23 July 2015

Witchcraft Couture by Katarina West Review!


Oscar Pellegrini is a talented fashion designer with a deadly enemy: his own critical mind. He destroys much of what he designs and has been drifting for years, gradually retreating from the fashion business he loves but holding on to his dreams of success. 

A chance meeting with a former girlfriend triggers a creative crisis so deep that Oscar escapes to Russia, where he drinks and despairs like never before. Just when he thinks he has lost everything he discovers a magical machine that turns ordinary outfits into irresistible sartorial triumphs. Oscar takes the machine back to Italy – and before he knows it, he has become famous for his designs, and celebrities and socialites are fighting to be first to wear his gorgeous garments. 

But the happily-ever-after ending for the fashion messiah turns into a nightmare when his dresses acquire a life of their own, gaining energy and evil as time goes on. Haunted by his creations, a dark secret he is no longer able to hide, Oscar finds himself fighting for his life and sanity, and searching for the answer to a question he never knew existed. 

Is there such a thing as stolen genius, and if there is, can it turn against the very person who stole it?


Purchase Link

    Amazon.com



Katarina West is a novelist, journalist and the author of Witchcraft Couture, a fantasy novel about a fashion designer who becomes an overnight success thanks to magic.

She was born in Finland, has studied in London and Florence – where she completed a doctorate in political science and published a book based on it – and now lives in an old, isolated farmhouse in Chianti with her husband and son, and a German ghost. (Yes, you might hear some German murmured on a moonlit November’s night…)

Katarina is currently working on a new novel – and, writing and country life permitting, tries to read anything and everything well-written that comes into her hands.


Read a Sample Chapter


In the beginning was magic, and magic was all that there was. Before my longing for genius, before genius was invented, before fashion and Paris and black lace dinner gowns, magic was alive in the forests of the North. Before reason began to overshadow religion, before factory chimneys coloured city skylines in grime and charcoal grey, and steam trains puffed their way through honey-coloured fields and dark woodlands; before the Bastille was besieged, the Titanic sank, and the atom bomb was invented – yes, before much of anything, up there in the North, between the two seas, where the earth was arid, the days were short and people silent, magic ruled the world.
Two kingdoms flourished, Kalevala and Northland, one on the current Finnish-Russian border, the other on the snowy plains of Lapland, and their rivalry was the stuff of legend and romance, the kind that came into being by the crackling fire during long winter evenings, when the wind was howling in the corners.
Back then, everything was different. This was not the era of reality shows and low-cost flights, but of long-bearded wizards and heroic bards who sang their enemies into perdition, and instead of blogs and tweets you had spirits and spells of every imaginable variety, and all the other makings of a timeless epic: adventures, battles, kidnappings, bloody weddings.
In the heart of this shamanistic set-up stood not a king or a warrior, or a princess with the face of Helen of Troy and the rump of Jennifer Lopez, or a great dark force whose name couldn't even be uttered. No, the leading role belonged to a magic mill so formidable that it was something not of this world, something mankind had never seen before.
Its name was Sampo and it was the talisman of talismans, because somehow it made money (or success, or whatever you wanted) out of nothing. All you had to do was to put an object inside it, and the Sampo was set in motion. After grinding your rubbish, after some wheezing and vibrating – and some hocus-pocus and abracadabra – and a concluding thud, it spit your milk and honey out, like a cash dispenser gone crazy, so that whoever possessed it was the richest, most powerful and goddam luckiest person in the world.
Everyone coveted it. Nations and heroes perished because of it.
Years passed, metamorphosing into decades and centuries. Napoleon escaped from Elba and Darwin set off on his five-year voyage on the Beagle and Van Gogh cut his ear off, and the Bolsheviks shot their tsar, and millions died in the trenches, and Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt shook hands in Yalta, and Dior dressed his women like lollipop-pink candies in wasp waists and stiffened skirts, and man set foot on the moon for the first time, and Elvis asked millions of women to love him tender, and life, in short, went on. Hardly anyone asked what had happened to the Sampo – even if in the villages of the North rumours circulated about it being hidden and forever lost to the modern world.
But the Sampo wasn't lost. Up there in the cold, hidden in the shadowy silence of an old forest, behind the rocks and the ferns, perched the biggest jackpot of the bygone world, covered in moss, forgotten yet functioning, waiting for its taker.
I have never believed in the power of magic – let alone stories, and much less folk stories coming from the back of beyond.
But then the Sampo entered my life.
And that's where my story begins.
It all began last month when I spotted a redheaded woman wearing a black dress in a boutique opening party in St. Petersburg, Russia, and that moment changed my life.
To the casual eye it was just a dress, and there was nothing visibly striking or particular in it. It was the quintessential little black dress, with an off-the-shoulder neckline, short cap sleeves and an ankle-length skirt.
Yet it took my breath away. I had never seen anything like it in my life before. There was something in it that went beyond ordinary craftsmanship and expertise, something unworldly and hypnotic, which couldn't be described. And the most amazing thing was that it was shining, and its shine radiated all around, so that the woman wearing it was shining too, and her milky skin glowed as if her body was illuminated from within.
Spotting it, I became motionless. I felt butterflies in my stomach, and a pang of jealousy in my heart, for someone had created this outfit, and it hadn't been me. I knew that I wouldn't rest till I had touched it, turned it inside out, and unravelled its mystery.
That was one June evening a month ago, when it all began.
 My Review
So Oscar is a fashion designer who somehow, like what often happens to a writer, has a creativity block. People feel sorry for him so he works at a fashion house and kind of just skates by everyday, not really creating anything new and just kind of buries himself in alcohol. He is in Russia at a party and spots a woman in a black dress and she glows...just glows and everyone is drawn to her. Oscar is intrigued to get to know her and her secrets. 
His quest to find her leads him to a machine, called Sampo, looks like a small refrigerator, yes a refrigerator...crazy huh?  I thought so too, Legend has it that it can create riches beyond your wildest dreams, for Oscar all he has to do is put an article of clothing in it and it transforms into something that everyone wants. A gorgeous item, coveted by all who see it.
Sounds great right? Well Oscar thought so too, but he found that the more he used it the more he had to keep it secret and caused him numerous problems. He lives with his mother in a mansion, Villa Marisa in Italy, that was previously the home of the deceased fashion designer Marisa Marchetti, whose company he currently works for. The more time that goes by and the more successful Oscar becomes, the more paranoid and insecure he gets, as the clothes give him bad vibes and feel evil or is it all in his head? He constantly has to keep this machine a secret, but at some point the secret gets out and that is things get really interesting.
The characters in this story are interesting, there is Oscar himself, who I think is a bit off, a crazy ex girlfriend, a very strange mother and his best friend Ben, also a co worker. To me this story was very Faustian in nature, sell your soul for success. Of course this is a fantasy novel, written with all the knowledge that the author possesses about the fashion industry. I was a bit skeptical at first but I did really enjoy the story. I liked the author's descriptive writing, kept me turning the pages for sure. 
I received a paperback copy of the book and was not monetarily compensated for my review.

