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Guest Post and Blog Tour For Venetian Bind by Lawrence E. Rothstein


Venetian Bind
by Lawrence E. Rothstein

About Venetian Bind


Venetian Bind
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – Venice
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Wild Rose Press (May 15, 2024)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 236 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1509254153
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1509254156
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CX5T3CP5

In Venetian Bind, Detective Marko Korb and his associate Kelan Su, a Chinese-American woman, must hunt down a murderer and prevent a devastating terrorist attack in the romantic city of Venice.

Korb, a fat, egotistical, and brilliant detective, and Kelan Su, a former Chicago police officer, licensed attorney, and martial arts expert, arrive in Venice to investigate the murder of Stefan Pakulić, a former Serbian paramilitary leader and accused war criminal.The daughter of a Bosnian expat who had rescued Korb from Pakulić’s clutches during the war is a suspect in the killing. Korb is torn between finding the murderer and his sympathy for the Serbian’s killer—the Venetian bind.

The investigation leads to Pakulić’s connection with Italian neo-fascists planning a terrorist action in Venice. It takes Korb’s genius and the intrepid sleuthing of Su to find the murderer, forestall the terrorist action, and protect the daughter of Korb’s rescuer.

GUEST POST

As a university professor teaching law courses, I often created hypothetical cases for the students to analyze and discuss according to the case law we were studying. This experience was one of the inspirations for writing detective novels after retiring from both a legal and a teaching career. Here is an example that plays off the situation in the movie My Cousin Vinnie.

HIGH AND STONED BUSTED IN ALABAMA

Billie Bob High and Joe Don Stoned, both 21 years old, were arrested in Jasper County, Alabama for armed robbery, murder, the illegal possession of a weapon and for theft of a mint green, 1963 Pontiac Tempest.  Deputy (pronounced “deppitee”) Sheriff Ewall Goodalboise first saw the defendants standing on the sidewalk outside of the Moonshine Bar & Grill with a six pack of beer.  The Deputy was driving back to the Sheriff’s Office at the end of his shift.  Goodalboise, a twenty year veteran on the force, didn’t like their looks.  As he said, “I seen such shifty characters too many times not to be all-fired suspicious that evil doin’s was afoot.”  However, he was unable to say exactly what prompted him to stop his car, get out and ask for their identification.  Although they both provided valid driver’s licenses, he then spun Billie Bob around and told him to put his hands up against the wall and patted down the outside of his clothing looking for weapons.  He found a .357 magnum pistol stuck in the back waistband of Billie Bob’s pants underneath his loose Hawaiian shirt.

He removed the gun and put cuffs on Billie Bob.  Before he patted down Joe Don, he told him to “put that theah sixah down on the sidewalk.”  Joe Don complied, whereupon the Deputy patted him down finding something long and hard that felt like a switchblade knife.  Upon removing it from Joe Don’s pocket, he pressed the button and out popped —— a car key.  “Whereabouts is the car that this key is fer?” asked Deputy Goodalboise.  “The green one up yonder,” answered Stoned, pointing vaguely at a mint green vintage 1960s car parked up the street.   The Deputy then reached down for the six pack, saying: “If ya gonna drive, boy, I’d bettah keep this here sixah.”  He turned it around to note the brand and noticed that its price sticker was from the Sack O’ Suds over in Beechum County.

Suddenly, Deputy Goodalboise remembered that the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office received an inquiry that day from Sheriff  Farley over in Beechum County about a mint green, 1963 Pontiac Tempest,  two boys and a .357 magnum. The information had been requested by the attorney, Vincent Gambino, representing two New York City boys on trial for armed robbery and murder at the Sack O’ Suds. He pushed his hat back, wiped the sweat off his forehead with his sleeve and drawled: “Well, well, well!  You boys’ll both have to come with me.  It seems y’all maght have some questions to answer over to Beechum County.”  He spun Stoned around, pulled his hands behind his back and clapped on another pair of cuffs.

Prior to trial the boys’ attorneys move to suppress all evidence pertaining to the pistol, the car key, the six pack label and any statements made by the boys concerning the car.  The trial judge suppresses the evidence and the prosecutor takes an immediate appeal as there is no case without this evidence.  The state supreme court affirms the decision of the trial judge and the defendants file a petition for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court. The petition is granted.  Discuss the constitutional arguments and cases that will be raised.

ANALYSIS

Remember this case would have gotten to the Supreme Court around the year 2000. Please excuse the lack of legal citation and full discussion of cases.

  1. Does the 4th amendment (through the 14th) apply to Deputy Goodalboise’s stop of High and Stoned to ask them for identification? Yes, but not an arrest, only a limited interruption to their freedom of action.  Since Terry v. Ohio, this means a less restrictive standard – reasonable suspicion rather than probable cause.  It is reasonable suspicion that a crime has been committed and the suspects are linked to criminal activity.  Reasonable suspicion, however, is not just a hunch or a feeling.  It must be based on specific stateable facts that relate the suspects to criminal activity.  In Terry, Officer McFadden had observed Terry and his colleagues walk repeatedly past a jewelry store, look inside, and stop and confer with each other out of sight of the store.  In Illinois v. Wardlow, a more recent extension of Terry, the officers observed the suspect running from the police presence in an area known for drug trafficking carrying an opaque paper bag.

High and Stoned were doing nothing unusual at all and certainly nothing that could be linked to criminal activity.  The Deputy admitted that he could not state exactly what made him suspicious of criminal activity or of danger to himself.  As for the danger issue, when questioned, they produced valid identification and did nothing more to create reasonable suspicion.

