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

06 May 2019

Fresh Off The Starship by Ann Crawford Book Tour!




Title: Fresh Off The Starship 
Author: Ann Crawford 
Genre:  Fiction -- Women's, Humor, Chick Lit, Sci-Fi 
Release Date: November 12, 2018 
Cover Designer: SHG Design 



Love to laugh? You'll enjoy this feel-good tale.
A starbeing skyrockets to Earth from the other side of forever with a specific assignment: to help steer humanity away from the collision course it's on. But we all know how travel can get drastically diverted--instead of landing in Washington, D.C., where she could assist on a grand geopolitical scale, she ends up in...Kansas!
Wrong place, right time? Join our shero on this whimsical journey as she pursues her purpose as well as discovers the beauty of life and love on Earth.

Click to Tweet about the Blog Tour

Tweet: Check Out the #BlogTour for Fresh off the Starship by @ann_crawford1 HERE-> https://ctt.ec/iXWef+ #BuyNow #99c #Books2Read http://bit.ly/2WmYSIA #WomensFiction #ScFi #Comedy #Books @BuoniAmiciPress







Ann Crawford is a fun-loving, world-traveling, high-flying, deep-diving, and living-to-the-max author of eight books. When she’s not flying planes, scuba diving, climbing every mountain (on the back of her husband’s motorcycle) or riding the world’s fastest roller coasters, you can find her in her writing nest with a view of Colorado’s Rocky Mountains out the window. Her bestselling and award-winning novels go as high and deep as she does—they’re profound yet funny; playful although poignant; heart-opening and heart-lifting; thought-provoking and inspiring; and edgy while universal. Ann is also a screenwriter and award-winning filmmaker and humanitarian.



Becoming Insane by Leyla Cardena Book Tour! #BecomingInsane @fayerogersuk, @authoright, @CardenaLeyla

Becoming Insane by Leyla Cardena
Summary:
When the monsters hiding underneath your bed are much less frightening than the bills you have to pay, the family you have to support, the job you have to find, and the unrealized dreams you cry about, then you know there’s a problem.

Especially when you are a full-grown adult in your mid-thirties.

It’s 1987. John Crane feels like throwing himself out of the window because of his depression, while his friend Jack Vain has to support his spiraling O.C.D. and panic attacks.

Their issues are driving them into a shared psychosis.

Without these issues, John and Jack may never have needed to go searching for the demon in the middle of the night, through the mean streets of New York.

John Crane’s writings will never be read and discussed, and Jack Vain’s drawings and paintings will never be seen and admired. But the creature is here. It knows them. It wants them. It wants their help. It wants to eat, to touch, to create. It wants to live and be free. It wants to avoid death and become immortal. John and Jack’s creativity looks like the perfect host.

As the beast of insanity takes hold, will John and Jack survive their own imaginations?

Information about the Book
Title: Becoming Insane
Author: Leyla Cardena
Release Date: 30th April 2019
Genre: Thriller
Page Count: 214
Publisher: Clink Street Publishing