Doctor Margaret in Delhi The Azadi Series: Book 2 by Waheed Rabbani Virtual Book Tour!

02_Doctor Margaret in Delhi_CoverPublication Date: May 5, 2015 Historical Novels Publishing Formats: eBook, Paperback 308 Pages Series: The Azadi Trilogy Genre: Historical Fiction 

  READ AN EXCERPT

Doctor Margaret in Delhi is Book 2 of The Azadi Series and a sequel to, Book 1: Doctor Margaret's Sea Chest.

This historical fiction novel continues with Margaret's journey from the time she and her Canadian husband participated in the 1854 Crimean War. Doctor Margaret travels alone to India to be with her parents at the American Presbyterian Mission at Futtehgurh, and then on to her posting at a hospital in Delhi. There she has to not only overcome work pressures, but also deal with her intimidators and intrigues of the Mughals, at the Delhi Red Fort. Margaret's tormenter since her childhood, Captain Albert, also joins a British regiment bound for service in India. The Russian, Captain Count Nicholai, whom Margaret had met in Crimea, also arrives in India under the guise of a French physician. The events leading up to the Indian Mutiny/Rebellion that breaks out in 1857 profoundly affect not only Margaret's life, but also of those who love her and others? who wish her harm. Also, mixed-up in the bedlam is one of the Delhi King, Shah Zafar?s, Red Fort?s Guards sepoys, Sharif Khan Bhadur, the grandfather of Doctor Wallidad, an American doctor. The Azadi Series covers the exciting events and turmoil that enflamed India from 1857 to 1947, and led to her independence. Those incidences engulf the characters of this story at that time, and then later their descendant's lives, again in the 1960s.

Praise for Doctor Margaret in Delhi

"Excellent historical fictional setting, voice and tone. Not my normal reading diet, but your voice is compelling. Overall impression: it seems to be a novel one may settle into and relax for a delightful journey--(Spoiler alert) with a cobra and lots of new Indian vocabulary in store. Interesting bit about Robert Clive and the East India Company. Seems it's a story that should be told." - J.T.Bleu

"I have both traveled extensively in India, as well as have researched both past- and present-day India. I found this novel to be not only entertaining, but quite accurate in its portrayal of a highly complex and constantly evolving country. Margaret is an impressive heroine who must navigate this landscape, and deal with men who don't have her bests interests at heart. I would definitely recommend this well-written novel. I learned from it, and I enjoyed it." - 5-star Amazon review by Read More Books