  1. If the initial stop and frisk violated the 4th Amendment, then all evidence seized as a result of that stop is inadmissible. The fruit of the poisonous tree.   Mapp v. Ohio.
  2. How might we rehabilitate the initial stop? While the Deputy did not say so, we might argue that he possessed facts that made his decision reasonable, i.e. he knew of the Jasper County inquiry about two boys whose descriptions were given.  He might have unconsciously realized that High and Stoned matched the description, even though he only consciously remembered the inquiry later.  We might be breaking new legal ground here with regard to a good faith exception.
  3. If we have rehabilitated the initial stop on the suggested grounds, then the Deputy also had reasonable suspicion of danger. He was then entitled under Terry to frisk, i.e. is to conduct a limited patdown of the outside of the clothing in a search for weapons.  He feels the gun clearly and can now pull it out.  He has probable cause to arrest High now.  He may also frisk Stoned for the same reason.  Finding something that feels like a weapon allows him to pull it out and determine if it is a weapon (it appeared to be a switchblade knife when viewed).  However, can he push the button once he has protected himself from its use?  Probably yes since the possession of a switchblade is also illegal and he would have grounds for an arrest and search incident to a lawful arrest. Chimel v. California.  Similarly, he may look at and manipulate the six-pack as an arrest search (but not if only a stop and frisk). Finding the key, can he now ask what the key is for and use that information to gather further evidence?  This is more problematic as he did not give the Miranda warnings although both could be considered in custody, probable cause being established and both being frisked and relieved of possible weapons.  On the other hand, he might have been prepared to let Stoned go once he determined the key case was not a weapon and therefore Stoned was not interrogated in a custodial situation.  This could be indicated because he asked to keep the six pack if Stoned were driving.  Miranda v. Arizona.

About Lawrence E. Rothstein

I am a retired lawyer and university professor who has published in constitutional law, privacy law, political theory and labor law. Born and raised in Chicago, I am now residing with my wife and family in beautiful southern Rhode Island. I have lived and traveled widely in Europe. As an avid reader of crime fiction, I have always wanted to write detective novels. As a lover of food and cooking, I include many scrumptious meals and some recipes in my novel and on my website.

Webpage: www.Rothsteinsmysteries.com;
Facebook page: www.facebook.com/Rothsteinsmysteries;
GoodReads:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/209521954-venetian-bind

Purchase Links: Amazon B&N

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

July 8 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

July 9 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – REVIEW, CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 9 – Lady Hawkeye – SPOTLIGHT

July 10 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

July 10 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 10 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

July 11 – Ascroft, eh? – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

July 11 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

July 12 – fundinmental – SPOTLIGHT

July 12 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 13 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

July 13 – StoreyBook Reviews – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 13 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 14 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – REVIEW

July 14 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

July 15 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – SPOTLIGHT

July 15 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 16 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 17 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

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Posted in Blog Tour, Spotlight

Spotlight and Blog Tour for A Whale of a Murder by Valerie Taylor


A Whale of a Murder: A Venus Bixby Mystery
by Valerie Taylor

About A Whale of a Murder


A Whale of a Murder: A Venus Bixby Mystery
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – Chatham Crossing — a fictional whaling town situated between Providence and Cape Cod
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Aspetuck Publishing (April 23, 2024)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 358 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8986599526
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CW1L6DC1

First in the Venus Bixby Mystery series from award-winning author Valerie Taylor.

Sea breezes and fireworks fill the air in cozy Chatham Crossing, the peaceful and historic whaling town situated between Providence and Cape Cod.

Venus Bixby, owner of the forever popular music store Oldies & Goodies, is counting on the festivities over the Fourth of July weekend to propel her to a position on the prestigious Town Committee.

After years of living in the shadow of her late husband, Venus will finally be the center of attention this holiday weekend: starting with her fiftieth birthday celebration and ending as the parade’s Grand Marshal.

Faster than a cookie crumbles, her dream collapses on the morning of her party when she trips over orange platform shoes in the gardens of the Sofia Silva Whaling Museum and breaks her thumb. When it’s discovered the shoes are attached to the body of the manager of the museum’s gift shop, Venus becomes both a suspect and a sleuth in Chatham Crossing’s first murder in decades.

Given this unexpected turn of events, will Venus ever sing and dance at her birthday party, or will her fractured thumb end up in handcuffs?

Includes cookie recipes and playlist!

About Valerie Taylor

Valerie Taylor tried to retire in 2016. But life had other ideas. After enjoying some of the best years of her life in Boston and Seattle, she moved back home to Connecticut and embarked on a second career as an author. Her first romantic comedy trilogy What’s Not Said, What’s Not True, and What’s Not Lost won multiple awards. Encouraged by her readers, she created a new cozy mystery series, spinning one of the secondary characters in What’s Not LOST into the role of amateur sleuth in A Whale of a Murder: A Venus Bixby Mystery. When she’s not writing or reading, Valerie enjoys practicing tai chi and being an expert sports spectator.

Author Links

Website: https://valerietaylorauthor.com

Facebook: facebook.com/valerietaylorauthor

Twitter/X: twitter.com/ValerieEMTaylor

Instagram: Instagram.com/ValerieETaylor/

Purchase Links – AmazonB&NBookshop.org

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

July 8 – Novels Alive – REVIEW

July 8 – Lady Hawkeye – SPOTLIGHT

July 9 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

July 9 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

July 10 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – SPOTLIGHT

July 11 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT

July 12 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

July 13 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 13 – Reading Is My SuperPower – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 14 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 15 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 16 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

July 16 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 17 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 17 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

July 18 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

July 18 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

July 19 – StoreyBook Reviews – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 20 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading Books – REVIEW

July 21 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – REVIEW

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Posted in Blog Tour, Guest Post

Blog Tour and Guest Post for Ghost and the Haunted House by Carmen Radtke

 


Ghost and the Haunted House
(Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
by Carmen Radtke

About Ghost and the Haunted House


Ghost and the Haunted House (Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
Paranormal Cozy Mystery
4th in Series
Setting – Fictional small town in New England
Independently Published (May 29, 2024)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 194 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D47ZLQWP

Could quaint Cobblewood Cove be a hotbed for black magic?

Genie and her ghostly great-great-aunt Adriana have been too busy with their gelato business and helping with the restoration of the old speakeasy to notice that something isn’t quite right in their small town.

