Posted in 5 paws, Historical, mystery, Review on April 1, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Rural Michigan, 1934

When her new husband Sam perishes in a bizarre farm accident, would-be milliner Polly soon becomes the prime suspect in his murder. As she digs for evidence to clear her name, Polly falls into a sinister web implicating her in a nefarious crime ring being investigated by White House Police. Polly’s life and those of her family are at stake.

Narrated by Polly, her self-righteous older sister, Sarah, and Sarah’s well-meaning, but flawed husband Wesley, a Methodist minister, the story follows several twists through the landscape of the rural Midwest.

 

 

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Review

 

The Great Depression was a tough time for many with no jobs, food scarcity, and the possibility of becoming homeless. The story encapsulates what it was like for this group in Marshall, Michigan, and what they endured to make sure their family was fed and they were kept safe.

This story is told from three points of view: Polly, her sister Sarah, and Sarah’s husband Wes. It is amazing how their views were very different on various things. We also learned how human each character was and they all had their own flaws that defined them as a character. At first, we mostly see it from Sarah and Wes’ point of view and what we see from Polly is letters to her mother. It is easy to form a negative impression of Polly from what we learn from Sarah. But I don’t think she was far off the mark and Polly was a spoiled child growing up and while only twenty, it doesn’t seem like much has changed even if she is married. However, married life is not all it is cracked up to be for Polly and we slowly learn about her husband Sam and his anger management issues. Sam is not a character anyone will like.

The mystery portion is from several different angles – how did Sam die? Who are these men that claim to be with the government? What are they searching for? They all do eventually tie together and you might be able to figure out part of the answer. I know I suspected one thing and found out I was right near the end.

While the story is primarily about Polly, we really do learn a lot about Sarah and Wes and how their lives have gotten to this point, and their thoughts and feelings about everything. I do feel like they felt the stress of this time with little money and trying to do their best to take care of their families. My thoughts about Polly changed as the book progressed and she started to grow up and realize that life isn’t what she thought and perhaps she needed to be more gracious. Sarah has a bit of a learning curve towards Polly as well, and we see how much her frustration with her sister over past events slowly changes.

I really enjoyed this book and learned a few things about the depression and how times were back then. I had just learned about Decoration Day from my spouse’s family and it was interesting to see it mentioned in this book. If you aren’t familiar with this tradition, it is when families visit the cemeteries and leave flowers and such on the graves of their family members. Having just found some graves of ancestors in a cemetery that is pretty much abandoned, it is important that these places don’t become lost.

This is a wonderful historical novel and we give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Charlotte Whitney grew up on a Michigan farm and often heard stories about the difficult years during the Great Depression. Her debut historical novel Threads: A Depression Era Tale has attracted over 400 reviews on Amazon. Charlotte’s previous work includes two nonfiction books and a romance novel, I Dream of White.

Charlotte lives in Tucson with her husband and two Labrador retrievers.

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Historical, Review, romance, women on March 28, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Four women. One family heirloom. A secret connection that will change their lives—and history as they know it.

Present Day: Julia Baxter’s wedding veil, bequeathed to her great-grandmother by a mysterious woman on a train in the 1930s, has passed through generations of her family as a symbol of a happy marriage. But on the morning of her wedding day, something tells her that even the veil’s good luck isn’t enough to make her marriage last forever. Overwhelmed and panicked, she escapes to the Virgin Islands to clear her head. Meanwhile, her grandmother Babs is also feeling shaken. Still grieving the death of her beloved husband, she decides to move out of the house they once shared and into a retirement community. Though she hopes it’s a new beginning, she does not expect to run into an old flame, dredging up the same complicated emotions she felt a lifetime ago.

1914: Socialite Edith Vanderbilt is struggling to manage the luxurious Biltmore Estate after the untimely death of her cherished husband. With 250 rooms to oversee and an entire village dependent on her family to stay afloat, Edith is determined to uphold the Vanderbilt legacy—and prepare her free-spirited daughter Cornelia to inherit it—in spite of her family’s deteriorating financial situation. But Cornelia has dreams of her own. Asheville, North Carolina has always been her safe haven away from the prying eyes of the press, but as she explores more of the rapidly changing world around her, she’s torn between upholding tradition and pursuing the exciting future that lies beyond Biltmore’s gilded gates.

In the vein of Therese Anne Fowler’s A Well-Behaved Woman and Jennifer Robson’s The GownThe Wedding Veil brings to vivid life a group of remarkable women forging their own paths—and explores the mystery of a national heirloom lost to time.

 

 

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Review

 

A blend of the present and the past but with women that all want the same thing, happiness.

This fictionalized story of the Vanderbilt family and The Biltmore fascinated me and remind me of a couple of shows that are set in this same time period. To be that wealthy might have been nice but had its own share of problems. This story follows the life of Edith and Cornelia Vanderbilt (the past), and Julia and Babs (the present). Each family has a veil that has been passed down through the ages and is supposed to bring good luck. It might have been in the past, but when it was Julia’s turn to marry she becomes the runaway bride.  She may love Hayes and he might love her, but that doesn’t mean that they belong together. An unsuspecting video puts Julia on another path to rediscover herself and what she wants from life. It also forces Babs (Julia’s grandmother) to take a hard look at her own life since her husband’s passing and is she living the life that she wants or deserves?

The story flips back and forth in time and we see the lives of these women unfold as they marry, discover themselves, and look to the future. Edith created the Biltmore estates and everything it entailed. That was a huge undertaking for her and her husband, George, but they did succeed. They have their ups and downs due to the times and even they were affected by the stock market crash in 1929. If you were wealthy even in these times you were looked at differently. Julia, an aspiring architect, has always admired this estate and chose to get married there. We learn that Julia has given up her dream of being an architect due to negative feedback from a professor. Instead of fighting for her project, she ran away. She ran away from her wedding too and she has a lot of soul searching to do to decide where she must land in this life.

