Reviews!

To any authors/publishers/ tour companies that are looking for the reviews that I signed up for please know this is very hard to do. I will be stopping reviews temporarily. My husband passed away February 1st and my new normal is a bit scary right now and I am unable to concentrate on a book to do justice to the book and authors. I will still do spotlight posts if you wish it is just the reviews at this time. I apologize for this, but it isn't fair to you if I signed up to do a review and haven't been able to because I can't concentrate on any books. Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly April 2nd 2024

24 January 2015

A Bowl of Olives by Sara Midda Review!


ABOUT THE BOOK

From the author of the international bestseller In and Out of the Gardenand the wondrous sketchbook Sara Midda’s South of France comes a long-awaited treasure of a book. Drawn from the artist’s wealth of impressions and memories, it is a book for lovers of food and art and fine gift books—a book for anyone who, upon arriving in a new town, seeks first the local market, or who believes the best thing to do on a given night is to share a table with friends. 

Sara Midda is a watercolorist whose delicate and beautiful paintings shine like jewels, evoking the sweet purple taste of a summer raspberry or the silvery greens and gnarled burnt umber of an olive grove. And she is also a collagist, weaving together photographs, line drawings, her personal swatches—all the hues of a spice cabinet, or the sensations of a picnic, the colors of the breeze, sunshine, laughter, the cooling grass. And a poet, in love with words that sing, like podding and wickernettle and snug

By turns reverent and playful, A Bowl of Olives is a work of pure enchantment, celebrating food—of the seasons, of family, of travel and memory. It is as richly layered as a favorite meal. 

The book is cloth-bound, jacketed, and printed on uncoated stock to convey the feeling of an artist’s sketchbook.



About the author
Sara Midda is an artist who lives in West Sussex, England, and previously lived in the south of France. Her most recent book is Artisan’s children’s activity book How to Build an A.
MY THOUGHTS
A Bowl of Olives is one of those cute little books you pick up just for fun. Full of delightful illustrations in each chapter, recipes scattered through the book that range from Onion Tart to Tarragon Chicken. Lots of food memories and descriptions of how to do place settings and having a picnic. I loved reading through this little book, the only complaint I had is the print is pretty tiny. the wonderful illustrations make up for it though. It is one of those little books you could keep on the coffee table, even though it is a small book, for your guests to look through.
I received a copy of the book for review and was not monetarily compensated.

Surviral by Ken Benton Spotlight with Excerpt!



The Book

The deadliest flu season in a hundred years is about to turn a whole lot deadlier. When an accident at a famous medical research facility lets a mutated avian flu strain out, a nightmare scenario unfolds.  Before authorities can react, millions are infected—and that’s just the beginning. The mortality rate exceeds 80%. Leaders and elected officials soon learn the man-manipulated virus respects neither rank nor stature. The resulting chain reaction leads to a collapse of modern society—even in Colorado, where no cases of the killer strain have yet appeared.

Clint Stonebreaker, a happily-married software engineer living in Denver, doesn’t like watching the news. He especially doesn’t let Jake, his wacky doomsday-prepping brother, watch it when he visits. But when chaos goes viral through the entire country, Clint and his wife Jenny are forced to acknowledge reality. They find themselves hitting the road with their gun-enthusiast neighbor to escape the deteriorating city. Their goal? Reaching Clint’s hunting cabin in Southeastern Colorado and trying to make a homestead of it.

They don’t get far before running into a gauntlet of obstacles. Colorado seems to have become a giant sociological experiment, with dire consequences for making the wrong decisions. The spirit of American resolve is pitted against the ugly realty of criminal opportunism in every direction they turn. Ironically, Clint isn’t sure which is worse: being forced to survive in the midst of civil unrest, or knowing he’ll have to admit to Jake that he was right. Assuming he can find him…

The Author

Ken Benton appears to be your run-of-the-mill city slicker at first glance, blissfully playing with his iPhone at the bar of the local barbeque joint while sipping on craft-brewed IPA. But he has a secret passion: doomsday survival prepping. And if you ever snuck up behind him to see what he was reading, it would likely be one of those apocalyptic-survival stories set after the collapse of modern society. Yes, he’s one of those nuts. But someday soon, Ken believes, those nuts may become the new upper class in society. Until then, we’ll just have to make do with story-telling. And preparing. Cheers.

