Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on April 2, 2022

 

 

 

 

 

Gambling with Murder: A Southern California Mystery
Mystery
5th in Series
Setting – California
Level Best Books (March 29, 2022)
Paperback, 260 pages

 

Synopsis

 

A late-night call is all it takes for rookie lawyer Corrie Locke to kiss her day job at the movie studio goodbye, and do what she does best: flex her sweet P.I. skills and go undercover to find a senior who’s missing from a posh retirement community. One small stumbling block: skirting past security to gain inside access to the exclusive Villa Sunset. Time to call in the heavy artillery. Besides former security guard turned legal assistant—now wannabe P.I.—Veera, Corrie relies on a secret weapon: her mother, a surprisingly eager addition to Corrie’s team. Armed with enough pepper spray to take down a band of Navy Seals, Mom impersonates a senior to infiltrate the Villa, Corrie and Veera in tow. Turns out the job’s not as easy as they’d thought. These seniors have tricks tucked up their sleeves and aren’t afraid of using them.

The action gets dicey when the missing senior case turns into attempted murder by a criminal mind who’s always one step ahead. Corrie’s hot on the trail, but finds more than she bargained for…when her mother becomes a target.

 

 

Amazon

 

 

Guest Post

 

The Life of a Fictional Criminal

 

by Lida Sideris

 

 

Since I write mysteries, I need to set up each book with a criminal element to give my heroine, Corrie Locke, something to do; actually, something to look forward to doing, in her case. She thrives on cleaning up the streets of Southern California, one criminal (sometimes more) at a time. And she’s got the skills, plus the weapons, to do it. How do I create my felons?

Sometimes, it’s as easy as reading a news story. For instance, I read about a perpetual thief, now in her eighties, who broke into doctors’ offices and stole everything from first aid supplies to drugs. The thief had been in and out of jail/prison her whole adult life. She formed the inspiration for a criminal in my latest, book, Gambling with Murder.

Other times, the felon slips in when I’m not looking.

In the first installment of my Southern California Mystery series, I wasn’t sure who the bad guy/girl was. I pressed on, right beside Corrie, to find the killer’s identity. And boy was I surprised! That’s because the felon acted pretty normal when he/she mingled with the rest of the book’s characters. Clues were tossed around, but innocent bystanders also misbehaved at times, so I couldn’t be sure who the culprit was until the very end.

To make fictional, villainous characters appear real, I give them:

–  Motive – Villains are people typically motivated to do bad things because of their particular circumstances. The motivation could be a thirst for greed or power (as in my first book, MURDER & OTHER UNNATURAL DISASTERS). Maybe they’re killers for hire (like the bargain basement hitman in book #3, MURDER: DOUBLE OR NOTHING) or maybe they need to exact revenge (a popular motive that appeared in #2, MURDER GONE MISSING).

–  Personality – Villains need character traits and even…jobs. I don’t have any independently wealthy villains in my books. Or do I? 😊 A villain could be a janitor, a student, a doctor, a college dean, or an amusement park character.

– Willingness to Help – I’m always a little surprised to find that villains can be helpful. They are capable of doing almost anything to throw the scent off their actual plans. And sometimes, deep, deep inside, they’re not all that bad. And that helps throw the reader off track.

 

 

The goal is to play hide and go seek with the reader. Hide the villain and keep the reader guessing. And in my case, sometimes, keep the writer guessing, too.

 

 

About the Author

 

Lida Sideris’ first stint after law school was a newbie lawyer’s dream: working as an entertainment attorney for a movie studio…kind of like her heroine, Corrie Locke, except without the homicides. Lida was one of two national winners of the Helen McCloy Mystery Writers of America Scholarship Award and a Silver Falchion Award Finalist. She lives in the northern tip of Southern California with her family, rescue dogs, and a flock of uppity chickens.

 

Website * Facebook * Twitter

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Giveaway

 

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Posted in excerpt, Guest Post, memoir, nonfiction, Review on March 24, 2022

 

 

 

 

Synopsis

 

This memoir was written to honor my youngest brother’s influence over my life, the good, the bad, and the ugly of living with a Down Syndrome sibling. It tells the story of the children in my family, despite our parents’ frailties, remaining committed to each other through life’s many changes and separations. Who I am today is directly related to the who I needed to become.

 

 

Amazon * B&N * IndieBound

 

 

Praise

 

“As the intertwined life stories of the author and her brother Bruce emerge, the story takes on a new tone. Bitterness and rancor are replaced with a gentle kind of mellowness and a roaring-fire-on-a-cold-winter-day kind of warmth. This is underscored when the author writes that her plans for Bruce were “to open and enrich his world.” In the end, however, she realizes how being with Bruce “accomplished so much more.” She realizes how this “sweet small man” and “Bruce’s” capacity to love and to “just go on because there was no other choice” profoundly influenced her life. And how Bruce opened and enriched her world.

Oh, and the title? You’ll have to read the book for yourself to figure that one out. Flavored with gentle humor and tongue-in-cheek wit, Listen to Me isn’t a long read. At about 30,000 words, you can finish it in an afternoon. But the reflections and insights will reverberate much longer.”- Kristine, Pages and Paws

“This book is a touching story about the unconditional love between an older sister and her brother, Bruce. The prose is uplifting and inspirational, without the traces of ableism that can be found in other such works. The overall message is a plea to see people for who they are, not their diagnosis and aims to increase disability awareness.”- Laura Quinn, Laura Quinn Writes

“This memoir is exactly what I needed. It made me laugh and cry and helped me appreciate the people in my life even more than I already did. Bruce’s love for his family, friends, and favorite rock ‘n’ roll idols lives on through this book. His larger-than-life personality left such an impression on me; I can honestly say that I feel like I know him without ever having met him. I think about him from time to time and his essence inspires hope in me, showing me how precious it is to have an innocent view of life at any age.

This book means so much to me. Lynne Podrat is a true artist with her words and the life she created around the people she loves. Her tenacity and devotion to her family—and herself—is unparalleled. She is a badass. If I could just accomplish half of what she has, I would be happy.”-Sandi, Proof Reader Sandi 

 

 

Guest Review from Gud Reader

 

Not so often do you get a memoir so immaculately written and touching on a sensitive issue like Down syndrome. Listen to me: how my down syndrome brother saved my life is just that book that fits this bill. The book revolves around two siblings Lynne and her brother Bruce who was born with Down syndrome. Just like the guardian angel she is, Lynne ensures that her baby brother is included in part of the family while also vowing to always protect him at all times.

Throughout the read, we get to know the powerful and persuasive character of Lynne and how her brother fuels her motivation to fight for the motivation of the family. Unlike the norm of sibling rivalry, these siblings learn to stick and look out for each other thus cementing some unwavering commitment to each other.

Lynne Podrat does a marvelous job of cramming the book with practical advice, resources, and also some indispensable information with some uplifting personal stories woven in. On her part, the author struck the right balance to entertain and also inform while keeping the reader engaged to learn more about how to enrich the lives of souls with Down Syndrome and also how they can reach their full potential. A story about braveness, finding your voice, and being encouraged to reach your best potential despite the hurdles. Really glad I read it!

 

 

Excerpt

 

Brucie’s Kids

 

Bruce’s involvement in Special Olympics and sports in general continued to dwindle while waiting for his final diagnosis of kidney disease. He lost his love of swimming and running. The energy needed for these sports was just not there. It was so sad as he had earned many a gold medal for running in Special Olympics. However, one sport he was willing to learn was soccer. Why? Randy played soccer and during Sunday visits to my home, along with my parents, everyone would attend Randy’s games.

