Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Inseparable by David KruhInseparable: An Alcatraz Escape Adventure by David Kruh

Publisher: DX Varos Publishing (June 21, 2022)
Category: Historical Fiction, Action/Adventure
Tour dates: July 6- 26, 2022
ISBN: 978-1955065504
Available in Print and ebook, 325 pages

 Inseparable

Description Inseparable by David Kruh


Tommy knew the right thing to do was turn them in to the cops. But that wasn’t the adventurous thing to do!

What happened to the three men who escaped from Alcatraz prison in June, 1962? Did they meet the same watery fate as dozens who preceded them into the cold San Francisco Bay? There is credible evidence two of them – brothers John and Clarence Anglin – not only survived but lived for years in South America. Inseparable is a fictional account of how a 13-year-old boy named Tommy helped them to freedom.

Tommy O’Conner was an only child whose mother, a widow of the Korean Conflict, had been left to make it on her own. She passed her independent, sometimes lonely spirit, to her son. But Tommy was also, in many ways, no different than other boys his age who dreamed of adventure. Then, one June day in 1962, his daydreams were interrupted by the real thing when he came face to face with John and Clarence Anglin – two of the Alcatraz escapees – and made the decision which would change all their lives.

View Trailer Inseparable by David Kruh




Interview David Kruh

Hi David, Welcome to Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More!  Thanks for agreeing to this interview.

TR: Please tell us something about Inseparable that is not in the summary. (About the book, character you particularly enjoyed writing etc.)

DK: During the time I was writing INSEPARABLE I had a picture on my computer desktop, so it was the first thing I saw when I booted up each day to begin work on the book. The picture is of John and Clarence Anglin, both about ten years old in crisply starched shirts with their hair combed and slicked back as they smile the smiles of boys joyously on the cusp of becoming teenagers. I know this may sound silly but I would say good morning to them every day. After all, I was tasking myself with telling a story in which they would be two of the three central characters – the third being a boy not much older than they were in this picture. In a few years they would begin committing petty crimes, eventually graduating to burglaries and, finally, a bank robbery. Though the bank job was committed using a toy gun, the brothers were sentenced to a state prison where they demonstrated an adept ability to leave the care of the state, albeit without permission. After several escape attempts John and Clarence were sentenced to serve at the Federal Penitentiary at Alcatraz in 1960 and 1961, respectively. In June, 1962 they would become famous for escaping what was considered the country’s toughest prison. But, to be fully rounded characters in a story they needed to be more than their “rap sheet.” This picture was my way of reminding myself that John and Clarence were once just two smiling, happy kids on their bicycles…

TR: Where did you get the inspiration for your cover?

DK: I wish I could take credit. But it came from one of  the wonderful graphic artists employed by DX Varos. It actually took my breath away, the way it encapsulated the theme of the book.

TR: I always enjoy looking at the names that authors choose to give their characters. Where do you derive the names of your characters?  Are they based on real people you knew or now know in real life? How do you create names for your characters?

DK: What a great question. Being based on an actual event I used the actual names of the warden, some prisoners and guards as well as the more well-known residents of Sausalito, such as restaurateurs Juanita Musson and Sally Stanford. Many of the secondary characters (other prison guards and prisoners, policemen, and townspeople) have names from friends. There are two major exceptions. My protagonist, Tommy, is named for a friend with whom I grew up. He had many of the adventuresome qualities needed to attempt the help of two escaped convicts.

TR: Which actors would you like to see playing the lead characters from Inseparable if were to be made into a movie or mini series?

DK: A movie or miniseries? Well, as my mother used to say “from your mouth to God’s ears…” I guess if I were to choose, I’d pick some of my favorite actors if, for no other reason, so I could meet them. How about Sam Rockwell for John or Clarence Anglin? Shea Wingham for the other brother and, oh, yea, Michael Shannon for Frank Morris. And, as long as you’re asking, Brian Cox as the Warden.

