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 May 2019

Summer Romance Rewind… A Deceptive Match By Kelli A. Wilkins


Summer Romance Rewind… A Deceptive Match
By Kelli A. Wilkins

Hi everyone,

Believe it or not, summer is just around the corner, so today I’m sharing a look at my sizzling summer romance, A Deceptive Match.

A Deceptive Match is a contemporary romance novel set in the world of professional wrestling. Wrestling has always been a part of my life, so it was only natural that one day I’d write a book with wrestling as the backdrop. But this book is different from all of my other books because the entire story came to me in a rather unusual way—in a dream.

One morning I woke up and said “Uh-oh!” and grabbed the pen and paper next to the bed. (I keep it there in case of inspiration.) I knew that if I didn’t immediately start writing down everything in my head, it would be lost forever. So I sat there, furiously scribbling the outline. At this point, it was just the bare bones of the plot and the characters, but I knew I was onto something.

Over the course of the day, more bits and pieces came through. Now I had a subplot, secondary characters, and knew more about what was happening in this wrestling romance that suddenly appeared out of nowhere. I was fortunate enough to actually “see” the book in my head like a movie—some scenes were missing, but I had a clear picture to work from.

People who have read the book and know about my love of wrestling always ask me the same questions: Which wrestlers are the characters based on? How do you know all this stuff? How much of it is real?

It’s easier to answer the second question first. Many years ago, I was fortunate enough to be on friendly terms with a bunch of wrestlers. My husband and I would go to matches and hang out with the guys after the shows. (No, I wasn’t a ring rat.) I picked up a lot of terms and got a real feel for what they did and how they experienced life on the road.

At the time, the thought of being a writer never even crossed my mind, so I had no idea that one day I’d use what I learned in a book. When I got the idea for A Deceptive Match, I was able to incorporate much of what I knew into the plot through Danni’s point of view.

The male characters in the book (Vinnie, Ev, Thorn, and Nick) aren’t based on any one wrestler or any real person. I specifically made sure that Vinnie and the others aren’t linked to real wrestlers, because it would take away from the story. Like characters in any book, I invented whatever quirks, flaws, and backstory I needed to help move the plot along.

And how much of it is real? Well, anyone who knows anything about wrestling can tell you that it’s technically termed “sports entertainment” for a reason. But that doesn’t discredit all the training, hard work, and other sacrifices the wrestlers go through every day. A Deceptive Match touches on the subject of what’s “real” and what goes on behind the scenes that most fans are unaware of.

Here’s the book summary and a mini-steamy excerpt:

A Deceptive Match

Falling for the wrestler she had been assigned to interview wasn’t part of Danni’s plan, until Vinnie Valentine pinned her heart in a flash.

Disgruntled with her job as the office assistant for a national sports magazine, Danni Stone impersonates a reporter to prove herself to her boss. Her assignment? Spend thirty days on the road with Vinnie Valentine, a sexy professional wrestler.

Life isn’t going well for the Heavyweight Champ. Vinnie is struggling with a manipulative boss, prepping for the most important match of his career, and feuding with his arch-enemy, Thorn. The last thing he needs is a nosy reporter following him around—even if she is hot.

Thrown together in close quarters, Danni can’t help falling for Vinnie, and she unwittingly becomes a key player in his title match. Their mutual attraction grows, and late one night, they give in to the lustful feelings they’ve been fighting.

As their relationship deepens, Danni considers telling Vinnie her secret. But before she can confess the truth, Vinnie discovers she isn’t the reporter she claims to be. Her lie threatens to ruin everything between them. Will their relationship be destroyed by her deception or will their love win out?


Excerpt:

Danni hurried down the hall to the locker room. She hadn’t meant to be late picking up Vin tonight, but the moron lot attendant wouldn’t let her back into the parking area. She pushed open the locker room door and rushed inside. “Vin, I’m sorry I—”

Her tote bag slipped through her fingers and dropped to the floor. Vin stood less than three feet away, soaking wet. A white towel barely covered his waist.

“Oh, my God!” Her entire body flushed as a tingling sensation built deep in her belly. Vin was practically naked and dripping wet from the shower.

