Posted in 5 paws, chick lit, Review, romance, Romantic Comedy, women on December 27, 2019

 

Synopsis

Honeymoon Alone is told through the lens of Lucy Gray – a third grade teacher who’s 26 and has never really been away from home. Her family is overbearing and her latest romantic interest ditches her publicly for her own cousin. She’s in a rut and on a whim (and the advice from a wedding psychic) she decides to spend her holidays in London – getting away and discovering who she can be without all the noise of her family and her life. She meets a cast of interesting characters at the exclusive honeymoon resort she winds up staying in. Some little white lies and big misunderstandings create quite the tangled web that threaten everything, as Lucy begins to wonder if she’ll ever get her life right.

 

 

Review

When you live your whole life (so far) in a sheltered fashion, there might come a time when you do something crazy…like take your sister’s discarded honeymoon and break free from the parental chains.  Ok, maybe you do some of this on a whim thanks to the advice of a psychic at your sister’s wedding, but something has to spur you into action!

I applauded Lucy for her decision to escape her home when a hotel in London calls to confirm her sister’s reservation.  A reservation that wasn’t going to be used because her OCD sister booked two honeymoon options.  Two!  But what better time to put that passport to use than a Christmas getaway.  Her friend Mary encourages her to go and even contacts a classmate of theirs to meet her at the airport and be a point of contact.  It works out to both of their advantages since the hotel is for honeymooners only (and there is no Mr. with Lucy) and Cary’s roommates turn out to be his worst nightmare.

I applaud Lucy’s gumption to take herself on a tour of London and see the usual touristy sites plus so much more. She has been held back thanks to an overbearing mother and older brother.  In fact, when she manages to “lose” her phone and disconnects from those ties is when she really blossoms.  We are able to peek into the frantic thoughts of her family through blog entries.  Apparently, the whole family can blog to let others know what is happening.  I suppose that is easier than making a bunch of phone calls.

Lucy manages to keep Oliver, the nosy concierge, at bay regarding her “husband” and why she is doing so much on her own.  But is he more than nosy?  Could he be smitten with Lucy?  Or is there something more “sinister” at play?  The only way to find out is to read the book.

This book had me laughing at many turns and I had a hard time putting the book down.    I wanted to know what secret Oliver was hiding, who the Honeymooners were, and would Lucy’s family learn to take a step back and let her live her life.  There are a few heart-stopping moments near the end but nothing too scary.  The story is also about finding your own path and looking out for yourself because your family may not know what is best for you despite their best intentions.

As a child of the 80s, I had to share this line with you…I didn’t mark more for some reason, I think I was enjoying the book too much.

“I’m an 80s themed mess.  My hair is crimped.  Crimped.  I look like a bottle of grape soda in my purple, polka-dotted dress complete with shoulder pads.”

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

About the Author

Nicole Macaulay received her MFA from Emerson College in Writing and Publishing. She worked at The WB Television Network, E! Entertainment and The Hallmark Channel. She does brand marketing for one of the largest US travel operators, Collette. She lives in Rhode Island with her husband and four children.

Website * Twitter * Facebook * Instagram

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Comments Off on Review – Honeymoon Alone by Nicole Macaulay @nicmacaulay #romance #chicklit #womensfiction
Posted in Blog tour, Giveaway, romance, women on October 22, 2014

Strollers & Stilettos Cover

 

Title:                            Strollers & Stilettos

Series:                         In Stilettos, #4

Author:                        Nana Malone

Release Date:           October 20, 2014

Genre:                         Contemporary Romance

 

Synopsis

What happens when real life gets in the way of Happily Ever After?

Chronic list-making, event planner, Jaya Trudeaux Westhorpe, envisioned a fairytale ending once she married hotel magnate, Alec Westhorpe—complete with a steamy, extended honeymoon and an eventual family.  What she didn’t expect was a baby on their doorstep and a family-phobic husband.

When reformed playboy, Alec Danthers Westhorpe, married the woman of his dreams, he thought he’d finally found peace. But a long-hidden secret threatens to jeopardize what he holds most dear.

Warning: Sexy, sass talking women will make you laugh, cry and want a pair of killer footwear.

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Excerpt

Of all the things Alec never thought he’d hear, “Someone’s left you a baby at the hotel” would have been at the top of the list. A baby abandoned on his property was bad enough. One in any way tied to his name was a potential disaster. Especially given the Kleinman deal. The old goat was already looking for a reason to back out of working with them.

Alec’s heart thundered as fury coursed through his blood. With one call, the ground beneath his feet shook. According to Caleb, the baby had come complete with a birth certificate naming him as the father. It wasn’t true. Couldn’t be true. Except, maybe it could be.

His stomach pitched even as he gripped the steering wheel. Normally, Jaya would be a calming influence, but right now, the last thing he wanted was her near this mess.

This was all some kind of mistake. He and Jaya had been apart for six months before he’d finally pulled his head out of his ass and come back to her. But he hadn’t slept with anyone. He would never have done that. Are you sure about that?

The bile rose in his throat, and he choked it back. Shortly before he’d realized he couldn’t live without Jaya, he’d been willing to do anything to bring himself a reprieve from missing her. Including drinking himself into blind oblivion. All he had were hazy, foggy patches and pieces from that one night, but he’d woken in his own bed. But there had been blond hairs on the pillow next to him, and the place had smelled distinctly of floral shampoo. Would he have substituted someone else for the woman he wanted? Could he have? No.

At least that’s what he wanted to believe, what he had to believe, but still, it was possible.

“Alec, I’m sure it’ll be okay. We’ll figure out what’s going on.” Jaya’s voice was soft, reassuring.

It only made him feel worse. He cleared his throat. “Jai, you didn’t have to come.”

“Caleb called in a 9-1-1. When are you going to realize that means that I’m coming too? We’re a family now. Your problems are my problems.”

Yeah, well, he’d see how she felt about it once they got to the hotel. Because he was pretty sure she wasn’t going to take it so smoothly that he had his own personal Billie Jean.

After breaking a myriad of traffic laws, they arrived at the hotel in barely one piece, and Caleb met them in Alec’s office, but halted when he saw Jaya. His gaze darted to Alec’s as he spoke. “Jai, I didn’t expect to see you here.”

“Whatever you have to say to him you can say to me. Where’s the baby?” Jaya asked.

When she crossed her arms over her breasts, Alec realized he probably couldn’t love her more than he did in that moment.

Caleb nodded brusquely before radioing one of his team to bring the baby in. When he turned his attention back to them, he spoke quickly. “About an hour ago, one of the maid staff found the baby girl in the business center. The kid had a note pinned to her that said, “Property of my daddy, Alec Westhorpe.” Caleb darted a glance at Jaya before moving on. “She also had what looked like a legit birth certificate on her, naming him as the father.”

Alec ground his teeth together. Whiskey, Tango, Foxtrot. “I don’t have a kid.”

Caleb nodded. “We’ll clear it up. The mother is listed as one Melanie Brooks. We’ve started digging up any information on her that we can. But right now she’s a ghost.”

Jaya’s voice was calm and level as she asked, “How old is the baby?”

“Eight and a half months, if the birth certificate is to be believed.”

Alec kept his eyes on Jaya. His body clenched, waiting for her to do the math. Waiting for her to turn a wounded, disbelieving gaze his way. But it didn’t come. Instead, she asked more questions.

“Can we talk to the maid who found the baby? Maybe she saw something?”

“My guys are talking to her now. Whoever left the kid, left her with a few days of baby food and her blanket and a toy or two.”

She sighed. “That poor baby.”

Alec watched his wife carefully. She seemed unconcerned whether the baby was his or not. Her only concern was for the welfare of the child.

There was a brief knock at the door, and Caleb’s right hand guy, Tom, walked in, carrying a squirming bundle. If the situation hadn’t been absurd enough, Alec might have started laughing at the picture Tom made with the kid. Someone as big as him, looking extremely uncomfortable with a baby in his arms.

As if sensing the new audience, the baby turned her head, and her gaze collided directly with Alec’s. He sucked in a sharp breath. Jet-black hair framed her heart-shaped face. Startling blue eyes stared back at him. And like him, she had a cleft in her chin. His head swam, and prickly heat stung his skin.

Jaya didn’t seem to notice. Instead, she relieved Tom of the tiny burden. “Hey there, beautiful girl. You’ve had a heck of a night, huh? Well, don’t you worry, we’ll find your mama, okay?”

The baby gurgled and rewarded Jaya with a smile.

“Have you called Child Protective Services yet?” Alec asked.

Caleb nodded. “Right after I called the cops. They’re already on their way and will be keeping it discrete. They’re interviewing the staff.”

For the first time since they’d walked in, Jaya slanted him with a displeased look. “We are not handing this baby over to CPS.”

 

About the Author

NanaMaloneUSA Today Bestselling Author Nana Malone’s love of all things romance and adventure started with a tattered romantic suspense she borrowed from her cousin on a sultry summer afternoon in Ghana at a precocious thirteen. She’s been in love with kick butt heroines ever since.

With her overactive imagination, and channeling her inner Buffy, it was only a matter a time before she started creating her own characters. Waiting for her chance at a job as a ninja assassin, Nana meantime works out her drama, passion, and sass with fictional characters every bit as sassy and kick butt as she thinks she is.

Nana is the author of twenty novels. And the books in her series have been on multiple Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble bestseller lists as well as the iTunes Breakout Books list and most notably the USA Today Bestseller list.

 

 Website / Facebook / Twitter / Goodreads / Newsletter

 


 

Giveaway

Nana will be giving away a digital copy of Sexy in Stilettos, the first book in her In Stilettos series
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Sexy in Stilettos Cover

Synopsis for Sexy in Stilettos

What’s worse than having to watch your sister marry your ex fiancé? How about when that fiancé fires you from the family business?

Hyper-organized, event planner, Jaya Trudeaux is used to doing things by the book and never making waves. It’s a strategy that’s served her well until she finds herself in failure alley with no fiancé, no job and her thirtieth birthday looming. Maybe it’s time to change her methods. Starting with an unlikely date to the wedding from hell.

The only thing that can tie carefree, playboy, Alec Danthers down is his formidable step mother. When she calls him home to help find his wayward brother, he never imagines an uptight, list making, sass-talking woman would make him think about putting down roots.

Can Jaya put the lists down long enough to enjoy the ride that is Alec? Will Alec stop running long enough to recognize true love?

Warning: Sexy, sass talking women will make you laugh, cry and want a pair of killer footwear.