Until pranks with touch of the macabre haunt the neighborhood, right before Halloween.

But it gets worse.

When a locked room murder case points straight at a connection to dark forces, the sleuthing duo fears for the living – and the not-quite so departed.

Can they root out the evil in their midst before it ends Adriana’s happy afterlife – forever?

About Carmen Radtke

Carmen Radtke has spent most of her life with ink on her fingers and a dangerously high pile of books and newspapers by her side.

She has worked as a newspaper reporter on two continents and always dreamt of becoming a novelist and screenwriter.

When she found herself crouched under her dining table, typing away on a novel between two earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand, she realised she was hooked for life.

The shaken but stirring novel made it to the longlist of the Mslexia competition, and her next book and first mystery, The Case Of The Missing Bride, was a finalist in the Malice Domestic competition in a year without a winner. Since then she has penned several more cozy mysteries, including the Jack and Frances series set in the 1930s and the Genie and Adriana Darling series.

Carmen now lives in Italy with her human and her four-legged family.

GUEST POST

How (not) to write

Picture this. A quiet, airy room, with a mood board for pictures on the wall, a noticeboard with plot points, character names and a rough chapter outline next to it. The scent of freshly brewed coffee refreshes my senses, and peace reigns supreme while I create a whole world with the touch of my fingertips.

Except, it’s all fiction.

This is how I would love to work ideally, although my first choice will forever be scribbling away in my notebooks in the cafés of Montparnasse in the early 1920s, and then go home and type up my masterworks. Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein have a lot to answer for.

At least my workspace is also slightly on the bohemian (translate: messy) side, and that no matter its size or location.

Reference books are piled up, in case my memory fails me. Crumpled pieces of paper with illegible notes abound – note to self: buy decent pens or work on your handwriting for goodness’ sake. Half a dozen small notebooks in which I keep notes on – well, anything.

Their actual usefulness is highly suspect due to the myriad of entries that make no longer sense.

One example: The source? An excellent question, you will agree. If you know the context. The source of the Nile? The source of money? That flaky pastry I can still taste on my tongue and feel on my hips? I’ve got no idea.

Alas, if I ever throw away these notebooks, their importance will reveal itself the instant the recycling van speeds away. At least it’s in a good tradition; wasn’t it J.K. Rowling who jotted down the original Harry Potter idea on a napkin?

The coffee mug is filled with herbal tea, to tell my brain once and for all that the coffee-break is over and a little bit of help would be nice, thank you very much.

Oooh, there’s a leftover biscuit. I’ll munch it, and then I’ll seriously get down to work. I promise.  Now let me just find the spoon to stir my tea, and check my emails one last time.

The funny thing is, on a good day it still takes me close to an hour from intending to write to physically put words onto the screen, but then I get lured in to this world that I not so much create as give in to. I write until my eyes blur, or the cat, an elderly rescue with lots of serious health issues, cries for attention.

That’s the hardest bit, the struggle to end a writing session. I’ve developed a way to write with the cat on my lap for a while, but there’s only so much time I can twist myself into a human pretzel before everything aches.

On a bad day, when all the words appear clumsy and ring wrong in my ears, I argue with my characters, and myself, and I curse myself for the mess on my too small desk. Because I can’t possibly be expected to create magic on the page under these challenging circumstances, right?

Now, if I could have that quiet, airy room, where no cat scratches at the door to complain about being shut out, or amble through the leafy streets of Paris on my way to my favourite writing jaunt or a congenial drink with like-minded people of style, wit and sophistication, surely it would be different. Instead, I sip the by now cold tea, give a bitter laugh, and walk away.

Luckily, I have something Hemingway didn’t have; a group of supportive writers who constantly check emails and Facebook to commiserate with me and others or cheer me on.

Which is why you find me still here, at my creatively arranged desk, marvelling at the worlds I can create, and the wonders I can find in my bohemian arrangement. I think I spotted a stapler I’ve been searching for ages.

It’s hard to believe I’ve written more than ten novels under these conditions, but there they are, ranging from period mysteries to contemporary, traditional to ghost cozy, and one work of literary fiction.

Over the course of penning the Alyssa Chalmers mysteries, Jack and Frances mysteries, Eve Holdsworth mysteries, and now the Genie and Adriana Darling mysteries, I’ve researched different eras, different towns and countries, upper class and working class, and lived vicariously through my characters (including a certain amount of envy).

Yet I’m always excited to return to them. They’re my friends. Sometimes they defy me, or exasperate me, or lead me astray, but they’re always there. Even if I can’t chronicle their adventures in a café in Montparnasse.

My latest move allowed me to upgrade from a tray to a room with a mood-board on the wall. Alas, it’s also freezing in winter, stifling in summer, and too far from the cat to spend more than an hour or two there . . .

Author Links:

Website – www.carmenradtke.com

Facebook – www.facebook.com/Carmen-Radtke-1958399947738868/

Twitter/X – https://www.Twitter.com/CarmenRadtke1

Purchase Links: Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

July 1 – Mystery, Thrillers & Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

July 1 – Eskimo Princess Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 2 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 2 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 3 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 3 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – RECIPE

July 4 – OFF

July 5 – Angel’s Book Nook – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 5 – fundinmental – SPOTLIGHT

July 6 – Baroness Book Trove – REVIEW

July 6 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

July 6 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT

July 7 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 7 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

July 8 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

July 8 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

July 8 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 9 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 9 – Lady Hawkeye – SPOTLIGHT

July 10 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading Books – REVIEW

July 10 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 11 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 11 – Novels Alive – REVIEW

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Posted in author news, Book Sales

A Sale and Good News to Celebrate this Fourth of July


Happy Fourth! I hope you’re all enjoying your summers. My 3-volume Buttercup Bend cozy mystery series is on sale for 99 cents for Kobo’s Independence Day Sale that ends on July 8. Grab your copy at https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/buttercup-bend-mysteries-books-1-3

I’m thrilled to announce that I’ve won two Certificates of Excellence from the Cat Writers’ Association for articles, and my poem, “Leaving” was accepted for publication in the South Carolina Bards Anthology 2024.