Doctor Margaret in Delhi Available at

Amazon Smashwords iTunes

03_Waheed RabbaniAbout the Author

Waheed Rabbani was born in India, close to Delhi, and was introduced to Victorian and other English novels, at a very young age, in his father?s library. Most of the large number of volumes had been purchased by his father at ?garage sales? held, by departing British civil service officers, in the last days of the Raj. Waheed attended St. Patrick?s High School in Karachi, Pakistan. He graduated from Loughborough University, Leicestershire, England, and received a Master?s degree from Concordia University, Montreal, Canada. While an engineer by profession, Waheed?s other love is reading and writing English literature, which led him to obtain a Certificate in Creative Writing from McMaster University and start on his fiction writing journey. Waheed and his wife, Alexandra, are now settled on the shores of Lake Ontario in the historic town of Grimsby. More information is available on his website. You can also find him on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads.

Doctor Margaret in Delhi Blog Tour Schedule

Monday, July 6 
Spotlight at Genre Queen 
  Tuesday, July 7 
Review at Book Nerd 
  Wednesday, July 8 
Spotlight at What Is That Book About 
  Thursday, July 9 
Spotlight & Giveaway at Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More 
  Friday, July 10 
Character Interview at Boom Baby Reviews 
  Wednesday, July 15 
Spotlight at The Never-Ending Book 
  Thursday, July 16 
Review at Just One More Chapter 
Guest Post & Giveaway at Unshelfish 
  Friday, July 17 
Interview at The Writing Desk 
  Sunday, July 19 
Review at Carole's Ramblings 
  Tuesday, July 21 
Review at Diana's Book Reviews 
  Wednesday, July 22 
Spotlight at A Literary Vacation 
  Thursday, July 23 
Spotlight at CelticLady's Reviews
  Tuesday, July 28 
Spotlight at Layered Pages 
  Friday, July 31 
Tour Wrap Up & Giveaway at Passages to the Past

04_Doctor Margaret in Delhi_Blog Tour Banner_FINAL

22 July 2015

Midori Spring Ceremonial (Emerald) Matcha Review! #midorispring




A bit about Matcha Tea

  • Matcha Tea is packed with antioxidants including the powerful EGCg
  • Boosts metabolism and burns calories
  • Detoxifies effectively and naturally
  • Calms the mind and relaxes the body
  • Is rich in fiber, chlorophyll and vitamins
  • Enhances mood and aids in concentration
  • Provides vitamin C, selenium, chromium, zinc and magnesium
  • Prevents disease
  • Lowers cholesterol and blood sugar
My Thoughts 

"Our Emerald Class Organic Matcha is rich in antioxidants, with greater than 137x the EGCG levels that of regular steeped tea. Organic Matcha has been shown to help (1) Increase energy levels (2) Help reduce stress and improve mental alertness (3) Support metabolism and help with weight loss (4) Support immune system and helps reduce inflammation. (5) Help the body cleanse of harmful elements."..

I started matcha tea last summer because I had read a lot about the benefits. Having diabetes, I have had to look at ways to lower my blood sugars. So life style change for this gal, diet, exercise, portion control and no binge eating. Doing all of this I was able to lose 65 lbs, along with oral meds of course helped. But all of that combined I was able to get off the insulin, hopefully I can stay off of it. 

Last summer when I noticed the health benefits of matcha tea, I ordered some black matcha tea. I started drinking it in the form of a smoothie, then put it into soy milk and whipped it up into a drink and had it over ice for a nice summer drink. I loved it and had my daughter try it and we both still drink it. 

So I was offered a tin of Midori Spring Ceremonial (Emerald) Matcha tea for review and since I wanted to try the green matcha, I was happy to say yes. Now the first thing I noticed upon opening the tin was the beautiful green color and the smell was a very grassy aroma. So I did the same thing with the green tea that I did with the black and I was surprised at the totally different flavor. A slightly sweet, vegetal flavor. The best way is to have it the ceremonial way (see below for directions) and I have tried it that way and loved it. But to get the benefits that I need I mix it in with my morning smoothie or juice. It will generally mix well in a smoothie but you can not put it in cold juice. You need to mix it in with a bit of hot water then add to juice. It will change the flavor and turn the juice an earthy green color. 

There are so many ways to use matcha tea, you can add it into almost anything you bake or cook. I have used it in cakes, breads and cookies. So very versatile. Back to the health benefits, I found that drinking matcha tea daily has seemed to help with my blood sugar numbers, again this is not a cure by any means, but it can't hurt. 

I received a tin (full size)  of Midori Spring Ceremonial (Emerald) Matcha tea for review and was not monetarily compensated for said review.

