Posted in 5 paws, christmas, Cozy, mystery, Review on October 31, 2019

 

 

Publication Date: 10/1/19 Paperback
ISBN: 9781629726014
Fiction / Mystery & Detective / Cozy / Culinary Book Design: © Shadow Mountain
Art Direction: Richard Erickson Design: Kimberly Kay

Synopsis

This Christmas, Sadie Hoffmiller Cunningham is making a list and checking it twice. For the first time since she and
Pete married five years ago, their combined families are gathering for the holidays in Fort Collins, Colorado, for a party that would make Santa and Mrs. Claus proud.

She just has to bake the famous Cunningham Candy Cane Cake, make sure the looming snowstorm doesn’t derail everyone’s travel plans, and oh, yes, solve one teensy-tiny mystery before the big day.

At ninety-four and nearly blind, Mary, Sadie’s friend and neighbor, knows this will be her last Christmas. When Sadie learns that someone has stolen antique Christmas ornaments from Mary’s tree, she vows to find the thief, no matter what. The ornaments had been appraised at more than
$40,000, but they were worth even more to Mary, who had intended to bequeath them to her great-granddaughter, Joy, as a final gift.

With Pete in Arizona wrapping up a case of his own, it’s up to Sadie to question the residents of Nicholas House, where Mary lives, and deduce who had the means and the motive to steal heirloom ornaments during what should be the most wonderful time of the year.

When stories of other thefts surface, Sadie feels like she’s creating a “naughty” list that could rival Santa’s. Identifying the thief, recovering the ornaments, and restoring them to Mary’s tree in time will take a Christmas miracle—and maybe a few extra-special cookies.

 

 

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Praise

“A warmhearted mystery.” -Kirkus

“Sadie Hoffmiller dishes up a fresh serving of Christmas cheer. An inspirational cozy whose feel-good vibe will be perfect for fans of Julie Hyzy’s and Nancy J. Parra. Readers with a sweet tooth will be sure to enjoy Sadie’s family recipes, sprinkled throughout the book.” -Booklist

“Kilpack represents a nice range of ages in this story, and the relationships feel both real and aspirational. The clues and solution are complex enough to keep readers guessing. Recipes are included, making this a fun choice for cookbook discussion groups as well as general readers. Twelve previous “Culinary Mystery” titles precede this entry, which can be read on its own.” -Library Journal

 

Review

Sadie is back!  I thought this series was over a few years ago but was thrilled to see at least one more book in this series to give us a peek into what Sadie has been up to since she married Pete.  They are enjoying life and she has hung up her investigating shoes until someone steals some of Mary’s priceless ornaments from the tree in her room at the local nursing home.  With Pete out of town for work, she pulls out her sleuthing skills to determine who might have stolen the ornaments and why.

I have to say I did not expect the thief to be this character.  I truly had my eyes peeled another way or two and never suspected this person.  But beyond the mystery, this book was also about forgiveness and not letting those that you love stray too far from your life before it is too late.

There are many recipes in the book that made my mouth water and I’m going to have to try some of them out very soon.

We give this book 5 paws up.  If you have never read of the books in this series, you might want to start at the beginning or at least part of the way through the series to learn about the characters.

 

 

About the Author

Kilpack, Josi-1Josi S. Kilpack is an accomplished and prolific author of nearly two dozen novels including the Sadie Hoffmiller Culinary Mystery Series. She has won multiple Whitney Awards for Mystery/Suspense, Romance, and Novel of the Year as well as the Utah Best of State Fiction Winner. She lives with her family in Utah.

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Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, Review, romance, Texas, women on October 30, 2019

 

 

Comfort Songs

a companion novel to Comfort Plans

by

Kimberly Fish

 

Genre: Contemporary Romance / Women’s Fiction

Publisher: Fish Tales, LLC

Date of Publication: September 19, 2019

Number of Pages: 348

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Award-winning author of Comfort Plans, Kimberly Fish, delivers a novel about family, forgiveness, and the seeds of second chances.

Eight years ago, Autumn Joy Worthington, still reeling from the bitter divorce of her Grammy-Award-winning parents, endured the betrayal of a man who’d promised her a wedding. Running from pain seemed the logical response. Reinventing herself in Comfort, Texas, as a lavender grower, she creates a wildly successful gardening haven that draws in tourists and establishes an identity far removed from her parents’ fame. Her mother’s retirement from stardom inspires AJ to offer her refuge and nurse the dream that they could move past old hurts and the tarnish of the music industry … to find friendship. A grandmother in the early stages of dementia and the return of AJ’s father complicate the recovery, but nothing sets the fragile reality spinning like the arrival of Nashville music executive, Luke English.

As Alzheimer’s slowly knocks away the filters of their family, AJ comes to appreciate the true meanings of love and forgiveness — and that the power of redemption can generate from the most unlikely sources. When AJ uncovers the grit to make hard choices, she also discovers that the flowers that bloom the brightest can have the most tangled roots.

 

 

 

 

 

Put together some washed up musicians, a cantankerous grandmother, a young woman trying to hold everything together, and a man that sees potential in everything and you have discovered Comfort Songs, a story that will touch your soul and make you laugh and cry all at the same time.

Each chapter starts with a snippet from a book that AJ is writing called Lessons from Lavender Hill.  Knowing the author and her love of the outdoors and plants, this was a natural fit for her and her characters.  The description of the farm brought forth colorful images in my mind as I imagined waves of lavender waving in the wind with the various shades of the lavender plants – so picturesque!

This story has so many facets that engage the reader and invest us in each character and the town of Comfort.  I am not sure who is my favorite character because several really struck home. Inez is AJ’s grandmother and her mind is starting to go and as the story progresses we see how dementia is affecting her and it is heart breaking.  But at the same time, she reveals more about her earlier days with her husband and dealing with her mother-in-law.  July is AJ’s mother and a very talented musician who has had rocky years and has decided to retire.  But is that the right thing for her?  Most likely not since most musicians are musicians until the day they die.  There is always music in their hearts.  Roger is AJ’s dad and he has had his share of issues in the past and Inez has bailed him out a time or two.  He is like Peter Pan, he really hasn’t grown up and it is frustrating to see him leave the responsibility of his mother to AJ.  Luke thought he was coming to Comfort to see July but didn’t expect to meet AJ or fall in love with her.  I enjoyed watching their story unfold, learning about Luke’s past, his hopes and dreams, and how AJ might fit into his life.

Then there is AJ and she is a bit of a hot mess considering who her parents are and the impact they have had on her life.  She is actually quite normal despite that fact but she still has issues.  I enjoyed watching her grow and become more confident in her own skin.

