Posted in 5 paws, fiction, Giveaway, Interview, Review, romance, Texas on January 18, 2021

 

 

 

COMFORT FOODS:

 

A Comfort Stories

 

Stand-Alone Novel

 

by

 

Kimberly Fish

 

 

Categories: Contemporary / Second Chance Romance

Publisher: Fish Tales Publishing

Date of Publication: October 7, 2020

Number of Pages: 385 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

From the award-winning author of Comfort Plans and Comfort Songs comes a story of two rising stars blitzed by social media. Lacy Cavanaugh and single-dad Rudy Delgardo live a hundred miles apart but meet in the worst possible way. Working at a weekly paper and creating social media for area businesses helps Lacy connect with locals who open her mind to a perspective beyond Instagram. In launching a food-and-wine festival to support Comfort’s new event center, she discovers surprising skills bubbling over, much like the food she’s attempting to cook.

Rudy, on the brink of his restaurant’s takeover, struggles to improve time management so he can create a better relationship with his daughter. Distracted by Lacy and her invitation to the festival, he’s tempted by her beauty, wit, and courage, but as a chef, he rarely gets to enjoy life outside the kitchen. Enemies, illness, and exes add unwelcome spice to the dish they’re concocting—one that will teeter with misunderstanding until the very end.

Will Lacy and Rudy embrace their second chances and discover the perfect seasonings of family, resilience, and grace to create a handwritten recipe of love that will stand the test of time?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An interview by author Kimberly Fish with Drue, the Florist at Comfort Flower Shop from Comfort Foods

 

 

Good morning, Drue, it seems you have a big order to assemble judging by the buckets of flowers on your workstation.

 

You have no idea. People are dropping like flies in these parts and everyone wants a funeral arrangement yesterday. I’d ask Lacy to walk over from next door to help, like she sometimes does, but she’s got her hands full trying to figure out that newspaper business.

 

How long have you known Lacy Cavanaugh?

 

Longer than she’d like to admit. She lived here a few years ago, bunking in with her sister when they were getting Provence Farm off the ground, and we met on account of how I was supplying them with flower arrangements for their cheese customers. Lacy was always a beauty, but she wasn’t always charming, if you get my drift. She was itching to get out of here and made no bones about it.

 

Were you surprised then that she returned?

 

Surprised doesn’t cover the half of it. When Frank—he’s the newspaper editor who’s been in the office of Comfort News for as long as I can remember—told me he was bringing in an intern—from Dallas—I about laughed in his face. I mean, what person in their right mind, would come here if they didn’t have to. When he told me it was Lacy, I did laugh. That girl had put Comfort in her rear-view mirror, and I reckon, she’d never intended to return.

 

Did Lacy slink into town or shout her return?

 

(Setting her clippers on the counter and reaching toward the coffee pot for a refill.) Well, she wasn’t proud to be back, but if I had to pin it down, I guess I’d say she just seemed lost. You know that looks some people get when the lights are on, but no one is home? She stopped by to say hello soon enough, but I could tell, her heart wasn’t in it. We’ll see how this works out. Frank doesn’t expect her to stay long, and he’s always been right about election results, so I’m guessing he knows what he’s talking about.

 

How long have you owned the Flower Shop, here on 5th Street?

 

Long enough to put my kids through school, and see my grandkids come around to help for special occasions. Lord knows why we stayed, but when Comfort gets in your blood, there’s no getting it out.

 

Sounds like you may be rooting for Lacy to outlast everyone’s predictions?

 

That Lacy Cavanaugh is something special, but I’m not sure she’s found out what she’s good at yet. I didn’t come to flower decorating until my kids were in junior high, and even then, it was just a means to an end. I didn’t fall in love with what I was doing until years later. I’m saying that to say, don’t put too much pressure on Lacy to have it all sorted out. Life is hard enough as it is, without everyone peeking in on your every move.

 

 

 

 

 

I managed to buy this book when it was on sale for $0.99 in December and I am so glad that I did so that I could discover what was happening in Comfort.  This book does stand alone and you do not have to read the first two to enjoy this, you just discover the stories of two other couples that are featured in this book.

Comfort is one of those towns that I would like to escape to when the world gets crazy. It is a small town where everyone knows everyone (or close anyway), the town appears calm and peaceful, and it is close enough to a larger city that allows for a different scenery when the need arises. At least that is what Lacy was probably hoping for when she ended in Comfort after a public incident shuts down her influencer abilities for a period of time. What Lacy doesn’t expect to find in this town is a renewed sense of self, closer ties with family, and love and a future she might never have expected to acquire.

Rudy Delgardo is an up and coming chef with a sweet, young daughter, Luna, that is maybe a little too smart for her own good. I love how she calls Lacy, Cinderella. Rudy has his own issues to deal with and one of them is his ex, Hannah. She is a piece of work that is for sure! I was happy with how this stumbling block worked out and it made me cheer.

If you are a foodie, there are plenty of scenes with descriptions of many delicious dishes that might make you gain 5 pounds just reading about them. From the restaurants in Austin and Comfort to Rudy cooking for Luna, Lacy, and others. There are even some recipes at the end in case you feel the need to whip up a dish or two.

Lacy’s influencer life that I mentioned is shut down by parents with too much money and not enough gumption to recognize the truth for what it is. It is the typical case of blaming someone else and not holding the true party responsible. The upside to this is that Lacy begins working for the small-town paper in Comfort and for its owner, Frank. The relationship between these two develops to more than Frank mentoring Lacy. I feel like he has true affection for Lacy, much like a father would for their child. When certain events unfold, this relationship becomes more evident and there are some very touching scenes. Lacy is able to use some of her social media prowess for her sister’s farm and a few other businesses, she just can’t do anything personally. And to make sure she doesn’t violate the agreement, she has gone old school with a “dumb” phone. This means no internet, no GPS (which she really needed several times), no apps. Just talking and texting.

One aspect of the book that might be a trigger for some, is the subject of human trafficking. Lacy stumbles across a situation that does not seem right for this small town. Many might say that this could not happen in their town, but sadly it happens all across the world in towns large and small. The message I picked up from this storyline is that if you see something that does not seem right, report it to the proper authorities. You might just save someone’s life.

The romance between Rudy and Lacy does not run smoothly.  When it comes to Lacy, Rudy is like a teenage boy that forgets how to converse with her. Actually, they both have this issue. Thankfully they don’t give up, and despite many misunderstandings, they manage to get it right.  Watching them stumble around with each other reminded me of some relationships I have had in the past.

