Rebecca Mascull is an historical novelist who also writes saga novels under the pen-name Mollie Walton.
Under the pen-name Rebecca Mascull, she is the author of four historical novels and co-author of a novella.
Her first novel THE VISITORS (2014) tells the story of Adeliza Golding, a deaf-blind child living on her father’s hop farm in Victorian Kent. Her second novel SONG OF THE SEA MAID (2015) is set in the C18th and concerns an orphan girl who becomes a scientist and makes a remarkable discovery. Her third novel, THE WILD AIR (2017) is about a shy Edwardian girl who learns to fly and becomes a celebrated aviatrix but the shadow of war is looming. All are published by Hodder & Stoughton.
She also completed the finishing chapters of her friend and fellow novelist Vanessa Lafaye’s final work, a novella called MISS MARLEY, a prequel to Dickens’s A CHRISTMAS CAROL. This novella was published by HarperCollins.
Her latest book as Rebecca Mascull is a stand-alone historical novel set in London and Poland during WW2. THE SEAMSTRESS OF WARSAW will be published by SpellBound Books in September 2021.
Rebecca also writes historical saga fiction as Mollie Walton. She has always been fascinated by history and on a trip to Shropshire, while gazing down from the iron bridge, found the inspiration for what became her debut saga trilogy titled THE IRONBRIDGE SAGA, published by Bonnier Zaffre: THE DAUGHTERS OF IRONBRIDGE, THE SECRETS OF IRONBRIDGE and THE ORPHAN OF IRONBRIDGE.
Her next Walton trilogy will be set in WW2 North Yorkshire. The first novel of this new saga will be published in March 2022 by Welbeck.
Social media links:
https://twitter.com/rebeccamascull
https://www.facebook.com/becca.mascull
https://www.facebook.com/RebeccaMascull/
https://www.facebook.com/MollieWaltonbooks/
https://www.instagram.com/beccamascull/
https://www.pinterest.co.uk/rebeccamascull/
Her agent is Laura Macdougall at United Agents.
http://www.unitedagents.co.uk/rebecca-mascull
Rebecca has worked in education, has a Masters in Writing and lives by the sea in the East of England.