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

10 April 2021

The Corpse Who Knew Too Much (A Food Blogger Mystery) by Debra Sennefelder Book Tour and Giveaway!

The Corpse Who Knew Too Much (A Food Blogger Mystery) by Debra Sennefelder

About The Corpse Who Knew Too Much

The Corpse Who Knew Too Much (A Food Blogger Mystery)

Cozy Mystery 4th in Series

Publisher: Kensington (September 29, 2020) 

Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages 

ISBN-10: 1496728912 

ISBN-13: 978-1496728913 

Digital ASIN: B082WR1YCL

Food blogger Hope Early takes on a cold case that's heating up fast . . .

 

Building on her recipe for success with her food blog, Hope at Home, Hope is teaching her first blogging class at the local library in Jefferson, Connecticut. She’s also learning about podcasts, including a true-crime one called Search for the Missing, hosted by Hope's childhood friend, Devon Markham. Twenty years ago on Valentine's Day, right here in Jefferson, Devon's mom disappeared and was never found. Finally Devon has returned to solve the mystery of what happened to her mother—and she asks Hope to help.

 

The next day Hope discovers Devon's apartment has been ransacked. Her laptop with the research on her mother's cold case is missing, and Devon is nowhere to be found. When her friend's body is later discovered in a car wreck, Hope is convinced it's no accident. Clearly, Devon was too close to the truth, and the cold-blooded killer is still at large in Jefferson. Now it's up to Hope to find the guilty party—before the food blogger herself becomes the next subject of another true-crime podcast . . .

 

Includes Recipes from Hope’s Kitchen!

 Sunshine Corn Muffins by Debra Sennefelder

When my day starts with a corn muffin, I know it’s going to be a good day. This is why I included this recipe in THE CORPSE WHO KNEW TOO MUCH. The muffins are moist, full of corn flavor and have a zip of citrus, hence their name. You can either lemon or orange juice or leave the citrus flavoring out completely. I hope you enjoy the recipe.


Sunshine Corn Muffins

Ingredients:

1 cup cornmeal

1 cup all-purpose flour

1/3 cup granulated sugar

2 teaspoons baking powder

½ teaspoon salt

1 egg, beaten

1 – 2 tablespoons lemon (or orange) juice.

¼ cup canola oil

1 cup milk


Directions:

Pre-heat over to 400 degrees. Grease or line muffin pan with paper liners.

In a large bowl, mix together corn meal, flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. 

To dry ingredients, add in egg, oil, milk and lemon juice. Stir gently to combine.

Spoon batter into prepared muffin cups.

Bake at 400 degrees for 15-20 minutes.

Remove muffin pan from oven and set on cooling rack. These are best eaten fresh out of the oven with butter.

  About Debbie Sennefelder

Debra Sennefelder is an avid reader who reads across a range of genres, but mystery fiction is her obsession. Her interest in people and relationships is channeled into her novels against a backdrop of crime and mystery.

Her first novel, THE UNINVITED CORPSE (A Food Blogger mystery) was published in 2018. When she’s not reading, she enjoys cooking and baking and as a former food blogger, she is constantly taking photographs of her food. Yeah, she’s that person.

Born and raised in New York City, where she majored in her hobby of fashion buying, she now lives and writes in Connecticut with her family. She’s worked in retail and publishing before becoming a full-time author. Her writing companion is her adorable and slightly spoiled Shih Tzu, Connie.

Author Links - 
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  Purchase Links 
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09 April 2021

Entanglement: Quantum and Otherwise By John K Danenbarger Author Interview!

 


Entanglement: Quantum and Otherwise

By John K Danenbarger

Genre: Literary Crime Fiction



About the Book


They look like the perfect family. 

But every family has its secrets.


Can we ever know the people we love?


Imagine flipping through old family albums. The faces are familiar; their true stories lost to time—half-forgotten family anecdotes woven together by generations of proud aunts and kindly grandmothers conceal more than they reveal.


"Entanglement" explores the blank spaces in our family trees.


The lives of eight souls intertwine in a sprawling family history. The family story is a legacy of addiction, kidnapping, crime, and murders unresolved and unforgiven.


Enjoy this epic achievement in the experimental tradition of David Mitchell and Ian McEwan, with the darkly exotic undertones of books like Mexican Gothic and The Cutting Season.


