Posted in excerpt, Giveaway, Psychological, Review, women on November 13, 2020

 

 

 

 

Other Fires: Novel by Lenore H. Gay

Publisher: She Writes Press (October 20, 2020)

Category: Women’s Psychological Fiction, Medical Fiction

 

 

Synopsis

 

Joss and Phil’s already rocky marriage is fragmented when Phil is injured in a devastating fire and diagnosed with Capgras delusion―a misidentification syndrome in which a person becomes convinced that a loved one has been replaced by an identical imposter. Faced with a husband who no longer recognizes her, Joss struggles to find motivation to save their marriage, even as family secrets start to emerge that challenge everything she thought she knew.

With two young daughters, a looming book deadline, and an attractive but complicated distraction named Adam complicating her situation even further, Joss has to decide what she wants for her family―and what family even means.

 

 

Amazon * Barnes&Noble * IndeBound * Books-A-Million

 

 

Praise

 

“Once again, Lenore Gay has woven a story that captivates the reader from page one. Other Fires is a brilliant study of tragedy on multiples levels. Beginning with a dysfunctional family struggling in the aftermath of a terrible fire, she expertly peels back the layers of human behavior and motivation that unravels the lives of the guilty and innocent. Peppered with surprising twists and turns, the story will stay with you long after you close the cover.”―PAM WEBBER, author of The Wiregrass and Moon Water

“Heartwarming and dramatic, the two major intertwining stories in Other Fires reach across decades from troubled childhood to mid-life adults and reaffirm what remains human and vulnerable in all of us. The portraits of the main characters arc from hopelessness to vulnerability and a sense of recovery. Gay holds the reader’s attention from the first page.”―DIANA Y. PAUL, author of Things Unsaid

“How do people figure out their minds? This novel explores what constitutes reality, and from whose perspective. Drawing on her varied experiences in life and background in rehabilitation and mental health counseling, Lenore Gay weaves together the perspectives of compelling characters who interact in ways that keep the pages of this novel turning.”―CHRIS REID, PhD, Rehabilitation Psychology

 

Excerpt

 

At school Terpe overheard awful words when she walked down the halls: “weird” and “strange” in loud whispers; but this hurt her the most: “stay away from that girl with the weird name.”

During class Terpe drew tree houses to help her decide among different shapes. She’d ask Dad if it should tower high on the other side of the creek, or face the hill? Should it sit on a strong branch with a tall ladder, or should they build it wider, close to the ground? When Dad got better, they’d decide.

Princess Roway and mermaids had purple, green and blue fins, so she drew them that way. While her hands stayed busy, she waited for the teacher to say something interesting. Why did teachers go over how to add and subtract, information she knew before she started school? She wanted to learn something new.

After school, she hurried down the hill behind her house. No boys. Ice covered the ground and her feet made crunching noises. She moved to keep warm. Bright gray sky shone through tree branches. She tossed her hair and hummed like she didn’t care whether either boy showed up, in case they were watching, hiding behind bushes. She spit. “To hell with them,” she muttered loud enough for them to hear.

Her house felt toasty warm but what about killing an animal to make a fur coat to keep her warm outside? Last summer she used Dad’s knife and carved a bow, quiver and some arrows out of sticks. She hid them in the back of her closet where her mother never cleaned. Firehose water ruined them and she threw them away. Now new ones:

“Bow, I call you, and I call you, quiver and I call you, splendid arrows.” Her bow appeared in her hand. At her feet lay a quiver and a pile of arrows. She filled the quiver, slung it on her back and walker deeper into the woods. A small animal, like a ferret, scurried out of the brush. She’d have to kill too many to make a coat. She threw her bow, arrows and quiver on the ground and stomped on them until they disappeared into the dirt.

She needed the boys’ help to travel to catch a big beast, to help her kill it, skin and dry it. This would turn into a better adventure than bowing to stupid Princess Roway who couldn’t even talk right.

Terpe paced, thinking up nasty words to say to the boys. Twigs snapped. They crashed through the woods and stood nearby. With hands on her hips, she stood tall. “You’re late. I’ve thought of an adventure and we have to get started.” They probably expected her to talk nice because she was a girl. Did they realize she could kill an animal as well as they could?

“This is the plan. We’ll shoot a big animal. I’ll make bows and arrows for us. I’ll shoot first. You all will have turns. You two will skin, clean and dry it. No blood and guts can stink up my coat. It should look like the fur coats in stores on Main Street.”

“You’re spoiled rotten,” Benjy said. “We need another girl in our group. One who won’t boss us and act like a priss-pot.”

“We do not need more girls. There are three girls and one Dad in my family. Besides, I’m a tomboy.”

“I’m not messing with blood and guts.” Benjy stuck out his tongue.

“I’ll help,” Declan said. “If you find me a good gut-scraping knife.”

“With a knife our problem should be solved expediently.” Benjy said. “Let’s send ourselves to the mountains. The biggest animals live up high.”

Declan walked faster than Benjy and led the way through the woods. Terpe thought Declan knew geography the best. In fact, geography might be his only good subject, besides art. She wouldn’t ask, not wanting to hurt his feelings.

“Where should we go,” she asked.

Declan’s hand sliced the air. “Mongolia, on those plains horses are short, yet strong. Shaggy because it’s really cold. We’ll steal three and race for miles until we find the biggest animals. Or maybe send ourselves to Nepal? Montana? Big animals will be sleeping in dens if it’s terrifically cold. We’ll disturb their hibernation and they won’t like it. Maybe we’ll kill one quick.”

“The word “Montana” means “mountain” in Spanish, Montana has over a hundred named mountain ranges and sub-ranges. Spruce and the Douglas firs grow at the top. Lots of bears, mountain lions and goats. Let’s go to the Rattlesnake Mountains. 8,000 feet, high enough.”

Montana sounded fine. She and Benjy outvoted Declan who said he didn’t care.

She wondered how Benjy could he lift his head it seemed so crammed with words.

“We’ll land on a valley floor.  We’ll have to climb rocks and boulders.” Benjy rubbed his hands.

They made a pact: if one of them got lost, they’d stop search for the lost one. In a circle and held hands. Benjy muttered jumbled words. They ran around in a circle and let go, spinning so fast, Terpe fell and her hand twisted under her. She jumped up.

“We’re at a perfect spot,” Benjy pronounced while she held her wrist and shoved it in her pocket.

They climbed. Declan let out a whoop. “Lean over, it’ll make the air warmer. Sideways-steps might attract mountain goats. We could grab one of those.”

She held her nose. “Phew, goats stink. Walking straight up’s hard enough. You think I want to walk sideways? Or wear a nasty coat stinking like a goat?”