This book kept me up until the wee hours of the morning because I kept saying to myself, “just one more chapter.” (I’m just glad I didn’t have to get up for work the next day.) The descriptions and scenes captivated me until the very end. I can’t wait for the next installment in this series! We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Author Kimberly Fish resides in Longview, Texas, and enjoys writing contemporary fiction set in the Hill Country. During the seven years she lived in San Antonio, wandering in and around Comfort, Texas, provided endless space for her imagination to develop stories of women discovering their grit. She studied the small Texas town that had seemingly dug its heels into the limestone and refused modern development and thought that was fertile ground for stories about women remodeling their lives. It made a juxtaposition of place and purpose that was hard to ignore. Plus, anything that takes intentional effort has a much higher value than the things that come easily—Comfort personifies this, and the novels remind readers that anything worth having is worth the work.

Comfort Foods is the third full-length novel in the set, Fiction from the Texas Hill Country, and follows behind the award-winning novels Comfort Plans and Comfort Songs. A novella, Emeralds Mark the Spot, is available as a free eBook download to subscribers of the incredibly sporadic newsletter at kimberlyfish.com and is the original story from which all other Comfort novels grew.

 

 

  Website  ◆  Facebook  ◆  Twitter

 

  Amazon  ◆  Goodreads  ◆ Pinterest

 

 Instagram ◆ YouTube

 

 

—————————————

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 ONE WINNER

 

GRANDPRIZE (US only):

 

Signed copy of COMFORT FOODS +

 

Ina Garten’s MODERN COMFORT FOOD

 

Ends Midnight, CST, January 22, 2021

 

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway
 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

 

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

 

or visit the blogs directly

 

 

1/12/21 Guest Post Hall Ways Blog
1/12/21 Review Sydney Young, Stories
1/13/21 Excerpt Forgotten Winds
1/14/21 Review Jennie Reads
1/14/21 Author Interview Texas Book Lover
1/15/21 Review The Clueless Gent
1/16/21 Review Jennifer Silverwood
1/17/21 Guest Post All the Ups and Downs
1/18/21 Review Momma on the Rocks
1/18/21 Character Interview StoreyBook Reviews
1/19/21 Review Book Bustle
1/19/21 Guest Post That’s What She’s Reading
1/20/21 Review Carpe Diem Chronicles
1/21/21 Review It’s Not All Gravy
1/21/21 Review Bibliotica

 

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

 

Posted in 4 paws, fiction, Literary, Review, Texas on January 13, 2021

 

 

THE BLACK-MARKETER’S DAUGHTER

 

by

 

Suman Mallick

 

 

Category: Contemporary / Literary Fiction / Multicultural

Publisher: Atmosphere Press

Date of Publication: October 13, 2020

Number of Pages: 166 pages

 

 

 

 

Zuleikha arrives in the US from Lahore, Pakistan, by marriage, having trained as a pianist without ever owning a real piano. Now she finally has one-a wedding present from her husband-but nevertheless finds it difficult to get used to her new role of a suburban middle-class housewife who has an abundance of time to play it.

 

Haunted by the imaginary worlds of the confiscated contraband books and movies that her father trafficked in to pay for her education and her dowry, and unable to reconcile them with the expectations of the real world of her present, she ends up as the central figure in a scandal that catapults her into the public eye and plays out in equal measures in the local news and in backroom deliberations, all fueled by winds of anti-Muslim hysteria.

 

The Black-Marketer’s Daughter was a finalist for the Disquiet Open Borders Book Prize, and praised by the jury as a “complicated and compelling story” of our times, with two key cornerstones of the novel being the unsympathetic voice with which Mallick, almost objectively, relays catastrophic and deeply emotional events, and the unsparing eye with which he illuminates the different angles and conflicting interests at work in a complex situation. The cumulative effects, while deliberately unsettling to readers, nevertheless keeps them glued to the pages out of sheer curiosity about what will happen next.

 

 

 

 

 Amazon  │  Bookshop.org

 

 

Praise



“Mallick offers an impressively realistic depiction of a woman caught between tradition, family, and her own sense of empowerment.” ~ Kirkus Reviews

“The Black-Marketer’s Daughter is a key-hole look at a few things: a mismatched marriage, the plight of immigrants in the U.S., the emotional toll of culture shock, and the brutal way Muslim women are treated, especially by men within their own community. Titling it—defining the heroine by her relationship to a man rather than as a woman in her own right—suggests how deeply ingrained that inequality can be.” ~ IndieReader Reviews 

“The Black-Marketer’s Daughter is the portrait of a woman who endures violence, intimidation, xenophobia and grief, and yet refuses to be called a victim. In this slender novel, Suman Mallick deftly navigates the funhouse maze of immigrant life in contemporary America—around each corner the possibility of a delight, a terror, or a distorted reflection of oneself.” ~ Matthew Valentine, Winner, Montana Prize for Fiction; Lecturer, University of Texas at Austin

 

 

 

 

 

 

Never underestimate the power of the written word.

 

I was intrigued by this book and wondered what sort of impact it would have on a reader. For anyone that opens their mind to the world within these pages, they will learn about culture, faith, love, despair, confidence, and desperation. But do not go into this book lightly, the stories within are complex and interwoven.

This story follows a young married couple from Pakistan that have settled in the DFW area in Texas. They have traditional roles within their family. The husband works and provides for the family, and his wife stays at home. I found it fascinating that the marriage contract between them included a piano and the lengths they went to in obtaining the piano and a piano bench.  Zuleikha has quite an interesting past. She learned how to play on a piano purchased with ill-gotten gains from things her father did to make sure his family got by in life. I would say that she was spoiled and had her father wrapped around her little finger. Iskander is very traditional in his thought of their marriage and his actions toward Zuleikha. He was controlling yet loving.

As time goes by, Zuleikha seems less satisfied with their life. She tries to broaden her circle by teaching piano lessons. This works well until she starts teaching another adult and an emotional relationship ensues. But this relationship is not without consequences as Zuleikha will learn.

There is so much to be learned from this book. I learned a little more about the Muslim faith. We are given a look into Shariah law and how it is interpreted. It is hard to truly understand these laws when it seems extreme in nature and what some of us may be used to when it comes to the freedoms we have in the United States. I found myself disgusted with some of the men from the mosque and their attitude towards Zuleikha, but at the same time, their beliefs are different than my own and we do not all fit into the same mold.

Some of this is hard to read and there could be some triggers for some readers. But the story is well told and in the end, Zuleikha had to make the best decision she could for herself and her family, no matter what others thought should happen. I thought she was very brave all things considered and wonder if I could have done the same in her shoes.

This book gave me a lot to think about and how I view people and situations and perhaps there is more to it than I could ever know and I should withhold judgment until more facts are known.