We don’t know the whole story about how Julia’s family received the treasured veil, but bits and pieces are revealed and the full story is discovered in a letter that ties both stories together. It is a beautiful tale and gives one hope for happiness no matter what life throws at you.

Julia learns a lot about herself with the help of a new architect friend, Connor. He isn’t present in the whole story but is at the beginning and the end. It was nice to see that he was not brought in too soon before Julia had a chance to discover who she was without Hayes (her former fiance) and how she was going to support herself.

I found the stories about Edith and Cornelia fascinating because that was a different time when women were expected to marry and raise a family. They didn’t do much else and rarely had a career. However, Edith and Cornelia’s running of the estate was quite an undertaking and I can’t even imagine doing what they did to keep it afloat and supporting those that lived on the estate or in the village.

I appreciated the author’s notes about how she came to write this story so make sure to check that out if you pick up this book.

Overall, we really enjoyed the story and give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Kristy Woodson Harvey is the New York Times bestselling author of nine novels, including Under the Southern Sky, Feels Like Falling, and The Peachtree Bluff series. A Phi Beta Kappa, summa cum laude graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s school of journalism, her writing has appeared in numerous online and print publications including Southern Living, Traditional Home, USA TODAY, Domino, and O. Henry. Kristy is the winner of the Lucy Bramlette Patterson Award for Excellence in Creative Writing and a finalist for the Southern Book Prize. Her work has been optioned for film and television, and her books have received numerous accolades including Southern Living’s Most Anticipated Beach Reads, Parade’s Big Fiction Reads, and Entertainment Weekly’s Spring Reading Picks. Kristy is the cocreator and cohost of the weekly web show and podcast Friends & Fiction. She blogs with her mom Beth Woodson on Design Chic, and loves connecting with fans on KristyWoodsonHarvey.com. She lives on the North Carolina coast with her husband and son where she is (always!) working on her next novel.

 

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Posted in 4 paws, Book Release, Christian, Historical, Review, suspense on March 22, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Can this undercover agent save the woman he loves—or is her heart as counterfeit as the money he’s been sent to track down?

After all that Grandfather has sacrificed to raise her, Theresa Plane owes it to him to save the family name–and that means clearing their debt with creditors before she marries Edward Greystone. But when one of the creditors’ threats leads her to stumble across a midnight meeting, she discovers that the money he owes isn’t all Grandfather was hiding. And the secrets he kept have now trapped Theresa in a life-threatening fight for her home–and the truth.

After months of undercover work, Secret Service operative Broderick Cosgrove is finally about to uncover the identity of the leader of a notorious counterfeiting ring. That moment of triumph turns to horror, however, when he finds undeniable proof that his former fiancé is connected. Can he really believe the woman he loved is a willing participant? Protecting Theresa and proving her innocence may destroy his career–but that’s better than failing her twice in one lifetime.

They must form a partnership, tentative though it is. But there’s no question they’re both still keeping secrets–and that lack of trust, along with the dangerous criminals out for their blood, threatens their hearts, their faith, and their very survival.

Combining rich history, danger, suspense, and romance, Crystal Caudill’s debut novel launches this new historical series with a bang. Fans of Elizabeth Camden, Michelle Griep, and Joanna Davidson Politano will be thrilled to find another author to follow!

 

 

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To read an excerpt of Counterfeit Love click here.

 

 

Review

 

This novel encompasses several genres that I enjoy reading: mystery, historical, romance, and Christian. All of these facets are wound together to create this enticing tale of a strong woman that isn’t afraid to go after what she wants no matter who stands in her way.

Theresa is a plucky young woman and I admire her courage and strength to continue with her life despite those that hold her back. She senses that her fiance, Edward, isn’t the right man for her and she is right for so many reasons. I won’t share those because it would give away too much of the plot. She also still loves Broderick despite his pigheadedness but he just might be the right man for her.

I loved the time period and the mystery of who is counterfeiting currency. There are so many possibilities and one of my suspicions held true. I love how the Secret Service is investigating this crime and has several people undercover to infiltrate the ring. However, there is one agent, Darlington, that is sent in to help speed things along that nearly blows it for everyone. It doesn’t help that he is abrupt, rude, and suspects Theresa of being the engraver.

Theresa and Broderick struggle with many things throughout this book from faith, trust, respect, and finding the truth. They are both given nudges along the way to find their way back to each other and to God.

This book is gritty and gets right into the trenches with the criminals, brothels, saloons, and so much more. But it adds to the richness of the background, characters, and storyline. I wouldn’t expect anything less and was glad to see that the author wasn’t afraid to show the seedy side of the times.

There were times when I read this book when I wondered if this was the 2nd book in a series because of the discussions about Theresa and Broderick’s past. It felt like this should have been a second book but it is not. However, it did not detract from the story and the author does a good job of explaining their past with each other.

Overall, we give this 4 paws up and look forward to reading more from this debut author.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Crystal Caudill is the author of “dangerously good historical romance,” with her work garnering awards from Romance Writers of America and ACFW. Counterfeit Love is her debut published novel.

Caudill says that reading and writing are part of her soul and have been since she first held a crayon. While she considered writing to be an escape from challenges and struggles and a way to keep her sanity, Caudill would come to recognize that God used it as a teaching tool. “The stories came through my fingertips, but they were marked with His fingerprints,” she shares.

As she delved into history and crafted her own stories of hope through danger, Caudill would answer the call to pursue writing as a career after her first writer’s conference. “My stories are still filled with danger, struggle, and history, but they are also permeated with the hope and love of Christ. I hope they are dangerously good. Good for the heart and for the soul.”

She is a stay-at-home mom and caregiver, and when she isn’t writing, Caudill can be found playing board games with her family, drinking hot tea, or reading other great books at her home outside Cincinnati, Ohio.

