Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, Literary, Review, Texas on July 30, 2022

 

 

 

PAPER TARGETS

 

by

 

Patricia Watts

 

 

Suspense / Literary Fiction / Women’s Fiction

Publisher: Atmosphere Press

Pages: 324 pages

Publication Date: May 3, 2022

 

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Everyone knew that Roanne never got angry­—until the night she killed her ex-husband and herself.

 

Roanne, a nice, suburban lady in her sixties who works at a Hallmark shop and volunteers at the Food Bank in Round Rock, Texas, calls her lifelong friend, Connie, confesses to murder, then puts the gun to her own head. Connie, spurred by Roanne’s last words about a lifetime of unspoken rage, sets aside her work as a cozy mystery writer and cupcake shop owner to confront the men who have stolen her dignity while she remained silent, including a bully brother, a rapist, and an ex-spouse. On a journey to reclaim her inner power and to make peace with the loss of her treasured friend, Connie’s mission is to avoid the same tragic path as Roanne, but she takes along a gun, just in case.

With pathos and humor, Paper Targets, by Patricia Watts, calls us to speak our own narratives, even when it is uncomfortable or risky, and shows us the magnificence of a friendship that transcends time.

 

 

 

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This was a more powerful story than I was expecting. As a woman, I have experienced men’s dismissiveness in my career and dealt with those who didn’t think I was capable. But I have also been around those that lifted me up in my life and encouraged me to seek more than I ever thought possible.

Connie and Roanne grew up in a time when women were just finding their footing and men took them for granted, diminished them based on looks, and took advantage of them. The #MeToo movement may have started, but that doesn’t mean that men will admit to their lecherous pasts and still want to blame the women. Roanne decided that she couldn’t do it anymore, which sets Connie on a path to confront her “Paper Targets.” The term Paper Targets is addressed earlier in the book when Roanne asks Connie who from her past would be on a target if she was practicing at a gun range. Connie names some people and after Roanne’s death, she realizes that she needs to unload some baggage on these men and lighten the load she is carrying. While not all of the men admit to their pasts, it forces Connie to move forward and not allow these to drain her soul.

“…this is not about revenge. So do all these guys deserve to be called out? Doesn’t the good they may have done balance out with the pain they caused me in the past? Am I just holding onto grudges and carrying that with me forever?”

“I’ve been knocked down and beat down and held down, but I found the courage to stand up and speak out and demand validation as a woman. We have rage that needs to be taken seriously, because, if it isn’t, it could kill us; it has killed us, you know?”

While not a lighthearted book, it is very moving and might make you think about your own life. I felt for Connie and Roanne, enduring fathers who set them up to fail in their future relationships with their husbands. But at the same time, they could have tipped the scale in the other direction, but without a foundation of parental support, it was hard to make that a reality. I admired Connie for confronting the men from her past and found the scene with her father to be very emotional. That was probably the hardest conversation she had to have with anyone.

This story jumps back and forth in time, allowing us to have a deeper understanding of these women and what their life was like and their relationships with their families. While bleak at times, there is a ray of hope that shines through for those left behind.

This book might just make you think a little bit about your own life and how different situations have impacted the person you have become today. Don’t let the past drag you down.

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Patricia Watts worked as a journalist for more than 20 years for newspapers in Texas, Hawaii, and Alaska. Following her news career, she tried her skill as a paralegal and then spent ten years investigating discrimination cases for the Alaska Human Rights Commission. Her novels include: Ghost Light and The Big Empty, crime mysteries co-written with Alaska author Stan Jones; The Frayer, suspense noir; and Watchdogs, a steamy thriller. Her home base is San Diego. She earned her B.A. in journalism at Humboldt State in California. She is the mother of a son and daughter and has eight grandchildren.

 

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The Frayer, and The Big Empty;

 

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Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, mystery, Review, Texas on July 27, 2022

 

 

DEADLY KEEPSAKES

 

A Tori Winters Mystery

 

by

 

ANITA DICKASON

 

 

Categories: Mystery / Women Sleuths

Publisher: Mystic Circle Books

Pages: 360 pages

Publication Date: July 1, 2022

 

 

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The past becomes the future. Secrets that can kill!

 

After someone tries to kill her, Tori Winters is on the run. Looking for a place to hide, a mysterious phone call about a vague inheritance seems to be the answer. After all, who would think of looking for her in Granbury, a small quaint Texas town? Instead, her life is about to spin into an existence where nothing is as it seems. The historic house she inherits has secrets. Ones she’s been warned can kill. A stranger in a strange town, who can she trust? There is the kindly lawyer and his son, or the disinherited step-grandson. What secrets do they hide? Tori’s newfound fortune may not be a blessing. It could become her death warrant.

 

 

 

 

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This is one of the best books I have read so far this year! I don’t even know where to start, but if you love mysteries and a little suspense, then pick up this book and be swept away by the characters, mystery, and this small Texas town.

Living in the DFW area, I always love finding books that are set here to see if they get the details right and can recognize different locations noted in the book. Anita does her research, and I had recently taken a trip to Granbury, I could picture the town square and the shops in my mind while following along.

Tori is one kick-ass character. When I first started reading this novel where Tori is doing her job as a hospice nurse, it took me back to last summer when I saw this firsthand after the passing of a family member. The counting of pills, destroying the medications, and so much more. Despite that certain situation throwing her in the middle of a hornet’s nest, she didn’t back down from those harassing her. Tori has a lot of gumption but also realizes that she might be safer in another town. A random call from a lawyer in Granbury draws her to this town to find out why he is calling her about an inheritance since she doesn’t have any remaining family, or so she believes. Tori’s trip to Texas turns out to be a permanent one once she discovers what she has inherited.