We give this book 4 paws up and recommend it for anyone that is looking for a book that is complex yet with sympathetic characters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Suman Mallick received his MFA from Portland State University and is the assistant managing editor of the quarterly literary magazine Under the Gum Tree. He lives in Texas.

 

 

 WEBSITE ◆ TWITTER

 

 AMAZON ◆ GOODREADS ◆ INSTAGRAM

 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

 

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

 

or visit the blogs directly:

 

 

 

1/6/21 Promo Hall Ways Blog
1/7/21 Review The Clueless Gent
1/7/21 Guest Post Momma on the Rocks
1/8/21 Review Forgotten Winds
1/8/21 Author Interview All the Ups and Downs
1/9/21 Review Bibliotica
1/10/21 Excerpt Texas Book Lover
1/11/21 Author Interview That’s What She’s Reading
1/11/21 Review It’s Not All Gravy
1/12/21 Playlist Chapter Break Book Blog
1/13/21 Review StoreyBook Reviews
1/13/21 Scrapbook Page The Page Unbound
1/14/21 Author Interview KayBee’s Book Shelf
1/15/21 Review Reading by Moonlight
1/15/21 Review Missus Gonzo

 

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

Posted in Adventure, Dystopian, excerpt, Science Fiction, Texas on January 9, 2021

 

 

HOUSE OF THE RISING SUN

 

by

 

Richard Cox

 

 

Category: Techno Thriller / Science Fiction / Adventure

Publisher: Night Shade Books

Date of Publication: July 27, 2020

Number of Pages: 408 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Both a frightening apocalyptic story set in the southern United States and a character-focused, deeply moving literary thriller.

 

What would happen if technology all over the world suddenly stopped working?

When a strange new star appears in the sky, human life instantly grinds to a halt. Across the world, anything and everything electronic stops working completely.

At first, the event seems like a bizarre miracle to Seth Black–it interrupts his suicide attempt and erases gambling debt that threatened to destroy his family. But when Seth and his wife, Natalie, realize the electricity isn’t coming back on, that their food supplies won’t last, they begin to wonder how they and their two sons will survive.

Meanwhile, screenwriter Thomas Phillips–an old friend of Natalie’s–has just picked up Skylar Stover, star of his new movie, at the airport when his phone goes dead, and planes begin to fall from the sky.

Thomas has just completed a script about a similar electromagnetic event that ended the world. Now, he’s one of the few who recognizes what’s happening and where it will lead.

When Thomas and Skylar decide to rescue Natalie and Seth, the unwilling group must attempt to survive together as the world falls apart. They try to hide in Thomas’s home and avoid desperate neighbors, but fear they’ll soon be roaming the streets with starving refugees and angry vigilantes intent on forming new governments. It’s all they can do to hold on to each other and their humanity.

Yet all the while, unbeknownst to them, Aiden Christopher–a bitter and malignant man leveraging a crumbling society to live out his darkest, most amoral fantasies–is fighting to survive as well. And he’s on a collision course with Thomas, Skylar, and the Black family…

 

 

 

Indiebound │ Amazon│  Bookshop.org

 

 

 

 

Excerpt from Chapter 2 of HOUSE OF THE RISING SUN by Richard Cox

 

In this scene, screenwriter Thomas Phillips has just picked up actress Skylar Stover at DFW International Airport. They’re on the phone, speaking with a man threatening to commit suicide, when the call mysteriously drops.

 

 

HOLY SHIT THE SKY IS FALLING

“Dude,” Seth said in a weak voice, “I told you everything you need to know. Can’t you just let me be done with it?”

“Don’t do it!” shouted Thomas, surprised at the sudden empathy he felt for this man he’d never met. “I can help you. You don’t need to do this.”

“Help me with what?”

“With money! With whatever you need.”

“If this is about money,” Skylar offered loudly, “I’ll help, too.”

“Who is that?” grunted Seth. He sounded lethargic, like he’d woken from a deep sleep.

“We just want to help you. You don’t need insurance. You don’t—”

“It doesn’t matter. Even if you paid every last dime of my debt, I still have to live with what I’ve done. And I can’t. I won’t. It’s too late.”

“It’s never too late, Seth. Let me help you.”

“Just come here when it’s over. Please.”

“Seth.”

“Promise me, man. Promise me you’ll come here and take care of my family. Please.”

Seth was crying. His voice was hoarse, and he coughed as if his lungs were failing him.

“Please, man. Promise me.”

“I promise, Seth. Just stop and I’ll do whatever you want.”

Now there was no answer.

“Seth?”

Thomas pressed the phone to his ear, trying to dampen the sound of the wind, but it was no use. Eventually he looked at the display again and saw it was dark. He swiped and tapped the screen, but nothing happened.

“Thomas, look out!”

He glanced up and saw he was about to rear-end a white Ford sedan that was either slowing down or stopped. He quickly checked his mirrors and veered into an adjacent lane. Jammed his hand on the horn.

“What the hell is wrong with you?” he yelled involuntarily. “This is a highway!”

“Thomas, again!”

He looked back at the road and saw they were rapidly gaining on a black pickup truck rolling on four enormous tires. Thomas changed lanes, sliding just past the truck and the noise of its monster tread.

“What the hell is going on?” he yelled.

“I don’t know, but something is weird. All the cars are slowing down. Look over there. It’s the same thing on both sides of the road.”

Skylar was right. Everyone was slowing down, but no one seemed to be using their brakes. Well, wait. In the far-right lane, about fifty yards ahead of them, a small car came to a screeching stop and Thomas heard the dull thunk of bumper-to-bumper contact.

“He totally hit that truck!” Sky yelled. “Why is everyone stopping?”

Thomas had slowed down and was switching lanes almost continuously as vehicles around him came to rest. When he looked briefly at Skylar, he saw something in the sky above her, something so odd and unexpected that he could hardly make sense of it.

People were beginning to climb out of their vehicles. Others stood in the road, gawking at the sky. Thomas moved toward the inner shoulder, trying to divine a clear path, but other drivers were having the same idea. Ahead, a woman stood beside a giant Lexus SUV and gestured to him.

“Skylar,” he said. “Look in the sky on your right.”

Thomas was rapidly approaching the woman on the shoulder. She was tall and thin, wearing a yellow sundress and flip flops. Maybe thirty-five years old.

“What is that?” Sky asked.

“Looks like a star, doesn’t it?”

“Yeah…except you don’t usually see stars during the day.”

They reached the woman in the sundress. She approached the driver’s side door. Her face was drained of color.

“Excuse me, sir. Do you know what’s happened?”

“I’m not sure. But I would guess it had something to do with that.”