I use the term learn loosely. Bruce’s education began with volleys back and forth in the street in front of our house. Randy would gently kick the ball to his uncle, who finally figured out he needed to kick the ball back, not pick it up and throw it. We would listen to their conversation from the driveway. “Okay, Uncle Bruce. I will kick the ball and you kick it back, like this. No, no. Don’t catch it. Just kick it back, like football.”

“Football?” Brucie would ask. “This is not a football,” Randy clarified. Even at a young age, Randy had great patience and respect for Bruce’s unique learning and physical capabilities, never getting frustrated with the repetition of instructions and coaxing his uncle who often did get frustrated. “Oh, come on,” Bruce would shake his head, his face crinkling up. “I can’t do this.” And he would walk away, Randy chasing him down to convince him back. The two had their own special bond. Though Bruce loved his nieces Arielle, Robyn, and Jerica, and his great-nieces, Randy’s daughters Maddie and Emily, his number one fan was Randy, whose comfort level with him was amazing. While growing up and now during Christmas visits back up north, watching them debate music, best artists, and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominees acknowledges that I did a good job making sure my brother would be remembered as an integral part of this family, stamped on their hearts forever.

We set up trash cans, bicycles, and our large planters as borders so the ball would stay in bounds during play, allowing the space to grow along with Bruce’s developing ability. Eventually, my father, Big Bruce, and I created a goal post so a “real” game could be played, with my father as permanent goalie and Big Bruce and me taking turns as rotating teammate or opposing goalie. My mother, cheerleader for both sides, received Brucie’s infamous dirty looks if she wasn’t cheering for his side. “Oh no, you cheat!” Brucie would stalk off our court shaking his head and hand once someone other than Randy or himself scored. He would allow us to cajole him back to the game as we laughed and ran after him. He enjoyed this game just as much as the soccer game. By the time Jerica joined her soccer team, Brucie was a pro, insisting either Randy or Jerica be on his team. When asked why he wanted the kids, we were told, “They know how to play.” If Big Bruce and I scored, Brucie would then insist on both so he could beat us, still claiming we cheated and loving us to cajole him back. We had a soccer ball, baseball, and football at the house in a bag with his name, hung next to Randy and then Jerica’s bags for whenever and whatever he wanted to play. Their sports becoming Bruce’s sports. His enjoyment of playing with “his kids,” as he liked to call them. Wonderful to watch.

My only regret was not being able to teach him how to ride a bike. He could never master the balance no matter how much we supported his weight or modeled what to do. We ended up finally donating the small girl’s twenty-inch bike with training wheels to Goodwill. Of course, in true Brucie fashion, once the small bike was gone, he decided he needed to learn how to ride Randy’s 24-inch bike. I am five-feet-two-inches tall and weighed, at that time, ninety-eight pounds. Brucie, four-foot-ten inches, weighed one hundred and twenty pounds. Guess who he wanted to hold him as he tried to get on the bike? The scene was as ridiculous as you can imagine. Nonetheless, I had the bike leaned against me, trying to get Bruce to stand on the curb and swing his leg over the bar. When you look up the word klutz, bear this picture in mind. By the third time of falling over with my brother on top of me, with the family laughing too hard to help, I gave up. We couldn’t get Bruce or David to peddle a tricycle when they were younger, let alone now, so I finally conceded defeat. Not an easy task for me.

 

 

Bruce playing Soccer with his kids

 

 

About the Author

 

Lynne Podrat graduated from the Pennsylvania State University and then spent fifteen years in the Fashion Industry as an Assistant Buyer and Department Manager with Bloomingdales Department Store before returning to school to receive her educational degrees from Arcadia University and Gynedd Mercy.

A retired educator and Administrator from the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania School District, she taught English, literature, composition, and history in elementary and secondary schools.

She has secretly been a writer and poet her whole life but has only recently chosen to share those talents with the world. Lynne now lives with her husband in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, spending winters dragon boating where her heart races and summers hiking the Rockies in Vail, Colorado where her heart sings.

 

Facebook * Instagram * Twitter

 

 

Giveaway

 

This giveaway is for 3 print copies, one for each of 3 winners, and is open to the U.S. only.

This giveaway ends on April 15, 2022 midnight, pacific time.

Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

 

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Posted in Children, Giveaway, Guest Post, Science on March 16, 2022

 

 

SCIENCE MAKES IT WORK SERIES:

 

Secrets of the Snow Globe

 

&

 

The Wonder of Color

 

by

 

CATHERINE STIER

 

 

Categories: Picture Book / Science / STEM (ages 4-8)

Publisher: Albert Whitman & Co.

Date of Publication: March 1, 2022

Number of Pages: 32 pages

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Secrets of the Snow Globe

 

After starting to collect snow globes with the help of her grandmother, Lily has questions. She wants to know who invented them, what the snow is made of, and how the tiny scenes look so magical when she peers inside. As she researches and experiments, Lily learns about light waves, magnification, and density—all while gathering ingredients to make her own snow globe.

 

 

The Twig│ Barnes And Noble │Amazon

 

 

 

 

The Wonder Of Color

 

When Ms. Vega announces a mural painting contest at school, James can’t wait to draw a picture to fill the library wall. But as he explores color, he has a lot of questions about where color comes from and how our eyes see it. As he experiments and reads, James learns about prisms, the color wheel, and light waves—all while working on his colorful contest entry.

 

 

AmazonBarnes and NobleThe Twig

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What inspired the new SECRETS OF THE SNOW GLOBE book?

 

Ever since Catherine Stier, author of the SECRETS OF THE SNOW GLOBE picture book, was small, snow globes held a fascination for her – even the little plastic ones found in souvenir stores. As a college student, she began a real snow globe collection.

 

 

1: Author Catherine Stier

 

2: A view of Stier’s snow globe collection. Read the stories behind some of her favorites!

 

3: The most recent addition – a gift from her dad, with a parchment and a quill, in recognition of her calling to be a writer.

 

4: lives in Texas now, but grew up in Michigan where snowfalls were common in the winter. She loves to watch this snow globe’s flitter fall!

 

5: This musical snow globe was acquired in memory of a family trip to New York City. It plays The Star-Spangled Banner!

 

6: This Merlin snow globe, a gift from her brother many years ago, has a light up crystal ball and plays When You Wish Upon a Star

 

7: A close up of the intricate details in the Merlin snow globe.

 

8: Stier was visiting Los Angeles when she got the news that the editor liked her snow globe pitch – so she celebrated by buying this mini-LA snow globe!

 

 

 

 

Catherine Stier is the author of more than twenty children’s books including the SCIENCE MAKES IT WORK picture book series and the Kirkus star-reviewed A DOG’S DAY chapter book series. She holds a master’s degree in reading and literacy and has served as a magazine writer, newspaper columnist, and writing instructor. Stier resides in San Antonio, Texas.

 

Website  ◆  Facebook  ◆  Twitter

 

  Amazon  ◆  Goodreads

 

 Instagram ◆  TikTok

 

 

————————————–

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 ONE WINNER

 

Autographed copies of both books, pin (for adults), snow globe socks,
& a snow globe making kit.