This family has a lot to deal with and like most families, there is one person that is the glue that holds it all together.  That is AJ’s role.  Not one she really wants but accepts wanting to help her family and do what is right.  But while she appears to be the glue, her life isn’t perfect and having everyone home at the same time brings that to light.  Thankfully, Comfort is a small town and AJ has some close friends that help support her and encourage her to lighten up and not shun what is right in front of her face.  Luke plays a large part in that support and he and AJ complete each other.  They may not see it for some time, but it is there.

This book has so much going for it from dramatic scenes to those that will make you laugh.  And then the ending…you’ll have to read the book to see how it turns out!

These are some of my favorite lines (I had more but tried to choose my ultimate favorites):

“This meal made him see he’d underestimated the people involved in July’s story.  They were all mourning things they’d lost.”

“Luke stared at AJ, wondering how she could sound exactly like the woman who walked into this house dirtier than a hound dog, but now, a mere half hour later, appeared a goddess.”

“Did these people even see the layers of effort she put into an ordinary day?  He doubted they had any notion of what she created on the other side of the hill.  They only saw what she could do for them.”

“Was it possible that below the grizzled exterior was a man who felt protective of his cub?”

“They were too much alike.  Too artistic.  Too self-centered.  Too destructive.  Too removed from the one great thing they created together.  the miracle of their gifts – their daughter.”

“Since driving off the interstate, he’s entered a world where a man’s character was judged by how well he could navigate heavy equipment and a fishing rod. And he’d not totally flunked.”

“In all honesty, I’ve always followed a carefully planned course.” His voice dropped for her ears alone. “But you make me want to be a better version of myself, and apparently that means letting go of agendas.”

“Mom has a way of turning the simplest melodies into strings of notes and lyrics that once they’re in your head, you can’t forget.”

“So, a widower and an almost-bride, you know, we’re a lyric waiting to happen.”

 

This book just sings to us and we give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

Kimberly Fish is a professional writer with almost thirty years of media experience. She’s been telling stories far longer. She published her first novel, a WWII historical fiction novel, because of a true story in her adopted hometown that was too good to ignore.  She quickly followed that success with a sequel. Since then, she’s continued writing fiction and added a contemporary second-chance romance series set in Comfort, Texas, to her list of fun, fast-paced novels. Kimberly lives with her family in East Texas.

 

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Check out the other blogs on this tour

10/22/19 Review Momma on the Rocks
10/22/19 BONUS Promo All the Ups and Downs
10/23/19 Review Reading by Moonlight
10/23/19 Review KayBee’s Book Shelf
10/24/19 Review Sybrina’s Book Blog
10/25/19 Review Sydney Young, Stories
10/25/19 Review Bibliotica
10/26/19 Review That’s What She’s Reading
10/27/19 Review Book Fidelity
10/28/19 Review The Book Review
10/28/19 Review Missus Gonzo
10/29/19 Review Forgotten Winds
10/30/19 Review The Clueless Gent
10/30/19 Review StoreyBook Reviews
10/31/19 Review Hall Ways Blog
10/31/19 Review Carpe Diem Chronicles

 

 

 

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Posted in excerpt, Giveaway, romance, Western on October 29, 2019

 

The Outlaw’s Heart

By Amy Sandas

Publication Date 10/29/2019

 

Synopsis

 

Three runaway brides

Determined to escape their fates

Flee West to find freedom that can only be had

in a cowboy’s arms…

 

Desperate to escape an unhappy marriage, Boston socialite Evelyn Perkins flees west in hopes of losing herself to the dusty frontier. But when her train is boarded by outlaws, Evelyn is taken for ransom. Despite her terror, Evelyn fears being returned to her husband more. Refusing to cooperate, she becomes the responsibility of a man whose steady gaze threatens to pierce her brave façade and reach the wounded heart within.

Gabriel Sloan has his orders, but the haunting shadows in the pretty young woman’s eyes spark an intense protective instinct he can’t deny. Every look, every touch brings them closer together. He would do anything to protect her, but dangerous men are on their trail, and soon the two must face Evelyn’s darkest nightmare—or risk losing the unexpected joy they’ve found forever…

 

 

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Runaway Brides Series

The Gunslinger’s Vow (Book 1)

The Cowboy’s Honor (Book 2)

The Outlaw’s Heart (Book 3)

 

Praise for Amy Sandas

“[B]eautifully written romance that’s full of adventure—electric and absorbing.”—Kirkus for Lord of Lies

“Pure perfection.”—Romancing the Book for The Untouchable Earl

“Smart and Sexy.”—Booklist for Luck is No Lady

 

Excerpt

The tall, muscled man who’d stared at her across the fire was even more intimidating up close. He had expansive shoulders, thick arms barely contained in his pale-colored cotton shirt, and powerful legs encased in worn denim. In a graceful economy of muscle and movement, he folded his large body into a crouch, bringing his face even with hers.

And what a face it was. Strong and beautiful in a way she’d never seen before. He had a broad forehead and a long, straight nose. His jaw was sharply angled, as were his cheekbones, but his mouth was wide and his lips were soft and full.

But unsmiling.

Startled by his unexpected proximity, Evelyn flinched when he lifted his hand, realizing belatedly that he held a canteen and was offering it to her.

He did not react to her obvious fear. Instead, he remained still—his expression flat as his eyes held hers. “It’s water,” he said.

His voice matched the rest of him—richly complex and powerful. Something strange rolled through her at the sound. Like anticipation of a storm when you hear the rumble of distant thunder, but warmer.

Her lashes flickered as she glanced down at the canteen. She was unbelievably thirsty, but how could she trust anything offered by men who held her captive?

“If you want to survive, you’ll drink the water and eat the food,” he said quietly. The words were just between them. Still she did not reach for the canteen. “You want to live?” he asked, raising a brow.

Evelyn lifted her chin, regaining eye contact with the man, despite her uncertainty and fear. “Yes, I want to live,” she replied, surprising herself by the conviction in her words.

With a single, short nod, he extended the canteen a bit more. “Then drink.”

She lifted her hands to take the water, but because of the binding rope and her frozen fingers, she couldn’t grasp it.

Realizing her predicament, he gave a quiet grunt, then set the canteen on the ground and reached for her wrists. His large, warm hands surrounded her curled fists. He held them in silence for a moment—as if his only intention was to share his heat and offer comfort.

Though Evelyn felt the icy stiffness in her fingers dissipating, she resisted the instinctive desire to accept anything more. But she didn’t pull away.

And she wasn’t sure why.

“Don’t be scared,” he stated, still in a private tone. “You won’t be hurt.”