Excerpt

Because Harold and Barry were both light sleepers, they decided Clint should take the first “watch.” It was only prudent for someone to stay awake and keep an eye on the cars, as well as the personal belongings Barry and Shay had to unload in order to fold their rear seat down for their makeshift bed. Harold would relieve Clint in a couple hours, and then Barry would take the last shift. Barry assured them he would be awake in the wee hours anyway.
“There is one thing that concerns me,” Barry said. “I’d feel better if our perimeter was more …secure.”
“I know what you mean.” Harold scanned their surroundings. “Well, we could move the cars to fence us in better.”
“Sounds like a good idea,” Jenny said.
Harold and Barry adjusted the two wagons so they were back to back, overlapping just a little. They decided it was good enough and everyone but Clint retired to try and sleep.
Clint sat in the comfortable canvas chair he brought along and gazed at the night sky. The smell of campfires was still heavy and the stars were out. He thought about Jake. Jake always liked the stars. Clint checked his cell phone for the twentieth time, but there were still no bars.
Jenny came out of the tent. Clint expected her to come over and kiss him goodnight, but instead she scurried to Harold’s tent and called him. The two of them talked in low voices before Harold got up and walked to his car. He came back with a small vinyl bag and handed it to Jenny. She thanked him and they both went back inside their tents.
Clint could still hear bits and pieces of conversations from the other campers. Not enough to understand the exchanges, but he picked up certain words that gave him the gist of the topics being discussed. Everyone was trying to go somewhere. People were concerned about their own safety, in addition to the safety of the ones they were going to see. Complaints about phones not working were also popular. Clint realized he and Jenny were in the same predicament as everyone else. Barry and Shay, too. They were nice folks. Good thing Clint picked this spot, so they could partner up with them for the night.
Clint caught himself nodding off twice. He eventually decided to move to the picnic table to prevent any further occurrences. Harold got up and relieved him shortly thereafter. He had a book, and turned the lantern back on so he could read.
Inside the tent, Jenny was sleeping lightly. She rustled as Clint found a comfortable position next to her. That’s when he noticed the vinyl bag Harold gave her was partially unzipped. He couldn’t be certain in the dark, but it looked to contain one of Harold’s pistols. Clint wasn’t sure whether that should relax him or make him nervous.
It must have relaxed him, because the next thing he knew it was morning. The sounds of people talking—along with car doors shutting and engines starting—caused his eyes to open and find sunlight.
When he and Jenny crawled out of the tent, Harold was talking to Barry next to his brown Volvo. Barry and Shay were packed up already, and apparently about to leave. Shay waited in the passenger seat. Clint and Jenny approached them.
“Good morning!” Barry said “The roads have reopened. Here.” He held out a piece of paper. Clint took it. There was writing on it.
“That’s the name, address, and phone number of Shay’s sister in Pueblo. If you need anything, or have any trouble travelling, feel free to contact us there. Or, if you happen to find yourself in Pueblo, stop by and visit.”
Shay rolled her window down. “Bye, guys. So nice meeting you. Bye, Jenny. Good luck!”
Clint was still groggy as they said their final goodbyes. He wished he had a cup of coffee. They had a bag of grounds packed away, but no practical way to make it.
