Announcement – New Release

The Girl in the Ticket Office Window

Patricia M Osborne

I’m excited to announce that The Girl in the Ticket Office Window will be released on the 10th November 2025. It will be available to read in paperback, on kindle and if you have kindle unlimited you’ll be able read it with that too.
It is now available to preorder on Amazon Kindle at a special price of 99p/99c. Following release the price will be £2.99/$4.50. The reason for the introductory price is to ensure that my loyal followers get the best deal.


I’m so happy with the cover and I hope you all like it too. Andy Keylock (Marketing Pace), my cover designer, has done an amazing job.

The Girl in the Ticket Office Window, the first book in the Zara timeslip series, is a little different to my normal books in as much that it uses a dual timeline that slips from present day to 1910. I was inspired to write this novel from an old photograph I spotted on a local Facebook group. The story began as a flash fiction and my very good friend and editor, Maureen Cullen, who is also a brilliant writer, advised me, ‘This could be a novel.’ I had my doubts, but yes, I turned it into a novel and what’s more, the second book in the series is over two-thirds written.

The book provides the normal themes of strong friendships and social conflict that I like to use, whilst also adding a bit of mystery and romance, including a love triangle with two men a century apart.

Preorder

About the Book

Girl misses train – catches a ride backwards in time

Journalist Zara Wiseman discovers an unexpected story for Feminine Smile Magazine when she finds herself transported back to 1910 and becomes Lady Rebecca. Initially the 24-year-old believes her quest is to save Rebecca from an arranged marriage to Sir Richard Cavendish but soon realises he’s not the true villain. As Zara unearths two deadly dark secrets, she fears Rebecca and Sir Richard’s lives could be in danger.

Torn between travelling back in time to save Rebecca and Richard and leaving her own life behind, Zara summons all her strength to fulfil her mission. With a dual timeline slipping between present day and 1910, Zara is caught in a love triangle with dishy boyfriend, Scott, and Sir Richard, the dashing and devoted gentleman.

Can Zara accomplish her mission?

Will she find her way back home?

Will she want to?

Preorder on Kindle


The Opening of Chapter 1

Strobe after strobe of blinding light seared through my eyelids then shattered into a thousand stars. I thought my head would burst. Stunned, I forced myself to reopen my eyes. What the …? My jeans and trench coat had gone. Instead, I was dressed in an emerald velvet gown to my ankles. Commuters carrying laptops had disappeared. In their place a few gentlemen in dark suits and bowler hats sauntered over to the platform, swinging large brollies at their sides. I stared up at the unfamiliar glass ceiling. What the hell had just happened?

            I moved over to the ticket office window and peered at my reflection. A straw hat topped with flowers and feathers matching the cream lace bodice was positioned on my piled-up hair. No sign of the wheeled suitcase either. It was like I’d stepped inside someone’s dream. My pulse pounded. There had to be some kind of scientific explanation. I headed back out of the station hoping everything would be as usual but all was far from normal.

            The road was empty with not a car in sight. I inhaled clean air. My stomach churned so I covered my mouth to stop throwing up. This couldn’t be real. My eyes shot to a little girl in a white smock dress and straw boater perched on a fence. She appeared mesmerised by two young lads in a scuffle. They wore grey tweed flat caps just like my great grandfather had owned. I was losing myself in a history book. I blinked back salty tears. If this was real, supposing I never got back to my own time? Mum and Dad couldn’t lose another child. And what would become of Chloe? My sister needed me.

            The bridge ahead was blemish free and surrounded by greenery. As if in an early twentieth century movie, a gentleman in Edwardian dress promenaded out of The Fox Inn. His eyes lit up with recognition as he approached. ‘Good morning, Lady Rebecca.’ He doffed his bowler hat.

            Lady Rebecca? Who the hell was I? My name was Zara. Once he’d passed me by I whispered, ‘Please God, if there is a god’ – I sobbed – ‘please help me.’

            After stepping off the pavement I witnessed another blinding flash. Disoriented, I stepped back and tripped. A blue Volkswagen almost hit me. The woman driver hooted her horn and raised her fist shouting abuse. The pedestrian man changed to green. As I hurried across the road my ankle boots felt huge on my feet; the court shoes had gone and so had the dress. I was wearing my own twenty-first century clothes and the suitcase rattled on wheels. The bridge was covered in grime and graffiti. The Fox Inn had disappeared and The Fox Revived had returned. Thank goodness I was back in 2023. I gave a sigh of relief. Had I gone through some kind of portal and then back out again?