 

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Posted in Book Release, excerpt, Historical, romance, Trailer on March 9, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

A courageous farm girl’s life is changed forever when she falls in love with a charming street musician, opening her eyes to the cruel mistreatment of Mexico’s mine workers and compelling her to stand with them against their oppressor – the man she is marrying.

Esperanza lives a charmed life. The daughter of a wealthy landowner, her family is thrilled when she attracts the attention of the handsome and mysterious Don Raúl, opening the door to a glittering life of opulence for them all.

However, a chance encounter with a charming street musician forces Esperanza to open her eyes to the cruel underworld of Mexico’s mistreated working classes, and she begins to doubt everything she ever thought she wanted.

As the people begin to rise up in a bloodthirsty revolution against their oppressors, Esperanza is forced to make choices that she hoped never to face. Esperanza’s decisions threaten to tear apart her family, her heart, and the country she loves.

In this brutal world where a few careless words can cost lives, will the price of freedom prove to be more than what Esperanza is willing to pay?

 

 

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Praise

 

“A rip-roaring, romantic adventure that is impossible to put down.” – Starred Review

“A well-written and well-researched story against the background of early 20th century Mexico.” – D. Wells, author

“Class intrigue, dynastic maneuvering, and dangerous politics against growing civil unrest in pre-revolutionary Mexico. Can an unlikely friendship blossom into more? I couldn’t put it down, and nor will you!” – Jennifer Nugée, editor

“This beautifully written novel will have you gripped right from the start.” – Melissa Hoskins, author

“A riveting peek into a time of Mexico’s history where huge change, excitement and danger are on the horizon. Hugely engaging characters really pulled me in.” – Starred Review

“I fell in love with the characters and laughed and cried with them all the way on their exciting journey. They feel like my best friends. It was wonderful to read about this little-known part of Mexican history that happened before the revolution. I cannot wait to read what will happen next.” – Starred Review

“A book that will make you weep, rage, and fall in love with an array of characters so realistic they might step off the page. An excellent novel.” – Jessica Leather, author

 

 

Excerpt

 

Don Lorenzo stared at her for a moment, the little cake frozen halfway to his mouth. Then he cleared his throat, placed it down in front of him, and regarded her with polite concern.

“I can see that you have been deeply moved by these tragic events, señorita. Your compassion does you justice. I beg your forgiveness for my tactless words. It has been a long time since we had a woman around the house to remind us to engage our hearts as well as our heads in such matters. Of course, our top priority at the moment is ensuring that this sort of thing never happens again. We are putting every effort into establishing the cause of the explosion, although at present we believe that one of the workers must have laid down a little too much dynamite, and the resulting blast was more than the walls of the tunnel could take.”

“A tragic case of simple human error,” agreed Don Raul, watching her over the rim of his wine glass. “Some poor idiota got his calculations wrong. Drunk, I expect. Many of the workers are dreadful for that, you know. We’ve even had to install guards to keep a check on it.”

“Those workers were not drunk!” she objected, outraged. How dare Don Raul try to turn this back on the workers, to make out as though the accident had been their own fault. “They were following your orders, Don Raul, from your last visit to the mines. You told them they had to use more dynamite to get the gold out faster or risk having their pay cut for not meeting their targets. They all told you it was too dangerous, but you forced them to do it anyway. Didn’t you? Didn’t you?”

There was a stunned silence around the table. Esperanza looked to Don Lorenzo, who was staring open-mouthed at his son with an expression of horror. For the first time, the idea crossed her mind that perhaps the old man had no idea about what had really been going on.

“Raul?” he said shakily, breaking the silence. “Is there any truth in these accusations?”

“Of course not, Father. The señorita must be mistaken. She has been listening to vicious, idle gossip and nothing more.” Raul gave a harsh but unconvincing laugh and glared at Esperanza with ice-cold venom. “This is why ladies should stay out of business, señorita. They have a tendency to believe every rumour they hear and allow their emotions to rule their heads.”

“It’s better to be like that than to have no emotions at all and not care that your actions have destroyed hundreds of lives,” she spat. “Have you even spared a moment to think about them? To consider their families?”

“No. Nor will I,” he snapped, standing up to face her. “There’s nothing to be gained from hanging on to the past, señorita. Life moves on, and so must we.”

“The thing is, though, life doesn’t always move on for everyone, does it?” she raged, angry tears springing to her eyes and her voice trembling with fury. She was on her feet now, too incensed to stay still. “Men lost their lives last week. Wives lost their husbands, children lost their fathers—all for the sake of that gold. And you sit here, bragging about your mines as though those people don’t matter? Did you think I would be impressed?”

She leaned across the table, and he did the same, the two of them facing each other down.

“I’ll tell you what you can do to impress me, señor. Don’t bother using your filthy gold to make silly little baubles for me. Give it to some of those families whose lives you’ve destroyed. Pay some of those medical bills they’re now crippled with or feed the hungry children you’ve deprived of their fathers. Explain to them how they’re supposed to move on with their lives and believe me, they will be happy to tell you exactly what they think of the drunken idiota who got his calculations wrong.”

 

 

Trailer

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Rachel Le Mesurier is the author of ARTIE’S COURAGE, A HERO’S HOPE, and SOFIA’S FREEDOM. In the MUSICIAN’S PROMISE SERIES, she wants to challenge harmful stereotypes, proving that women can be powerful heroes and that men should never feel ashamed to express their emotions. She aims to write characters that readers can identify and empathize with, who make the reader think, laugh, and cry as they share their adventures.

 

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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.

 

 

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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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Giveaway

 

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Posted in excerpt, Historical, Interview, women, WW II on March 7, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

WWII-era novel celebrates female friendships and the resilience of the human spirit

THE CORSET MAKER a historical novel

The master planner of rebuilding Ground Zero, world-renowned architect Daniel Libeskind, has created a new piece of art for the cover of “The Corset Maker,” the forthcoming historical fiction novel by his sister, author Annette Libeskind Berkovits. The novel–loosely inspired by their mother’s real-life story–is a powerful addition to the genre of 20th-century historical fiction, and is slated for release on International Women’s Day, March 8, 2022.