Thomas gestured toward the new point of light in the sky, which was twenty or so degrees above the horizon, brilliant and white. It was bigger and brighter than any nighttime star but much smaller than the sun, which was almost directly above it. In different circumstances, like if he had been on his back porch, looking at it over the lake, the new star might have been the most amazing thing Thomas had ever seen. Instead, Natalie’s husband was trying to kill himself and the airport freeway was a war zone and the whole world seemed to have lost its mind. No vehicle was operational except his and people were noticing. Especially because, aside from the rumble of his engine exhaust, the airport was quiet. Eerily quiet. Nothing else mechanical was running.

Nothing.

The woman’s face was slack, her mouth wide open. She seemed to be holding back tears. Next to him, Skylar whispered words he couldn’t hear.

Something was terribly wrong about the silence. It was never quiet on this road, ever, not even in the middle of the night, because D/FW was one of the busiest airports in the world. The sound of jet engines and traffic was so ubiquitous you never even noticed it.

Until it wasn’t there at all.

“I’m sorry,” he said to the woman. “We have to go.”

Thomas inched his car forward. The woman’s eyes widened.

“Wait! Can you help me? I’m stuck here.”

Thomas kept driving, watching the stalled cars carefully. He picked up speed. Changed lanes often.

“Don’t you think we should have helped that woman?” Sky asked.

“Help her do what?”

“I don’t know. Get home. Something.”

“We only have so much room. We can’t take them all.”

Thomas realized why his car worked and the others didn’t. Honestly, he’d known it all along.

 

Read part two of this excerpt 1/10/21 on Jennie Reads

 

 

 

 

 

Richard Cox was born in Odessa, Texas and now lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His newest novel is House of the Rising Sun. Richard has also published The Boys of Summer, Thomas World, The God Particle, and Rift. He’s written for This Land Press, Oklahoma Magazine, and TheNervousBreakdown.com.

When he’s not writing or reading, Richard loves spending time with his wife and two girls. And hitting bombs.

He also wrote this bio in third person as if writing about someone else. George likes his chicken spicy!

 

 

 Website ◆ Twitter ◆   Amazon ◆ Goodreads

 

Instagram ◆  Facebook ◆ YouTube ◆ BookBub

 

 

 

 

—————————————

 

GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY! GIVEAWAY!

 

THREE WINNERS

 

1st: Signed copies of House of the Rising Sun & The Boys of Summer;

 

2nd: Signed copy of House of the Rising Sun;

 

3rd: eBook copy of House of the Rising Sun.

 

Giveaway ends Midnight, CST, January 15, 2021

 

(US only)

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

 

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

 

or visit the blogs directly:

 

 

1/5/21 Guest Post Texas Book Lover
1/5/21 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
1/6/21 Review Missus Gonzo
1/7/21 Deleted Scene That’s What She’s Reading
1/8/21 Review Chapter Break Book Blog
1/9/21 Excerpt StoreyBook Reviews
1/10/21 Excerpt Jennie Reads
1/11/21 Review Reading by Moonlight
1/12/21 Guest Post All the Ups and Downs
1/13/21 Review Rainy Days with Amanda
1/14/21 Review Forgotten Winds

 

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

 

Posted in 5 paws, Review, romance, Texas on January 4, 2021

 

 

Synopsis

 

Chaynie Mayfield is the absolute last person who should be heading up the Morgan’s Grove library Valentine’s event. Ever since her boyfriend dumped her last year—on Valentine’s Day—she’s had a hard time believing in love.

When Greg Peterson, handsome architect and former schoolmate, is commissioned to oversee the library’s renovations, Chaynie’s spirits are instantly lifted. Greg helps her brainstorm, and they create an “Under the Stars” theme that promises to deliver a magical night for the entire town.

The longer Chaynie and Greg work together on the romantic project, the deeper their attraction grows. But when her dream job comes calling, Chaynie must decide whether her future aspirations are worth the price of leaving a town, a family, a library she adores, and a love she’s not sure she can live without.

 

 

Amazon * B&N * Kobo

 

 

Review

 

If you are looking for a sweet, clean, romance read then you might want to check out this book and this series. This is the second in the series about a small town in Texas called Morgan’s Grove. This is the type of town I would love to live in versus the big city. It has charm, lovable characters, and just enough tension to keep me interested in what could possibly happen next.

This story focuses on Chaynie and Greg. Morgan’s Grove is a small town and they happened to have gone to school together but Chaynie didn’t really remember Greg very well. Perhaps that was good because they were able to get to know one another as they were now without any preconceived notions about each other.  I liked how they were friends first before realizing that perhaps there was something more there than just friendship.

Chaynie’s job in the town library would be a dream job for me as much as I love books. But she is stuck in an assistant librarian role and she wants more and applies for jobs outside of the town to try and make use of her knowledge and experience. After all, the current librarian doesn’t seem to be going anywhere. I really enjoyed the Valentine’s Day event she planned for the library. Greg gave her the idea to make it an event for everyone, not just couples. Considering her feelings about the day, this was a brilliant idea.

I thought the relationship between Chaynie and her mother was beautifully portrayed. They are both still mourning her father’s passing which is a strong bond for them. But they both want each other to succeed and be happy in life and they have a few projects they work on together which explores their talents in a few different areas.

The only thing I would have liked to have seen is more of an appearance of some of the characters from the first book, like Jill and Rick. There are mentions of them but no appearance and there are a few times when it would have been expected to see them.

Overall an enjoyable book and I can’t wait to see who is featured in the next book. We give this book 5 paws up.

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Traci Borum is a writing teacher and native Texan. She’s also an avid reader of women’s fiction, most especially Elin Hilderbrand and Rosamunde Pilcher novels. Since the age of 12, she’s written poetry, short stories, magazine articles, and novels.

Traci also adores all things British. She even owns a British dog (Corgi) and is completely addicted to Masterpiece Theater–must be all those dreamy accents! Aside from having big dreams of getting a book published, it’s the little things that make her the happiest: deep talks with friends, a strong cup of hot chocolate, a hearty game of fetch with her Corgi, and puffy white Texas clouds always reminding her to “look up, slow down, enjoy your life.”

 

Website * Facebook * Twitter * Goodreads * Amazon

 | 
Comments Off on Review – Meet You Under the Stars by Traci Borum #MorgansGroveSeries @TraciAuthor #TXAuthor #romance #5paws
Posted in coming of age, Cover Reveal, Texas, Trailer on December 17, 2020

 

 

RIVER, SING OUT

 

 BY

 

JAMES WADE

 

 

Categories: Contemporary / Literary Fiction

Rural Fiction / Crime Fiction / Coming-of-Age

Publisher: Blackstone Publishing

Date of Publication: June 8, 2021

Number of Pages: 315 pages

 

 

 

 

“And through these ages untold, the river did act as the lifeblood of all those things alongside it.”

