Tuesday, August 6, 2024

Rhys is now a historical figure!

 RHYS BOWEN:  Today I’m celebrating the release of my latest book, THE ROSE ARBOR



 I’ve already shared a lot about it… about how I read an article on the village abandoned in WWII when it was requisitioned by the British army. The photos showed ruins that could be centuries old, creepers covering the remains of walls, trees growing up through what had been living rooms. This touched me so much that I wanted to write about it, and since I primarily write mysteries, I found myself thinking…. What if something really bad had happened in that village, but because everyone had to move out in a hurry nobody even found out about it for years.



 

My village is a fictitious one but absolutely based on the real Tyneham. So the story takes place in 1968. And some of you will be surprised to know that this now counts as a historical novel. I think quite a few of us were around in 1968. Dost that make us historical figures?  One of my first readers of the manuscript said the book felt so real. This is probably because I lived through this time. I was fresh out of university, working for the BBC in London, very fashionable in my Mary Quant, my Vidal Sassoon haircut and my white boots. And I was there when the culture suddenly changed, from smart, mod, preppy to hippie. I remember watching as young people, people I knew, tuned out, dropped out, grew their hair, wore long flowing garments and went to live together in squats in abandoned buildings. At first they championed causes… save the whales, save the forests, no more war etc, but then they were high on weed most of the time, or even LSD and just existed.



 This story features that change to hippie culture as well as tying back to WWII. A child missing in 1968. Three little girls who vanished while being evacuated in the war. And a heroine who might have ties to a place she can’t possibly have been to.  It was a challenge to write, piecing together various stories, like working on a jigsaw puzzle, but I guarantee it’s going to keep you turning pages.


 Who of us remembers that time? Were any of you in London? It really was a swinging city. I remember shopping in Carnaby Street, watching the Beatles recording at the BBC, courtesy of my friend who was their sound engineer. I remember the protest marches that morphed into love-ins. At least it felt safe and optimistic in England (not so much in Europe where the Berlin Wall had just been erected). We hitch hiked everywhere. I went around Greece for three months with a friend, staying at private houses.  A few men flirted with us but it was mostly harmless. I was worried the world had changed but my two granddaughters have just been around Italy and Greece and also had a wonderful time, feeling safe everywhere. So maybe things aren't so different and most people are still kind and trustworthy. Let's hope so.

 So what were you doing in 1968? Were you born? In school? What do you remember?

And tomorrow evening I'll be visiting the Poisoned Pen bookstore via Zoom. I've signed a lot of books for them if you want a signed book and I'll be happy to answer your questions.  Here is the link to check in for the event on Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/thepoisonedpenbookstore/videos/

Also I'll be the featured guest of the week on Friends and Fiction tomorrow.  Busy week!

69 comments:

  1. Happy Book Birthday, Rhys! I am really looking forward to reading this, although I have to say having a book set in 1968 considered historical makes me feel really old :)

    I was in college in 1968; I remember that a difficult year [marked by tragic assassinations] ended with three Apollo 8 astronauts orbiting the moon for the first time [and taking that amazing Earthrise photograph] . . . .

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    1. I remember Bobby Kennedy and how angry I felt then the moon orbit made us hopeful again

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  2. RHYS: Congratulations on your new book!

    No, I don't remember much of 1968. I was 2 years old. We lived in a mostly Italian neighbourhood in Toronto until we moved to the suburbs in 1971. It was mostly countryside and farmer's fields on Steeles Avenue back then.

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    1. GRACE: You are the same age as my cousin, who is the closest to me in age (3 years apart).

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  3. Congratulations, Rhys. I look forward to reading The Rose Arbor.
    I remember 1968 very well……it was the year I graduated from high school.
    Dianne Mahoney

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  4. RHYS: Congratulations on your book release of THE ROSE ARBOR! I love that title. Since the library does not have a copy of THE ROSE ARBOR, I am going to break my book buying ban and order a copy of your novel from the Poisoned Pen.

