hayley to face the fact she has merely been a summer fling. Days later, Adam takes a taxi into Truro and disappears. Despite an extensive police search, he is never found.

Six years later Hayley is settled and happy with a small daughter, Amelie. Nick Pallister’s unexpected arrival at the hotel, takes her by surprise, dredging up unwanted memories. Why did he leave so suddenly? And did it have anything to do with Adam’s disappearance? But there’s the danger Nick could have questions of his own, ones that might jeopardise the new life she has built for herself and her daughter.

Jo Lambert,

Author, Reviewer and Blogger

Writer of West Country Contemporary Sagas

Member of the Romantic Novelists Association

BOOK WEBSITE AND BLOG:  https://www.jolambertauthor.website

TWITTER: @Jolambertwriter

FACEBOOK:https://www.facebook.com/jolambert185


I am a great fan of Jo’s books and am happy to feature her on my blog on publication day. By now, a copy of The Secrets We Keep will have found its way on to my Kindle. I look forward to reading and reviewing it.

The Collaborator’s Daughter

GUEST BLOG – EVA GLYN

CHARACTERS OF A CERTAIN AGE

I have always liked people and I have always liked wine, firmly believing that both are more interesting as they mature. So why does so much romantic fiction feature characters in the first (or, at a push, second) bloom of youth, when those in the third age are largely ignored?

After all I have friends in their sixties who have fallen in love, and why wouldn’t they? For so many retirement is an opportunity to change things around, whether they are single through circumstance or choice. A time of excitement, of new beginnings. And of downright terror about what might lie ahead.

This is where Fran Thomson, my protagonist in The Collaborator’s Daughter, finds herself. She quit her job to care for her stepfather, but now he has died, and when she looks the future in the face it’s rather too shapeless and empty. Not only that, but the past shifts under her feet as well, when she discovers the birth father she always believed died a hero, was executed as a Nazi collaborator.

Fran somehow finds the courage to travel to Dubrovnik to try to find out what happened. I am not altogether sure I would have had the guts, but then she’s a romantic heroine and I am not.

A romantic heroine who, by her own admission, is carrying a few too many pounds and hasn’t a clue how to apply clever make up. So she is more than surprised when Jadran Novak, a Croatian silver fox who was roped into helping her find out about her father by his nephew, begins to take a more than friendly interest and suggests a research trip:

Fran gazed at the clothes spread out on the bed. They were going for three nights, that was all. Why was she making such a meal of it? Her denim skirt would do for the evenings, and she knew Jadran liked her embroidered cardigan, so she’d take that as well.

Despite the difficulties of packing, there was a frisson of something about the trip that took her back to being a girl again, back to the shared house in Parsons Green. This was what they’d do before a night on the town; lay potential outfits on their beds, then run from room to room in their underwear, giggling and squealing, borrowing a skirt here, a pair of tights there …

Oh my god. Underwear. Hers was utilitarian to say the least. Sensible cotton knickers and well-constructed bras. But it didn’t matter. It wasn’t as though anyone was going to see them. Were they?

Fumbling her phone she checked Jadran’s text again. He had booked them rooms, plural. Her slightly tatty and greying knickers would remain her secret. As would the folds of flesh they strained to hide. Honestly, she could have at least tried to diet while she was here, but what with a glass or two of wine every night, and baking cakes for Jadran … But it was fine. He’d booked two rooms. Clearly his intentions weren’t sexual at all.

The tiny lurch of disappointment surprised her. Yes, it was a lovely fantasy to want to be kissed and held in his arms, but the reality of going any further was frankly appalling. But that wasn’t entirely true either. A tiny part of her, a part that had been hidden for so long she had almost forgotten it existed, wanted more. Alone in her bed at night, all sorts of more. But in the cold light of day even the thought absolutely terrified her.

Eva Glyn writes relationship-driven fiction set in Croatia for One More Chapter, and she’s rather close to sixty herself. Find out more at www.evaglynauthor.com.

Want to read on? Then follow my lead and download this fabulous novel …….. review to follow in the fullness of time.

Buy link for The Collaborator’s Daughter:
https://mybook.to/CollaboratorsDaughter

HOLDING OUT FOR A HERO

When I started writing Dark, Highland Skies I thought long and hard about the hero: Hector Strachan, known as ‘Tor. I’d already created heroes with typical highlander colouring: dark hair, blue eyes and fair skin that blisters at the first touch of the summer sun. (see Ruairi Urquhart in Tall, Dark and Kilted). Some of my choices were influenced by Jamie Frazer in Outlander – who could resist the combination of auburn hair and blue-grey eyes. Then I thought, no, Tor is going to be more like his Viking ancestors who harried the west coast of Scotland and left their DNA behind: tall, blonde – the image of a young Robert Redford sprang to mind. Well, a girl can dream, can’t she!

It appears that readers and reviewers have fallen for Tor, too. Here’s what they’ve said …

It’s great to see our military heroes so well understood, with life changing injury and post traumatic stress explored sympathetically (in Tor’s case)

scottish white sandy beach morar south of mallaig west Scotland

It is not just the story itself which I loved but also the description of all the locations and in many cases the history behind it, I would say it was all extremely well researched

The Bothy

I must say I rather fell for Tor – not only because he looked like my kind of guy but because of his infinite patience and gentleness, too.

The chemistry between astrophysicist Halley Dunbar and veteran Tor Strachan, a soldier suffering from PTSD and veteran Tor Strachan simply sizzles.

A former career soldier, he was invalided out of the army following horrific wounds sustained in a dreadful incident in Afghanistan

An extract from Dark Highland Skies

‘Look.’ Tor pointed skywards to where a golden eagle was circling above them, its wing tips spread open like fingers, yellow talons tucked neatly into its body. It turned its head and looked down on them, as if demanding to know what they were doing on its land. Its high chirruping cry cut through the bright, still air, drawing everyone’s gaze away from the coffin and heavenward. ‘It’s a sign that Tam is ready to leave us and that all will be well,’ Tor murmured, bending his head close so only Halley could hear.

Dark Highland Skies ~ (Lizzie’s Scottish Romances)Dark Highland Skies ~ #Scottish Historical Romance #Review @lizzie_lamb

Another smashing review for Dark Highland Skies. Thank you to Jaye and Anita for taking the time to read my novel and to write such a smashing review.

Jaye Marie & Anita Dawes's avatarJaye Marie and Anita Dawes

Astrophysicist Halley Dunbar has spent her career searching for the one-in-a-billion exoplanet outside our solar system capable of sustaining life. Required to travel to Lochaber, Scotland to arrange her great-uncle’s funeral, she leaves the world she knows behind and encounters people who make her realise there’s more to life than searching for something that might not exist.

Laird’s son, Tor Strachan rocks up, and she discovers the one man capable of making her happy. However, there are obstacles in the way, and it becomes clear that Afghan veteran Tor must confront his demons before he can be the man Halley deserves. As for Halley, she has secrets of her own; ones she can’t share with anyone – not even Tor.

A good man is hard to find.

Early Reviews for Dark Highland Skies

“I knew by the end of Chapter One that Halley Dunbar was another of Lizzie Lamb’s fabulous…

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