Cooking/Baking/Mixing With Recipes 
We have great recipes on our Midori Spring Website. The key is to add about 1 teaspoon of our Chef's Choice Matcha to any mix, blend when baking or cooking. 
Note that cooking with matcha, or applying heat, may turn the green vibrant powder into a dull brown. Which is why we recommend adding a dash of fresh matcha to your finished creation. Adding matcha powder to your finished creation is a good way to brighten up your dish while giving a delicious Green Tea flavor.



Brewing Matcha Tea
Here is an important guide on brewing matcha the right way:
Quick Method (For the casual drinkers)

What you need: Bowl or mug, Small Wire Whisk or Milk Frother, Teaspoon
1. Place 1/2 – 3/4 teaspoon of Midori Spring Matcha Powder in mug, try to remove clumps.
2. Pour 60mL/2oz of hot water (72-76°c, 162-169°f) into mug and whisk briskly in a “W” motion until fine foam appears. Can use a small wire whisk or milk frother.
3. Sip and Enjoy!



Traditional Method (For the adventurous)
What you need: Matcha Bowl (Chawan), Matcha Whisk (Chasen), BambooScoop (Chashaku), Small Sifter
1. Warm up matcha bowl and bamboo whisk. Place whisk in bowl and fill ¹/3 of bowl with hot water. Let it sit for 1 minute, discard water. Dry bowl with clean cloth or paper towel.
2. With the bamboo scoop place 2 scoops of Midori Spring Matcha through a small sifter into bowl to avoid clumping.
3. Pour 60mL/2oz of hot water (72-76°c, 162-169°f) into bowl and whisk briskly in a “W” motion until fine foam appears. The whisk should not scratch the bottom of the bowl.
4. Sip and Enjoy!




Midori Spring Brewing Chart
Brewing MethodMidori Spring MatchaWaterTemperatureTaste Profile
Traditional Midori0.5~1 tsp or 2 Chashaku scoops60mL/2oz72-76°c/162-169°fRich, full bodied, creamy, smooth, sweet
Medium Midori1/2~3/4 tsp or 1 Chashaku scoop80mL/2.7oz72-76°c/162-169°fSmooth, creamy, medium sweetness
Sweet Midori1/2~3/4 tsp or 1 Chashaku scoop90mL/3oz68-72°c/154-162°fLight, very smooth, hint of sweetness
**Tips, the amount of Matcha and water can be adjusted depending on your taste preference.**

Take a look at the following recipe at Midori Spring



Midori Spring EXTRA SOFT CHOCOLATE CHIP MATCHA COOKIE Recipe



  • #midorispring

Golden Tips Darjeeling Tea Bags (Darjeeling Tea, 25 Tea bags) Review ! #goldentipstea





Product Description
  • 100% Pure & Unblended Darjeeling tea
    Bagged and collectively wrapped tea sachets to retain Taste and flavour
    The finest pick of Darjeeling tea for an ecstatic cup of liquor and aroma

     
100% Pure Unblended Indian Teas Connoisseurs from across the world opine that teas grown in India are incomparable and unparalleled in terms of quality, flavor & strength. The flavoury Darjeeling has always been a favorite among tea lovers. As it deserves, Indian Teas command a premium price over teas grown in any other region. Over the years, brands and multinationals, in order to compete on price points, started blending cheaper teas grown in other regions of the world. These blended, impure & poor quality teas were however, still marketed as 'brand India Tea' and sold all across. Such unfair and illegitimate practices resulted in tremendous dilution of the individuality & uniqueness of Indian teas. As a result, over the years, millions of customers switched to teas from other regions. Not only has this deprived tea lovers from a chance to cherish the finest teas grown on earth, it has also led to a major setback for millions and millions of low wage workers and stakeholders of the Indian Tea Industry who face the brunt of such a dilution till date. Golden Tips Teas endeavours to re-introduce you to the world of Real Indian Teas. With our selection of 100% Pure Unblended Indian Teas, sealed & shipped directly from India, Golden Tips tea wishes to reinstate the deserved position of Indian Teas in the global tea market and make available the finest teas grown on earth. 2) Garden Fresh Teas Direct from India

  •  Golden Tips tea are located exactly where your favorite teas are grown. With unparalleled infrastructure in Darjeeling, Assam, Nilgiri, Sikkim, Kangra, Dooars, Golden tips tea are able to source some of the finest teas grown in India every season. The location at source gives Golden tips tea the advantage to identify and select teas from Darjeeling, Assam, Nilgiris and surrounding regions within days of their harvest.
My Thoughts
The flavoury Darjeeling has always been a favorite among tea lovers and personally I have always enjoyed a strong black tea. I was offered a box of Golden Tips Darjeeling Tea Bags (Darjeeling Tea, 25 Tea bags) and I immediately said yes. I don't have tea every day but when I do I want a quality cup of tea, one that is strong enough for my tastes but not bitter. This tea accomplished both, using fresh boiled water and a bit of rock sugar for sweetener, this made the perfect cup to relax me in the evening. I really liked this brand and the price is great! I have not seen this product in any of our local stores but I have put it in my wish list at Amazon for when I run out!
I was offered a box of Golden Tips Darjeeling Tea Bags, 25 count, for review and was not monetarily compensated and my thoughts are my own.
#goldentipstea

Maud's Line by Margaret Verble Spotlight wit hGiveaway !