 

(US only, ends midnight CST, 3/19/2022)

 

 

 

 

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Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

For direct links to each post on this tour, updated daily,

or visit the blogs directly:

 

3/9/22 Guest Post Reading by Moonlight
3/9/22 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
3/10/22 Review Book 1 All the Ups and Downs
3/10/22 BONUS Promo LSBBT Blog
3/11/22 Review Book 2 Jennifer Silverwood
3/12/22 Fun Facts Shelf Life Blog
3/13/22 Fun Facts Jennie Reads
3/14/22 Review Book 1 Stories Under Starlight
3/15/22 Review Book 1 Chapter Break Book Blog
3/16/22 Scrapbook Page StoreyBook Reviews
3/17/22 Review Book 1 That’s What She’s Reading
3/18/22 Review Book 2 The Page Unbound

 

 

 

 

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Comments Off on Scrapbook Page & #Giveaway – Science Makes it Work Series by Catherine Stier @Catherine_Stier #LSBBT #children #STEM #science
Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on March 15, 2022

 

 

 

 

Casino Queen (Night Hawk Casino Series)
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – California
Wild Rose Press (March 16, 2022)

 

Synopsis

 

Caroline Popov, alone, heartbroken, and deeply in debt ends up in glamorous Palm Springs, California where Native casinos have just opened, offering employment to thousands. She lands a job at the Palm Oasis Casino where she is mentored by the charismatic tribal chairman, John Tovar.

Embraced by casino culture, Caroline works her way up to casino manager of the Night Hawk, in the High Desert of Southern California. There, she is responsible for managing multicultural team members, satisfying the demands of often unique guests, and growing revenue while rooting out corruption.

In the process of rediscovering her inner strength, she learns, you have to gamble like your life depends on it. Because it often does.

 

 

Amazon * B&N

 

 

Guest Post

 

The Top Ten Things Behind the Blackjack Table Have Taught Me About Life & Love 

Because Love is the Biggest Gamble of All

 

For most of my career I have worked at casinos, on land in California and Nevada, and at sea all over the world. Let me say, you learn a lot about the human personality when you watch thousands of people from behind the felt of a blackjack table.

I wrote a novel, Cruise Quarters, about my experiences living and working on a cruise ship. While I was promoting my book, I received a request from a website asking me to provide a quote from my novel. Imagine my surprise a few months later when I Googled my name and I found a list of websites where my quote had been used. The first and most exciting was Goodreads, where it was listed as a top gambling quote. Being a writer, I was thrilled because Goodreads is the world’s largest site for readers. I love to make up quotes, it’s a great way to give advice in a short pithy sentence. I make them up for my chapter titles. Online casinos picked up my quote, people on social media sites, and even Seeking Alpha, a financial website. My words have even been used as part of a legal argument in an Indian lawsuit. 

Working at a casino is hard. You are on your feet for eight hours, with seven demanding faces of players in front of you. Even though it is a challenging job I like it because I know all the rules and procedures I have to follow. The rules are all written down in a very big manual.

The truth behind that one quote was not all I learned by working at a casino. I have decided to share some more of my wisdom with you. These quotes might be about casinos but they really are about life in general. Even though you might not ever visit a casino, hopefully, you will relate to them.   

 

 

1. It is hard to walk away from a winning streak, even harder to leave the table when you are on a losing one.

 

This is the quote that started it all. As a dealer, I have watched this a million times from behind the table. People who are losing will pull out more money than they budgeted, will borrow from their friends, or even open up a line of credit. Because they believe that on the next hand, the next spin, or the next throw of the dice things will turn around. It reminds me that sometimes desperation will lead you to do crazy things. How many times have we driven by an ex-boyfriend’s house or drunk dialed them even though we know, we are never, ever, getting back together.

 

2. A player in the last stage of her gambling addiction, just wants to lose all her money.

 

To take it one step further when someone stays at the table so long and loses so much money, they don’t walk away with their last fifty dollars. Instead, they prefer to lose it all. When they leave, I watch them walk away with an empty wallet and a look of relief spread across their face. Like in a bad relationship you have to do all the crazy stuff, to convince yourself that it is really over, and only then can you begin again.

 

3. Before you sit down at the table make sure the dealer runs an honest game.

 

All the casinos in America run honest games, licensed by the state and the federal government. But you need to research the rules of each casino, whether you get paid even money or time and a half on a blackjack, or if they stay or hit on soft seventeen because those rules can really change your odds of winning. The same applies to dating, always make sure the person you are dating is sincere. If you are dating a guy with a girlfriend or even worse a wife your odds for success go down. And if you are dating a serial womanizer, just give up.

 

4. In life, there are gamblers and there are people who gamble. Gamblers have studied the odds.

 

As I have said the rules at a casino really matter. To a gambler, the difference in the rules at certain casinos can mean the difference between winning and losing. So think like a gambler, research a potential date like a gambler researches the odds at a casino. Serious gamblers follow the rules of basic strategy for blackjack. These rules are designed to increase a gambler’s odds of winning at the table. 

 

 

5. Juice might get you in the door, talent keeps you there.

 

The casino business is like any other industry the people you know, your connections might help get you the job, but you must have the talent to succeed. In love the same rule applies. You might have an initial connection but it will take work to make the relationship work.

 

6. A winning streak can only last for so long.

 

No matter how great your life is going, one day you will hit a roadblock. I consider myself a realistic optimist. I hope for the best but prepare for the worst. In life, this means saving for unexpected emergencies. I think in life we also need an emergency fund for our relationships, a backup plan if things don’t work out.   

 

7. You’ve got to gamble big to win big.

 

You have to gamble big, but only if you have studied the odds, considered all the obstacles along the way, and have a backup plan. I think in affairs of the heart you have to love with all your heart. I took a huge chance when I married my Scottish husband Ray, after only knowing him for three months. On top of that, we moved from a cruise ship to Palm Springs. It was a huge gamble but many years later, I am happy to report both the move and the marriage have paid off.

 

8. The best part of playing one-on-one with the dealer is there are no other players to piss you off.

 

I guarantee if you sit down at a blackjack table it won’t be long before one of the other players will be happy to offer you some unsolicited advice. Players don’t sit there in silence, they are happy to let you know how you or the other players screwed up the hand. Somebody took the bust card, someone didn’t hit when they should have, the list goes on and on. 

I love dealing at a table with only one player, especially if it is a person who understands that if they follow the rules of basic strategy they greatly increase their odds of winning. In life there is always someone giving you advice you never asked for, telling you why your relationship is doomed. Sometimes they are right and sometimes they are wrong. The best advice my father ever gave me was, you have to make your own mistakes, no one else can make them for you.  

 

9. When people work in the money store, they begin to believe the money is theirs.

 

In a casino, the dealers and the players are surrounded by money. The dealer stands in front of a tray filled with chips and sometimes the temptation to throw a few of those chips into their tip box is too tempting. Even though they know that if they get caught it will end their career, they do it because they feel like the money will never be missed.

I watched a documentary on Netflix, The Tinder Swindler. It is the story of a guy who travels around the world scamming hopeful women, looking for love, out of their money. So, people be careful, guard your money and your heart, because sometimes when you date people they begin to believe your money is theirs. The same goes for lending money. A wise lawyer once told me, once you lend someone money, they begin to believe it is theirs.

