Page Turners Book Club of Hilton Head

Writing Yamacraw Bluff has given me many moments of excitement. I felt like that yesterday when I got the following email:

Professor Luke Pittaway,

My book club is reading your book “Yamacraw Bluff”.

We will be discussing it over a lunch on at the Pink House in Savannah, Georgia.  Following the lunch, we intend to take an hour walking tour around Savannah or a trolley tour. Would you provide us with a list of questions in discussing the book that would be helpful to spur conversations? Would you recommend sites for a walking tour that would be applicable to your book or is there one of the trolleys that is giving tours related to your new book?

It’s my first such request, so I wasn’t sure how to respond best. Here are my thoughts on the interesting questions part:

  • The first part of the book focuses on debtors’ prisons. The reform of these prisons was one of the underlying reasons that the colony of Georgia was founded. So, a question could be “From the book, what did you find unusual about how debtors’ prisons were run?”. There are many details, but the general gist is that a debtors’ prison was very different from what we understand a prison to be today.  
  • The founding of Georgia’s colony was a significant entrepreneurial endeavor, marked by a charismatic founder, a Board of Trustees, a prospectus, and extensive advertising. A question could be, “What details about Oglethorpe’s part in founding Georgia stood out for you?”
  • The book is rich in historical detail; you could ask, “What historical details surprised you the most?”
  • The story onboard the Anne follows an actual account from the colony’s recorder, with a few embellishments. So, a question could be, “What did you enjoy most about the story of the colony’s settlers leaving England and coming to Georgia on the Anne. Why, did you enjoy that part of the story?”
  • The second part of the book becomes more fiction and less fact, although there are many aspects that possibly align with what might have happened. I would thus ask some general questions like:
  • How did the contrast between England and Georgia work? Did you get a feeling of joining the settlers?
  • The portrayal of the Yamacraw Indians and their contributions to Georgia’s founding is essential to its history. How did the author portray their contribution?
  • The colony suffered from a severe epidemic of smallpox that threatened its existence. How would you have felt if you’d been part of the community experiencing that suffering?
  • Books often need villainous characters – which of the darker characters stood out to you and why?
  • As the book concludes, Savannah faces numerous governance challenges. What did you learn about this history from the book?

Jenkins’ Ear Manuscript Submitted

It’s a nice feeling, isn’t it? When you complete something big, and send it off. That was the feeling I got on Monday, April 14th, when I sent my sequel to Yamacraw Bluff to the publisher. The book entitled Jenkins’ Ear already has its marketing blurb,

“The second installment in the Tom Ellis trilogy. After the dramatic adventures experienced by the young Ellis in Yamacraw Bluff in the burgeoning Savannah, Georgia, war has been declared. Using the pretext of Jenkins’ severed ear, the British are amassing a fleet to attack and inflict a brutal blow against Spain’s American colonies. Meanwhile, in Georgia, General Oglethorpe has been ordered to assemble a force and invade Spanish Florida.
Georgia’s first ranger, Tom Ellis, is now a corporal and is sucked into the fight of his life. Failure will be unthinkable, and heroes will be required on all sides, as South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida learn about the outcome of the invasion.
Jenkins’ Ear is a fully panoramic historical novel that captures the sights, scenes, and experiences of combatants during the British foray into Florida. It tells the story of the Spanish machinations that led to South Carolina’s Stono Rebellion, chronicles the aggression against Florida, and concludes with the siege of St. Augustine’s Castillo de San Marcos.”

Thank you, Culicidae Press, for continuing to publish my work, and Angela Schmeling for working on the cover design for the new book.

Now availabe in E. Shaver’s Bookshellers in Savannah.

I just heard that my recent book, Yamacraw Bluff, has been placed on the shelf at E. Shaver’s Booksellers in Savannah, Georgia ( 326 Bull St, Savannah). It’s wonderful to see it on bookshelves, especially in Savannah, as it focuses on the city’s founding. I visited the bookstore a few times while living in Statesboro and feel that supporting local independent businesses is important. So, if you are one of my Savannah contacts and would like a copy, please drop by E. Shavers Booksellers and purchase it there. If you’re not in Savannah, it’s available on Amazon, online from Barnes & Noble, and in Athens, OH, from the Little Professor Bookstore. If you’re interested in stocking the book (optimism allowed), you can get it at a discount by ordering it directly from Culicidae Press https://lnkd.in/gTvvhXvW.

Book reviews hot off the press

I am delighted to see book reviews for my recent historical fiction book, “Yamacraw Bluff”. So far, I’ve had 11 on Amazon and maintained a 5-star* rating. Also, pictured is my Goodreads rating, which is also 5-star. It’s great to see people enjoying my work.

I love the Amazon AI summary: “Customers find the book to be a great read, with one mentioning how the author kept them riveted. The story receives positive feedback, with one customer noting how the incredible amount of research informed the storyline, while another appreciates how it blends fact and fiction seamlessly.”

No. 1 on Amazon’s New Releases for the Colonial Period

Yamacraw Bluff is selling. Following its launch at the end of January, the book reached the number-one spot on Amazon’s new releases for the colonial period.

Yamacraw Bluff is available from Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Yamacraw-Bluff-Luke-Pittaway/dp/1683150988

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/yamacraw-bluff-luke-pittaway/1146783451?ean=9781683150985

Grice Connect Features Yamacraw Bluff

One fantastic aspect of my recent book publication, Yamacraw Bluff, is that it has given me the chance to reconnect with friends and colleagues from Statesboro, GA, and Georgia Southern University. Two friends recently gave my book a shout-out. Dewayne Grice posted a lovely article on Grice Connect about the thinking underlying my decision to write the book (https://lnkd.in/gpGUJw6t). Meanwhile, Jenny Lynn Anderson shared its publication with BULLOCH COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY and talked about it on her travel blog (https://lnkd.in/efKSFSMN). Her particularly heartwarming comment stood out, “Many young entrepreneurs learned so much from Luke!” I hope my former students feel that this sentiment is genuinely justified.

Available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Yamacraw-Bluff-Luke-Pittaway/dp/1683150988