“I…um…you’re…I…oh God,” she muttered and whirled around. Why wasn’t he saying anything?

Vin’s warm hand settled on her shoulder. He gently turned her to face him. Beads of water dripped down his chest, and she longed to lick them away. “Um…you…you’re wet.” She glanced at the towel and prayed it would fall off his waist.

“And you’re not?”

She squealed as Vin drew her to his chest. His mouth covered hers, and she lost all sense of reason.

A wet heat built between her legs as Vin’s tongue entered her mouth. She clutched him tight and dug her fingers into the solid flesh of his back and ribs. He smelled like soap and water and yet there was a hint of something manly, musky about him.

Vin moaned and cupped her buttocks through her sundress, melding her body against his. A high-pitched mewing sound escaped her throat as a long-denied lust flared within her. Was this really happening? She’d had this fantasy for so many nights, would she wake up and discover it was only another erotic dream?

Order A Deceptive Match here:


***

I enjoyed creating the characters in this wrestling universe, and as I was writing, I fell in love with Everett, Vinnie’s best friend. I knew I had to tell Ev’s story and give him his own book, so I wrote A Secret Match. That book is all about Everett, but Danni and Vinnie play supporting roles in the storyline. Although the books are connected, they each stand alone as individual reads.

I hope romance fans and wrestling fans alike will check out A Deceptive Match and A Secret Match. They’re a good blend of action, drama, romance, humor, and spicy love scenes.

Happy Reading!
Kelli A. Wilkins

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kelli A. Wilkins is an award-winning author who has published more than 100 short stories, 19 romance novels, 5 non-fiction books, and 2 online writing courses. Her romances span many genres and heat levels, and she’s also been known to scare readers with her horror stories.
Her historical romance, Dangerous Indenture, was released in March 2019. This full-length novel is set in Pennsylvania Colony and blends a sensual romance with mystery and suspense.

She published the second half of her flash fiction series, Cupid’s Schemes, in early 2019. These two volumes of lighthearted mini-romances are perfect reads for a quick lunchtime escape or an after-work indulgence.

Kelli released her latest Teachable mini-course, Fiction Basics: Finding Ideas in February 2019. She authored Fiction Writing for Beginners through Teachable in 2018. These courses are perfect for anyone who wants to learn how to write. Visit: https://kelliwilkins.teachable.com/ for more details.
If you like horror fiction, don’t miss her novella, Nightmare in the North.
Not just an author, Kelli is also an amateur photographer. Visit her pages on Shutterstock https://www.shutterstock.com/g/kelli+wilkins and iStock https://www.istockphoto.com/portfolio/kelliwilkins to view her photos.
Kelli posts on her Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorKelliWilkins and Twitter: www.Twitter.com/KWilkinsauthor.
Visit her NEW website www.KelliWilkins.com and blog http://kelliwilkinsauthor.blogspot.com/ to learn more about all of her writings.

“Memory” from Phoenix: Transformation Poems by Jessica Goody Guest Post!


“Memory” from Phoenix: Transformation Poems by Jessica Goody

I write to make myself heard and understood, to share my sense of self and the world around me, and poetry is the most accurate means I know of to describe what goes on inside my mind.
When something affects me deeply and I find myself unable to keep from thinking about it, putting it on paper clears my head. Ideas are everywhere; it’s just a matter of paying attention to things around you. It’s much harder to find the right words to express your thoughts. I look for the stories within a scene, the inner thoughts behind the images.

This poem, “Memory” was inspired by personal experience: When I lived in New York, I volunteered with an arts program for senior citizens with Alzheimer’s Disease. Working with them, I saw firsthand how perfectly lucid, funny, articulate, talented people would suddenly forget their surroundings, their memories, their own names. Some of them had been married for upwards of forty years, which made me wonder what it must be like to wake up next to someone you have known for so long and not be able to recognize them; being forced watch to the person you love become a stranger.

