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Sunday, 7 April 2019

The Peacock Bottle by Angela Rigley @angierigley BLOG TOUR @rararesources #ThePeacockBottle








In this Victorian dual timeline novel, Amelia Wise feels a jolt when she finds a blue perfume bottle in the overgrown garden of the house she has inherited.

Several events in her life mirrors those from the past and, with the help of her newfound cousin, Olivia, the bottle's secret is uncovered.














Welcome to the Blog Tour for The Peacock Bottle by Angela Rigley.  Thanks to Rachel from Rachel's Random Resources who invited me to take part on the tour.

I'm delighted to welcome the author here to Random Things today, she's talking about the books that are special to her in My Life in Books



My Life in Books - Angela Rigley


The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett about a young girl, Mary Lennox, who finds an old key, was the inspiration for my latest novel, The Peacock Bottle, a dual timeline set in Victorian Cumberland. Amelia finds a large locked gate in the overgrown garden of the abandoned house she has inherited, and is intrigued to see what is behind it. Little does she know about the tragedy that caused it to be so neglected.

Being an avid reader, my writing urge began at school. Never having heard of the term anthropomorphism, I loved writing stories about animals who could speak, but was put off when my English teacher, a formidable lady called Mrs Piggott, wrote in the margin of one of my essays, ‘No imagination’. I suppose that was true at the time. Brought up in small farming communities, with no social life, and having moved six times by the age of twelve, I had not had a lot of interaction with people. Being a shy, introverted child did not help.

Enid Blyton’s Famous Five and Secret Seven series were some of my favourite reads, and also the MaloryTowers books. As I went to a boarding school at the age of ten, I could identify with the girls in the school.



In the school library I found Mazode La Roche’s series about Adeline and Philip Whiteoak who travel from London to Canada to build a new life in Jalna. There was a particular paragraph in one of them that to my innocent eyes was very risqué, and I would often pop into the library just to find that passage and read it while nobody was looking, for I felt I would be in trouble if the nuns found out. I was sure they would not have known it was there.

Once I left school and started having a social life, writing never entered my head and, with four children under the age of five by the time I was twenty seven, and another one ten years later, I did not have time to even consider such a hobby.

However, once the children were older, I discovered Mills and Boon books and, much to my husband’s irritation, would read one in an evening, my favourite author being Charlotte Lamb. My writing urges surfaced again and I had aspirations of being a famous Mills and Boon author. My first attempt had only reached a few chapters when I saw a writing course advertised, so I paid the fee I could not really afford and began to write short stories. I learnt a lot from the course even though I did not finish it.



I had seen the film Goodnight Mister Tom, based on the book by Michelle Magorian, about a boy taken in by a man who, against his will, grew to love him, and this gave me the inspiration for my first novel, Looking for Jamie. Using an old exercise book belonging to one of my children, the story slowly emerged of an eight-year-old boy, found lost and bedraggled, who is taken in by the household of The Grange. The master does not want him at first but soon changes his mind.

After I retired I joined a local writers’ group where I met another author who went on to form his own publishing company, and he and his partner agreed to publish my book before I had even finished writing it. They enjoyed the story so much they asked me to write a sequel, so A Dilemma for Jamie was born, and then another, and another, so now there are five Jamie books.

The urge to write a Mills and Boon-type romance returned and Florence and the Highwayman developed. I sent it with great hopes to Mills and Boon but, of course, it was rejected, so I self-published it.

Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth and the subsequent sequels, set in the twelfth century around the cathedral of Kingsbridge; The Forest by Edward Rutherford, set in the New Forest, weaving the story from generation to generation; and The Clan of the Cavebear by Jean M Auel, set in the Ice Age, have all been inspirations for my writing. I wrote my first children’s book, Cal the Caveboy, after reading the latter.

Nowadays I buy books written by fellow authors on Facebook, Kath McGurl’s love of genealogy and dual timeline books being especially enjoyable.



Angela Rigley - April 2019 






Married to Don, I have 5 children and 9 grandchildren, 
I live in Derbyshire, England, and enjoy researching my family tree (having found ancestors as far back as 1465), reading, gardening, playing Scrabble, meals out and family gatherings. 
I am the treasurer of my writing club, Eastwood Writers’ Group, and I also write and record Thoughts for the Day for Radio Nottingham. At church I sing in the choir and am an Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion, a reader, a flower arranger and a member of the fundraising team for Cafod, my favourite charity. I have written hymns, although I cannot read music.
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