Pages
▼
Sunday, July 31, 2016
July Mini Musings
Love and Other Scandals: I have had this in my TBR pile for a while. I'm sorry it took me so long to read it. It was such a cute romance. I loved the banter between the main characters. It made for a really fun read. I'm looking forward to reading the next one.
Once and For All: I read this book in one sitting. I'm a sucker for second chance/friends to lovers stories. The couple on this book was so cute together. I loved what Danny did to help Bree out. I was rooting for them the whole time. Definitely a book to check out!
Underneath It All: This was a random pick from my library. I thought this was a cute story. I loved Matthew. He was so sweet. It took a while for Lauren to grow on me. She was a little annoying at times. I do want to read the rest of the Walsh brother's stories in the future.
Saturday, July 30, 2016
Books We Didn't Finish - July Edition
Smoke: I was really intrigued by the premise of this story. But once I got into the book, I found myself really bored. There was a lack of understandable world building at the start. I wasn't interested in waiting it out to be clued in.I made it about 30% and gave up.
We Could Have been Beautiful: I ended up making this a DNF because I couldn't stand the main character. She was not likable and really materialistic. I knew I would just end up loathing her throughout the entire book.
Missing pieces: I tried to get into this one several times, but just couldn't finish it. I think it was the relationship between the main characters. I had a hard time buying that former reporter would never look into her husband's background in the 20-something years they were married. How could you be married to someone for that long and never want to know?
Within These Walls: I was really hoping for a good horror or ghost story. Instead I got page after page of dullness and too many pop culture references.
Blood Gospel: I have had this on my TBR for a long time. I was really disappointed to make this a DNF. It was just so boring. I got half of the way through and gave up. Even once the explanation of the Order of the Sanguines was given, I still didn't care enough to see if they found the book in the end.
The Madwoman Upstairs: I only got about 1 disc in before I gave up on this one. How am I supposed to by into a character who is studying English Literature in graduate school who doesn't like most of the classic authors? I didn't...
Here's to Us: So I'm a huge Elin Hildebrand fan. However, her latest book just wasn't doing it for me. There were too many characters to keep track of, I think. It just seemed like too much back and forth. I was really sad to DNF this one.
Savage: The back of the book synopsis made it sound really good. Once I got into it, it was just not very interesting. It wasn't holding my attention.
Burn What Will Burn: This book had pretty much the
same thing going as Savage. It sounded interesting, but just wasn't holding my interest.
Sanibel Flats: I've been trying to go back and read some old series. This was the first book in the Doc Ford mysteries. I got about 2/3 of the way through and decided it wasn't as good as I had hoped.
Friday, July 29, 2016
Book Spotlight: Giveaway of The Valley by Helen Bryan
Author: Helen Bryan
Publisher: Lake Union Publishing
Date of publication: July 2016
Left suddenly penniless, the Honorable Sophia Grafton, a
viscount’s orphaned daughter, sails to the New World to claim the only property
left to her name: a tobacco plantation in the remote wilds of colonial
Virginia. Enlisting the reluctant assistance of a handsome young French spy—at
gunpoint— she gathers an unlikely group of escaped slaves and indentured
servants, each seeking their own safe haven in the untamed New World.
What follows will test her courage and that of her
companions as they struggle to survive a journey deep into a hostile wilderness
and eventually forge a community of homesteads and deep bonds that will unite
them for generations.
The first installment in an epic historical trilogy by Helen
Bryan, the bestselling author of War Brides and The
Sisterhood, The Valley is a sweeping, unforgettable tale
of hardship, tenacity, love, and heartache.
Purchase Links
Giveaway Details: We are giving away 1 copy of The Valley for you to try out. (US/Canada only)
Helen Bryan is a Virginia native who grew up in Tennessee.
After graduating from Barnard College, she moved to England, where she studied
law and was a barrister for ten years before devoting herself to writing
full-time.
A member of the Inner Temple, Bryan is the author of four
previous books: the World War II novel War Brides; the historical
novel The Sisterhood; the biography Martha Washington:
First Lady of Liberty, which won an Award of Merit from the Colonial Dames
of America; and the legal handbook Planning Applications and Appeals. The
Valley is the first in a planned trilogy based on her childhood
stories of ancestors who settled in Virginia and Maryland before Tennessee
became a state.
Bryan resides in London with her family.