She searched his gaze in the darkness. She wanted to believe him, but she knew far too well how easily a man could hide wicked intent. “I am not so naive,” she replied, her voice barely more than a murmur of sound.

He did nothing to indicate he heard her reply as he released his hold on her hands and deftly loosened the ropes. He did not remove them altogether, but he allowed for a bit of freedom to use her hands more effectively. Then he picked up the canteen and offered it once again.

Evelyn managed to bring it to her lips this time and took a few long drinks. The water soothed her throat, but it also made her very aware of her empty stomach. Lowering the canteen, she offered it back to the man who remained patiently beside her. Watching her in silence.

His nearness was discomfiting. As were his size and his quiet manner.

She had no idea what to make of him. There was strength in him, something his muscled form attested to without effort, but he displayed not the slightest hint of temper or violence.

Of course, Matthew hadn’t either…until something set him off.

The outlaw took the canteen, never shifting his gaze from hers. Not even when the voices around the fire rose higher in discord.

“Shit,” the young one named Ramsey exclaimed, frustration clear in his tone. “We can still ransom the woman. I mean, look at her.”

Evelyn stiffened under the sudden flood of attention. The man crouched before her was still watching her carefully, and she feared she might have revealed her trepidation when his brows lowered over his gaze.

Did she really believe she was better off with these outlaws than in her husband’s hands?

Yes. Yes, she did. But that didn’t mean she was not in danger.

He stared at her for a moment longer before he rose to his feet and walked away without a word, leaving the canteen on the ground beside her. She couldn’t keep her gaze from following his powerful form as he melted into the darkness beyond the fire while the others continued discussing her fate.

She expected to release a breath of relief at being left alone again, but it didn’t come.

“With her fancy clothes and fine airs, there’s gotta be someone somewhere who’ll be willing to pay good money to get her back.”

Evelyn listened to the exchange with increasing tension. These men were right about one thing. Her husband would no doubt be willing to pay a small fortune to get her back. But there was nothing in the world that would convince her to tell them that.

 

***

Excerpted from The Outlaw’s Heart by Amy Sandas. © 2019 by Amy Sandas. Used with permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

About the Author

Amy Sandas’ love of romance began one summer when she stumbled across one of her mother’s Barbara Cartland books. Her affinity for writing began with sappy pre-teen poems and led to a Bachelor’s degree with an emphasis on Creative Writing from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. She lives with her husband and children in Wisconsin.

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Posted in christmas, excerpt, Giveaway, romance on October 28, 2019

 

Cowboy Firefighter Christmas Kiss

By Kim Redford

Publication Date 10/29/2019

 

Synopsis

 

The firefighting cowboys of Wildcat Bluffs take Christmas VERY seriously…

When Ivy Bryant arrives in town to run the historic honkytonk, she finds herself immersed in traditions that can’t be bucked. Luckily, cowboy firefighter Slade Steele has an idea to increase both the honkytonk’s income, and his own. It’s an offer Ivy couldn’t refuse, even if the passion between them wasn’t already reaching the boiling point.

Ivy and Slade’s love story is legendary—when you add in arsonist cattle rustlers, a runaway Angus bull, and a chili recipe that includes liquor AND chocolate, Wildcat Bluffs will be celebrating a cowboy Christmas unlike any other.

 

 

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Smokin’ Hot Cowboys

A Cowboy Firefighter for Christmas (Book 1)

Blazing Hot Cowboy (Book 2)

A Very Cowboy Christmas (Book 3)

Hot for a Cowboy (Book 4)

Cowboy Firefighter Christmas Kiss (Book 5)

 

Excerpt

As Ivy Bryant stood on her tiptoes with arms raised to toss decorative tinsel over deer antlers on the wall above her head, she heard the side door that led to the Wildcat Hall’s beer garden open and boots hit the floor with a determined stride.

“We’re closed!” she hollered, not bothering to look over her shoulder. “Come back next week.”

“You look like you could use a little help,” a man said.

She froze with her hands in the air as she felt the deep male voice with that melodic, slow cadence of a born-and-bred Texan strike her body and go deep, as if she’d been pierced by a flaming arrow. Talk about red-hot. She tried to shrug off the heat, but the chair shifted under her, making her sway.

“Easy does it,” he said. “Chairs have a way of pretending they’re bulls sometimes.”

“Bulls?” She didn’t know whether to laugh at the joke or appreciate he’d tried to make her feel better about almost toppling to the floor. Still and all, if she’d known she was going to have company, she’d have put on something besides formfitting yoga pants and top in hot pink with black trim. He was getting an eyeful.

“In my case, I always tried to pretend bulls were chairs.”

“How’d that work out?” She eyed the antlers, mind half on her next throw and half on the amusing man behind her.

“About like you can imagine.” He sighed, as if life had been unfair. “I finally had to give up bulls for chairs.”

“I bet the bulls were grateful.” She definitely wanted to see the face that went with the voice, but she wanted to finish her task more.

“Yeah…but I’ve broken a few chairs.”

“Maybe even one of the chairs here in the honkytonk.”

“Might be. Looks like your chair is keeping an uneasy peace with the floor

“That’s one way of putting it.” She rose to her tiptoes again, trying one last time to get the tinsel to disobey the laws of gravity.

“Let me help.” He spanned her waist with large hands and lifted her so she could easily reach the antlers.

She caught her breath in surprise at his strength—and his boldness. But she wasn’t looking a gift horse in the mouth. She quickly twined the antlers with red tinsel until they looked festive for the holidays.

“Pretty,” he said.

She shivered in response. What had gotten into her? She should be struggling to get away. Instead, he was revving her up with his hot hands.

“Got any more tinsel to put up?” he asked in a deep voice gone husky. “I could hold you all day and into next week.”

“I suggest you put me down before you get into trouble.”

“If you’re the one handing out trouble, I’d wait in line to get it.”

She couldn’t help but chuckle because he was laying it on thick in that teasing way Texas men would do to get them out of problems with women. “Better put me down before your arms give out.”

“Not a chance. You’re light as a feather.”

She laughed harder. “Guess some women would fall for that one. What are you selling?”

“As a matter of fact, I’m here to help you, but you might consider it selling to you, too.” He gently set her down so her feet were steady on the floor, and then he stepped back.

She turned to face him—and felt her breath catch in her throat at the tall hunk of a cowboy. He wore pressed Wranglers that accentuated his long legs and narrow hips, with a wide leather belt sporting a huge rodeo belt buckle. His blue-and-white-striped, pearl-snap shirt tucked neatly into the waistband of his jeans emphasized the width of his shoulders and breadth of his chest. Blond haired. Blue eyed. Square jawed. Full lipped. He looked as if he’d been made to dazzle—and she was sud­denly and breathtakingly susceptible to every single one of his charms.

