Posted in Blog Tour, Guest Post

Guest Post and Blog Tour for Vanishing Into the 100 % Dark

 


Vanishing Into the 100% Dark (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
by Amber Royer

About Vanishing Into the 100% Dark


Vanishing Into the 100% Dark (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery
8th in Series
Setting – Japan
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Golden Tip Press (March 4, 2025)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 324 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DT2DW97B
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Bean to chocolate maker Felicity Koerber has been invited to be part of a chocolate festival in Tokyo. It’s a big deal for a Texas gal with a chocolate shop on Galveston’s historic Strand, so a whole group of her friends come along to support her. It’s intimidating enough to be giving a class on chocolate making with the help of a translator – she also stumbles across the scene of a murder, where a quirky group of international actors and stunt performers are making a monster movie. Felicity has already solved half a dozen murders back in Texas, so at this point her friends basically expect her to get involved – even before the young media influencer in Felicity’s group becomes the main suspect. Felicity has taken on the role of chaperone for Chloe, so she can’t imagine how she could explain what went wrong to the girl’s mother. Which gives her even more motivation to figure out the real killer.

In the meantime, things get complicated at the chocolate festival when a rival chocolate maker tries to get her disqualified from the awards competition – and claims that her amateur sleuth status is bringing undesirables into the festival. And things are even more complicated as the stress of being in an unfamiliar place brings out secrets about Felicity’s friends – and her fiancé.

GUEST POST

As a writer, I find myself collecting random bits of information.   A snippet of dialogue from an overheard conversation here, a random fact about book ink that just might prove to be the murder weapon in my next book there.  You have to remain open to the world, become observant, and find ways to fit new things you experience in with your treasure trove of writing information.

I find that travel offers the best possible opportunities for doing that.  When you are at home, it is easy to take passing details for granted.  But when you are in a new place – whether two towns over or halfway around the world – you are bound to notice differences in even everyday things.  Do people speak differently, using slang or idioms you haven’t heard before?  What about table manners?  The presence or absence of pets?

I was in Hawaii for a week before someone pointed out that you can’t have a billboard anywhere in the state.  But once I noticed it, I was more conscious of the views along the roadside, which were unobstructed.  That said something about what was considered most of value locally.  It’s also a detail I probably would not have learned about had I not been there.

I have visited Japan a couple of times, and each time I’ve taken notes as a sort of free-form travel journal, while I captured my favorite visual memories as Instagram posts.  I knew that I would want to do more with the information I was collecting, and that I wanted to use Tokyo as a setting for a book.  I was finally able to do that with Vanishing Into the 100% Dark.  This book takes the characters from my Bean to Bar Mysteries series and sends them on a trip to a chocolate festival in Tokyo.

I had no idea which bits of information I was going to use, so I recorded every interesting fact I came across, every important location I might want to look up again.  (If you decide to journal, but you don’t have a project, consider writing down stories that people have shared, little details about things that happened to you, especially things that aren’t funny now but might be later, names of restaurants and shops, the specific names of foods you’ve eaten, the names of flowers, birds and animals in your surroundings, and tidbits of history about the area.)

Even without a piece of fiction in mind, keeping a travel journal can be a worthwhile end itself.  It can be filled with personal memories just for you, or to be shared with a select few.  Or those notes could become a series of blog post, or even a full-blown travelogue.  This would require editing the entries into a seamless narrative that has beginning and end scenes of setting off on your adventure, bookended with your return.  Usually, the idea is to show how you are different in that return scene, having grown somehow and learned something from your travels.  (This mirrors the way novels are structured, where the character takes a literal or metaphorical journey and is somehow bettered by the experience.  Unless, of course, it is a tragedy.)  Travelogues are usually written in first person and recounted in the past tense.  Because you have in effect become the main character of your travelogue, you lend your voice to it, and it is filtered through your narrative point of view.  This makes the resulting work more personal than anything achieved in a guidebook or non-fiction work on a particular destination.  Travelogues allow for the inclusion of specific non-repeatable experiences, alongside instruction about culture and history.  You might share your reasons for traveling to the place (which may or may not feel universal to your readers) and encourage others to visit for reasons of their own.