Author Interview!

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

Most challenging. Hmm. Getting started takes weeks and months of thinking about what the underlying theme should be and then how to illustrate it without pontificating. This process seems to depend on the time of year and my brain. I can’t explain the time of year. Maybe it’s the weather, but I write best when it is not cold. I suspect my brain freezes easily, like eating ice cream too fast. I probably live in Italy for that reason. On the other hand, writing is like gelato to me; I love it. And when I am in the groove, nothing seems to be difficult or challenging. I don’t even need to plot out the story threads, but obviously, I have to go through all the processes of revision as anyone else and drive myself crazy trying to decide if this-or-that version is a finished piece of literature. I tend to hire professional editors to help me decide. You would be amazed at the difference in recommendations between one professional editor and another. 

When and where do you do your writing?

I have a seclusion room with a view. Very lucky that way. I write any time of day, except nights. I let my resting mind work up new ideas, so sometimes I have to write down that idea first thing in the morning, before I set up breakfast for the family. I am also so fortunate to have married a woman who is my best critic and support.

What have you learned about promoting your books?

Being an old marketer, I reckoned that I should know how to market my novel. But I was wrong. I knew one should segment the market to find how large the market is and all the who, what, where of that market. But that is not always possible with books like mine since the reader could be anyone, anywhere, at any time. If one’s novel does not fit specifically into one of the major genres, whoops! My novel is literary crime fiction. “Fiction” is way too broad a market. “Crime” is a popular segment of the reading public, but “Literary” means that my novel does not have the formula to fit that genre. It will only be appreciated by those who do not want predictability. Those people are the smallest segment of both readers and movie-goers. I think this phenomenon is just an older-human’s version of the child’s desire to have a story read to them over and over.

What are you most proud of as a writer?

That I have written a novel that should live on for a while because people will discover it long after I am dead. Also, at the time of writing this, I am aware of a literary award situation yet to be announced.

If you could have dinner with any writer, living or dead, who would it be and what would you talk about?

Jodi Picloult, because of her brilliance as an author and incredible capacity as a human being. Sitting at the dinner table, I don’t know whether I would be able to eat or talk since I am in such awe of her. She has done with several novels what I have done with only one. She puts philosophical concepts into an interesting story. I would just like to have absorbed her talent. But, if she was too busy, I wouldn’t mind picking Lisa Genova’s mind. Go ahead. Set it up. I’ll dress up to cover my ineptitude.


About the Author

John was a merchant marine captain, sailing the New England coast (including round-trips to Bermuda), and now writes literary crime fiction. He spends much of his creative time in Italy with his wife.


Facebook: http://bit.ly/danenbargerfb

Twitter: http://bit.ly/danenbargertw

Amazon: http://bit.ly/danenbargerjohnk

Goodreads: http://bit.ly/entanglementgoodreads

B&N: http://bit.ly/3kP5aha 


Excerpt

Glacial ice. Layered. Thick. Forming after the bewildering storm in her head and creeping up her spine. The courier’s delivery from Joe Tink lies like a white patch of snow on her desk. Being alone in her office, she doesn’t have to explain to anyone why she is waiting for it to melt. But it doesn’t. Finally, with curiosity spreading like hoar-frost, she feels forced to open this unwarranted denunciatory thing in front of her. To decide if she should leave.

Your father is dead.

That’s it? She’s vexed. Almost angry. What’s with this couriered letter? He could just as easily have called her from Bangor. Always had. They were close, weren’t they? Closer than normal.

Besides, she had long hoped her father would kill himself.

But Joe wrote more. Pages and pages.

This late-September afternoon, in some sort of unfamiliar circuitous telepathy, Geena has been thinking about Joe—Pickled Tink Joe—more than usual. She was reminded of him earlier by two different women in her Kansas City office asking Geena about the fall season back in New England, presuming that she knew all about New England and its leaves.

You know, Geena, how beautiful it must be!

With Geena’s children out of the nest and her ex a near-forgotten fugitive from marriage, she had moved to a smaller apartment in Prairie Village, west of Kansas City, to live alone, but rarely feeling alone. Her two boys, or more probably their spouses, dependably call about visiting her with the grandchildren during holidays, and neighbors in the building complex drop in daily to see if she needs anything.

