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Showing posts with label #War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #War. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Father of One by Jani Anttola - Book Tour - Author Interview - Giveaway - Enter Daily!


Father of One
by Jani Anttola


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GENRE:   War Novel / Literary Fiction


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BOOK BLURB:


Maka, a young Bosnian soldier, has survived three years under siege. When the enemy forces launch their final attack on his hometown, he must escape to the hills. But traversing the vast woods is a task against all odds: to stay alive, and to find his infant son and his wife, he is soon forced to make a desperate move.

Set against the harrowing background of raging guerrilla warfare and the genocide in Srebrenica, Father of One is, at heart, a story of deep humanity, compassion and love. It is the account of one man’s desire to reunite his family, separated by war, and of bonds unbroken by trauma, sustained by loyalty and tenacity. Writing in a voice that rings with clarity and authenticity, Jani Anttola lays open a dark moment in Europe’s recent history.

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EXCERPT:


 This is it.

He would shoot some of them, then kill himself with the last one.

Maka counted his rounds. One in the chamber, four in the magazine. That was enough. And he had the grenade. He clipped off a cartridge and put it in his pocket. How many could he get? One? Two? More? He decided on three. A good number. He’d kill two on the road, then at least one more with the grenade when they stormed the house.

Three lives for his. It sounded like some sort of a deal.

He placed the muzzle of the automatic rifle into the rugged hole and took aim at the nearest soldier. He was about thirty metres away. Maka would drop him with a single slug. But when he looked at the man through the sights, over the blued metal of the gun, he felt bitter about dying this way. He knew the man outside was there to kill him and his kin, but what if he, too, was somebody’s father? He was probably in his forties and distantly resembled a clerk who had worked in the post office in Srebrenica. This Chetnik also wore a šajkača, with its V-shaped top making his head look like a pig’s hoof. He had a messy stubble and a moustache that seemed to hang from his long, thin nose, as he stood under the sun with weary eyes.

So, you’re here to kill me?

It’s you who’s going to die now. But I don’t do this because I like it.

If there were a way to leave this situation without killing anybody, let alone himself, Maka would do so. Just it was too late. It was far too much, and nothing could get it undone. He positioned the sights in the middle of the man’s chest and calmed his breathing down. He took the slack out of the trigger, until he felt the tiny resistance of the firing mechanism in his fingertip.

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AUTHOR INTERVIEW:


Are the experiences in this book based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

Yes, the story is closely based on someone I know, this Bosnian couple. I sat down with them for a series of interviews, then constructed the novel based on what had happened to them during the war. It’s an accurate account, but a work of fiction in the sense that there’s a lot of my interpretation and many of the side characters and such are fictional. But those also I created based on people who had been there, or who could have been there. I mixed up some things and added a few things. I had myself been a soldier in the Bosnian army, and I weaved in a couple of details from what I’d seen and experienced in the war. But it’s not my story at all.

Do you read your book reviews? How do you deal with bad or good ones?

Of course, I like to know what the reader’s experience was. You can always take something home, especially from the critical ones. There’s no need to “deal” with either good or bad reviews. The reader always interprets your work through their own lens, so their response is always valid, even when it’s different from what you intended.

What, in your opinion, are the most important elements of good writing?

A good story and a good technique. I see some writers who’ve honed their technique through practice and studying, so their prose is well polished, but the things they have to say are very pedestrian. I guess when most of us lead somewhat boring lives, it tends to result in boring narratives. Then there are the ones with interesting ideas, the kind that could contribute something to humanity if only they understood some basic creative writing rules. “Rules” and “creative” sounds like an oxymoron, but they’re there for a reason. Then you have the painful types who can’t handle either element, and finally those rare, brilliant ones who master both. I don’t know which category I fall into. That’s up to my readers to determine. But I’m of course trying not to be in the first three.

What’s the most difficult thing about writing characters from the opposite sex?

I believe that if you understand basic human psychology and have normal empathic skills, it shouldn’t matter much what your character’s gender is. One thing we men sometimes forget, though, is that for many women, the daily power imbalances and fear of gender-based violence are very real. If a male writer can weave that sentiment into his female character, he’s doing pretty well.

What are you reading now?

I often alternate between two or three books. Now I’m reading Steinbeck’s "East of Eden," and Coetzee’s "Life & Times of Michael K." Magnificent works, both.

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AUTHOR BIO & LINK:



Jani Anttola is a Finnish novelist and a medical doctor. In the 1990s he served in Rwanda with the French military and fought in Bosnia as a soldier of the Bosnian army. His works have been published in the UK and Finland. He has spent most of his adult life abroad, working in Africa, the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific.