I’ll be speaking at the Lancaster County Library on Monday, July 15 from 2 to 4 pm. If any of you’re in the area, I hope you’ll drop by. There’ll be raffles and refreshments. I’ll also be autographing books and reading excerpts from my latest titles.

Meet the cats from my new release, A Mixed Bag of Cat Tails: 

Bojangles from my time-travel tale, “The Missing Mistletoe.”
Stripey from my fantasy, “Cat Genie.”
Snow White from my romance, “Saving Snow White.”
Bluebell from my horror story, “Knowledge is Power.”
Gato the ghost cat from “Haunted Honeymoon.”
Lucky from the mystery, “Murder Gone A-Stray.”
Merry and Jingles from, “Catnapped for Christmas.”
Ebony from “The Pyramid Murder.”

Thank you all for your support. Have a wonderful Fourth of July!

Posted in Uncategorized

Blog Tour and Author Interview for A Chocolate is Announced by Amber Royer

 

A Chocolate is Announced (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
by Amber Royer

About A Chocolate is Announced


A Chocolate is Announced (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery
7th in Series
Setting – Texas
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Golden Tip Press (June 25, 2024)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 277 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CZMXM3BN

Felicity Koerber is finally getting her life together. She has a fiancé, her bean to bar chocolate shop on Galveston’s historic Strand has become a gathering spot for the community, and she is ready to embrace whatever the future holds. She’s ready for another launch party – despite the disaster at her grand opening, when she’d first gotten involved with solving a murder. And this time she’s embracing her status as a sleuth. She’s hosting a murder mystery weekend to celebrate the new Mystery Flavor line of craft chocolate bars. She’s held a contest to choose the attendees, who will all stay at her aunt’s flip hotel and enjoy the island. It’s all supposed to be perfectly random – only, Felicity starts to uncover connections between her guests. When one of them winds up murdered, Felicity has to keep her aunt from becoming the main suspect.

The killer is very clearly calling Felicity out, leaving clues that mean little to anyone other than her. But that doesn’t narrow down the suspect pool. Her guests are there because they love the true crime podcast she’s been featured on. And she can’t decide whether the killer wants her to catch them – or just wants to taunt her.

Meanwhile, Felicity is also playing host to her future in-laws and discovers that her fiancé’s sister, who is also a cop, is very competitive. Can Felicity hold her own and make a good impression, while keeping her business together and her aunt out of jail? And can Felicity solve it in time to protect the people she cares about from becoming additional victims?
Satchmo the retired police dog turned therapy dog returns to help her sniff out a few clues, and one of the guests brings along a ferret named Cheeseburger, who keeps showing up in the most unexpected places.

About Amber Royer

Amber Royer writes the CHOCOVERSE comic telenovela-style foodie-inspired space opera series, and the BEAN TO BAR MYSTERIES. She is also the author of STORY LIKE A JOURNALIST: A WORKBOOK FOR NOVELISTS, which boils down her writing knowledge into an actionable plan involving over 100 worksheets to build a comprehensive story plan for your novel. She blogs about creative writing technique and all things chocolate at www.amberroyer.com. She also teaches creative writing and is an author coach. If you are very nice to her, she might make you cupcakes. Chocolate cupcakes, of course.

AUTHOR INTERVIEW

Name: (If you have a pen name under which you write, please list both names)

Amber Royer

State and City or Country and City where you live

Princeton, Texas (at the edge of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex)

How long have you been published? What titles and/or series have you published and with which publisher? Have you self-published any titles? Please give details.

My sci-fi Chocoverse trilogy was published by Angry Robot Books.  The first book, Free Chocolate, came out in 2018.  I met a large number of real-world chocolate makers and chocolatiers while researching and marketing those books.  After that, The Bean to Bar Mysteries, starring a craft chocolate maker, became a self-published passion project.  I’m now on book 7 in the series.

Tell us a little bit about your books — if you write a series, any upcoming releases or your current work-in-progress. If you have an upcoming release, please specify the release date.

In The Bean to Bar Mysteries, Felicity Koerber comes home to Texas as a recent widow.  She starts the next chapter in her life by opening a chocolate shop, which over the course of the series has become a gathering place for her friends and the community.  Felicity finds herself drawn into solving the murder of an employee who dies at the grand opening for Greetings and Felicitations, and is subsequently called on to solve a number of cases surrounding her friends and her business.  In the seventh book, A Chocolate is Announced, that released on June 25, Felicity is hosting a murder mystery weekend to celebrate her fiancé/business partner’s first forays into making his own chocolate bars, a line focused on unusual flavor combinations.  Of course, something goes wrong at the party, and Felicity and her friends must solve a locked room murder.

I’m in the outlining stages of the next book in the series, Vanishing into the 100% Dark, which will be set around a chocolate festival in Tokyo.  This will be the first time Felicity and friends will be traveling to a different country.  (The third book in the series took place on a cruise ship, but they never did arrive at their destination port.)  Felicity finds a body that then disappears from the area where a movie was being filmed across the way from the festival.  She has to solve the murder to convince people it really happened.  Vanishing will be coming out early October.

Describe your goals as a writer. What do you hope to achieve in the next few years? What are you planning to do to reach these goals?

I’m working on a second mystery series and a stand-alone sci fi novel. But in between projects, I’d like to write more short fiction.  I’ve set a goal to submit a piece of short fiction to an anthology or magazine once a month.

What type of reader are you hoping to attract?  Who do you believe would be most interested in reading your books?

For my current series, my ideal reader likes a little romance in with their mystery.  Pretty much everything I write – sci-fi included — has romantic subplots.  I hope to attract readers who like a bit of humor and banter mixed in with real emotional growth, and who enjoy getting invested in puzzling out a mystery.  For my sci-fi, I think I appeal most to people who like something that will make them both laugh and think – with a side of clean romance, of course!