    The premise of your story sounds intriguing, For some reason, I am reminded of an episode on Midsomer Murders about a village that was used during the Second World War. There was a lady who left clothes at the abandoned site and shoes for her brother who was missing in action during the war. She always believed that her brother would come back and need clothes and shoes.

    1968 was quite a year! Though it was before I was born, I read History at University and learned about tragedies like the assassination of Martin Luther King Junior and Robert Kennedy, the second Kennedy to be assassinated. There were also riots. My Mom was teaching at her high school when the police chased some people into the school and the teachers had to lock their doors! So many things happened in 1968. Color me impressed that you knew the sound engineer at the studio where the Beatles were recording.

    In another lifetime, I was briefly a model and I read a book about the history of models. I remember there were photos of Carnaby Street. And Vidal Sassoon. I had my hair cut once at Vidal Sassoon and 80 percent of the stylists were channeling the punk rock look at that time. And to think that within 30 years I would meet you at a book event when you wrote the Constable Evans novels.

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    1. Yes, the world suddenly changed that year from fun and carefree to riots and drugs!

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  5. Congratulations, Rhys! Great photos!

    Oh, yes, I was born, and loving every minute. I'm afraid my Mary Quant's were knockoffs and Vidal Sasson cuts were only a dream - I was in high school.

    My first trip to Europe was in 1971. Landed in London which was still swinging, hitchhiked all over Europe, "crashed" with groups of like-minded people and had an overall wonderful time. My favorite story - a boyfriend went over after I returned. When he came back he talked about being so excited to see the signs for the Underground. How cool the Brits were to point the way. He said he couldn't get down those stairs fast enough only to discover - the subway. Not sure he ever forgave the English, or me for not giving him fair warning.

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  6. Congratulations on your new book, Rhys! It's probably on my Kindle already! You have been telling us about the mystery of the missing girls and the deserted village. I need to clear my calendar for this story! I have been looking forward to it.

    I was a junior at UCONN in 1968. My mother had died in my freshman year and my dad had just gotten engaged to a local widow who invited me to join her and her daughter on a European vacation that summer. That was my first trip to London, with my soon-to-be step mother and step sister. My dad was with us for that part of the trip. That summer was an eye-opener in so many ways.

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    1. That was a nice way of bonding. I hope

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  7. Happy birthday, Rhys! This is such a wonderful book and I can’t wait for everyone else to read it! I was in high school in 1968 and pretty much unaware of the world. That would come in the early 70s.

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  8. Congrats on your book release, Rhys. I was in elementary school in 1968 and my youngest sister was born that year.

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  9. In 1968 I was at university and having my eyes opened at the outside world, what with assassinations, drugs, and sex although that was still only said quietly (of course no one did IT). There was one lad who was black who introduced us to the NAACP, and quietly spoke of what was expected of him as a black man in Nova Scotia. He was proud to be head porter on the train, but wanted so much more. Meanwhile the only other black people were the university maids.
    I think 1968 was the year that the magazine Mademoiselle had an article on going braless. If I remember correctly, it was February and cold. We all had to attend Formal Meal for lunch and dinner, and the shortest way was a quick run across the quad. For some reason, all the males were standing on the steps as most of the girls ran over – nips up! What a memory!

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    1. I never followed the brakes trend! Too uncomfortable. And going to college in London people of other races were not unusual to me, but all white in my college!

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  10. Congratulations, Rhys. It’s intriguing that the year I graduated from college is now classified as “historic” . Although looking back that was several lifetimes ago…Elisabeth

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    1. Sometimes it doesn’t feel that long ago. I’m meeting up with college friends in a month and we’ll chatter as if we were never apart

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  11. Cathy Akwrs-JordanAugust 6, 2024 at 8:05 AM

    I was 5 in 1968 so I don’t remember much about it. LOL. I was thrilled to wake up and find The Rose Arbor waiting on my Kindle, just like Christmas! It a nice, rainy day so I’m going to curl up and read it today. It sound so intriguing!