 

Jonah Hargrove is celebrating his thirteenth birthday by avoiding his abusive father, when a girl named River stumbles into his yard, injured and alone. The teenager has stolen thousands of dollars’ worth of meth from her murderous, drug-dealing boyfriend, but lost it somewhere in the Neches River bottoms during her escape. Jonah agrees to help her find and sell the drugs so she can flee East Texas.

Chasing after them is John Curtis, a local drug kingpin and dog fighter, as well as River’s boyfriend, the dangerous Dakota Cade.

Each person is keeping secrets from the others—deadly secrets that will be exposed in violent fashion as all are forced to come to terms with their choices, their circumstances, and their own definition of God.

With a colorful cast of supporting characters and an unflinching violence juxtaposed against lyrical prose, River, Sing Out dives deep into the sinister world of the East Texas river bottoms, where oppressive poverty is pitted against the need to believe in something greater than the self.

 

 

 

Pre-Order The book from your favorite retailer

 

Blackstone Publishing ║ AmazonBooks-a-Million

 

Indie BoundDownpourHudson Booksellers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

River, Sing Out – Book Trailer from AV FILMS on Vimeo.

 

 

 

 

James Wade lives and writes in Austin, Texas, with his wife Jordan. He has had twenty short stories published in various literary magazines and journals. He is the winner of the Writers’ League of Texas Manuscript Contest and a finalist of the Tethered by Letters Short Fiction Contest. All Things Left Wild was his debut novel.

 

  Website ║ Facebook ║ Blog

 

Instagram ║  YouTube ║ Goodreads

 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

For direct links to each post on this blitz

 

 

tour services provided by

 

 

 

 

Posted in Children, Giveaway, Interview, Texas on December 12, 2020

 

 

CLEO CAN TIE A BOW

 

A Rabbit and Fox Story

 

by

 

Sybrina Durant

 

 

Genre: Children’s Activity Book / Picture Book

Publisher: Self-Published

Date of Publication: September 25, 2020

Number of Pages: 39 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Cleo loves bows. She wears her hair in a bow and decorates her room with bows. Cleo is bow crazy. Learning to tie a bow is very difficult for some people but Cleo remembers how to do it from a cute story she once heard. It is about a little rabbit with very long ears and a very helpful fox who shows her what to do to keep them clean. This is the story of how Cleo learns to tie a “bunny ear” bow. Exercises in manual dexterity build self-esteem in children. Knowing how to tie shoestrings, scarves and more into a bow is a useful and rewarding skill. Teach a child a useful skill. Build confidence and self-esteem that lasts a lifetime. Other books in the Learn To Tie With The Rabbit and the Fox series are the book with that name in English, Spanish, and Tagalog plus Nellie Knows How To Knot A Neck Scarf and Ned Knows How To Knot A Necktie.

 

 

 

 

Sybrina Publishing │ Amazon

 

Barnes and NobleSmashwords

 

 

 

 

 

Author Sybrina Durant’s Favorite Cartoon Girls

 

(With Bows)

 

 

 

 

1: BETTY BOOP – 1930s – Everyone loved Betty Boop. She was a star of Talkertoons. Her first film was Dizzy Dishes, where she actually looked more like a dog than a human.  You might not remember that, but I bet you remember her in Boop-Oop-a-Doop where she was a lion tamer and a tightrope walker. Betty Boop is still a cartoon favorite today.

2: Blossom – PowerPuff Girl – 1998 – Blossom was the “everything nice” girl of her superpower gang. She was also the most level-headed of all the Powerpuff Girls. She could literally freeze objects with her breath; so to keep her happy and you “freeze free,” it might be best to give her a candy bar when she starts to get cranky.  Sugar is known to calm her way down.

3: Betty Rubble – Flintstones – 1960 – Betty was the best friend of Wilma Flintstone, and she was the adoptive mother of Bamm-Bamm. Remember that little tyke, along with Fred and Wilma’s daughter, Pebbles? These cave people may have lived in the prehistoric town of Bedrock, but they had some amazing alternatives to our modern conveniences like telephones, automobiles, and washing machines.

4: Judy Jetson – The Jetsons – 1962 – This was my very favorite cartoon, growing up.  I really thought we’d be living their futuristic lifestyle by now. At least, I thought I’d have a flying car. Judy was George and Jane Jetson’s sixteen-year-old daughter. Anyone remember her floating robotic diary, named, “DiDi”?

5: Nancy (and Sluggo) – 1938 – Nancy was an 8-year-old child who lived with her Aunt Fritzi Ritz in Three Rocks, Tennessee. Her best friend was an orphan named Sluggo Smith, whom she was always trying to improve. The Nancy comic strip was so popular that it inspired a game called 5-card Nancy. Have you ever played that game?

6: Helga G. Pataki – Hey Arnold – 1996 – Poor Helga…she loved Arnold so much that she literally made multiple shrines dedicated to him. Too bad she didn’t know that bullying someone was not conducive to getting them to love you back. An angry, rude girl is kind of a strange main character for a kid’s show, but it worked for this one. It thrived on the airwaves from October 7, 1996, to June 8, 2004.

7: Little Audrey – 1947 – Little Audrey was a variation of another cartoon character known as Little Lulu.  Little Audrey was drawn in a blue colored theme while Little Lulu’s color palette was red. Sadly, Little Audrey was the butt of a lot of mean jokes, but nothing could get her down.  No matter what catastrophe occurred, “Li’l Audrey just laughed and laughed.” Her first film appearance was in Noveltoon’s Santa’s Surprise.

8: Susie Carmichael – Rugrats – 1993 – Susie is one of the toddlers (thus the term “rugrats”) in a series of imaginative adventures that mainly revolved around Angelica and Tommy Pickles. The kind and fun-loving Susie was introduced to the show as a foil to the mean-spirited Angelica. Susie was easy to love, while Angelica – not so much.

9: Abby Hatcher – 2019 – Abby Hatcher is a Canadian animated cartoon series about a 7-year-old child of American and Chinese descent with professional detective skills and tools to rival those of Inspector Gadget. She and her best friend, Bozzly, an aquamarine rabbit-like Fuzzly, go on wild adventures together.

10: Maggie Simpson – The Simpsons – 1989 – The Simpsons is one of the longest running cartoons in history.  There have been 690 episodes and counting. Most everyone knows who innocent baby Maggie is. In all these years, she has never learned to talk or walk very well but she is still adorable, just the same. Did you know that the word “simp” is short for “simpleton” and that is where the family name is derived?

