Oliver & Jack: In Axminster Workhouse
Oliver & Jack: In Axminster Workhouse
After a blissful seaside interlude, Oliver and Jack are arrested for theft and sent to Axminster Workhouse to await trial. They are put in the less-than-tender care of Workmaster Chalenheim, who controls the work they do, the amount of food they eat, and the punishments they must endure.
Oliver struggles with the shame of being in a place he thought he'd left behind him long ago. Meanwhile, Jack is confronted by a predator who tests the limits of Jack's love for Oliver. Together they must find a way to escape the workhouse before they succumb to the harsh conditions or are separated by the hangman's noose, whichever comes first.
In Axminster Workhouse is the third book in Christina E. Pilz's Oliver & Jack series, a gay historical romance. If you enjoy stories about young love battling together against evil under dire circumstances, then pick up a copy today
Author: Christina E. Pilz
Publisher: Blue Rain Press
Published: 09/14/2015
Pages: 478
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.21lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.96d
ISBN: 9780989727365
About the Author
Pilz, Christina E.: - Christina E. Pilz was born in Texas in 1962. After living on a variety of air force bases, in 1972 her father retired and the family moved to Boulder, Colorado. There amidst the clear, dry air of the high plains, as the moss started to grow beneath her feet, her love for historical fiction began with a classroom reading of "Little House on the Prairie." She attended a variety of community colleges and state universities, and finally found her career in technical writing, which, between layoffs, she has been doing for 18 years. During that time, her love for historical fiction and old fashioned objects, ideas, and eras never waned. In addition to writing, her interests include road trips around the U.S. and frequent flights to England, where she eats fish and chips, drinks hard cider, and listens to the voices in the pub around her. She also loves coffee shops, mountain sunsets, prairie storms, and the smell of lavender. She is a staunch supporter of the Oxford comma.