TR:  There has been a lot of research, books, and documentaries on this very famous escape from Alcatraz.  Can you tell us about some of the research you did yourself?

DK: Well, I saw the Clint Eastwood movie many years ago (long before I even had the idea for my novel) took a tour of the prison in 2011, which is where I first conjured the idea for INSEPARABLE. But before I began my work of fiction, I wanted to ground myself in the story not just of Alcatraz and the escape but of the quirky, unique town of Sausalito which I call one of my book’s main characters. Through Facebook I found some wonderful Sausalito residents who generously shared memories of their town, and also read three excellent Arcadia publications (Houseboats of Sausalito, Sausalito, and Marinship) which are filled with pictures of the town including many from the era in which the book takes place. The FBI’s website is a treasure trove of pictures and details of the actual escape and the company which runs the very popular Alcatraz Cruise has an extraordinary website with many more details about life – and death – on “The Rock”.

TR: When did you first have a desire to write?  How did this desire manifest itself?

DK: I’ve been writing since first grade. I know because my mother saved my first work of fiction – a science fiction story about a rocket which saved the planet from an asteroid. (I know what you’re thinking but I checked with a lawyer – the producers of Armageddon are off the hook. The statute of limitations has long run out.)

TR: What do you do when you are not writing?

DK: I think about my next book. Really, I do. Since my “wheelhouse” is non-fiction (INSEPARABLE was a rare attempt at fiction, although heavy on actual history) I spend a lot of time doing what I call “burrowing down rabbit holes” – researching and tracking down leads on my latest subject. In the warm weather (a few precious months here in New England) I’m also working in my garden, where I grow pumpkins and other vegetables. Oh, and watching the Red Sox. During colder (and snowier) months I hunker down in the basement refurbishing and restoring antique radios or operate my ham radio station. And, of course, read a lot of history.

TR: What are you currently working on?

DK: I recently began work on a compelling, unsolved mystery which began in Boston on VJ Day (Victory over Japan Day), August 15, 1945. On that day, in the midst of a raucous city-wide celebration of the end of the war, a baby boy was abandoned on the Boston Common, left in the arms of a twelve-year-old boy. I wrote a column in 2005 for the Boston Globe on the child, who was named “Baby Victory” by the press of the day. What I didn’t know was that the baby boy was adopted in 1951.  He later married and had two daughters, one of whom contacted me after reading my 2005 column. We recently began collaboration on a book about her search for the identity of her grandmother. http://www.bambinomusical.com/LittleBabyVictory/index.html

TR: Is there a question that you would have liked me or another blogger to ask but didn’t? Please ask and answer.

DK: Well, first of all I’m grateful you didn’t ask me if I think the escapees actually made it to freedom. Because I could argue both ways and, for the purpose of book sales, would like to keep the possibility open.

The question I’d like to be asked is “what are you most grateful for?” so I could answer “my wife.” There were days I doubted I could even write 80,000 words of fiction… that I could tell a coherent, believable story… or create characters whom readers would care and root for. But my wife Mauzy never doubted me and never stopped making sure I had the time to fulfill my dream.  It wouldn’t have gotten done without her.


About David KruhInseparable by David Kruh


David is the published author of several books on Boston history and the co-author, with his father Louis, on a book about presidential homes and landmarks.

A frequent contributor to the Boston Globe, Boston Herald and History Magazine, David is also a published and produced playwright, and a popular lecturer on a variety of historical subjects. ‘Inseparable’ is his debut novel.

Website: http://https//inseparablealcatraznovel.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/david.kruh

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Inseparable by David Kruh

Days Of Days by Frank NapolitanoDays Of Days by Frank Napolitano

Thanks to Shelby Kisgen of Smith Publicity Inc., I am giving away one print copy of ‘Days Of Days by Frank Napolitano.

Description Days Of Days by Frank Napolitano


For these men, the fire service is their heart, their blood, and their brotherhood. On the morning of September 11, 2001, bound by that brotherhood, they responded to the alarm at the World Trade Center. They fought that day to save civilians, each other, and themselves, against an adversary they thought they knew, and with every step they took, came to realize they might not see another sunrise.