 

I loved this list and it sent me down quite the rabbit hole wondering if there were other characters that might have made my top ten list.  I have to say, some that I thought had bows did not, like Olive Oyl or any of the Peanuts characters.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sybrina Durant is the author of some fanciful and some factual books.  Her writings have inspired several online entrepreneurial ventures. Two of those are the Rabbit and Fox Bookstore and the Girls Love Bows Gift Shop.  Spend some time browsing both for some interesting and surprising gift ideas for yourself and others

.

 Website  ◆  Subscribe to Newsletter

 

 Rabbit & Fox Facebook Page  ◆  Twitter

 

 Amazon  ◆  Goodreads  ◆  Instagram

 

YouTube ◆  Pinterest  ◆  LibraryThing  ◆  BookBub

 

—————————————

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 ONE WINNER

 

Hardcover Autographed Book, $25 Amazon Gift Card,

 

Long Sleeve Tee Shirt

 

(US only; ends Midnight, CST, December 17, 2020)

 

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

 

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

 

or visit the blogs directly:

 

 

12/7/2020 Book Trailer The Adventures of a Travelers Wife
12/7/2020 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
12/8/2020 Review Chapter Break Book Blog
12/9/2020 Author Interview Jennie Reads
12/10/2020 Review Forgotten Winds
12/11/2020 Review Story Schmoozing Book Reviews
12/12/2020 Top Ten StoreyBook Reviews
12/13/2020 Guest Post Book Fidelity
12/14/2020 Review The Page Unbound
12/15/2020 Guest Post All the Ups and Downs
12/16/2020 Review Missus Gonzo

 

 

 

 

 

Blog tour services provided by

 

 

 

Posted in Giveaway, Historical, romance, Texas, Trailer, Western on December 1, 2020

 

 

ONCE UPON A MAIL ORDER BRIDE

 

Outlaw Mail Order Brides, #4

 

by

 

Linda Broday

 

 

Categories: Western / Historical Romance

Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca

Date of Publication: November 24, 2020

Number of Pages: 352 pages

 

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Accused of crimes he didn’t commit, ex-preacher Ridge Steele is forced to give up everything he knew and make his home with outlaws. Desperate for someone to confide in, he strikes up correspondence with mail-order bride Adeline Jancy, finding in her the open heart he’s been searching for. Upon her arrival, Ridge discovers Addie only communicates through the written word, but he knows a little of what trauma can do to a person and vows to stand by her side.

Addie is eager to start a new life with the kind ex-preacher and the little boy she’s stolen away from her father―a zealot priest of a terrorized flock. As her small family settles into life at Hope’s Crossing, she even begins to find the voice, and confidence, she’d lost so long ago.

But danger is not far behind, and her father will not be denied. While Addie desperately fights the man who destroyed her childhood, a determined Ridge races to the rescue. The star-crossed lovers will need more than prayers to survive this final challenge…and find their way back to each other again.

 

 

 

 

iBooks │ Amazon │ Indiebound

 

Barnes and NobleKobo

 

 

Praise

 

“An awesome culmination to a great western romance series!” ~ Fresh Fiction

“Broday concludes the Outlaw Mail Order Bride series with a sizzling finale that features a tantalizingly slow build to intimate trust that catapults into adrenaline packed ardor.” ~ Booklist

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of over twenty historical western romance novels and short stories. I reside in the Texas Panhandle on land the American Indian and Comancheros once roamed, and at times if the breeze is just right, I can hear their voices whispering in the wind. Texas’ rich history is one reason I set all my stories here where cowboys are still caretakers of the land. I’m inspired every day by their immense dedication and love for the wide-open spaces.

When I’m not writing, I collect old coins and I’ve also been accused (quite unfairly I might add) of making a nuisance of myself at museums, libraries, and historical places. I’m also a movie buff and love sitting in a dark theater, watching the magic unfold on the screen. As long as I’m confessing…chocolate is my best friend. It just soothes my soul.

 

 

 

 Website  ║  Facebook  ║  Pinterest

 

Twitter  ║   Goodreads  ║   Amazon  ║   BookBub

 

 

————————————— 

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 FOUR WINNERS 

 

GRAND PRIZE:

 

Full Autographed Set of the Mail Order Bride Series

 

2ND and 3RD PRIZE:

 

Autographed copy of Once Upon a Mail Order Bride

 

4TH PRIZE: $10 Amazon Gift Card

 

(US Only. Giveaway Ends Midnight, CST, 12/11/2020.)

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway
 

 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

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

or visit the blogs directly:

 

12/1/2020 Book Trailer StoreyBook Reviews
12/1/2020 BONUS Post Hall Ways Blog
12/2/2020 Excerpt Forgotten Winds
12/3/2020 Review Carpe Diem Chronicles
12/4/2020 Review Momma on the Rocks
12/5/2020 Character Interview All the Ups and Downs
12/6/2020 Excerpt The Clueless Gent
12/7/2020 Review Missus Gonzo
12/8/2020 Guest Post The Page Unbound
12/9/2020 Review Chapter Break Book Blog
12/10/2020 Review Reading by Moonlight

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

 

 

Posted in Giveaway, mystery, Spotlight, Texas on November 21, 2020

 

 

 

 

The Light Catcher Murders (Kate Atherton Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Publisher: Independently published (August 15, 2020)
Paperback: 323 pages

 

Synopsis

 

Kate Atherton’s idyllic retirement is going well…if you don’t count the two murders, the mysterious drone, and her photographer friend who manages to poke a hornet’s nest of criminal activity, that is.

Nestled in the scenic Texas Hill Country, the cozy town of Wheaton Creek seemed to Kate Atherton an idyllic place to escape the world’s harsh realities. And then there was the first murder.

Kate once enjoyed a long, successful career with a specialized, highly secret federal intelligence agency. Crises in both her personal and professional life drove her to early retirement and, ultimately, to Wheaton Creek, the perfect place for her and her former-military husband to escape what had come to feel like a world made up of wars, hatred, fear, and untimely death. And, at first, the escape was all Kate had hoped for. Then murder came to Wheaton Creek—a crime that a corrupt county sheriff seems determined to pin on Kate’s photographer friend, Lucy Celek.

Lucy’s work has been chosen to appear at a prestigious photography festival, a festival that could take her from amateur to professional standing. All goes well until the gallery displaying her work is broken into, and one of Lucy’s photographs is vandalized. A week later, the man Lucy suspected of destroying her photograph—a fellow photographer who was angry that his own work was not chosen by the festival committee—is murdered. Faced with a sheriff who shows little interest in expanding his list of suspects beyond Lucy, Kate feels she must dust off her puzzle-solving skills to find the real killer. Murder is just the beginning, though, as Kate’s amateur sleuthing begins to reveal a tangled web of crimes that go beyond anything she could have imagined.

