Katie Daysh's Blog

October 9, 2023

BookBub Deal!

I'm so excited that Leeward is currently a Featured Deal on BookBub!!! The ebook is 99p for a limited time, so grab those queer sailors quickly! Leeward

https://www.bookbub.com/books/leeward...
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Published on October 09, 2023 05:16 Tags: ageofsail, bookbub, historicalficton

August 28, 2023

Newsletter!

Hi everyone!

I now have a monthly newsletter! Sign up if you’d like to hear writing updates and/or me talking about writing and reading. I’m hoping to have the first instalment out soon if people are interested.

https://subscribepage.io/8ma7eI
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Published on August 28, 2023 11:31 Tags: newsletter

August 1, 2023

Leeward History #1: Battle of the Nile



Nightingale was still screaming as the Orient's seams convulsed like a failing heart. A bright orange aura consumed the bay.

And the sun erupted.

The explosion kicked Nightingale in the chest. He fell to his back, instinctively rolled over, and clasped his hands over his head. The scream of one hundred and eighteen guns blowing to pieces tore at him, made every timber in the Lion bounce and shake. Angry waves, ploughing from the ripped hull of the Orient, lifted the ship's bows, slammed her down. The rest of the mizzen lanterns shattered around Nightingale, igniting into pockets of fire –

– and then came the debris of the Orient. Nightingale raised his head in time to see her main top-mast pitch over in the air and impale the ocean, yards away from the Lion's hull. Scraps of metal pinwheeled, slicing through the mizzen stays. Red-hot steel ripped holes in the ship's frame, tearing up rails and ladders and chunks of the helm. Nightingale ducked, but not in time to stop a raining hail of splinters gouging into his forehead.


1st August marks the anniversary of the Battle of the Nile, which took place in 1798. For those of you who've read Leeward, you'll know this is the event that kickstarts the book, where Captain Nightingale receives his physical and psychological scars. Reading about this battle really inspired Leeward because I wanted to capture what it must have sounded and looked like. I reference the above painting a lot in the first chapter, with that spar pinwheeling through the air in the top left-hand corner and the cathedral-like glow of the exploding Orient.

The Battle of the Nile was fought between the British Royal Navy and the French Republican Navy off the coast of Egypt. It finalised a campaign that had been battling Napoleon across the Mediterranean, culminating in his invasion of Egypt as a stepping-stone to conquering British India. Under Horatio Nelson, the British fleet located the French anchored at Aboukir Bay. In the formation of two lines, the British ships attacked the French. During the climax of the battle, the French flagship, the huge Orient, erupted. Only a handful of French ships managed to escape, meaning a strategic victory for the British both during this battle and eventually across the entire Mediterranean.

It was the battle which made Nelson into a hero, and he had medals cast for the officers who served on the ships which took part. This is referenced in Leeward, with Nightingale despising his Nile medal as a marker of a very (for him) pyrrhic victory. He has one made for his lieutenant, Leroy Sawyer, the man he had secretly been in love with and who dies at the Nile.

Hope you enjoyed this short history lesson and how it inspired Leeward!
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Published on August 01, 2023 09:04 Tags: ageofsail, battleofthenile, historicalfiction

July Round-Up!

Hi everyone! Thank you to everyone who has followed me on here. It's so appreciated! I'm so excited that I finally managed to get into Goodreads Author Programme after being rejected through the form so many times (I think that's a rite of passage for any author, right? lol)

I thought I would use my first blog post on here to do a little round-up of my writing and reading in July. I've started recording little videos of this for my Tiktok and Instagram reels but I still cringe listening to and looking at myself, so I thought I would use this writing format too haha

My main update for this month is that I have sent Leeward's sequel off to the publisher, Canelo, for a round of edits! There were times when I thought I would not get to this stage as I struggled so much with this manuscript. I had plots which went nowhere, gaps in the narrative, and issues with character voice. It took me a fair few drafts to finally think... hey, okay, I can see where this is going. I fell into the character voice midway through about draft 3 (?) and I'm finally at a point where I am really happy with it and can't wait for people to read it!

So while that's off, I have been working on another project, another queer historical piece. It is super fun, and a bit more socially based than Leeward. Full of a lot of juicy drama and character tension! I'm always a fan of working on a few projects at once because I find if I struggle with one, I can hop to the other, and then back again – and usually, that helps to resolve any plot issues!

In terms of reading, I'm sorry but I'm not very good at reading glamorous and viral new books. (I'm a bit boring lol). I finished Tom Nancollas's Ship Asunder, about bits of ship utilised in Britain's landscape and architecture, and you can find my review here:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I've also been delving into my little (or not so little) historical obsession, the lost Franklin expedition. I finished reading Michael Smith's WONDERFUL Icebound in the Arctic (https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...) and have recently started John Wilson's North with Franklin. I'm immensely enjoying that one, even if...I know what happens at the end 😅

Thanks for reading, if you made it this far haha. I plan to use this blog as an alternative to my little reels and videos, talking about my writing process, books, and snippets of history related to the period I write in.

Bye for now xx
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Published on August 01, 2023 07:44