Read an Extract
John Crane took deep breaths to calm down his anxiety, staring at his hands with an empty look, peeling off the dead skin at the tips of his fingers – a common habit of his, every time he would feel stressed. His agent, Mr. Morgan, was reading John’s manuscript – stopping and rereading the paragraphs that seemed too complicated to him. “Hmms” and “ah, okays” were mumbled, and John began to feel impatient. Leaning towards Mr. Morgan’s desk, John took a quick glance at the pages and paragraphs that had caught his agent’s attention and tried to guess what he was thinking. When he leaned back, noticing John scrutinizing him, the anxious author stared at the documents placed on Mr. Morgan’s table, his gaze rested on the year stated on the documents. The year was 1987, and these digits were screaming like an alarm bell in John’s mind. He had promised himself that this year, he would do anything in his power to get one of his works published. Had John finally written a masterpiece? Or was it just a piece of pretentious garbage?
Mr. Morgan lifted his head, took a quick look at John, before staring back at the manuscript, and started talking. “This seems okay, but I don’t think everyone is keen on symbolism.”
John exhaled and answered defensively, trying hard not to lose his calm. “Yes, but…it’s obvious enough, even for the untrained…”
“I suppose with this title…” said Mr. Morgan cynically, holding the title page to John’s face – God, Men, and Beasts. “Obvious indeed, eh? Don’t you think the title is a tad bit too heavy for a compilation of fairy tales?”
John buried his hands underneath his right leg and obligating himself to dig up the whys and hows of this book situation. “Any kind of book, be it fantasy or horror, is a reflection of what is happening today– socially, morally, etc.,” he begins to explain.
“Of course, but it doesn’t mean we can’t have a good time with them and just relax. Without having to guess every time what this or that means.”
“I haven’t created a puzzle; they’re fairy tales! There’s going to be morals in them, which is a logical result.”
“Listen, if you want to publish this, in that case, I’d advise you to call them short stories, not fairy tales.”
“…Why?”
“Because when people hear ‘fairy tales’, they think ‘kids’. And those stories, filled with social, philosophical, psychological, moral, and sexual innuendos, not to mention religious and political satire, cannot be associated with the word ‘fairy tales’.”
“Okay. So, in other words, it’s just a big pile of shit,” John uttered in a disgusted manner, raising his hands in the air.
“I didn’t say that. I didn’t say it wasn’t good. It’s excellent, for the ones who care to read about those kinds of subjects.”
“This is atrocious. You have just stated that the majority of people won’t read my book because they’re idiots and want to stay that way! I think that people are more intelligent than you think they are. Curious, at least.”
“Well, you sure are optimistic…”
John leaned back and tried to remember which passages could have been considered to be too thought-provoking. Maybe it was the dream sequences of some of his characters where he could lose the reader’s attention or rather the “mindfucking” parts as John liked to call them – a mishmash of described images that referenced insanity against reason, fantasy against reality, and emotions that devoured logic.
Mr. Morgan, whose interest had already shifted to finishing his cup of coffee, told John, “Anyway…the last time we talked together, you told me you had financial problems, and that you were relying on indemnities that would probably end very soon. I told you to bring me a book that would sell for a wide audience, and so you did…but I don’t think ‘God, Men, and Beasts’ can help you out if you want to make money quickly thanks to a book.”
Even though John’s emotions and patience had been tested during those last few minutes, he couldn’t hide from the fact that money had to be gained quickly, and that it was very probable that “God, Men and Beasts” would not make enough money in time for him to pay his debts. Mr. Morgan’s last comment was perfectly reasonable but unfortunate.
“So, it won’t sell?” asked John in a pessimistic tone.
“Hmmm…it could…yes. But, you won’t gain anything from it until a very long time. If you want to make money quickly to pay your bills, I’d advise you this – either you write a small, funny or provocative book (and not about politics, religion, or anything else), even an erotic book for all I care, or you go and get yourself a job and write on weekends. Why don’t you write something about your boyfriend? If you have one…”
“Yeah…of course…in other words, you want me to write shit about my private life?”
“Not shit, just…something that could gather a larger readership…something generic, you know…at least, if you
want to make a quick buck.”
“No. I won’t. And, you want to know why? Because, this is what I write about. I take up fantasy and symbols to express, artfully, what is happening today,” John concluded, getting up from his chair, ready to go, convinced that there was nothing more to say.
“I’d advise you not to be so proud, Mr. Crane. It is easier to write about the injustices of the world than it is to write about its beauty and the positive aspects. Anyway…in that case, you’ll have to find yourself a job. Good luck with that. I’ll see if I can find a publisher for ‘God, Men, and Beasts’, but I can’t promise you anything.”
John walked towards Mr. Morgan’s desk, took back the manuscript, and said, “That won’t be necessary, Mr. Morgan.
But, thank you anyway.” He walked away, leaving Mr. Morgan alone – his cup of coffee still in his hand, and his eyes bulging out, unable to believe the nerve of his client.

Author Information
I was born on the 2nd of August 1990 in Geneva, Switzerland, and still live there until today. I haven’t even changed neighborhood! I still like it very much and the fact that I live near the red-light district makes it even more interesting. I had many little jobs since the age of fourteen, shoe shops, hairdressers, pharmacy, boutiques. Then from the age of sixteen until eighteen I became an apprentice as an administrative assistant, working at the company three times a week and going to commercial school twice a week. I then found a job at eighteen as an administrative assistant in a trust company then got promoted as a legal assistant for its corporate department. I went to night school to study law, and gathered some other professional certificates/diplomas during that time. At 23, I quit everything as I realized that the only reason why I did all this was because I needed to be financially stable enough to write and create. Something I unfortunately didn’t have the time to do while working and studying. And also rest and sleep a lot!