It’s the spring of 2001 in New York City. FDNY engineman and jazz musician Phil Coletti works his shifts on Engine 252 in Brooklyn. He never expected to fall in love with a woman he rescued from a suicide attempt on the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, but he’s been on the job long enough to know he should expect the unexpected. Across the river in Manhattan, Captain Patrick Boyle, the most decorated officer in the history of the FDNY, lies in a hospital bed recovering from third-degree burns. He’s surprised to see his former lover at his bedside- especially since she ditched him to get engaged to a billionaire running for governor of NewYork-and he begins to wonder if the Job is truly for him. Over on Ladder 14, Bryan O’Rorke, a hard-charging truckie and son of a fireman killed in the line of duty, demands 110% from the guys on his crew. When a probationary firefighter from the Bronx, nineteen-year-old Harry Sturgis, arrives at the firehouse, it doesn’t take long before O’Rorke is putting the kid through the paces, and both men suffer the consequences of his unorthodox methods.

This visceral and unsettling novel tells the story of the firefighter’s life, culminating with the emergency response to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center on a spectacular September Tuesday in 2001. It portrays the courage, pain, and devotion of the men and women who respond when the alarm is sounded, who follow an unwritten code borne of necessity and preservation, and who sometimes pay the ultimate price so others may live.

All proceeds from this publication will go to the 911 Tribute Museum and the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation.

Praise Days Of Days by Frank Napolitano


Day of Days is a riveting and passionate look at those people who are first to respond to the calamities that befall unsuspecting civilians every day. Gritty and intense, it is destined to be to the fire service what From Here to Eternity was to the U.S. Army.”- Kia Heavey, author of Domino and Underlake

“This book captures the Brotherhood of Firefighters perfectly.”— Thomas Wieboldt, Retired Firefighter FDNY Engine 217

“If I didn’t know better, I would have thought this book was written by a 40-year veteran of the FDNY.”—Brian Murphy, Professional New York Firefighter

About Frank NapolitanoDays Of Days by Frank Napolitano


Frank Napolitano has been a volunteer firefighter in Greenwich, Connecticut since 1982, where he has held the rank of lieutenant and captain in the Glenville Volunteer Fire Company. He has worked for the New York Public Development Corporation, practiced law at Manhattan law firms, and works as director of risk manager and insurance services for a large not-for-profit organization in Manhattan.

Each year, to honor those lost on September 11, 2001, he is one of dozens of firefighters who run the Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation 5k run/walk in their turnout gear. He is a docent at the 9/11 Tribute Museum in Manhattan, which is staffed by members of the 9/11 community that provide guided tours at the 9/11 Memorial. He resides in Greenwich, CT with his wife and daughter.

Website: https://fnauthor.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/franknapolitanoauthor/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/franknapolitano.author
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/2099244.Frank_Napolitano

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Tsars Locket by Ken CzechThe Tsar’s Locket by Ken Czech


Publisher:  Fireship Press (April 30, 2020)
Category: Action/Adventure, Historical Romance, and Historical Thriller
Tour dates: Sept 30-Nov 25, 2020
ISBN: 978-1611792775
Available in Print and ebook, 303 pages
Tsars Locket

Description Tsar’s Locket by Ken Czech


When Duty, Honor, and Love Collide

Julian Blunt, a former sea captain and a despised Catholic, is stunned when Queen Elizabeth proposes that he help carry a betrothal locket to Tsar Ivan the Terrible in Moscow. It means an alliance between England and Russia is brewing, and the queen warns that should the locket fall into the hands of the Pope or his minions, it could mean war.