“Whatever you’re selling, I think I’m buying.” She spoke the words with a teasing lilt in her voice and a mischievous smile on her face. Still, she meant it. And he probably knew it because he was definitely heartbreaker material. How many women had already fallen to his charms and been left in the dust? She didn’t intend to be a notch on his belt, but if she’d known leaving the city for the country paid off so well in eye candy, she might’ve followed her sister sooner.

He chuckled at her words and held out his hand with a thick, muscular wrist that came from controlling thousand-pound-plus animals. “Slade Steele. If you haven’t heard of me, maybe you’re aware of the Chuckwagon Café and Steele Trap Ranch. Family businesses. I’m not just any guy off the street.”

“You’re definitely not just any guy.” She slipped her hand into his big one and felt him gently enclose her fingers. “Smart guy to throw a few compliments my way. Guess you’re more than a pretty face.” She tried to keep the teasing going, so their interaction stayed on a light note, but he was still holding her hand and she wasn’t pulling away and his eyes were heating up to a blazing blue fire.

“Nothing but the truth.”

“My sister Fern is the star.” She tried to tug her hand away, but he held on another long moment, nodding as if deciding something or conveying something or accepting something before finally letting go.

He grinned with a gleam in his eyes, revealing teeth white against the tan of his skin. “Yeah, she is that…but you make the earth move.”

“Oh my.” She returned his grin while fanning her face with one hand in that old Southern way, as if he was too hot to handle. “You really do want to sell me something, don’t you?”

“How am I doing?”

“Not bad.”

***

Excerpted from Cowboy Firefighter Christmas Kiss by Kim Redford. © 2019 by Kim Redford. Used with permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

About the Author

Kim is an acclaimed, bestselling author of Western romance novels. She grew up in Texas with cowboys, cowgirls, horses, cattle, and rodeos for inspiration. She divides her time between homes in Texas and Oklahoma, where she’s a rescue cat wrangler and horseback rider–when she takes a break from her keyboard.

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Posted in excerpt, Giveaway, romance on October 27, 2019

 

The Sisters Café

By Carolyn Brown

Publication Date 10/29/2019

 

Synopsis

 

Cathy Andrew’s biological clock has passed the ticking stage and is dangerously close to “blown plumb up.” Cathy wants it all: the husband, the baby, and a little house right there in Cadillac, Texas. She’s taken step one and gotten engaged to a reliable man, but she’s beginning to question their relationship. Does he really love her, or is she just arm candy for his political career? Why is her future mother-in-law getting increasingly hostile? Worse, why does he stand up for his mother when she says those awful things, instead of protecting her?

Cathy is full of self-doubt. Both of her options—going through with the wedding or breaking off her engagement—are beginning to look like a nightmare either way. She knows her friends will back her up, but she’s the one who has to make a decision that’s going to tear her apart.

(Previously published as The Blue-Ribbon Jalapeno Society Jubilee and What Happens in Texas.)

 

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Excerpt

If Prissy Parnell hadn’t married Buster Jones and left Cadillac, Texas, for Pasadena, California, Marty wouldn’t have gotten the speeding ticket. It was all Prissy’s damn fault that Marty was in such a hurry to get to the Blue- Ribbon Jalapeño Society monthly meeting that night, so Prissy ought to have to shell out the almost two hundred dollars for that ticket.

They were already passing around the crystal bowl to take up the voting ballots when Marty slung open the door to Violet Prescott’s sunroom and yelled, “Don’t count ’em without my vote.”

Twenty faces turned to look at her and not a one of them, not even her twin sister, Cathy, was smiling. Hell’s bells, who had done pissed on their cucumber sandwiches before she got there, anyway? A person didn’t drop dead from lack of punctuality, did they?

One wall of the sunroom was glass and looked out over lush green lawns and flower gardens. The other three were covered with shadow boxes housing the blue ribbons that the members had won at the Texas State Fair for their jalapeño pepper entries. More than forty shadow boxes all reminding the members of their history and their responsibility for the upcoming year. Bless Cathy’s heart for doing her part. She had a little garden of jalapeños on the east side of the lawn and nurtured them like children. The newest shadow box held ribbons that she’d earned for the club with her pepper jelly and picante. It was the soil, or maybe she told them bedtime stories, but she, like her mamma and grandma, grew the hottest jalapeños in the state.

“It appears that Martha has decided to grace us with her pres-ence once again when it is time to vote for someone to take our dear Prissy’s place in the Blue- Ribbon Jalapeño Society. We really should amend our charter to state that a member has to attend more than one meeting every two years. You could appreciate the fact that we did amend it once to include you in the membership with your sister, who, by the way, has a spotless attendance record,” Violet said.

Violet, the queen of the club, as most of the members called it, was up near eighty years old, built like SpongeBob SquarePants, and had stovepipe jet- black hair right out of the bottle. Few people had the balls or the nerve to cross her, and those who did were put on her shit list right under Martha, aka Marty, Andrews’ name, which was always on the top.

Back in the beginning of the club days, before Marty was even born, the mayor’s wife held the top position on the shit list. When they’d formed the Blue- Ribbon Jalapeño Society, Loretta Massey and Violet almost went to war over the name of the new club. Loretta insisted that it be called a society, and Violet wanted it to be called a club. Belonging to a club just sounded so much fancier than saying that one belonged to a society. Loretta won when the vote came in, but Violet called it a club anyway and that’s what stuck. Rumor had it that Violet was instrumental in getting the mayor ousted just so they’d have to leave Grayson County and Loretta would have to quit the club.

***

Excerpted from The Sisters Café by Carolyn Brown. © 2019 by Carolyn Brown. Used with permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

 

The Shop on Main Street

By Carolyn Brown

Publication Date 9/3/2019

 

Synopsis

Steel Magnolias meets The Ya Ya Sisterhood from New York Times bestseller Carolyn Brown

Carlene Lovelle, owner of Bless My Bloomers lingerie shop, has everything she’s ever wanted: a loving husband, a successful small town business, and great friends who never disappoint.

However, that all changes when Carlene finds a pair of sexy red panties in her husband’s briefcase.She knows exactly who those panties belong to—they were purchased from her very own shop.

Carlene is shocked. Her marriage is over, her life in a tailspin. She’s humiliated, upset and heartbroken, but it’s time to move on to the anger stage of grieving.

