Christmas is definitely in the air after the first snowfall in Ireland last week, and it's very exciting to see so much love coming in for LAST CHRISTMAS IN …
[Read more...] about Last Christmas in Paris – ’tis the season!
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Christmas is definitely in the air after the first snowfall in Ireland last week, and it's very exciting to see so much love coming in for LAST CHRISTMAS IN …
[Read more...] about Last Christmas in Paris – ’tis the season!
I've been so busy writing that I've hardly had time to update my website, so without further ado, I am absolutely thrilled to share with you the cover for LAST …
[Read more...] about Last Christmas in Paris – cover reveal!
My short story HUSH, which was originally published in the WW1 collection FALL OF POPPIES - Stories of Love and the Great War, is now available to download as …
[Read more...] about Short story HUSH – now available to download
In more exciting book news, I am thrilled to be able to announce a project I've been keeping secret for months! My wonderful friend and fabulous writer, Heather …
[Read more...] about New book announcement: LAST CHRISTMAS IN PARIS
While I have been busy here editing my third novel, and working on ideas for a fourth, I recently heard that THE GIRL WHO CAME HOME will be published in …
[Read more...] about Foreign translations, cover designs and poppies
Would you like to participate in an exciting cover reveal for my next book? March 2016 will see the U.S. publication of an exciting new collection of stories …
Hello! It's been a long time since I posted an update here, but for good reason. I've been very busy finishing my third novel and last week I finally wrote THE …
“… a collection of short stories inspired by the plangent, romantic landscape of imperiled mansions, trench warfare and Anglo-American overlap, contains nine loamy tributes to the genre. These miniatures center on Nov. 11, 1918, the day the Great War ended and its memory began.”
“Gaynor’s talent for evoking a time and place, as well as her ability to write a beautifully heart-wrenching story with realistic characters, enables her to touch readers. The unexpected twists and turns of the plot and jumping of timelines holds readers’ attention to the satisfying climax.”
“The Girl Who Came Home follows on the centenary remembrance of the Titanic in 2012. Is the world ready for yet another account of this tragedy? With this novel, the answer is a resounding yes.”
“Hazel Gaynor captures both the heartache and hope of England between the Wars in this richly imagined novel peopled with unforgettable characters, impossible ambitions and unexpected twists of fate. Once begun, I dare you to put it down.”
“For fans of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society comes another terrific epistolary historical novel that is simply unputdownable [...] this remarkable novel will undoubtedly go on my keeper shelf.”
"I adored The Cottingley Secret ... Gaynor has penned, in majestic prose, an enchanting and enthralling tale of childhood magic, forgotten dreams, and finding the parts of ourselves we thought were lost forever"
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