 

10. You can’t replay the last hand, that is in the past. You have to play the cards in front of you.

 

Regret is what holds most people back. So many times, at the blackjack table people are in their head replaying the last hand, which means they can’t concentrate on the cards in front of them. 

No matter what cards life has dealt you, good or bad, I know one thing for sure, you can’t relive the past. Most of us can’t get over our failed relationship or lost job. But when you keep playing the same script in your head you spend so much time regretting the past that you miss the present. If you keep pining for the guy or girl who hurt you in the past, you will never see the person standing in front of you now.  

Isn’t that what being in the present is all about?

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Growing up in a strait-laced Southern family, I was always fascinated with casinos. In my twenties on a summer hiatus from teaching in North Carolina, I drove to California and became a dealer at Caesars in Lake Tahoe. Well, I can tell you that after teaching high school, handling an unruly gambler was a piece of cake. My mother highly disapproved of my working in a casino, “a place so bad it has ‘sin’ in the middle.”

Eventually, I succumbed to pressure from the family and returned east to take a high-tech job in Boston. I also began working on my MFA in writing at Emerson. I wanted to write the first realistic novel about casino life from the perspective of an experienced table games dealer. I am always amazed that normal and sometimes quite intelligent players become absolutely clueless in the casino. They repeat superstitious nonsense and no amount of logic can change their position, maybe my novel will.

While in Boston I was offered the opportunity to join Princess Cruises as a croupier. Jumping at the chance, I spent the next five years circling the globe. Sometimes life exceeds your dreams. I was awed by the wonders of Venice, the fjords of Norway, and the Northern Lights in Leningrad.

I returned from ships with a very special souvenir, my Scottish husband Ray. We went to work at the Spa Casino in Palm Springs. We now live in Hollywood, Florida, where I write about my casino years while wistfully gazing out at the ocean.

 

I love to see any of you out there reading Casino Queen. Send me a picture to carabertoia@yahoo.com and I will post it on social media. 

Thank you, Cara B

 

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Giveaway

 

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Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on March 13, 2022

 

 

 

 

Hippie Wagon Homicide (Twister Sisters Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – Small farming/tourist town in the Missouri Ozarks
Wings of Ink Publications, LLC (February 1, 2022)

 

Synopsis

 

Cordelia Davis lives with no regrets, despite her life changing drastically a half century ago when a tornado altered the destiny of the little Ozark town of Willow Lane. The town grew back stronger and more beautiful, and Cordelia, her sister, Pamela, and her best friend, Wanda, built a life to treasure.

As Willow Lane honors the memory of those lost and celebrates all that has been achieved, tragedy refuses to remain in the past. News of murder rocks the pastoral countryside when Cordelia discovers a body on her farm, beneath her beloved willow tree. And while the police make an immediate arrest, Cordelia finds herself untangling a web of lies and long-ago secrets.

With suspects in every nook of her cozy town—and an old flame knocking on her door—it will take all Cordelia’s tenacity to face the past and to weather the mysteries of Willow Lane.

 

 

Amazon

 

Read for Free via Kindle Unlimited

 

 

Guest Post

 

Whether a beachside resort, Colorado mountain town, or English village, the setting of a cozy mystery can be as important and dynamic as the human characters themselves. In my brand-new Twister Sister series, you’ll get to explore the town of Willow Lane. A charming historical farming community in the Ozarks.

While two of the main characters in the first book, Hippy Wagon Homicide, live on farms, don’t worry, you’re not inundated by details of growing wheat, worries of drought, or tractors breaking down. (However, I can’t promise a tractor won’t ever be involved in one of the murders in the Twisted Sister series. Hmmm….) You will get all the cute and charming animals who live on a farm, and I’m sure your two favorites will be Cordelia’s canine best friend, a chow named Ursa, and a rather ridiculous goat named Breakfast. But thanks to Cordelia, Pamela, and Wanda’s casserole delivery business, Twister Sisters, you’ll spend plenty of time in Willow Lane itself, with its Americana town square of sloping lawns, gigantic trees, freshwater spring, and old-time bandstand. Then visit the charming shops, bakeries, diners, and tourist attractions where locals spend their lives and make their living.  From farmhouses, to glamorous mansions on the ritzy side of town, there’s something wonderful, beautiful, and mysterious, no matter which part of the map of Willow Lane you choose to explore first.

Your guide on this murderous adventure will be Cordelia Davis, and there’s no one better help you through it as she’s has spent every one of her sixty-six years as a resident. In fact, she is descended from the town founders and the discoverers of the spring, which at the turn of the 20th century was believed to bring health, wealth, and twins. She can show you the willow tree where she received the first kiss from her true love when she was sixteen as its branches dangled into the water, hiding them from view. She’ll guide you to the underground tunnels that run under the park that serve both as a shelter and possible intrigue. She’ll be able to point out exactly where the tornado that tore through Willow Lane fifty years ago cut through farmland, ripped out houses, and flattened the downtown–leaving only the bandstand and one row of historical buildings intact. More importantly, she’ll be able to point out every beautiful, complicated, and sometimes delicious detail that shows how the very tragedy that nearly ended her beloved town all those years ago only served to make it grow back stronger, with a focus on equity and fairness, beauty and charm, comfort and family.

The one thing she can’t show you, what she would never even dream of being a possibility, is how that tornado five decades ago and the events that happened during its twisting tour through Willow Lane, will come back and prove the adage “revenge is best served cold” is accurate. Luckily for you, Cordelia is as smart, brave, and strong as she is exceptional at casseroles, knitting, and friendship. You’ll get to accompany her as she unravels mysteries, gets justice for the wronged, and makes Willow Lane an even more spectacular place than anyone ever dreamed it could be.

She can’t wait to take your hand and lead you on this first adventure in the Hippie Wagon Homicide.

 

 

About the Author

 

 

Reading the Cozy Corgi series is pretty much all you need to know about Mildred. In real life, she’s obsessed with everything she writes about: Corgis, Books, Cozy Mountain Towns, and Baked Goods.  She’s not obsessed with murder, however. At least not at her own hands (nor paid for… no contract killing here). But since childhood, starting with Nancy Drew, trying to figure out who-dun-it has played a formative role in her personality.  Having Fred and Watson stroll into her mind was a touch of kismet.

 

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Posted in Giveaway, Guest Post, romance, Texas, women on March 10, 2022

 

 

THE SPARK OF LOVE

 

Mesquite Springs, Book 3

 

by

 

AMANDA CABOT

 

 

Categories: Fiction / Christian / Historical Romance

Publisher: Revell

Date of Publication: March 1, 2022

Number of Pages: 352 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

She’s determined to start a new life in the West . . . if only the old one would leave her alone

When a spurned suitor threatens her, heiress Alexandra Tarkington flees New York for Mesquite Springs in the Texas Hill Country, where her father is building a hotel. But the happy reunion she envisions is not to be, as her father insists she return to New York. Instead, Alexandra carves out a niche for herself in town, teaching schoolchildren to paint and enjoying the company of Gabe Seymour, a delightful man she met on the stagecoach.

But all is not as it seems. Two men, each with his own agenda, have followed her to Mesquite Springs. And Gabe, an investigator, is searching for proof that her father is a swindler.

With so much to lose–and hide from one another–Alexandra and Gabe will have to come together if they are ever to discover whether the sparks they’ve felt from the beginning can kindle the fire of true love.