Fussing, they climbed. White birds, each with two sets of wings flew close. When the sun shone on their giant bodies, the undersides of their wings flashed yellow and green.

Declan hollered, “Watch out, Terpe, one of those birds might swoop down, pick you up and carry you away!” His voice rose, “Watch out. Really! Something’s flying your way.”

 

 

Guest Review by Bookgirl

 

Lenore H.Gay’s novel ‘Other Fires’ is about loss, motherhood, passion, betrayal, and the different ways that these things can entangle and complicate our lives.
Joss is a writer, working on her second book and raising her two young daughters. Before the beginning of the story, she and her husband have some marital troubles when he is unfaithful. Phil is the husband of Joss and father of her daughters. At the beginning of the story, he is sleeping on the couch because his wife no longer wants to sleep with him. Terpe (short for Euterpe, because her mother has a PhD in Greek mythology) is their 8 year-old daughter. As plucky and inquisitive as any adult, she is bright for her age.

All three are sleeping peacefully in their house one night when it mysteriously catches on fire. Terpe smells the smoke first, and wakes her parents, grabbing her baby sister and rushing out of the house. During the family’s escape from the inflamed house, Phil is caught under some falling boards and sustains a massive head injury. Thankfully, Joss and Terpe manage to pull him to safety but he remains in a medically induced coma for several weeks as they try to rebuild their lives after the fire.

When Phil finally wakes, he is subtly different in an alarming way. Because of the injury, he begins experiencing something called Capgras syndrome, a disease of the mind which makes the sufferer think that the people around them are deceiving them. Basically, he assumes that Joss has been replaced with a perfect impostor and no one can convince him differently.

This book is a whirlwind of intense emotion and character study. The author really created something unique and interesting, and she clearly did her research on the medical aspects. I highly recommend this one!

 

 

 

About the Author

 

(c) Sasha Gay-Overstreet

Lenore Gay is a retired Licensed Professional Counselor with a master’s in sociology and rehabilitation counseling. She was an adjunct faculty at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Rehabilitation Counseling Department for thirty years. She has worked in several agencies and psychiatric hospitals, and for ten years worked at her private counseling practice before becoming Coordinator of VCU’s Rehabilitation Counseling Department internship program.

Her debut novel, Shelter of Leaves, was a finalist for the Foreword Book of the Year award and a finalist for an INDEFAB award. For three years, Lenore has served on the Steering Committee of the RVALitCrawl, which has been featured in RVAMag, Richmond Family Magazine, and Richmond Magazine. She is an active member of James River Writers. She lives in Richmond, Virginia.

 

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Giveaway

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Family, Psychological, Review on November 11, 2020

 

 

Synopsis

 

This story begins with a funeral. One of three brothers is dead, mourned by his siblings. But which one? And how? And, most importantly: why?

William, Brian, and Luke are each born a year apart in a lower middle class Catholic family in 1960s Dublin. William, the eldest, rises to the top of the heap in the film industry as a successful movie producer. Luke, the baby of the family, surprises everyone by morphing into a worldwide pop star. Brian, the compliant middle son, is the eternal adult in the room: the helpful, steady one, the manager of finances and careers.

But none of them is actually quite what he seems. Wounded by childhood, they have betrayed one another in myriad ways, hiding behind little lies that have developed into full blown treachery. With an unnerving eye for the complexities of families, Nugent delves into the secret life of a deeply troubled household and provides stunning insights into the many forces that shape us from childhood.

 

 

Amazon * B&N * Kobo

 

 

Review

 

I have seen dysfunctional families but this one takes the cake. Three brothers that seem to despise each other, a self-absorbed mother and a father that doesn’t stand up for much of anything makes for an interesting family dynamic.

This book has sections for each brother and flips from year to year, and not in order. The saying that there is always more than one side to a story could not be any truer in this book. Each incident is told from each brother’s point of view and how they interpreted what was happening at the time. William is first, then Brian, and then Luke. Each brother’s story tends to paint them in a better light, but what is the real truth to the events that occurred? Perhaps there is a little bit of truth to each side with reality somewhere in the middle.

I was intrigued when the story started because I had no idea which brother was in the coffin. You get some hints, but are they reliable? I suspected two of the brothers at different points based on the text, but I was quite surprised by how the story unfolded. Never in my wildest dreams did I expect that ending.

I don’t think I liked any of the brothers but at times they each redeemed themselves, at least for a moment. They each have their own struggles that have to be dealt with and how they handle them is unique to each of their personalities. Sadly, this family could have used some counseling when they were younger.

This book covers so many hot topics such as the #metoo movement, marriage equality, alcoholism, drug use, various diseases (1 could be a spoiler so no specifics here!), narcissism, and possibly even child abuse or neglect. I had a hard time putting this book down. It was a train wreck waiting to happen. But that is what makes this book work in my eyes.

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Liz Nugent worked as a stage manager in theatres in Ireland and toured internationally before writing extensively for radio and television drama.

Unravelling Oliver was published in 2014, hit the number 1 spot for several weeks and won Crime Novel of the Year at the Irish Book Awards.

Lying in Wait, published in 2016, went straight to number 1 and was chosen for the Richard & Judy Book Club. It won the Radio 1 Ryan Tubridy Listeners Choice Award at the Irish Book Awards.

In October 2017, Liz won the Irish Tatler Woman of the Year Award in Literature.

Skin Deep was published in 2018. It also went straight to number 1 in the bestsellers charts and scooped two awards at the An Post Irish Book Awards in Nov ’18: Crime Novel of the Year AND the Radio 1 Ryan Tubridy Listener’s Choice Award.

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Cozy, Giveaway, mystery, Review on November 11, 2020

 

 

 

 

Back to the Burgh and Beyond (The Owl’s Nest Mysteries)

by C.S. McDonald

Publisher: McWriter Books

Release date: Sep 10, 2020

 

Synopsis

 

Meet Alexa Owl. She’s returned home to Pittsburgh after a divorce to start a new life and a new business, The Owl’s Nest Couturier Shoppe. Much to her surprise, she’s getting more than she ever bargained for: Detective Bobby Starr, and he’s no ordinary sleuth. Bobby is an angel who’s returned to Earth in hopes of earning his way into the Guardian Angel Squad. He’s been sent by none other than Saint Pete to acquire Alexa’s help to solve three cold case murders he left behind. Except, here’s the catch: he’s only been allotted four days to solve the first case! How in heaven’s name is she supposed to do that? Alexa is a professional seamstress—not a detective. Bobby insists the only way to solve the first case is to return to 1953, and Alexa’s not in love with that idea at all!

 

 

AmazonB&N

 

 

Review

 

I had such a good time reading this first book in a new series….or at least I hope it will be a series! It combines mystery, humor, paranormal, and time travel all in one book.