Memory

Everything he loves about her is gone.
Her face is frozen, blank as new paper,
once-dark eyebrows faded to whiteness.
Her mouth drags now, the pinpricks of

dimples no longer flickering in the curve
of her cheek. Her skin is slack and creased
with wrinkles, the joints stiff and swollen.
Her long fingers gnarled and crone-cold,

legs etched with blue veins mapping their
decades together. Every day he visits,
waiting to see some spark of memory
in her eyes; the knowledge of his presence,

forgotten yet familiar. He holds her cold
hands, scrubbing them between his own
to warm them, and links their fingers,
stroking her knuckles with his thumb.

Jessica Goody is the award-winning author of Defense Mechanisms: Poems on Life, Love, and Loss (Phosphene Publishing, 2016) and Phoenix: Transformation Poems (CW Books, 2019). Jessica’s writing has appeared in over three dozen publications, including The Wallace Stevens Journal, Reader’s Digest, Event Horizon, The Seventh Wave, Third Wednesday, The MacGuffin, Harbinger Asylum and The Maine Review. Jessica is a columnist for SunSations Magazine and the winner of the 2016 Magnets and Ladders Poetry Prize. A fifth-generation New Yorker, she currently lives in the South Carolina Lowcountry with an exuberant poodle named Coco.




Jessica’s poetry collections Defense Mechanisms: Poems on Life, Love, and Loss and Phoenix: Transformation Poems are available on Amazon.

Staging is Murder (A Laura Bishop Mystery) by Grace Topping Book Tour and Giveaway!


Staging is Murder (A Laura Bishop Mystery) by Grace Topping

About the Book

Cozy Mystery 1st in Series 
Henery Press (April 30, 2019) 
Hardcover: 268 pages 
ISBN-10: 163511490X 
ISBN-13: 978-1635114904 
Paperback: 268 pages
ISBN-10: 163511487X 
ISBN-13: 978-1635114874 Digital 
ASIN: B07N96J65X
Laura Bishop just nabbed her first decorating commission—staging for sale a 19th-century mansion that hasn’t been updated for decades. But when a body falls from a laundry chute and lands at Laura’s feet, replacing flowered wallpaper becomes the least of her duties.
To clear her young assistant of the murder and save her fledgling business, Laura’s determined to find the killer. Turns out it’s not as easy as renovating a manor home, especially with two handsome men complicating her mission: the police detective assigned to the case and the real estate agent trying to save the manse from foreclosure.
Worse still, the meddling of a horoscope-guided friend, a determined grandmother, and the local funeral director could get them all killed before Laura props the first pillow.

About the Author

Grace Topping is a recovering technical writer and IT project manager, accustomed to writing lean, boring documents. Let loose to write fiction, she is now creating murder mysteries and killing off characters who remind her of some of the people she dealt with during her career. Fictional revenge is sweet. She’s using her experience helping friends stage their homes as inspiration for her Laura Bishop mystery series. The first book in the series, Staging is Murder, is about a woman starting a new career midlife as a home stager. Grace is the current vice president of the Chesapeake Chapter of Sisters in Crime, and a member of the SINC Guppies and Mystery Writers of America. She lives with her husband in Northern Virginia.

Author Links 
  Website - https://www.gracetopping.com 
  Twitter - https://twitter.com/gtoppingauthor 
  Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/GraceToppingAuthor 
  GoodReads - https://www.goodreads.com/goodreadscomgracetopping

Purchase Links -
Amazon B&N Kobo 
a Rafflecopter giveaway 
TOUR PARTICIPANTS
Part One
April 25 – The Power of Words – REVIEW
April 25 – Readeropolis – SPOTLIGHT
April 26 – Moonlight Rendezvous – REVIEW
April 26 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT
April 27 – A Wytch’s Book Review Blog – REVIEW, CHARACTER INTERVIEW
April 28 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, AUTHOR INTERVIEW
April 28 – Babs Book Bistro – SPOTLIGHT
April 29 – I’m All About Books – SPOTLIGHT
Part Two
May 6 – Brooke Blogs – GUEST POST
May 6 – Laura’s Interests – SPOTLIGHT
May 7 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
May 8 – Baroness’ Book Trove – REVIEW
May 8 – Lisa Ks Book Reviews – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 9 – The Avid Reader – REVIEW
May 9 – Carole’s Book Corner – SPOTLIGHT
May 10 – Teresa Trent Author Site – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
May 11 – The Book Decoder – REVIEW
May 11 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
May 12 – A Blue Million Books – GUEST POST
May 13 – That’s What She’s Reading – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 14 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

  Have you signed up to be a Tour Host?

