Guest Post and Giveaway: The Lessons for Sleeping Dogs Blog Tour with Charlie Cochrane

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We’re so pleased to welcome author Charlie Cochrane back to TNA, on the tour for the latest installment in the Cambridge Mysteries series, Lessons for Sleeping Dogs. Enjoy Charlie’s guest post, and then be sure to leave a comment below to enter the following giveaway:

Every comment on this blog tour enters you in a drawing for your choice of an a ebook from Charlie Cochrane’s backlist (excluding Lessons for Sleeping Dogs.) Entries close at midnight, Eastern Time, on October 17, 2015. Contest is NOT restricted to U.S. entries. Don’t forget to add your contact information so we can reach you if you win!

Good luck!

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Jonty and Orlando and Room 40

This post was inspired by a post I once read about heroes. It defined a hero as “A man who has honour and a sense of duty, which he holds true to quietly, without a fuss.”

That immediately made me think, “That could be Jonty, or Orlando!”

Admittedly my Cambridge lads don’t normally wear armour, (in fact I’m not sure they’ve ever worn armour except perhaps for the obligatory “box” to protect the old meat and two veg when playing cricket). Nor do they ride on white chargers; Orlando gets cross enough about Jonty’s obsession with motor cars; he’d hate having to mount a horse!

They did, however, serve in WWI, both with the Room 40 cryptanalysis boys (which is referenced in “Lessons for Sleeping Dogs”) and later out in France. But they’re also heroes in their everyday lives, sticking steadfastly and stubbornly to what they believe is decent and right.

They’re creatures of their time, of course, born in the late Victorian era but Edwardians through and through. They’re based at a forward thinking but still ancient Cambridge college, trying to knock some knowledge into their students, solving mysteries on the side and desperately trying to stop the world finding out that they’re lovers because exposing that fact would have exposed them to the risk of disgrace and prison.

I’ve often wondered what Jonty and Orlando would have done with themselves if they’d been born in another era. Solved mysteries? Of course! Fallen in love with each other? Naturally. I always associate my lads with the great last line of Mary Renault’s “The Mask of Apollo” :  No one will ever make a tragedy – and that is as well, for one could not bear it – whose grief is that the principals never met.”  It would have been a huge tragedy for these two not to have found each other, but let’s not be mawkish. Whatever era they’d been in, they’d have been funny, annoying and adorable.

But I can’t help but wonder what career they would have had and how their heroic tendencies would have manifested themselves. If they’d been born thirty years later then they’d have been Bletchley men, of that I’m certain. Or would Jonty have been a bomber pilot while Orlando was his wingman, in a nippy little Hurricane? I prefer the thought of them annoying Turing at Bletchley – it would have been safer for them, for one thing and maybe Alan T wouldn’t have misplaced the silver he buried in the woods if he’d had the lads to help him locate it.

A hundred years earlier, Jonty and Orlando might have been in Nelson’s navy, one of his band of brothers. I can imagine Edwardian Jonty and Orlando having a discussion about this scenario and arguing over which one of them would have earned his captain’s “swab” first.

I can also see them at the time of Agincourt, knights in Henry’s army, part of those “happy few” although Jonty has the build less for a chevalier than for one of those famous British archers. Maybe Jonty would have actually have ghost written the “Once more into the breach” and “We few, we happy few…” speeches for the king. It’s just the sort of mellifluous language he’d have enjoyed creating.

Go back another few hundred years and I could see my lads having taken up arms on a crusade. Not for any religious reason or for the glory, but as a means of running from the traumas of their younger lives. Neither of them had particularly happy formative years; maybe that’s one of the reasons they find so much comfort in each other and in putting wrongs to right.

So, what if Jonty and Orlando had been 1980’s babies? I know Jonty would embrace modern technology with great glee and Orlando would tolerate it, much as he tolerates that car of Jonty’s. Maybe they’d be at 21st century Cambridge University, trying to knock some sense into the modern undergraduates, or Orlando would have a job in a bank, working out complex algorithms to maximise the company’s investments while Jonty treads the boards at the National Theatre, making the young girls swoon at his Hamlet.  But that doesn’t seem heroic enough. I don’t think they’re really the men for modern warfare, so where would their valour find an outlet?

