Footprintsin the Sea Vol 5

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It's been longer than I expected, loads going on at the moment but only a couple of weeks later than I promised, Footsteps in the Sea volume 5, with the title Volcano is up on Amazon Kindle and should be available on Monday or soon after.
There will be a link in the right hand column so order from here and help the site.

During the following few months I will be launching the full series, one volume at a time as paperbacks and when that's done, I'll link them together.
Once Volcano is settled I'll put that on the Kindle lending library as well because there are lots of people who prefer reading them that way.
I've also been busy getting my other, (non TG books) ready for paperback publishing because their sales have picked up a little and I am hoping to get myself a web site and then look into some serious promotion because emails I have been receiving seem to indicate I have a following and a bit of promotion on my part might encourage that.

On the other hand, where I now live there are some very interesting country walks which include sections of the Grand Union Canal and I've been looking at a lot of the boats and might just get it into my head to buy one and live on it. The big advantage being that living on a boat and wanting a change of scene means undoing a couple of mooring ropes and starting an engine. There's no need to pack everything, not even an overnight bag. I might even have a go at being the first person to sail a British narrow boat across the Atlantic and then use America's inland rivers and canals to wander down from New York to California. I just hope that any Native Americans who spot me are able to differentiate between a narrow boat with no wheels and an Iron Horse. Do inland boats in the States need cow catchers fitted to the bow?
Lotsalove,
Frances

Comments

No need for cow catchers fitted to the bow

The train pulling the flatcar your boat is loaded on as it travels across the Rocky Mountains and midwest will already have a cowcatcher attached. You may neeed an icebreaker prow if you are in certain waters during the winter. Alternately you could go Panama Canal or Northwest Passage. It would make a great book. :-)