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  12. Congratulations Rhys on The Rose Arbor !
    It is now on my Kindle . A day with a new book from you is always a good one.

    In 1968, I was fifteen and it was a year of great changes for me including a move and the separation of family and friends. It also was the beginning of new experiences.
    Danielle

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    1. Moving is so hard when you are a teenager

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  13. Rhys, congratulations on The Rose Arbor! It's been fun following your journey to publication on this one, and I can't wait to read it.

    Yep, another "historical figure" here. I was a junior in high school then, and had been following the Carnaby Street trajectory from a remove via Ingenue Magazine. My aspirations to be another Twiggy were of course pretty silly; I had the skinny, long-legged physique, but thick glasses and unruly hair without the benefit of Vidal's precision cuts. And my mother laughed at my attempts at Twiggy's creamy white skin and big eyelashes. But I could sew, and my non-uniform (Catholic school) wardrobe was as close as I could get to mod.

    My cousin Jimmy was in the Air Force and went to Vietnam. By the time he got out, scarred and psychically wounded, he went to London instead of back home to Ohio. Married an English "bird", adopted an English accent, and played guitar with at least one band that included Mick Jagger. He brought Trish home once, in about 1970, and she was unbelievably exotic by our standards, a true hippie, but with an elevated fashion style. Her miniskirt was topped with a suede vest with nothing under it, and long, straight blonde hair. Out went my Carnaby Street fantasies!

    On my first visit to London an online pal from Kent took charge of me one day, and we visited the V&A because the main exhibit was a Carnaby Street/Mary Quant retrospective. Swoon!!

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    1. You could sew well even then! I bet you looked really fashionable. And such an interesting story about your uncle. Do you still have relatives in UK?

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    2. Jimmy was my favorite cousin, actually, only two years older. He and Trish divorced when their son and daughter were young, and he came back to the States and married his high school girlfriend. The kids stayed in the UK, and are still there. I don't really know them, but Jimmy's grandson is on Facebook, and we have become friends. However, he just moved to Japan last year, to teach ESL. I'm hoping to visit him, and possibly take my grandson, who has been studying Japanese for a couple years.

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  14. Happy Book Birthday! Congratulations! Yay for The Rose Arbor.

    I was 11 in 1968, but I remember the time well, particularly the anti-Vietnam protests and the killings of MLK and RFK--and how uncertain everything felt. 1968 was the year the TV show Julia, starring Diahann Carroll, first aired. I remember how excited my mom was that a black woman was the star of a TV show. It's routine now, but in 1968 it was a big deal.

    I didn't make it to London until 1972, but I don't think it had changed that much in 4 years. It was still a swinging city.

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    1. Diana was groundbreaking ! How silly it seems now that it was such a big deal to allow a black womsn to star

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  15. Congratulations! I can't wait to read the new book.

    In 1968 I was sixteen and completely absorbed in high school. Girlfriends, dating, getting good grades (president of German Club, among other things), active in girl scouts, trying to achieve perfect hair, and more. I didn't hit the thrift-store and embroidered clothes phase until a couple of years later, and I wasn't active in politics at all.

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    1. That was me a few years earlier. Involved in all the sports and clubs and good grades. Of course it was a girls school so no distractions

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  16. Congratulations, Rhys! I wasn't even a twinkle in my parents' eyes yet. They weren't married until 1971 and I wasn't born until 1973.

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  17. Congratulations on the big day! I very much look forward to reading this book.

    In 1968 I was 14, an admirer of Twiggy and the Carnaby Street fashion scene who could sew well, so I had some pretty “cool” clothes. But I lived very near Madison, Wisconsin, an epicenter of Viet Nam war protest that turned violent and scary. It took years for the university campus and surrounding area to recover, and that culture had an affect on all of us.