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Jo Cassie McRae is a native Texan who has lived near Austin on the edge of the Texas Hill Country for over 30 years.  In addition to writing, McRae loves to read, garden, and cook.  Like Kate Atherton (The Light Catcher Murders), McRae’s bookshelves overflow with history books, biographies, historical fiction, and mystery novels.  Unlike Kate, McRae does not have a mysterious, secret former career, having worked instead as a rather ordinary legal assistant at an Austin law firm.

 

Website * Facebook * Goodreads

 

Giveaway

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway


 

 

Posted in Giveaway, humor, Satire, Texas on November 12, 2020

 

 

THE SQUARE ROOT OF TEXAS:

 

The First Calamity of QED Morningwood

 

by

 

Rob Witherspoon

 

 

Genre: Satire / Humor / Absurdist Fiction

Publisher: Independently Published

Date of Publication: September 26, 2018

Number of Pages: 181 pages

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

QED Morningwood is a liar, braggart and teller of tall tales. When he shows up at the domino parlor with a mysterious Russian crate in the back of his pick-up truck, he confides to the players he is a ‘Shadow’ member of the NRA, not on their official membership roll, and has a load of rocket propelled grenades – all lies. The news spreads to the real Shadow NRA, the FBI and Homeland Security. Meanwhile, the Russian Ministry of Cultural Preservation sends an agent to retrieve the crate, the actual contents known only to the Russians.

 

The Russian agent, an FBI team, a DHS undercover agent and a Shadow NRA hit team arrive in Heelstring, Texas looking for QED and his crate. Their convergence is followed by interrogations, seduction, lies, arrests, jailbreak, kidnapping and rescue – along with car chases and explosions. If not for Cotton Widdershins, an ancient black man with secrets of his own, who acts as QED’s mentor and savior, the Morningwood line would be doomed to end, or at best spend life in a federal penitentiary.

 

 

Amazon

 

 

 

 

 

Check out this intro to The Square Root of Texas and QED Morningwood with author Rob Witherspoon. It isn’t long, just 1 1/2 minutes but it has me intrigued and I need to read this book…car chases, explosions, and maybe a sword fight!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rob Witherspoon was born and raised in rural Texas. He earned a BA in Physical Education, UT Arlington 1985 and a BS in Aerospace Engineering, UT Arlington 1990. He worked in the aerospace industry for 30 years before retiring in 2018. He lives in north central Texas with his wife and youngest daughter and has spent much of his life in rural communities and on the ranch. He combines his love for Texas, lying, the outdoors, engineering, and his children in his writing.

 

  Website  *  Facebook  *  Twitter

 

  Amazon  * GoodreadsYouTube

 

 

 

————————————— 

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 THREE WINNERS 

 

GRANDPRIZE (US only):

 

Signed Copies of The Square Root of Texas and Deus Tex Machina

 

2ND PRIZE (US only): Signed Copy of The Square Root of Texas

 

3RD PRIZE  (US Only): Kindle Copy of The Square Root of Texas

 

Giveaway ends midnight, CST, 11/20/2020

 

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway
 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page

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

or visit the blogs directly:

 

11/10/2020 Notable Quotable Texas Book Lover
11/10/2020 BONUS Promo Hall Ways Blog
11/11/2020 Review Max Knight
11/12/2020 Author Video StoreyBook Reviews
11/13/2020 Review Book Bustle
11/14/2020 Author Interview All the Ups and Downs
11/15/2020 Guest Post Video Sybrina’s Book Blog
11/16/2020 Review Jennie Reads
11/17/2020 Excerpt Chapter Break Book Blog
11/18/2020 Review Reading by Moonlight
11/19/2020 Review Bibliotica

 

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

 | 
Comments Off on Author Video & #Giveaway – The Square Root of Texas by Rob Witherspoon @RoobWiddershins #LSBBT #humor #satire #TexasAuthor #SmallTownTexas
Posted in excerpt, Giveaway, suspense, Texas, Thriller on November 2, 2020

 

 

 

Strong from the Heart

 

(Caitlin Strong #11)

 

by

 

Jon Land

 

 

Genre: Mystery / Thriller / Suspense

Publisher: Forge Books

Date of Publication: July 28, 2020

Number of Pages: 368 pages

 

 

Scroll down for Giveaway!

 

 

 

 

Caitlin Strong wages her own personal war on drugs against the true power behind the illicit opioid trade in Strong from the Heart, the blistering and relentless 11th installment in Jon Land’s award-winning series.

The drug crisis hits home for fifth generation Texas Ranger Caitlin Strong when the son of her outlaw lover Cort Wesley Masters nearly dies from an opioid overdose. On top of that, she’s dealing with the inexplicable tragedy of a small Texas town where all the residents died in a single night.

When Caitlin realizes that these two pursuits are intrinsically connected, she finds herself following a trail that will take her to the truth behind the crisis that claimed 75,000 lives last year. Just in time, since the same force that has taken over the opiate trade has even more deadly intentions in mind, specifically the murder of tens of millions in pursuit of their even more nefarious goals.

The power base she’s up against―comprised of politicians and Big Pharma, along with corrupt doctors and drug distributors―has successfully beaten back all threats in the past. But they’ve never had to deal with the likes of Caitlin Strong before and have no idea what’s in store when the guns of Texas come calling.

At the root of the conspiracy lies a cabal nestled within the highest corridors of power that’s determined to destroy all threats posed to them. Caitlin and Cort Wesley may have finally met their match, finding themselves isolated and ostracized with nowhere to turn, even as they strive to remain strong from the heart.

 

 

 

 

 

Praise

 

“A time-jumping, savory Tex-Mex tale, seasoned with all the ingredients of a great thriller.”―Brad Meltzer, New York Times bestselling author

“A mind-blowing tale that takes a flamethrower to our psyches to warm the chill it leaves up our spines. Seething with energy and replete with wondrously staged set pieces, this is thriller writing that defies genre even as it reminds us why we love to read.”―NYK Daily

“Exceptional…. Snappy one-liners, plausible dialogue, and lots of nonstop action, Land delivers another riveting, believable thriller.”―Press-Republican

“Caitlin Strong is one of the strongest female characters ever to hit the page, and Jon Land is the king of the intelligent thriller, continually pushing his own writing to new levels.”―New York Journal of Books

 

 

 

 

Prologue from STRONG FROM THE HEART

 

BY JON LAND

 

 

Southwest Texas

 

“There is a house down in New Orleans, they call the rising sun.”