Alexa Owl, freshly divorced, is back in her hometown to start her couturier business. What she doesn’t expect is to have a ghost and a ghost cat arrive on the scene and demand her help in solving a very old mystery. But the unique part is how she helps solve the crime, she is transported back to 1953 yet a copy of herself remains to take care of business. Thankfully, she has some new help that covers for her if she seems a bit off in the present.

As I read the book and tried to solve the mystery, the author does a tremendous job of throwing several red herrings into the mix and while you might think you know the answer, the truth will probably surprise you. I thought I had it all solved and tied up in a red bow and then had to undo that bow and find another suspect.

I think my favorite character is going to be Winnie. When she was a child, she lived in the building that Alexa now owns. She is quite the spitfire and I love that she enjoys baking and using alcohol in all of her recipes.

There is a bit of potential romance between Alexa and a classmate, Cliff.  There is a rocky start and only future books will tell us if this progresses or not.

We give this book 5 paws up and if you are a cozy fan, definitely check it out.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

For twenty-six years C.S. McDonald’s life whirled around a song and a dance. Classically trained at Pittsburgh Ballet Theater School, The Pittsburgh Dance Alloy, and many others, she became a professional dancer and choreographer. During that time, she choreographed many musicals and an opera for the Pittsburgh Savoyards. In 2011 she retired from her dance career to write. Under her real name, Cindy McDonald, she writes murder-suspense and romantic suspense novels. In 2014 she added the pen name, C.S. McDonald, to write children’s books for her grandchildren. In 2016 she added the Fiona Quinn Mysteries to that expansion. She decided to write the cozy mystery series that everyone, including teens and tweens, can read and enjoy. Presently, the Fiona Quinn Mysteries nine books with a tenth slated for 2021. The books are also available on audio, narrated by Maren Swenson Waxenberg. Cindy’s newest venture is The Owl’s Nest Mysteries. Once again, she has set her cozy mystery in Pittsburgh. The female protagonist, Alexa Owl, is much different from Fiona Quinn. The Owl’s Next Mysteries has a little grit, a little time travel, a little romance, and a whole lot of cozy! Ms. McDonald resides on her Thoroughbred farm known as Fly by Night Stables near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with her husband, Bill, and her poorly behaved Cocker Spaniel, Allister.

 

 

Website  ~  Twitter  ~  Facebook

 

 

Giveaway

 

 

Autographed copy of BACK TO THE BURGH AND BEYOND (USA only) (ends Nov 27)

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Posted in 5 paws, fiction, Giveaway, Middle Grade, Review, Trailer, Young Adult on November 9, 2020

 

 

ARACELI’S PATH

 

Among Angels and Devils in Juarez

 

by

 

MARION SURLES

 

 

Genre: Realistic Fiction / Border Stories / Mature Middle Grade

Publisher: Love and Literacy

Date of Publication: November 30, 2019

Number of Pages: 145

Scroll down for the giveaway!

 

 

 

Araceli comes from a blended, dysfunctional family held together by the love of a grandmother. Rubí is being raised by a single mother who works as a prostitute. Both young girls are affected not only by their mothers’ choices but also by the violence and culture of Juarez, Mexico.

Can they overcome the cards they have been dealt, or are they destined to follow the same paths as their mothers?

Follow the lives of Araceli and Rubí from childhood to young adulthood and listen for children everywhere who are voiceless, trapped in their own cultures.

 

English version

 

 

Spanish version

 

 

Amazon

 

Proceeds benefit Love and Literacy  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While a fictional tale, this story takes a hard look into life for those living in Juarez, Mexico. It is not for the faint of heart and I found it heartbreaking to see young girls forced into prostitution to stay alive and make their way in the world not to mention the squalor that they experience on a daily basis.

Araceli’s story is similar to many in her town. She is a substitute mother for her younger siblings since their mother is not interested in their welfare, only her own. Thankfully, they have their Abuela to help fill the gap that their mother leaves behind. There is also a kind neighbor that owns the corner store that looks out for Araceli and her sisters. Araceli has dreams beyond ending up like her mother, married with many children and no future. It was hard to watch her struggle with life and not be able to see her dreams come to fruition, but she doesn’t give up on a better life.

I felt like Araceli never gave up hope on herself, her life, her family, and even those around her. This is evident with another girl, Rubi. Rubi’s life was even harder than Araceli’s growing up. I don’t think she attended school at all, was left outside when her mother was entertaining men, and I’m not sure if she was fed much. There are passages that mention Rubi at the age of 12 with heavy makeup and pregnant. I think she had three to four children before she was 18, possibly younger. Araceli tried to befriend Rubi but was rebuffed. Perhaps Rubi didn’t trust anyone and could only look out for herself. I think that one of the few people that were able to get through to her was Paul. Paul was a photographer with a church missionary group that was building homes for some families in Juarez. For some reason, he took Araceli and her family under his wing and even Rubi to the extent she allowed it. His kindness and generosity is overwhelming but is just a drop in the bucket considering all of those that need help.

I enjoyed this book on various levels. It taught me about the reality of this town in Mexico, and possibly others like it; the kindness of strangers especially Paul (Abuelo), and the photographs of the town and the joy in their faces despite everything. I hope that those that read this book take to heart the opportunities to help those less fortunate whether it is locally or in another country. This is the type of book that could open up discussions in the classroom or at home about the fate of the world and those around us.

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marion Surles was born in 1957 in Columbus, Mississippi. From a young age, she was interested in learning Spanish, due to a special offering of Spanish at her elementary school. She received a BA and MA in Spanish and social work from Mississippi State University and teaches Spanish and English as a Second Language to all levels of students. She also serves as a volunteer missionary at home and in many Spanish-speaking countries. Most recently, she has formed a mission in Juarez, Mexico called Love and Literacy, which encourages reading and staying in school. Every two months, Marion travels to Juarez to bring books and literacy activities to a poor neighborhood, partnering with a local family to serve as the library. Her books are a fictional account of the lives of her students. Her Facebook page, Love and Literacy, gives updates of her work in Juarez.

Marion lives in Dublin, Texas with her husband, horses, and dogs. She enjoys trail riding, kayaking, and camping, plus visiting with her daughters and granddaughter nearby.

 

WebsiteFacebook ║ Amazon Author Page

 

 

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TWO WINNERS: Autographed copies of Araceli’s Path and Grit in


Juarez (choice of English or Spanish), Day of the Dead shopping bag &

plate, Mexican coin purse, Mexican candy. 