 

 

Purchase at Baker Publishing (Revell)

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Challenges of Titling

 

Guest Post by Amanda Cabot

 

No doubt about it: titles are important. Along with the author’s name and the cover art, they’re what readers consider when deciding whether to buy a book. That’s why so much time and thought goes into choosing the title. It has to be just right.

I could have called the book Runaway New York Heiress or The PI’s Search for a Con Man. Both of those are aspects of the story, but the titles are wrong – terribly wrong – for this book. Not only do they sound too modern, but they’re too limiting. The Spark of Love is about much more than Alexandra’s leaving New York and Gabe’s search for the con man.

There’s another reason why those titles are wrong: they don’t tie into the rest of the series. The first two books, Out of the Embers and Dreams Rekindled, have fire-related words in them. I wanted there to be no question that this book was part of the Mesquite Springs trilogy, and that meant that its title needed a word that at least hinted at fire. That’s why I was thrilled when the titling committee suggested The Spark of Love. Perfect!

The next challenge was announcing the title to my readers. I usually simply include it in a newsletter, but this time I wanted to do something different. Since my husband and I play Scrabble almost every evening, I decided to use Scrabble tiles for my announcement.

What do you think? Did having “Mesquite Springs,” which I needed to make the other letters fit, make it too complex?

 

 

The third challenge is one that other authors have done, namely finding a story-related word for each of the letters in the title. I’ve enjoyed reading other authors’ answers to this challenge and thought it would be fun to try my hand at it. So, here it is:

 

T – Texas. Like many of my books, this one is set in Texas. The Hill Country, to be specific.

H – Hotel. The building of a hotel plays a key role in the story.

E – Excitement. There’s a lot of excitement surrounding the hotel and the two newcomers to Mesquite Springs.

 

S – Stagecoach. The hero and heroine meet while waiting for a stagecoach.

P – Painting. Alexandra is an amateur artist, and painting is one of the ways she dealt with a lonely childhood.

A – Alexandra. She and Gabe are the protagonists of the book.

R – Riches. More than one person is seeking riches … some in less than legal ways.

K – Kisses. It wouldn’t be a romance without at least a few of those, would it?

 

O – Oak. A key scene takes place under one of the venerable live oaks in the park.

F – Fear. Fear is the reason Alexandra leaves New York and heads to Mesquite Springs.

 

L –Legacy. Alexandra’s father plans to leave her a legacy, but is it the one she wants?

O – Occupancy. Every hotel needs a high occupancy rate to survive, and Alexandra’s determined to do everything she can to ensure that the one in Mesquite Springs has it.

V – View. The first view of Alexandra’s father’s land is a surprising one.

E – Ever after. “And they all lived happily ever after.” Or did they?

 

Have you learned anything about the story from the last challenge? I hope so. I learned one thing: have a title with fewer letters in it next time.

 

 

 

 

 

Amanda Cabot is the bestselling author of Out of the Embers and Dreams Rekindled, as well as the Cimarron Creek Trilogy and the Texas Crossroads, Texas Dreams, and Westward Winds series. Her books have been finalists for the ACFW Carol Awards, the HOLT Medallion, and the Booksellers’ Best. She lives in Wyoming.

 

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3/8/22 Excerpt Chapter Break Book Blog
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Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, Historical, mystery on March 8, 2022

 

 

 

 

Front Page Murder (A Homefront News Mystery) 
Historical Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Crooked Lane Books (March 8, 2022)
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 304 pages

 

Synopsis

 

In this World War II-era historical mystery series debut by Joyce St. Anthony, small-town editor Irene Ingram has a nose for news and an eye for clues.

 

Irene Ingram has written for her father’s newspaper, the Progress Herald, ever since she could grasp a pencil. Now she’s editor in chief, which doesn’t sit well with the men in the newsroom. But proving her journalistic bona fides is the least of Irene’s worries when crime reporter Moe Bauer, on the heels of a hot tip, turns up dead at the foot of his cellar stairs.

An accident? That’s what Police Chief Walt Turner thinks, and Irene is inclined to agree until she finds the note Moe discreetly left on her desk. He was on to a big story, he wrote. The robbery she’d assigned him to cover at Markowicz Hardware turned out to be something far more devious. A Jewish store owner in a small, provincial town, Sam Markowicz received a terrifying message from a stranger. Moe suspected that Sam is being threatened not only for who he is…but for what he knows.

Tenacious Irene senses there’s more to the Markowicz story, which she is all but certain led to Moe’s murder. When she’s not filling up column inches with the usual small-town fare—locals in uniform, victory gardens, and scrap drives—she and her best friend, scrappy secretary Peggy Reardon, search for clues. If they can find the killer, it’ll be a scoop to stop the presses. But if they can’t, Irene and Peggy may face an all-too-literal deadline.

 

 

Amazon * B&NKoboIndieBound

 

 

Guest Post

 

Many people have asked me why I wrote a book set in the 1940s, and it’s a question I’m always happy to answer.

 

My mother played a lot of Big Band records when I was little. Her favorite was Glenn Miller’s “String of Pearls.” I grew up with a love of that music, whether it was Miller, or Artie Shaw, or even Frank Sinatra. Mom’s best friend liked Harry James, and my great-aunt liked Guy Lombardo. Lombardo was definitely not my favorite—it was torture to have to watch Lombardo’s New Year’s Eve show on television when I wanted to watch Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve. Oh, the tragedy of having only one TV in the house—black and white at that.

 

 

But I digress.

 

The forties always seemed like a romantic era to me, partly because of my parents’ story. My mother was twenty one when the war broke out and she already had her own beauty shop. Her weekends were filled with going to the movies and hanging out with friends. She dated, but there was no one special. Sometime between December 1941 and 1943 (I don’t know the details) she ended up closing her shop, moving to Harrisburg, and getting a secretarial job there. In August of 1943, a friend set her up on a blind date with a handsome soldier who was stationed nearby at Fort Indiantown Gap. Two weeks later, she married this soldier and shortly after that, he was shipped overseas. Talk about a whirlwind romance!

 

 

I didn’t know most of this until I was grown and learned it second hand. My dad died when I was two and my mom when I was nineteen. I wish that I could talk to them about their romance, the war, and life in general (I have a lot of questions!) In any case, their history reinforced my love of the era. Pre-Covid, my husband and I made yearly trips to Gettysburg for the World War II weekend held at the Eisenhower Farm and the Gettysburg Visitor Center. It’s wonderful. There’s even a reenactment in the neighboring town of New Oxford, which becomes Nouveau Oxford for the day. The town is occupied by the Germans and the Americans and Brits come to liberate it. On that Saturday night, there’s a USO dance in Gettysburg. I might be the only person who gets teary eyed when my husband and I are dressed in our forties duds and walk into the dance and hear the band start up with “Moonlight Serenade.” I always feel like I’m coming home, that I’ve stepped back in time to where I really belong.

 

 

Writing a book set during World War II gives me that feeling every time I sit down at my desk. I put on my Big Band Pandora station and for a few hours every day I’m right beside Irene as she investigates the murder of one of her reporters, suspicious goings on at the local factory, dancing at the Starlight, giving her little sister a pep talk, and wondering if the new boarder at her house is what she appears to be. Sometimes it’s hard to come back to the present.

 

 

Reader, do you feel that way when you read a book? Do you find it hard to come back to reality? Did you ever wish you had a time machine and could go back to another era? I hope you’ll take a chance on reading Front Page Murder. Irene would like to take you back to May 1942 in Progress, Pennsylvania. Just maybe you’ll be like me and want to stay there.

