There is a lot I want to say about the book I’m going to introduce to you. The second in my very exciting two-book deal that I have recently signed with my publishers, Severn House (click here for a refresher). There’s so much to say that I’m not entirely sure where to start. Because I think this book represents one of the most important things I’ve ever had to say as a writer. Although, it didn’t start out that way. I guess there are just times when a project goes in a direction you didn’t plan or expect. There are times when, as a writer, a project packs such a big punch that it leaves you a bit wobbly on your feet, and unsure where to start.
So, I guess the best place to start is how this book, entitled “Flight of the Hummingbird,” came about. For those of you who have followed my writing journey from the beginning (a hearty salute to you, by the way), you might remember my first book (click here to learn more). Called “All the Lights Above Us,” it follows five women of different ages and nationalities as the D-Day invasion drops on their doorsteps. These women, all facing a variety of challenges in war-torn Europe, must meet the moment with what little cards they have to play. One of these women is a German girl named Emilia. Born in Berlin in the 1920s, she came of age as Hitler came to power. A product of the countless Hitler youth programs, and ingrained deeply with some disturbing ideology… until she sees first-hand some of the uglier sides of what she’s gotten into.
Of all the women in “All the Lights Above Us,” Emilia’s was probably the most difficult story for me to write. For a variety of reasons, really. The first being… well… how do you humanize someone like that? How do you humanize someone who had a hand in, whether brainwashed or not, some truly cruel and heinous acts? Emilia’s character took extra special care in the development stage. I walked a precarious tightrope of trying to show her dangerous position without excusing what she had taken part in.
Since Emilia’s story was the most troubling for me, it came as no great surprise that her story seemed to garner the most interest with readers. It seemed, to my delight (and despair, in a way) that I was very successful in bringing a human element to a very villainous figure. So, it came as no great surprise when my publisher at the time started throwing some emails around about Emilia. They wanted a bit more of her backstory. They wanted me to try my hand at a prequel.

So, I came up with an idea. I decided to write a similar story to “All the Lights Above Us,” showing another single-day (or rather weekend) event. This time in Germany. I wanted to show Emilia and some other female characters grappling with the infamous Night of the Long Knives of 1934 – the final and very bloody bid of Hitler to seize total and complete control over Germany. I wanted the story to take the same path as its original material, showing various women of various ages dealing with an impossible situation. Yes, that was what I wanted…
….until I read Mein Kampf. Okay, let’s all take a pause here to take a very deep and cleansing breath. Because whenever one brings up that book, you know things are going to go to take a dark turn. Sometimes, I’m not entirely sure what possessed me to read that book in its awful entirety. Sometimes, I wish I could actually go back in time and change my mind and not read it at all. That’s how much this read affected me. Leaving a cut so deep I don’t think it ever really healed over completely.
I tried reading the book on my own at first. A solo endeavor that I didn’t really want anyone to know I was undertaking. However, I only made it a few chapters in before I realized I was going to need help. LOTS of help. So, along with letting my husband and some close friends into the loop, I also enlisted a qualified mental health professional to help me work my way through the pages. A dizzying journey that the two of us started comparing to a trip to Mordor to destroy the one ring. Because much like Frodo, the closer I got to the mountain, to finishing the book, the heavier the burden became.

It would take a completely separate post to fully describe what reading that book did to me. But I’ll sum it up by saying that Mein Kampf, though written so long ago, still has the power to twist and warp the human mind. It can still hurt people. And that is why it is kept under safe guard in my library and never allowed to leave the house. It’s also how “Flight of the Hummingbird” took a wildly different direction than the one I first intended.
There are two things that scared me the most about reading Mein Kampf. One was the certain parallels I saw between it and some of the hate groups in my own country, in my own time. The similarities were both uncanny and frightening, reminding me that the coals of hate still burn hot. Hot enough to consume us all if we don’t figure out how to keep them in check. The other was just how easy it is to take advantage of an innocent person’s fears. To take those fears and wrap them in so many lies that you find yourself nodding along while reading one of the most hateful books ever penned (seriously… so thankful for my mental health professional who steered me through that experience). That was Hitler’s power. That was how he bent an entire country to his will. He twisted their fears, he stoked their anger, and perhaps the most paramount… he gave them someone to blame.
It is a rhetoric that I am afraid to say I see playing out in my own day. And one that made me decide, once and for all, that I had to say something. So, what I ended up handing over to my publisher at that time was a different book entirely than the one I had originally pitched. Not a story of a single weekend in Germany from multiple points of view. But a story spanning the entirety of the 1920s and early 1930s in Berlin, and a story that focused on one family – that of Emilia and her parents – as they fall into some of the worst darkness that has ever wrapped up humans in its terrifying grip.