What advice would you give other authors or those still trying to get published?

Embrace your voice, which is what will allow you to bring something to the table that no one else can.  I fought that for a long time, trying to write what I felt like I should be writing instead of what felt natural.  I tend to do first person, bantery adventure puzzles, where characters may or may not make up words.  It works for my voice – though I’ve written a number of very different protagonists.  It wasn’t until I fully embraced this and let myself have fun writing that I came up with something that felt alive enough to be publishable.

What particular challenges and struggles did you face before first becoming published?

I don’t fare very well as a discovery writer.  I just get to distracted by fun ideas and go hopping down the trail after random plot bunnies.  So for years, I would get positive responses to my query letters, and many of the people I submitted to would devour my sample pages.  But when they would ask for the full, I would quickly get a rejection.  It wasn’t until someone kindly sat me down and explained that I didn’t fully understand the point of structure that I was able to realize my weakness and learn to outline.  (I’m not knocking discovery writing.  Just saying how I was shooting myself in the foot by being too stubborn to embrace all of the tools in my writer’s toolbox.  Now that I have a better grasp on structure, I do sometimes discovery write, knowing that I can mine the first few scenes of a story for all the pieces I need to get to a logical ending.)

Do you belong to any writing groups? Which ones?

I’m a member of Sisters in Crime (both national and my local SiNC North Dallas.  (We just launched our third anthology – Notorious in North Texas.  I’ve had a short story in each one.)  I am a member of the Cat Writers’ Association.  I also lead the Saturday Night Write Craft Discussion Group.  We meet on the 3rd Saturday of the month via Zoom, and unless I’ve wrangled a guest speaker, I’m in charge of leading discussion on any number of writing craft-related topics.  (I’ve been teaching creative writing through UT Arlington Continuing Education since 2008, and have worked with other organizations such as Writing Workshops Dallas and Writing Day Workshops, so I’ve had a lot of experience uncovering common writing questions and concerns.)

What are your hobbies and interests besides writing?

I love to travel.  Some of my favorite places include Japan (where I will be visiting again soon, to visit friends and to solidify my take on the setting for Vanishing into the 100% Dark) and Hawaii, where we recently spent two weeks traipsing through every coffee and cacao farm that would have us.  I also love to cook and entertain, or to be outside walking in the park or playing disc golf with my husband.  We also have two cats, who are as challenging as they are adorable.

What do you like most and least about being an author? What is your toughest challenge?

I like how being an author allows me to connect with people.  When someone tells me that something about my characters touched them, or echoed their own emotions about a situation, that makes my week – and fuels my desire to write then next book, even in those moments where it feels mostly like shouting into the darkness.  I guess my biggest challenge is balancing writing time with everything that comes along with being a writer in the era of social media.  Sometimes you have to just focus on getting the draft done before you can worry about building a platform for it.

What do you like about writing cozy mysteries?

Cozy mysteries are all about community.  I’ve written in other genres, and they each have their appeal.  But one of my favorite parts about the Bean to Bar Mysteries has been developing Felicity’s network of family and friends.  Readers reach for cozies for the mystery puzzle, foremost, but they come back to a cozy series because they like spending time in the sleuth’s world, looking forward to cameos from favorite side characters (according to many of my reviewers, they just want more Ash, the blogger who went from Felicity’s arch nemesis to the guy chronicling her cases in his podcast) and the opportunity to learn something about the sleuth’s business or hobbies.

Can you share a short excerpt from your latest title or upcoming release?

Here’s a bit from A Chocolate is Announced:

Ash passes out the packets for everyone’s characters. I don’t get one. Everyone else does — including Aunt Naomi and Uncle Greg.

Once we’re dismissed from the table, Logan shows me his character sheet. He asks, “What am I supposed to do with this?”

I say, “You pretend to be whoever is on the page during the scheduled mystery-solving sessions. You can be yourself the rest of the time.”

Logan gives a dismissive wave. “I know that. I mean, what am I supposed to do with this character? I’ll feel stupid.”

Ash has given him Paisley Vain, an arrogant aristocrat with a heart full of greed. Which is so not Logan. Ash probably thinks this is hilarious, considering Logan is a tough-guy, ex-bodyguard, ex-cop, with a tortured, tragic past.

Logan doesn’t look amused, but I convince him to be a good sport. After all, this event is in his honor. It’s a testament to his personal growth over the course of the time that I’ve known him that he can at least attempt to be silly.

In character now, Ash gathers us in the lobby.

Several people sit on the sofa in front of the fireplace. Imogen lets out a startled, “Oof.” She reaches underneath herself and pulls out the sheathed knife she sat on. She places it on the coffee table, saying, “Oh my, who could have left that here?”

She looks conspiratorially at Ash, but he looks a bit confused. 

It must be a prop knife, and maybe there had been some miscommunication on where it had been left. Or maybe the game’s killer or victim was already supposed to have it.

But that sheathed blade, easily a foot long, looks so ominous sitting on the table. It looks so real – like we’ve genuinely invited violence into the room.

Is there anything else you’d like our readers to know about you or your books?

I grew up in Southeast Texas, a ferry ride away from Galveston.  For me, Galveston will always be the place I think of when I think of the beach.  I’ve highlighted something different about Galveston in each of the Bean to Bar Mysteries, and for A Chocolate is Announced, I’ve woven in my childhood memories of the beach itself.

Please list your social media links, website, blog, etc. and include some book cover graphics and author photos if possible.