In Warsaw, Poland, the young Rifka Berg, raised in an ultra-Orthodox home, asks her father why girls don’t have bar mitzvahs. Eventually, his answer provokes Rifka to risk
everything. In a bold move, unheard of at the time, teenage Rifka and her close friend, Bronka, open their own business–a corset shop on the most fashionable street in Warsaw. Rifka yearns to read forbidden literature and explore the world beyond the confines of her small community.

Her wishes come true, albeit harrowingly when the tumultuous events of the 20th century take her on a journey for survival. A Parisian Count, a Moroccan arms smuggler, and an orphaned Spanish boy will test the convictions and tug at Rifka’s heart. Faced with life and death situations, Rifka will have to take immense risks. She will have to decide if there is ever a time to abandon her principles for a higher purpose. What decisions will she make? Will circumstances choose for her?

In this unforgettable journey, Rifka becomes embroiled in some of the most violent events of the century: the Jewish-Arab conflict in Palestine, the Spanish Civil War, and the Nazi occupation of Southern France. As her involvement deepens, she sees firsthand how autocratic rule deprives people of even the simplest freedoms.

Rifka’s personal struggles and dilemmas go to the heart of the major ethical issues and challenges of our time.

 

 

 

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This book releases on March 8, 2022. Preorder today!

 

 

Praise

 

“‘The Corset Maker’ is a compelling story of girlhood, war, survival – and against all odds, a story of finding out who you truly are. It is a beautifully written journey that weaves together the personal and the historical. I was gripped by this unique and courageous protagonist – and found myself alongside her throughout the book. It is without a doubt one of the most fascinating and meaningful books I have read.”  — Rachel Arnow, artist and author of “Kinder Kalender,” “All the World From A-Z,” and “The Wild West;” Berlin, Germany

“With her eloquent and captivating writing Annette Berkovits transports one to the riveting saga of survival, resilience, and ingenuity of a young woman from Warsaw, Poland. Set mainly in the twists and turns of the first half of 20th century Europe, ‘The Corset Maker’ ignites the reader’s imagination of history and brings to life the hard choices and challenges facing young people during that time. The story concludes with an unexpected ending in the last decade of the century. I simply could not put the book down.” — Zvi Jankelowitz, Director of Institutional Advancement, Yiddish Book Center; Massachusetts

“This sweep of twentieth-century European history seen through the eyes of a young Orthodox Jewish woman is a truly gripping read.” — Joanna Orwin, award-winning author of “Shifting Currents;” Christchurch, New Zealand

 

Excerpt

 

 

RIFKA, WARSAW, 1928

 

Twelve-year-old Rifka paced the bedroom pondering her father’s morning blessing: Blessed are you, Lord, our God, Ruler of the Universe, who has not made me a woman. Why did Poppa rejoice not having been born a woman? It upset Rifka every time she heard it. Worse than upset, it made her plain crazy. She could not figure out why a man as intelligent as Poppa couldn’t understand such prayer was hurtful to the women in his family and there were eight of them, including herself, Golda in Palestine, and Momma. Saul was the only boy in the family.

After dinner when Poppa seemed relaxed in his chair with a little glass of schnapps in his hand, Rifka addressed him. She admired his wisdom and wanted him to see her as someone worthy of engaging in a discussion. “Poppa, why are you thankful not to be a woman?”

Instead of taking her seriously he lifted his eyes toward Rifka and looked at her intently, as if he hadn’t seen her for a long time. “My, my, you sure have grown since last year. If you were a boy, you’d be ready to study for your bar mitzvah.”

The unexpected words hurt. “Why can’t girls have a special ceremony to show they’ve matured?”

“But they do.” Poppa smiled broadly. “They have a wedding. Soon you will be a bride.”

Rifka felt so offended she stood silent momentarily, but not wanting Poppa to digress from her original question, she refrained from an outburst that sat devilishly at the tip of her tongue. “So about the blessing…” she said.

“Some questions shouldn’t be asked,” Poppa had said with an annoyed look, and he picked up his paper though Rifka was nowhere near finished.

“But Poppa…”

“You ask too many questions. Why don’t you go help Momma?” With that Father disappeared in the pages of Today’s News.

Rifka charged out of the room, her cheeks burning with resentment. Why was her father always involved in spirited discussions with his synagogue friends, but when it came to her it was as if she were nothing?

Well… He didn’t converse much with Momma either, except to say what he wanted for dinner.

In the bathroom, Rifka splashed cool water on her face, her outrage still red hot. Like a dispassionate critic, she stared at the mirror, something she did now and then to understand what men who ogled her on the street saw in her. She certainly didn’t consider herself beautiful

and was oblivious of the effect her appearance had on the opposite sex: teenage boys at the synagogue casting sidelong glances or their fathers’ unchaste smiles. She did not appreciate the red glints or the stubbornness of her abundant chestnut curls, or the small beauty mark on the side of her upper lip. Her almond-shaped green eyes and olive skin stood out among the faces of her peers, and even among her fair complexioned sisters. At barely four- foot-eight, Rifka was short and felt her breasts were too large for her small boned, hourglass frame. She

hoped that her full, heart-shaped lips compensated for this anatomical defect. By age twelve and a half, Momma had said, “It’s time I make you a starter brassiere,” confirming Rifka’s self-assessment. But her looks were the least of her interests. She was more engrossed in thinking about her place in the world.

She had to do something to show her father how wrong he was to dismiss her that way.

By morning, Rifka had her solution. So, what if it was outrageous? He needed strong medicine to rouse him from his obtuseness.

When Poppa went out to visit his friend and her mother took the children to shoot the breeze with a neighbor, Rifka found his daily prayer book. She hesitated a moment, then picked up the siddur, stroked the embossed letters on the cover and kissed it. Wetness filled her eyes. She found the page with the offensive blessing, and she stared at it. Tears ran down her cheeks. It blasphemed against half the humans on earth!