Tour Schedule

Monday 6th May

Tuesday 7th May

Wednesday 8th May

Thursday 9th May

Friday 10th May

Saturday 11th May

Sunday 12th May


05 May 2019

Hide Not Seek (The Not So Reluctant Detectives) by D.E. Haggerty Book Tour and Giveaway! @dehaggerty


Hide Not Seek (The Not So Reluctant Detectives) by D.E. Haggerty

About the Book

 
Cozy Mystery/Romance/Humor 3rd in Series 
Independently Published (April 18, 2019) 
Print Length: 183 pages 
ASIN: B07NYSCT6W
I know who you really are.
Pru has a secret, which she has no plans to reveal - ever. But after a woman is murdered and all clues point to her, she has no choice but to disclose her true identity. When her revelations help thwart the killer's plan to frame Pru for the murder, the killer begins stalking her. With each note he sends, he gets closer. The police are stumped. Pru wants to run away. She really, really wants to run, but Ajax has found the woman of his dreams and he's not letting her go anywhere. He can be patient. In the meantime, he'll protect her with his life. Pru isn't feeling very patient, and her friends, Mel and Terri, are definitely not willing to wait until the police uncover who the stalker is. The three friends take matters into their own hands and jump headfirst into the investigation.
Will Pru and her friends uncover her stalker before he turns his violence on Pru?

About the Author

I grew up reading everything I could get my grubby hands on, from my mom's Harlequin romances to Nancy Drew, to Little Women. When I wasn't flipping pages in a library book, I was penning horrendous poems, writing songs no one should ever sing, or drafting stories which have thankfully been destroyed. College and a stint in the U.S. Army came along, robbing me of free time to write and read, although on the odd occasion I did manage to sneak a book into my rucksack between rolled up socks, MRIs, t-shirts, and cold weather gear. After surviving the army experience, I went back to school and got my law degree. I jumped ship and joined the hubby in the Netherlands before the graduation ceremony could even begin. A few years into my legal career, I was exhausted, fed up, and just plain done. I quit my job and sat down to write a manuscript, which I promptly hid in the attic before returning to the law. But practicing law really wasn’t my thing, so I quit (again!) and went off to Germany to start a B&B. Turns out running a B&B wasn’t my thing either. I polished off that manuscript languishing in the attic before following the husband to Istanbul where I decided to give the whole writer-thing a go. But ten years was too many to stay away from my adopted home. I packed up again and moved to The Hague where, in between tennis matches and failing to save the world, I’m currently working on my next book. I hope I’ll always be working on my next book.
Hide Not Seek is my fifteenth novel.

Author Links 
Website: http://dehaggerty.wordpress.com 
Blog: https://dehaggerty.wordpress.com/category/mymusings/ 
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dehaggerty 
Twitter: https://twitter.com/dehaggerty 
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dehaggerty/ 
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7210211.D_E_Haggerty Amazon author page: http://www.amazon.com/D.E.-Haggerty/e/B00ECQBURU/ Newsletter signup: http://eepurl.com/bbmdj9 
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+DEHaggerty/posts 
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/denahaggerty/ 
Bookbub author page: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/d-e-haggerty 
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/d-e-haggerty-4b49a29/ 

Purchase Links 
Amazon Smashwords Kobo Barnes and Noble Goodreads 


TOUR PARTICIPANTS
April 22 – Mallory Heart’s Cozies – REVIEW
April 22 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT
April 23 – ⒾⓃⓉⓇⓄⓈⓅⒺⒸⓉⒾⓋⒺ ⓅⓇⒺⓈⓈ – CHARACTER INTERVIEW
April 24 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
April 25 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT
April 25 – I’m All About Books – GUEST POST
April 26 – Laura’s Interests – SPOTLIGHT
April 26 – MJB Reviewers – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
April 27 – T’s Stuff – SPOTLIGHT
April 28 – Readeropolis – SPOTLIGHT
April 29 – Babs Book Bistro – SPOTLIGHT
April 30 – Cozy Up With Kathy – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 1 – My Reading Journeys – SPOTLIGHT
May 1 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – GUEST POST
May 2 – Defining Ways – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 2 – A Blue Million Books – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
May 3 – Books Direct – REVIEW
May 3 – The Book’s the Thing – REVIEW
May 4 – Here’s How It Happened – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 4 – LibriAmoriMiei – REVIEW
May 5 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
May 5 – StoreyBook Reviews – REVIEW