It was not an easy story to write. There were times when I grew so heartbroken and frustrated with my own characters that I wanted to pull a “Misery” stunt and just burn the whole thing. However, the importance of my mission kept me going. I had to show people just how easy it really is for hate like this to take root. Especially as we face unprecedented challenges in our own time, and hate seems to have found an all-too-welcome seat in the mainstream.
The book that resulted is a painful and jarring story. One that my original publishers ultimately turned down. Which, I can’t even really blame them. After all, like I said, it was a completely different book than what I had originally pitched. Still, the rejection of that did sting, and it resulted in me hiding the book deep in my files and pretending it didn’t exist. I started referring to it as my “Frankenstein Monster Baby” – a creation that I wasn’t entirely sure I knew how to control. A story that might be better off lurking in my files and not seen by anyone else.
But….
A couple years later, I pulled that manuscript out, and I read through it. I was surprised when the story, even though I wrote it myself, captivated me. I decided that it was a good story through it all, one that really did need to be told. So, I contacted my agent and asked her thoughts. “despite its past, do you think this story has a future?” I asked her.
Yes, she said. Lindsay was always a big fan of Flight of the Hummingbird. A major champion for it, actually. So, when Severn House came knocking for more material after “As the Storm Clouds Gather” was published, she wanted to include it in our pitch document. So, with trembling hands, I added it to the batch of pitches, and I gave her permission to send it over.

Severn asked to read it along with Farewell, Camelot. Then, Severn said they wanted to publish it. Just like that. So it is that in December of 2026, my Frankenstein Monster Baby will see the light of day after all, and I was awash in quite the wave of feelings when I received that news.
I stand by this book, no matter how hard it was to pen, and no matter how hard it might be to read at certain parts. I wrote it not only because I wanted to show people how easily hate takes root, but also because I wanted to show that… well… these people were… humans. And humans, I have learned during my 40-year-tenure on this planet, are pretty damn complicated. Humans gets scared. Humans make snap judgements. Humans are a dual make-up of tremendous light and terrible darkness. And sometimes, the wrong side wins.
Let’s join hands and stop that from happening. Let’s talk to one another. Let’s find someone we disagree with and… well, turn them into a human. Treat them like a human. Talk to them. Listen to them. Try to understand where they’re coming from, what they’re really afraid of. Let’s remind each other that we have light as well as darkness. We have love, which I truly believe is so much stronger than hate. Sometimes the fire burns too hot and we can’t control it. Meaning that there are unfortunately some people who cannot be reasoned with. But I think, I truly believe, that most people are good people who are trying their best, and you never know what magic can happen, what darkness you can stop from finding fertile soil, if you just reach your hand out.
I raise a hearty toast to Flight of the Hummingbird, and I cannot wait to see it on store and library shelves. May it teach. May it fly. May we learn.

All photos taken in Berlin by M.B. Henry. For more of my photography – click here.
Stay tuned here on the website and via newsletter as developments continue for both of these projects! Can’t wait for 2026!
ANOTHER SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT!
Guess what friends! As it turns out – books run in the family! Click here to check out the latest children’s book released by my sister – Megan Connerly. She’s quite the artist, she is a dedicated educator, and she loves animals! This book teaches little ones about emotions as they read Watson the Dog’s story of abandonment and finding love again. It’s perfect for all the animal lovers of all ages out there!