 

 

Blog Tour Stops

October 20, 2014

Musings From an Addicted Reader

So Many Reads

October 21, 2014

Romance Junkies

Reading By The Book

Read Your Writes

Book Talk with Eileen

October 22, 2014

Cricket’s Chirps   

Snarky Mom Reads

StoreyBook Reviews

October 23, 2014

Joyfully Reviewed

The Book Review

Love Romance Passion

The Season For Romance

So, I Read This Book Today

SOS Aloha

October 24, 2014

Becky on Books…and Quilts

A Closet Full of Books

Em & M Books

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Comments Off on Blog Tour & #Giveaway : Strollers & Stilettos by Nana Malone @NanaMalone
Posted in 4 paws, excerpt, Inspirational, Review, romance on January 9, 2024

 

 

 

 

 

Synopsis

 

Is there hope for this love between friends?

Pamela Hayes is a smart, successful business owner with a supportive family and a thriving bakery. She should be the happiest girl in the world. But she can’t shake the melancholy that accompanies every conversation she has with her best friend, Mark. Pamela doesn’t know how much longer she can hide her true feelings.

Why can’t Mark see how perfect they would be together? She would make a much better girlfriend than the one he currently has. Pamela prays he’ll come to his senses soon and realize he’s with the wrong girl. But when her dream comes true, it isn’t the fantasy she had envisioned.

There is trouble in paradise from the start, and all the red flags she’s been ignoring are starting to threaten her confidence…and her relationship with Mark. She’ll have to rely on family and her faith in God to help her secure the hope she so desperately needs.

 

 

 

Amazon

 

 

Excerpt

 

Motes reflected in the sunlight that beamed through an eastern bedroom window. Background noise filtered past closed doors. Turning over in bed onto her stomach, Pamela Hayes yanked a beige satin comforter off the floor with one hand. That same hand then tossed a navy-blue neck pillow upon the bed. Footsteps on the other side of the door grabbed her attention.

Mom’s on her Saturday-morning prowl. Five, four, three, two, one …

Anna Hayes’s head poked inside her daughter’s bedroom. Hallway lighting bathed her trim figure in artificial brightness. “Morning, babe. Touching base before I go.” Her warm gaze surveyed the tousled bed. “From the tangled cover, it looks like you had a rough night.”

With a hand covering her yawn, Pamela shook her head and turned onto her side. “Just my normal Friday night tug-of-war. It’s my preferred method of winding down.”

Anna’s soft laugh sounded like music. “Any special plans today?”

Leaning on her elbow, Pamela rested her face on spread fingers as she gazed at her mother. Forty-eight-year-old Anna wore desert-green ankle boots, cropped white pants, and an oversized olive-green sweater. A brown suede bag hung over her shoulder.

“You look like a dream, Mom. If I didn’t know otherwise, I’d think you were going out with someone special.”

Laughter flitted through slightly parted lips. “I’m late. Give me a quick rundown on your activities for today.”

Oh boy. I had hoped she wouldn’t ask. Better mention my afternoon expedition last.

“Shopping for a spring wardrobe around noon. My jeans are tatty. And then, shooting the rapids.”

The door opened wider as Anna grasped the doorknob. “Water rafting somewhere near South Town?”

“Oklahoma City. The spring season begins today. It’s safe, Mom. Stop frowning.”

“I’m sure they take safety precautions. But promise to be extra careful. I can do without mental pictures of my twenty-five-year-old daughter drowning.”

Pamela flopped onto her back. “Yes, ma’am.”

“Thank you. I love surrender whenever I hear it.” Anna checked her watch. “I’ll be out late. Don’t hesitate to call if you need me.”

After those parting words, her mother floated out of the house. Her all-day Saturday excursions had begun late last year. A seeming whim had developed into a lengthy pattern.

After the front door lock clicked, a sleepy Pamela hid her head beneath the sheets and immediately fell back to sleep.

 

 

Review

 

Pamela and Mark might be best friends, but are they right for each other? Or is it just Pamela’s desire? There is a whirlwind relationship culminating in their wedding, but it doesn’t take long after the honeymoon (like the same day!) to realize that there might be issues. Communication will have to be worked on if this relationship will work.

I wasn’t wild about Mark at first. He was very self-involved, and it was evident when he knew nothing about Pamela’s business and interests. It doesn’t take too much for him to realize that he is going to have to step up his game and get to know his wife. Pamela ran away from their issues from the start instead of staying and talking to Mark about it, despite their list of relationship “rules.” Granted, she only ran away for a few hours, and I can understand her desire to take a breather to think about the situation. However, that is a bad precedent to start at the beginning of a marriage.

Things do settle down, and we see them work through many issues and situations to strengthen their relationship or at least give the appearance of becoming a stronger couple. I don’t know if they ever truly resolve their issues to my satisfaction, but this isn’t my relationship or how I would handle things, and I know that everyone has their own approach to dealing with issues.

There are a few surprises along the way, and I like that Pamela is growing her business with Mark’s help. Although, I felt like he was trying to take it over at times. I know he has the experience and was trying to be helpful, but I think he could have gone about it differently.

There are family issues to deal with as well. Mark isn’t fond of his parents. Pamela is torn between her divorced parents. I think this helps us to understand why Mark and Pamela approach situations the way that they do.

Overall, we give this book 4 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

E. C. Jackson began her writing career with the full-length play Pajama Party. Thirty-one years later, she adapted the play into Pajama Party: The Story, a companion book to the second book in the five-book standalone Hope series.

Jackson’s favorite pastime is reading fiction. She enjoys taking the journey along with the characters in the books. That also led to her unorthodox approach to story writing. Her vision for each book she writes is to immerse readers into the storyline so they become connected with each character.

“The Write Way: A Real Slice of Life” is the slogan on her Facebook author page. She feels that if every person reading her books feels connected to the characters, her job is done.

 

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads

 

 

Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on June 29, 2023

 

 

 

 

A Crafty Collage of Crime (An Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery)
Cozy Mystery
12th in Series
Setting – New Jersey and Tennessee
Independently Published (June 16, 2023)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 258 pages

 

Synopsis

 

Wherever crafts editor and reluctant amateur sleuth Anastasia Pollack goes, murder and mayhem follow. Her honeymoon is no exception. She and new husband, photojournalist (and possible spy) Zachary Barnes, are enjoying a walk in the Tennessee woods when they stumble upon a body on the side of a creek. The dead man is the husband of one of the three sisters who own the winery and guest cottages where Anastasia and Zack are vacationing.

When the local sheriff sets his sights on the widow as the prime suspect, her sisters close ranks around her. The three siblings are true-crime junkies, and thanks to a podcaster who has produced an unauthorized series about her, Anastasia’s reputation for solving murders has preceded her to the bucolic hamlet. The sisters plead for her help in finding the real killer. As Anastasia learns more about the women and their business, a host of suspects emerge, including several relatives, a relentless land developer, and even the sisters themselves.

Meanwhile, Anastasia becomes obsessed with discovering the podcaster’s identity. Along with knowing about Anastasia’s life as a reluctant amateur sleuth, the podcaster has divulged details of Anastasia’s personal life. Someone has betrayed Anastasia’s trust, and she’s out to discover the identity of the culprit.

Craft project included.

 

 

Amazon * Kobo * Barnes & Noble * Apple Books

 

 

Guest Post

 

Ever Hear of a Reluctant Amateur Sleuth?

 

By Lois Winston

 

When I was first asked to create a crafting themed cozy mystery series, I first embarked on some research. My writing roots were firmly planted in various romance genres—contemporary, romantic suspense, and chick lit. I wrote standalone novels that always ended with a happily-ever-after. I knew of Miss Marple, Jessica Fletcher, and Nancy Drew, but I hadn’t read a cozy mystery in…well, I couldn’t even remember the last cozy mystery I had read.

Since current romance trends were quite different from those of the last century, I figured the same must hold true for the cozy mystery genre. Thus, I headed to the library and hauled home an armload of current cozy mysteries.

After immersing myself in books by dozens of contemporary cozy authors, I came away with one conclusion—I didn’t want to do what others were already doing quite successfully. I saw no point in competing against all these other authors for a slice of the cozy pie. If I was going to gain any success at all, I had to think outside the box, making my series just different enough that although it maintained the cozy label, it stood out from a crowded field.

As I mulled over ideas, my first decision was not to make my sleuth a hobbyist or owner of a craft or needlework shop. She wouldn’t be a member of a knitting or quilting circle or involved in only one craft. I had a background as a crafts designer and had also worked as a craft book editor. I decided to make Anastasia Pollack, as I named her, the crafts editor at a women’s magazine. That way, I could feature a different craft in each book. As far as I could tell, no cozy author had ever done that before.

I also decided I wouldn’t inflict Cabot Cove Syndrome on the town where my sleuth lived. Yes, there are murders that occur in her hometown. However, as the writers of Murder She Wrote came to realize, you can only suspend disbelief up to a point before no one is left standing other than the sleuth. Even Jessica Fletcher began traveling outside her small community to stumble upon dead bodies here, there, and everywhere.

Since Anastasia’s career doesn’t limit her to a shop or office cubicle, she not only finds dead bodies at her place of employment and in her hometown, but she also trips over them in various other settings around the New York metropolitan area. In her latest adventure, she even finds a dead body in Tennessee.

But I continued to think outside the box as I developed Anastasia. Many cozy mystery sleuths are busybodies compelled to stick their noses in police business because they believe they know more than local law enforcement. Anastasia is different. She’s very much a reluctant amateur sleuth, getting involved only because she believes she has no other choice. However, she’ll be the first to tell you, she’d rather be doing anything else—including undergoing root canal!

Meddling is meddling, though, as far as most law enforcement is concerned. However, Anastasia’s interactions with at least some law enforcement personnel have earned her their respect. This becomes very evident in the way she’s sucked into the murder investigation in A Crafty Collage of Crime, the twelfth book in the Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery Series.

 

 

About the Author

 

USA Today and Amazon bestselling author Lois Winston began her award-winning writing career with Talk Gertie to Me, a humorous fish-out-of-water novel about a small-town girl going off to the big city and the mother who had other ideas. That was followed by the romantic suspense Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception.

Then Lois’s writing segued unexpectedly into the world of humorous amateur sleuth mysteries, thanks to a conversation her agent had with an editor looking for craft-themed mysteries. In her day job Lois was an award-winning craft and needlework designer, and although she’d never written a mystery—or had even thought about writing a mystery—her agent decided she was the perfect person to pen a series for this editor. Thus, was born the Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries, which Kirkus Reviews dubbed “North Jersey’s more mature answer to Stephanie Plum.” The series now includes twelve novels and three novellas. Lois also writes the Empty Nest Mysteries, currently at two novels, and one book so far in her Mom Squad Capers series.