Barry got in his car and joined the crowd of vehicles that were all attempting to leave at the same time. He first tried to wedge his way into the line, but then seemed to have an inspired notion. He turned and drove right through the trees to get to the side road, his windshield acquiring a small pine branch in the process. Several other cars then followed his example.
“We might as well wait until this clears out more,” Harold said. “Go ahead and use the bathrooms if you need to. I’ll start packing up.”
Harold had everything loaded when Clint and Jenny returned from the restrooms. The field cleared out fast and was nearly vacant by now. Unsightly patches of burned grass marked the sites of last night’s campfires. One of them was still smoldering.
“Are we ready?” Harold said. He appeared to be in good spirits.
They took one final look around before climbing into the car for the road trip. Clint was hopeful of a reunion with his brother before this day was through. Harold started the engine and put the car in gear.
But then he put in back in park.
“No,” he said. “Dear God, no!”
“What’s wrong?” Clint didn’t like the sudden desperation in Harold’s voice.
Without answering, Harold turned the ignition off, opened his door, jumped out, and ran through the trees towards the road.
“What’s the matter now?” Jenny asked.
“I don’t know. Not car trouble, I hope. Looks like he tried to run after Barry and Shay. Did they leave something behind?”
“Or accidentally take something of ours, maybe?” Jenny asked.
Clint looked at her and tilted his head. She raised her eyebrows. They both got out of the car. Harold had disappeared. The traffic was now thinned out, so the remaining cars were moving freely.
Clint turned to Jenny and made an exaggerated shrug. As he did, he noticed a black Chevy Suburban driving on the field. It parked next to the still-smoldering fire. A well-dressed man got out and stomped on it.
“There he is,” Jenny said, pointing to the trees. Clint turned back around.
Harold was back in view, shaking his head and muttering as he slowly returned.
“I’m so stupid,” he said. “So stupid. We’re screwed. Damn those shysters!”
“What’s the problem?” Clint asked.
“They siphoned us. Took all our gas. We had over three-quarters of a tank. Now on empty!” He walked up to his car and pounded a fist on the hood. “Dammit!”
“Are you sure?” Jenny asked. “How can that be? You guys watched the cars all night, right?”
“Let me see,” Clint said. He came around to the driver’s side, slipped in sideways and turned the key one click to the accessory position. The gas gauge rose only to E and the need gas light came on. He cranked the ignition. The car started right up, but the gas reading didn’t change.
“Oh, no.” Clint turned the car off and rested his head on the steering wheel.
Jenny came up next to him. “I don’t understand. Who could have stolen our gas? How could this happen?”
“Our friends,” Harold said. “Barry and Shay. They must have been low.”
“No,” Jenny replied. “No, I don’t believe it. No way it was them. Maybe we punctured the gas tank or something?”
“It was Barry,” Harold said. “Only person it could have been. There’s no gas leak. I saw the gauge when we repositioned the cars last night. There would be a smell, and a puddle under the car.”
“Well then it had to be someone else—like that Zane character, maybe.”
“He’s right, honey.” Clint shook his head. “I remember thinking the position he put his wagon in was a little weird, overlapping the rears like that. It was so the gas caps were lined up.”
“Right,” Harold said. “Remember when he offered to siphon some gas to us? That struck me as odd. Obviously, he had a siphon. Now I see it was a sly way of finding out how much we had.”
Jenny looked shocked. “I …I just can’t believe it. They were so nice. And they gave us their address and phone number.”
“Fake,” Harold said. “Guaranteed. That’s why he wanted the last watch. I shouldn’t have fallen for that. Stupid, stupid, stupid.”
“Not your fault,” Clint said. “They fooled all of us. Good actors. But what are we going to do now?”