 

10 May 2019

The Modern Cast Iron Cookbook by Tiffany La Forge Review!



This is another wonderful cookbook that I have the pleasure of reviewing. If you haven't cooked with cast iron, you really should. It takes some getting used to on how you are supposed to clean and season the cast iron frying pan. 

I like using my pan for a variety of cooking. I have cooked chicken and fish in my pan. This cookbook has a section at the beginning giving the reader a response to cast iron myths such as never use soap in your pan. You actually can and it will remove a bit of the seasoning but not too bad as the seasoning is bonded into the pan. The reader also learns about what brands to buy, how to season, what techniques you can use when cooking. The book details what utensils you can use and how to clean the pan.

As far as recipes, there are seven sections that include; breakfast and lunch, biscuits & bread, vegetables and sides, vegetarian and vegan mains, fish and poultry, beef, pork and lamb, and finally desserts and sweet treats, yes desserts. The recipe in the bread section that I want to make is Skillet Sour Crean Coffee Cake with Walnut Streusel, sound good? I thought so too.

Now I am not a vegetarian or vegan but I do like to eat meatless meals. Lasagna is always a recipe that I like without meat or with meat. Skillet Lasagna with Zucchini., Pesto and Goat Cheese. Now that sounds good. I also like soup and there are a few good recipes for soups with chicken or whatever other meat you would like. 

What did I like about the cookbook? I like cooking with other appliances but there are times that I just don't want to use them and cooking on the stove top and using my cast iron pan is the perfect way to go for me. I like the section in the front of the book with all of the tips on how to take care of the cast iron pans. I love the simplicity of the recipes, they are easy to understand. The only thing I missed was pictures, there aren't nearly enough of them. That said I think that I will be getting a lot of use out of this cookbook. I highly recommend it! 

Thanks to the publisher for my copy of the cookbook for review!

Mother's Child by Michael Conant Virtual Book Tour and Interview!

Mother's Child
By Michael Conant
Genre: Women's Literature
About the Book
Told in the voice of June, the story's protagonist, Mother's Child is a "slice of life" as it unfolds during a short period in a lifetime; strung together by one intensely charged event after another. It is the humor of life, marriage, and motherhood surrounded by the challenges of fighting the onslaught of an unknown disease, broken societal systems, and the suffering of broken hearts. It is the story of the average woman, finding her extraordinary voice, and having the courage to be heard. 
In just over two months, June Gallagher's life has turned upside down; it will take a lifetime to resemble "normal" again. Her son's life is on the line--she is determined to save him. 
About the Author
Michael Conant is the publisher and founder of Incorgnito Publishing Press.
Before entering the world of book publishing, Michael spent over twenty years in b2b publishing. He served as a circulation, sales, and marketing executive, managing products across several industries, with a concentration in financial publications.
Prior to his foray into publishing, Michael pursued his love of theater as an actor, singer, director, and producer at regional theaters, dinner theaters, and at several Off-Off Broadway theaters. Michael introduced New York audiences to the American premier of Hal Shaper’s musical adaptation of Jane Eyre, which featured Michael as Rochester along with a very young Alyssa Milano as his ward, Adelle. 
Shortly after moving to Pasadena, CA, Mr. Conant was introduced to Cure Mito, an organization of “Mito Moms” dedicated to funding Mitochondrial Disease research in support of Dr. Richard Boles at Los Angeles Children's Hospital. Michael helped the group secure non-profit status and was elected as the organization’s first president.
In between his publishing duties and new writing efforts, Michael plays a lot of tennis with his South Pasadena, Arroyo Secco teammates. He also spends free time visiting with family and getting "puppy" kisses from his niece's lovable, crazy Bernedoodle, Bentley. (b3ntley_zefluff on Instagram)
Mr. Conant is also the co-author of David Margrave: The plumber who outwitted the IRS. He may be contacted at mconant@incorgnitobooks.com
An Interview with Michael Conant

What do you find most challenging about the writing process, and how do you deal with it?