To date Lois has published twenty-one novels, five novellas, several short stories, one children’s chapter book, and one nonfiction book on writing, inspired by her twelve years working as an associate at a literary agency. To learn more about Lois and her books, visit her at www.loiswinston.com where you can sign up for her newsletter and follow her at various social media sites.

 

 

Website * Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers blog * Twitter

 

Pinterest * Goodreads * Newsletter * BookBub

 

 

 

Giveaway

 

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Posted in 4 paws, Book Release, excerpt, Review, romance, women on April 28, 2022

 

 

 

 

Title: SAND DOLLAR LANE

Author: Sheila Roberts

Publisher: Harlequin/Mira

Pages: 368

Genre: Women’s Fiction / Romance

 

Synopsis

 

Brody Green is finding it hard to recover after being dumped by his fiancée, Jenna Jones, then watching her walk down the aisle with someone else. Jenna is determined to make up for her love defection and find him the perfect woman, but Brody is done with love. First a divorce, then a broken engagement. From now on he’s keeping things light, no commitments. Luckily Brody’s business is booming. Beach Dreams Realty is the best real estate company in town. And the only one. Until…

Lucy Holmes needs a new start. In business, in love, in…everything. If ever there was a cliché, it was her life back in Seattle. She was a real estate broker working with her husband until she caught him trying out the walk-in shower in a luxury condo—with another agent. She’s always been the more successful of the two, and with him gone, she’s determined to build a business even bigger than what she had. Moonlight Harbor is a charming town and it has only one real estate agency. Surely there’s room for a little competition.

Or not. Looks like it’s going to be a hot market in Moonlight Harbor. And maybe these two competitors will make some heat of their own.

“Lighthearted and full of colorful, quirky characters and surf-side warmth… Roberts’s picturesque coastal world is sheer delight and will appeal to romance and women’s fiction fans alike.” —Library Journal

 

 

Amazon

 

Review

 

If you are looking for a beach read, then look no further than this series. It is filled with tension, love, hope, and reimaging your life once you have to put the pieces back together.

Lucy walks into a showing and finds her husband in the shower with another woman. That sets into motion a series of events that forces Lucy to reevaluate her life and move forward without him. She decides to chuck it all and move to this small beach community called Moonlight Harbor. Here she sets up shop as a realtor much to the dismay of the only realty shop in town and Brody Green. But competition is a good thing and this creates even more tension between the two. I really enjoyed their banter at the beginning and how long it took them to warm up to each other. I even chuckled when their children were dating and how much that grates on their nerves that their parents were acting like children.

Hannah, Lucy’s daughter, does come off as somewhat entitled in the beginning but I liked how she realized that her dad didn’t treat Lucy right and in a way boycotted him and his new girlfriend. However, time with Lucy helping her start her business and remodel the house stabilizes and grounds her so that she isn’t so bratty.

This small town drew me in with the unique shops and engaging characters, and I really wanted to pack up and move there so that I too could enjoy the small-town feel. I feel like everyone would be welcoming no matter the situation and I would feel right at home.

This is the 6th book in this series and can be read as a standalone, but there are comments in this book that didn’t make sense (having not read the first 5 books) until I went back and looked at the synopsis for the first book regarding Jenna and spousal support. Since she and Brody were previously engaged but not married, I didn’t understand until I discovered she had been married before. Then it all made sense.

A very engaging book and we give it 4 paws up.

 

 

 

 

Excerpt

 

Lucy Holmes-Anderson was smiling as she made her way to the condo she was showing in downtown Bellevue. She and her husband, Evan, had seen it during a realtors’ open house the day before and been sure that it would sell in a moment. And she was going to be the one to jump on that moment. She had a couple she knew the place would be perfect for and she’d arranged to meet them there on their lunch hour.

She’d tried to let Evan know that she had a fish on the line but her call had gone straight to voice mail. It seemed like that happened a lot lately. Hardly surprising, though. Like her, he was busy showing houses, getting listings, writing up offers, and when he was with someone, he never took calls. He had said something about having a noon appointment so he was probably already with his clients.

Sometimes it seemed he spent more time showing houses to other people than hanging out in his own house with her. For a couple who worked together, it sure seemed that they didn’t see much of each other.

But that was the nature of the real estate business. No set hours, and evenings and weekends were usually busy. For both of them. They were often either in their separate offices in Anderson-Holmes Realty or meeting with people.

Even when they were together, it felt more like they were simply sharing space. He’d spent most of the evening the night before convincing a hesitant couple to lay out a king’s ransom on a dog of a house in a Seattle neighborhood that was supposed to be the next big thing. By the time he’d gotten off the phone, he’d been ready to do nothing more than crash in front of the TV.

There wasn’t even such a thing as a cozy breakfast together. Nothing new there though. Breakfast had always been a crazy rush to get out the door. This particular morning it had involved a phone conversation with their daughter, Hannah, about the “little” accident she’d had with the new car they’d given her the summer before for her high school graduation. At least she’d only crunched into a post in a parking garage and the only thing that got hurt was the car, but it was a costly hurt. Not good for the insurance premiums.

“It’s not that new anymore,” she’d said in between tears and apologies. “I’ve had it almost a year.”

“And we’ve paid the insurance for the first year. Remember, come June it’s going to be time for you to take that over,” Lucy had said. “And accidents only make your insurance go up.” Which it was going to do to theirs.

Lucy hadn’t wanted to be the baddie, but they’d flipped a coin over who was going to have a chat with their baby and she’d lost.

“Remind her that she’s got to get a job as soon as spring quarter is over. It’s time she started taking some financial responsibility,” Evan had insisted.

They were paying for her tuition at the University of Washington, plus housing (which wasn’t cheap when you lived in a sorority). Car insurance was something they’d decided Hannah could cover in the future.

So Lucy had done the reminding thing.

This had not been welcome news, and while Hannah could often wheedle one or the other parent into caving when she wanted something (or to get out of something), the parents had stayed united on the issue of a summer job.

“You’re not doing summer quarter,” Lucy had said. (More reminding.) “You’ll have time for a job. I’m sure you can find something fun. Maybe helping Daddy and me in the office.”

“Inputting boring stuff into the computer,” Hannah had said in disgust.

“And posting listings online. Looking at all those cool pictures of houses.”

“Stuck inside like a mushroom.”

Lucy hadn’t bothered to remind her daughter that mushrooms grew outside in the woods.

“You guys are so unfair,” Hannah had concluded.

Of course, that accusation had been enough to make Lucy want to cave. She had always struggled with dishing out discipline, even when their daughter was little, although she’d certainly tried her best. And really, Hannah wasn’t a bad kid. Just a little spoiled, maybe.

“We need to do this, don’t we?” she’d said as Evan grabbed the keys to his Maserati and started for the door.

“We do. Everybody has to face reality sooner or later, Luc.”

And reality included hard work. Lucy knew that firsthand. She’d come from a hardworking middle-class family and put herself through college. So had Evan.

They’d both worked their way through school at the same pizza parlor and slowly fallen in love in between orders. With his degree in business and hers in interior design, they’d partnered up in both business and life. They’d put in long hours to establish their real estate agency, and when the market in the Seattle area turned hot, they’d been more than ready to take advantage of it.

They were now the epitome of success, with three brokers in their office—two hunky millennials who could charm anyone into listing their house with Anderson-Holmes and a beautiful, bright young thing named Pandora who reminded Lucy a lot of herself twenty-two years earlier when she and Evan first opened their doors.

As far as Lucy could see, the girl’s only flaw was that she lacked confidence. It seemed she couldn’t submit a single offer without consulting Evan. Only the other day she’d called with a silly question about a house inspection that left Lucy shaking her head.

“She just needs some hand-holding,” Evan had said.

“I could use some hand-holding,” Lucy had replied in a playful tone of voice.

There’d been a time when he would have taken the hint, taken her to bed and gotten a hold of more than her hand. This time, he’d merely chuckled and returned to surfing the internet on his laptop.

She hadn’t pushed. They were both going pretty hard and it seemed he was tired a lot.

Still, this wasn’t what she’d envisioned their love life looking like now that they were empty nesters. She’d joked to her older sister, Darla, that with Hannah out of the house, she and Evan would probably have sex in every room. That was what you did when you had the place to yourselves, right? She and Evan were only forty-four. He was still in his prime and she was at her sexual peak.

So far, she’d been lucky if she got him stirred up in the bedroom let alone anywhere else. Where was all that empty-nester-second-honeymoon fun they were supposed to be having? Somewhere in the future—at the rate they were working, the distant future.

But all work and no play… If she closed this deal, she was going to make sure they went on a nice long vacation. They needed to put the romance back in their relationship. She’d been eyeing resorts in both Hawaii and Fiji. She’d also been looking into cruises. One of those European river cruises would be so nice.

Yes, a river cruise. Evan had his boat and his fancy midlife sports car. She should get a cruise.

Her smile grew bigger. The Jorgensons were going to love this slick two-bedroom condo in downtown Bellevue. In addition to a bonus room, it had all the bells and whistles—a generous kitchen with quartz countertops and an eating bar; spacious living and dining rooms; windows with electric blackout blinds; unobstructed views of downtown Bellevue, Seattle, Lake Washington and the Olympic Mountains. The facility offered a spa, fitness center and theater room. What was not to like? For some, the price. But the Jorgensons could afford this.

Actually, so could Lucy and Evan. It might be nice to downsize from their four-bedroom three-thousand-square-foot house. It wasn’t like they’d filled the place up with kids. Or ever would.

Okay, maybe not this condo. Their house was on Lake Washington and it was important to Evan to be on the water. She liked the water, too. There was something so calming about it. So someplace smaller. Cozier.

That appealed to her. Yes, it was worth considering.

Meanwhile, here were the Jorgensons. In their late thirties, dressed in trendy clothes, driving a Tesla compact, this couple was more than ready to go from being renters to becoming homeowners. Lucy had convinced them that a condo was a good way to start. Plenty of freedom and no maintenance worries.

“I know you’re going to go crazy when you see this condo,” she told them as she let them into the lobby.

“I looked at the pictures online,” said Emma Jorgenson. “It looks gorgeous.” She smiled at her husband, Aaron, who smiled back at her.

“We’re excited to see it,” he said.