I think (and this may seem odd but it makes perfect sense in my head) they’d be leading lights for a charity like Help for Heroes, or the British Legion, working their socks off to make sure that people who’ve served their country aren’t left to cope alone. That would be an admirable outlet for their brains, bravery and sense of right and wrong.

Oh, and I think Orlando would be working doubly hard to make sure their Civil Partnership ceremony wasn’t splashed all over “Country Life”!

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Lessons for Sleeping DogsBlurb: Cambridge, 1921

When amateur sleuth Jonty Stewart comes home with a new case to investigate, his partner Orlando Coppersmith always feels his day has been made. Although, can there be anything to solve in the apparent mercy killing of a disabled man by a doctor who then kills himself, especially when everything takes place in a locked room?

But things are never straightforward where the Cambridge fellows are concerned, so when they discover that more than one person has a motive to kill the dead men—motives linked to another double death—their wits get stretched to the breaking point.

And when the case disinters long buried memories for Jonty, memories about a promise he made and hasn’t kept, their emotions get pulled apart as well. This time, Jonty and Orlando will have to separate fact from fiction—and truth from emotion—to get to the bottom of things.

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Charlie CochraneBio: As Charlie Cochrane couldn’t be trusted to do any of her jobs of choice—like managing a rugby team—she writes, with titles published by Carina, Samhain, Bold Strokes, MLR and Cheyenne.

Charlie’s Cambridge Fellows Series of Edwardian romantic mysteries was instrumental in her being named Author of the Year 2009 by the review site Speak Its Name. She’s a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, Mystery People, International Thriller Writers Inc and is on the organising team for UK Meet for readers/writers of GLBT fiction. She regularly appears with The Deadly Dames.

Connect with Charlie: 

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The Fine Print:

*Entrants must be 18 years or older to qualify
*No residency restrictions apply
*All comments must be relevant to the author’s prompt to be eligible (when applicable)
*The Novel Approach will not be held liable for prize delivery unless otherwise specified
*Void where prohibited by law

26 thoughts on “Guest Post and Giveaway: The Lessons for Sleeping Dogs Blog Tour with Charlie Cochrane

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  1. Even though I want to protect their privacy, I did have a nice moment imagining Jonty and Orlando’s wedding photo shoot!

    vitajex(at)Aol(Dot)com

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  2. I can totally see them as men of any age, doing what they knew to be right, and honorable, while being annoying and silly and lovable as needed. Men don’t change so much. (Women change perhaps even less.) I think that is why war has that ‘oh not this again’ quality, captured by you and Sayers and WS.
    I am halfway done with this one now. I have no idea who did the crime. (I never do,) but I am loving my visit with your boys.
    Choice drawn cavaliers indeed.

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  3. I love Jonty and Orlando, and I can perfectly imagine them in many periods is time, of course always together, always able to find a rightful cause or an innocent to protect…
    susanaperez7140(at)gmail(dot)com

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  4. Congratulations on your new release! I am looking forward to beginning the series. I have them loaded onto my kindle to read next week while on vacation! Thank you.

    ree.dee.2014 (at) gmail (dot) com

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  5. I am looking forward to many happy reading hours on the train as I always start a series from book 1 each time a new one comes out. I do read the one that I know I will cry over at home – can only blame a bad day at work for so much.

    sue61408at yahoo dot com

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  6. Thanks for the great post! I’m still catching up on this series (and loving it!) but I can see them in all those times. amaquilante(at)gmail(dot)com

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  7. I have loved this book as I have all the others. Thank you for continuing to write about these boys. Please keep at it! :)

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  8. Loved the last line. It made me laugh. I’d love to see the lads at Bletchley with Turing. Aiming to catch up with Jonty and Orlando next year – still 3 books behind. Eep, especially as I love these stories so much. Congratulations on the new book!

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  9. Silly website ate my original reply. I loved the last line of this. It made me laugh. I could so imagine Orlando doing that. I’d love to see the lads at Bletchley with Turing. Enjoyed the post, and congratulations on the new book. New years resolution for 2016 is catching up with your lads. 3 books behind now. Eep.

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