 

NOVEMBER 5-15, 2020

 

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11/5/20 Book Trailer Book Bustle
11/5/20 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
11/6/20 Review Reading by Moonlight
11/7/20 Excerpt Chapter Break Book Blog
11/8/20 Top Ten It’s Not All Gravy
11/9/20 Review StoreyBook Reviews
11/10/20 Guest Post All the Ups and Downs
11/11/20 Review Forgotten Winds
11/12/20 Author Interview Bibliotica
11/13/20 Review The Clueless Gent
11/14/20 Review Missus Gonzo

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Christian, Giveaway, Historical, Review, romance on November 5, 2020

 

 

THE LOVE NOTE

 

by

 

Joanna Davidson Politano

 

 

Genre: Christian / Historical Fiction / Romance

Publisher: Revell

Publication Date: October 20, 2020

Number of Pages: 400

 

 

 Scroll down for the giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Focused on a career in medicine and not on romance, Willa Duvall is thrown slightly off course during the summer of 1859 when she discovers a never-opened love letter in a crack of her old writing desk. Compelled to find the passionate soul who penned it and the person who never received it, she takes a job as a nurse at the seaside estate of Crestwicke Manor.

Everyone at Crestwicke has feelings—mostly negative ones—about the man who wrote the letter, but he seems to have disappeared. With plenty of enticing clues but few answers, Willa’s search becomes even more complicated when she misplaces the letter and it passes from person to person in the house, each finding a thrilling or disheartening message in its words.

Laced with mysteries large and small, this romantic Victorian-era tale of love lost, love deferred, and love found is sure to delight.

 

 

 

AmazonBarnes and NobleBookshop.org

 

Christianbook.comIndieBoundBaker Book House

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m going to be straight up with you that my review will probably not do this book justice because I am so overwhelmed at all of the intricacies of the story and the family. I was blown away by the twists that were revealed, the history of the characters, and the multitude of quotes that spoke to my heart. So don’t go into this book expecting a sweet romantic story, it is so much more than that as I quickly discovered.

Willa Duvall is a woman after my own heart. She wants to be more than just someone’s wife. She has aspirations to help people with her medical skills and knowledge as a nurse and from working with her father in his clinic. I loved that she was pushing for cleanliness and so much more when that was not the practice of doctors or hospitals. I hated that she was put into a position that she had to barter for her future with her father to pursue becoming a doctor when he just wanted her to be married. As part of the barter, she ends up as a nurse to Golda Gresham, mostly in part due to a letter that she finds in her desk. She doesn’t know who wrote it or who it was meant to receive it, as it was neither addressed nor signed. Golda is quite the character and she does not take any guff from anyone including her children, much less Willa. The interaction between these two started off shaky but in the end, they had a firm friendship and mutual understanding.

Let’s talk about this letter that Willa found. It is one heck of a love letter and I can see why Willa wants to find who wrote it and return it to the proper owner. What she doesn’t expect is for this letter to make its way around the various characters who all think the letter was written for them. The story of this letter is pretty amazing too and just when you think you understand the who and why of the situation, a new piece of information is released changing your whole perspective on the situation.

I enjoyed all of the characters for one reason or another, but I think my favorite is Aunt Maisie or “crazy Maisie”. This woman had firm beliefs and thoughts and I chuckled at her book of words. Words she wanted to use someday so she kept track of them so she was prepared. With the other characters, you had the gamut of personalities from loving, to controlling, insecure to confident. All of these personalities round out the story nicely with just enough tension to make the story engaging.

I can’t forget to mention the romance portion of the story. For Willa, she doesn’t feel like she needs a man to make her life whole but there is one man that seems to fill the bill, Gabe Gresham. They have been friends since childhood and there is something that pulls them together. But don’t think that their path is easy because it is not and that is one of those twists I mentioned. There are several other love stories occurring, but you will have to read the book to discover those for yourself.

Here are some of my favorite quotes (and I did trim the number back – so many more I could have shared!)

“Every day, every moment, I choose you.”

“It was as if God had wrapped his directions up in my friend’s voice so I’d be sure to hear them.”

“You needn’t be afraid of your words, Miss Duvall. Only careful. They’re as easy to gather as rocks, and just as easy to throw about, but don’t underestimate them.”

“Don’t waste a moment when you find the one you love.”

“That letter had been shaking up the household ever since it had been unleashed here, and now it seemed to have somehow landed with her.”

“These words have a life beyond the page. They’ve taken flight in this house, moving where they will, seeping into the cracks of hearts. It’s woken something up in them, opened them to the possibility that love exists and they are worthy recipients. And that is vital.”

“Allow yourself to be caught by a man, Miss Duvall. The right one is worth the risk.”

“…everyone had a story, some with cracks deeper than anyone could imagine.”

“Matched souls always find their way back to one another, for they seek refuge in the same place.”

 

Overall, I highly recommend this book. The author takes us on a journey that will not be forgotten and many wise words are spoken that we could take to heart even today.

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joanna Davidson Politano is the award-winning author of Lady Jayne Disappears and A Rumored Fortune. She loves tales that capture the colorful, exquisite details in ordinary lives and is eager to hear anyone’s story.

She lives with her husband and their two kids in a house in the woods near Lake Michigan.

 

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ONE WINNER: Copy of The Love Note + $25 B&N Gift Card + Pack of 50 Love Notes Cards.

 

OCTOBER 27-NOVEMBER 6, 2020 

 

(US ONLY)

 

 

 

 

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10/27/20 Book Trailer Hall Ways Blog
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10/29/20 Review Rainy Days with Amanda
10/30/20 Top Five Story Schmoozing Book Reviews
10/30/20 Review Carpe Diem Chronicles
10/31/20 Excerpt 1 All the Ups and Downs
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11/2/20 Author Interview The Adventures of a Travelers Wife
11/2/20 Review The Clueless Gent
11/3/20 Guest Post Max Knight
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11/5/20 Review Jennie Reads
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Posted in 4 paws, Historical, mystery, Review, romance on November 3, 2020

 

 

 

 

The Gentleman and the Thief: Proper Romance Victorian

 

Author: Sarah M. Eden

 

Series: Book 2 in The Dread Penny Society

 

Genre: Historical Mystery/Suspense, Victorian Romance, Inspirational Fiction

 

Publisher: Shadow Mountain Publishing (November 3, 2020)

 

Length: (368) pages

 

 

Synopsis

 

A standalone novel in The Dread Penny Society set in 1865 London brimming with secrets, scandal, suspense, and romance.


From the moment Hollis Darby meets Ana Newport, he’s smitten. Even though he’s from a wealthy, established family and she isn’t, he wishes he could have a life with her by his side. But Hollis has a secret: the deep coffers that have kept his family afloat for generations are bare, so he supports himself by writing penny dreadfuls under a pseudonym. If not for the income from his novels, he would be broke.

