Josephine Greenland Embers Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour #YoungAdult #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub @greenland_jm @maryanneyarde

FEATURED AUTHOR: JOSEPHINE GREENLAND

It is my pleasure to feature Josephine Greenland  as part of The Coffee Pot Book Club Blog Tour being held from March 18 – May 20, 2021. Josephine Greenland is the author of the Young Adult / Crime / Mystery novel, Embers, which was released by Unbound Publisher on 4 March 2021 (336 pages).

Below are highlights of Embers, Josephine Greenland’s author biography, and her inspiration behind writing the book.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HIGHLIGHTS: EMBERS

 

Embers

by Josephine Greenland

Two siblings, one crime. One long-buried secret. 

17-year-old Ellen never wanted a holiday. What is there to do in a mining town in the northernmost corner of the country, with no one but her brother Simon – a boy with Asperger’s and obsessed with detective stories – for company? 

Nothing, until they stumble upon a horrifying crime scene that brings them into a generations-long conflict between the townspeople and the native Sami. When the police dismiss Simon’s findings, he decides to track down the perpetrator himself. Ellen reluctantly helps, drawn in by a link between the crime and the siblings’ own past. What started off as a tedious holiday soon escalates into a dangerous journey through hatred, lies and self-discovery that makes Ellen question not only the relationship to her parents, but also her own identity.

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AUTHOR BIO: JOSEPHINE GREENLAND

 

Josephine is a Swedish-British writer from Sweden, currently working as an English teacher in Edinburgh. She has a BA in English from the University of Exeter, and an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Birmingham. She started writing novels at the age of nine, but only began writing seriously in English while at university, for her first creative writing course (2015). Since then, she’s had 14 short stories published, won two competitions and been shortlisted twice. Embers is her first novel, inspired by her travels in northern Sweden with her brother, and was her dissertation project for her MA. When not writing, she enjoys playing music, jogging, hiking, and discussing literature with her cat. 

 

 

Social Media Links:

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Guest Post: The Inspiration Behind Your Book

 

Sammi Flag


There are two main points of inspiration that first triggered me to write Embers back in 2017, during an Arvon writing retreat in Devon, England. The first is the true crime that took place not far from the mining town where my brother and I stayed in northern Sweden during our interrailing holiday the same year. Two teenaged girls discovered a circle of reindeer bodies (decapitated and with their legs chopped off) laid out almost in a ritualistic fashion, in the forest. The culprit was never found. I was shocked and horrified by the gruesomeness of the crime and that anyone in their right mind could commit such an act. This opened my eyes to the hate crime committed against the Sami – the indigenous population of northern Scandinavia and Russia who traditionally made a living out of reindeer herding. I watched two documentaries on Youtube; one by the investigative journalism programme Cold Facts (Kalla Fakta) which discussed the various crimes that reindeer herders have to put up with on a daily basis, and one about the general life of the forest Sami who keep their reindeer in the woods all year round (rather than going up into the mountains during summer), and how their lifestyle is being affected by the forest, infrastructure and iron ore industries.

 

Shaman Drug

 

Sun Symbol

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The other point of inspiration, which gives the novel its mystic character, is Sami folklore. Intrigued by the ritual circle the reindeer bodies had been laid out in the crime, I researched ritual sites and came across the concept of a seit – a holy place – and the shaman drum (which is featured on the book’s front cover, etched into the forest landscape). The drum was traditionally used to predict the future, and featured a map of the cosmos, with the sun in its centre. As is uncovered later in the novel, the sun and its role in Sami religion become of key significance. The symbol, a form of a cross, is also featured in the title on the book cover. The mystical aspect to the crime also impacts the relationship between the siblings. As Ellen and Simon investigate the reindeer killing, they uncover a link to their own Sami heritage from their grandfather, and between the crime scene and Sami folklore. While Ellen is keen to pursue this lead, Simon dismisses it as a distraction from the main investigation.

As well as these two features, the general landscape of northern Sweden with the mountains and the forest was also a key inspiration, as it inspired the depictions of the setting in my novel, and also the dark, brooding, mystic atmosphere.

Lappland Gate

 

Instagram Handle: @coffeepotbookclub

 

3 Comments
  • Jan Sikes
    Posted at 11:14h, 15 April Reply

    How fascinating! I am not familiar with Sami folklore and I’m intrigued. Love the book cover too! Thanks for sharing, Linnea!

    • Linnea Tanner
      Posted at 17:33h, 15 April Reply

      Hi Jan–Thank you for visiting and commenting on the Sami Folklore. I was also intrigued by how the Sami legends inspired Josephine Greenland to write, “Embers.”

  • Christy B
    Posted at 11:41h, 20 April Reply

    It sounds like the metaphors here are as rich as the characters! It sounds like an intriguing read.

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