bushboy
Perhaps the publishers see the common link in what’s happening in the US now which makes it a timely book to publish.
MBHenry
We are living through some truly frightening times. I have tremendous hope, though, that we can and will find a way forward.
Sheila Morris
May we all fly and learn.
And may we refrain from voting against our own self-interests.
MBHenry
<3 <3
tootlepedal
Congratulations.
MBHenry
Thank you!!
mitchteemley
Doubly awesome news, MB!
MBHenry
Thanks much Mitch! 🙂
equipsblog
You vocalized my fears of the past few years and look forward to reading these booy. Thanks for sharing.
MBHenry
These are some scary times. A big comfort for me, as a student of history, is looking back on what we have made it through as a country. It gives me a vast sense of hope that we will find a way forward through this too. Wishing you well. <3
equipsblog
Wishing you the same. We weathered similar problems in the past. This may be the first time we have had an executive who is so willing to break hundreds of years of norms and rules, with the legislative and judicial branches offering minimal to no opposition. Even in the Nixon era, Congress would step in to curb his more aggressive over teaches. People are too afraid of offending He Who Must Be Obeyed and loyalty to the Man is the only job requirement.
Joni
Congratulations! That was a very interesting backstory to your manuscript. Did you ever watch the British PBS series World on Fire about WW2? I remember them trying to portray how easily brainwashed the young German people were, to the extent that a young teenage girl volunteered to have a German officers baby to increase the master race, and how bewildered her parents were by her and her brothers decisions. Unfortunately, the series was cancelled so we never got to see what happened after she got pregnant. As for the problems in the US, I’m Canadian so will refrain from commenting as it’s not my country. Your book sounds like it would be a great bookclub selection. Your Camelot book sounds interesting too. I know historical fiction is popular now, but did you have a hard time finding an agent?
MBHenry
I have not seen that series. A pity it was canceled, I feel I would have been interested in watching it (as hard as it is to take that stuff in sometimes). I did have a bit of a time finding an agent, but I think it’s rare to have an easy time finding one. It makes me extra grateful for Lindsay and her taking a chance on me when I debuted back in 2022, and her continued championing of my work.
Joni
Thanks. I’m just starting the process and not finding it easy, but then I knew that going in.
MBHenry
Keep at it. I found my agent via cold query. It does work! You just have to get it to the right person!
Joni
Thanks for your reply!
LTodd
Congratulations on selling your books. I hope you did something fun to celebrate. I’ll be watching for them to hit the shelves.
MBHenry
I definitely partook in plenty of celebrating! 🙂 Thanks so much for your support!
Eilene Lyon
Thanks for the backstory on this book, M.B. I think it sounds like an excellent story for our current age, with scary parallels. I’ve not read Mein Kampf and have no plans to do so. Recently read yet another story about Auschwitz-Birkenau that is so horrifying. After 5 book club reads in a row on dark themes, I am seeking lighter fare.
That said, I do worry about the direction the “meme generation” is taking—so willing to let the internet crap substitute for critical thinking and kindness. I’m actually giving a talk tomorrow that illustrates how ugly people can be online toward innocent people. Sigh. I fear our country is firmly in the grip of a downward spiral of hate.
MBHenry
I hear you about the lighter reading! Definitely going to be gravitating towards that coming up haha. And I also agree about the keyboard wars going on, which seem especially vicious these days on social media. I really wish people would remember that they’re dealing with human beings with feelings and fears, and I think we would do better talking to one another, face to face, and having a bit more empathy and understanding. It’s something I hope very much this book will teach people.
Daniel Greenwood
Congratulations M.B., and thank you for writing this post. So much of what you say echoes Britain as well. I don’t think I could read MK, but maybe it would help if more people understood the playbook that is being used now in society, politics and the media.
It’s very interesting to hear your insight into the creative process, perhaps people don’t realise just how much of a burden writing can put on the author’s health. Hoping the mental heath professional has made the difference for you.
Good luck with the next book!
MBHenry
I think that’s why I read it in the first place. I mean, I wrote it off as research for this upcoming book at the time. But there was a deeper interest that I think had to do with wanting that context that you mention, especially in this day and age. And yes, writing can definitely take a toll on the mental health! Thanks so much for reading and commenting!
derrickjknight
This post itself is completely captivating. I have never read Mein Kampf and never will. But it has helped you write a much needed reflection on WWII and the present day.
MBHenry
Thanks Derrick! Yeah… I can’t say I’d recommend reading it, in all honesty.
rajkkhoja
Congratulations 👏! So beautiful photos.
Fraggle
So glad your Frankenstein made it through! Will be looking out for it!
MBHenry
Yes – the Frankenstein will have its day after all! Very exciting! 🙂 Thanks always for your support!
chattykerry
Perhaps this is the perfect moment for your book to be read? I can’t believe that there are still people who don’t believe the Holocaust happened. I don’t think I could manage to read Mein Kampf. Congratulations, MB.
MBHenry
I do think the read is timely, and the publishers must have agreed. Here’s hoping we can all find a way forward! <3 Hope you're well.
chattykerry
This is your time to shine, MB. Enjoy every moment of this recognition. I am better than I was. Thank you! K x
Americaoncoffee
Congratulations M.B. You have a great build of momentum … success!
MBHenry
Thanks very much! Let’s hope things continue on the upward! 🙂
Grammy Writes
Congratulations! Wishing you much success.
MBHenry
Thank you!!!
mitchteemley
Belated congrats (Part II), M.B.!
MBHenry
Thank you Mitch!!
Tim Harlow
I am looking forward to both of your new books. The Kennedy assassination is unfortunately still vivid in my memory. I was 5, and coming home from kindergarten when our teacher (she drove us all home – different world then) pulled the station wagom over, and turned up the radio. We all heard the news that President Kennedy was dead. I still recall my teacher crying and having to take a few minutes before getting under way again.
I admire you for being able to read Hitler’s book. I cannot. My Mom’s younger brother was killed in World War II fighting the Japanese fascists. He was shot down returning from a bombing run over Japan. I never knew my Uncle, only heard family stories. My Dad served in the Pacific in the Navy. He survived a few kamakazi attacks on his ship. I have a piece of a Japanese Zero wing with a little part of the red sun emblem.
So, for me fascism brings about anger and hatred. What’s going on in our country today makes me ill.
But nevertheless, I am so excited for your new books. I love your writing, and I know they will be awesome. You need to have “As the Storm Clouds Gather” made into a movie!
MBHenry
Hey! Thank you so much! I’m so happy you have enjoyed my writing thus far and I really hope you enjoy the coming two! Exciting writing times, for sure. What a family history – thank you for sharing it here. I’m so sorry about your uncle, and wow, what your dad went through!