Website: http://amberroyer.com

Blog: http://amberroyer.com/blog/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amberroyerauthor/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Amber.Royer.Author/

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AmberRoyer

Twitter: https://twitter.com/amber_royer

Tik-Tok: @amberroyerauthor

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Amber-Royer/e/B00PFV4CGM

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8144619.Amber_Royer

A Chocolate is Announced Trailer .mp4

Author Links

Website: http://www.amberroyer.com

Blog: http://amberroyer.com/blog/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amberroyerauthor/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Amber.Royer.Author/

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoA_29HV2nPmRnox9LPVanw

Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/amber_royer

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Amber-Royer/e/B00PFV4CGM

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8144619.Amber_Royer

Purchase Links:

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CZMXM3BN/

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

June 24 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Eskimo Princess Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 26 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 27 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

June 28 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR GUEST POST

June 29 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

June 29 – fundinmental – CHARACTER GUEST POST

June 30 – Cozy Up With Kathy – CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 1 – Maureen’s Musing – SPOTLIGHT

July 1 – Boys’ Mom Reads – REVIEW

July 2 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 3 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT

July 4 – OFF DAY

July 5 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

July 6 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading – REVIEW

July 6 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 7 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

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Guest Post and Blog Tour for What Grows from the Dead by Dave Dobson


What Grows From the Dead
by Dave Dobson

About What Grows From the Dead


What Grows From the Dead
Mystery
Stand-Alone
Setting – North Carolina
Independently Published (March 9, 2024)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 367 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8884545977
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CXN1KQ1B

Morris Drummond is not at his best. Well, he hasn’t been at his best for a while now. But having just suffered two crushing losses, he’s almost at rock bottom, which for him means driving ride-share in his mom’s beat up Chevy, drowning his sorrows in tacos and spray cheese, and avoiding anything related to ambition, self-care, or laundry.

Morris is about to learn that he didn’t even know what rock bottom looked like, and it’s all thanks to his mom. A secret she left behind comes to light, and that brings down a lot of unwanted attention on Morris, the kind that looks likely to send him either to prison or to the hereafter. Blood and treachery from long ago rise to the surface, and Morris has only his lawyer Annie, who’s an old high school friend, and a few unexpected allies to call on as he tries to figure out what his mom was up to and why so many people want him out of the picture.

A humorous mystery with elements of suspense and thrillers, What Grows From the Dead is set in present-day small-town North Carolina, not far from the mysterious Uwharrie Forest.

Content warnings: Coarse language throughout; some gun violence (not graphic).

GUEST POST

Writing past your headlights 

It’s late, and your trip’s been long and difficult. You’re off the main road, trying to follow directions, but they aren’t detailed enough. You’ve never been here, you’re not familiar with the territory, and nothing looks familiar in the dark – just shadows, hints, only coming into focus for an instant as your lights cross them. There’s paint on the road to show the lanes, but some of it is worn away, and the intersections and turns aren’t marked.You’re going too fast for your lights, and if something’s in the road, you’re in for a few moments of either terror or panic as you try not to run headlong into it.

That’s my writing process. I’m what writers call a “pantser,” somebody who writes by the seat of their pants. That’s in contrast to a “plotter,” somebody who has reams of backstory, character profiles, recipes, history, and a massive, detailed plot outline, somebody who knows what’s happening in each chapter, what beats they need to hit, as they progress towards the plot’s conclusion, along the route they’ve already worked out and carefully crafted step by step.

Those two styles are wonderful in that they both can lead to terrific work. J.R.R. Tolkien was clearly a plotter, almost more excited about creating the details his world’s history and language and legend than he was in the story on which the book rests. Donald Westlake, author of countless mysteries, legendarily hated outlines and just wanted as he wrote to find “what’s next?”

How it works for me is I just start writing, page one, and usually I just write until the first draft of book is finished. I usually have no more than a couple sentences of concept, not a plot, just a setup. I often don’t know who my characters are, or even how many they will be, until I begin to discover them on the page. A pattern I often follow is to write for a bit and then throw myself a curve at the end of a chapter – a twist in the plot, an unexpected appearance, a secret revealed. I certainly don’t try to make every chapter end on a cliffhanger, but those seem to me to be natural moments of heightened interest, nice punctuation marks in the narrative. Often I don’t know what they are or even when they’re coming until I write them. If I’m doing my job right, they also serve as little nudges to keep reading – the reader saying “what’s next?” right along with me.

In What Grows from the Dead, one of those moments that turned out to be central to the story was a “what’s in the box?” moment, one that readers of the book will surely remember. I had no idea starting the chapter what was in the box. I hadn’t even known there was going to be a box until I threw it in as another twist a couple chapters earlier. I certainly didn’t know that the contents of the box would be critical to how the story played out. I did know it had to be something important and maybe a little unexpected given that I’d kind of hyped it up some, but beyond that, I didn’t know until I wrote the last sentences of the chapter what was in there.

I’m sure that sounds chaotic, and it is, but I have a good bit of background in thinking this way. I’ve been doing improv comedy for the past 18 years with a group at a local comedy club, and my love for that feeds perfectly into my writing style. With improv, you start a scene without knowing what it’s about, without knowing where you are, who you’re with, or even who you are. All of that gets solidified as you go, ideally early on in the scene so you can build the relationships and the drama that make the scene get moving and have a more appealing (and if you do it well, amazing and funny) plotline. You’re doing all the elements of storytelling there in the moment, while people are watching you, without a chance to edit or go back or rethink, and it’s just magical when it works. The basic tenet of improv is “yes, and” – meaning I accept what you’ve just added to our world, and here is something else I’m giving back, something that hopefully expands and defines the world, our characters, our relationships, our desires.

When improv succeeds, it’s absolutely enchanting. In part, that’s because the expectations the audience has are so low – they know you’re making up a scene and a story and a world on the spot, and if you pull it off, even halfway, they’re with you, impressed or even amazed. If you fail, you can just go on to the next scene, and you’ve only wasted a few minutes of people’s time. With books, however, it’s totally different. You’re asking people to spend hours in your world, and there’s a strong expectation going in that the book will be good, that it will be polished, tight, meaningful, lyrical. You don’t get the grace that an improv audience will give you, and you shouldn’t get it. Even if you write a book using the principles from improv, the book still needs to be just as good as what you’d get from somebody with fifteen notebooks full of outlines, backstory, and character sketches.