Please join Margaret Verble as she tours with HF Virtual Book Tours for Maud's Line, from July 13-24th 
  
Publication Date: July 14, 2015 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Formats: eBook, Hardcover 
ISBN-10: 0544470192 
Pages: 304  
Genre: Historical Fiction

      

02_Maud's Line_CoverA debut novel chronicling the life and loves of a headstrong, earthy, and magnetic heroine Eastern Oklahoma, 1928. Eighteen-year-old Maud Nail lives with her rogue father and sensitive brother on one of the allotments parceled out by the U.S. Government to the Cherokees when their land was confiscated for Oklahoma?s statehood. Maud's days are filled with hard work and simple pleasures, but often marked by violence and tragedy, a fact that she accepts with determined practicality. Her prospects for a better life are slim, but when a newcomer with good looks and books rides down her section line, she takes notice. Soon she finds herself facing a series of high-stakes decisions that will determine her future and those of her loved ones. Maud's Line is accessible, sensuous, and vivid. It will sit on the bookshelf alongside novels by Jim Harrison, Louise Erdrich, Sherman Alexie, and other beloved chroniclers of the American West and its people.



Read an Excerpt

Maud was bent over one row suckering tomato plants and Lovely was bent over the next one. They were talking about a girl Lovely had his eyes set on. But a cow’s bawling interrupted that. Maud unfolded and looked toward the river. Lovely did the same. The bawling was loud, unnatural, and awful, and it set them to running. They ran first toward the house, not toward the sound, because neither had taken a gun to the garden. Maud stopped at the steps; Lovely rushed in for their rifles. Armed up and not bothering to talk, they both ran straight toward the pump to get to the pasture below the ridge where the howling was coming from. If they hadn’t been fearful, they would’ve run fifty more yards to the gate and gone through it. But they were scared and hurrying, so they climbed the barbed wire just past the pump, and Lovely snagged his sleeve, leaving behind a piece of blue cotton waving like the flag of a small foreign country. Maud did worse than that. She snagged her leg below the knee at the back, opening a tear deep at its top and three inches long. Maud was vain about her legs and Lovely had only three shirts, but still they ran, focused on the bawling, without minding their mishaps. 

       When they got to the cow, Betty was folded with both her head and her rump sticking up. Between them, smack across the ridge of her spine, were three wide, angry gashes. She was thrashing all over the ground. She’d flattened out a circle of weeds, and, oddly, out of the center wound, a stalk of poke protruded. It was a thick stem of poke and resembled, stuck out as it was, a spear. That’s what Maud thought as soon as she saw it. 

       Lovely yelled, “Her back’s axed. We’ll have to shoot her.” He moved toward Betty’s head and raised his rifle. But then he just stood, cheek on the stock, eye down the sights, finger on the trigger. 

       Maud yelled, “Pull it.” 

       But the end of Lovely’s gun shook like a leaf in a breeze. So Maud raised her rifle, moved a step west to keep from shooting her brother, and waited until she had a good look at an ear. 

       The blowback of skull and brain splattered onto Lovely’s overalls and shirt. He lowered his gun and looked down at his bib. He said, “I’m gonna be sick.” Before he completely bent over, he threw up fatback and biscuits over pieces of cow head. 

       Betty’s legs kept flailing. Maud shouldered her rifle again; said, “Move farther back”; looked down her sights; and sent another bullet into the white patch between the cow’s eyes. Then she cradled her gun in the crook of her arm, cupped her hand over her mouth, and cried, “Betty, I’m sorry.” Her shoulders heaved. She felt the blood trickle down the back of her leg. She looked at the rivulet, laid her gun on the ground, and tore off a Johnson grass blade. She plastered it over the wound and then sat in the weeds and watched the cow twitching to death. 

       Tears watered Maud’s eyes and spilled onto her cheeks. Betty was a tough Hereford with a big heart and strong legs and, the year before, had climbed a fallen tree to escape the worst of the flood. But any dead cow would’ve been a disaster. They’d lost all but three of their herd to the water. To take her eyes and mind off of Betty’s trembling, Maud looked over to Lovely. He was wiping his bib with a leaf. She said, “Don’t worry about that. We’ve got to save this meat.” 

