Reviews!

I am still having a difficult time concentrating on reading a book, I hope to get back into it at some point. Still doing book promotions just not reviews Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly July 2024

11 February 2016

The Singing Violin by Alida Van Den Bos Book SPotlight!



THE SINGING VIOLIN: [KIDNAPPED] 

(ISBN: 978-1-63135-809-8) is now available for $16.50 and can be ordered through the publisher’s website: http://sbprabooks.com/AlidavandenBos 

This book is available at Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com
Enter the mind of an obsessive kidnapper in the stunning novel The Singing Violin. What must a young woman do to escape a man who is so obsessed with her that he wants to turn her into a prostitute?

When beautiful young Ryanna goes out for a drink with her boyfriend’s sister, she realizes the danger that she is in. For they are not in an ordinary pub, but a brothel, and she runs away. Harry, the brothel owner, desires Ryanna and catches her, but she escapes and turns to her boyfriend, Richard, for help. Richard just passed his violin examination with the symphony orchestra, and as he is playing a concert, Ryana watches him on television and phones her brother. A knock on her door announces a flower delivery. When Ryanna opens the door and sees it’s Harry, she screams.

Ryanna’s brother hears her screams and calls the police. But Harry has drugged the girl and taken her away. Will she be found before she is forced into a life of prostitution?
“This contemporary thriller deals with social and mental health issues, as it keeps readers enthralled with the big chase scenes. We are thrilled to announce its release,” said Robert Fletcher, CEO of Strategic Book Publishing and Rights Agency. 

About the Author: Alida van den Bos grew up in Holland. She emigrated with her husband and two children to Australia, where adventure beckoned. “We tried digging for opal in Coober Pedy, and then started a horse stud with some successes in local and metropolitan racecourses aptly named Running Hoofs.” They later went into the antique trade. 


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