The book is ripe with amazing characters, from the truly despicable to new best friends for Tori. Multiple characters set off red flags for me, but the true killer was a surprise. Maybe it shouldn’t have been once certain facts were disclosed, but it didn’t click with me to suspect this character. Perhaps because it was also 1 in the morning, and I couldn’t put this book down.

I had suspicions about noises Tori heard in her house but had nothing to back it up until the author shared additional details based on Tori’s observations. I marveled at what was uncovered, like a secret wine cellar and the home’s history. There were definitely secrets kept in that house, and it took Tori and her team to uncover them. I don’t think that we know all of the secrets since this will be a series, and you must leave something for the next book(s).

I had to chuckle at the small-town politics and the antics of some citizens who thought they were better than everyone else. That mentality is 100% accurate!

I’ll be interested to see what sort of romantic interest Tori will have in future books. There are a couple of men vying for her attention, but who will come out the winner? Or will either of them?

So, the only thing I can’t get on board with regarding Tori is her sandwich choice – peanut butter and mayonnaise. Yuck!  But I guess not every character can be perfect, and I’m sure someone out there likes that combination.

This is an outstanding book, and if I could give it more paws, I would, but it gets a 5 paw rating, and the series will be on my “must read” list.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Award-winning Author Anita Dickason is a twenty-two-year veteran of the Dallas Police Department. She served as a patrol officer, undercover narcotics detective, advanced accident investigator, tactical officer, and first female sniper on the Dallas SWAT team.

Anita writes about what she knows, cops and crime. Her police background provides an unending source of inspiration for her plots and characters. Many incidents and characters portrayed in her books are based on personal experience. For her, the characters are the fun part of writing as she never knows where they will take her. There is always something out of the ordinary in her stories.

In Anita’s debut novel, Sentinels of the Night, she created an elite FBI Unit, the Trackers. Since then, she has added three more Tracker crime thrillers, Going Gone!, A u 7 9, and Operation Navajo. The novels are not a series and can be read in any order.

As a Texas author, many of Anita’s books are based in Texas, or there is a link to Texas. When she stepped outside of the Tracker novels and wrote, Not Dead, she selected Meridian, a small community in central Texas for the location.

 

 

 

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Posted in 5 paws, fiction, Historical, Review, Texas on July 21, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

Set during the Great Depression, Sarah Bird’s Last Dance on the Starlight Pier is a novel about one woman—and a nation—struggling to be reborn from the ashes.

July 3. 1932. Shivering and in shock, Evie Grace Devlin watches the Starlite Palace burn into the sea and wonders how she became a person who would cause a man to kill himself. She’d come to Galveston to escape a dark past in vaudeville and become a good person, a nurse. When that dream is cruelly thwarted, Evie is swept into the alien world of dance marathons. All that she has been denied—a family, a purpose, even love—waits for her there in the place she dreads most: the spotlight.

Last Dance on the Starlight Pier is a sweeping novel that brings to spectacular life the enthralling worlds of both dance marathons and the family-run empire of vice that was Galveston in the Thirties. Unforgettable characters tell a story that is still deeply resonant today as America learns what Evie learns, that there truly isn’t anything this country can’t do when we do it together. That indomitable spirit powers a story that is a testament to the deep well of resilience in us all that allows us to not only survive the hardest of hard times, but to find joy, friends, and even family, in them.

 

 

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Review

 

The depression was a hard time for most people in the US. While the realities of life were obvious, people still found ways to entertain themselves. In this case, the dance marathons pitted couples against one another to win a cash prize. Looking back, you have to wonder how sane this idea was as some of these marathons lasted months. I can’t even imagine being awake that long even with catnaps here and there. I don’t know about historical accuracy, but this novel featured “hoofers” or employees in the marathons and typically won, keeping the money in the company or with the promoter. Reading these accounts made me appreciate what people did to ensure their livelihood.

Evie Grace Devlin was no stranger to performing, but her dream was to be a nurse, and she thought she had succeeded when she was accepted into a nursing school in Galveston on a full scholarship. Who knew the head nun would have it out for her and yank that from under her at the last moment? This moment throws Evie back into the theater world via dance marathons as a nurse of sorts. This ragtag group became her family, and I learned a lot about how these marathons worked and to what extent they would help each other just make it through life. When you learn about Evie’s life growing up and how her mother treated her, you won’t lose any love for that woman. Mamie only cares about herself to the extent of torpedoing her daughter’s life.

Zave is a hoofer and has a connection to Evie that she discovers after a short period of time. They form a bond, and Evie thinks he could be her life’s great love until she learns something about him. I won’t spoil that secret, but it creates tension and issues between the two until they resolve the issue.

This story intrigued me, educated me, and gave me all the feels while reading about lives during the Great Depression. There are even political references since it was the same time that FDR ran against Hoover for President. I enjoyed the various settings, from Houston to Galveston to Litchfield to Chicago. Each represented what was happening in these different areas during the depression, and not all towns were alike.

We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Sarah Bird is a bestselling novelist, screenwriter, essayist, and journalist who has lived in Austin, Texas since long before the city became internationally cool. She has published ten novels and two books of essays. Her eleventh novel, LAST DANCE ON THE STARLITE PIER–a gripping tale set in the secret world of the dance marathons of the Great Depression–will be released on April 12th.

Her last novel, DAUGHTER OF A DAUGHTER OF A QUEEN–inspired by the true story of the only woman to serve with the legendary Buffalo Soldiers–was named an All-time Best Books about Texas by the Austin American-Statesman; Best Fiction of 2018, Christian Science Monitor; Favorite Books of 2018, Texas Observer; a One City, One Book choice of seven cities; and a Lit Lovers Book Club Favorites.