       Maud sent Lovely off to round up their uncles, Blue and Early. The men came back with Blue driving Great-Uncle Ame’s 1920 Dodge sedan. He maneuvered it into the pasture as close to Betty as he could get, and the four of them strung her up to the sturdiest tree around. They set to butchering, talking about the meanness it took to ax a cow in the back. They gave Blue the hide to cure and packed Betty’s meat in old newspapers and feed sacks. They deposited those on the floor of the backseat and agreed they’d pay Hector Hempel, the dwarf who ran the icehouse, two rump roasts for storing the meat. The men drove off with the car loaded so heavy it didn’t rattle. 

       Maud walked to the house. She first tended her leg and then drew her dress and slip off over her head. At eighteen, she was fit, dark, and tall like the rest of her mother’s family and most of her tribe. She was more of a willow than an oak, and her figure and personality had grown pleasing to every male within a twenty-mile radius, to some of the women, too, and to most of the animals. Maud carried that admiration the way eggs are carried in a basket, carefully, with a little tenderness, but without minding too closely the individual. She drew on another slip and dress, tossed her and Lovely’s dirty clothes in a tub, and pumped cool water over them until they were completely covered. She left them to soak while she filled one of the front-yard kettles with water and lit a fire under it. 

       While she stirred their clothes in the kettle, her heart sank further than it’d sunk since the flood, and tears came to her eyes again. Heat rose up to her cheeks, and the fire under the pot made her shins hot. She poked the clothes with the pole and gave in to crying and to some self-pity she didn’t much admire. She wanted a washer with a tub and ringers. They were advertised all the time in the papers. So were refrigerators, lamps that turned on with buttons, toilets that flushed in the house. She lifted her dress out of the water with the end of the pole and dipped it again. She wiped her nose with the back of her hand and forced her mind off of the things she wanted. She turned it to the cold kind of cruelty that would kill an innocent cow. She felt Betty’s twitching in the wound on the back of her leg, felt her bawling all over again in her heart. 

       But she was recovered and hanging the clothes on the line when the men got back to the farm. And although they were noticeably tired from the butchering and lugging of meat, and Lovely was still shaken from the whole ordeal, they pitched in and scooped out the wash water, carried it to the garden for the tomato plants, and set wood for a fire in the pit. Maud had saved back enough meat to feed some of their extended family: Blue and Early, of course; and her grandpa Bert; and her great-uncle Ame and his wife, Viola; and her aunt Lucy and her husband, Cole. She didn’t save out any for her father. It was Saturday and late in the afternoon. He wouldn’t crawl back until well into the night. 

       Blue left to clean up and fetch the others. But Early hung around to eat his share of the beef. He was only twenty-six, and his talk was about going to town, gambling, and people of the female persuasion. Maud found Early a lot of fun, and having him to herself raised her spirits some. She teased him about his plans for the evening and fed him the food that was ready, except for the onions. She told him he needed to hold off on those out of respect for the women. 

       Shortly after Early left, Blue came back in a wagon with his father, Ame and Viola, Lucy and Cole, and their baby boy. He pulled the wagon close to the fire and hitched the mules to the rail. There weren’t enough chairs for everybody to sit, so they ate from the wagon bed, some in it...

PRAISE FOR MAUD'S LINE

"Maud is refreshingly open and honest about her own sexuality though conscious of her place as a woman in a sexist society, always careful not to insult the intelligence or manhood of her male friends and relations. Verble writes in a simple style that matches the hardscrabble setting and plainspoken characters. Verble, herself a member of the Cherokee Nation, tells a compelling story peopled with flawed yet sympathetic characters, sharing insights into Cherokee society on the parcels of land allotted to them after the Trail of Tears." ..Kirkus 

Writing as though Daniel Woodrell nods over one shoulder and the spirit of Willa Cather over the other, Margaret Verble gives us Maud, a gun-toting, book-loving, dream-chasing young woman whose often agonizing dilemmas can only be countered by sheer strength of heart.  
..Malcolm Brooks, author of Painted Horses 

"I want to live with Maud in a little farm in a little valley under the shadow of a mountain wall. Maud's Line is an absolutely wonderful novel and Margaret Verble can drop you from great heights and still easily pick you up. I will read anything she writes, with enthusiasm. ...Jim Harrison, author of Dalva, Legends of the Fall, and The Big Seven 

Margaret Verble gives us a gorgeous window onto the Cherokee world in Oklahoma, 1927. Verble?s voice is utterly authentic, tender and funny, vivid and smart, and she creates a living community the Nail family, Maud herself, her father, Mustard, and brother, Lovely, and the brothers Blue and Early, the quiet, tender-mouthed mare Leaf, and the big landscape of the bottoms, the land given to the Cherokees after the Trail of Tears. Beyond the allotments, it opens up into the wild, which is more or less what Verble does with this narrative. A wonderful debut novel...Roxana Robinson, author of Sparta

03_Margaret VerbleABOUT THE AUTHOR

MARGARET VERBLE, an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, has set her novel on her family's allotment land. She currently lives in Lexington, Kentucky, and Old Windsor, England.