While early on in younger years if she had lived there in Prairie Village—if she would have had time to think—she might have found this neighborly spontaneity a bothersome lack of privacy. Now, in her fifties, she loves this place and the midwestern populace who go nowhere. No New Englander had ever seemed as outgoing and optimistic as these Kansas busybodies. And, although Geena found that the religious tethering of the Bible Belt could be a nuisance, she has several local social friends who are comfortably unbridled and who distract Geena from her shrouded pathos, often recruiting her into playing bridge on Sunday afternoons and in occasional local tournaments.

Geena would never tell any one of these people, or anyone else for that matter, how she had grown up seeing the fall season as death-and-dying. Invariably depressing. Kansas is nosy neighbors, but still, New England is the epitome of fall presenting itself in all its dispiriting glory. In New England she had thought she smelled the dying in the rotting leaves, and she had heard death’s unambiguous footsteps in Maine’s ice and snow, inwardly cringing with the sound of each bone-crushing footfall in the long, dark winters.

Or maybe not. Maybe the winters are not the reason at all. Maine reminds her, in overkill, of the past, the shivers of buried darkness, ruining sleep. Anguish, grief, agony. Words that mean nothing compared to the reality.

Thus, many years ago, when offered a full-time position after temping in Kansas City during college, she decided to continue living in Kansas, away from New England. Geena is running her own construction consulting business, her towering height underscoring her authoritative presence, both for her few employees and for her clients. She has made sure her office staff have only seen her as a stoic engineer, a just but distant boss. Thus, the arrival of Joe’s letter forces her to leave the office as if struck by a sudden illness, which is, in fact, substantially true. She has escaped—not remembering the drive home—to hide her soul in the bedroom corner with her mother’s memories, in the few things she has kept: the cushioned chair—a maudlin carver chair she would never have bought—and the dorm-room lamp, as stringent as its droll Ikea name, that her mother bought Geena years ago.

Lost in the bedroom corner to scrutinize this bewildering letter, she doesn’t remember having ever screamed before, but at the end of this letter, she has screamed. Now crying quietly, the soft reverberations of her emotional outburst, Geena feels a punishing sensation sweeping harshly over her with the intensity of a squalid wind, a punishment for all things hidden inside her.



Revelations Series: Artemis, Book Three by Mary Eicher New Release Blitz and Giveaway! #bookstagram #LGBTQIA+ @ninestarpress @indigomarketingdesign

Title: Revelations

Series: Artemis, Book Three

Author: Mary Eicher

Publisher: NineStar Press

Release Date: 04/05/2021

Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex

Pairing: Female/Female

Length: 73300

Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy, LGBTQIA+, Lit, sci-fi/fantasy, action family-drama, ancient aliens, good v evil, end of the world, astrophysicist, pope, refugees, war, four horsemen of the Apocalypse

Add to Goodreads


Description

The moment is rapidly approaching when humanity must choose its future. What appears a simple choice between love and fear is complicated by the desires of two opposing cosmic forces. Artemis Andronikos rushes to discover a message the ancients left in stone ruins around the Earth. Aided by her partner Lucy and the rogue astrophysicist Wolfgang Strang, Artemis assembles a team of brilliant young scientists to decode when, where, and how the choice is to be made.

Convincing the former Harbinger children to grow beyond their Ivy League training and listen to their inner voices is the first step. Preparing them to accept a new version of reality proves more difficult. And Artemis must deal with an existential threat of her own; one that could separate her from her soulmate for eternity.

Theories of consciousness and philosophy battle as the cosmos bears down. How does one select a future when everything one has been taught is wrong? When knowledge fails, only the gods of one’s own heart remain.

Excerpt

Revelations
Mary Eicher © 2021
All Rights Reserved

The absence of a single speck of light in the night sky was hardly a catastrophe. Except to Dr. Wolfgang Strang. Mystified, the astrophysicist removed his reading glasses and rubbed his temples. Objects, even unexplained objects, did not simply vanish. Suspicious of the sterile numeric data, Strang set it aside and stepped into the yard to inspect the cosmos with his own eyes. The “great river,” as the Inca had called the Milky Way, floated serene and seemingly unchanged in the southern sky. But to Strang the universe was regrettably diminished, and he felt the loss deep in his soul.

“Stargazing, Wolf?”

Strang turned to find a tall, slender figure emerging from the shadows. “No, my dear. I am merely looking for an old friend.”