Sarah was a finalist for The Dublin International Literary Award; an ALEX award winner; Amazon Literature Best of the Year selection; a two-time winner of the TIL’s Best Novel award; a B&N’s Discover Great Writers selection; a New York Public Libraries Books to Remember; an honoree of theTexas Writers Hall of Fame; an Amazon Literature Best of the Year selection; a Dobie-Paisano Fellowship; and an Austin Libraries Illumine Award for Excellence in Fiction winner. In 2014 she was named Texas Writer of the Year by the Texas Book Festival and presented with a pair of custom-made boots on the floor of the Texas Senate Chamber.

Sarah is a nine-time winner of Austin Best Fiction Writer award. She was recently honored with the University of New Mexico’s 2020 Paul Ré Award for Cultural Advocacy. In 2015 Sarah was one of eight winners selected from 3,800 entries to attend the Meryl Streep Screenwriters’ Lab. Sarah was chosen in 2017 to represent the Austin Public Library as the hologram/greeter installed in the Austin Downtown Library. Sarah was a co-founder of The Writers League of Texas.

She has been an NPR Moth Radio Hour storyteller; a writer for Oprah’s Magazine, NY Times Sunday Magazine and Op Ed columns, Chicago Tribune, Real Simple, Mademoiselle, Glamour, Salon, Daily Beast, Ladies Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, MS, Texas Observer; Alcalde and a columnist for years for Texas Monthly. As a screenwriter, she worked on projects for Warner Bros., Paramount, CBS, National Geographic, Hallmark, ABC, TNT, as well as several independent producers.

She and her husband enjoy open-water swimming and training their corgi puppy not to eat the furniture.

 

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Posted in coming of age, excerpt, Giveaway, Short Story, Southern, Texas on July 9, 2022

 

 

PICTURES OF THE SHARK

 

by

 

THOMAS H. McNEELY

 

 

Short Stories / Southern Fiction / Coming of Age

Publisher: Texas Review Press

Date of Publication: July 12, 2022

Number of Pages: 205 pages

 

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A sudden snowfall in Houston reveals family secrets. A trip to Universal Studios to snap a picture of the shark from Jaws becomes a battle of wills between father and son. A midnight séance and the ghost of Janis Joplin conjure the mysteries of sex. A young boy’s pilgrimage to see Elvis Presley becomes a moment of transformation. A young woman discovers the responsibilities of talent and freedom.

Pictures of the Shark, by Houston native and Dobie Paisano award-winning author Thomas H. McNeely, traces a young man’s coming of age and falling apart. From the rough and tumble of Houston’s early seventies East End to the post-punk Texas bohemia of late eighties Austin, this novel in stories examines what happens when childhood trauma haunts adult lives.

 

 

 

 

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Praise

 

“McNeely’s brilliant stories are filled with delicious menace and heartbreaking hope.” – Pamela Painter, author of What If? Writing Exercises for Fiction Writers and Fabrications: New and Selected Stories

“In these gorgeously crafted interlinked stories, Thomas McNeely demonstrates once again an uncanny ability to illuminate the darkest emotional corners of his characters with a vision that is as tender and compassionate as it is unflinching.” – Antonio Ruiz-Camacho, author of Barefoot Dogs

“With masterful prose, McNeely draws you down into emotional depths where your ambivalence and confusion show you at your most profoundly human. These stories hook you quickly and deeply and keep you even after they end. – C.W. Smith, author of Steplings, Buffalo Nickel, and Understanding Women

 

 

 

Excerpt from “No One’s Trash”

 

From Pictures Of The Shark

 

By Thomas McNeely

 

 

Outside the kitchen, past the glassed-in storm door, rain lashed the back yard, which was already filling up with water.  On the TV, light poles littered the streets, and freeway underpasses were ponds where windshields of cars peeked out like frogs.  Margot hoped Jimmy wouldn’t be foolish enough to drive across Houston to pick up Buddy; though she didn’t want to begrudge him their time together, either.

Buddy sat in front of the TV, his back to her, rigid as a mannequin, the usual mood he assumed when Jimmy came to get him on Saturdays.  Margot had left the back door open to keep an eye on the pecan tree that swayed over the fence with Mr. Knight’s back yard.  What good it would do to watch it fall on her garage, she didn’t know.  Even through the thrum of rain and air conditioner’s moan and the TV announcers’ gabble, she could hear the Knights arguing next door.

Just as she told Buddy to say a prayer that his father would be safe, the lights in the house went out, the TV went dead, the air conditioner stopped.  Buddy glanced back at her – she was standing at the sink, checking the road, which was still clear – then he leaned across the piles of paper on her desk, pressing his nose against the air conditioner to catch the last cool drops, his eyes closed, beatific, as if receiving a sacrament.  How delicate he still was, she thought, his milk-pale skin covering blue veins, his wrists so small she could circle them with her forefinger and thumb.  All morning, he hadn’t spoken to her; she still wasn’t sure if he would now.  Her heart constricted with tenderness for him, a physical ache.

Outside, there was only the steady thrum of rain.  Even the Knights had fallen silent.  Margot wanted to say something to Buddy, but felt suddenly shy.  It was a foolish thing, a humiliating thing, to feel this way with one’s own son.

The phone rang.  She nearly jumped out of her skin; in the sudden quiet, it was uncanny and absurd.  Buddy looked at her, then at the phone, an accusation.

It could only be one of two people: Jimmy, or her mother.  It was Jimmy.  All morning, Margot had called the lab, and Jimmy’s beeper, and his parents’ house, where Jimmy said that he lived.  Jimmy’s mother answered, and asked Margot who she thought she was, calling her son at all hours, hounding him, before she hung up.  Jimmy’s voice, now, was falsely causal, as if he’d just gone to the grocery store and was phoning to see if there was anything he could bring back.  He asked how they were doing, in a tone that suggested he still lived with them, a tone that never failed to jolt her with anger at its presumption, and relief that it was no longer true.  She said they were fine.  He asked her about the backyard.  She said that it was fine, too, that it hadn’t taken on any water, and thanked him for putting in the drain, which was what she knew he wanted to hear.  Buddy glared at her, catching her lie; she turned her back on him.