Author Website:

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BOOK BUY LINKS:



Amazon US Paperback:

Amazon CA Paperback:

Amazon UK Paperback:

The Book Guild UK Paperback:

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GIVEAWAY:


Jani will award a $25 Amazon OR Barnes and Noble Gift Card (Winner's Choice!!!) to a randomly drawn winner via Rafflecopter during the tour.




a Rafflecopter giveaway

Friday, February 24, 2017

Walking Out of War by Scott Bury - Book Tour - Giveaway - Enter Daily!


Hello lovelies! It gives me great pleasure today to host Scott Bury and his new book, “Walking Out of War”!

Be sure to make it to the end of this post to enter to win some exciting prizes like ebook copies of the featured book and a $15 Amazon Gift Card!  Also, come back daily to interact with Scott and to increase your chances of winning!

Thanks for stopping by!  Wishing you lots of luck in this fabulous giveaway!


Walking Out of War

by Scott Bury

Genre: Historical Adventure, War
Ukraine, 1944: After the Soviets burned the Ukrainian city of Ternopyl to the ground to crush the stubborn Nazi occupiers, they rounded up every remaining Ukrainian man around for the Red Army’s final push on Germany. Maurice Bury, Canadian citizen, Ukrainian resistance fighter and intelligence officer, is thrust once again into the death struggle between Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s USSR.

Fighting across the Baltics in the autumn of 1944 is tough and bloody. Then the Red Army enters Germany, where they’re no longer liberators—they’re the long-feared Communist horde, bent on destruction, rape and revenge. The Communists are determined to wipe Nazism from the face of the earth. And the soldiers want revenge for Germany's brutal invasion and occupation.

Maurice has determined his only way out of this hell is to survive until Nazi Germany dies, and then move home to Canada. But to do that, he’ll have to not only walk out of war, but elude Stalin’s dreaded secret police.
*Goodreads * Amazon*

The Trench

Latvia, October 1944

The sergeant interrupted his stream of thought. “We’re going to get to those bushes over there,” he waved at a small stand of dead trees fifty metres ahead of the tank. “We’ll use the trees as cover to that shed over there, and from there we’ll be able to fire on the trench Fritz is using in front of the farm.”

“We’ll never make it,” Maurice said.

Nikolaev turned on him like an angry dog. “Don’t question my orders, you kokhol coward,” he snarled.

“It’s not cowardice, Sergeant.” Maurice pointed to the left. “There’s another trench fifty or sixty metres that way, to cut off any retreat. They’ll shoot us all from the flank if we run across fifty metres of open ground.”

Nikolaev crouched and peered around the rear corner of the tank to where Maurice was pointing. Sixty metres away, between the farm and the windbreak, was another trench he hadn’t seen. He could count at least eight flared German helmets above the lip, which seemed to be watching the action between the dueling T-34s and Panzers.

“Right. Okay, boys, that’s our target. Fix bayonets and we’ll rush it on my count.”
Maurice felt cold in his bowels. Bayonets meant up-close fighting. But there was no time to think, no time to react other than to follow the other boys in fixing the long bayonet to the barrel of his rifle.

The Red Army was advancing and the Germans fleeing, but the men in the trench were covering their retreat with flanking fire. They concentrated on the men riding on the tanks, now ahead of Maurice’s group and to their left.

Sergeant Nikolaev crouched at the back corner of the tank, intent on the trench. He held up one hand. “One, two …” When the Germans seemed to be focused away from them, he sprang to his feet without finishing the count. He ran toward the trench.

The men jumped after him, running flat out. Maurice could only hope one of his own men wouldn’t stab him accidentally, and they closed the fifty metres to the trench before one of the German soldiers turned toward them.
Scott Bury can't stay in one category.
After a 20-year career in journalism, he turned to writing fiction. "Sam, the Strawb Part," a children's story, came out in 2011, with all the proceeds going to an autism charity. Next was a paranormal short story for grown-ups, "Dark Clouds."

The Bones of the Earth, a historical fantasy, came out in 2012. It was followed in 2013 with One Shade of Red, an erotic romance.

Army of Worn Soles, published in 2014, tells the true story of Maurice Bury, a Canadian drafted into the USSR's Red Army to face the German invasion of the Soviet Union.

Invited to participate in two Kindle Worlds, he published Torn Roots: A Lei Crime Kindle World Novella and Jet - Stealth: A Jet Kindle World Novella. Both came out in July 2015.

In between writing books and blog posts, Scott helped found an author's cooperative publishing venture, Independent Authors International. He is also President of author's professional association BestSelling Reads.

**This post contains affiliate links and if clicked and a purchase made I may receive a small commission to help support this blog.  This does not cost you anything, it just helps pay for all those awesome giveaways on here.**

This contest is sponsored by a third party. Fabulous and Brunette is a registered host of Silver Dagger Scriptorium.  Prizes are given away by the sponsors and not Fabulous and Brunette. The featured author and Silver Dagger Scriptorium are solely responsible for the giveaway prize.