“I’m excited to show it to you. If you like it, we’ll want to move quickly. This one won’t last.”

They rode the elevator up to the twenty-seventh floor. “The view is amazing. You won’t believe your eyes,” Lucy said.

She let them into the unit. It was gorgeous. Hardwood floors, windows showcasing a million-dollar view (no, make that two million).

But what did she hear? Was that voices?

“Is someone else looking at this place?” asked Aaron.

“No one should be.”

Lucy followed the sound down the hallway and into the master bedroom, her clients trailing her.

“This bedroom is fabulous,” Emma breathed. Then her eyes fell on the trail of his and hers clothes leading into the bathroom. “Umm.”

“Sounds like someone’s in the shower,” said Aaron.

“That’s not possible. The owners are in Cabo.” But Lucy had seen the clothes also, and someone was definitely in the bathroom. She could hear water running, and a high-pitched giggle. What on earth was going on?

“Maybe you should wait here,” she said to her clients, and moved toward the bathroom.

“Ooh,” said a familiar female voice as Lucy stepped through the door and onto the azure porcelain floor.

Oh, no. She had to be hallucinating. Behind frosted sea green glass, etched with marsh grass, under the luxury rainfall showerhead, two bodies were silhouetted.

“Baby,” said another voice.

It was a voice Lucy knew well, a voice that had called her baby, too. Dread urged her not to look around that glass wall but anger won out and she did.

There stood Evan with Pandora, the bright young thing. Both naked and sudsy. And Evan wasn’t holding her hand. This didn’t happen in real life. This happened in books or movies.

Lucy blinked, hoping the image before her would disappear. It didn’t. Evan and Pandora Welk were still right where she’d seen them.

“Evan?” Lucy squeaked. He was too busy to hear her. She raised her voice. “Evan!”

Pandora was the first to turn. Those faux-innocent hazel eyes of hers got so big they looked like golf balls. She let out a screech and the soap in her hands shot across the shower.

Evan turned, too, and looked over his shoulder. If eyeballs could bounce, his would have bounced right out of his head and onto the shower floor.

“Luc!” he cried, and stepped in front of Pandora in an effort to shield her.

Caption the moment What’s Wrong With This Picture?

Plenty. Evan was old enough to be this girl’s father. There she was, all slender and perky, and there he was, a forty-four-year-old fool with love handles. It was so inappropriate and unprofessional and…wrong! And furthermore, if he was going to go wild and crazy like this, he should have been doing it with Lucy.

The Jorgensons joined the party, apparently too curious to stay behind. “Eeep,” said Emma Jorgenson.

“Whoa,” said Aaron Jorgenson, half laughing.

“Ack!” said Evan, still trying to shield the home-wrecker from the audience that was gathering to gawk at them.

Red-faced, Pandora hurried out of the shower, grabbed a towel and her clothes, and beat it as if the hounds of hell were after her.

Lucy hoped they were and she hoped they took a great big bite out of that perky, bouncy bottom.

 

 

About the Author

 

USA Today and Publisher’s Weekly best-selling author Sheila Roberts has seen her books translated into several different languages, included in Reader’s Digest compilations, and made into movies for both the Hallmark and Lifetime channels. She’s happily married and lives in the Pacific Northwest.

Her latest book is the women’s fiction/romance Sand Dollar Lane (Harlequin/Mira, April 2022)

 

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Comments Off on Review & #Excerpt – Sand Dollar Lane by Sheila Roberts @_Sheila_Roberts #women #fiction #romance #newrelease #PUYB
Posted in 5 paws, excerpt, Psychological, Review, suspense on July 2, 2021

 

 

Synopsis

 

A thriller that depicts the resilience of a woman faced with devastating loss, the unexpected friendship forged from tragedy and the recurring societal themes that confront every generation.

Julianna Sandoval is living in limbo. Her husband’s plane has vanished over the Atlantic Ocean and although the Coast Guard has suspended the search, she clings to hope that he’ll still be found alive. Three months later, a young woman appears after hours at Julianna’s Ormond Beach restaurant, declaring, “He’s not who you think he is.” Before the stranger can say anything else, a gunshot through the window kills her instantly. Seasoned detective Paul Grant is assigned to investigate the girl’s murder. He senses that the shooting was not random but doesn’t know the connection to his only witness. Was the girl referring to Julianna’s presumed dead husband, her lazy stepson, her shady bar manager, or someone else? As Grant methodically gathers evidence and challenges alibies, Julianna’s faith in her friends and family is tested. The investigation leaves her wondering who she can trust and culminates with an eerie link to the past that no one sees coming.

 

 

Kobo * B&N * Amazon

 

 

Review

 

This suspense novel is told from multiple points of view – Julianna, a restaurant owner, and Grant, a police detective. This works well because you see different sides of the same situation and how each reacts to the various revelations and facts that come out about the woman killed in Julianna’s restaurant. There is another subplot, the disappearance of Julianna’s husband, Michael. These two different stories are woven together and while you might be able to figure out why this woman was killed, you might not know all of the details. I had my suspicions about several characters and I was right in some cases and wrong in others.

This book also has a tie with trafficking and there are a lot of details provided for the reader to recognize it in their own community. This is a tough topic and very timely considering the larger number of young people that end up in the hands of those selling them for their bodies. I especially liked the chapter at the end where a young woman who escaped the trafficking shares her story and facts about that industry. It is an eye-opener for sure.

Grant is an interesting character because while he is relatively new to this town, he still hasn’t settled into his office and unpacked the boxes he brought with him. What does this mean for him? Is he invested in his new town and job? Too busy to unpack? I think there is a multitude of answers to this question. But he is a good detective and is able to uncover things that Julianna didn’t know and help solve the case.

Julianna has her own demons including losing a sister before she was even born and then her parents. While she doesn’t have a lot, she does have the restaurant her parents owned while they were alive. We also see her guilt and confusion about her missing husband. Could she have done more? She unearths some secrets she never expected and it causes her to question her own judgment. I can’t blame her, when everything you think is real is proven otherwise, you tend to doubt yourself.

There are a few twists at the end, one that I suspected, but it goes further than what I could have ever imagined. This was a very enjoyable book and I had a hard time putting it down. We give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

Excerpt

 

Julianna | Monday, July 5

 

I poured myself a glass of red wine from an open bottle at the bar and pictured Michael sitting across from me. We were having a nightcap now that the diners had finished their desserts and coffee and were headed home, their tummies full of pasta with homemade Italian sauce. He raised his glass to make a toast—to having me all to himself for a few weeks. I was about to do something I considered reckless: abandoning the restaurant for two weeks to go on vacation in Italy. Before Michael, I’d never been out of the country, much less on a cross-Atlantic flight, but he’d planned our adventure to the last detail. We’d never really taken a honeymoon. I was too worried about leaving the restaurant unsupervised, but he’d finally convinced me to relax. Samantha and Alex could easily handle things while I was gone.

I guess it just wasn’t in my DNA to be so carefree, a work ethic I’d inherited from my father. Little by little Michael had shown me that it was okay to have fun. Taking time off for an overdue celebration of our marriage was part of enjoying life. He was a hopeless romantic.

I dabbed my eyes with a cocktail napkin. Now I was the romantic one, clinging to a distant memory. I was also feeling more hopeless—it had been ninety-five days since I’d last seen my husband.

I started to take a sip of wine when I heard a voice behind me.

“We need to talk,” she said.

I whipped around to see a woman leaning against the hostess stand at the front of my restaurant. We had closed over an hour ago. My bar manager and chef had just left for the night, leaving me alone to finish some paperwork. She seemed to have appeared out of nowhere.

Her voice sounded like a girl’s, but she looked more like a Real Housewife. She wore a tight navy dress with a scooped neckline that accentuated her rounded breasts. Gold bracelets adorned both wrists and her heels were so high that her feet arched unnaturally. Her bleached blonde hair was tousled about her face, and her skin was deeply tanned, the color that came from hours of soaking up the Florida sun.

“We’re closed,” I said, perplexed that this woman was somehow in my restaurant at nearly 1:00 a.m.

“You’re Julianna, right?” she asked. Her eyes squinted slightly.

Most of my customers, even the regulars, called me Miss Sandoval. I couldn’t put my finger on it, but there was something off-putting about the informal way she said my first name. Or maybe I was just irritable from a long night. Holidays were always busy, and that night’s Fourth of July dinner crowd had been no exception.

“Look, I’m sorry, but we’re closed,” I repeated. “You’ll need to come back during normal hours.”

For an instant, I thought about my pistol in the safe in the back office. It wasn’t that I felt in danger—she looked more like the type who’d be robbed than someone who’d do the robbing. Still, her presence was strange, especially on the one night when my stepson was out of town, leaving me to close the restaurant alone.

“He’s not who you think he is,” she said.

I shook my head, trying to make sense of her words. Was she drunk? High? And who was she talking about? It didn’t matter. She was keeping me from going home and I was already exhausted. I reached in my jacket pocket for the key to the front door and stepped from behind the expansive bar to escort her out. As I approached, I got a better look at her face. She was heavily made-up, with contoured cheekbones, lash extensions and plumped-up lips. I reiterated that we were closed and she needed to leave.

“You stupid bitch,” she sneered. “You don’t have a clue!”

I stopped in my tracks. My entire body stiffened. The hatred in her voice was personal, as if she knew me, which she didn’t. Before I could respond, I heard a blast outside. Glass shattered like someone had dropped a full tray of dishes onto the concrete floor.

Her eyes bulged and she gasped for air, opening and closing her mouth like a hooked fish. Her doll-like face was now oddly contorted. She stumbled forward a few steps, struggling to maintain her balance. When she tried to speak, blood spewed from her mouth.

I screamed.

She lurched forward, arms outstretched, and tried to grab me.

I instinctively stepped back and watched in horror as she clutched her chest and gasped for air.

Our eyes locked.

She stared at me, terrified. Her expression was the haunted, helpless look of someone who knew death was certain. Then she collapsed face-first to the floor.

I took another step back, turned and sprinted through the open archway toward the kitchen. I continued retreating down the hall to my office and slammed the door behind me. My heart was pounding in my ears. My fingers trembled as I struggled to twist the flimsy bar lock on the door knob.

Only then did I realize that I had no escape. My small office had no windows or other exits.

I frantically snatched the phone and dialed 9-1-1.

“Hurry, hurry, hurry,” I chanted into the receiver.

“9-1-1. What is your emergency?”

“A woman,” I panted. “A woman has been shot.”