Ana Newport also has a secret. Though she once had a place in society thanks to her father’s successful business, bankruptcy and scandal reduced his fortune to nothing more than a crumbling townhouse. So Ana teaches music during the day, and at night she assumes the identity of the “Phantom Fox.” She breaks into the homes of the wealthy to reclaim trinkets and treasures she feels were unjustly stolen from her family when they were struggling.

When Hollis’s brother needs to hire a music tutor for his daughter, Hollis recommends Ana, giving him a chance to spend time with her. Ana needs the income and is eager for the opportunity to get to know the enigmatic gentleman. What neither of them expects is how difficult it will be to keep their respective secrets from each other.

When a spree of robberies rocks the city, Ana and Hollis join forces to solve the crimes, discovering that working together deepens the affection between them. After all, who better to save the day than a gentleman and a thief?

 

 

 

Amazon | B&N

 

Book Depository | Bookshop | BookBub

 

 

Praise

 

“The real joy in Eden’s follow-up to The Lady and the Highwayman (2019) is the furthering of the overarching crime story and the work of the Dread Penny Society as Hollis and Ana pursue a chaste romance. Eden excels at exploring the realities of Victorian life and class differences. Once again, chapters of penny dreadfuls written by the characters are interspersed throughout, with Hollis’ story about a school for ghosts offering particular delight. Fans of Eden’s smart series will be thrilled and impatient for the next installment.”— Booklist, starred review

 

“Every time I thought my racing heart just couldn’t take the suspense anymore, I’d turn the page and smile.”— Bookconfessions

 

“Eden writes it well, so thoroughly researched that you’re transported and in Victoria England. Great suspense and romance.”— Leslie, Books and Socks Rock

 

“Undeniably clever, suspenseful, well-researched, and deftly written…”— Katie Jackson, com

 

“Charming, suggestive, and featuring rich historical details, The Gentleman and the Thief has the elements of a gritty, juicy penny dreadful.”— Foreword Reviews

 

 

Review

 

I have enjoyed this new series by Sarah Eden. I love the historical aspect but what I think I really like are the stories within the story – the penny dreadfuls. They are witty and I can see where these would take a person’s mind off the bad things going on around them. Like they say, get lost in a book!

This is also supposed to be a proper romance. To me, that just means a very clean romance story set in the past when people were more proper and had manners. This book definitely fills that bill but the romance is very light. We know that Hollis and Ana are attracted to each other and have their flirtations and interactions, but I think the book was more focused on other things such as the DPS – Dreadful Penny Society – and their works trying to get urchins and orphans off of the street and away from those that abuse them. There is also the mystery of who is the Phantom Fox. Granted the answer is discovered early on, but I enjoyed watching how that story unfolded as well.

I found all of the characters engaging and they all added something to the story whether it was good or bad. I think that if you like clean, historical novels that you will like this series.

We give this 4 paws ups.

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Sarah M. Eden is a USA Today best-selling author of witty and charming historical romances, including 2019’s Foreword Reviews INDIE Awards Gold Winner for Romance, The Lady and the Highwayman, and 2020 Holt Medallion finalist, Healing Hearts. She is a two-time “Best of State” Gold Medal winner for fiction and a three-time Whitney Award winner. Combining her obsession with history and her affinity for tender love stories, Sarah loves crafting deep characters and heartfelt romances set against rich historical backdrops. She holds a bachelor’s degree in research and happily spends hours perusing the reference shelves of her local library.

 

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Posted in 4 paws, Review, suspense, Thriller, Time Travel on October 30, 2020

 

 

 

 

Title: THE ANCESTOR

Author: Lee Matthew Goldberg

Publisher: All Due Respect

Genre: Thriller / Mystery

 

 

Synopsis

 

A man wakes up in present-day Alaskan wilderness with no idea who he is, nothing on him save an empty journal with the date 1898 and a mirror. He sees another man hunting nearby, astounded that they look exactly alike. After following this other man home, he witnesses a wife and child that brings forth a rush of memories of his own wife and child, except he’s certain they do not exist in modern times—but from his life in the late 1800s. After recalling his name is Wyatt, he worms his way into his doppelganger Travis Barlow’s life. Memories become unearthed the more time he spends, making him believe that he’d been frozen after coming to Alaska during the Gold Rush and that Travis is his great-great grandson. Wyatt is certain gold still exists in the area and finding it with Travis will ingratiate himself to the family, especially with Travis’s wife Callie, once Wyatt falls in love. This turns into a dangerous obsession affecting the Barlows and everyone in their small town, since Wyatt can’t be tamed until he also discovers the meaning of why he was able to be preserved on ice for over a century.

 

A meditation on love lost and unfulfilled dreams, The Ancestor is a thrilling page-turner in present day Alaska and a historical adventure about the perilous Gold Rush expeditions where prospectors left behind their lives for the promise of hope and a better future. The question remains whether it was all worth the sacrifice….

 

 

 

 

Down & Out Books

 

Praise

 

“Lee Matthew Goldberg is an animal—there is no other way to say it. His prose is heavyweight ambitious, as visceral as a sweaty-toothed dog at your throat. He evokes Robert Louis Stevenson as much as he does a modern thriller novelist. And I’ll be honest: I expected a crime novel, but I got a spell-binding epic, an epistolary revelation, a tale as rich as a paying gold mine. The Ancestor is more than a novel. It’s an ode to the rich tradition of adventure storytelling…seasoned with ample spice of love and violence and greed.” —Matt Phillips, author of Countdown and Know Me from Smoke

“In The Ancestor, Lee Matthew Goldberg masterfully weaves together a story involving family and violence set against the backdrop of an unforgiving Alaska of both past and present.” —Andrew Davie, author of Pavement and Ouroboros

“From the icy opening battle of man vs. wolf, you feel yourself in the hands of a master storyteller and that feeling never lets up.” —SJ Rozan, bestselling author of Paper Son

“This thrilling novel is rich in descriptions of the vast, snowy, and deadly wilderness of Alaska; it ably captures the type of person who chases gold.” —Foreword Reviews

“A story that blends the familiar and the supernatural in a manner that calls Stephen King’s work to mind. That said, Goldberg’s book possesses a flavor all its own—a distinctive mélange of the sincere and the strange.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Beautifully written, and capturing the unforgiving grit of Gold Rush Alaska, Lee Matthew Goldberg’s The Ancestor is a thrilling page-turner with an ache in its heart. I’m a huge fan.” —Roz Nay, author of Hurry Home and Our Little Secret

“A suspenseful historical thriller.” —Indie Reader

“One of the year’s best thrillers. Blake Crouch fans will love Goldberg’s Alaskan opus.” —BestThrillers

 

 

Review

 

I enjoy a good time travel novel but usually the ones I have read go from the present to the past. This book is the opposite and Wyatt finds himself transported 120+ years into the future. What a surprise that had to be for him. He manages to adapt better than I expected he would, but perhaps that is because they are in a small town in Alaska, and while there is some newer technology, the bulk of the town seems to be working class and sometimes struggling to get by.