Carlene finds that she has all she needs as the ladies of this small town rally around and teach her that revenge is a dish best served red-hot.

(Previously published as The Red-Hot Chili Cook-Off and A Heap of Texas Trouble.)

 

 

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Excerpt

Some men are just born stupid. Some don’t get infected until later in life, but they’ll all get a case of it sometime. It’s in their DNA and can’t be helped.

Carlene could testify with her right hand raised to God and the left on the Good Book that her husband, Lenny, had been born with the disease and it had worsened with the years. Proof was held between her thumb and forefinger like a dead rat in the form of a pair of bikini underwear. They damn sure didn’t belong to her. Hell’s bells, she couldn’t get one leg in those tiny little things. And they did not belong to Lenny, either. Even if he had become an overnight cross- dresser, his ass wouldn’t fit into that skimpy pair of under- britches, not even if he greased himself down with bacon drippings.

They were bright red with a sparkling sequin heart sewn on the triangular front. They’d come with a matching corset with garter straps and fishnet hose. Carlene recognized them, because she’d designed the outfit herself at her lingerie shop, Bless My Bloomers. They belonged to a petite, size- four brunette with big brown eyes who had giggled and pranced when she saw herself in the mirror wearing the getup.

Carlene jumped when her cell phone rang. The ring tone said it was Lenny, but she was still speechless, staring at the scrap of satin in her hand.

She dropped to her knees on the carpet and bent forward into a tight ball, her blond hair falling over her face. She felt as if someone had kicked her firmly in the gut and she couldn’t breathe. In a few seconds she managed a sitting position, wrapped her arms around her midsection, and sucked in air, but it burned her lungs. The noise that came forth from her chest sounded like a wounded animal caught in a trap. Tears would have washed some of the pain away but they wouldn’t flow from her burning green eyes. Finally, she got control of the dry heaves and managed to pull herself up out of the heap of despair. Dear God, what was she going to do?

The brunette who’d bought the red- satin outfit had told her that she and her sugar daddy were going to Vegas, and she wanted something that would make him so hot he’d be ready to buy her an engagement ring. What was her name? Bailey? Brenda? No, something French, because Carlene remembered asking her about it. Bridget…that was it! Bridget had been to Vegas with Lenny. On how many other trips had he taken a bimbo with him and how many of them had been ten or fifteen years younger— and a size four, for God’s sake?

In seconds, the phone rang again. She picked it up and said, “Hello.” Her voice sounded like it was coming from the bottom of a well or, maybe, a sewer pipe.

“Carlene, I left my briefcase in my office. I slept on the sofa to keep from waking you, since I got in so late last night. Bring it to me before you go to work, and hurry. There’s a contract in it that I need and the people will be here to sign in ten minutes. I’ll hold them off with coffee until you get here.”

No good- bye.

No thank you, darlin’.

Not even a please.

Did he talk to Bridget like that?

Anger joined shock and pain as she dropped the panties back in the briefcase and then removed the little card she’d made for him to find that morning. She’d written that she was sorry she had fallen asleep before he got home and that she’d make it up to him that night with champagne and wild sex. She stood up, straightening to her full statuesque height of just a couple of inches under the six- foot mark. Damn that sorry bastard to hell. How could he do this to her?

***

Excerpted from The Shop on Main Street by Carolyn Brown. © 2019 by Carolyn Brown. Used with permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

About the Author

New York Times and USA Today Bestselling author and RITA Finalist, Carolyn Brown, has published more than seventy books.  These days she is concentrating on her two loves:  women’s fiction and contemporary cowboy romance. She and her husband, a retired English teacher, make their home in southern Oklahoma.

Website * Facebook

 

 

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Posted in 4 paws, memoir, nonfiction, self help on October 25, 2019

 

Synopsis

Angela’s blue Subaru spins in an icy, Indiana intersection. She and her mother are not breathing. Hours later, she wakes in the ICU. Her arm paralyzed, her mother dead.

Police determine she ran the stop sign, and she believes it. She folds herself inward, unable to face either loss. Mustering the fight, she straps her arm to her chest and resolves to survive. Creased forehead. Locked jaw. She gathers bones and muscles, rejecting defeat. Angela returns to Aerospace classes and spends the summer finishing her work at NASA. Graduating, she lands a job a thousand miles from everything she knows.

Guilt, fear and pain eclipse who she is. She buries the tiny seed, planted by her mother, deep under the pain. Hiding a thousand miles away, Angela doubts her ability to love or be loved. But will she live? Will she learn to fly?

 

Review

I met Angela at a book event and was intrigued by her story. She was in a car accident that killed her mother and left her with various injuries that kept her in pain for 15+ years. This book is her story but is also a guide for those in similar situations on how to let go and move forward.

This story is an inspiration to those that think that they just can’t handle another day of pain. Angela sought help from multiple sources including holistic methods. She had a team of doctors on her side that tried new techniques and they emerged in the medical field. Some worked, some did not.

When they say that the mind is powerful they aren’t kidding. I think it was Angela’s inability to remember the crash that was ultimately holding her back from healing. Dealing with the memories helped her move forward further than she ever had in the past.

I liked that at the end of most chapters there are words to reflect upon and then chapters sprinkled throughout that gives the reader different things to reflect upon in their own lives. This book is not meant to be devoured in a day, but to be thoughtful over a period of days, especially if you are working through your own issues.

Angela has dogs that help her through the most of it and those moments touched my heart. I was teary eyed when she spoke about having to do what was best for her first dog when cancer was discovered. Having had to help two of my own dogs cross the rainbow bridge, this passage touched me the most.

Overall we give this book 4 paws up and highly recommend it for anyone going through their own issues to help them work through their issues and move forward in life.

 

 

About the Author

Angela is an artist and an Aerospace Engineer. With Zephyr Jackson, her loyal Labrador, at her side, she lives and loves fully in the midst of suffering. She experiences the support and love of Jesus Christ in every intimate moment and in all of His creation. On her yoga mat, she soothes her nervous system, uncovering her true self. Angela sinks her fingers into the soil and into the written and spoken word, creating beauty.

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Posted in Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery, suspense on October 25, 2019

 

 

The Last Thing She Said (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #3) by Lauren Carr

Category: Adult Fiction (18 +), 386 pages

Genre: Mystery

Publisher: Acorn Book Services

Release date: July 22, 2019

 

Synopsis

“I’m working on the greatest mystery ever,” was the last thing noted mystery novelist Mercedes Livingston said to seven-year-old Chris Matheson before walking out of Hill House Hotel never to be seen again.