He flashed a self-deprecating smile and accepted an affectionate hug in response. The astrophysicist offered his arm to his companion and noted how well moonlight suited her. The pale rays illuminated Artemis’s ebony tresses and lent a violet cast to her pale, intelligent eyes. “What causes your noctambulant wanderings this night, Temmie?”

Artemis closed her fingers about his arm and gently nudged him to walk with her. “You know me, Wolf. I came to commune with the moon as usual.”

Strang chuckled. “Ah yes. Artemis and the moon are legendary companions.”

Echoing the small laugh, Artemis glanced at her friend, noting how the light deepened the lines at his eyes and accentuated the folds on his bristled cheeks. Strang was looking older of late, as if he were struggling with a burden grown too heavy.

“What is it, Wolf?” she asked, pausing their leisurely stroll.

“The object has vanished.” Strang motioned to the lower edge of the Milky Way. There, amid a plethora of unnamed bits of light, a single object had captivated him seventeen years ago. It was the birth star marking the moment the Harbinger had awakened and reality had vaulted into chaos.

Artemis glanced at the familiar stellar formation Strang was indicating and shook her head. “You can’t possibly tell just by looking, Wolf. Perhaps it has merely dimmed once again.”

Strang patted her arm. “No, no. My darling girl, I realized the object has never been visible to the human eye. I am referring to the latest information from the observatory. I assure you there is no mistake. The object is no longer there.”

A chill skittered down Artemis’s spine. She had not expected a sign. The question of the Harbinger’s purpose had faded over the years. A generation endowed with precognition had reached maturity. Gifted. Blessed. Awakened with the ability to foresee events. To most, the Harbinger was considered an evolutionary gift to the human race. And Artemis had chosen to merely let it be. Allowing herself to cease the quest to understand the reason behind the Harbinger, she had put away her suspicions for a decade.

She could feel apprehension in Strang as well. He shared her concern, she knew, just as it had been with the Harbinger’s mysterious awakening, the object’s sudden disappearance presaged an approaching danger.

Artemis closed her eyes and willed a nascent panic to subside. Taking a calming breath, she lifted now darkened eyes to Strang and whispered, “Then it has begun.”

Purchase

NineStar Press | Books2Read

Meet the Author

I live in Southern California with my two daughters. I have degrees in English and Psychology from the University of California and twenty plus years of writing experience from technical manuals to short stories. As an executive with a major computer firm, I managed customer documentation and field training and have traveled extensively. I have a passion for history, alternative theories about life’s mysteries life and dolphins. Find Mary on Facebook.

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08 April 2021

Off to the Races by Elsie Silver Cover Reveal!

Join us for the cover reveal of Off to the Races by Elsie Silver. Fans who love Enemies to Lovers Romances will sink their teeth into this sexy, slow burn, sports romance. Keep scrolling for more details about this sexy cover. 

Title: Off to the Races

Author: Elsie Silver

Release Date:

Genres: 4/29/2021

Trope: Enemies to Lovers, Slow Burn, Contemporary Romance, Sports Romance

He can’t decide if he hates me or wants me.

Vaughn Harding is my new boss. Getting close to him would be career suicide for a female racehorse trainer, and plain old gossip fuel in this small town. I get a kick out of our verbal sparring, but I swore off his type years ago.

And I’ve got plans.

I’m the new trainer at Gold Rush Ranch and I’ve just been handed a problem horse that I promised to make a winner. I want to put down roots, and I’m not about to let a man distract me. No matter how electric it feels when we lock eyes, or how my body ignites when we touch.

Vaughn’s a vivid reminder of every guy I grew up around. Handsome, rich, entitled--a total media darling. But there’s a sadness in him that I can’t seem to turn my back on. A sensitive side hidden beneath brooding good looks.

The last thing I need is a broken man to put back together, and the last thing he needs is more scandal.

Teasing him for kicks is one thing, but handing over my heart?

I should have known better.

Pre-Order on Amazon

Add to Goodreads Here! 

About the Elsie Silver 

Canadian author who loves book boyfriends and the sassy heroines who bring them to their knees. Connoisseur of charged looks and lingering touches. Fan of witty banter. Horse girl through and through. Fully convinced that it’s always wine o’clock somewhere.