GIVEAWAY!
One lucky US reader will win a paperback copy of Maud’s Lines. Just enter as many ways as you’d like on the Gleam widget below. 
Maud's Line Giveaway!

BLOG TOUR SCHEDULE

Monday, July 13 
Review & Giveaway at Broken Teepee 
  Tuesday, July 14 
Guest Post at Mina's Bookshelf 
Spotlight at A Literary Vacation 
  Wednesday, July 15 
Review at A Book Geek 
  Thursday, July 16 
Review at Beth's Book Nook Blog 
  Friday, July 17 
Excerpt & Giveaway at Teddy Rose Book Review Plus More 
  Saturday, July 18 
Review at Queen of All She Reads 
  Monday, July 20 
Review at Book Nerd 
  Tuesday, July 21 
Guest Post at Just One More Chapter 
  Wednesday, July 22 
Interview & Excerpt at The Old Shelter 
Excerpt & Giveaway at CelticLady's Reviews 
  Thursday, July 23 
Review & Giveaway at Unshelfish 
Spotlight at Layered Pages 
  Friday, July 24 
Spotlight & Giveaway at Passages to the Past

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21 July 2015

Stand Down A J.P. Beaumont Novella by J.A.Jance

From New York Times bestselling mystery & suspense author J. A. Jance… A new e-original novella featuring one of our favorite protagonists – J.P. Beaumont

STAND DOWN A J. P. Beaumont Novella by J. A. Jance 
E-book ISBN: 9780062418487 
On-sale 7/21/15; $1.99 
Mass Market Paperback ISBN: 9780062418494 
On-sale 7/21/15; $3.99 

William Morrow is thrilled to publish J.A. Jance’s e-original novella STAND DOWN (Witness Impulse; on-sale July 21st , 2015; e-book ISBN: 9780062418487; $1.99).

Life has shifted for J. P. Beaumont. After a tragic accident that devastated—and ultimately disbanded—his Special Homicide Investigaton Team, he accepts that he has left homicide detection behind at this point, but he has a lot of unanticipated free time on his hands. He's keeping busy with renovations on the new house that he and his wife, Mel Soames, the newly appointed chief of police in Bellingham, Washington, have bought. But new fixtures and paint palettes can occupy only so much of Beau's daily life, and Mel is encouraging him to return to where he is needed: investigating crimes.

In the meantime, she is struggling to gain control of her new situation, cast into a department where some are welcoming—and some are not. It's been a few months, and the tension in the police department is rising, but Beau realizes Mel has to tackle things in her own way, so he refrains from advising. But when Beau shows up one afternoon to survey the construction at their new house and finds Mel's car there but no sign of her, his investigative instincts kick in. Suddenly he's back in the game—except this time, his heart is on the line as well as his professional dignity.

Jance’s third e-novella does not disappoint. The J.P. Beaumont series (a highly anticipated combined Walker & Beaumont novel) continues with the forthcoming DANCE OF THE BONES: A J.P. Beaumont and Brandon Walker Novel (William Morrow hardcover; on-sale September 8th, 2015; ISBN: 9780062297662; $26.99). In anticipation for the September release, STAND DOWN will include a special sneak peek of DANCE OF THE BONES!


DANCE OF THE BONES A J.P. Beaumont & Brandon Walker Novel by J. A. Jance 
Hardcover ISBN: 9780062297662 
On-sale 9/08/2015; $26.99

About DANCE OF THE BONES 

J. P. Beaumont and Brandon Walker, two of New York Times bestselling author J. A. Jance’s most acclaimed series characters, join forces for the first time in one of the most suspenseful works of her career. Years ago, Amos Warren, a prospector, was gunned down out in the desert and Sheriff Brandon Walker made the arrest in the case. Now, the retired Walker is called in when the alleged killer, John Lassiter, refuses to accept a plea deal that would release him from prison with time served. Lassiter wants Brandon and The Last Chance to find Amos's "real" killer and clear his name. Sixteen hundred miles to the north in Seattle, J.P. Beaumont is at loose ends after the Special Homicide Investigation Team, affectionately known as S.H.I.T., has been unexpectedly and completely disbanded. When Brandon discovers that there are links between Lassiter’s case and an unsolved case in Seattle, he comes to Beau for help. 