As the famed song played in the single bud still wedged inside an ear, Tom Santiago found himself baking beneath a sun that had risen hours ago, long before his postal rounds brought him to the town of Camino Pass. The mailbag was still slung over his shoulder, a trail of circulars, bills, and typical junk mail left in his three-mile wake across the desert. His other ear bud fluttered by his side, Santiago noticing that no more than he noticed the wind having blown his cap off a mile back, exposing his nearly baldpate to the blistering sun.

His scalp was already scorched red, but neither the pain nor the burn registered with him one bit. He walked purposefully, even though no part of his assigned route awaited him and only bobcats, mule deer and coyote were anywhere about to claim the mail he was toting.

“And it’s been the ruin of many a poor boy and, God, I know I’m one . . .”

Santiago listened to classic rock through the duration of his route, able to time his delivery schedule to how many songs he’d listened to. He could cover an entire neighborhood in the length of one of Bob Dylan’s ballads and a whole street in the time it took to listen to almost any pair of Beatles songs that ranked among his favorites.

Today, though, he didn’t register the song playing in one of his ears or anything else. He walked in an absurdly straight line, as if the desert flora he passed lined his normal route, similarly not noticing the Homeland Security drone overhead. Homeland maintained a fleet of them in the area of the Texas-Mexico border to watch for immigrants making their way north after illegally crossing the border. But the dispatcher who radioed the nearest patrol vehicle currently coming up on Tom Santiago from behind never before had to deal with a wayward mailman instead.

The Humvee with the Homeland Security logo stenciled on both sides came around Santiago and banked to the side to cut him off, only to have him skirt the vehicle and continue on as if it were a natural obstacle. So officers Jim Ochoa and Darnell Reavis leaped down from their air-conditioned cab and caught up with the dazed, barely blinking mailman after a brief chase.

“Hey, buddy, what’s wrong?” Ochoa said, snapping his fingers in front of Santiago’s face and positioned so he could not resume his march through the desert. “You lost or something?”

When this produced no response, Darnell Reavis plucked some mail from the top of Santiago’s bag.

“Isn’t that a crime or something?” Ochoa asked him.

“I don’t think this drunk sack of shit is in shape to care.”

“You think he’s drunk?”

Now it was Reavis who snapped his fingers before the mailman. “Or stoned. What else?”

Ochoa regarded some of the mail Reavis had handed him. “Looks like he left a whole bunch of mail to Camino Pass undelivered.”

“Never heard of it.”

“Small town, no more than three hundred residents,” Ochoa recalled.

“Maybe one of them can tell us what happened to this guy. Hey, what’s that song he’s listening to?” Reavis wondered, easing the stray bud into his ear to find out.

“Well, I got one foot on the platform, the other foot on the train, I’m going back to New Orleans to wear that ball and chain.”

***

Both Ochoa and Reavis felt something strange as the town of Camino Pass came into view. Though neither would admit it, both were of a mind not to continue and call in the Highway Patrol instead, especially when Tom Santiago’s eyes bulged at sight of the town and he began thrashing against the bonds of his shoulder harness.

“No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, NO!”

Santiago finally stopped with his eyes frozen open on Camino Pass growing in shape before them, the perspiration that had soaked through his blue postal uniform now gluing him to the Humvee’s leather-like upholstery.

“What do you want to do?” Reavis asked Ochoa.

“Let’s see what we can see,” his partner replied, even though that wasn’t what he wanted to do at all.

They passed by the homes dotting the town’s outskirts and continued toward its small commercial center populated by stores that had been around since either man had been born, some of them closed.

“Hey,” Reavis said, his attention drawn to the right, “there’s an open door over there. A restaurant, I think.”

“Or a bar,” from Ochoa.

“That would explain things.”

“Want to check it out?”

“I’m thinking one of us should stay with the mailman.”

Ochoa threw open his door. “He’s not going anywhere. Come on.”

***

Tom Santiago’s blank stare followed the men passing through the open door, little more than the length of a breath passing before they stumbled back outside, both nearly falling in their desperate rush back to the vehicle.

“No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,” the mailman repeated over and over again on an infinite loop, as Ochoa screeched the Humvee around and raced from the town with the accelerator floored the whole way.

Reavis grabbed the mic from its stand. “Central, this is Rover Six! Central, come in!”

“This is Central, Rover Six.”

“Central, we’ve got a potential Level One event in the town of Camino Pass. Send . . .”

“Rover Six, this is Central,” the Homeland Security dispatcher said, when Reavis went quiet after using terminology reserved only for the most serious of catastrophes. “Rover Six, we read you. Please continue.”

Reavis swallowed hard. “Send . . . everyone.”

 

Start Reading Chapter One on All The Ups and Downs, 11/3/2020 OR LATER

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jon Land is the USA Today bestselling author of more than fifty books, eleven of which feature Texas Ranger Caitlin Strong. The critically acclaimed series has won more than a dozen awards, including the 2019 International Book Award for Best Thriller for Strong as Steel and the 2020 American Fiction Award for Best Thriller. He has also authored six books in the MURDER, SHE WROTE series and has recently taken over writing Margaret Truman’s CAPITAL CRIMES series. A 1979 graduate of Brown University, Land lives in Providence, Rhode Island, and received the 2019 Rhode Island Authors Legacy Award for his lifetime of literary achievements.

 

Facebook  ◆  Twitter ◆  Amazon

 

Goodreads ◆ BookBub ◆ Website

 

 

—————————————

 

 

GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!  GIVEAWAY!

 

 FIVE WINNERS

 

GRANDPRIZE (US only):

 

5 Autographed copies

 

Ends midnight, CST, November 8, 2020

 

 

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

 

 

Visit the Lone Star Literary Life Tour Page 

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

or visit the blogs directly:

 

10/29/2020 Character Spotlight Chapter Break Book Blog
10/29/2020 Review Bibliotica
10/30/2020 Top 5 List Hall Ways Blog
10/30/2020 Review Tangled in Text
10/31/2020 Review Reading by Moonlight
11/1/2020 Top 9 List Missus Gonzo
11/2/2020 Excerpt StoreyBook Reviews
11/3/2020 Excerpt All the Ups and Downs
11/4/2020 Top 10 List Texas Book Lover
11/5/2020 Guest Post Forgotten Winds
11/5/2020 Review The Clueless Gent
11/6/2020 Top 10 List KayBee’s Book Shelf
11/7/2020 Review That’s What She’s Reading
11/7/2020 Review Book Bustle

 

 

 

 

blog tour services provided by

 

 

 | 
Comments Off on Excerpt & #Giveaway – Strong From The Heart by Jon Land @JonDLand @ForgeReads #LSBBT #mystery #suspense #series #thriller #TexasBook #TexasRanger