For decades, the writer’s fate remained a puzzling mystery until an autographed novel and a letter put a grown-up Chris Matheson on the trail of a cunning killer. With the help of a team of fellow retired law enforcement officers, each a specialist in their own field of investigation, Chris puts a flame to this cold case to uncover what had really happened that night Mercedes Livingston walked out of Hill House Hotel. Watch out! The clues are getting hot!

 

Guest Post

Meet Doris Matheson – Not Your Average Grandmother

By Lauren Carr

 

I’m a people watcher. I was really no fun back in my single days because instead of listening to my dates, I would be spying to the strangers at the next table in an effort to figure them out. After almost thirty years of marriage, my husband knows what’s happening when he sees that look in my eye, when I become more interested in a particularly juicy exchange happening at the next table. That’s when he’ll break out his cell phone to text our son, “She’s doing it again.”

My favorite part of being a writer is finding new characters and exploring their minds and backgrounds to figure out what makes them tick. I enjoy presenting the character to the readers as a whole, and then, through the story, I slowly peel back the layers to show the reader what is underneath—who that character really is.

Admittedly, I knew while writing Ice that some readers may think I was pushing the envelope with Doris Matheson, who is not your average grandmother. No, Doris is not a hipster, who dances to disco, rides around on a motorcycle, or chases men. Rather, she is a strong, compassionate woman whose tuna casserole can be considered a weapon.

While going through the edits for Ice, I felt a sense of recognition when reading the mother and son exchanges. It wasn’t until I was proofreading my latest mystery that it hit me.

Doris Matheson is my mother!

I had no idea while creating the character of Chris’s sixty-five-year-old mother, a spunky, take charge library director, that I had based her on my own mother, who had passed away the year before. To tell you the truth, I don’t know if it was by accident or my subconscious at work.

Like Doris, my mother was an avid reader, particularly of murder mysteries. Actually, to tell you the truth, if the book didn’t have a dead body in it, my mother wasn’t interested. She went to school in a one-room school house. Even though she didn’t attend college, she had common sense and wasn’t shy about sharing it with her children.

A beautiful blonde, my mother was also a farm girl, who was a regular at all of the libraries in our small town. One librarian told me that behind her back, everyone called her “that beautiful lady.” She was truly a lady, who conducted herself with class. A widow, she had more dates than I did when I was in high school.

But my mother was no push-over. Every time we have to buy a new vehicle, my husband recalls when we bought our first car together as a married couple. Since my mother worked for General Motors, she and her family had an employee discount. Finding the best deal in her area, Jack and I traveled to Ohio and sat in silence while Mom haggled with the salesman. Through each issue, the salesman would relent with a groan and “Oh, Beryl.” She even made sure we left that dealership with a full tank of gas.

That strength of character is evident in this scene from The Last Thing She Said in which Doris and Elliott, a fellow member of the Geezer Squad to a club to question the club owner, a suspect in the cold case they are investigating:

“Why can’t I be the bad cop?” Doris asked Elliott after they had parked his SUV in the parking lot of Kyle Billingsley’s night club.

“Because getting arrested for assault is not on my bucket list.” Elliott opened the driver’s door and slid out. He went around to the passenger side to open Doris’s door. “We promised Chris that we were only going to talk to him again to see if he can give us more information. Helen seems to think he knows more than he’s saying. Chris believes he’s a patsy. Our job is to find out which it is.”

“Chris believes in giving everyone the benefit of the doubt,” Doris said with a frown.

“Don’t you?”

“Not when they try to come between me and the love of my life.”

Elliott sighed. “Why do I have the feeling we’re not talking about Kyle Billingsley anymore?”

At lunchtime, it was too early for the night club to open. Finding the front doors locked, Elliott peered through the plate glass windows in search of someone to let them inside while Doris disappeared around the corner.

Upon realizing she was gone, Elliott rushed into the alley just in time to see her slip through the employee entrance. “Doris! You get back here!” he ordered in a stage whisper to catch her attention while not alerting the workers unloading produce from a food delivery truck. As he drew closer to the door, he pressed his body against the wall to stay out of sight until they turned their backs long enough for him dash inside.

“Doris!” He searched the work area littered with sound equipment, furniture, and cases of alcohol. “Where are you?” He finally caught sight of her through an open doorway in which a case of Mexican beer acted as a door stop. “There you are.” He took her arm by the elbow. “What do you think you’re doing?”

She wrested out of his grasp. “I’m looking for Kyle Billingsley. We have to find him before we can talk to him.”

A muscle-bound man in a tank top stood up from where he had been working in a cupboard behind the bar. When Bart saw the couple standing before him, he almost jumped out of his boots. “How did you get in here?”

“Through the side door,” Doris said. “You really need to hire better help. There’s no telling what kind of riff-raff could walk in off the streets.”

Bart laid his huge hands flat on the bar.

“We’re looking for Kyle Billingsley,” Elliott said.

“Who’s lookin’?”

“Weren’t you listening?” Doris stepped forward. “We’re looking for him.”

“And who the hell are you?” Bart reached into his pocket.

Recognizing the outline of a gun, Elliott reached into his pocket for his concealed weapon.

“Get your hands out of your pockets and stand up straight!” Doris snapped.

His eyes wide, Bart yanked his hands out of his pockets and held them up for her to see.

“Do you seriously think that my asking to see Mr. Billingsley would be grounds enough for you to take out that pathetic little concealed weapon of yours and shoot me? What type of idiot are you? Are you suicidal or just plain stupid?” She jerked her thumb in Elliott’s direction. “Do you really think you could get the both of us before he took you out? And we haven’t even begun to talk about manners. Were you raised by wolves or what? Shooting complete strangers is just plain rude. You didn’t even have the courtesy to ask for our names before you went reaching for that sorry little gun in your pocket. If you’re going to shoot someone, at least get their names first.”

“I’m sorry. I—I was just—I just—I had an itch.”

“An itch my foot!” Doris pointed at the door behind the bar. “Now, go get Mr. Billingsley.”

“But—”

“No buts. Shoo!” She flapped both hands at him.

Like an obedient child, Bart hurried through the door leading to the inner offices.

“I have a feeling if we had more mothers out walking the streets, violent crime would drop significantly,” Elliott said.

“I know if we had more mothers out on the streets that violent crime would drop significantly,” Doris said. “Unfortunately, there would also be a proportionate rise in lawsuits for being rude to felons.”

Kyle Billingsley tottered out from his office. Upon seeing their good friend’s older brother, Doris and Elliott were taken aback. With effort, they concealed their surprise.

Maybe Shannon was adopted, Doris thought as she took in the loose flesh on Kyle’s bony arms and legs and the potbelly. The pink hair fin on top of his head and matching earplugs didn’t help.