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The Year We Lived by Virginia Crow Blog Tour! #HistoricalFiction #TheYearWeLived #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub



Book Title: The Year We Lived Author: Virginia Crow

Publication Date: 10th April 2021

Publisher: Crowvus

Page Length: approx. 118,000 words – approx. 350 pages

Genre: Historical Fiction


Twitter Handles: @DaysDyingGlory @CrowvusLit @maryanneyarde

Instagram Handles: @StomperMcEwan @coffeepotbookclub

Hashtags: #HistoricalFiction #TheYearWeLived #BlogTour #CoffeePotBookClub


The Year We Lived

By Virginia Crow


It is 1074, 8 years after the fateful Battle of Hastings. Lord Henry De Bois is determined to find the secret community of Robert, an Anglo-Saxon thane. Despite his fervour, all his attempts are met with failure.


When he captures Robert’s young sister, Edith, events are set in motion, affecting everyone involved. Edith is forced into a terrible world of cruelty and deceit, but finds friendship there too.


Will Robert ever learn why Henry hates him so much? Will Edith’s new-found friendships be enough to save her from De Bois? And who is the mysterious stranger in the reedbed who can disappear at will?


A gripping historical fiction with an astonishing twist!


“It is a shame you did not arrive two days ago,” de Bois said, opening his arms wide as though he was greeting a friend rather than his sworn enemy. He stopped three feet from Robert. “I was married then. There are only scraps left from my feast, but your curs are welcome to them.”

Robert dropped his bow to the ground and reached for his sword.

“Before you do that,” de Bois mocked. “You should know, I have given orders to have your sister’s throat slit the moment you draw any weapon. Then she will hang from the walls of my garrison, as an ornament for the crows.”

With great reluctance, Robert released his hold on the sword hilt. “You know why I’m here.”

“Of course,” Henry laughed, amused by the expression of restraint on the face of the man before him. “I heard your sister was abducted by a changeling, though. Then who is she?” he asked, pointing back to Edith.

Robert turned to look at Dunstan and found he was no longer there. Trying not to show his confusion to the man before him, he steadied his thoughts and moved his hand away from the sword’s hilt. “You killed my men, you framed a simpleton, and you kidnapped my sister. I shall not forgive any of these things.”

“Your sister is no longer your concern,” de Bois said scornfully. “But your eyes tell me you do not believe me, so ask my wife.”

Robert tried once again to mask his emotions from the scheming, cruel man before him, but his confusion was beyond his ability to hide. “Your wife? What has she to do with me?”

“What indeed?” Henry chuckled and motioned to the soldier who still held Edith. “Look there,” he continued as Edith walked forward. “There are twenty archers ready to fire on her if you should try to take my wife from me.”

The realisation of what Lord de Bois meant seeped into Robert as he watched Edith walk towards him, while Henry took a step back and watched the pair thoughtfully. Edith’s fragile features ventured a slight smile as she reached her brother and, almost at once, ten of Robert’s men stepped forward to form a protective ring around the pair. Robert watched the archers on the wall as they drew back their bows but Henry, who stood outside the circle of men, never gave the order to fire.

“Edie,” Robert whispered as he took her hands in his own. “What is this?”

“It is our chance at peace, Robert,” she sniffed, trying to maintain a sense of calm.

“You married him?”

“Two days ago.”

“What happened on the fen?” he demanded, suddenly uncertain his sister had not intended to flee to the Normans. “Dunstan said it was an ambush.”

“He’s alive?” Edith croaked, tears of relief bursting into her eyes. “He tried to save me, Robin,” she wept. “And Egbert, and-” the tears streamed from her eyes as she lowered her face before sobbing, “and Alan. I watched them kill him with my own knife. It should have been used to save his life, not take it from him.”

“Why did you marry such a man?” Robert asked, lifting her chin gently to look into her eyes.

“To save my child from eternal damnation.”

“What?”

Edith took a step towards him so that only her brother would hear her words. The shame she felt in them, though there had been nothing she could do to defend herself, was too great to share with anyone else. “I’m carrying the child of Henry de Bois. To become his wife was the only way to secure its soul.” She watched his eyes narrow and, believing it to be out of disappointment, she hurriedly explained. “I had no choice, Robin. I tried to stop him. With God as my witness, I swear I tried.”

“This is not your fault, Edie,” Robert replied. “It is mine. I’ll kill him with my own hands.”