In a flash, she ripped out the page, slammed the book shut and replaced it on the little table. A ring at the front door interrupted her act of rebellion. Her heart beat faster.

Filled with apprehension she tiptoed toward the door and listened. After a moment Bronka’s voice brought relief, “Come on, open up. I need to pee.”

She let her friend in. “Quick! I am so happy it’s you.”

Bronka jumped up on one leg, then the other, and eyed Rifka. “What’s the matter? You have a wild look in your eyes. What are you clutching in your hand?”

“I’ll tell you when you come out of the bathroom. Hurry!”

While she waited for Bronka, the enormity of her act began to register. She’d desecrated the holy book. The crumpled page in her hand stung as if sheíd grasped a scorpion. What to do with it?

Bronka appeared in the kitchen where Rifka stood in total consternation. “You have the look of a thief on your face,” her friend said.

“I’ve done something terrible and very stupid. I’d not tell another soul in the world. You are the only person I can trust, but I’m not sure it’s right to draw you into my crime.”

“Crime? Donít be so melodramatic.”

Rifka opened her palm and the crumpled page lay there accusingly. Bronka stepped closer, leaned over to look at the ball. “What is that? I see Hebrew letters on it.”

“I tore a page from my father’s Talmud.”

Bronka inhaled loudly in shock. “Why on earth…?”

Rifka began to explain, but her friend said, “Let’s cover your crime, fast, before anyone else shows up.” She picked up a small bowl and matches from near the stove and threw the paper in.

“Wait! What are you doing?” Rifka screamed.

The lit match erupted into a mini bonfire as the two girls stood watching with a mixture of horror and guilt.

Rifka pleaded with Bronka. “I beg you, never tell anyone.”

“Did you forget our loyalty pledge we swore in the first grade? It was forever and ever.”

“Poppa will kill me if he discovers the page missing.”

“Don’t worry. I have a great idea,” Bronka said, but Rifka stood looking dubious. “Let me run home quickly and bring my father’s siddur.”

“But… I can’t… It wouldn’t be right,” Rifka said.

That prayer book was all Bronka had left of him.

“Just let me get going.” Bronka ran out the door.

It didn’t take more than twenty minutes and they replaced the desecrated book with a nearly identical copy.

“What would I ever do without you, Bronka? You are my savior.”

“Never mind, you’d do the same for me.”

Luckily, it turned out Poppa didn’t notice the switch and continued to recite the blessing. Rifka concluded Poppa would never change. But what cheered her most was that Bronka would never change either. She could always count on her.

 

 

Interview

 

 

Why did you choose a corset maker as a protagonist of a historical novel that deals with some of the bloodiest events of the twentieth century?

 

It seemed to me that precisely because a woman who spends time designing undergarments would probably be an excellent example of a woman furthest away from violence. But that’s not how real life happens. Life takes people into directions they’d have never imagined. The corset maker in my novel was inspired by my mother and her three friends who themselves experienced the brutality of the times from the 1930s to the end of WWII and beyond. These were women who found incredible courage under impossible circumstances. I hope that my protagonist can inspire young women of today who often see violence in the media and have no idea how they would react if faced with a real-life circumstance of theirs, or their loved ones lives in danger.

 

Most historical novels of that period deal with one huge event—say WWII alone is enough of a subject for many books—yet you’ve woven together not one, not two, but three or more violent events: pre-WWII antisemitic attacks on Jews; the Arab—Jewish conflict in Palestine; the Spanish Civil War and WWII in Southern France. Why include all of these?

 

Well..it is as you say ambitious, but for some women, the events of the twentieth century, one of the bloodiest in history, actually threw them into such events in a serial manner. This was the case with the women who inspired the novel. My own mother for example escaped the antisemitism in Poland to find herself in the midst of the Arab revolt in Palestine, then found herself at the outbreak of WWII in Warsaw, Poland on September 1, 1939, and after she escaped that hell, she wound up in a brutal Soviet gulag in Siberia. I was interested in exploring what inner resources keep such women going, what gave them strength to survive. I also wanted to spotlight how young women, in particular, can sometimes make spur of the moment decisions that can alter the course of their entire lives.

 

What about the male characters in your novel? How did you happen to invent them?

 

I started with a very young, curious protagonist and I knew that her insular religious community wouldn’t be enough for her, especially not after she enrolled in a secular school at the behest of her grandmother who was a woman ahead of her times. I just knew that her hormones would begin to make an impact, so meeting a man—well, it had to happen. But how would she react to him? And what if he was a man of a very different social status, a Parisian Count, no less? That’s the stuff of moving the plot forward. Of course in her long life there would be other men, for other reasons.

 

It is interesting that you placed this young woman of orthodox Jewish upbringing in a monastery in Spain. Why there?

 

So this is a good example of how life can take someone to unplanned places. Readers will find out why and how Rifka got there and why she chose to devote a portion of her life to care for orphans. In some ways, this experience was a foundation for her future growth as a woman. And in the monastery, she tried to give the children the kind of education she wanted to have, but of course, some of it had to be subversive. There was, in fact, a lot of tension during the Spanish Civil war between nuns who supported the democratically elected government on the Republican side and those who supported Franco’s forces. He of course eventually won and became a dictator who ruled for thirty-five years.

 

 

About the Author

 

Annette Libeskind Berkovits is the author of two acclaimed memoirs: “In the Unlikeliest of Places: How Nachman Libeskind Survived the Nazis, Gulags and Soviet Communism” a story of her father’s survival, and “Confessions of an Accidental Zoo Curator.” She has also penned a poetry book, “Erythra Thalassa: Brain Disrupted.” “The Corset Maker” is her first novel.