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    1. You and Karen both learned to sew early in life! I sewed too. I made my formal dress for the college ball . It wasn’t quite finished in time and my friends had to see me into it!

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  18. Congrats Rhys!! I was a senior in high school in 1968. I remember the preppy look (Weejuns, Villager clothes) which changed to hippy. The world changed to the Vietnam war protests, and a big change was the music. Even the Beatles music went from happy go lucky (I Wanna Hold Your Hand) to Magical Mystical Tour! We had Jimi Hendrick, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison...

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    1. So right. Vietnam changed the world from fun, hopeful, bright to the drugs, protests of the hippies

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  19. I was in college in 1968, and the hippies had commandeered their own table in the cafeteria. We called them "the fringe," and they seemed very exotic. Psychedelic music was very much on trend. It was two years later that I participated in a march protesting the Vietnam War--past (not onto the premises of) the Army War College, previously called the Carlisle (PA) Indian School,which was close to Dickinson College (my alma mater). A couple of years earlier, my friend down the street and I used to take the bus and train into downtown Philadelphia, wearing our leather caps and speaking in what we thought were English accents. Beatlemania reigned, of course, and everything British was popular.

    So excited to read The Rose Arbor, Rhys. I "wished for" it on NetGalley but my wish didn't come true. And copies aren't available yet at the library. So I am planning to buy it because it sounds wonderful. I wish you much success with the book!

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    1. We had formal meals at college too but it was a women’s college within a big university

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  20. Hank Phillippi RyanAugust 6, 2024 at 9:27 AM

    1968! I think I had given up my 1967 Vidal Sassoon hair cut, cut up high over one year and Long on the other side :-) and had long hair product in the middle, and bellbottoms. I had a pair of pink acid washed jeans that I was particularly proud of. Happily embracing my status as a historical person! And huge congratulations on this fabulous book.
    Xxxxxx

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    1. My Vidal Sassoon at his Bond Street salon took almost 3 hours but the cut was imperfect that it just fell back into place when I washed it. Never achieved that again!

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  21. Went to order my copy form the library, only to discover I already was in line. Oh my. 1968 I was 22, finally living in an apartment after convincing my mom I needed to learn life skills. I was due to be married in 1969. I thought I knew life (HA!). I did know that I wanted to visit the UK more than anything ~~loved Monty Python, and the Avengers esp Emma Peel. Finance was in spy training so most of my political life was unspoken or underground. Like others have said it was a pivotal year. Hope this one will be as well. Congrats Rys for helping to make history, not write about it.

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  22. Congrats on your new book!

    In 1968, my parents were married, so I wasn't born yet.

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  23. Oh my, 1968! I had great legs and wore little mini-skirts that would scandalize me these days. The music, the fashions, the sense of "movement" in the world from the rather stodgy 50s to the 60s and on to the 70s was palpable. I miss that sense of excitement. On to other things: I have had the privilege of reading Rhys's book, and--who would have guessed--it's completely absorbing, right up there with her best.

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    1. My skirts were also really short! And you are right about the spirit of the time. It felt exciting and daring and hopeful. Then everything changed with Vietnam

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  24. By the way, Rhys was our guest speaker at LA Sisters in Crime Sunday and she was fabulous. The large audience was enthralled. We were so lucky to have her!

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  25. I was 6 years old in 1968 attending first grade in small town Nebraska. I was losing teeth, growing out my pixie cut, and riding my purple Schwinn.

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  26. Congratulations, Rhys! I feel so fortunate to have an ARC of this fabulous mystery!

    In ‘68, I turned 1, so no memories to share but I loved being a child of the seventies and eighties. Gen X, for sure.

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  27. Hi, Rhys. The Rose Arbor is on my Kindle, waiting to be read during the week Peter and I are on vacation in Arles. In 1968, I was 14 and looked nothing like Twiggy but still wore mini-skirts and lots of eye makeup when I could get away with it. I was against the Vietnam War, but it was another year before I started protesting.