Sometimes you wind up writing something that is semi-autobiographical.  It tips over into fiction, though there is a basis in what you actually experienced.  I feel like I did that when writing Vanishing into the 100% Dark.  It’s a mystery, so obviously most of what happens is complete invention with no basis in reality.  But the emotions underlying some of the experience of being in Japan comes from feelings I had visiting the same spots.  In the opening, Felicity turns on her phone and immediately gets hit with roaming charged before she remembers she’s supposed to install a virtual sim.  That actually happened to me.  She gets excited watching the giant 3-D cat billboard outside the train station in Shinjuku.  I felt exactly the same way, a little nervous when the cat started to bat something off the edge of the virtual frame – even though logic was telling me the object wouldn’t actually fall to the street, my senses weren’t so sure.

I felt like writing parts of the book had become a travelogue, overlaid with the exciting mystery and thriller-esque events that made up my plot.  Even things that happened to me separately and in different locations came together in a way that weirdly felt like cohesive memory, even as I blended them into a fictional scene.  Felicity visits a movie studio in the course of the book, and on one table there is Japenese-style potato salad, cucumber salad and a box each of katsu sandwiches and strawberry sandwiches.  I’ve eaten all of those things – but never in the same meal.  But I can imagine how the flavors all work and what the experience would be like.

There’s an oversized Godzilla head peeking over one of the hotels in that same area of Shinjuku, which became the loose inspiration for the hotel where my characters stay during the course of the book.  Because it is a fictional hotel, I didn’t have to worry if I was getting interior details right, but the emotion of looking up at the enormous face of a monster familiar from movies I’ve seen needed to be spot on.

It can be easier to evoke emotion in your writing by appealing to the senses.  Use at least a couple of sensory details to put the reader in the scene and then tell the reader what you – or your character – is feeling in the moment, in reaction to those details.  I feel that by doing that in Vanishing, it helps the reader understand WHY Felicity loves to travel.

About Amber Royer

Amber Royer writes the Chocoverse comic telenovela-style foodie-inspired space opera series, and the Bean to Bar Mysteries. She also teaches creative writing and is an author coach. Her workbook/textbook Story Like a Journalist and her Thoughtful Journal series allow her to connect with writers. Amber and her husband live in the DFW Area, where you can often find them at local coffee shops or taking landscape/architecture/wildlife photographs. They both love to travel, and Amber records her adventures on Instagram – along with pics of her pair of tuxedo cats. If you are very nice to Amber, she might make you cupcakes. Chocolate cupcakes, of course! Amber blogs about creative writing technique and all things chocolate at www.amberroyer.com.

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: 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

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

Bookshop.org

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

March 4 – Jody’s Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT

March 4 – Bigreadersite – REVIEW

March 5 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

March 6 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

March 6 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

March 7 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – RECIPE

March 8 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – CHARACTER GUEST POST

March 9 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

March 10 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

March 11 – Cozy Up With Kathy – CHARACTER GUEST POST

March 12 – Celticladys Reviews – RECIPE

March 13 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

March 13 – Frugal Freelancer CHARACTER INTERVIEW

March 14 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

March 15 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR GUEST POST

March 16 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

March 17 – Deal Sharing Aunt – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

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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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Posted in Blog Tour, Spotlight

Spotlight and Blog Tour for Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark, A Bean to Bar Mystery, by Amber Royer


Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark
(A Bean to Bar Mystery)
by Amber Royer

About Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark

Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark (A Bean to Bar Mystery)
Cozy Mystery
6th in Series
Setting – Texas
Golden Tip Press (September 12, 2023)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 301 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0C9YXTC78

Felicity Koerber’s bean to bar chocolate shop on Galveston’s historic Strand is hosting the friends and family coming into town for her best friend Autumn’s wedding. As matron of honor, Felicity has a ton of tasks to complete – including making chocolates for the gift bags. She doesn’t have time to solve another murder. But when one of the bridesmaids becomes a prime suspect in the death of a visiting real estate agent, Felicity has to put her detecting skills to use again to keep the wedding plans from getting derailed.