“I’m not going to be able to make it over there today,” Jimmy said.

“Of course not,” she said, too quickly.

“Have you thought anymore about the letter?” he said.

It was all she thought about.  “Not yet,” she said.

Buddy was watching her.  He’d understood, she saw, that Jimmy wouldn’t come; his expression was like water clearing – relief and also anger.

“I’m sorry,” Jimmy said.  “Tell Buddy I’m sorry.”

“Tell him yourself,” she said.

Buddy cradled the receiver against his shoulder, turning from her, giving mumbled one-word answers to the questions Jimmy always asked:  How was school that week?  How was his horror movie coming along?  He told Jimmy he loved him, too, then put the receiver back in its cradle.  Then he jumped up and down silently, shaking his fists, baring gritted teeth – a hateful, sorrowing dance.  She had borne this kind of anger before from Jimmy.  Now she couldn’t look at him, at Buddy, her son.

Outside, she saw the Knight girls, Cara and Darla, hop across the paving stones in the back yard, like naiads, like water sprites, already soaked to the bone.  Buddy turned to her, his mouth pinched and vindictive.

“Get rid of them,” he said.

“I can’t do that,” she said.

She couldn’t, even if she had wanted to; they were already at her door.

 

 

 

 

Thomas H. McNeely is an Eastside Houston native. He has published short stories and nonfiction in The Atlantic, Texas Monthly, Ploughshares, and many other magazines and anthologies, including Best American Mystery Stories and Algonquin Books’ Best of the South. His stories have been shortlisted for the Pushcart Prize, Best American Short Stories, and O. Henry Award anthologies. He has received National Endowment for the Arts, Wallace Stegner, and MacDowell Colony fellowships for his fiction. His first book, Ghost Horse, won the Gival Press Novel Award and was shortlisted for the William Saroyan International Prize in Writing. He currently teaches in the Stanford Online Writing Studio and at Emerson College, Boston.

 

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2 winners: autographed copy of Pictures of the Shark

 

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Posted in Giveaway, Guest Post, memoir, Review, Texas on June 28, 2022

 

 

 

 

Synopsis

 

As a young book lover with dyslexia, Barbara found the solution to her reading struggles in Miss Gluding, her first-grade teacher, who showed compassion for her student’s plight—and knew how to help her. From that time on, Barbara knew what she wanted to be: a teacher, just like Miss Gluding.

Unfortunately, Barbara also had some bad teachers in the years that ensued—including her sixth-grade teacher, an exacting woman who called attention to Barbara’s learning disabilities in front of classmates. Still wanting to follow in Miss Gluding’s footsteps in 1964, Barbara vowed she would be a better one than her sixth-grade teacher; instead, however, she became very much like her, with unattainable expectations for her students and herself. After seventeen years in the teaching profession, she realized she had to either change her teaching style or change careers. By providence, right as she stood at this crossroads, she was offered the opportunity to teach overseas at The Dragon School in Oxford, England, for a year—an opportunity she jumped at.

In the year that followed, Barbara would rely on her faith in God to give up a lot of what she knew about teaching and learn to do it differently—ways that wouldn’t have room for her perfectionism. In short, she would have to begin again.

 

 

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Advance Praise

 

“In this memoir, an English/dramatic arts teacher recounts a pivotal year at the Dragon School in Britain as part of an exchange program. . . . engaging and thought-provoking. . . . will be of special interest to aspiring as well as seasoned teachers. A well-crafted account about the search for greater flexibility when confronting life’s inevitable challenges.”Kirkus Reviews

“ . . . engaging . . . This book is an endearing testament to the power of personal growth and reflection in one teacher’s incredibly rich professional life.”StoryCircle Book Reviews

“In this memoir, Barbara Kennard so expertly captures the array of experiences that teachers encounter—the high and the low, the heartwarming and the hilarious. During her year teaching in Oxford, she comes to learn a new way of approaching both her classroom and her life that makes for an incredibly engaging read. Teachers everywhere will love this book.”—Nadine Kenney Johnstone, writing coach and award-winning author of Of This Much I’m Sure: A Memoir

“For any who struggle to distinguish between perfectionism and a yearning to grow into the fullest version of who God has created us to be, this book is a balm. Barbara Kennard writes candidly and compassionately about the people and places that taught her about self-acceptance and mercy. Her love of great writers and her appreciation for those she teaches and those who teach her shine through in vivid prose and engaging stories. Kennard is a lifelong educator. With humor, honesty, and self-awareness, this book invites readers to learn lessons alongside her about forgiveness, surrender, grace, and love.”—Dr. Jennifer Howe Peace, coeditor of My Neighbor’s Faith: Stories of Interreligious Encounter, Growth, and Transformation and Interreligious/Interfaith Studies: Defining a New Field

“The story of Barbara Kennard’s quest should inspire anyone who feels a calling to seek patiently for the best way to answer it and put it into play. This wise memoir should also remind us that although perfection can never be attained, we stand to have a lot of fun in the pursuit.”—David Smith, author of Be a Teacher: A Memoir in Ten Ideas

 

 

Guest Review by Nora

 

If you are a teacher, you will love this book! In fact, I would even go so far as to say, if you know a teacher, you should give this book to them as a gift. Even if you are not a teacher, you will love it.

Barbara Kennard’s memoir about her time teaching at the Dragon School in Oxford is as compelling as many other memoirs I’ve read, and twice as heartfelt. Kennard was a teacher in the eighties and nineties, and, after teaching at an all-boys school in Boston for several years, she decided that she needed a change of scenery.