I glanced at the space between my desk and the back wall and squeezed myself into the small opening. My desk was made of wood. It wouldn’t stop a bullet. Still, I felt safer crouched behind it.

“What is your address?” the dispatcher asked.

“Café Lily. 216 South Atlantic Avenue, Ormond Beach.”

“And your name?”

“Julianna Sandoval. Please, send the police right away!”

I listened for any sounds of movement in the hallway. Whoever shot her could be coming for me next. The restaurant was eerily quiet, but that didn’t mean I was alone.

“Help is on the way, Julianna. Just stay with me. Where are you?”

“In my office.” My voice cracked. I tried to swallow but my mouth was dry.

“Did you see who shot her?”

I blinked, trying to recall the scene I’d just witnessed. I’d heard the gunshot and the window shattering. Why hadn’t I looked in that direction? The entire time, I’d never taken my eyes off the woman. Why hadn’t I tried to identify the shooter?

“Ma’am, are you still there?” the dispatcher asked.

“I’m here,” I whispered.

I eyed the safe on the wall. I’d have to give up the cover of my desk to retrieve my pistol, but I had no choice. A flimsy lock wouldn’t hold up against someone determined to break down the door. I stood quickly and pressed the cold metal keypad—0216, my parents’ anniversary. Or was it 0212?

My mind went blank.

No, it was 0216.

With a single motion, I grabbed the gun and darted back to my hiding place. I squatted behind my desk with the phone pressed against my ear and my gun pointed toward the door. As much as I tried, I couldn’t catch my breath.

“You’re doing good, Julianna. The police are on their way.”

But what if help didn’t arrive in time?

 

 

About the Author

 

Liz Lazarus grew up in Valdosta, Georgia, known for its high school football and being the last watering hole on highway I-75 before entering Florida. She was editor of her high school newspaper and salutatorian of her class. Lazarus graduated from The Georgia Institute of Technology with an engineering degree and Northwestern’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management with an MBA. She went on to a successful career as an executive at General Electric’s Healthcare division. Later, she joined a leading consulting firm as a Managing Director and is currently head of Operations for a healthcare start-up. Interestingly, Lazarus initially ignored the calling to become a novelist—instead, she tackled other ambitions on her bucket list: living in Paris and learning to speak French, getting her pilot’s license, and producing a music CD. But, as she explains, her first book “wouldn’t leave me alone—it kept nudging me to write to the point that I could no longer ignore it.” Though her first novel, Free of Malice, released in the spring of 2016, is fiction, the attack on the main character is real, drawn from Lazarus’ own experience. It portrays the emotional realities of healing from a vicious, physical assault and tells the story of one woman’s obsession to force the legal system to acknowledge her right to self-defense. Reader response to Lazarus’ first novel was so encouraging that she embarked on a writing career, releasing her second novel in the spring of 2018. Plea for Justice is a thriller that depicts the journey of a paralegal investigating the case of her estranged friend’s incarceration. As she seeks the truth, loyalties are strained and relationships are tested leaving her to wonder if she is helping an innocent man or being played for a fool. Her third novel, Shades of Silence, released in 2021, showcases the resilience of a woman faced with devastating loss, the unexpected friendships forged from tragedy, and the recurring societal themes that confront every generation. Lazarus lives in Atlanta and is engaged to fiancé, Richard. When not working, she enjoys reading, traveling, and spoiling their cat, Buckwheat.

 

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Comments Off on Review – Shades of Silence by Liz Lazarus @liz_lazarus #psychological #suspense #excerpt
Posted in Book Release, excerpt, Psychological, suspense on April 30, 2021

 

 

Synopsis

 

A thriller that depicts the resilience of a woman faced with devastating loss, the unexpected friendship forged from tragedy and the recurring societal themes that confront every generation.

Julianna Sandoval is living in limbo. Her husband’s plane has vanished over the Atlantic Ocean and although the Coast Guard has suspended the search, she clings to hope that he’ll still be found alive. Three months later, a young woman appears after hours at Julianna’s Ormond Beach restaurant, declaring, “He’s not who you think he is.” Before the stranger can say anything else, a gunshot through the window kills her instantly. Seasoned detective Paul Grant is assigned to investigate the girl’s murder. He senses that the shooting was not random but doesn’t know the connection to his only witness. Was the girl referring to Julianna’s presumed dead husband, her lazy stepson, her shady bar manager, or someone else? As Grant methodically gathers evidence and challenges alibies, Julianna’s faith in her friends and family is tested. The investigation leaves her wondering who she can trust and culminates with an eerie link to the past that no one sees coming.

 

 

Kobo * B&N * Amazon

 

 

Excerpt

 

Julianna | Monday, July 5

 

I poured myself a glass of red wine from an open bottle at the bar and pictured Michael sitting across from me. We were having a nightcap now that the diners had finished their desserts and coffee and were headed home, their tummies full of pasta with homemade Italian sauce. He raised his glass to make a toast—to having me all to himself for a few weeks. I was about to do something I considered reckless: abandoning the restaurant for two weeks to go on vacation in Italy. Before Michael, I’d never been out of the country, much less on a cross-Atlantic flight, but he’d planned our adventure to the last detail. We’d never really taken a honeymoon. I was too worried about leaving the restaurant unsupervised, but he’d finally convinced me to relax. Samantha and Alex could easily handle things while I was gone.

I guess it just wasn’t in my DNA to be so carefree, a work ethic I’d inherited from my father. Little by little Michael had shown me that it was okay to have fun. Taking time off for an overdue celebration of our marriage was part of enjoying life. He was a hopeless romantic.

I dabbed my eyes with a cocktail napkin. Now I was the romantic one, clinging to a distant memory. I was also feeling more hopeless—it had been ninety-five days since I’d last seen my husband.

I started to take a sip of wine when I heard a voice behind me.

“We need to talk,” she said.

I whipped around to see a woman leaning against the hostess stand at the front of my restaurant. We had closed over an hour ago. My bar manager and chef had just left for the night, leaving me alone to finish some paperwork. She seemed to have appeared out of nowhere.

Her voice sounded like a girl’s, but she looked more like a Real Housewife. She wore a tight navy dress with a scooped neckline that accentuated her rounded breasts. Gold bracelets adorned both wrists and her heels were so high that her feet arched unnaturally. Her bleached blonde hair was tousled about her face, and her skin was deeply tanned, the color that came from hours of soaking up the Florida sun.

“We’re closed,” I said, perplexed that this woman was somehow in my restaurant at nearly 1:00 a.m.

“You’re Julianna, right?” she asked. Her eyes squinted slightly.

Most of my customers, even the regulars, called me Miss Sandoval. I couldn’t put my finger on it, but there was something off-putting about the informal way she said my first name. Or maybe I was just irritable from a long night. Holidays were always busy, and that night’s Fourth of July dinner crowd had been no exception.

“Look, I’m sorry, but we’re closed,” I repeated. “You’ll need to come back during normal hours.”

For an instant, I thought about my pistol in the safe in the back office. It wasn’t that I felt in danger—she looked more like the type who’d be robbed than someone who’d do the robbing. Still, her presence was strange, especially on the one night when my stepson was out of town, leaving me to close the restaurant alone.

“He’s not who you think he is,” she said.

I shook my head, trying to make sense of her words. Was she drunk? High? And who was she talking about? It didn’t matter. She was keeping me from going home and I was already exhausted. I reached in my jacket pocket for the key to the front door and stepped from behind the expansive bar to escort her out. As I approached, I got a better look at her face. She was heavily made-up, with contoured cheekbones, lash extensions and plumped-up lips. I reiterated that we were closed and she needed to leave.

“You stupid bitch,” she sneered. “You don’t have a clue!”

I stopped in my tracks. My entire body stiffened. The hatred in her voice was personal, as if she knew me, which she didn’t. Before I could respond, I heard a blast outside. Glass shattered like someone had dropped a full tray of dishes onto the concrete floor.

Her eyes bulged and she gasped for air, opening and closing her mouth like a hooked fish. Her doll-like face was now oddly contorted. She stumbled forward a few steps, struggling to maintain her balance. When she tried to speak, blood spewed from her mouth.

I screamed.

She lurched forward, arms outstretched, and tried to grab me.

I instinctively stepped back and watched in horror as she clutched her chest and gasped for air.

Our eyes locked.

She stared at me, terrified. Her expression was the haunted, helpless look of someone who knew death was certain. Then she collapsed face-first to the floor.

I took another step back, turned and sprinted through the open archway toward the kitchen. I continued retreating down the hall to my office and slammed the door behind me. My heart was pounding in my ears. My fingers trembled as I struggled to twist the flimsy bar lock on the door knob.

Only then did I realize that I had no escape. My small office had no windows or other exits.

I frantically snatched the phone and dialed 9-1-1.

“Hurry, hurry, hurry,” I chanted into the receiver.

“9-1-1. What is your emergency?”

“A woman,” I panted. “A woman has been shot.”

I glanced at the space between my desk and the back wall and squeezed myself into the small opening. My desk was made of wood. It wouldn’t stop a bullet. Still, I felt safer crouched behind it.

“What is your address?” the dispatcher asked.

“Café Lily. 216 South Atlantic Avenue, Ormond Beach.”

“And your name?”

“Julianna Sandoval. Please, send the police right away!”

I listened for any sounds of movement in the hallway. Whoever shot her could be coming for me next. The restaurant was eerily quiet, but that didn’t mean I was alone.

“Help is on the way, Julianna. Just stay with me. Where are you?”

“In my office.” My voice cracked. I tried to swallow but my mouth was dry.

“Did you see who shot her?”

I blinked, trying to recall the scene I’d just witnessed. I’d heard the gunshot and the window shattering. Why hadn’t I looked in that direction? The entire time, I’d never taken my eyes off the woman. Why hadn’t I tried to identify the shooter?

“Ma’am, are you still there?” the dispatcher asked.

“I’m here,” I whispered.

I eyed the safe on the wall. I’d have to give up the cover of my desk to retrieve my pistol, but I had no choice. A flimsy lock wouldn’t hold up against someone determined to break down the door. I stood quickly and pressed the cold metal keypad—0216, my parents’ anniversary. Or was it 0212?

My mind went blank.

No, it was 0216.

With a single motion, I grabbed the gun and darted back to my hiding place. I squatted behind my desk with the phone pressed against my ear and my gun pointed toward the door. As much as I tried, I couldn’t catch my breath.

“You’re doing good, Julianna. The police are on their way.”

But what if help didn’t arrive in time?