 

 

About the Author

 

Joyce was a police secretary for ten years and more than once envisioned the demise of certain co-workers but settled on writing as a way to keep herself out of jail. As Joyce St. Anthony, she is the author of the Homefront News Mysteries. The first in the series, Front Page Murder, will be (or was, depending on the blog date) released on March 8, 2022. Under her own name–Joyce Tremel–she wrote the award-winning Brewing Trouble cozy mystery series. She is a native Pittsburgher and lives in the beautiful Laurel Highlands of Pennsylvania with her husband and two cats–Hops and Lager.

 

Joyce Tremel website * Joyce St. Anthony website

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Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on March 5, 2022

 

 

 

 

Murder Faux Paws: A Nick and Nora Mystery
Cozy Mystery
5th in Series
Setting – California
Beyond the Page (February 22, 2022)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 273 pages

 

Synopsis

 

Dead men tell no tales, but in the riveting new Nick and Nora Mystery, they sure leave a lot of clues . . .

 

When a local PI’s untimely death is ruled a suicide by the police, budding sleuth Nora Charles has no intention of letting sleeping dogs lie—or sleeping cats, for that matter. Certain it was a case of foul play, Nora rouses her trusty sidekick Nick and launches an investigation of her own. Then a second PI is murdered, and Nora knows the two men were on to something—and that she’s on to something too.

Following the enigmatic clues left by her late predecessors, Nora soon uncovers a plot that involves a local politician, missing campaign funds, and what could be a bogus real estate deal. But when hints of treason surface, what started as small-time thievery soon balloons into a matter of national security. With the uncanny Nick sniffing out—and spelling out—leads, Nora follows a trail that will take her to the heart of a shadowy conspiracy, and into a trap set by a conniving culprit that will have her wishing she had Nick’s nine lives . . .

 

 

Amazon * B&N  * Google PlayApple iBooks *  Kobo * Smashwords

 

 

Guest Post

 

Picking Character Names

 

by T. C. LoTempio

 

Two questions I get asked most often are:  How do you get your plots?  And How do you decide on character names?

My answer to the first question is always the same:  I have no idea.  They just come to me.  Anything could inspire it – a name, an event, something I ate (no really).  For example, I got the idea for my Nick and Nora series from my cat jumping on my stomach while I was watching The Thin Man.   I got an idea for a YA book from the name on the side of a garbage truck (true story).  And I got the idea for one of my gothic thrillers that I wrote way, way, back in the day when my friend Vi moved to Arizona and she told me the name of her street.

Picking character names can be more difficult.  The name, I feel, should suit that particular character and his or her particular personality.  Picking out the names, of course, for my main characters in the Nick and Nora series was easy.  My main female character is, of course, Nora Charles named after the fictional detective’s wife.  Nick, the tubby tuxedo cat and the star of the show is naturally named after Dashiel Hammett’s famed detective.  The supporting characters followed.  I wanted Nora’s human sidekick to be a bit quirky – she’d have psychic powers (or think she had) a French accent (just because she liked it) and adore Nick.  So, I looked up French names on the internet and decided on Gillard for the last name.  I picked Chantal because we had an intern at work with that name, and she rather reminded me of the character I was creating.  Nora’s beau was named Daniel Corleone, and that too was easy….he’s named after Danny Corleone, a real-life person, the husband of one of my best friends in NJ.

There are some points I try to remember when constructing a character name: I try to make them memorable, unique, and not distracting.  As to how I name them, well, I’ve used all of the below methods:

  1. Consult the phone book.  I can’t tell you how many times I’ve shut my eyes, flipped to a page, plopped my finger down, and Wolla!  Sydney McCall was born (of course the name was Sidney, a guy, so I just made the adjustment)
  2. Consult a baby name book. You would be surprised at how many unique and beautiful names there are in a baby name book!  You can also find nicknames there too!  That’s how I got the nickname for a character named Charlotte: Charley.  (that’s in an as yet unsold manuscript, so I can’t say any more about it!)
  3. Use a random name generator. Another fabulous tool, from which I managed to cobble together the name of Nora’s other beau, Leroy Samms.
  4. Pay homage to characters from movies and tv shows: I”ve modeled characters after famous people – for example, Lola Grainger in the first Nick and Nora mystery is my tribute to the late, great Natalie Wood.  I thought about calling her Natalie Grainger but I thought it might be too obvious, considering the character dies in a boating accident on page 4.  I’ve also named characters after ones I liked on tv shows – one, also in an as yet unsold manuscript, is called Victoria Chase – my homage to Wendie Malick’s character in Hot in Cleveland.

 

The best advice I can give on this topic is:  don’t get hung up on the name.  If necessary, call them “X” and get back to it.  Believe me, the perfect name will come.

Just ask Nick and Nora.

 

 

About the Author

fred-profileT.C. LoTempio is the national bestselling author of the Nick and Nora mystery series, as well as the Pet Shop Mystery Series and the Cat Rescue mysteries. She lives in sunny Phoenix Arizona along with her two cats, Maxx and ROCCO, who is a talented blogger himself.

 

ROCCO’s blogWebsiteFacebookTwitter

 

 

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Posted in Cozy, Giveaway, Guest Post, mystery on March 3, 2022

 

 

 

 

#FollowMe for Murder: A Trending Topic Mystery
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – In the fictional, seaside town of Central Shores, Delaware.
Level Best Books (February 15, 2022)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 300 pages

 

Synopsis

 

Meet 28-year-old influencer and celebrity blogger Coco Cline, who has started her own social media consulting firm in her hometown of Central Shores, Delaware. Her new clients, Sean and Olivia Chen, are ten days away from the grand opening of their specialty consignment shop when Coco stumbles across their store clerk Stacy dead behind the register.

Worried that a cloud of suspicion will ruin their chances of a successful business launch, the Chens ask Coco to work alongside the inexperienced Central Shores police force to speed up the investigation. Using her celebrity status and social media savviness, Coco realizes Stacy’s seemingly ordinary life was all an act. Following a trail of cryptic online posts, confusing timelines, and muddied gossip, Coco and her friends discover Stacy’s questionable relationships just might be the reason for her untimely demise.

Murder is about to go viral in #FollowMe for Murder, a Trending Topic Mystery.

 

 

Amazon

 

 

Guest Post

 

More than just a sidekick

by Sarah E. Burr

 

As with many things in life, solving a mystery is more fun when it’s done together. Or at least, that’s how I envision it – I haven’t cracked a case in real life (yet). But my main character Coco Cline certainly has her sidekicks: Jasper, Charlotte, and Hudson. I hesitate to call them sidekicks because they are so much more to Coco. They support her, encourage her, make her laugh, and give her tough love and reality checks. They are her family.

When I began writing #FollowMe for Murder, I knew right away that while I wanted to have a strong female lead, she would be surrounded and assisted with her investigation by a group of close friends. Why? They say write what you know, and I know that if were to ever stumble across a dead body and a mystery, I would want my besties at my side, puzzling out the crime. No one wants to go through something so grizzly alone. Not only do Jasper, Charlotte, and Hudson have Coco’s back when things get sticky, but they all provide invaluable information and perspective to the mystery. They aren’t just sitting on the sidelines, going along with Coco no matter what. They challenge Coco, call her out when needed, and point her to possible motives that she never even considered. Each is an invaluable member of the mystery-solving team, and as readers will see, they each have their own big personalities.