The story focuses on Wyatt and Travis, two men that seem to look a lot alike and that could be because Wyatt is Travis’ great great grandfather. Or so we are told. Wyatt struggles with what he has lost including his wife and son and to find his ancestors is probably mind-boggling for him to grasp. But once he does, he wants to know everything he can about his family and what happened to them. He is able to discover some information which I think helps him accept what has happened to him. I found his interactions with Aylen interesting. I think they are both searching for more to hold on to in their lives.

Travis has dreams of his own and wants to be more for himself and his family. I think he wrestles with the memory of his brother and how that impacted his family. But he has a wife that adores him and a son that is a hoot. I love that he calls Caribu, boo. Travis’ father, Stu, has issues as well and I felt like he was obsessed with discovering what happened to his son that died.

While the book really revolves around the men, the women in their lives are strong competent characters. They don’t take any flack and will stand up for their family. I like that about Callie, Cora, and Lorinda. While they may realize that options are limited in their town, they don’t let that hold them back or down.

This story moved along at a pretty steady pace with some peaks of excitement. I liked the journal entries that shared more of Wyatt’s journey to Alaska. It gives us a better insight into the man.

This was an enjoyable book and we give it 4 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Excerpt

 

Chapter 1

 

One eye open, the other frozen shut. He knows what an eye is, but that other “I” remains a mystery. Mind scooped out and left in ice. Words are hunted, slowly return. Blue sky, that’s what he sees. The sun twinkling like a diamond. Tundra, there’s another recalled word. Packed snow on all sides as if the world succumbed to white. The air a powerful whistle. A breeze blows, not a friend but a penance. It passes right through and chills to the core, this enemy wind. Limbs atrophied, no idea when they last moved. Boil of a sun thaws and prickles. Tiny spiders swinging from leg hairs, biting into flesh. He cries out but there is no sound. For it feels like he hasn’t spoken in centuries.

Back of throat tastes of metal. Blood trapped in phlegm. A cough sends a splatter of red against the stark land, a streak in the form of a smile. When was the last time he ate? His stomach growls in agony, a good sign. Organs working, or at least attempting to work. His one eye scans to the left and the right, no sign of anyone, not even an animal. No chance for a savior or sustenance.

He gums his jaw, the first inkling of movement. Aware of his scraggily beard coated in frost. Crystals spiral from his chin, collect in his lap. Now he sees his hands, luckily in gloves except they are a thin brown leather, rather useless. Bones crack as he maneuvers to remove the gloves. Fingers tremble once hit with fresh air and numbness subsides. Massages his legs, gets the blood flowing, an injection of life. The spiders accelerate and then relent, toes wiggle, and he sits up. Around his neck rests a notebook and a fountain pen, the tip crusted in flakes. He feels an object in a front pocket and pulls out a silver compact mirror, the back embroidered with floral patterns, ladylike. This is not my mirror, he decides, but then has a more important realization. Who am I? With trembling hands, he brings the mirror up to his face for a glance.

The reflection of a stranger. All beard save for some features that emerge. A bulbous but authoritative nose, green eye flecked with gold, a mane of dark hair cascading to his shoulders. Handsome in a grizzled way. Shades of a bear in the roundness of his cheeks and a wolf in his stare.

“I am…,” his lips try to say, but there is no answer. Often one can wake from a dream and the dream seems real for a moment, but a sense of self never vanishes. Whoever he was has been long gone, unlikely to return anytime soon. At least while he remains freezing in the wilderness.

I must make it out of here.

It’s relieving that he thinks of himself as an “I”. Whoever he is, he is someone. A mother birthed and fed him from her breast. A father taught him.…taught him what exactly? Survival skills? How to hunt? If he had a father worth his while, he’d know how to do this.

And then, a caterwauling from the depths of his soul, a fawn-in-distress call that plants a trap for curious predators. He knows this sound well, meaning he’s lured prey before. His daddy schooled him like a good man should.

The waiting game. Another call erupts, a coyote’s howl this time. He can recognize the difference. Then it comes to him that he needs to know what to do should an animal appear. He pats down his pockets, no weapon but his fists. And then, the clinking of sharp nails against the ice sheet. A majestic wolf, eyes like the sky, shimmering coat the color of clouds. Its charcoal nose twitches; the blood he hacked up in plain sight. He and the wolf lock into a dueling stare, neither wanting to be the first to flinch. A vision of death with baring teeth, or the start of his new life if victorious. The wolf doesn’t give him a chance to contemplate, lunging with a mouth full of saliva. He catches it in a brutal embrace and becomes knocked off his heels, slamming his back against the hard ground. They skitter down a slick snowcap, snapping at one another like angry lovers. The wolf is relentless, a worthy opponent, a test of wills. He gets the beast in a headlock, trying to crack its neck, but the wolf is too slippery. Breath fumes from other kills circle into his nostrils—this wolf has never lost a battle before. Blood splashes, no clue which of them has been wounded. They spin in the snow like a tornado. He makes a fist, jams it in the wolf’s mouth. Teeth marks scrape against his knuckles as he rams his fist farther down the wolf’s throat. The wolf heaves, chokes, attempting to chew off his hand but its strategy is futile. It has only come across other animals, never a human mind that can think steps ahead.

Now he attempts a headlock again with his left arm, squeezing off circulation. The wolf lets out a whimper that reverberates through his wrist. They lock into a dueling stare again, except this time he does not see the many kills of the wolf through its gaze. He visualizes its sadness, its inevitable end. And then, the sound of a heavy branch snapping, the wolf’s neck broken, his blood-soaked fist removed from the back of its throat. Its dead tongue lolling out of its mouth against the icy bed. He pets its beautiful coat, this formidable foe, now a present wrapped with a bow. Delectable to quench his all-consuming hunger.

He needs the clearest block of ice he can find. Using the wolf’s teeth to carve a fine translucent round piece, he creates a magnifying glass. He rubs the dirt away and keeps rubbing until enough moisture flecks off. There’s a bed of whittled grass at the slope he and wolf ended up in, and he holds the ice over the dry grass, propping it against two logs until a brilliant rainbow prism shoots through and ignites a fire. He rips off all the breakable branches he can locate to stoke the flames. While it continues to spread, he procures a rock to blunt out the wolf’s teeth, then uses them for the painstaking task of skinning the fur. He does it carefully so a semblance of a coat remains, which he dips into a nearby brook to wash away any lingering blood and sinew. The sun has mostly dipped behind the mountains and he wears the wolf’s coat to mask the chill, then roasts its carcass over the roaring fire, breaking off legs and gnawing while the true flesh still cooks.