            My heart pulsated as I turned towards Bridge View Station. Avoiding the main entrance in case it sent me back, I slipped in through the side doorway.

~~~


I hope that the opening has made you want to read more. On release you can order a copy via Amazon, bookstore, or your local library.

In the meantime find out more and preorder on Kindle at the special price of 99p/99c. Price goes up on release.




Watch out for more bookish news concerning House of Grace trilogy.

Price slashed to 99p/99c for ‘The Oath’

I tend to neglect promoting The Oath so I’m excited to announce that it can be downloaded on Amazon Kindle for only 99p/99c. This deal ends 08:00am GMT/ 08:00am PDT 12th June 2025.


Download your copy from Amazon Kindle

Available on Kindle Unlimited

About the book

The Oath takes the reader on an emotional rollercoaster with its captivating story set in the late Victorian era. Although heartbreaking, it is also uplifting, both of which may cause the reader to shed a tear or two.

Marry the baronet, or vulnerable parents face la prison des pauvres

France 1895 – Seventeen-year-old Françoise abandons her carefree life and sails for England to marry distant cousin Charles Dubois. On arrival she finds her groom aloof and evasive.

‘Playtime is over. Seventeen is old enough to wed and bear a child.’

Draped in expensive silk brocade, she yearns for her homeland and comfortable gowns, and when she discovers the baronet’s clandestine visits, it is her cheery maid she turns to, her new confidante and friend.

BETRAYAL – HEARTBREAK – FRIENDSHIP

The Oath: A coming of age, historical fiction saga from the author of House of Grace family saga trilogy.


Download for 99p/99c on Amazon Kindle

“A coming-of-age story with well-rounded characters (I love Tilly!), authentic description and a great plot with many twists and turns. A real page-turner for anyone who enjoys historical romance at its best. Loyalty, love, loss and friendship. You’ll need tissues!”

“I loved all the references to France, and the speech/conversation were particularly engaging. This is a book I can highly recommend (and already have to friends). Well done to the author on such an engaging novel.”

“I was hooked from the beginning, hoping that Tilly would get a lucky break and that things would work out for Françoise. Both main characters were very likeable.” 

Read more reviews and download from Amazon Kindle

N.B: This is a limited offer and will end 08:00am GMT/ 08:00am PDT 12th June 2025.

Please note that The Oath is only available to download from Amazon Kindle.

The Paperback version (currently @£9.99) is available to order via all good bookstores (brick and online) or your local library.

Launch Feature – Susan Richardson

Please join me in congratulating Susan Richardson on the launch of Smatterings of Cerulean published by Dark Winter Press. Susan is not only a poet but also known for the beautiful narrator’s voice in the fabulous podcast A Thousand Shades of Green.


Smatterings of Cerulean is a collection of short poems by Susan Richardson, accompanied by the photographs of Ken Whytock.  It is a collection, essentially, about love.  In these poems, Richardson explores the trajectory of the human experience, and how in all its shapes, textures and colours, love is at the root of the myriads of internal landscapes people travel.  There is darkness and loss in these pages, yes, but there is also strength, fierce feeling, and ultimately, hope.  These poems are the fullness of life crafted into small spaces, a blending of intense emotion and compelling images that tell a story of what it means to love. 

In the Veins

Courage lives in the veins

Blood nourished earth clad raven

I envy your wings

Susan Richardson


What readers say

‘Susan’s poignant new collection is a journey through grief and the tangle of memory: the loss of loved ones, through to the reality and experience of sight loss, and then to a celebration of love and its power to balance, and to recharge. Short form poetry presents the challenge of distilling complex emotions and memories, often through short moments of observation of surroundings or complex emotional states, and it is a challenge that Susan meets with skill, power, and vulnerable bravery throughout this work. For those who follow her poetry podcast, A Thousand Shades of Green, I found myself reading her words in her voice, her steady, quiet strength underpinning this work from start to finish. Bravo, Susan!’

Mo Schoenfeld – poet, winner of Judges Mention – The Best Haiku Anthology 2022 (Haiku Crush)

‘Oh the delicacy of sight; that seeing what happens in the absence of light, in the memories of love, in the touch of loss that holds the world so much more beautifully than it did before the black and white ink stains and photographic images made their way to the white spaces in Susan Richardson’s latest collection, Smatterings of Cerulean (DarkWinterPress).

She brilliantly binds together visual and verbal forces to imprint us with an unspoken knowing that some words should be left unsaid, some shadows remain forever dark.  In this we witness  “memory slips from the corner of my eye”, and we find, with certainty, we can hold fast to the promise she makes in this body of work:  “One day I will strike colour with a vengeance”.  And she does. Oh yes, she does.’

-Karen Pierce Gonzalez,  Coyote in the Basket of My Ribs, Down River with Li Po


Order your copy now on Amazon UK US CA

Book News

Publication Day – The Woodhaerst Triangle

Let me introduce you to Book 1: The Woodhaerst Triangle in the new 1970s family drama trilogy.



The Woodhaerst Triangle is a love story wrapped in family drama. It is available to read on Kindle or in paperback. It can be ordered via Amazon on Kindle and paperback. The paperback may also be ordered via any bookstore, or ask your local library to order in a copy.

Prologue for The Woodhaerst Triangle
Patricia M Osborne

Prologue

June, 1953

A high-pitched cry fills the small room as the infant enters the world.

             ‘Is it all right? What did I have?’ The girl tries to sit up. Beads of sweat run across her forehead. Her white linen gown is bloodstained.

            ‘No concern of yours, lass. Lie back and let me finish cleaning you up.’ The buxom nurse pats the girl down below with a threadbare towel.

It shouldn’t be like this. She should’ve been allowed to have the infant at home, in her own surroundings. Not in this dingy room with an old woman telling her she has no right to know anything. It wasn’t fair. ‘But the baby’s mine. Please, what did I have? Please let me hold it.’

            ‘Take the bairn away’– the nurse waves her large hands at the female attendant – ‘take her. Quickly.’ 

            The skinny attendant wraps the baby in white muslin showing only a mass of dark hair.

            ‘A girl. I have a daughter. Please don’t take her away. Please. Let me see.’ The girl lies back powerless, too tired to even barely move.

            Ignoring the young mother, the attendant leaves the room with the infant in her arms. As she opens the door shrieks from another teen in labour echo along the corridor. The heavy door slams shut silencing the screams.  

            The girl sobs. ‘Please.’          

            ‘Forget her. She’s not yours.’ The nurse dips a flannel into a fresh bowl of lukewarm water, wrings it out and washes the sixteen-year-old’s face. ‘You’re a lucky lass. Normal delivery and no stitches. When the time’s right, and you have a husband, you can have more bairns. Forget this ever happened. Go home and continue your life.’

If you’d like to order a paperback or kindle copy – go HERE. The kindle copy is offered at an introductory price which will increase this time in October.



Watch out for more bookish news for Book 2 – The Woodhaerst Reunion as I’ll be doing a cover reveal in the next few days!

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