She’s already nervous about the impeding deadline she’s given herself to finally choose between her two love interests – and figuring where life goes once she makes her choice. But add in a missing pigmy goat and a new coffee shop that wants to partner with her, and she’s frazzled.

She begins to discover that not everything is as it seems among the wedding guests. Can she handle the wedding preparations, pull off turning her shop into a concert venue, and unmask the killer – before anyone else dies?

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 techniques 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 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: 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

Book Trailer

Video 1

Video 2

Purchase Links – Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

September 11 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

September 11 – Jane Reads – AUTHOR GUEST POST

September 12 – Cozy Up WIth Kathy – CHARACTER GUEST POST

September 12 – My Reading Journeys – REVIEW

September 13 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

September 13 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT

September 14 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST

September 14 – The Mystery Section – SPOTLIGHT

September 15 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

September 15 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

September 16 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

September 16 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR GUEST POST

September 17 – FUONLYKNEW – RECIPE POST

September 18 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

September 19 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

September 20 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR GUEST POST

September 21 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

September 22 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – SPOTLIGHT

September 23 – Brooke Blogs – SPOTLIGHT

September 24 – #BRVL Book Review Virginia Lee – SPOTLIGHT

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Posted in Blog Tour, Cozy Mystery, New Releases

Spotlight, Blog Tour, and Giveaway for Grand Openings Can Be Murder, A Bean to Bar Mystery by Amber Royer


Grand Openings Can Be Murder (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
by Amber Royer

About Grand Openings Can Be Murder

Grand Openings Can Be Murder (Bean to Bar Mysteries)
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Publisher: Golden Tip Press (February 2, 2021)
Paperback: 266 pages
ISBN-10: 1952854083
ISBN-13: 978-1952854088
Digital ASIN: B08JLFHD7N

Felicity Koerber has had a rough year. She’s moving back to Galveston Island and opening a bean to bar chocolate factory, fulfilling a dream she and her late husband, Kevin, had shared. Craft chocolate means a chance to travel the world, meeting with farmers and bringing back beans she can turn into little blocks of happiness, right close to home and family.

She thinks trouble has walked into her carefully re-built world when puddle-jump pilot Logan Hanlon shows up at her grand opening to order custom chocolates. Then one of her employees drops dead at the party, and Felicity’s one-who-got-away ex-boyfriend – who’s now a cop – thinks Felicity is a suspect. As the murder victim’s life becomes more and more of a mystery, Felicity realizes that if she’s going to clear her name in time to save her business, she might need Logan’s help. Though she’s not sure if she’s ready to let anyone into her life – even if it is to protect her from being the killer’s next victim. For Felicity, Galveston is all about history, and a love-hate relationship with the ocean, which keeps threatening to deliver another hurricane – right into the middle of her investigation. Can she figure it out before all the clues get washed away?

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 techniques and all things chocolate at www.amberroyer.com. She also teaches creative writing for both UT Arlington Continuing Education and Writing Workshops Dallas. If you are very nice to her, she might make you cupcakes.

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: 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
AmazonBarnes and NobleKoboApple BooksIndie Bookshop

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

January 20 – I’m All About Books – SPOTLIGHT

January 20 – My Journey Back – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

January 21 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

January 21 – My Reading Journeys – REVIEW

January 22 – Brooke Blogs – RECIPE WITH SPOTLIGHT

January 22 – Books a Plenty Book Reviews – REVIEW

January 23 – I Read What You Write – CHARACTER GUEST POST

January 23 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

January 24 – A Blue Million Books – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

January 25 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

January 26 – Celticlady’s Review – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

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

January 27 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

January 28 – Mysteries with Character – GUEST POST

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

January 30 – Diane Reviews Books – GUEST POST

January 30 – Ruff Drafts – SPOTLIGHT

January 31 – Maureen’s Musings – RECIPE WITH SPOTLIGHT

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