The school that she was working at, Fessenden, was not providing her with enough support and the parents were making her feel attacked and underappreciated. But a co-worker at the school told Kennard about a teacher exchange program with the Dragon School that would mean Kennard would get to teach in Oxford, England for a year. This seemed like the perfect job for Kennard, who had begun to wonder if teaching was even the right path for her after all.

After moving to England and meeting the staff and children that attended the Dragon School, Kennard began to slowly acclimate to the differences in culture, curriculum, and what was expected of her as a teacher. The thirteen year-olds that she taught were as sneaky as any teenagers in the States and Kennard had to work to gain their trust and love– a process that she executes with as much grace and kindness as any favorite teacher would.

Reading about Kennard growing to love teaching again after a few hard years in the profession was as rewarding as watching a friend succeed at something. In fact, by the end of the book I almost felt like Kennard was a friend of mine, and I was glad to know her for the brief time that I spent reading her book. She made me think way back when I had a excellent teacher in my life.  I am sure my favorite teacher is long gone but not forgotten! I am sure Kennard’s students will always remember her as well!

 

 

About the Author

 

Barbara Kennard taught English and performing arts to elementary, middle, and high school students from 1980 to 2015 and has received two teaching awards: The Christa McAuliffe Award for Teaching Excellence and The Barbara Kennard Sixth Grade English Prize, established in her name at The Fessenden School by a Fessenden family.

Barbara lives in Texas with her husband, pianist Brady Millican, and their cat, Piper.

 

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Giveaway

 

This giveaway is for 3 print copies and is open to the U.S. only.

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

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Posted in 5 paws, Giveaway, Review, romance, Texas, women on June 20, 2022

 

 

BETTING ON LOVE

 

by

 

MARY BEESLEY

 

 

RomCom / Contemporary Romance

Publisher: Wild Rose Press

Date of Publication: March 24, 2021

Number of Pages: 193 pages

 

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Tempest Swan is out for revenge. Billionaire Leonard Allred’s software program has put her out of a job. She makes a bet with a friend that she’ll get Leonard to take her on a date so she can get retribution, but a fortuitous accident with an adorable nerd might just derail her vengeance.

Leonard has reasons for hiding his identity from the public. It’s worked well for him so far, until he starts falling for the honest and witty Tempest. But how can he destroy their budding romance by admitting he’s actually the guy she hates?

 

 

Amazon

 

 

 

 

 

Praise

 

“If I could give Betting on Love more stars I would because 5 stars aren’t enough.” -Jacky, Goodreads reader

“BEST BEACH READ!! Witty and fun and it was super hard to put down.” – Katherine, Goodreads reader

“It had just enough spice to make you feel the sparks.” – Rebecca, Goodreads reader

 

 

 

 

 

I LOVED this book. It was funny, quirky, sassy, and romantic all rolled into one. I almost couldn’t put this book down and probably wouldn’t have if we didn’t have plans with the family.

Tempest has a dry wit that tickled me. She could say just the right thing to put someone in their place or insult them but not sound insulting at all. I shouldn’t be surprised since she is a Texan woman and we learn that trait from birth.

Leo has some baggage in his life and while it didn’t win him any friends he did find his path in life especially when Tempest crashed into it one day all because of a bet she had with her best friend and roommate, Blair. Of course, Tempest doesn’t know that “Arty” is Leo and she starts falling for him. Imagine her surprise when she learns the truth about who he is?!

But the path to true love is never easy and Tempest and Leo find this out quite quickly when another twist evolves in their lives? I am not going to spoil it but when it happens you will know right off the bat what is about to happen. This event really throws their world upside down and it takes some time for them to realize that what they have together is worth everything.

I read this book at the perfect time. I needed something light, funny, and romantic and this fits the bill. I loved all of the interactions between the characters, and the different sides we saw of Tempest and Leo. I have to say that Blair makes quite the foil for this story and I think there should be a follow-up book telling her story, especially considering the ending.

I also enjoyed all of the “betting” in this story. It starts with Blair and Tempest and apparently, anytime you say the word “bet” then one is created and the stakes are never anything too crazy but a fun way to try and win what you want from the other party. I enjoyed how Tempest and Leo brought it into their interactions with one another. I think they both thought it was cheesy but went along with it to make life interesting.

There is a good supporting cast with Zena, Leo’s sister, and Dean, Leo’s assistant. We also have some funny scenes with Tempest’s sister Jo and her husband and children. I cracked up that Jo thought Leo was gay until nearly the end. Apparently, Tempest and Leo do a good job of hiding their desire for one another throughout the majority of the book.

Overall, I loved the book and give it 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mary Beesley is a Whitney Award Nominee and received a Crowned Heart of Excellence Review and a 5-star Reader’s Favorite Award.

 

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Posted in Book Blast, Giveaway, mystery, Texas on June 17, 2022

 

 

DEADLY KEEPSAKES

 

A Tori Winters Mystery

 

by

 

ANITA DICKASON

 

 

NOW AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER!

 

MYSTERY

Publisher: Mystic Circle Books

Coming July 10, 2022

Number of Pages: 360 pages

 

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The past becomes the future. Secrets that can kill!

 

After someone tries to kill her, Tori Winters is on the run. Looking for a place to hide, a mysterious phone call about a vague inheritance seems to be the answer. After all, who would think of looking for her in Granbury, a small quaint Texas town? Instead, her life is about to spin into an existence where nothing is as it seems. The historic house she inherits has secrets. Ones she’s been warned can kill. A stranger in a strange town, who can she trust? There is the kindly lawyer and his son, or the disinherited step-grandson. What secrets do they hide? Tori’s newfound fortune may not be a blessing. It could become her death warrant.

 

 

CLICK TO PRE-ORDER!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Award-winning Author Anita Dickason is a twenty-two-year veteran of the Dallas Police Department. She served as a patrol officer, undercover narcotics detective, advanced accident investigator, tactical officer, and first female sniper on the Dallas SWAT team.