Julian joins the queen’s messenger, the lofty and spirited Jessandra Calcross, in a perilous voyage across the Baltic Sea and into the very heart of Russia. When a papal assassin determined to prevent the royal marriage strikes, Jess turns to Julian as the only man she can trust. Although at odds over religion and station, a slender emotional bond grows. Stalked by the relentless murderer, Julian is soon torn between abandoning his mission so he can better safeguard Jess, and fulfilling his vow to the queen. If he fails the queen he’ll never captain a ship again. But if he and Jess continue on to Moscow, they face a darker peril in the mercurial and sinister Tsar Ivan–a peril that will drive courage and dawning love to the breaking point.

Praise Tsar’s Locket by Ken Czech


“The vivid descriptions of the European cities, including Moscow and the Tsar’s palace, transport us to that era. An exciting and informative novel. Highly recommended.”–Waheed Rabbani, Historical Novel Society

“There were twists and turns throughout, but the climactic twist at the end really caught me off guard. If you love a really good story with action, suspense and romance, then I recommend this novel.” —Lesley Jones for Reades’ Favorite

“The historical backdrop to the tale is … fleshed out with gorgeous details and cinematic style descriptive work, enabling author Ken Czech to show off some real knowledge and a true sense of atmosphere about the period. Add to this the real excitement of a perilous journey across the sea, well-developed villains, a political versus religious thematic arc and some authentic yet accessible dialogue, and you have a truly excellent novel that readers will simply devour.” —K. C. Finn, author of the Caecilius Rex series

“I enjoyed the setting, the play-by-play of action, and the chemistry between Jess and Julian was off the charts. This is an astonishing story that had me hooked from the beginning …” —Rabia Tanveer for Readers’ Favorite

Interview Tsar’s Locket by Ken Czech

Hi Ken, thanks for agreeing to this interview. 

TR: Please tell us something about ‘The Tsar’s Locket’ that is not in the summary.  (About the book, character you particularly enjoyed writing etc.)

KC: I thoroughly enjoyed creating my vision of Moscow at the time of Tsar Ivan the Terrible. Many of the original palaces and churches in the Kremlin still exist, so I tried to incorporate as much physical detail as possible without being too pedantic.

TR: What is your favorite scene in the book? Why?

KC: Near the end of the book is a scene in which Julian Blunt and Jess Calcross, my main characters, are invited to a feast given by Tsar Ivan the Terrible. The feasting is dark, brooding, and gluttonous, filled with tension and impending doom. For me, this scene epitomizes the danger Julian and Jess face at the court of the tsar.

TR: How completely do you develop your characters before beginning to write?

KC: I try to paint a physical picture of my main characters first. I’ve found it easier to develop their mentality, their fears and foibles, their courage and sense of adventure after I know what they look like. Character development continues throughout as failure leads to eventual success and the characters grow (we hope!).

TR: How long did it take you to write this book from concept to fruition? Also, how intensive was your research into the real history?

KC: It took me about a year to complete The Tsar’s Locket. I had a general idea as to which direction my story would go and how the characters would interact. Then came the fleshing out as the plot progressed. The research component was rather extensive. I had to delve into details of the Elizabethan era, sailing a ship of the time, investigating the Livonian War (about which very little appears in print in English), and recreating the Moscow of Ivan the Terrible.

TR: How did you come across the real history that inspired you to write ‘The Tsar’s Locket’?

KC: As a history professor, I had known about Tsar Ivan’s desire to wed an English bride for commercial and military reasons. There was so much religious strife going on in Europe at the time that I reckoned what the dangers might be if a betrothal locket had actually been delivered.

TR: Tell us about your cover. Did you design it yourself?

KC: I was able to find the image of an Elizabethan-era locket at an auction site on the Internet. I tied the locket image to the image of St. Basil’s Cathedral, perhaps the most iconic building in all of Russia. Fireship Press, my publisher, refined the layout, created the titles, and presto—we had a cover.

TR: What writers have you drawn inspiration from?

KC: I’m a bit old-fashioned. Some of my favorite writers have long since passed away, including Andre Norton, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Robert E. Howard. Among modern authors, the writings of Bernard Cornwell, Ben Kane, and Conn Iggulden have really captured my attention.