 

 

About the Author

 

Liz Lazarus grew up in Valdosta, Georgia, known for its high school football and being the last watering hole on highway I-75 before entering Florida. She was editor of her high school newspaper and salutatorian of her class. Lazarus graduated from The Georgia Institute of Technology with an engineering degree and Northwestern’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management with an MBA. She went on to a successful career as an executive at General Electric’s Healthcare division. Later, she joined a leading consulting firm as a Managing Director and is currently head of Operations for a healthcare start-up. Interestingly, Lazarus initially ignored the calling to become a novelist—instead, she tackled other ambitions on her bucket list: living in Paris and learning to speak French, getting her pilot’s license, and producing a music CD. But, as she explains, her first book “wouldn’t leave me alone—it kept nudging me to write to the point that I could no longer ignore it.” Though her first novel, Free of Malice, released in the spring of 2016, is fiction, the attack on the main character is real, drawn from Lazarus’ own experience. It portrays the emotional realities of healing from a vicious, physical assault and tells the story of one woman’s obsession to force the legal system to acknowledge her right to self-defense. Reader response to Lazarus’ first novel was so encouraging that she embarked on a writing career, releasing her second novel in the spring of 2018. Plea for Justice is a thriller that depicts the journey of a paralegal investigating the case of her estranged friend’s incarceration. As she seeks the truth, loyalties are strained and relationships are tested leaving her to wonder if she is helping an innocent man or being played for a fool. Her third novel, Shades of Silence, released in 2021, showcases the resilience of a woman faced with devastating loss, the unexpected friendships forged from tragedy, and the recurring societal themes that confront every generation. Lazarus lives in Atlanta and is engaged to fiancé, Richard. When not working, she enjoys reading, traveling, and spoiling their cat, Buckwheat.

 

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Posted in Giveaway, Interview, mystery on April 1, 2020

 

 

 

A GIRL LIKE YOU: Beautiful Henrietta Von Harmon works as a 26 girl at a corner bar, Poor Pete’s, on Chicago’s northwest side. It’s 1935, but things still aren’t looking up since the big crash and her father’s subsequent suicide. Left to care for her antagonistic mother and seven younger siblings, Henrietta is persuaded to take a job as a taxi dancer at a local dance hall. Henrietta is just beginning to enjoy herself, dancing with men for ten cents a dance, when the floor matron suddenly turns up murdered. The aloof Inspector Clive Howard then appears on the scene, and Henrietta unwittingly finds herself involved in unraveling the mystery when she agrees to go undercover for him in a burlesque theater where he believes the killer lurks.

Even as Henrietta is plunged into Chicago’s grittier underworld, she struggles to still play the mother “hen” to her younger siblings and even to the pesky neighborhood boy, Stanley, who believes himself in love with her and continues to pop up in the most unlikely places, determined, ironically, to keep Henrietta safe, even from the Inspector if needs be. Despite his efforts, however, and his penchant for messing up the Inspector’s investigation, the lovely Henrietta and the impenetrable Inspector find themselves drawn to each other in most unsuitable ways.

 

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A RING OF TRUTH: In this second book of the series, Henrietta and Clive delightfully rewrite Pride and Prejudice―with a hint of mystery!

Newly engaged, Clive and Henrietta now begin the difficult task of meeting each other’s family. “Difficult” because Clive has neglected to tell Henrietta that he is in fact the heir to the Howard estate and fortune, and Henrietta has just discovered that her mother has been hiding secrets about her past as well. When Clive brings Henrietta to the family estate to meet his parents, they are less than enthused about his impoverished intended. Left alone in this extravagant new world when Clive returns to the city, Henrietta finds herself more at home with the servants than his family, much to the disapproval of Mrs. Howard―and soon gets caught up in the disappearance of an elderly servant’s ring, not realizing that in doing so she has become part of a bigger, darker plot.
As Clive and Henrietta attempt to discover the truth in the two very different worlds unraveling around them, they both begin to wonder: Are they meant for each other after all?

 

 

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A PROMISE GIVEN: This third book in the Henrietta and Inspector Howard series provides a delightful romp through the English countryside and back.

Anxious to be married, Henrietta and Clive push forward with their wedding plans despite their family differences, made worse now by Oldrich Exley’s attempts to control the Von Harmons. When the long-awaited wedding day arrives, there is more unfolding than just Clive and Henrietta’s vows of love. Stanley and Elsie’s relationship is sorely tested by the presence of the dashing Lieutenant Harrison Barnes-Smith and by Henrietta’s friend Rose―a situation that grows increasingly dark and confused as time goes on.

As Clive and Henrietta begin their honeymoon at Castle Linley, the Howards’ ancestral estate in England, they encounter a whole new host of characters, including the eccentric Lord and Lady Linley and Clive’s mysterious cousin, Wallace. When a man is murdered in the village on the night of a house party at the Castle, Wallace comes under suspicion―and Clive and Henrietta are reluctantly drawn into the case, despite Clive’s anxiety at involving his new bride and Henrietta’s distracting news from home.
Delicately attempting to work together for the first time, Clive and Henrietta set out to prove Wallace’s innocence, uncovering as they do so some rather shocking truths that will shake the Linley name and estate forever.

 

 

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A VEIL REMOVED: Murder is never far from this sexy couple . . . even during the holidays!

Their honeymoon abruptly ended by the untimely death of Alcott Howard, Clive and Henrietta return to Highbury, where Clive discovers all is not as it should be. Increasingly convinced that his father’s death was not an accident, Clive launches his own investigation, despite his mother’s belief that he has become “mentally disturbed” with grief. Henrietta eventually joins forces with Clive on their first real case, which becomes darker―and deadlier―than they imagined as they get closer to the truth behind Alcott’s troubled affairs.

Meanwhile, Henrietta’s sister, Elsie, begins, at Henrietta’s orchestration, to take classes at a women’s college―an attempt to evade her troubles and prevent any further romantic temptations. When she meets a bookish German custodian at the school, however, he challenges her to think for herself . . . even as she discovers some shocking secrets about his past life.

 

 

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PREORDER! Release Date: April 28, 2020

 

A CHILD LOST: A spiritualist, an insane asylum, a lost little girl . . .

When Clive, anxious to distract a depressed Henrietta, begs Sergeant Frank Davis for a case, he is assigned to investigating a seemingly boring affair: a spiritualist woman operating in an abandoned schoolhouse on the edge of town who is suspected of robbing people of their valuables. What begins as an open and shut case becomes more complicated, however, when Henrietta―much to Clive’s dismay―begins to believe the spiritualist’s strange ramblings.

Meanwhile, Elsie begs Clive and Henrietta to help her and the object of her budding love, Gunther, locate the whereabouts of one Liesel Klinkhammer, the German woman Gunther has traveled to America to find and the mother of the little girl, Anna, whom he has brought along with him. The search leads them to Dunning Asylum, where they discover some terrible truths about Liesel. When the child, Anna, is herself mistakenly admitted to the asylum after an epileptic fit, Clive and Henrietta return to Dunning to retrieve her. This time, however, Henrietta begins to suspect that something darker may be happening. When Clive doesn’t believe her, she decides to take matters into her own hands . . . with horrifying results.

 

 

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Interview with Michelle Cox

 

What attracted you to writing about the 1930s in Chicago?

 

That’s a good question because I’ve actually always been more attracted to the 1940s.  When I was fishing around for an idea for a new novel, however, I decided to base my protagonist, Henrietta Von Harmon, on a real woman I met while working at a nursing home on Chicago’s NW side.

This woman was apparently a real bombshell in the 1930s depression-era Chicago and had a whole string of strange jobs, including working at the Chicago’s World’s Fair in 1933 as a “Dutch Girl.”  This detail was so intriguing to me that I just couldn’t pass it up.  So I shifted the book from the 1940s to the 1930s to make it work.  I didn’t realize at the time I was starting a series, however, or I might have at least initially thought twice about what decade to set it in.

 

So it didn’t start off as a series?

 

No, funnily enough!  I was originally writing just a one-off mystery because I thought I could attract an agent that way (as it turns out – not so much), but as I got deeper into the story, I started to really fall in love with these characters.  I wanted to keep their stories going, but I wasn’t all that enthused about continuing the story-line I had created.

I liked the characters, but I didn’t want to just write a series about a Chicago cop and his wife, solving crimes in a gritty 1930s Chicago.  That seemed like it had been done before, and, more to the point, I didn’t think I would enjoy describing stabbings, rapes, various murders, and child abductions . . . you get the point.  I wanted to write something a little different, so I had to change the story a little, which was to make Clive secretly wealthy, which brings up a whole host of other problems.

 

Your series is billed as a mystery, but it’s more than that, isn’t it? It’s more like a big family saga?

 

Yes, very astute!  It is really a little of everything, which marketers and book distributors hate because they want it to fall into a clearcut genre so that they know where to put it on the bookshelf.  But the series is really a blend of genres.  It’s like Downton Abbey meets Upstairs, Downstairs with a little Agatha Cristie thrown in.  Besides being historical fiction, it’s both mystery and romance, though it doesn’t neatly follow those formulas.

They say to write something you’d like to read, so I did.  And I think it’s working – the series has won over 30 awards, and those have been in all three genres, which I think is kind of neat.

 

What is the best piece of advice that you have been given, and/or given away?

 

Hard one! There’s a couple, actually. One is “No one can stop you but yourself.” And the second is similar.  It’s from the author, Laurie Buchanan, “Whatever you’re not changing, you’re choosing.”

 

 

About the Author

 

Michelle Cox is the author of the multiple award-winning Henrietta and Inspector Howard series as well as “Novel Notes of Local Lore,” a weekly blog dedicated to Chicago’s forgotten residents. She suspects she may have once lived in the 1930s and, having yet to discover a handy time machine lying around, has resorted to writing about the era as a way of getting herself back there. Coincidentally, her books have been praised by Kirkus, Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, Booklist and many others, so she might be on to something. Unbeknownst to most, Michelle hoards board games she doesn’t have time to play and is, not surprisingly, addicted to period dramas and big band music. Also marmalade.

 

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Giveaway

 

$100 Amazon Gift Card courtesy of Michelle Cox, author of the Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series (ends Apr 10)
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Posted in excerpt, romance, Spotlight on November 8, 2019

 

Synopsis

A Sprinkling of Magic

Catarina lives alone and works alone, and she likes it that way. Her only romance ended with such pain that she’s convinced she’s meant to be single forever. She lives quietly above the small upholstery shop she runs in downtown Fairview.