Those two cases suddenly become hot when two young boys from the reservation, one of them with close ties to the Walker family, go missing. Can two seasoned cops, working together, decipher the missing pieces in time to keep them alive? 

J. A. Jance is the New York Times bestselling author of the J. P. Beaumont series, the Joanna Brady series, the Ali Reynolds series, and four interrelated thrillers about the Walker Family. Born in South Dakota and brought up in Bisbee, Arizona. Jance lives with her husband in Seattle, Washington, and Tucson, Arizona. 

Somebody I Used To Know by David Bell Spotlight!


Book Details

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: NAL (July 7, 2015)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0451474201
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451474209

David Bell’s SOMEBODY I USED TO KNOW (New American Library Trade Paperback Original; July 7, 2014; $15.00), Nick Hansen has never really gotten over the death of his college girlfriend, Marissa Minor, some twenty years earlier. He managed to move on, but Marissa’s death in a house fire right before college graduation still haunts him.
One day at the grocery store, Nick receives the shock of his life:  he comes face-to-face with a young woman who is the spitting image of Marissa. But when Nick tries to speak to the woman, she drops her basket of groceries and runs out of the store. Unfortunately, the next morning, the police come knocking on Nick’s door. The young woman from the grocery store was found murdered in a hotel and the only clue they have is a slip of paper with Nick’s name and address, which Nick knows nothing about.
Convinced that there's a connection between this young woman's murder and Marissa's death years ago, Nick enlists the help of his college friend, Laurel Davidson, to investigate the events leading up to the night of Marissa's death. Nick needs to clear his name and uncover what really happened to the love of his life. Two decades of deceit, heartbreak, and longing will be swept away, and the truth will be more shocking than he ever could have imagined.
The Washington Post wrote that David Bell’s previous book The Forgotten Girl provided“…realistic glimpses of small-town America…you might want to read [The Forgotten Girl] the next time you’re drawn back to the place you came from. It’ll remind you of why you got the hell out of there in the first place.” The Cleveland Plain Dealer also chimed in that “[Bell is] a bang‑up storyteller, armed with enough detours and surprises to keep the pages turning.” 

SOMEBODY THAT I USED TO KNOW was recently reviewed by Publishers Weekly where they wrote of it:  “Distinctive characters and a smartly crafted plot lift this well above the genre average.”

Praise for David's work:

David Bell is a natural storyteller and a superb writer…Mr. Bell understands the hearts and minds of ordinary and not so ordinary people, and his keen insights add a powerful dimension to his crisp writing.”
—Nelson DeMille, #1 New York Times bestselling author

"David Bell writes spellbinding and gripping thrillers that get under your skin and refuse to let go."
—Linwood Barclay, New York Times and #1 international bestselling author

"A master.”
—John Lescroart, New York Times bestselling author

“One of the brightest and best crime fiction writers of our time.”
—Suspense Magazine

“Distinctive characters and a smartly crafted plot lift this well above the genre average.”
—Publishers Weekly



The Author

David J. Bell is the bestselling and award winning author of the novel SOMEBODY I USED TO KNOW (NAL/Penguin). His previous novels include THE FORGOTTEN GIRL, NEVER COME BACK, THE HIDING PLACE, and CEMETERY GIRL. He is currently an Associate Professor of English at Western Kentucky University and can be reached via his website at www.davidbellnovels.com, on Twitter at Twitter.com/davidbellnovels, and on Facebook at Facebook.com/davidbellnovels.

Chaos Company by Christopher Slayton Spotlight!



Publication Date: March 9th, 2015
Publisher: Kindle Direct Publishing

Summary/Blurb: 

The highly effective team of genetically enhanced soldiers code-named Chaos Company has returned to the United States to be commended for their bravery. While on leave the team finds themselves at odds with the highly dangerous mercenary Liam King, who has been contracted to assassinate President Jennifer Grey. Chaos Company thwarts Liam’s attack, but at the cost of their team leader's life. 

With their leader killed the team looks to Corporal Desmond Striker to guide them in a hunt for Liam. During their hunt the team will find themselves in the cross-hairs of a private military company and have their abilities pushed to their limits. Before Chaos Company finally comes to blows with Liam they will discover that their greatest threat is a leader within their own country.

Learn more here:

You can purchase the book here at Amazon:




Author Bio

Christopher Slayton was born and raised in New Castle, Delaware. During Chris’ high school years he earned two All-Conference awards in lacrosse and three national awards in JROTC. Chris attended the University of Delaware, where he earned a B.A. in Psychology. While in college Chris was a UD ambassador, and wrote sketches for his school’s comedy show. Chris was a member of his school’s Tae Kwon Do team, where he earned multiple honors in nine tournaments. Chris has incorporated his passion for both martial arts and videogames into his writing, helping him finish his first ebook Chaos Company.
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