The jewels on the rings that adorned his fingers glinted off the bright lights in the lounge when he reached up to take the cigar out of his mouth. “Bart said you wanted to see me. What’s this about?”

Doris regrouped to respond. “I’m here about your sister Shannon. I believe you spoke to my son on Sunday. We have more questions.”

“What gives? I’d answered all of his questions.” Kyle turned in Bart’s direction and shook his cane at him. “Did you water down the scotch I gave him, Bart?”

The bartender vigorously shook his head. “No, sir.”

“Then what’d I do that he felt like he had to send his mother after me?”

“I don’t know, boss, but I wouldn’t mess with her if I was you.”

“If I were you,” Doris said to correct his grammar.

“What if you were me?”

“It’s if—”

Elliott cut Doris off by ushering her across the lounge to a table where Kyle was taking a seat.

 

Readers will find that Doris’s power is not due to wealth or political position. After all, she is only the director of a small library. Rather, she has earned the respect of those around her through intelligence, compassion, and strength.

Yep, that’s my mom. I can’t wait for you to meet her. You’re gonna love her.

 

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About the Author

Lauren Carr is the international best-selling author of the Thorny Rose, Mac Faraday, Lovers in Crime, and Chris Matheson Cold Case Mysteries—over twenty titles across four fast-paced mystery series filled with twists and turns!

Book reviewers and readers alike rave about how Lauren Carr seamlessly crosses genres to include mystery, suspense, crime fiction, police procedurals, romance, and humor.

Lauren is a popular speaker who has made appearances at schools, youth groups, and on author panels at conventions. She lives with her husband, and two spoiled rotten German shepherds on a mountain in Harpers Ferry, WV.

Website  ~  Twitter  ~  Facebook  ~  Instagram

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Cookbook, cooking, Review on October 24, 2019

 

 

Filled with more than 80 simple and seasonal recipes for dishes you can make in the oven 

Every week, Yvette van Boven develops a new oven recipe for her magazine column. The recipes are seasonal, delicious, and most importantly, really simple, and now, they’re collected in her latest cookbook: Home Made in the Oven.

What is van Boven serving up fresh from her oven this time? How about autumnal stuffed Portobello mushrooms, a freshly baked plum pie, or cabbage rolls with caraway and hazelnuts. Alongside the more than 80 recipes are van Boven’s annotated illustrations and photographs of finished dishes. For van Boven, everything belongs in the oven: vegetables, meat, fish, pizza, stews, and of course, sweets! The recipes are sure to provide you with plenty of tips, tricks, and inspiration for cooking in your oven.

Indigo * IndieBound * Abrams Books

 

Review

 

This is the second cookbook from Yvette Van Boven that I have had the pleasure of enjoying.  And when I say pleasure, I mean that!  This book is more than just a cookbook, it is a feast for the eyes with the illustrations that accompany each recipe.  Take a look

 

 

The recipes are pretty easy to make from what I have eyeballed for future meals.  There are three sections that cover everything – vegetables, fish & meat, and baking.  There is an Index that is by chapter and by ingredient.  I love looking to see what recipe could be made from whatever ingredient I have on hand and then taking it from there.

The recipe I have made so far is called Cupboard Cannelloni and can I saw this is one of those recipes that most people will have everything on hand, well if you cook a lot you will most likely have everything on hand!  I was looking for something a little different when it comes to a pasta dish and this recipe reminds me of lasagna roll-ups but with less cheese.  My husband raved over the dish and leftovers the next day were just as good.  I must have put more red pepper flakes in the dish because it had a little kick to it…not burn your mouth hot, just a bit spicy.

So here is the recipe so that you can try it yourself at home.

Cupboard Cannelloni

 

12 sheets of lasagna noodles (I used 8 and after softening them broke them in half

2 onions, finely chopped

3 cloves garlic, minced (I think I used 5 because more garlic is good!)

Splash of olive oil

2 links sausage, casing removed (I used a mild Italian sausage but use what you have on hand)

8 1/2 oz spinach (frozen is ok) – I don’t think I used enough so would increase that next time

Pinch of red pepper flakes

Sea Salt

3T tomato paste

1/2 glass of red wine

1 14.5oz can diced tomatoes

Chunk of cheese for grating – as long as it melts, use it!  I actually had a lot of shredded cheese so I used a Zesty Ranch Monterey Jack and Parmesan cheeses on top

 

Preheat the over to 350°.

Slide the lasagna sheets into a pot of boiling water (3 at a time) and cook until soft (several minutes).  Remove the sheets when they’re just about soft.  Separate and let them dry spread out on a clean dish towel.  Reserve the cooking liquid.

Saute half of the onions and two-thirds of the garlic in some oil and add the sausage meat in pieces.  Fry until the meat is cooked through, then spoon in a ladleful of pasta cooking liquid.  Add the spinach and cook until the liquid is reduced.  Season with red pepper flakes and salt if needed.

In a saucepan, saute the remaining onion and garlic in oil until tender.  Add the tomato paste and fry.  Douse with the wine and tomatoes.  Reduce the sauce somewhat and season with red pepper flakes and salt.

Put 1 tablespoon of the sausage-spinach filling on a short end of a lasagna sheet and roll it up.  Place in an oiled baking dish. Repeat until everything is used.  Pour the sauce on top and sprinkle with the cheese.  Bake for 25 minutes.

 

This was really easy to make and the prep time took the longest.  I will say that I did everything in one deep skillet, from cooking the noodles to making the sauce.  Made for a little faster cleanup that way.

Here are two photos I took but mostly all you can see is the cheesy goodness!

 

 

This cookbook has so much to offer and I look forward to trying many more recipes with my family!

 

About the Author

Yvette van Boven is a critically acclaimed cookbook author, freelance recipe writer, and illustrator. She is the host of Holland’s popular cooking show Koken Met van Boven, and is also the culinary editor of Holland’s largest women’s weekly magazine and writes and illustrates a weekly column for the popular arts and culture publication Volkskrant magazine. She lives in Amsterdam and Paris.

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Posted in 3 1/2 paws, fiction, Review, Short Story on October 24, 2019

 

Synopsis

“Dreams of Lake Drukka” and “Exhumation” explore the unearthing of horrific, long-buried family secrets. Journeying into the darkest recesses of the past, these stories depict the dire consequences of discovering the truth.