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04 May 2019

Murder Knocks Twice by Susanna Calkins Review and Interview with the Author! @scalkins3


Murder Knocks Twice
Susanna Calkins | April 30th, 2019 | Minotaur
Paperback ISBN: 978-1250190833 | Price: $16
Historical Mystery

HISTORIAN AND AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR WRITES OF GLAMOUR AND MURDER IN 1920s CHICAGO


Highland Park, IL – Beneath the streets of 1920s Chicago lie a dangerous, glittering underworld of speakeasies, where socialites sip bootlegged cocktails and rowdy soldiers play poker in a backroom. Macavity award-winning author and PhD historian Susanna Calkins writes of this world in her newest historical mystery novel Murder Knocks Twice (April 30, 2019, Minotaur Books).


When Gina Ricci takes on a job as a cigarette girl to earn money for her ailing father—and to prove to herself that she can hold her own at Chicago’s most notorious speakeasy, the Third Door—she is enchanted by the dark, glamorous atmosphere overseen by the club’s imposing owner, Signora Castallazzo. Yet she soon discovers that dark secrets lurk in the speakeasy’s shadowy corners as the staff buzzes with whispers about Gina’s predecessor, who died under mysterious circumstances, and the photographer, Marty, warns her to be careful.


After Marty is brutally murdered with Gina as the only witness, she becomes determined to track down his killer. What secrets did Marty capture on his camera—and who would do anything to destroy it? As Gina searches for answers, she’s pulled deeper into the sinister truths hiding behind the Third Door.

Susanna Calkins is the author of Murder Knocks Twice and the award-winning Lucy Campion series, holds a PhD in history and teaches at the college level. Her historical mysteries have been nominated for the Mary Higgins Clark and Agatha awards, among many others, and The Masque of a Murderer received a Macavity. Originally from Philadelphia, Calkins now lives in the Chicago area with her husband and two sons.
http://www.susannacalkins.com/

My Review
Murder Knocks Twice is a new series by Susanna Calkin that takes place in 1929 Chicago during prohibition. We see Gina Ricci, the main character, start a new job as a cigarette girl in a speakeasy, replacing a girl who was murdered. 

We meet a myriad of characters that work at the speakeasy, The Third Door owned by Signora Castallazzo, the customers, ie socialites finding some fun, ex-servicemen playing poker in a back room. Prohibition cocktails and mentions of gangsters such as Al Capone and there is also a mention of the St.Valentine's Day Massacre and the rise of organized crime. 

I have not read much about 1929 Chicago other than the stock market crash. What does a cigarette girl do, she wears this box around her neck and goes around the speakeasy selling cigarettes and cigars, she also waits tables as needed. That is what Gina started doing but she also wants to be a photographer. The piano player, Marty is murdered and Gina comes upon the scene just as Marty is dying. Gina had learned that she and Marty were cousins on her mother's side so this murder was personal.

Gina finds herself right smack dab in the middle of trying to figure out who and why Marty was murdered. With a camera and a roll of film, that she learns how to develop, may give her answers. Will she find out what she is looking for?  She does learn more about her mother's family and I see this as a big part of the series. Who her mother's family are and why were they estranged?

I enjoyed reading this book, not fast-paced but easy enough to read. I see this as a fun series that I would continue reading. If you love a good historical mystery that takes place during Prohibition, then this is the series for you.

I received a copy of this book for review purposes only.


An Interview with Susanna Calkin

What drew you to 1920s Chicago?
Initially, I was drawn to the fun. I mean, 1920s Chicago! It’s hard not to get a visual of flappers, gangsters, jazz players, cocktails, boas etc. That’s why I start the series with Gina’s first day on her job--a cigarette seller in a glamorous speakeasy--so that we could all enter this world together. But I wanted to explore other dimensions too--what is the impact of Prohibition on regular people?