 

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About the Designer

 

Daniel Libeskind is an internationally renowned architect, known for the Jewish Museum in Berlin, the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, and the Dublin Performing Arts Center in Ireland, among many others. His Master Plan for rebuilding the World Trade Center site in New York City was selected in 2003 and has served as the blueprint for the entire site, including the Freedom Tower, the Memorial, the Museum, and the PATH Terminal.

 

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Posted in Giveaway, Guest Post, Historical, mystery on February 23, 2022

 

 

 

 

The Secret in the Wall: A Novel (Silver Rush Mysteries)
Historical Mystery
8th in Series
Poisoned Pen Press (February 15, 2022)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 400 pages

 

Synopsis

 

 

Sometimes you can’t keep your gown out of the gutter…

 

Inez Stannert has reinvented herself—again. Fleeing the comfort and wealth of her East Coast upbringing, she became a saloon owner and card sharp in the rough silver boomtown of Leadville, Colorado, always favoring the unconventional path—a difficult road for a woman in the late 1800s.

Then the teenaged daughter of a local prostitute is orphaned by her mother’s murder, and Inez steps up to raise the troubled girl as her own. Inez works hard to keep a respectable, loving home for Antonia, carefully crafting their new life in San Francisco. But risk is a seductive friend, difficult to resist. When a skeleton tumbles from the wall of her latest business investment, the police only seem interested in the bag of Civil War-era gold coins that fell out with it. With her trusty derringer tucked in the folds of her gown, Inez uses her street smarts and sheer will to unearth a secret that someone has already killed to keep buried. The more she digs, the muddier and more dangerous things become.

She enlists the help of Walter de Brujin, a local private investigator with whom she shares some history. Though she wants to trust him, she fears that his knowledge of her past, along with her growing attraction to him, may well blow her veneer of respectability to bits—that is, if her dogged pursuit of the truth doesn’t kill her first . . .

 

 

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Guest Post

 

 

Mapping out the past

 

When I settled in to create my Silver Rush historical mysteries, set in the 1880s “Victorian West,” I weighed whether to use fictional or real settings. I quickly realized that grounding my historical mysteries in real locations gave me a framework to build upon… and I’m very fond of structure (of all types, including buildings).

To get a better feel for the places I write about, I turn to historical newspapers, city directories, census data, and (my not-so-secret passion) maps!

With Leadville, Colorado, the primary setting for the first five books of my series, I was lucky. Much of the downtown and nearby streets of Leadville had not changed much from its long-ago days. But there were challenges.

For instance, I found many newspaper references to a thoroughfare called “The Boulevard,” in early Leadville articles and descriptions—in fact, it’s mentioned several times in an 1880 Leadville Daily Chronicle article, quoted here. (You can also view a great photo of The Boulevard by photographer William Henry Jackson on my Pinterest site, here.) However, by the time I went looking for it for the second book in my series, IRON TIES, it seemed to have fallen off the map. Honestly, how could a wide, macadam road described as “so smooth that it had nary a straw to impede the wheels of a carriage” disappear so completely? Finally, in an early-2000s version of a Google Maps satellite image, I spotted the faintest track heading out of town in the right direction through a wooded area.

When I tried to find The Boulevard on a research trip, it was almost invisible: more an overgrown, rubble-strewn trail than a road. I would have never found even that, if not for Google Maps.

For IRON TIES, I also had to invent a fictional gulch since one did not actually exist exactly where I needed it to. I named it “Disappointment Gulch” and confessed all in the Author’s Note. However, that particular agony had a silver lining: A Leadville expert, who I had exchanged increasingly desperate email about nearby real gulches and the various distances, etc., from town, gifted me with a large, plastic, three-dimensional topographical map of Leadville and its environs.

 

A portion of my much beloved 3D map of Leadville, Colorado.

 

 

When my protagonist, Inez Stannert, decided to pick up and move to San Francisco, I sure wished I’d had such a 3D map of the “Paris of the West,”  to help me chart the ups and downs of the hilly city. However, Google maps had much improved at this point, and with its “street view,” I could trudge (virtually) all over, from the east-facing waterfront on San Francisco Bay to the Cliff House overlooking the Pacific Ocean on the west. Also, there is a wealth of San-Francisco historical maps available online. Two map-related sites I often turn to are the David Rumsey Map Collection and OldSF.

On the David Rumsey site, one of my favorite maps is Bancroft’s 1881 map of San Francisco. This map is very high resolution and, like all maps on this site, can be downloaded for free. To get my bearings for the first San Francisco book, A DYING NOTE, I took this map and zoomed in on the area that includes the intersection of Pine and Kearney streets, where Inez now works in a music store. To get a better sense of this area, I printed that section out and plotted where various historical buildings and businesses were, using the map’s “reference list” and the 1882 city directory. After doing so, I realized the building holding the music store and the apartment above—where Inez lives with her young ward, Antonia Gizzi— is encircled by houses of worship. The sounds of bells would have been deafening at certain times of day, a fact I incorporated into my fiction.

 

Points of interest for my series plotted on a printout of Bancroft’s 1881 map of San Francisco. Pink is (mostly) places of worship; yellow shows the location of Inez’s music store and apartment and nearby schools; orange indicates other buildings of interest: hotels, theaters, the Pacific Stock Exchange, etc.

 

OldSF combines a map of current-day San Francisco, a database of historical photos, and a variable timeline. You can widen or narrow the timeframe, choosing any period from 1850 to 2000, and view photos at various locations from those times. For instance, choosing 1850–1898 provided two very nice images of the Montgomery Building on the corner of Montgomery and Washington Streets—the perfect location for one of my fictional lawyers in THE SECRET IN THE WALL to have his office.

In THE SECRET IN THE WALL, I also needed a map of Alcatraz Island so I could better envision what my characters would see there in 1882. From 1853 onward, the military outpost was in constant transformation, with structures and fortifications built, expanded, repurposed, and destroyed at a rapid pace. I searched long and hard but never could find a map specific to my timeframe. However, my brother dug up a 1910 Alcatraz map online. With many thanks for his sleuthing, I gleefully printed it out and, working from 1880s written descriptions, marked it up to get a sense of what it looked like in 1882 (or thereabouts).