The meat is a godsend to his empty stomach and also an immediate poison that his body rejects by throwing up. But he sucks on some ice and the queasiness diminishes. By the time it’s fully cooked, darkness reigns and he feels more like a shell than anyone has before. Except with each chew, this lessens and soon he becomes human again. But the loneliness isn’t as easy to fight off. There are souls that feel lonely, he assumes, but at least they have themselves for company. They can rely on memories to help them through cold nights. He searches his mind for a wisp of the past, any nugget, wading through a never-ending sea. The horizon seemingly attainable, but with every stroke just as far away. He’d cry but the tears are frozen in his ducts, and his one eye still sealed shut.

When enough of the wolf has been eaten so his belly distends like a newly pregnant woman, he feeds the fire with more broken limbs and curls up to its warmth, his only confident in this harsh wilderness, possibly his only companion forever—a lifetime of attempting to be caressed by flames and nothing more. He wraps himself tightly in the wolf’s fur, hoping that when he wakes again he’ll know who he is. The nightmare vanished along with the sun rising like a bride’s pretty little hand on his grizzled cheek.

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Lee Matthew Goldberg is the author of the novels THE DESIRE CARD, THE MENTOR, and SLOW DOWN. He has been published in multiple languages and nominated for the 2018 Prix du Polar. The second book in the Desire Card series, PREY NO MORE, is forthcoming, along with his Alaskan Gold Rush novel THE ANCESTOR. He is the editor-in-chief and co-founder of Fringe, dedicated to publishing fiction that’s outside-of-the-box. His pilots and screenplays have been finalists in Script Pipeline, Book Pipeline, Stage 32, We Screenplay, the New York Screenplay, Screencraft, and the Hollywood Screenplay contests. After graduating with an MFA from the New School, his writing has also appeared in the anthology DIRTY BOULEVARD, The Millions, Cagibi, The Montreal Review, The Adirondack Review, The New Plains Review, Underwood Press, Monologging and others. He is the co-curator of The Guerrilla Lit Reading Series and lives in New York City.

 

Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

 

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Journal, Review on October 25, 2020

 

 

For the last three years, I have been fortunate enough to be chosen as a blogger for Abrams Books and their dinner party. It brings together bloggers, instagrammers, and others to spread the word about new cookbooks and the like from this publisher.

I’ve had a slow start this year in sharing the books, but am hoping to rectify that over the next week. Let’s just say 2020 hasn’t been the best year for anyone.

We received this journal in our first box. I will admit I’m not a big journaling fan, but I can see the potential for this journal especially if it is used with someone young or old. I can envision answering the questions with a young child and then perhaps bringing it back out years later and see how the answer change. For our older generation, I can see using this as a tool to create dialogue regarding the changes in food preparation, meals, and the like. It could be a great resource for future generations.

While reading through this book, there are some questions that a child couldn’t answer, such as bars where the bartender knows me. A senior may not be able to answer that one either BUT they might have some interesting stories to tell about their youth. I think, in either case, this journal should be used as a starting point and let your imagination run wild from there.

The illustrations in this book are beautiful and complement the topic. I had to check out the website to see what other works have been created. I discovered that she lives in the Netherlands and does work for a lot of larger companies. Annalies has some serious talent.

 

I am giving away a copy of this book to one follower in the US (shipping costs). Many ways to enter, so don’t delay!

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, Historical, Review, romance, Texas on October 25, 2020

 

 

THE KISSING TREE

 

Four Novellas Rooted in Timeless Love

 

by Karen Witemeyer, Regina Jennings,

 

Amanda Dykes, and Nicole Deese

 

 

Genre: Christian / Romance / Anthology

Publisher: Bethany House

Date of Publication: October 13, 2020

Number of Pages: 400

 

 

Scroll down for the giveaway!

 

 

 

 

In this Texas-sized romance novella collection, courting couples, decades apart, leave a permanent mark of their love by carving their initials into the same oak’s bark.

 

Regina Jennings: “Broken Limbs, Mended Hearts”

 

When a young man from her past returns and upends their small town with a new invention, schoolteacher Bella Eden is reminded of the heartbreak she suffered years ago under the old oak tree. When her job is on the line, can she trust the man who disrupted her life to help her fight for a brighter future?

 

Karen Witemeyer: “Inn for a Surprise”

 

Determined to keep love alive for others, Phoebe Woodward builds an inn that caters to couples. When her father sends a property manager to help make it a success, she finds her whimsical vision thwarted by his stodgy practicality. Finding the right blend of romance and reality is a challenge, and her spinster heart may be in for a surprise.

 

Amanda Dykes: “From Roots to Sky”

 

WWII airman Luke Hampstead found comfort in letters from the sister of a lost compatriot. When he visits Texas to thank her, he discovers her constructing a project with surprising ties to his letters . . . and that she herself is even more surprising. While a promising opportunity awaits him elsewhere, will what they’ve shared be enough to give their future flight?

 

Nicole Deese: “Heartwood”

 

Abby Brookshire’s world is turned upside down when the historic tree she’s strived to preserve as the head groundskeeper at the Kissing Tree Inn is put in danger of removal. Making matters worse, the only way to protect its legacy is to partner with the man she’s been ignoring since he left town years ago. Will she have the courage to move on from the past and start a new beginning?

 

 

Amazon || Barnes & Noble || Baker Publishing Group

 

 

 

 

 

These four novellas travel through time in Oak Springs, Texas, and weave together love stories surrounding the Kissing Tree. While each story is independent of the other, there are a few ties that bring them all together besides the tree. The main characters in the first story, “Broken Limbs, Mended Hearts”, Bella and Adam, make an appearance in “Inn for a Surprise”. The Kissing Tree Inn is constructed in “Inn for a Surprise” but is still around in the last two stories and it is a descendent from the story “From Roots to Sky” that ties the fourth story into the book. Each story brings together two souls that thought they couldn’t find love and they couldn’t be more wrong.

I don’t think I can pick a favorite out of these four stories. Each has a unique tale to tell and I fell in love with all of the characters and the situations that they endured to get to the apex of finding their true love.

 

“The magic found in Oak Springs had less to do with a romantic inn and everything to do with the nature surrounding it.”

 

Broken Limbs, Mended Hearts features Bella and Adam. You could say there were not bosom buddies while in their last year of school, in fact, a situation occurred that had Bella changing her chosen profession. I don’t think she ever forgave Adam for that incident until he arrives back in town several years later and realizes she is the one that he wants as his wife. I liked how Adam realized he had a couple of hurdles to cross to win her affection and he is quite creative in helping get past those barriers. I enjoyed this line because progress happens no matter the time and this reminded me of that. Adam says this line to Bella – “I came to Oak Springs to bring our town up to date. It’s the 1870s. Progress needs to happen.”