Helen Bryan’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:
Tuesday, July 19th: Just
Commonly
Tuesday, July 19th: West
Metro Mommy Reads
Wednesday, July 20th: A
Book Geek
Thursday, July 21st: Kritter’s
Ramblings
Friday, July 22nd: View
from the Birdhouse
Friday, July 22nd: Reading
is My Superpower
Monday, July 25th: WV Stitcher
Monday, July 25th: FictionZeal
Tuesday, July 26th: Black ‘n Gold Girl’s Book Spot
Friday, July 29th: From the TBR Pile
Monday, August 1st: A Bookish Affair
Tuesday, August 2nd: Broken
Teepee
Wednesday, August 3rd: Lavish Bookshelf
Thursday, August 4th: Just One More Chapter
Monday, August 8th: A. Holland Reads
Tuesday, August 9th: Laura’s Reviews
Wednesday, August 10th: Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews
Monday, August 15th: BookNAround
Wednesday, August 17th: The Maiden’s Court
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Spotlight: Excerpt of Fatal Identity by Marie Force
Author: Marie Force
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: July 2016
Sam pushed through the double doors and into cool, crisp winter air that smelled like snow. She’d had a conversation yesterday with her son, Scotty, about how air can smell like snow. Scotty said it wasn’t possible to smell snow, even after she got him to take a few deep breaths to see what she meant. He remained skeptical, but she had a few more weeks of winter to prove her point.
“Mrs. Cappuano.”
Sam turned toward the man who’d called to her. He was in his late twenties or early thirties, handsome with dark blond hair and brown eyes. The panic she saw in his expression put her immediately on alert. “That’s me, although they don’t call me that around here. And you are?”
“Josh Hamilton.”
Sam shook his outstretched hand. “What can I do for you, Josh?”
“I need your help.”
“Okay.”
“Today I was bored at work, so I started surfing the web, you know, just clicking around aimlessly.”
As a technophobe of the highest order, Sam didn’t know because she’d never done that and certainly not at work, where she was usually too busy to pee, let alone surf.
Josh took a series of deep breaths, and Sam’s anxiety ramped up a notch. “I saw this story about a baby who was kidnapped thirty years ago. They had this age-progression photo showing what he’d look like now, and…” He gulped. “It was me.”
“Wait. What?”
With trembling hands, Josh retrieved his cell phone from his pocket and called up a web page, zeroing in on a digitally produced photo that did, in fact, bear a striking resemblance to him.
“Those photos are produced by computers. They’re not exact.”
“That’s me! And it explains why I’ve never felt at home or accepted in my family. What if they took me?”
“Hang on a minute. What evidence do you have to suspect that your parents participated in a criminal act to bring you into their family?”
He seemed to make an effort to calm down. “They’re extremely accomplished people and so are my siblings. My brother is a board-certified neurosurgeon. He went to Harvard for undergrad and medical school. My sister is an attorney, also Harvard educated, Law Review, the whole nine yards. And then there’s me. I barely made it out of state college after having spent most of my five years there on academic probation. After four years working for the federal government, I’m a GS-9 at Veterans Affairs, where I shuffle paper all day while counting the minutes until I can leave. The only reason I have that job is because my father, who has never approved of a thing I said or did, pulled strings to get me in. They’re all Republicans while I’m a liberal Democrat who fully supports your husband. I hope he runs in four years, by the way.”
“None of that proves your parents kidnapped you.”
“Will you take my case? Please? I need to know for sure. This would explain so much of why I’ve felt like a square peg in my own family my entire life.”
Sam held up a hand to stop him. “I’m a homicide cop, not a private investigator, but if you really believe a crime has been committed, I can refer you to someone within the department—”
“No.” He shook his head. “I want you. You’re the best. Everyone says so.”
“I’m honored you think so, but I’m on a leave of absence for the next few days, so I’m not able to take your case personally.”
“It has to be you. You’re the only one I’d trust to do it right.”
“The Metro PD has plenty of very qualified detectives who could look into this for you and help determine whether a crime has been committed, Mr. Hamilton.”
“You don’t understand. It can’t be any random detective. It can only be you.”
“Are you going to tell me why?”
He took another series of deep breaths, appearing to summon the courage he needed to tell her why. “It’s… He’s… Well, my dad, you see… He’s Troy Hamilton, the FBI director.”
Holy bombshell, Batman! Sam’s mind raced with implications and scenarios and flat-out disbelief. “You can’t honestly believe that your father, one of the top law enforcement officials in the country, kidnapped a child thirty years ago.”
“I wouldn’t put it past him,” Josh said.
“He’s one of the most respected men in our business. He’s revered.”
“Believe me, I know all about how revered he is. I hear about it on a regular basis.” He looked at her beseechingly. “You have to help me. I don’t know who else to turn to. Besides some of the people who work for my father, I don’t know any other cops, and you’re the best. And… I’m scared.” The last two words were said on a faint whisper.
Sam wanted nothing to do with the snake pit this case could turn out to be, but the detective in her was far too intrigued to walk away. “How’d you get here?”
“I took the Metro.”
She took a look around to see if anyone was watching, but the parking lot was deserted, and the usual band of reporters that stalked the MPD were taking the day off. They tended to do that when it was freezing. “Come with me.” She led him to her car and gestured for Josh to get in the passenger side.