“We need help!” Jenny shouted to the air. She began waving her arms frantically. “Somebody, help!”
She then lowered her voice and looked at Harold. “We need to find someone who will give us some gas.”
“Not bloody likely,” Harold said.
The sound of a big motor drew close as the black Suburban on the field suddenly pulled up next to them. The passenger window rolled down and the driver leaned over in his seat.
“You folks all right?” the driver said. “Having some kind of trouble?”
Jenny ran up to his window. “Oh yes, yes, thank you for stopping! Someone siphoned all our gas last night while we were sleeping. We made friends with this other couple, but we think they ended up stealing our gas! Please, can you help us? We just need some gas. At least enough to get back to Denver.”
The driver turned his engine off and climbed out. Clint thought the man looked out of place as he came around the front of his big SUV. Probably in his early fifties, he was too well-groomed, and appeared too well-rested, to be one of the campers from last night. He wore a dress shirt and sports jacket, which smartly complimented his jeans, cowboy boots, and partially-gray hair. This man moved with a certain confidence. Somehow, his presence here relieved much of the stress of the current situation.
“Name’s Wade. Sorry to hear about your trouble. Gasoline has become a scarce commodity, so I’m not surprised by your story. Unfortunately, I can’t spare any, either. And I’m not going to Denver anytime soon—like for the rest of my life, if I’m lucky. About the best I can do is offer you a ride into Springs.”
“Did you spend the night here?” Clint asked. “I don’t remember seeing your car.”
“No.” Wade shook his head. “Not in the park. I got stuck in the Black Forest, too, though. Fortunately, I have some friends with a house here. Heard about the impromptu communities of stranded motorists and decided to take a quick survey of the scene before heading home.”
“You look familiar,” Jenny said.
“You folks live in the Springs area?”
“No, Denver. But we have a second home down near Springfield.”
“I see.” Wade looked disappointed. “Too bad. Well, my offer stands, anyway. You seem like nice people. I’m your fifth-district congressman, Wade Bennett.”
“Oh.” Jenny giggled. “That must be why I recognized you. I’m Jenny Stonebreaker. This is my husband, Clint, and our neighbor, Harold. We were trying to make it down to our second home.”
“Maybe we still are,” Harold said. “Would you mind making room in your truck for some of our equipment?”
“I suppose I could do that. Not the entire load, I hope.” Wade eyed the rear compartment of Harold’s wagon.
“No,” Harold said. “Only the bikes and backpacks.”
“Wait a minute,” Clint said. “We need to discuss this.”
Wade nodded. “Of course. Talk it over. I’ll wait a bit. Those look like good bikes, and you all seem to be in decent shape. You might be able to get back to Denver by early afternoon. Although…”
Everyone looked at him.
“It might be safer heading south. Guess it depends on your second home. Denver had some problems last night, from what I hear. More riots and looting. Just so you know. Up to you.”
Wade sat in his car while Clint, Harold, and Jenny talked. Clint wasn’t initially sure about trying to finish the trip by bike, but when he heard the congressman’s warnings about Denver he was much more inclined towards it. The ride would be difficult either way. But at least going south figured to be more downhill than facing the steep inclines back to Denver.
Then there was Jake. Clint still had no way of knowing if he was okay. Stopping by his house in person might be the only way to do that now. And travelling by an internal-combustion powered vehicle no longer seemed to be an option.
Harold, predictably, was all for it. Jenny took some persuading. Ultimately, though, she was sympathetic to Clint’s fear of riots and acquiesced.