That’s where editing and rewriting come in for me. I can improv a first draft, see what happens, get to know my characters, come up with a plot and world, emotional beats and a satisfying ending. Once I’ve done that, I get right back in my car and drive that route again, this time in daylight, where I can see appreciate the colors and the leaves and see everything coming. That’s when the world truly takes full shape.

About Dave Dobson

A native of Ames, Iowa, Dave loves writing, reading, board games, computer games, improv comedy, pizza, barbarian movies, and the cheaper end of the Taco Bell menu. Also, his wife and kids.

Dave is the author of Snood, Snoodoku, Snood Towers, and other computer games. Dave first published Snood in 1996, and it became one of the most popular shareware games of the early Internet. He’s recently published some puzzle card games in the Doctor Esker’s Notebook series.

Dave taught geology, environmental studies, and computer programming at Guilford College for 24 years. He does improv comedy at the Idiot Box in Greensboro, North Carolina. He’s also played the world’s largest tuba in concert. Not that that is relevant, but it’s still kinda cool.

Flames Over Frosthelm was Dave’s first novel, released in 2019. He followed it a year later with Traitors Unseen and The Outcast Crown, then Daros in 2021, The Woeling Lass in 2022, and Got Trouble and Kenai in 2023. He released his first mystery novel, What Grows From the Dead, in 2024, and he’s currently at work on a humorous epic fantasy novel.

Author Links

Website: https://davedobsonbooks.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DaveDobson https://www.facebook.com/frosthelmbooks

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davedobsonfromiowa/

Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/GCDaveDobson

BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/davedobson.bsky.social

Mastodon: https://mas.to/@davedobson

GoodReads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/209690880-what-grows-from-the-dead

Purchase Links – Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

June 18 – Jane Reads – REVIEW, AUTHOR GUEST POST

June 19 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

June 20 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 21 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT, INDIVIDUAL GIVEAWAY

June 22 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – SPOTLIGHT

June 23 – Brooke Blogs – SPOTLIGHT

June 24 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT

June 24 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

June 26 – StoreyBook Reviews – CHARACTER GUEST POST

June 27 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST

June 27 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

June 28 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

June 28 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

June 29 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – REVIEW

June 29 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

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Double Scoop of Murder: A Coffee and Cream Cafe Mystery by Lena Gregory (Audiobook Book Blast)


Audio Book – Double Scoop of Murder:
Coffee & Cream Café Mysteries
by Lena Gregory
Read by Eleanor McCormick


Double Scoop of Murder: Coffee & Cream Café Mysteries
Cozy Mystery
3rd in Series
Setting – Watchogue, Long Island, New York
Audiobook (June 25, 2024)
Publisher Tantor Audio
Listening Length – 6 hours and 39 minutes
ASIN B0D67ZB8TB
Audio CD: ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CZ31MZVK
Gemma Halliday Publishing (November 21, 2023)
Number of Pages 226
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CCLT922F
Paperback ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8879730982

From author Lena Gregory comes a hunt for more than just treasure . . .

Danika Delany is loving running her uncle’s old-fashioned malt shop on eastern Long Island and putting her own modern spin on the treats they serve. Life is finally looking up for her! That is, until local billionaire Maxwell Crumbholtz dies and leaves his fortune in the form of a treasure hunt. Chaos descends on Watchogue, and Dani and the rest of the gang from the Coffee & Cream Cafe join the melee when they enter the contest, try to decipher the clues, and go in search of the treasure. But Dani digs up more than she expected when she discovers a dead body buried instead of a treasure! To make matters worse, a witness claims to have seen Dani at the scene of the murder. Now, instead of a four-billion-dollar payday, Dani is on the hunt for a killer.

 

About Lena Gregory

Lena Gregory is the author of the Bay Island Psychic Mysteries, which take place on a small island between the north and south forks of Long Island, New York, the All-Day Breakfast Café Mysteries, which are set on the outskirts of Florida’s Ocala National Forest, the Mini-Meadows Mysteries, set in a community of tiny homes in Central Florida, and the Coffee & Cream Café Mysteries, which take place in a small town on the south shore of eastern Long Island, New York.

Lena grew up in a small town on the south shore of eastern Long Island, but she recently traded in cold, damp, gray winters for the warmth and sunshine of central Florida, where she now lives with her husband, three kids, son-in-law, and four dogs. Her hobbies include spending time with family, reading, and walking. Her love for writing developed when her youngest son was born and didn’t sleep through the night. She works full-time as a writer and a freelance editor and is a member of Sisters in Crime.

Author Links

Audiobook Purchase Links – AmazonB&NKobo
Find the entire Coffee & Cream Café Mystery Series in all formats here.

Coming August 27, 2024

Book Blast Participants
June 25
Christy’s Cozy Corners
FUONLYKNEW
Girl With Pen
Literary Gold
Celticlady’s Reviews
MJB Reviewers
Sapphyria’s Book Reviews
Cozy Up With Kathy
Reading Authors
Lady Hawkeye
Books, Ramblings, and Tea

June 26
Guatemala Paula Loves to Read
Maureen’s Musings
Socrates Book Reviews
Sarah Can’t Stop Reading
Reading Is My SuperPower
Baroness Book Trove
Brooke Blogs
Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book
Ruff Drafts

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Spotlight and Blog Tour for Easier Dead Than Drawn: A Paint By Murder Mystery by Bailee Abbott


Easier Dead Than Drawn: A Paint by Murder Mystery
by Bailee Abbott

About Easier Dead Than Drawn


Easier Dead Than Drawn: A Paint by Murder Mystery
Cozy Mystery
3rd in Series (1st with this publisher)
Setting – New York
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Level Best Books (May 7, 2024)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 272 pages
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D15342M1

When the town council hires Chloe Abbington’s close friend, famous wall muralist Lana Easton, to paint a mural advertising the return of the floating amphitheater, not everyone in Whisper Cove is happy about the theater or Lana. Naysayers think the noise from concerts and visitors will disrupt their quiet community. It doesn’t help that a lot of money taken from the town’s budget is being used to pay the muralist for her services. The mood turns even more grim when Lana is found dead, and since Chloe was there alone to discover her body, that makes her the prime suspect.