Anita writes about what she knows, cops and crime. Her police background provides an unending source of inspiration for her plots and characters. Many incidents and characters portrayed in her books are based on personal experience. For her, the characters are the fun part of writing as she never knows where they will take her. There is always something out of the ordinary in her stories.

In Anita’s debut novel, Sentinels of the Night, she created an elite FBI Unit, the Trackers. Since then, she has added three more Tracker crime thrillers, Going Gone!, A u 7 9, and Operation Navajo. The novels are not a series and can be read in any order.

As a Texas author, many of Anita’s books are based in Texas, or there is a link to Texas. When she stepped outside of the Tracker novels and wrote, Not Dead, she selected Meridian, a small community in central Texas for the location.

 

 

 

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Posted in Book Release, excerpt, suspense, Texas, Thriller on May 23, 2022

 

 

Synopsis

 

When the shocking discovery of a murdered woman’s body disturbs the tranquility of tourist season, the police detective in charge of the puzzling case must work alongside the new filmmaker in town to pursue every lead in the new romantic thriller from New York Times bestselling author Laura Griffin.

After a scandal derails her television reporting career, Macey Burns comes looking for a change of pace in Lost Beach, Texas. She’s ready to focus on her first passion–documentary filmmaking–and has a new job working for the island’s tourism board, shooting footage of the idyllic beachside community. Her plans for a relaxing rebound are dashed when she realizes the cottage she’s renting belonged to the woman whose body was just found in the sand dunes.

Detective Owen Breda is under intense pressure to solve this murder. Violent crimes are rising in his small town, and he can’t stand to see anyone else hurt…especially not the beautiful documentarian who keeps showing up at the precinct.

With the clock ticking, cameras rolling, and body count climbing, Macey and Owen must use all their resources to find the killer without getting caught in the crosshairs.

 

 

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This book releases 5/24, pre-order your copy today!

 

Excerpt

 

Macey blinked at the windshield, shocked. Her heart raced as she tried to catch her breath. The car was tilted, and the headlights illuminated a patch of weeds and a gravelly strip of shoulder.

Macey put the gearshift in park and shoved open the door. She started to get out, but the seat belt yanked her back. Unbuckling it, she slid out. Rain pelted her as she looked around in a daze.

What the hell had happened? One second she’d been driving along and the next second it was like aliens had seized control of the car. And she’d definitely felt a bump. Had she hit something?

Glancing at the road, she saw no other traffic. She retrieved her cell phone and slammed the door. Her wet flip-flops thwacked against the gravel as she walked around the front of the Honda and checked for damage. No dents. No sign of an animal.

She stopped beside the front bumper. The right tire was flat.

“Crap.”

She switched on her cell phone’s flashlight and aimed it at the tire. Rain streamed down her face and neck. What now? She turned off the flashlight and called Josh, but he didn’t pick up, so she sent him a text:

SOS! Flat tire. Call me.

A car raced past and sprayed her with water. She yelped and whirled around, but the driver didn’t even slow. Cursing, she glanced up and down the highway. This end of the island was fairly desolate-mostly campgrounds and nature parks. She’d passed a marina, but that was a ways back.

When she’d planned her trip down here, she had wanted seclusion. After weeks of scouring listings, she’d been ecstatic when a long-term rental popped up on the island’s north end, just footsteps from the beach. The idea of being away from town, surrounded by sand and waves and the soundtrack of nature, had been immensely appealing. But now she wasn’t sure. Maybe she should have followed Josh’s advice and rented an apartment in town for the summer.

Macey shivered and rubbed her bare arms, chilled from the rain despite the warm temperature. Her tank top and jeans were already soaked through, and she was out here alone and stranded.

I can handle it.

Ha. Famous last words.

She went back around the Honda and reached inside once again, this time to pop the trunk. It was a new-to-her car, and she didn’t know the spare tire situation, but surely there was something in back. Macey had helped a boyfriend change a tire in college once. Well, maybe not helped, but she’d watched, and it had seemed pretty straightforward.

She tromped back to the trunk and slid aside the tripod and the suitcase filled with camera equipment. After finding the corner tab, she peeled back the layer of carpet.

Score! A spare tire, along with a heavy metal tool-a lug wrench?-and what had to be a jack.

But the spare seemed . . . off. She frowned down at the anemic-looking tire. Pressing her fingers against it, she confirmed her suspicion.

The spare was flat, too.

“Crap,” she said again.

Macey checked her phone. Still nothing from Josh. She hated asking a man to rescue her, but it was freaking pouring, and she was out of options.

Another lightning strobe, followed by a clap of thunder. Then a jagged white bolt zapped down from above.

She looked up at the sky, awestruck. The ferocious beauty of it reminded her of why she’d been attracted to Lost Beach in the first place. She’d been lured by the film project, of course, which would pay her bills while she got her life sorted. But beyond that, she’d been attracted by the dramatic juxtaposition of nature and people. She’d been lured by the rugged Texas coast and one of the last long stretches of untamed beach and twenty-foot dunes.

Rainwater trickled down the front of her shirt, reminding her of her plight. She stared down at the useless tire.

Her trip was off to a rocky start. She wasn’t superstitious-at least not usually-and she refused to take tonight as a bad omen. She was here for the entire summer, and no matter what happened she planned to make the best of it.

A flash of light had her turning around. A pair of headlights approached, high and wide apart, like a pickup truck. The truck slowed, and she felt a ripple of unease.

But maybe this was just what she needed-some Good Samaritan here to help her.

The truck rolled to a stop and the driver’s-side door opened.

Macey squinted into the glare. Nerves fluttered in her stomach as a man got out. Tall, wide shoulders, baseball cap. She couldn’t see his face, only his towering silhouette against the light as he walked toward her.

As he got closer, she saw that he was very tall-six-three, at least, and he easily outweighed her by a hundred pounds. Oftentimes Macey liked being short because people underestimated her. This was not one of those times.