LINKS


author website:


23 January 2015

Perdita by Hilary Scharper Spotlight!



Perdita By Hilary Scharper
Sourcebooks Landmark
January 20, 2015
$16.99 Trade Paperback

“Stunning… richly complex and unpredictable.” —Historical Novel Review

Marged Brice is 134 years old. She’d be ready to go, if it weren’t for Perdita . . .

The Georgian Bay lighthouse’s single eye keeps watch over storm and calm, and Marged grew up in its shadow, learning the language of the wind and the trees. There’s blustery beauty there, where sea and sky incite each other to mischief… or worse…

Garth Hellyer of the Longevity Project doesn’t believe Marged was a girl coming of age in the 1890s, but reading her diaries in the same wild and unpredictable location where she wrote them might be enough to cast doubt on his common sense.

Everyone knows about death. It’s life that’s much more mysterious…

Buy Perdita by Hilary Scharper: Amazon | B&N | BAM |!ndigo | IndieBound | Kobo

About the Author
Hilary Scharper, who lives in Toronto, spent a decade as a lighthouse keeper on the Bruce Peninsula with her husband. She also is the author of a story collection, Dream Dresses, and God and Caesar at the Rio Grande (University of Minnesota Press) which won the Choice Outstanding Academic Book Award. She received her Ph.D. from Yale and is currently Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Toronto.


Excerpt

MARGED BRICE
Cape Prius—1897
July 3

Seven hours passed, and the waves were—Mr. Thompson said they were fifteen feet or more in front of the Lodge. The rain had not ceased, but the sky had turned an evil gray, and we heard thunder far off in the distance….

“The storm is moving fast,” said Mr. Thompson, and he shook his head glumly.

I began to pray fervently. It was but three o’clock in the afternoon, but the entire sky had turned a livid gray, and it seemed as if night had dropped upon us like a curtain falling. Now we could see lightning blaze across the horizon….

The rain came down in sheets, and the waves took on an even more ominous and angry aspect. My heart sank as I thought of the boats in that water.

Then—“There,” shouted Mr. Thompson, gesturing toward the eastern skyline.

And appearing suddenly from around the Point, we could see the outline of a large boat. Its foremast was rolling horribly—up and down, back and forth—and we could see, as it neared, that the first jib sheet was ripped to pieces. The mainsail was shredding rapidly in the wind, and the waves were pushing it toward the shore, where it would surely be smashed into pieces against the rocks. We saw the men lowering the lifeboats and then push off, desperately making for shore.

“Allan,” I cried. He had run out into the storm without warning toward the boats, and I leaped out after him.

Giveaway
3 signed copies of Perdita by Hilary Scharper (open December 15, 2014 – February 7, 2015)

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22 January 2015

Guardian by Natasha Deen Spotlight!!

The Book
Book Details
  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Great Plains Teen Fiction (September 1, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1927855098
  • ISBN-13: 978-1927855096

For seventeen-year-old Maggie Johnson, transitioning the dead isn’t hard.  What’s tough is surviving the insults and pranks of Serge Popov, high school thug and the dumbest jock to ever set foot in Dead Falls, Alberta.  When she finds him dead from alcohol poisoning and later discovers his spirit trapped in her room, she figures it’s a case of divine justice. Let the jerk rot.  But someone—or something—has a different agenda.  If Maggie doesn’t help Serge cross over, she’ll die at the hands of the otherworldly entity that’s taken an interest in the deceased bully. As she digs into the circumstances of Serge’s death, now classified a murder, she’ll uncover the secrets hidden by the world of the living and the wonders revealed by cities of the dead—if her investigation doesn’t kill her, first.


The Author
Natasha Deen graduated from the University of Alberta with a B.A. in psychology. With 15 years experience as a presenter and workshop facilitator with schools, Natasha is also an advocate for vulnerable groups and has worked with the provincial government as well as school boards, libraries, writing camps, and non-profit agencies.
She is published in a variety of genres—from creative non-fiction through to YA and adult—and is an author with Orca Books, The Wild Rose Press, Summit Studios, and Great Plains Publications. Her novel, Ethan’s Chase, was nominated for a 2008 CAPA Award for excellence in romance and her novella, What Happens in Vegas won the 2012 International Digital Book Award. She was the inaugural 2013 Regional Writer in Residence for the Metro Edmonton Library Federation, serving Edmonton, Sherwood Park, St. Albert, & Fort Saskatchewan.