Inn for a Surprise is the story of Phoebe and Barnabus. This story had me in stitches because Barnabus thinks that this inn is a lost cause when it comes to marketing and has, in his mind, renamed the inn with several alliterations, including the Inn of Pecking Pulp Providers. When Phoebe stumbles across this information, I think it causes her to see Barnabus in a new light. They work well together as a team and it shouldn’t be too surprising that they fall in love. What did surprise me was her father’s reaction. You’ll have to read the story to discover that answer.

From Roots to Sky is Hannah and Luke’s journey. Luke came to Oak Springs out of a sense of obligation to Hannah’s brother that died during WWII. He had taken on the task of writing to Hannah and he included drawings of what he saw in Europe, much like her brother had done for her before he died. Hannah is endearing and scattered all at the same time. I’m sure many are not sure how to handle her proclivity to keep moving and not wait for anyone to help her do anything. I admired her determination to forge her own path and not a traditional path that might be expected of a woman in the 1940s.

Heartwood is the last novella and brings together Abby and Griffin. Abby is a descendent of a character mentioned in “From Roots to Sky”, Arnie, and the cottage built in that story by Hannah and Luke is another tie to all of the stories. I enjoyed watching these two lovebirds (when they finally admit it) reconnect even though it takes some time to get there since Griffin is there to assess the Kissing Tree and this riles Abby up to no end.  Abby and Griffin know each other well and both love nature and the outdoors. In fact, I liked this line that Abby says to Griffin – “You’ll always smell like trees no matter what you squirt on your shirt. Nature’s in your DNA.”

 

No matter what sort of story you might like, each novella in this book will appeal to you in one way or another, from the characters to the setting.

We give this book 5 paws ups.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Voted #1 Reader’s Favorite Christian Romance Author of 2019 by Family Fiction Magazine, bestselling author  Karen Witemeyer offers warmhearted historical romance with a flair for humor, feisty heroines, and swoon-worthy Texas heroes. She makes her home in Abilene, Texas, with her husband and three children.

 

 

Website ║ Karen’s Posse Reader Facebook Group

 

 

 

Regina Jennings is a graduate of Oklahoma Baptist University, with a degree in English and a minor in history. She’s the winner of the National Readers’ Choice Award, a two-time Golden Quill finalist, and a finalist for the Oklahoma Book of the Year Award. Regina has worked at the Mustang News and at First Baptist Church of Mustang, along with time at the Oklahoma National Stockyards and various livestock shows. She lives outside of Oklahoma City with her husband and four children.

Website ║ Facebook

 

 

Amanda Dykes is a drinker of tea, dweller of redemption, and spinner of hope-filled tales who spends most days chasing wonder and words with her family. She’s a former English teacher and the author of Whose Waves These Are, a Booklist 2019 Top Ten Romance debut, as well as three novellas.

 

Website ║ Instagram

 

 

 

 

Nicole Deese’s eight humorous, heartfelt, and hope-filled novels include the 2017 Carol Award-winning A Season to Love. Her 2018 release, A New Shade of Summer, was a finalist in the RITA Awards, Carol Awards, and INSPY Awards. Both of these books are from her bestselling Love in Lenox series. When she’s not working on her next contemporary romance, she can usually be found reading one by a window overlooking the inspiring beauty of the Pacific Northwest. She lives in small-town Idaho with her happily-ever-after hubby, two rambunctious sons, and princess daughter with the heart of a warrior.

 

Website ║ Facebook

 

 

 

————————————-

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

SIX WINNERS! Grand prize: print copy of The Kissing Tree plus custom, 18” x 3.5” wooden sign;

 

five other winners: print copy of The Kissing Tree.


 October 20-30, 2020

 

(U.S. Only)

 

 

 

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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:

 

10/22/20 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
10/22/20 Review Chapter Break Book Blog
10/22/20 Review Missus Gonzo
10/23/20 Review Carpe Diem Chronicles
10/23/20 Review Book Fidelity
10/24/20 Review Story Schmoozing Book Reviews
10/24/20 Review Librariel Book Adventures
10/25/20 Review StoreyBook Reviews
10/25/20 Review That’s What She’s Reading
10/26/20 BONUS Promo All the Ups and Downs
10/26/20 Review The Adventures of a Travelers Wife
10/26/20 Review Reading by Moonlight

 

 

 

 

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Posted in 4 paws, Review, romance on October 23, 2020

 

 

Synopsis

 

The third book in the Highland, Georgia romantic comedy series from Laura Trentham, A Highlander is Coming to Town, full of love, laughs…and highlanders!

You better watch out. . .

Holt Pierson is dreading Christmas. His parents absconded to Florida for the season and left him to handle the family farm which will be his one day―whether he wants it or not. Driven by duty, Holt has always followed the path expected of him. But lately, he’s been questioning what he wants and where he belongs. Will assuming the responsibility of the Pierson farm make him happy or is there something―or someone―else out in the wider world calling to him?

To Claire Smythe, the Scottish lead singer of a touring band, Highland, Georgia, is the perfect place to hide . . .until a very handsome and deeply curious Holt begins to ask all the questions Claire doesn’t want to answer. As Holt draws Claire out from under and into the fabric of small-town life, can Claire put the past behind her and embrace the unexpected gifts of the season―including the new and lasting love?

 

 

 

 

Review

 

This has been a fun series to read and I enjoy the ties between Scotland and this town in Georgia.

If you delve into this series, make sure to start with the first book since the characters continue from book to book and there is a little bit of an introduction into the various characters. I haven’t read the second book (this is book 3) and I feel like I missed something regarding Claire and her decision to leave the band she was singing with and hide out in Highland. There are some mentions of running from her family and the obligation, but I don’t know what caused her to leave the band.

I enjoyed watching the interaction between Claire and Holt. They definitely have some sizzling chemistry, but Claire’s walls hold him back from having a serious relationship. Claire’s secret is holding her back from a full relationship with him or anyone else. It is a shame that she feels she has to hide away from those in town and dress in clothing that disguises who she is. But time helps her realize what she wants out of life.

I think one character that steals the book is Mrs. Meadows that Claire lives with and is assisting with various tasks around her house. She is a feisty woman that has endured a lot in her life and we get a glimpse of those tragedies. She isn’t afraid to stand up to Holt in the beginning for the wrongs his family had done to her in the past. Thankfully, she is a smart woman and moves past those.

If you are looking for an escape this might be a good choice to pick up.  We give this book 4 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

LAURA TRENTHAM is an award-winning author of contemporary and historical romance. She is a member of RWA, and has been a finalist multiple times in the Golden Heart competition. A chemical engineer by training and a lover of books by nature, she lives in South Carolina.

 

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