“No,” Edith begged, snatching his wrist. “Peace, the bishop said. Peace, at whatever cost.” She rested her head against his chest and felt his arms wrap around her. She was safe. For that moment, fleeting though it was doomed to be, she felt entirely safe. Henry could not reach her and, in her brother’s arms, she returned to the child she had been until so recently.

“I will have justice on de Bois for what he has done.”

“Yes,” she answered. “And I swear I shall send you everything and everyone you need to see it done. But not yet, Robert, for he wasn’t lying when he told you about the archers, and all you will achieve here in combat is your own death. I can’t watch it. Is…” her voice trailed off as she looked around the circle. “Is Dunstan safe?”

“He has his own ways of protecting himself. He arrived with us tonight, but he has not seen fit to stay.”

“He tried to save me, Robert. It was I who broke your command, not he.” Edith gave a flash of a smile before it fell, and she shook her head. “I loved him.”

“Changeling on one side, Norman on the other,” Robert tried to laugh, but the strain caused a tear to fall from his eyes where, until now, he had kept them guarded. “How do you manage to find them, Edie?”

“Thank you for coming to find me, Robert,” she said, emotionless formality taking her tone. Robert turned to look at what she had seen to cause this change. De Bois stood next to the ring of men. “I doubt I’ll see you again for some time, but I’m pleased to have explained it to you.”

“Come, my wife,” Henry snapped. “The dawn is not yet here, and my bed is growing cold.”

At this, one of the men closest to the Norman reached to draw his sword. Robert rushed forward and snatched his wrist.

“No, Sweyn. Liebling Edith has requested her safe return to the garrison.”

“You don’t learn, do you?” Henry sneered, snatching Edith’s hand and pulling her from the ring. “She is no longer Liebling Edith. She is Lady de Bois.” He pushed her forward and watched as, with hunched shoulders and faltering step, Edith returned to the garrison. She never looked back.

“You don’t want peace,” Robert snapped. The ring of guards formed a semicircle behind him as he addressed Henry. “Why did you do this?”

“Peace?” the lord scoffed. “That’s my brother’s notion. But it hurts, doesn’t it? To see her, this fragile, delicate creature, who you were meant to protect. And to know that another man has taken her. Whatever she told you, it was true. She all but begged me to marry her.”

“I will have justice for what you have done to her.”

“No. What I have done to her was done as justice for what you did to Matilda. I want her child,” he snapped. “I want the child Matilda bore you. It should be raised in a Norman court, not with Saxon savages.” He paused long enough to spit on the ground at Robert’s feet. “If I do not get the child, I’ll make sure your Liebling doesn’t survive birthing my own. I won’t need a wife once I have an heir.”

Obeying Edith’s request was the most difficult moment of Robert’s life. He longed to draw his blade and thrust it into the chest of the man before him. But it would accomplish nothing, for Edith would still die in the barbaric fashion Henry had contrived for her. Instead, he was left to watch as Henry de Bois returned to the garrison and the gates were closed behind him. Robert turned and, without offering his men any words, he led them away.


Purchase links


Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08TWYNBCP

Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TWYNBCP

Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B08TWYNBCP

Amazon AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B08TWYNBCP

Barnes and Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-year-we-lived-virginia-crow/1138704747

Waterstones: https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-year-we-lived/virginia-crow/9781913182274

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/gb/en/ebook/the-year-we-lived

Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1066348

Crowvus: https://www.crowvus.com/product-page/the-year-we-lived


Author

 

Virginia Crow

 

Virginia grew up in Orkney, using the breath-taking scenery to fuel her imagination and the writing fire within her. Her favourite genres to write are fantasy and historical fiction, sometimes mixing the two together such as her newly-published book "Caledon". She enjoys swashbuckling stories such as the Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas and is still waiting for a screen adaption that lives up to the book!

 

When she's not writing, Virginia is usually to be found teaching music, and obtained her MLitt in "History of the Highlands and Islands" last year. She believes wholeheartedly in the power of music, especially as a tool of inspiration. She also helps out with the John O'Groats Book Festival which is celebrating its 3rd year this April.

 

She now lives in the far flung corner of Scotland, soaking in inspiration from the rugged cliffs and miles of sandy beaches. She loves cheese, music and films, but hates mushrooms.


Social Media


Website: https://www.stompermcewan.com

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