Why did I choose friendship as one of the main pillars of Coco’s world? Well, the most memorable books I’ve ever read all revolve around solid, steadfast friendships, and I wanted to give readers a group of friends they could root for, both as individuals and as a unit. I think about how greatly Nancy Drew relied on George Fayne and Bess Marvin. The ultimate trio, in my mind. George and Bess had Nancy’s back in the wildest situations, and as a kid, their friendship became my ideal. Soon, Nancy, Bess, and George would be joined by Harry, Ron, and Hermione from Harry Potter, the ladies from The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, the nine companions who make up The Fellowship of the Ring, Naruto and Team 7 from the Naruto manga, and so many more. I find myself most drawn to books and shows (a special shout out to Shawn and Gus from Psych) where friendship withstands even the most challenging of hurdles, so it felt only natural to embrace such a theme in my novel.

Coco would be lost without Jasper’s wit, Charlotte’s optimism, and Hudson’s loyalty, just as their lives would be less sparkly without her. I hope readers see themselves and their friends in #FollowMe for Murder and enjoy the thrilling ride that is friendship.

Who are some of your favorite literary duos, trios, or groups of friends?

 

 

About the Author

 

Sarah E. Burr lives near New York City. Hailing from the small town of Appleton, Maine, she has been dreaming of being Nancy Drew since she was a little girl. Since Sarah wasn’t stumbling across any crime scenes in corporate America, she left her career in healthcare technology to write mysteries of her own.

Her novel #FollowMe for Murder, first in the Trending Topic Mysteries, shines the spotlight on a social media PR expert after she discovers a dead body in her clients’ store, forcing her to untangle a web of secrets in her small, beach-side town.

Sarah is also the author of the Court of Mystery series and the Glenmyre Whim Mysteries. She is a member of Sisters in Crime, currently serving as the New York Tri-State Chapter’s social media guru. When she’s not spinning up new stories, Sarah is off seeing Broadway musicals, reading up a storm, video gaming, and enjoying walks with her dog, Eevee.

 

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Posted in fiction, Giveaway, Guest Post, Literary, Review on February 28, 2022

 

 

 

 

Time and the Tree by Róisín Sorahan

Publisher: Adelaide Books, NY (September 6, 2021)

Category: Literary Fiction, Fantasy, Modern Fable, and Self-actualization

ISBN: 978-1955196635

Available in Print and ebook, 282 pages

 

 

Synopsis

 

A modern fable about the nature of time and the quest for happiness.

It’s darkly funny, deceptively simple, and a necessary read for testing times.

In this gripping philosophical tale, a boy awakens beneath a tree in a forest in summer. He is soon joined by Time and his slave, a withered creature hooked on time and aching to disappear. The story evolves over the course of a year as a host of characters are drawn to the Tree for guidance. The unlikely cast grapple with choices and grope towards self-knowledge in a world where compassion is interwoven with menace. As the seasons bring great changes to the forest, we watch the child grow while the trials he faces mount.  Then the time for talk and innocence passes as the forces of darkness rally, threatening the lives of his friends.

Lyrical, honest, and heart-breaking, Time and the Tree confronts readers with a unique perspective on the challenges life presents. A wise and hopeful book, it is uplifting and unsettling by turns.

 

 

Amazon * Amazon-UK * Barnes&Noble

 

IndieBound * BookDepository

 

 

Praise

 

Time and the Tree by Roisin Sorahan is truly a masterpiece…A fable full of thought-provoking metaphors, knowledge, and awareness of the bigger picture…I would recommend it for all who relish beautiful literature, especially stories with a deeper meaning.”-San Francisco Book Review (5/5 star rating)

Time and the Tree explores matters of spirit, intention, kindness, and how to live the time that is offered through a series of revelations that will often prompt readers to set aside the tale to consider their own relationships with time and life. Sorahan’s…ability to bring to life some basic tenets of existence and the existential questions many come to feel during the course of a lifetime creates an insightful read on the level of The Velveteen Rabbit classic.”- D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review

“A genre-busting masterpiece, full of pacy storytelling, wry dialogue, and philosophical challenge…”- Declan Kiberd, Author (incl. Inventing Ireland), Professor Emeritus at the University of Notre Dame, and international authority on modern Irish literature

“Time and the Tree is unlike anything I’ve read in contemporary literature – a beautiful fable fit for difficult and confusing days.”- Luke Gerwe – Associate Editor, PBS NewsHour, and formerly Managing Editor, Voice of Witness book series

“An uplifting and tranquil allegory filled with positivity and hope, ‘Time and the Tree’ by Róisín Sorahan is a magical tale of a young boy who lives in a forest, a wise and caring tree which offers shelter and guidance and numerous other characters that appear in order to challenge and change under the tree and the boy’s influence. This book is filled with lessons: to be mindful and present instead of constantly rushing towards a tomorrow that’s just out of reach; the importance of healing past trauma and self-love and acceptance, or showing empathy for others. Hope and positivity flow from the pages of this lyrical story as we navigate the ever-changing seasons in this magical forest. ‘Time and the Tree’ is well-written, its characters complement each other, with the naivety and curiosity of the young boy setting up many of the lessons. There is a level of spirituality in this book, it encourages meditation and gratitude while also promoting that it’s ok to be you, to embrace your unique qualities, and to follow your own path. Told with an emphasis on nature, ‘Time and the Tree’ is an uplifting read that will infuse any reader’s day with positivity. Its imagery and storyline are gentle and easy to follow with its underlying message about looking to the light in all things will leave readers with warm feelings of hope and positivity. I found this book entertaining and witty in places, but ultimately it left me with a sense of peace and calm.”LoveReading

“This is a lovely story that, on the surface, appears like a simple fairy tale. But it is much more than that. It is full of symbolism and knowledge…this book has a beautiful message that is sure to stay with me. Time and the Tree is a beautiful debut from a talented author.”- Manhattan Book Review

 

 

Guest Review by Gud Reader

 

Despite being the most commonly used noun in the English language time still tends to be a hard-to-understand concept. For my part having read a great deal of books relating to the concept of time, I have to admit that ‘Time and the Tree’ is the best I have read so far.

This entertaining and lush debut by Roisin Sorahan revolves around the life of a young boy, a wise old tree, and Time which is an actual character in the book. The story plays out in different seasons where we witness the growth of the young boy as time also takes a toll. However, as the boy grows, he is mentored by the wise old tree which provides snippets of wisdom. Also, one cannot ignore the slaves who are always trailing time which represents the various people who find time as always being limited this acting as the ‘slaves’ of time.

On my part, Roisin does a marvelous job of creating an outstanding fable out there to help educate the masses on the concept of time. The author’s mastery of idiomatic creativity while also making her otherwise abstract characters look real is just out of this world. A well thought out novel that can be hailed as a guide for living life while living for the present.

 

Guest Post

 

THE CHANGING FACES OF HONG KONG

 

By Róisín Sorahan

 

I was 20 the first time I boarded a plane. A flight from Dublin to Boston, with a J1 visa in my pocket and a head full of adventure. The world expanded on that flight. I had found my element. My feet hardly hit terra firma since. Then, covid.

For now, I content myself with poking over past escapades and unraveling the changes in our world. I am hopeful, and eager to sally forth once again. I want to see new places. I also want to revisit some that continue to confound me. I miss being bewildered.