TR:  Describe the room you are sitting in as though it was a scene in one of your books.
– What words do you use over and over that drive your editor crazy?
– Which character do you love to hate?
– Using the title of your book as an acrostic, describe your work or yourself.
– Using only adverbs, describe the writing process for you.
– You are sitting in a coffee shop. What does your writer mind see?

KC: Wow! My writing room: The shelves are crammed with books, mostly old, some beautifully bound in leather or vellum. There are common themes among them including travel, exploration, and sport. The artwork filling the walls reflects those themes: here, a 19th-century chromolithograph of a pheasant, and by the window overlooking an abandoned granite quarry, an exotic papier mâché celebration mask given by Tibetan students once upon a time. My computer screen stares at me from my desk; I try to keep its glass face filled with words. A black chair rides on gray carpet, the latter wearing down a bit. Papers and notebooks abound.

In my first book, I used ‘he muttered’ about thirty times. Since then, I really watch dialog tags.

It was easy to hate Tsar Ivan the Terrible, a monster capable of truly horrific deeds. I had a wealth of research material to call upon in creating my version of the tsar, but what struck me was how unpredictable he was.

Acrostic: The – Tenacious

               Tsar’s – Thorough

               Locket – Learned

Adverbs: regularly, frequently, powerfully, elegantly, voraciously, keenly, avidly, descriptively, scholarly, thoroughly, tenaciously

The coffee shop, no, my easy chair, yes. I look out the window and see the changing seasons, the panoply of colors, the rigors of winter, the visits of birds, the sunsets. The natural world plays a large part in all of my books. 

TR: If you could be somebody else for a day who would you choose and why?

KC: Strangely, perhaps, president of the U.S. for a day. It would be a day to exercise common sense, choose decency toward all, and utilize my seventy years of life experiences from the real world.

TR: What do you do when you are not writing?

KC: I have been an antiquarian bookseller for several decades and continue to collect and sell books in my fields of interest. My wife and I also enjoy the outdoors, our time with grandkids, and peace and quiet.

TR: What book/s are you reading at present?

KC: I’m reading and enjoying Bernard Cornwell’s Fools And Mortals, a Shakespearean drama so different from his popular Napoleonic and Saxon England novels.

TR: When did you first have a desire to write?  How did this desire manifest itself?

KC: I think I first thought about writing after reading several of Edgar Rice Burroughs’s adventure novels when I was a kid. I recall writing pastiches of his works, trying to emulate his style. I had several science fiction stories published many years ago, but then academia and academic research and writing took over. After I retired from the classroom, I started writing historical fiction and love every moment (or word) of it.

TR: What are you currently working on?

KC: Continuing my Russian saga, my new novel takes place in 16th century Siberia. An army of Cossacks invades the vast, unknown region in search of furs, land, and wealth. My protagonist is a young woman rejected by her Samoyed clan because she is a half-blood Russian. She is determined to halt the Cossack incursion. Yes, the invasion really happened. 

TR:  This is your third novel. What have you learned about the writing process from first to third?

KC: I think I’ve learned to create story arcs that are not only plausible but entertaining. In The Tsar’s Locket, I had to weave story arcs on the religious and political situations of the time that enhanced the experiences of my main characters.


About Ken CzechTsars Locket by Ken Czech


History has been his passion since award winning author, Ken Czech was a wee lad. After retiring from a career of teaching history at both secondary and higher education levels, He turned that passion to writing historical novels. His stories combine fiction with actual events and actors taken from the past.  He lives with his wife Mary on an abandoned granite quarry in Minnesota where they enjoy the wildlife and the changing seasons. That’s where his writing happens.

His latest book THE TSAR’S LOCKET has received Five Stars from Reader’s Favorite. His previous novels BEYOND THE RIVER OF SHAME and LAST DANCE IN KABUL have also received very favorable reviews.

Website: https://www.kennethczech.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100019397558582

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Tsars Locket by Ken Czech