Well, this book took more than five or six years to write: three years to postpone and come up with excuses not to write it, one year to write it in my head and think about it, and one year to actually write and publish it. Creativity has never been an issue with me. But writing is as much about discipline as anything else. You have to commit to the act of writing your thoughts and re-writing them and then having an editor stomp all over them so you can re-write them again. It’s a long and involved process that begins before you actually type or write a word – even when writing fiction as oftentimes, real events and times can be part of the plot. Mother’s Child, is based on facts of a particular disease and how it affects children and families. So, research was necessary. I find that when I am writing a plot event I enjoy telling or a character I get a kick out of, time ceases to matter. Other times, I sit there and count the words (or let Word do it for me) and struggle to get to my minimum word count for that day. When that happens, I tend to let my eyes drift to a part of the book I enjoyed to get refreshed and inspired.
When and where do you do your writing?
Because I am also a publisher, I like to joke that I have offices worldwide – anywhere a coffee shop has Wi-Fi! And that, along with my home office desk, is where I write. Sometimes on the road as well though I must admit that, during a six-week vacation (unintended) last summer, I wrote only five or six pages. Goes back to that discipline thing or for me at times, a lack thereof. I mostly write during the day but often find inspiration chasing away my sleep at odd hours of the night. I am trying to learn to write things down and to not rely on my memory to recall them the next day. I have an excellent memory; it happens to also be very short.
What have you learned about promoting your books?
Don’t write for love nor profit! Wait – write for the love of writing and because you just want to but don’t expect others to shell out hard earned greens for your black and white offerings. If they do, you are blessed. But, either way, you are no more or less a writer – to yourself. Someone once said to me, “Don’t write unless you have something to say.” I took that to heart. Write because you have a story you have to tell: a fantastical tale, a personal event, a take on an historic happening or whatever it is. But for God’s sake and more so for your own, don’t write because you think you are going to make money! As a publisher, I have learned that you put a book out there wherever you can to get exposure. Spend money where readers congregate and get your authors to get out and about and not sit in a coffee shop or at home praying a crowd gathers outside the front door. Books are like many other products and endeavors; it takes a tipping point to get them discovered on a large stage. Unfortunately, you cannot create a tipping point; you can try and create exposure.
What are you most proud of as a writer?
That I did it. It was an emotional experience for me when I handed the first printed (albeit ARC) copy to my sister. No one knew I was writing a novel except my editor. There is a back story to how this book came about that is too long and boring to go into here. Suffice it to say, this was a project left undone in the past, that invaded my being for years. I could only find peace of mind by writing it. It was an unfinished commitment that my stubborn nature would not let go of.
The other thing that I am proud of or rather get a kick out of is how the characters in the book wrote themselves. Though I had a strong outline in my head of where the plot would go and the type of people that would be in the story, I never could have imagined how they would come to life the way they did. I would write a story line and it was as if each of the characters were shouting out to me, “I am going to do this,” or “No, no-I wouldn’t say that but wouldn’t it be funny or more real if I said or did this.” This was especially true when writing about June’s mishaps or her friendship with Lizzie. And, it was most poignant and real when writing the Epilogue. I didn’t know I was going to write an Epilogue and, in fact, tried to get out of it (my editor would have none of that). I wrote it in one pass with two corrections from my very involved editor. I’m still not certain I wrote it or if someone somewhere was whispering it to me. Sometimes, you just have to trust the voice within.
If you could have dinner with any writer, living or dead, who would it be and what would you talk about?
Well, I would love to have a dinner celebration with all of my Incorgnito Publishing authors and illustrators/designers and editors. They inspired me to write and I enjoy their efforts so much. They live far apart but I have it my head to someday be able to do that.
Otherwise, I think I would have to chose David McCullum: we could just talk about John Adams all night and the other founding fathers perhaps. Okay so maybe he talks and I just listen and sip prosecco.

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