“Need a hand?”

 

 

About the Author

 

Laura Griffin is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than thirty books and novellas. Her books have been translated into fourteen languages. Laura is a two-time RITA® Award winner (for Scorched and Whisper of Warning) as well as the recipient of the Daphne du Maurier Award (for Untraceable). Her book Desperate Girls was named one of the Best Books of 2018 by Publishers Weekly. Laura lives in Austin, Texas, where she is working on her next novel.

 

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Posted in Biography, Crime, memoir, Texas on May 15, 2022

 

 

 

WASHED IN THE BLOOD

 

by

 

SHELTON L. WILLIAMS

 

 

Genre: Memoir / Biography / True Crime

NEWLY UPDATED!

Date of Publication: February 17, 2022

Number of Pages: 175 pages

 

 

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The true story behind the Kiss and Kill murder in Texas in 1961. Author Larry King says: Washed in the Blood is a page-turning read about the time–early 1960s–and place–Odessa, Texas–during its rowdy oil boom days when violence often rode the range. It is at once an examination of local mores and foibles, piety and hypocrisy and an inside-look at the famed ‘Kiss and Kill’ murder of a 17-year-old would-be actress, Betty Jean Williams, whose ghost is said to haunt the Odessa High School campus to this very day.

 

 

 

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Shelton Williams’s Scrapbook Photos

 

All Included in Washed in the Blood

 

(All images used with permission)

 

 

 

 

  1. Betty Williams
  2. Tommy’s Drive-Inn where Betty and Mack met (artist Mike King)
  3. Warren Burnett, lawyer, Mack Herring, and family (photo credit Shel Hirschhorn)
  4. The Williams Boys: Uncle Chet, the Jeweler; Uncle Bill, the Bad Boy; Grandpa Pete, the Kid Evangelist; Joe, dad, and deacon
  5. Mack’s Girls

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shelton L. Williams (Shelly) is the founder and president of the Osgood Center for International Studies in Washington, DC. He holds a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and he taught for nearly 40 years at Austin College in Sherman, Texas. He has served in the US Government on 4 occasions, and he has written books and articles on nuclear proliferation. In 2004 he began a new career of writing books on crime and society. Those books are Washed in the Blood, Summer of 66, and now the three books in the Covey Jencks Mysteries series. All firmly prove that he is still a Texan at heart.

 

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Posted in Giveaway, Historical, humor, Texas, Western on May 5, 2022

 

 

OUTLAW WEST OF THE PECOS

 

An H.H. Lomax Western, Book 7

 

by

 

PRESTON LEWIS

 

Genre: Western / Humor / Historical Fiction

Publisher: Wolfpack Publishing
Series: An H.H. Lomax Western, Book 7

Date of Publication: January 4, 2022

Number of Pages: 228 pages

 

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Accused of cheating at cards on a Southern Pacific passenger train in far West Texas, H.H. Lomax is kicked off the train and finds himself at the mercy of the unpredictable justice of Judge Roy Bean, who calls himself “Law West of the Pecos.” After being fined of all his money, married, and divorced by the judge in a matter of minutes, Lomax discovers an unlikely connection to him.

Against a backdrop of a pending world heavyweight championship bout, Lomax heads to El Paso to interest someone in writing and publishing Bean’s biography. He winds up in an El Paso boarding house across the hall from Texas killer John Wesley Hardin. They despise each other, but Hardin fears Lomax’s straight-arrow Texas Ranger brother and treads lightly around Lomax. Because of Hardin’s crooked connections in El Paso, Lomax gets caught between him and corrupt constable John Selman.

El Paso is becoming the focal point of efforts to host a championship prizefight that everyone from the Presidents of the United States and Mexico to the governors of Texas, New Mexico Territory and Chihuahua have vowed to stop. Calling on his connections to his Ranger brother, El Paso officials and the promoter of the boxing match, Lomax uses his Judge Roy Bean friendship to pull off the oddest prizefight in heavyweight history.

Outlaw West of the Pecos stands as an entertaining mix of historical and hysterical fiction.

 

 

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Preston Lewis’s Top 8

 

Comic Western Movies Worth Watching

 

As an author of comic westerns, I’ve also spent a lot of time viewing comic movies set in the Old West.  The test of a successful comic western for the silver screen comes in tweaking the genre without mocking it; polishing the genre’s traditions without subverting them, and amending the Code of the West without repealing it.  Therein resides the friction in melding the traditional western and Hollywood comedy genres.

This list shows my preferences: westerns set before the rise of the automobile; westerns that generally avoid profanity and scatological humor; and westerns that make me laugh or at least smile at the celluloid outcome.  So, here goes my list in chronological order:

 

Ruggles of Red Gap (1935):  While a western, Ruggles of Red Gap opens in Paris, France, when the services of prim and proper English manservant Marmaduke Ruggles (Charles Laughton) are lost in a poker game to gauche American millionaire Egbert Floud.  Floud’s noveau riche wife Effie is anxious to take the butler back to Red Gap, a remote Western community, to flaunt the family’s new wealth.  Her plans, however, collapse when Red Gap townsfolk mistake Marmaduke for an English colonel instead.  The movie’s drama comes not from gunfights and chicanery, but from Marmaduke’s reluctant transition from a lowly manservant to his own man in democratic America.  One of the most poignant moments in all of movie history comes when Marmaduke quiets a rowdy saloon with his sincere recitation of The Gettysburg Address.  Nominated for a best picture Oscar, Ruggles of Red Gap lost to Mutiny on the Bounty, another Charles Laughton movie.