One day, a drop-dead gorgeous man walks into her upholstery shop. Remy is opening an ice cream parlor down the street, and he’s stopped in to check out the ugly old sofa Catarina is working on. As it happens, the sofa played a storied role in his parents’ marriage. He tells her all about it over cups of tea, and afterward, Catarina peeks into his cup. Her Romany (Gypsy) grandmother taught her the art of reading tea leaves when she was a child, and Catarina immediately knows her grandmother would have made much of what she sees in Remy’s cup. But Catarina doesn’t take what the tea leaves say seriously. Fortune-telling is hardly scientific, after all.

Catarina’s relationship with Remy sets off complications for several people around them, including her life-long friend Tanya and Remy’s twin brother, Rhys. The situation becomes even more complex when a young girl Catarina didn’t even know existed shows up at her door, having left the old country to meet the branch of her family she found through a DNA test. Veda still follows the old ways, and she and Tanya are convinced Catarina and Remy are meant to be together.

Catarina is not so sure. Remy has a secret he didn’t share, and when Catarina learns about it, she doubts whether she should have taken the risk of another relationship. Can he win back her trust?

 

 

 

Excerpt

Catarina is of Romany ancestry. She runs the upholstery shop in downtown Fairview. Remy is opening an ice cream shop down the street.

Her father had been surprised that Catarina had wanted to learn upholstery. It was heavy work, and Catarina was a small woman. But she liked the idea of running her own business, and she liked living right over the shop. It was a convenient arrangement, and the work kept her strong and fit without any need to visit a gym.

She put on her heavy work boots and headed downstairs. The staircase delineated a strong shift in the appearance of the building’s interior. Her living quarters, full of light, plants, art and books, had a charming bohemian air to them. Downstairs, it was a functional workshop. She kept a few upholstered pieces of furniture in the plate glass window upon which the name “Loveridge’s” was drawn in swoopy gold lettering, but the rest of the space was functional. Tools, furniture in every state of repair and disrepair, and big books of fabric samples crowded the space, yet everything managed to look orderly.

Today she had a new project to start. It was an ugly green sofa with, so far as she could see, zero aesthetic value. Reupholstering furniture cost at least as much as buying new, so most people didn’t bother unless a piece was valuable or beloved. Why anybody would love this hideous monstrosity, she couldn’t imagine. Worse yet, the customer had chosen to replace the old fabric with a newer version of the moth-eaten green it now had. This piece wouldn’t be especially satisfying to complete. However, she gave the customers what they wanted. She sighed and got to work, flipping the sofa upside down with less trouble than anyone would expect from such a small woman.

She began carefully removing the old fabric, taking care not to rip it so she could use the old pieces as patterns for the new fabric. She would have to re-do the old springs and replace the padding, and in the end it would look like an entirely new piece — but would still look ugly, she thought. The woman who had arranged the sofa repair had seemed nice enough but had abysmal taste.

She was still taking it apart when the bell on her front door jingled. Unexpected customers only rarely walked in her front door. Usually, people called and made an appointment before stopping in, so she looked up in surprise.

He was tall, with thick, dark hair and a light beard. He was dressed casually, in jeans and a white button-down shirt. He wore sunglasses, but took them off as he walked in, revealing eyes as dark as Catarina’s own.

“Hi, what can I do for you?” she asked, putting down the flat-head screwdriver she’d been using to remove some old staples. She reflexively touched her hair, noting it was still wet but well in place.

“I see you’re working on my mother’s sofa,” he said. “My sister arranged to have it recovered.” Catarina was a bit surprised that Serena was his sister. Serena was, she’d guess, around 20 years older than this man.

“Yes, I’m just starting it,” she said. “Is there any problem?”

“Not at all,” he said. “She told me today she had decided to have it recovered, and I just wanted to see what your plans for it are. Can you show me the new fabric?”

Now that was odd, Catarina thought. What was his interest in his mother’s ugly old sofa? But she just smiled.

“Of course,” she said. “I have it here.” She indicated another work table just behind her. On it was a bolt of ugly green fabric, very similar to the old fabric she was removing. She had started stacking sections of the old stuff in a pile at the end of the table, ready for use in making new patterns.

The man walked over to the table and ran his hand over the bolt of material.

“Serena was right. This is just as ugly as the old stuff. Mom is going to love it,” he said, and laughed, causing Catarina to laugh along with him.

“It might not be the most beautiful material I’ve ever used,” she said. “But the customer — your sister Serena, you say? — seemed very happy with it. We did look through quite a few sample books before she settled on this one.”

“You must be wondering why anybody would want to keep this horrible sofa,” he said.

“Well … something like that might have crossed my mind.” She walked around the work table, closer to where he stood.

“I wouldn’t be here if not for this sofa, you might say.”

“Now that sounds like a story,” Catarina said. She looked into the man’s dark brown eyes. They were so dark as to be nearly black. She wondered if he had Romany blood, as she did. If he added a couple of gold earrings and tied a diklo around his head, he would look just like a gyspy king, she thought. Matchka had awakened from her nap and was regarding the man with curiosity, meowing and repeatedly walking between his legs.

“I’m Catarina,” she said, extending her hand.

“Remy,” he said, returning the handshake. Then he reached down and picked up Matchka, cuddling her until she settled in and purred. “And who is this?”

“That is Matchka,” Catarina said. “She seems to like you.”

“Matchka,” Remy said. “Does that have a meaning?” He stroked under the cat’s chin. Clearly, he’d owned a cat before.

“It does. It means ‘cat,’ actually.”

Remy laughed. “That sounds like a story.” His eyes crinkled in the most attractive way when he laughed, she noticed. Maybe that was what made her throw caution to the wind.

“Would you like a cup of tea? And then you can tell me everything I need to know about the history of this sofa.” Although she couldn’t imagine how knowing the history could possibly change how she worked on it.

Remy looked surprised, but then smiled. “I’d love a cup of tea,” he said.

“I’ll be right back,” she said. “Matchka will keep you company for a bit.” She quickly ran upstairs and put on a pot of water to boil. She looked at her reflection, wondering if she could rearrange her hair without looking like she cared too much about what this customer thought of her. No, probably not. But she added a tiny bit of lip gloss and powdered her nose. Then she loaded up a small lacquered tray with her grandmother’s tea set, jam and orange slices. She included the sugar bowl and some cream, since she didn’t know how he took his tea. By the time she’d assembled all the ingredients, the water was boiling, and she started the tea leaves steeping.

She walked slowly down the stairs, careful not to spill anything or drop her grandmother’s tea set.

“That’s a beautiful tea set,” he said. It was, indeed. It was clearly an antique, beautifully detailed with swirls of color and gold edging. Catarina treasured it.

“Thanks,” she said. “It belonged to my grandmother. I think of her whenever I use it.” She put the tray down at the far side of the work table, away from the fabric. “How do you take your tea? I have my own tradition, but you might prefer just sugar and cream, or plain.”

“Usually plain, but I’m curious to see how you do it,” he said.

“This is how my grandmother made it,” she said. “With jam and orange slices.”

“Interesting,” he said. “I’ll try it. Was that her own invention?”

“My Romany grandmother taught me to make it this way,” she said, watching him closely to see if he reacted to word of her heritage. Some people did. But he just smiled and watched her preparations.

“Now we let it steep for just a bit,” she said. “So you owe your existence to this oh-so-beautiful sofa?” She hopped up on the edge of the work table and crossed her legs, settling in for a story. He followed her lead.

“Well, I may have stretched things a bit,” he said. “But my parents married against their families’ wishes. Neither of their parents were thrilled by the marriage. She was from a strict and somewhat well-off family, and my father was a poor Italian whose parents didn’t even speak much English. They had hoped for him to marry a Catholic Italian girl.”

So that’s where all that beautiful dark hair came from, Catarina thought to herself. But she said only, “My parents married against their families’ wishes as well.” Remy didn’t respond. He was deep into a story he had obviously told with relish many times before.

“They decided to elope as soon as he got off work on a Friday afternoon. They had it all arranged, but that day, he broke his leg at work. So there they were, all their stuff already packed up in the back of his truck and him with a broken leg. She couldn’t go back home, and neither could he. But they couldn’t drive off together, either. She wouldn’t think of going off with him unmarried. So they ended up calling his best friend, who took them back to his house. The best friend’s mother called in her own priest, who was a recent immigrant who barely spoke English. They were married with my father lying down on the old woman’s sofa, and my mother had to be told when to say ‘I do,’ because she didn’t understand Italian at all. And then they went to the hospital and he got his leg set. My mother learned how to drive that very day. There was no way my father could drive a stick shift with a broken leg. They say they drove pretty much the whole way to the hospital in first gear because she was terrified of shifting. Then she drove to the place he’d rented, about an hour away under normal conditions, all in first gear. People were honking at them the whole way, but they didn’t care. Dad was in a lot of pain but kept telling her she was doing fine. Can you imagine?” He talked with his hands, demonstrating his mother’s driving, seemingly not even realizing he was doing it.

“I guess that wasn’t the honeymoon they planned,” she said, and checked on the tea. It needed a bit more time.

“I would guess not. But my sister came along pretty much nine months later on the dot, so there you go. And later on, my dad bought this sofa from his friend’s mother. Whatever he paid was more than the thing was worth, I’m sure. But they kept it in their house my entire life, even after they could have well afforded something different.”

“And now?” She noticed that the longer parts of his hair tended to move out of place when he was animatedly telling a story, and moving his hair back into place was just a natural move for him.

“Dad is gone, and Mom had a hip replacement recently. She’s having a little trouble so she’s in a nursing home, hopefully just temporarily. They’re doing some intensive physical therapy there. We’re hoping she can come home soon. So Serena thought it would be a good time to recover the sofa, which, as you can see, badly needed it.” He chuckled. “It badly needed it about 30 years ago, actually.”

“So that’s why your sister was particular that the job be done quickly.” His face was so expressive that she felt she could read his mind if she could just look into his eyes for a while.

“Yes. We want to surprise Mom when she comes home.”

“That’s a very sweet story,” Catarina said. She picked up her cup and motioned to Remy. “This is ready now.”

“You drink it with the leaves in?”

“Yes. Back in the day, we’d read the tea leaves afterward. My grandmother knew how.”

Remy took a cautious sip. “Hey, this is pretty good. I’ve heard of lemon in tea, but I’ve never had it with an orange slice.”