Excerpt:

Never.  It’s such a great word. Decisive. Non-negotiable.
“Would you kill someone?”
“Never.”
Ask the right question to a kid, and you get the emphatic never:
“Would you eat liver?”
“Eww! Never!”
I like “never.” It’s a brave word. I see it used all the time with the people around me. Get them talking about a subject they’re passionate about and inevitably “never” enters the equation. It speaks to the action, the mindset, the moral or value they wouldn't betray.
“I would never harm an animal.”
“I would never hurt a child.”
“I’ll never drink and drive.”
In the real world, we get to have these absolutes, these lines we’d never cross.
In the fiction world, however, life is all about figuring out what your character would NEVER, NEVER-EVER do…then making them do precisely that thing. Or at the very least, putting them into a situation where they’re sorely tempted to do that thing they thought they’d never do.
Take Maggie from Guardian. She’s an easy-going kid. Wants good marks. Loves her family and friends. Drools over her crush. Her big problem in life is Serge, the resident school bully. But no matter. It’s the final year of high school and she’ll be rid of him, soon enough.
She’d never become friends with Serge.
She’d never put her friends’ lives in danger.
She’d never cross the law.
Her nemesis Serge, well, he’s not so easy-going. He’s trapped in a town he hates. Forced to live with his father who he despises, all to protect his mother who is the only person he loves. He can’t stand Maggie. Sees nothing in her to connect with.
He’ll never have anything but contempt for Maggie.
He’ll never be weak.
He’ll never submit to anyone or anything.
As a writer, as their writer, it’s my job to twist them around. Make them spin on their nevers and see what happens.
So, how do I do that?
Well, first I have to get them into a situation where they can’t escape each other. They’re teens so, sure, I could make them work on some kind of school project together.  Or create some type of lockdown scenario and trap them in a computer lab.
The only problem with that is at some point, one of them can walk away from the other. Great for them. Not so great for me, the reader, or the questions I want to explore about consequences, forgiveness, and redemption.
There was only one way out of it for me.
Kill Serge, turn him into a ghost, and have him haunt Maggie.
Perfect. Now the bully must rely on his victim. Now the victim must face her tormentor.
Someone has murdered Serge. And the only way for him to cross-over, the only way for him to stop haunting Maggie, is for he and Maggie to face each other, deal with each other, work as a team, and survive whomever has killed him and is now coming after Maggie.
And the question of the book is whether they’ll be able to do any of that.
I sighed. I was tired and exhausted and heartbroken. “What did you do?”
Serge looked at me.
“To get your dad to let you back on the team?”
He grinned. “We had a heart to heart.”
“Now who’s being a hosebeast?”
He exhaled, impatient. “Look, I just pointed out that if I was on the team, I couldn’t be at home. He liked that.”
I glanced at him. “You guys really had a sucky relationship, didn’t you?”
“With detective skills like that, you should go into policing. Think of how much the crime rate would drop.”
“Don’t be a jerk.” I slowed the car as the light in front of me turned yellow.
“I only meant that most kids complain about their parents and vice-versa, but they love each other.”
His face tightened at the word “love.”
“You really hated him and he couldn’t stand you.”
“In a nutshell.”
I stepped on the accelerator. “Why?”
He shrugged. “Why not?”
“Because it’s not natural for parent and kids to actually hate each other.”
“Maybe not in your perfect little world, but not everybody’s dad is their best friend.”
“Maybe, but he must have done something to you.”
His face hardened, a rough slab of flesh and bone. “He didn’t do anything to me.”
“That night, at the pool,” I said, “I saw the way you were standing in front of your mom—”
“Lay off it, Deadhead.”
“I’m just saying—”
“And I’m just telling you to shut up!” His voice rose, anger made it raw. Serge’s body sparked, flashed white.
The light blinded me and I lost sight of the road. I hit the brake, but turned the wheel at the same time. A big rig’s horn blared in my ears. I blinked, trying to see past the flash.
The horn sounded again.
That’s when I realized the light blinding me wasn’t Serge.
It was the semi’s headlights, bearing down on me.

Find out more about Serge and Maggie: 

The Book Trailer



Purchase Links
Amazon
Great Plains Publication
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Strange Magic by Michelle Mankin Release Blitz with Giveaway!