Writing about this duology, author Mike Thorn says: “It was only in retrospect that I could see the connections between these two stories. When I revisited them for publication, it struck me that they work well as companion pieces. Both plots depict unfulfilled pacts with supernatural undercurrents, both include journeys to uncover unresolved familial trauma, and both pivot around the revelation of repressed memories. I wanted to explore the relationship between setting and atmosphere in these pieces, and to depict horror within internal and physical ‘sites of trauma.’ The characters are grappling with painful memories / experiences that have held them back, consciously or unconsciously. One story focuses on a character who is the agent of her own revelations, whereas the other story sees someone whose agency is quickly and brutally taken away.”

 

 

 

Review

This book is comprised of two short stories.

The first is called Dreams of Lake Drukka and reminds me of someone making a deal with the devil and it was now time to pay the price.  It is a little creepy but was well written but definitely could have been developed into a longer tale.  Of the two stories, I preferred this one.

The second is called Exhumation.  This is one bizarre story!  I’m not even sure how to describe it but let’s just say that Abel is “forced” to remember some times from thirty+ years ago and they aren’t pleasant memories.

If you are into weird and outlandish stories, you might enjoy these two.  Won’t take long to read, maybe 15 minutes depending on how fast you read.

We give these stories 3 1/2 paws.

 

About the Author

Mike Thorn is the author of Darkest Hours and Dreams of Lake Drukka & Exhumation. His fiction has appeared in numerous magazines, anthologies and podcasts, including Dark Moon Digest, The NoSleep Podcast, Turn to Ash and Tales to Terrify. His film criticism has been published in MUBI Notebook, The Film Stage, The Seventh Row, Bright Lights Film Journal and Vague Visages. He completed his M.A. with a major in English literature at the University of Calgary, where he wrote a thesis on epistemophobia in John Carpenter’s Prince of Darkness.

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Posted in 4 1/2 paws, Review, romance on October 23, 2019

 

 

 

 

Glass Slippers, Ever After, and Me

by Julie Wright

Publication Date: 10/21/19

Page Count: 336

Fiction / Romance / Contemporary

Cover Design: © Shadow Mountain

Art Direction: Richard Erickson

Design: Kimberly Kay

 

Synopsis

 

Can the fairy tale bring Charlotte the happiness she’s looking for or was he always there to begin with?

A modern reimagined Cinderella story.

When aspiring author Charlotte Kingsley finally gets published, she thinks all her dreams have come true. But the trouble begins when her publicity firm reinvents her quirky online presence into a perfectly curated dream life. Gone are the days of sweatpant posts and ice cream binges with her best friend, Anders, replaced instead with beautiful clothes, orchestrated selfies, and no boyfriend. Only, that carefully curated fairy tale life is ruining her self-esteem and making her feel like a fraud.

When a bestselling author takes Charlotte under her wing—almost like a fairy godmother—she helps Charlotte see the beautiful person she already is and the worth of being authentic. But is it too late to save her relationship with Anders? The clock is quickly ticking towards midnight, and Charlotte must decide between her fairy tale life and the man she loves before he’s gone forever.

 

 

IndieBound * Amazon * B&N

 

Walmart * BAM * Deseret Books

 

Praise

 

“This sweet, heartfelt tale of authentic characters facing intriguing challenges is at once very romantic and charmingly chaste.” -Booklist, starred review

“Wright spins a modern-day and very meta Cinderella tale. This fast-paced, lighthearted romance also carries a moral lesson about falsehoods getting in the way of the quest for true happiness.” -Publishers Weekly

“Aspiring author Charlotte ‘Lettie’ Kingsley writes fairy tales and hopes to be published. When she gets one more rejection, her feelings of pique lead her to an inspired idea: She’ll write a self-help book called The Cinderella Fiction that will encourage readers to live their best lives. Lettie’s agent has big plans for the book and has created a team to make it a bestseller, including a PR firm that demands a complete makeover for Lettie. From wardrobe to apartment to a new nickname, ‘Char,’ every detail is changed to create an image that inspires admiration and a legion of followers. However, it also means that her real-life relationships are affected, and the new Char is so different from the old Lettie that she’ll have to sift through what she wanted, and what she’s gained, so she can live her own best life, authentically. Wright updates ‘Cinderella’ with a modern twist and smart, satisfying details.” -Kirkus

 

Review

 

This book will make you laugh but also give you pause to look at your own life and if you are living behind a mask.

After years of rejection, Lettie has had a book accepted to be published and her life is about to turn upside down on all fronts.  She has a tenuous relationship with her mother, she has a stepsister that she adores, and a hunky paramedic neighbor that is about to become more than just friends.

Lettie is probably like most of us, comfortable in her skin but has yet to have her dream of being a published author of fairy tales come true.  It is only when she writes a self-help book called The Cinderella Fiction, that her dream comes true.  But the sacrifices she will have to make nearly ruin her life.  You probably have read stories about people that seem to have a “perfect” life via social media but have learned it is all staged.  That is what happens to Lettie but not by choice, it is forced onto her by her publicist.  I get that the publicist is trying to help improve her image so that when her book is published she seems authentic.  But what she has Lettie doing going against her normal nature and this causes rifts with her stepsister, Kat, and her now boyfriend (and neighbor) Anders.  Lettie has to go on her own journey to find herself and thankfully she does in the end.

I admired Lettie for pursuing her dreams but I don’t think she was very confident which is why she found herself in the situations she was in throughout the book.  But a book without some angst wouldn’t be as much fun to read.  The witty banter between Lettie and Anders had me laughing.  The book was about soul searching, not only for Lettie, but for Anders too.  I think even Lettie’s mother learned a few things by the end, not only about her daughter but about her stepdaughter too.

There are so many great lines in this book and here are just a few of my favorites (and I have quite a few!):

“What? You think every time I say I don’t believe in marriage, a married couple drops down dead?”

“What happened?  I have a shovel and a pretty decent knowledge of the surrounding woods  If she broke your heart, all you have to do is say the word.”

“I don’t know.  Maybe if a member of the Mafia murdered someone on a couch, they’d need a quick replacement.”

“You know, when I was a kid and we’d first moved to the States, my parents told me that the ice cream truck music only ever played when the truck had run out of ice cream.”  “You have nothing to say to that?”  “I’m paying my respects to your stolen childhood with a moment of silence.”

 

This was a fun book and we give it 4 1/2 paws.

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Julie Wright started her first book when she was fifteen. She’s written over a dozen books since then, is a Whitney Award winner, and feels she’s finally getting the hang of this writing gig. She enjoys speaking to writing groups, youth groups, and schools. She loves reading, eating writing, hiking, playing on the beach with her kids, and snuggling with her husband to watch movies. Julie’s favorite thing to do is watch her husband make dinner. She hates mayonnaise but has a healthy respect for ice cream.

 

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