Why do you think the National Prohibition Act had such an impact on society?
The National Prohibition Act reveals a fascinating set of tensions that you can trace back to the founding of the country. On the one hand, there were the founders of the colonies (Puritans, Quakers, Baptists etc) who sought to create godly and orderly societies, and who widely viewed alcohol as a disorderly influence that brought about licentiousness and crime, and which need to be heavily regulated. On the other hand,  there were those who manufactured and distributed alcohol, who viewed it as a reliable source of income and who regularly found ways to get around restrictive laws. And of course, in between, there are all the consumers who viewed alcohol as access to merriment, entertainment and a sense of escape. These tensions played out over the next few centuries, culminating in the National Prohibition Act. The impact of prohibiting the distribution and sale of alcohol was profound—because people were not willing to give up their alcohol, illegal access became the norm. Naturally, those who were willing to protect illegal access are operating outside the law. And because the illegal alcohol trade was so dangerous, people were willing to pay prices, putting money into the hands of criminals, leading effectively to the rise of organized crime in the U.S. as well as widespread political corruption. These long-standing implications were not resolved after Prohibition was repealed in the 1930s, and can still be felt today.

Your award winning Lucy Campion Mystery series is set in the 17th century London and this latest title takes place in 1920s Chicago. What did your research process look like for both of these series?
My research for the Lucy Campion mysteries began well before I even had the idea of writing a novel, the idea forming as I studied seventeenth century letters and diaries, and the penny press—broadsheets, pamphlets, tracts, ballads, etc—which often described sensationalized “strange news” and “true accounts” of odd happenings. I travelled to different archives in the U.S. and in London, scouring old documents. I also served on the Golden Hinde in London for a few months, a 16th century museum replica of Sir Frances Drake’s ship that is dry-docked on the Thames by London Bridge. As a “living history specialist” (tour guide! Pirate!) I was able to be somewhat immersed in the period as well.  But because I was working on my dissertation at the time, I was also reading scholarly works and analyzing historic social and political trends from the period. When I actually started writing my book a number of years later—after becoming fascinated by a collection of “murder ballads” from the era—I realized that I had to figure out the everyday details of people’s lives—how did they live? What pastimes and merriments did they enjoy? How did the streets of London fit together? So I had to go back to the archives (which, thankfully, are largely online now), find historical maps, and used historical calendars to keep my details straight.


By contrast, my research for Speakeasy Murders was very different. While I’ve taught some American history, I don’t have nearly the background knowledge that I had specializing in early modern British history. But I live in the Chicago area now, so I’m able to walk around where my books are set. I’ve taken 1920s tours and visited a speakeasy from the era. I’ve watched a ton of period films (silent and talkies) and I listening to 1920s music. I’ve tried lots of Prohibition-era cocktails. I’ve read every edition of the Chicago Tribune from 1929, poured over the Sears and Roebucks catalogs, and watched old footage of different events on YouTube. And I’ve still read a number of scholarly sources about Prohibition, flappers, gangsters, etc. But the most fascinating difference that I’ve discovered is how the Prohibition is still “alive” in Chicago. When I tell people about my books, there’s always someone saying—‘oh my grandfather cut Al Capone’s hair,’ or “My great-Aunt was married to a bootlegger.”

After you research, how do you turn what you’ve found into a story?
For the Lucy Campion mysteries—my story began with a collection of murder ballads that told the story of a young woman, found strangled or stabbed, and in her pocket was a note. The note would say—“Dear sweetheart, meet me at such-and-such. Don’t tell anyone.” And then it would be signed some guy’s name. The community would find the note, figure out who the guy was, throw him jail, bring him to trial and he’d usually be hanged. I wondered had he been framed? Who was the woman? That became the premise of my first novel.


For the Speakeasy Murders, I scoured the Chicago Tribune, hunting for odd stories and questionable happenings. I started my story deliberately in Jan 1929, so that it could end close to the St. Valentine’s Day massacre in February.  I came across some images of a young woman holding a kodak camera and that’s why Gina became a photographer. I had to learn a ton about 1920s photography. I thought about what it would really be like to work in a speakeasy, so I had to research music, cocktails, women’s clothes, as well as cigarettes and candy.

How does your passion for history influence your writing?
I love discovering strange and fascinating details of a period. I’m also intrigued by the big historical questions: Why did this happen? How did this happen? What was the impact of x on this community? Or, even more often– Is this the “true” story, or is there another plausible explanation? Each of my books has an underlying question. In the Speakeasy Murders, my fundamental question is: “What was the impact of Prohibition on regular people?” and even more specifically, for Murder Knocks Twice, “What was it like to sell cigarettes in a Chicago speakeasy in 1929?”

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