 

Destry Rides Again (1939):  Jimmy Stewart’s first western, Destry Rides Again took the title from a 1930 Max Brand western novel, but little of the plot.  Stewart as Tom Destry Jr., the son of a legendary lawman, is called upon to clean up the crooked town of Bottleneck.  As a western nerd who drinks milk and refuses to carry a gun, Stewart seems ill-fitted for the task but ultimately triumphs over the wickedness, even winning over “Frenchy,” the crime boss’s saloon singer girlfriend played by Marlene Dietrich.  This was the second of three films carrying the same title, which was also used on a Broadway musical, a radio production, and a short-lived ABC television series in 1964.  The 1939 movie was added to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 1996 as being “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant.”

 

Along Came Jones (1945):  As Melody Jones, Gary Cooper plays a hapless and naïve cowboy who is the victim of mistaken identity when the citizens of Payneville take him for notorious outlaw Monte Jarrad.  Torn between the advice of his irascible partner George Furry (William Demarest) and his growing affection for Loretta Young’s Cherry de Longpre, who just happens to be desperado Jarrad’s girlfriend, Jones manages to survive all calamities except love.  Based on Alan LeMay’s western Useless Cowboy, the film is considered an early feminist western due to Cherry’s gun skills in saving the guileless Jones.  Along Came Jones gently parodies Cooper’s long established western persona.

 

The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw (1958):  Directed by Raoul Walsh, The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw was the first spaghetti western with the outdoor scenes shot in the Spanish province of Aragon.  With dozens of television westerns lighting up the black-and-white screens of American television, Walsh thought it was time for a cowboy spoof.  Kenneth More portrays Jonathan Tibbs, a British inventor and gun aficionado who comes to America to enhance the family fortune with gun sales.  After some fancy gun handling, he’s appointed the sheriff of Fractured Jaw and is soon caught in the middle of a feud of between two cattle outfits battling over water rights.  His only allies are hotel owner Kate (Jayne Mansfield) and the local Indian tribe, which reverses the cliché and rides to Tibbs’s rescue instead of the cavalry.

 

North to Alaska (1960):  No compilation of Westerns is complete without John Wayne so the first of the Duke’s two movies to make the list is North to Alaska.  As Sam McCord, Wayne transports soiled dove Angel (Capucine) from Seattle to Nome, Alaska, to substitute for his partner’s former fiancé who married another man.  Partner George Pratt (Stewart Granger) is not nearly as enamored with Angel as is McCord, who is finally forced to admit his love after a roll in the mud.  Played out against the backdrop of claim jumping masterminded by con man Frankie Canon (Ernie Kovacs), love, justice, and Wayne ultimately triumph.  I liked the movie so much that I borrowed the title for my sixth book in the H.H. Lomax series.

 

McLintock! (1963):  This western transfers William Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew from Europe to the American West where George Washington “G.W.” McLintock (John Wayne) declines to give his estranged wife Katherine (Maureen O’Hara) a divorce.  Much of the charm of the movie is the interaction between Wayne and the fiery redhead O’Hara.  Before reconciling with Katherine, cattle and mining baron McLintock resolves Indian difficulties, fights political corruption, plays matchmaker, survives a mud fight, and ultimately makes everything right with the world.

 

Cat Ballou (1965):  Lee Marvin won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his dual role as the evil gunslinger Tim Strawn and inebriated dime novel hero Kid Shelleen, a character well-suited to Marvin’s off-screen reputation.  (By one biographer’s account, Marvin was so drunk early one Hollywood morning that he bought a map of the stars to find his way home.)  Hired by Cat Ballou (Jane Fonda) to fight off Wolf City Development Corp. from stealing her father’s ranch, Shelleen arrives drunk and disheveled.  One of the funniest scenes in all of western movies occurs when a drunken Shelleen sees candles over the coffin of Ballou’s murdered father and starts singing Happy Birthday.  Shelleen sobers up in time to save the day before reverting to his old ways.  Cat Ballou was ranked No. 10 on the American Film Institute’s 2008 list of greatest westerns.

 

Paint Your Wagon (1969):  Granted Pardner (Clint Eastwood) singing “I Talk to the Trees” was not one of the finest moments in western cinema, but the humor and other songs such as the haunting “They Call the Wind Maria” and the plaintive “Wand’rin’ Star” by Ben Rumson (Lee Marvin) redeemed Paint Your Wagon.  The movie chronicles the rise and literal fall of “No Name City” after gold is discovered.  The initial foibles of a womanless community beset by get-rich-quick schemes are gradually supplanted by the civilizing influence of women’s presence.  This film will always rank high on my list as it was the first movie date I shared with the young lady who would become my wife.

 

What is your favorite Comic Western that is worth watching?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Preston Lewis is the Spur Award-winning author of 40 westerns, historical novels, juvenile books, and memoirs.  He has received national awards for his novels, articles, short stories, and humor.

In 2021 he was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters for his literary accomplishments.  Lewis is past president of Western Writers of America and the West Texas Historical Association.

His historical novel Blood of Texas on the Texas Revolution earned a Spur Award as did his True West article on the Battle of Yellow House Canyon.  He developed the Memoirs of H.H. Lomax series, which includes two Spur finalists and a Will Rogers Gold Medallion Award for western humor for his novel Bluster’s Last Stand on the battle of Little Big Horn.  His comic western The Fleecing of Fort Griffin and two of his YA novels have won Elmer Kelton Awards for best creative work on West Texas from the West Texas Historical Association.

He began his writing career working for Texas daily newspapers in Abilene, Waco, Orange, and Lubbock before going into university administration.  During his 35-year career in higher education, he directed communications and marketing offices at Texas Tech University, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, and Angelo State University.

Lewis holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Baylor University and master’s degrees from Ohio State in journalism and Angelo State in history.  He lives in San Angelo with his wife, Harriet.

 

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Outlaw West of the Pecos!

 

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5/9/22 Review Shelf Life Blog
5/10/22 Series Spotlight It’s Not All Gravy
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