“I actually grew that orange in my apartment upstairs. The window lets in enough light to keep my lime tree and orange tree happy, believe it or not.” While he was peering into his cup, she took the opportunity to study his face some more. It was remarkable how he looked so masculine and yet so beautiful at the same time. Usually, a man who could be described as beautiful had something of an effeminate look to him, but that was not the case with Remy. At all. His face was chiseled, but the longish hair and the very long, dark eyelashes and expressive eyes softened his appearance just enough.

“So, do you believe there’s anything to telling fortunes with tea leaves?”

“Well, I am of two minds. On one hand, no, of course not. It’s very unscientific. On the other hand, that doesn’t stop me from reading them anyway.” She took another sip.

“Would you read mine? Just for fun?”

“Of course.” She glanced at his cup. “Take out the orange slice, and drink the rest, leaving just a little tea behind. Like this,” she said, demonstrating with her own cup. He did.

“How’s this?”

“That’s fine. Now hold it in your left hand and swirl, like so. You want to turn it three times,” she said, and reached out her hand to guide his. She felt an electric shock as she did, and he jumped, making her think he must have felt it, too.

“Now set your cup upside down in its saucer.”

His eyes were glued to hers. She decided to lighten the mood. “I see many pieces of reupholstered furniture in your future. Many, many pieces. The complicated ones that are very expensive to have done,” she said, and they both laughed. “No, seriously, you read from the rim and work your way down. You look for patterns in the leaves, or for clumps that resemble certain symbols, which have meanings. This little blob here looks a bit like the letter L, do you see? So at this point, if I were doing a serious reading, I’d ask you if there is anything significant with that letter. Perhaps a lover or a business name.”

“I’m having a sofa upholstered by Loveridge’s,” he said.

“That clears up that!” she said. “Now, quite close here, this looks a bit like a flower. Do you see it?”

“Maybe? Is a flower good?”

“It can mean true love is coming. That’s what I would tell you if I were making a living as a fortune-teller. But it can also mean that happiness of other kinds is coming. Actually, there’s lots of interpretation to it. A good fortune-teller reads the customer more than the tea leaves. If you were a young single girl, I’d certainly tell you you were about to find true love. If you were an older married person, I’d probably tell you something you’ve been hoping for was about to bring you happiness.”

“What would you say about that little blob on the bottom?”

“Well, what would you say it looks like?”

“Maybe a pencil? Or a snake?”

“I probably wouldn’t say snake. Snakes might mean there is someone who does not deserve your trust. I’d probably call it a cigar, and would tell you to expect a new friend. Now, my grandmother would have woven all this into a cohesive story that would convince you that love, happiness and prosperity were coming your way. Or, someone else might interpret everything quite differently, and then try to sell you a love potion or to offer to remove a curse from your money to change your fortune. A lot would ride on whether the fortune-teller was honest or just trying to drum up some business from you. It’s like reading your astrology in the newspaper. Many people, no matter if you read them something from the wrong sign, would be quick to agree that the description fit them to a T. If you deal in vague generalities, you can always be right.”

“Interesting. I had no idea there was so much to it. Did your grandmother believe in it?”

“She did. She was also a shrewd judge of character, however. If you had her tell your fortune, you’d get from the experience much of what you might get from visiting a therapist for help finding your life path. Just having someone pay close attention to you and offer an encouraging view of your life can do wonders to motivate someone to look on the positive side of life.”

“How did you end up doing upholstery rather than telling fortunes?”

“Well, for one thing, I’m a modern Romany girl, and my parents were fairly modern, for that matter. At least, my father was. He started this shop decades ago, and my parents sent me off to college to study art. I probably would have made more money reading palms and tea leaves than I would have as an artist, though. So when my father retired, I decided to take over the business. It’s not a bad way to make a living, and it satisfies some of my artistic impulses. And, it allows me to stay independent. I’m not sure I’d do well working for anyone else.” She paused. “So that’s my story. What’s yours?”

“Well, it’s pretty bland in comparison. My dad went back to school and became an accountant. I lived a boring middle class suburban life. I majored in accounting but found it dull and a few months ago I bought a little place down the block. Used to be a barber shop? Jim’s?”

“Oh, yes, that place has been closed for years. My father went there, back in the day.”

“I’m remodeling it and plan to open a little ice cream shop.”

“Oh, that’s great! This downtown needs new life. An ice cream shop would be wonderful, but it seems a terrible risk, doesn’t it?”

“Absolutely. I’d definitely advise anyone against such a move. But nevertheless, I’m doing it. I’ll probably lose my ass and have to redouble my efforts in accounting. I’m staying on at the accounting firm for now, anyway, just to be safe and to keep the insurance. But there you go. I’m a bit of a dreamer, I’m afraid.”

“I would never advise anyone to ignore their dreams,” Catarina said. She stood. “My dream of finishing your mother’s sofa this week will not come true if I don’t get back to it, though. But I’ve enjoyed talking to you. Stop in anytime. You can check my progress on your sofa.”

Remy also slid off the work table and stood up. “I’ll do that. I’m just at the end of the block. If you need to take a break, stop in. You can give me your opinion on the design of the place.”

“I will definitely do that,” Catarina said.

He reached out his hand and she took it, feeling again an electric shock as they touched.

“Sorry! I think I picked up some static electricity,” he said. She quickly agreed that must be it, but she knew her grandmother would have a different explanation, and she thought again of the flower in his tea cup. Close to the rim. Her grandmother, she knew, would have told him he was about to fall in love.

 

About the Author

Sophia Sinclair grew up in a town so small (pop. 170!) that the little town of Fairview where this series is set seems like the big city to her. For many years, she was the editor of a small town’s daily newspaper, so she understands the rhythms of small-town life. When she started writing romances, she decided to set them all in a small town called Fairview. If you’re from a small town, you’ll feel like you’ve been there. If you’re from a larger city, don’t be surprised if you start yearning for small-town life. It’s often said that in a small town, everybody knows everyone else’s business, but the truth is, there are still a lot of secrets in small towns!

She is married to a European man, has two grown children and two lovely grandbabies she spoils to death. There’s a little bit of Sophia in every one of her books. Molly is a librarian who wears plain dark dresses and looks very conservative but often wears racy underwear under that plain black dress. Sophia dresses the same. Lori likes to have a good time and always has lots of boyfriends before meeting the love of her life. Sophia will take the Fifth on that one. Catarina has a German poem on her bedroom wall; Sophia has the first two lines of that same poem tattooed on her upper thigh, in German. (It’s Rilke, and the first two lines translate to: “You see, I want a lot. Perhaps I want everything.” As for Julie in Perfect Fit, Sophia is mad about all aspects of pregnancy, breastfeeding, childbirth, and babies. She attended many of her friend’s births, taught breastfeeding to WIC moms as a volunteer, started a business that handled pumps, bras, slings etc., and gave very serious thought to working as a lactation consultant, doula or midwife once the newspaper industry died. Instead, she started writing these romance novels, and she very, very much hopes you’ll enjoy them.

She also writes for Curvicality.com, an online women’s lifestyle magazine aimed at plus-size women. That’s why Julie in Perfect Fit is plus-sized. She wanted to show that love is for everyone; not just the thinner ladies.  Here is an example of the fun stuff she writes there.

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Posted in 4 paws, Giveaway, mystery, Trailer on April 18, 2019

Panic Point

Pepperman Mystery Series

Book Two

by

Bill Briscoe

  Genre: Mystery / Crime Fiction / Stand-Alone

Publisher: self-published

Date of Publication: March 26, 2019

Number of Pages: 248

Scroll down for Giveaway!

When Earl’s bride Morgan vanishes in the Smoky Mountains on their honeymoon, the former Navy SEAL is certain she’s been abducted. The park rangers disagree, and after a storm washes away any potential evidence, they call off the official search. Then another man loses his daughter in the same area. Can one last lead help Earl find Morgan before he loses her forever?

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This is the first book I have read by this author but it won’t be the last!  I think I read this all in one night.

This story is fairly fast-paced from the moment that Earl meets Morgan, to their wedding and honeymoon six months later.  They say you never know where you find love and for Earl and Morgan it was in the dentist office with Morgan treating Earl’s bad tooth.  Now I’m not sure I would want to go camping on my honeymoon but more power to those that like something a little different.  However, the honeymoon does not go as planned when Morgan is abducted from their campsite.  I can’t even imagine what she (or anyone in a similar position) endures at the hands of their captor(s).  The one upside is that Earl has his family supporting him and to Earl, a family is more than just those that are related to you.  I appreciated the stories of how some people came into the family and the hand that Earl extended to someone that was helping him find Morgan as they added a deeper human element.

The story really picked up steam when Earl is contacted for a special mission to rescue women being held in the hills of Tennessee.  I don’t want to spoil anything but I was intrigued by the group of men, their skill sets, their backgrounds, and that they were willing to take on this mission to save these women.  Granted Earl has a personal motive but anyone else could have walked away.

There are some lighter moments and others that make you want to cheer because justice is being served.   I did have an uneasy feeling about one character and turns out I was right to feel that way but you’ll have to read the book to figure out who I might be talking about and how they fit into the plot.

I don’t think I would put this book in the mystery category, maybe more suspense or thriller, but either way, it was still an enjoyable read and we give it 4 paws up.

Bill grew up in the oil and gas refinery town of Phillips in the Texas Panhandle. After graduating from college with a master’s degree, he spent most of his career working for a major insurance company as an agency manager and consultant.

As his retirement was on the horizon, he had an idea about a book. That story, Pepperman’s Promise, became the prequel to The Pepperman Mystery Series, and Perplexity and Panic Point, the next two books in the series, are now available.

Bill and his wife of fifty years live in West Texas.

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——————————————–

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

Grand Prize: Autographed Copies of the Full Pepperman Mystery Series

Two Winners: Autographed Copies of Panic Point

April 16-26, 2019

(U.S. Only)

 

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Check out the other blogs on this tour

4/16/19 Book Trailer Texas Book Lover
4/16/19 Notable Quotable Hall Ways Blog
4/17/19 Excerpt Chapter Break Book Blog
4/17/19 Excerpt The Clueless Gent
4/18/19 Review StoreyBook Reviews
4/19/19 Review #Bookish
4/20/19 Scrapbook Page All the Ups and Downs
4/20/19 Character Interview Max Knight
4/21/19 Review That’s What She’s Reading
4/22/19 Author Interview Forgotten Winds
4/22/19 Series Spotlight Book Fidelity
4/23/19 Review Reading by Moonlight
4/24/19 Promo Books and Broomsticks
4/25/19 Review The Page Unbound
4/25/19 Review The Love of a Bibliophile


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