Before Chloe finds herself painted into a corner as the killer, she and sister Izzie hurry to solve the case and find the real criminal. The suspect list grows to include Lana’s boyfriend and her intern, as well as a couple of local residents. The task is a tall order for the sisters, and it doesn’t help that the detective on the case is someone who doesn’t seem to care for Chloe or her interference. Clues about Lana’s past surface and point to more than one suspect. The challenge will be to decide which one is the real killer.

About Bailee Abbott

Bailee Abbott is a native Ohioan who spends her days plotting murder and writing mysteries. She’s a member of Sisters in Crime as well as of International Thriller Writers. Bailee lives with her husband and furry friend Max in the quiet suburbs of Green, Ohio. Visits to Bemus Point, a town along the Chautauqua Lake in southwest New York inspired the setting for the PAINT BY MURDER mystery series. Bailee also writes the SIERRA PINES B&B MYSTERIES and the MACKENZIE BLUE MYSTERIES as Kathryn Long.

Author Links
Website: www.BaileeAbbott.com
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/BaileeAbbott1
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/BaileeAbbottBooks
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21094675.Bailee_Abbott
Instagram: @baileeabbottbooks

Purchase Links – Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

June 17 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

June 18 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

June 19 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

June 20 – Hearts & Scribbles – SPOTLIGHT

June 20 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

June 21 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

June 22 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

June 23 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

June 24 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT

June 26 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

June 27 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT

June 28 – MJB Reviewer – SPOTLIGHT

June 29 – Reading Is My SuperPower – REVIEW

June 30 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – REVIEW

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Spotlight and Blog Tour for Breach by Holly S. Roberts

Breach: A Terrifying Summer Adventure
by Holly S. Roberts

About Breach


Breach: A Terrifying Summer Adventure
Psychological Thriller
Setting – Off the coast of California
Publisher ‏ : ‎Independently Published (March 22, 2024)
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 202 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8320606989
Digital: Wicked Story Telling (June 20, 2024)
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CQYXJ3T1

Craving the vastness of the open sea, Kate and her family set out on a journey of forgiveness and healing aboard Ryan’s Gift, their newly remodeled yacht. After a tragic accident, it’s imperative that Kate returns to the ocean, the place she once called home, in an attempt to restore her spirit.

In the middle of their idyllic voyage, the nightmare begins. With no power or communication, a monster lurks below the surface and the family must find a way to defeat the darkness before it destroys them.

Experience this gripping story of a family’s fight for survival and a terrifying reckoning from the deep.

Excerpt
“Eighteen months had passed since the accident that left Kate with an incomplete spinal cord injury, taking away the use of her legs. The rehabilitation center staff had believed her fortunate for retaining some sensation below the waist, but Kate had never felt unluckier” .

“Kate examined the water looking for a dorsal fin. Slight waves from the Sea Doo rocked the yacht. She wheeled herself frantically toward the stern, her pulse hammering as the real threat lurked unseen below”.

“Kate’s voice was a whisper, her hands tense on the wheels of her chair. ‘Ryan, hold on,’ she breathed as the shark’s massive silhouette darted beneath the yacht toward her daughter”.

“With every ounce of her being, Kate focused on the rolling waves. ‘This ends today,’ she declared, determination lining her features as she prepared to defend her family from a terrifying nightmare”.

About Holly S. Roberts

Holly S Roberts is the USA TODAY bestselling author of thrillers, mysteries, and romance. Her Detective Eve Bennet crime series is a #1 Amazon bestseller. She’s a retired homicide detective who worked high-profile cases in Arizona. Holly lives high in the mountains with her husband and two spoiled dogs.

Author Links

Website: http://wickedstorytelling.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hollysrobertsauthor

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hollysrobertsauthor/

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@hollysrobertsbooks?lang=en

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPzvSdXdeVFQhlGmbqYBJ3w

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6522660.Holly_S_Roberts

Purchase Links

Amazon/Kindle Unlimited

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

June 20 – The Mystery of Writing – SPOTLIGHT

June 20 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

June 20 – Brooke Blogs – SPOTLIGHT

June 21 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

June 21 – Novels Alive – REVIEW

June 21 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 22 – StoreyBook Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 22 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

June 22 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

June 23 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT

June 23 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

June 24 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – REVIEW

June 24 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

June 25 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

June 25 – Rosepoint Publishing – REVIEW

June 26 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT

June 26 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – SPOTLIGHT

June 26 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – SPOTLIGHT

CLICK HERE TO ENTER A GIVEAWAY FOR A SHARK PLUSHIE!

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Posted in Uncategorized

5-Star Review of Heidi ((Family Of Rescue Dogs Book 11): A Puppy’s Progress by Brian L. Porter

5 stars*****
This author writes about his dogs. He also has a mystery series. This book is about the first year that his new puppy, Heidi, spent with him, his wife, and his other dogs. You can tell from the writing how much Mr. Porter loves dogs. It’s a heartfelt tribute, along with photos, of not only Heidi, but all his current dogs as well as those who passed away but still live on in the author’s memory. You’ll laugh and cry when reading this book if you, like Mr. Porter, are a dog lover. I’m a cat person, but I care for all animals, and this book certainly touched me.

The book covers how the author brought Heidi, a tiny dachshund puppy, into his home after a sad loss, the introduction to his other dogs, her favorite games and toys, her growth, her spaying operation, her life through the seasons and the holidays with her human and canine family, and the celebration of her first birthday.

Interspersed throughout are wonderful photos that capture Heidi’s first year. At the end, the book includes a gallery of Mr. Porter’s dog photos that display the love and affection the author feels toward his pets. I highly recommend this read to dog lovers and pet lovers alike.