 

A 1910 map of Alcatraz Island, with my notes showing 1880s points of reference.

 

 

About the Author

 

Ann Parker is a science writer by day and a fiction writer by night. Her award-winning Silver Rush Mysteries series, published by Poisoned Pen Press, a Sourcebooks imprint, is set primarily in 1880s Leadville, Colorado, and more recently in San Francisco, California, the “Paris of the West.” The series was named a Booksellers Favorite by the Mountains and Plains Independent Booksellers Association, and Ann is listed in the Colorado Authors’ Hall of Fame. The Secret in the Wall is the eighth and newest entry in the series.

 

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Giveaway

 

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Posted in 4 paws, Book Release, Historical, Review on February 21, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Nina de Gramont’s The Christie Affair is a beguiling novel of star-crossed lovers, heartbreak, revenge, and murder—and a brilliant re-imagination of one of the most talked-about unsolved mysteries of the twentieth century.

Every story has its secrets.
Every mystery has its motives.

“A long time ago, in another country, I nearly killed a woman. It’s a particular feeling, the urge to murder. It takes over your body so completely, it’s like a divine force, grabbing hold of your will, your limbs, your psyche. There’s a joy to it. In retrospect, it’s frightening, but I daresay in the moment it feels sweet. The way justice feels sweet.”

The greatest mystery wasn’t Agatha Christie’s disappearance in those eleven infamous days, it’s what she discovered.

London, 1925: In a world of townhomes and tennis matches, socialites and shooting parties, Miss Nan O’Dea became Archie Christie’s mistress, luring him away from his devoted and well-known wife, Agatha Christie.

The question is, why? Why destroy another woman’s marriage, why hatch a plot years in the making, and why murder? How was Nan O’Dea so intricately tied to those eleven mysterious days that Agatha Christie went missing?

 

 

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Review

 

What really happened to Agatha Christie when she went missing for those 11 days?

While I have read some of Agatha Christie’s novels over the years, I will admit that I didn’t know much about her personal life. While this is a fictionalized telling of what happened during those eleven days, it was fascinating to imagine the dynamics of the relationship between the Christie’s and how this mistress came into their lives and destroyed their marriage. While mostly told from Nan O’Dea’s POV, there are some chapters that are told to us from Agatha’s POV and also the detective that found her quite by chance.

We learn a lot about Nan and her childhood and the first love of her life. There are some other things that come about that add complexity to the story and the reason why Nan did what she did to get to know this family. While I probably should have seen it coming, it was a bit of a surprise.

I found that the multiple POV added depth to the story and kept me intrigued as to why this story was playing out as it was for the characters. Did some of this happen? Perhaps.

You will also find that the chapters jump around in time but it is important to understand Nan’s motivation for her actions.

This was a surprisingly delightful story and we give it 4 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Nina de Gramont is the author of a collection of short stories, Of Cats and Men, as well as the novels Gossip of the Starlings and The Last September. She has written several YA novels (Every Little Thing in the World, Meet Me at the River, The Boy I Love, and — under the pen name Marina Gessner — The Distance From Me to You). Nina teaches creative writing at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. She lives in coastal North Carolina with her daughter and her husband, the writer David Gessner.

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, Historical, Review, Texas, Western on February 17, 2022

 

 

THE SPARROWS OF MONTENEGRO

 

by

 

BJ MAYO

 

 

Categories: Western / Historical Fiction / Texas

Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing

Date of Publication: February 8, 2022

Number of Pages: 312 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Tree “Bigfoot” Smith and Cedar Jones first meet on the day they join the US Cavalry’s Fourth Cavalry Regiment based out of the Historic Fort Concho in what is now San Angelo, Texas, in 1870.

Their journey takes them into the heart of the dangerous Llano Estacado region known as the Comancheria. The area is ruthlessly defended by a band of Quahadi Comanche and their stoic leader, Lonely Horse. The Troop encounters a large group of Comanches and the gun-running Comancheros at Mushaway Mountain, close to Gail, Texas. A quick battle ensues that leaves eight men dead.

Post Cavalry life finds Tree Smith and Cedar Jones as cowhand and cook on the large Rolling J cattle ranch in South Texas bordering the Rio Grande River. The ranch employs two Vaqueros from the village of Montenegro in Mexico, just across the river, whom Tree befriends.

The quiet life on the Rolling J ranch is brought to an abrupt halt when a local sheriff warns that a band led by the cold-blooded, sadistic killer known as Gato Montes has been preying on the ranches along the Rio Grande. After the sheriff is nearly killed by these men, Tree is tasked with tracking them down, only this time, he is traveling alone and the dangers are greatly multiplied. His epic journey takes him back into the Llano Estacado where he is captured by Lonely Horse and taken to Mushaway Mountain where the Comanche carry out their own form of frontier justice.

Tree’s return journey puts him on the same path as Marco, a Mexican goat herder, who rides with him to the Mexican Village of Montenegro, where Tree meets Julia, who changes his life forever after he becomes involved in and bears witness to the wonderful celebration of Dia de los Muertos.

 

 

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PRAISE FOR THE BOOK

 

“I could not put this one down. Mayo has masterfully written a character-driven page-turner, a compelling tale for the reader who seeks something more than the stereotypical western novel.” Ron Schwab, author of Goldsmith and the Law Wranglers series

 

“This mild-mannered west Texas rancher has woven a border tapestry using yarns made of unimaginable horror and sweet innocence.” Tumbleweed Smith, author of Under the Chinaberry Tree

 

“A thoroughly enjoyable read—a cowboy’s trail you’ll want to follow, with a memorable cast of characters, renegades, soldiers, lawmen, and simple folks, and a hero that you’ll want more of.” John J. Jacobson, author of All the Cowboys Ain’t Gone

 

 

 

 

 

If you are in the mood for a historical western that has everything from cowboys & ranching, cavalry, Dia de Los Muertos, Indian justice, faith, humor, and even a little romance, then this is the book to read.

