about the author

Raymond Silverthorne is somebody who knows first-hand that certain events can leave us feeling we have no control over the direction in which our lives are going, but at other times we make conscious and deliberate choices. The author of Sempre: Finding Home worked, lived in and loved London for nearly 40 years, but as 2010 came to an end, newly married he moved with his husband to a small village in Portugal, a country that at that time neither of them knew much about. The life Ray began living there contrasted greatly with the one he’d had in London, and inspired him to write, contrasting and comparing his birth home with the one of his heart.

about the book

When an old man dies in a London park, a family heirloom slips from his finger, and is found by a young woman who is instrumental in reuniting the past with the present as old and new love stories are told.

Through these interweaving stories we witness destiny’s hand in both historic and contemporary Portugal and Britain, and the drama comes not from villains in black cloaks, but from situations which are out of the characters’ control. It is due to the trials of these ordinary people, and a happy ending that ties in so many of the plot’s strings, that this is one of those stories you will want to read a second time in order to fully appreciate how the characters’ lives overlap, and the hand fate plays.

This story owes a great amount to four songs: ‘Ordinary Girl’ by Alison Moyet; the author wanted to know why the protagonist of the ‘story’ thought she had to leave the way she did. ‘Take a Drunk Girl Home’; a country song about a man who takes a drunk girl home and doesn’t take advantage of the situation. ‘Symphony’ by Sarah Brightman; about the end of a love affair that leaves one half of the couple uncertain of what went wrong. The fourth song is, ‘If You Could Read My Mind’ by Gordon Lightfoot; it mentions ‘a ghost in a wishing-well’ and was a spur for writing about the mystery which the author feels has a place in all our lives…

news

Writing the wrongs

It always used to amaze me when I would come across errors in a book that I was reading, ‘How could a book reach the published stage of its life and not be perfect?’ Oh, I don't mean mistakes in histo ........

Family Trees

The story of 'Sempre; finding home' covers various generations in both Portugal and England in my attempt to show how lives overlap and destinies entwine. Understandably, the number of names an ........

HOME IS WHERE ‘WE’ ARE

Our furry family member continues to humble us with her loyalty. She, like the character of Cashew in my story, found a home in the small Portuguese village, and has only recently helped us mak ........

blogs

Goodbyes & Bons Dias

dia 4 de outubro 2024The tears came unexpectedly, rolling down my cheeks as I held Stephen in an embrace and asked “Are you alright?”“Not really, but I suppose that's because we're emotional people.”T ........

The Carnation Revolution; 25 April 1974

During one of Europe's lengthiest authoritarian regimes, Portugal's governments were inspired by autocratic, authoritarian and fascist ideologies. On 25th April 1974, in a coup led by left-leaning ........

A Brief Tale of Two Countries (6th March 2024)

Portugal‘Rei-do-mundo’ (King-of-the-world). Due to slight differences in pronunciation of the first part of my name, that's what my good friend Manuel T called me from our first conversation. The ‘T’ ........

contact

Austin Macauley are one of the fastest-growing publishers, striving hard to give authors the best chance of succeeding in an increasingly crowded market. With headquarters in London, New York and Sharjah, Austin Macauley Publishers™ have established themselves as an energetic and innovative independent trade publishers.

Publisher Details

+44 (0) 207 038 8212

+44 (0) 203 515 0352

mail@austinmacauley.com

Austin Macauley Publishers™ Ltd.

1 Canada Square, Canary Wharf,

London, E14 5AA

United Kingdom