Synopsis

Billy Blade is a hardworking, hard living, razor sharp musical force. Mysterious behind his dark shades, the rough around the edges Texan mesmerizes with his haunting harmonica and tantalizes with his dangerous looks and smooth country charm. His latest album is topping the charts. He’s the newly crowned King of the Bacchus Krewe. He’s definitely living the rock star dream.
Exotic Creole beauty Thyme Bellerose couldn’t be more content. She has it all. An adoring grandmother. A handsome Tulane medical student beau. A satisfying job in the heart of New Orleans’ French Quarter. Her life is as rich as the ice cream she creates. She’s got everything under control.
But control is an illusion. Dreams can turn into nightmares. And now during Mardi Gras, otherworldly powers stand ready to shape their destinies in ways they could never imagine.
Shadow and light. Magic and mystery. Reality and myth. All come together in a place where rules bend and lines blur. Even those between life and death.

Pre-Order Link

Strange Magic (Part 1)
Pre-Order
Strange Magic (Part 2) 
Releasing February 5, 2015

About the Author

Michelle Mankin is the Amazon bestselling author of the Black Cat Records series of novels.
Romance with subtext.
Reimagining classic stories with sexy rock stars and thought provoking issues.
For many years she worked in the insurance industry as an underwriter. Somehow, the boredom didn't kill her but the hours and hours of looking at facts and figures provided ample time for her mind to wander.
Love Evolution, Love Revolution, and Love Resolution are a Brutal Strength centered trilogy, combining the plot underpinnings of Shakespeare with the drama, excitement, and indisputable sexiness of the rock 'n roll industry.
Things take a bit of an edgier, once upon a time turn with the Tempest series.  These pierced, tatted, and troubled Seattle rockers are young and on the cusp of making it big, but with serious obstacles to overcome that may prevent them from ever getting there.
Rock stars, myths, and legends collide with paranormal romance in a totally mesmerizing way in the Magic series.
When Michelle is not prowling the streets of her Texas town listening to her rock music much too loud, she is putting her daydreams down on paper or traveling the world with her family and friends, sometimes for real, and sometimes just for pretend as she takes the children to school and back.
Brutal Strength series:
Love Rock’ollection: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00P9KD71A
Tempest series:
Irresistible Refrain: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00FLG5KPS
Unforgettable: Tempest #5. A Tempest/ Brutal Strength mashup. Coming soon
The MAGIC Series:
STRANGE MAGIC:    Part One: http://tiny.cc/jjfssx      Part Two: http://tiny.cc/xyjbsx
DREAM MAGIC: October 2015
TWISTED MAGIC: coming soon

Author Links

Connect with Michelle Mankin  On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Author-Michelle-Mankin/233503403414065
Receive the Black Cat Records newsletter: http://eepurl.com/Lvgzf

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September Sky by John A. Heldt Spotlight!



SEPTEMBER SKY: When unemployed San Francisco reporter Chuck Townsend and his college-dropout son, Justin, take a cruise to Mexico in 2016, each hopes to rebuild a relationship after years of estrangement. But they find more than common ground aboard the ship. They meet a mysterious lecturer who touts the possibilities of time travel. Within days, Chuck and Justin find themselves in 1900, riding a train to Texas, intent on preventing a distant uncle from being hanged for a crime he did not commit. Their quick trip to Galveston, however, becomes long and complicated when they wrangle with business rivals and fall for two beautiful librarians on the eve of a hurricane that will destroy the city. Filled with humor, history, romance, and heartbreak, SEPTEMBER SKY follows two directionless souls on the adventure of a lifetime as they try to make peace with the past, find new purpose, and grapple with the knowledge of things to come.

BIOGRAPHY: John A. Heldt is the author of the critically acclaimed Northwest Passage and American Journey series. The former reference librarian and award-winning sportswriter has loved getting subjects and verbs to agree since writing book reports on baseball heroes in grade school. A graduate of the University of Oregon and the University of Iowa, Heldt is an avid fisherman, sports fan, home brewer, and reader of thrillers and historical fiction. When not sending contemporary characters to the not-so-distant past, he weighs in on literature and life at johnheldt.blogspot.com.

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