Hong Kong has been on my mind a lot these times, for all the wrong reasons. In 2020, Beijing imposed a national security law, with the aim of smashing the dissent that had taken to the streets. A statue marking the Tiananmen Square massacre was removed from the University of Hong Kong in the dead of night in late December.

This is not the Hong Kong I recall. The first time I visited, it was transitioning from British colonial rule to Beijing leadership, and it was still in the honeymoon phase. It was best described to me as a wealthy businessman’s playground. Under the terms of the 1997 handover agreement, a 50 year grace period was granted to the newly defined autonomous region to enjoy the freedoms and capitalist culture not found in other parts of China. It existed according to the mantra: “One country, two systems.” Officially part of China, the reality was very different.

I quickly discovered that Hong Kong was a short hop but a far cry from the mainland. For starters, it was filthy rich, it used the Honk Kong dollar, and was heaving with ex-pats. It spent its money on style, food, frivolity, booze, and was practiced in the art of having a good time.

While none of this has changed, the political backdrop is significantly different, and the city is destined to evolve. Places, like people, do what they must to survive. It’s unclear what the losses will be. What is apparent is that Hong Kong will have to adopt a new persona. And few cities are as skilled both at putting on a great face and altering its image as needed. When I last visited, I met the city equivalent of a geisha, skilled in pleasure and adept at satisfying every whim.

Honk Kong goes to great lengths to gratify the wealthy, as well as those traveling on a shoestring. It has a surprising array of tourist attractions that come for free, or thereabouts. Sophisticated, alluring, it’s a city bent on indulgence. But, as it was shaped by the British in the 19th century according to Victorian contradictions, the painted face is concealed beneath a veneer of civilized gentility.

Intent on exploring both facets of the city in my early wanderings, I wangled an invitation to a ladies’ tennis club which was housed in a lovely old colonial building. A woman with perfectly painted nails gave me the tour of the gorgeous facilities. We pattered pleasantries until she asked about my game. Horrified she’d pour me onto a court rather than into an armchair, I mumbled apologies about a busy job and a tennis elbow. She pulled up short, then pulled herself together, “You work? How quaint.”

After 156 years of colonial rule, the British influence is still stamped everywhere. Cars drive on the left side of the road, club-house life interweaves the ex-pat social scene, and antiquated 1920s London trams travel the length of the city.

The region encompasses Hong Kong Island, which is surrounded on three sides by the South China Sea and separated from mainland China by the Shenzhen River; Kowloon Peninsula; the New Territories; and over 200 pocket-sized islands. Victoria Harbor serves as Hong Kong’s centerpiece, above which the skyline is stacked in tiers, as layer upon layer is built into the hills that shape the city. Ferries, pleasure cruisers, and Chinese tourist junks jaunt across the harbor connecting the city’s major landmasses.

The natural, deep harbor is also the city’s umbilical cord to the wealth that has nurtured its development into one of the world’s biggest and most lucrative trading centers.

Notwithstanding the fact that Hong Kong is one of the most densely populated cities in the world, it scores high on quality-of-life indexes. The public transportation network is the finest I have witnessed and getting around couldn’t be easier.

The demand for space has also resulted in the construction of whimsical skyscrapers that cut the sky into handkerchief squares. This is a city operating on many levels and the street is just the start of it. Cloud-high bars are piled upon designer wear stores; Michelin-starred restaurants; fortune-touting soothsayers; herbal tea sellers; scented massage parlors; financial trading floors; tropical fish tanks; ornamental birdcages; and Ming Dynasty vases.

Shopping in Hong Kong is a glutton’s all you can eat buffet. Gucci and Gabanna aside, it trades in the stuff of legend and, with the right sized wallet, trunks can be filled with authentic Chinese ceramics, crafts, and carvings from the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Though there are also great finds in the more modestly priced curio shops that specialize in wooing customers with exotica such as fans, calligraphy brushes, and feng shui compasses.

The weekend markets are spectacles in themselves. They are thronged with leisurely strollers drawn by the scent of plum blossom bonsai, the glow of neon tetra shoals, and the fun of watching fussy old men at the bird market feed crickets to their fussy odd birds.

The city’s a wonderful mix of the bizarre, the brash, and the bewildering. Between the ultra-modern high-rise buildings, traditional Taoist temples are filled to the brim with designer-labeled worshippers cajoling deities with offerings to raise their fortunes. Man Mo temple, located amongst the antique stores on Hollywood Street, is the oldest and best known. Built in 1847, it is dedicated to Man Tai, the god of literature; and to Mo Tai, the god of war. In the past, disputes were settled here that could not be resolved under British law. Today, tour buses line the street as the faithful crowd inside burns incense spirals which are suspended from the ceiling to draw the gods’ attention to the supplicants’ wishes.

Other worshipers bow down to Hong Kong’s sumptuous food offerings. My heavenly moment was in Tim Ho Wan – the world’s cheapest Michelin-starred restaurant, specializing in dim sum. It was a hole-in-the-wall back then, run by Chef Mak Pui Gor, who has subsequently built it into a franchise. I joined the snaking queue on a Monday morning as it wound down the street in an unassuming neighborhood in Kowloon. It was a long, chilly wait, but I still remember the taste of those sugar sprinkled, lightly deep-fried, savory pork buns. The steam rising off them would have tempted the gods themselves.

A city built on hills, everything rises upward in Hong Kong. Viewing Chinese street signs and towering sky-scrapers from the upper deck of a century-old tram is a cheap and fun way to get to grips with the disorienting contradictions of this city. The lines run East to West, sweeping Hong Kong Island’s commercial centre. However, for the best views in town, Honk Kong’s Peak Tram is the most popular tourist attraction on offer. It soars above the cityscape, dropping visitors at the summit of Victoria Peak, offering a great perspective of the street grids and harbor beneath.

At sea level, the seven-minute public ferry ride, which connects Hong Kong Island with the Kowloon Peninsula, is as much a mode of transport as a pleasure trip. It provides a brief view from the water of Hong Kong’s signature sight. The densely packed skyline is the city’s pièce-de-résistance and is best seen at night. As the light fades the buildings explode into neon life, culminating in the tacky, yet entertaining, Symphony of Light, which plays over the buildings in a cacophony of colour, while red sailed junks glide alongside Kowloon Peninsula’s promenade and the Avenue of Stars.

Hong Kong is the perfect city consort. It has an array of faces to suit the visitor’s mood and needs. Coy by day with joggers, business suits, and café lattes; by night the charade fades as the lights come on and ambiguity dissolves. It has spent the past 180 years adapting and transforming and putting on a show. It turns uncertainty into an art form. And, when necessary, it removes the mask and bares its teeth. It cannot be categorized and underestimated, and it is highly skilled in dissembling.

To this wanderer, it’s the masquerade and layered contradictions that make Hong Kong so alluring. I’m drawn back in the hope that I’ll get a glimpse of what’s hidden beneath the veils. The city spins, even as the music stutters. And the world changes, as it always does.

 

 

About the Author

 

Róisín Sorahan is an Irish author currently living in Vermont. She has published numerous stories about her adventures on the road, as well as life as an English teacher in China. Prior to becoming a nomad writer, she pursued a decade-long career in public relations. She holds a Master of Letters from Trinity College Dublin, specializing in Samuel Beckett. Time and the Tree is her debut novel.

 

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