We are delighted to announce DEAD GODS, the second in the Times Top 10 bestselling Pagans series by @jamesbluecat.bsky.social. Coming 27 August 2027. Find out more via the link in our bio or copy and paste: www.moonflowerbooks.co.uk/news/moonflo...
Moonflower Books
A photoshoot in a bombed-out mansion, a photographer who refuses to speak English, and the arrival of the police... and that's just the start of Ari's tumultuous journey in the 1960s fashion scene. Read an extract from Penelope Tree's PIECE OF MY HEART: www.moonflowerbooks.co.uk/piece-of-my-...
Lovely arrivals today. On the left from Flame Tree Publishing and on the right @moonflowerbooks.bsky.social, I'm looking forward to reading these. Thank you!
Moonflower Books
Independent publisher Moonflower has acquired Dead Gods, the second novel in James Alistair Henry’s Pagans series 👇
Thank you very much indeed @moonflowerbooks.bsky.social for this fabulous book mail of Seething Lane by @jackjewers.bsky.social out 3rd September
www.moonflowerbooks.co.uk/seething-lane
New blog alert! Revealing the cover for the paperback edition of the "beautifully written, wise, funny and all so true” Piece Of My Heart by Penelope Tree...
www.moonflowerbooks.co.uk/news/cover-r...
With previous winners including Philip Roth, Michael Chabon, Mary Robinette Kowal, and Francis Spufford, it's pretty good company to be in. Winner to be announced at LACon in August so watch this space!
Hot on the heels of the announcement of the sequel, DEAD GODS, a huge congratulations to James Alistair Henry on the nomination of PAGANS for the prestigious #SidewiseAwards!
Pagans by James Alistair Henry
Pagans is something so fresh it feels like it has existed forever. It's a story where Christianity never took root in the UK, nor the rest of the world for that matter. As a result of the Norman robber barons not invading in 1066, the UK never wound up being united…
There are many things I love about @jamesbluecat.bsky.social’s novel, Pagans, but the line “Gehyrest ðu þæt unwyrþan sweg hie forþiað on þæm drylican soncræfte-boxe?” is VERY high up the list