I wasn’t quite sure what to expect when I started this book and wasn’t sure where the first few storylines were going, but as I continued reading everything fell into place. As it was said in the book “Dios knows.” The stories weave together as if they were always meant to be there and the descriptive words of the sights, sounds, and smells will have you wondering if you were there with them experiencing the same thing.

There are so many likable characters, and of course some unlikable ones too. I’m not quite sure who my favorite character was out of all of them, but it was close between Tree, Marco, and Felicity. Tree is one of the main characters and like his name, he is steadfast and strong. Marco is a minor character we meet about 2/3 of the way through the book but his kindness and goat-whisperer abilities just spoke to me. Felicity is not your average woman and can definitely take care of herself as she shows us multiple times. Plus, her ability to move past her past and look forward to a future with Cedar is something many can relate to in our own lives.

This story is not a sweet recounting of what life was like in the late 1800s but a realistic look at what settlers might have endured from the Indians, banditos, wild animals, and weather that they may not be prepared to experience. The biggest obstacles were the Indians and the justice that they meted out to those trying to take over their lands or unsavory acts perpetrated upon the tribe or others. The truth isn’t whitewashed and the details may be hard to read for some, but it was how things were handled at that time.

While the story has multiple facets, the main focus is on Tree and his life during the cavalry and afterward. He is a noble character with flaws and a heart as big as Texas. So many go through life with events from their past that haunt them and this is no different for Tree. However, he learns to adapt and eventually captures the heart of a woman from a village across the border. While we don’t see a lot of their relationship blossom and it does seem to happen rather quickly, they are perfect for each other and ultimately complete each other.

I do have to add that I got a huge chuckle of what the men would call their privates – hangy-downs.

This is a wondrous tale that hovers between western and historical fiction, but it definitely made an impression on me. We give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BJ Mayo was born in an oil field town in Texas. His career in the energy industry took him to various points in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Louisiana, Alabama, Bangladesh, Australia, and Angola, West Africa.

He and his wife were high school sweethearts and have been married for forty-six years. They live on a working farm near San Angelo, Texas.

 

Website ◆ Facebook  ◆  Twitter

 

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 THREE WINNERS:

 

Autographed copies of The Sparrows of Montenegro.

(US only. Ends 2/19/22)

 

 

 

 

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Visit Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

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

or visit the blogs directly:

 

 

 

2/8/22 Review Reading by Moonlight
2/8/22 BONUS promo Hall Ways Blog
2/8/22 BONUS promo LSBBT Blog
2/9/22 Review The Plain-Spoken Pen
2/9/22 Review Book Fidelity
2/10/22 Review Bibliotica
2/10/22 Review Forgotten Winds
2/11/22 Review The Book’s Delight
2/11/22 Review Momma on the Rocks
2/12/22 Review Librariel Book Adventures
2/13/22 Review Julia Picks 1
2/14/22 Review Book Bustle
2/15/22 Review Rainy Days with Amanda
2/16/22 Review Jennie Reads
2/17/22 Review StoreyBook Reviews
2/17/22 Review The Clueless Gent

 

 

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Book Release, Historical, Review, Texas on February 15, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Texas Ranger Tom Bell is tracking a fugitive killer when he rides into Pine Top, a hastily erected shanty-town crawling with rough and desperate men-oil drillers, come by the thousands in search of work. It soon becomes apparent that the lawman’s poking around has irritated the wrong people, and when two failed attempts are made on his life, Bell knows that he’s getting closer to finding out who is responsible for cheating and murdering the local landowners in order to access the rich oil fields flowing beneath their farms. When they ambush him for a third time while he’s out with a local woman he’s fallen for, they make the deadly mistake of killing her and leaving him alive

 

 

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Review

 

This is the first book I have read by this author and after reading the author’s notes, apparently, Texas Ranger Tom Bell has other books that he is featured in and you could say this is like a prequel to those books.

In this book, Tom is chasing a murderer from the valley and ends up in East Texas. I don’t think I realized it when I picked up the book, but since I lived for some time in Longview, I am familiar with the area even though it would have looked much different in the 1930s. I was fascinated to learn that Liberty City was previously called Hog Eye until the oil boom. I had to chuckle at the name of the town, but there are small towns all across this country with unique names.

Set during the oil boom, this book showcases human nature and that they weren’t that much different than people today by scheming and deceiving landowners, killing, prejudice for those even a little different from them, gangsters and prohibition. This book gets into the nitty-gritty of life in a small shanty town and had me spellbound imaging life nearly 90 years ago. Life was not easy because there was also the depression which made some people greedy that much more as we saw from various characters.

I really like Tom Bell and how seriously he took his position as a Texas Ranger. It was not an easy job for him or anyone else, but they made it work somehow. I thought the details painted a picture for us to imagine what life was like in this area at that time. The towns exploded with oil derrick workers and I can imagine law enforcement was stretched thin trying to keep everything peaceful. It was not an easy task for anyone. Those that were of ill repute were going to wreak havoc no matter what and those scenes had my heart pounding wondering how things were going to shake out for Tom.

This is a fascinating book and one I enjoyed immensely. We give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Reavis Z. Wortham retired in 2011 and now works harder than before as the author of the critically acclaimed Red River historical mystery series. Kirkus Reviews listed his first novel, The Rock Hole, as one of their Top 12 Mysteries of 2011. True West Magazine included Dark Places as one of 2015’s Top 12 Modern Westerns. The Providence Journal writes, “This year’s Unraveled is a hidden gem of a book that reads like Craig Johnson’s Longmire on steroids.” Wortham’s new high octane contemporary thriller from Kensington Publishing, Hawke’s Prey, featuring Texas Ranger Sonny Hawke was released in June 2017.

 

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