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    1. I’m going to that part of France next month, Kim. Enjoy!

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  28. The Rose Arbor is a fascinating story that weaves in the huge displacenents British people had to endure in WWII. How parents could bear to send their small children away with scraps of paper pinned to their coats with their names boggles a mind that had trouble leaving hers for the first day of kindergarten! Another Rhys Bowen gem!

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  29. Congratulations, Rhys, on your book birthday! I’m looking forward to reading The Rose Arbor.

    I was 12 in 1968. My elementary school went through 6th grade back then (here ours go through 5th) so I wasn’t doing any protesting. But I remember the assassinations that year, Bobby Kennedy’s especially because my favorite teacher was crying. I hadn’t seen a lot of grown-ups cry so that shook me up. — Pat S

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    1. That is so moving!

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    2. My father woke us up for school every day, through high school. I remember he was crying on the morning when when Bobby Kennedy had just been shot - one of the only times I saw him cry.

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  30. Congrats Rhys !
    And I can't forget Lucy Burdette's Poisonous Palate is out today as well.
    Congrats Lucy!

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    1. We’ll be celebrating that tomorrow!

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  31. PAT D Blogger won't let me sign in. Sigh. The sixties were interesting times but historical? I think not! I was in college in 1968, enjoying the freedom of not living at home. Vietnam was certainly a topic, the SDS had obnoxious demonstrations. Our campus was big (Univ of Texas-Austin) and had a wide variety of students from all over the country and international. By that time the British craze and Carnaby Street were over, fashion wise. Mini skirts definitely still around. It was still dresses for class and football games, but the hippie fashion was creeping in. I think coeds were wearing pants and jeans to class by the end of the year. Walking on the Drag got to be a real pain as hippies and Hara Krishnas panhandled with enthusiasm. Jackie Kennedy married Aristotle Onassis and a lot of bad jokes popped up about it. There were the heartbreaking murders of RFK and MLK. My future husband joined the Army after deciding he wasn't ready to settle down to school. Doofus.
    I am eager to read your book, Rhys!

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    1. I remember getting my first pant suit around that time. Similar to what Kamala wears!

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  32. Rhys, congrats on the release of The Rose Arbor. I'm excited to get my hands on this--just finished my last pile of books and need this!

    I was 14 the summer of '68--finished with junior high and waiting for high school to begin. But what I remember most were the assassinations of Martin Luther King and especially Bobby Kennedy. You didn't think things could be worse after MLk was killed, then Bobby Kennedy was shot. It felt like the world was exploding in darkness.

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  33. 1968 I was in college.
    Two years later I spent much of January in London and the vicinity on a college trip.
    The shift from hip to hippy was an interesting one.
    Now here we are protesting so many of the same things.
    SIGH

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  34. How I wish I had time to comment. I loved the sixties for so many reasons. But right now the day is filled with my hubby's recuperation after triple bypass (he's doing fine), and no time to respond in detail. Great sounding story and congratulations, Rhys. Look forward to reading about London in the sixties.

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    1. Elizabeth, glad to hear your husband is doing fine. Hope his recuperation goes smoothly!

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  35. In 1968 I was in high school.

    However, 1968 has been in my thoughts for much of the past weeks. I don’t remember what triggered it first, but something in the political news made me feel like it was 1968 all over again. Subsequent events have strengthened this feeling. I just hope this election doesn’t end as disastrously as that one did.

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  36. Huge congrats on The Rose Arbor, Rhys! So glad I got to read it as an ARC! I think it is my favorite of all your standalones! I was sixteen in 1968 my older friends and boyfriend were already deep into hippie dropout culture, so that part of the book really resonated with me.

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  37. I was ten and living in Quito Ecuador with my family. It was quite distant from all that was going on in London and the US. Question...how do you post with your name? It asks for a URL.....WHat am I missing??

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  38. In August of 1968, I was just entering my sophomore year of high school and worrying about which colleges I would apply to and how I would pay for it.

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