Though she had no idea what she planned to do with him or the information he’d dropped in her lap, she couldn’t walk away from what he’d told her. “Tell me more about this website where you saw the photo.”
“It’s a blog run by parents of missing children.”
“How did you end up there?”
“I read a story about a baby who was kidnapped from a hospital in Tennessee the day after he was born and how his parents have never stopped looking for him. The thirtieth anniversary of the abduction is coming up, so they’ve gotten some regional publicity. There was a link in the story that led to the blog where the age-progression photo was.”
“So the photo hasn’t been picked up by the media?”
“Not that I could tell, but I was too freaked out by what I was seeing to dig deeper, especially since my thirtieth birthday is next week. I told my boss I had an emergency. I left the office and came right to you.”
“Why me?”
“Are you serious? After the inauguration, the whole country knows what an amazing cop you are. Who else would I go to with something like this?”
Blowing off the comment, she said, “You realize that accusing the FBI director of a capital felony is not something you do without stacks of proof that he was involved.”
“That’s where you come in. I need proof, and I need it fast before that picture gets picked up by the wires or social media and flung around the country. I need proof before he knows that I know.”
Sam had to agree that time was of the essence before this thing blew up into a sh*tstorm of epic proportions. With that in mind, she started the car, pulled out of the MPD parking lot and into weekday afternoon traffic that clogged the District on the way toward Capitol Hill.
“Where are we going?”
“My house.”
She glanced over at him and saw his eyes get big. “For real?”
“Yes, for real.” She paused before she continued. “Look, if you want me to dig into this, I have to do it at home. I’m…off duty right now. I’ve gotta stay below the radar on this or my bosses will be all over me.”
“No one will hear it from me.”
After a slow crawl across the District, Sam pulled up to the Secret Service checkpoint on Ninth Street. Normally they waved her through, but she had to stop to clear her guest. “They’ll need to see your ID.”
Josh pulled his license from his wallet and handed it to her.
She gave it to the agent, who took a close look before returning it to her. “Thank you, ma’am. Have a nice day.”
“You too.”
“What’s that like?” Josh asked. “Being surrounded by Secret Service all the time?”
“About as much fun as you’d expect it to be.”
“Why don’t you have a detail?”
“Because I don’t need one. I can take care of myself.” Thankfully, he didn’t mention the recent siege in Marissa Springer’s basement as an example of her inability to take care of herself. Sam liked to think that was a onetime lapse in judgment, never to be repeated.
Outside their home, her husband’s motorcade lined the street. What was he doing home so early?
She parked in her assigned spot—everyone who lived on Ninth Street now had assigned parking spaces—and headed up the ramp that led to their home.
“Why do you have a ramp?” Josh asked.
“My dad’s a quadriplegic. He lives down the street. My husband installed the ramp so he could come to visit.”
“Oh, that’s cool. Sorry about your dad, though.”
“Thanks.”
Nick’s lead agent, John Brantley Jr., met her at the door. “Lieutenant.”
“Brant. What’s he doing home so early?”
“The vice president isn’t feeling well.”
“Say what?”
a Rafflecopter giveaway
About Marie Force
Connect with Marie
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: July 2016
Every family has its secrets…
As the first anniversary of her marriage to Vice President
Nick Cappuano approaches, Lieutenant Sam Holland is dreaming of Bora Bora—sun,
sand and a desperately needed break from the DC grind. But real life has a way
of intervening, and Sam soon finds herself taking on one of the most perplexing
cases of her career.
Government worker Josh Hamilton begs Sam to investigate his
shocking claim that his parents stole him from another family thirty years ago.
More complicated still, his “father” is none other than the FBI director. When
a member of Josh’s family is brutally murdered, Sam begins to question how deep
this cover-up goes. Is it possible the revered director was part of a
baby-napping ring and that others involved are also targets?
With a killer intent on deadly revenge and her team still
reeling from a devastating loss, Sam’s plate is full—and when Nick and their
son, Scotty, take ill, is her dream of a tropical anniversary celebration in
peril too?
Enjoy this excerpt!
Sam pushed through the double doors and into cool, crisp winter air that smelled like snow. She’d had a conversation yesterday with her son, Scotty, about how air can smell like snow. Scotty said it wasn’t possible to smell snow, even after she got him to take a few deep breaths to see what she meant. He remained skeptical, but she had a few more weeks of winter to prove her point.
“Mrs. Cappuano.”
Sam turned toward the man who’d called to her. He was in his late twenties or early thirties, handsome with dark blond hair and brown eyes. The panic she saw in his expression put her immediately on alert. “That’s me, although they don’t call me that around here. And you are?”
“Josh Hamilton.”
Sam shook his outstretched hand. “What can I do for you, Josh?”
“I need your help.”
“Okay.”
“Today I was bored at work, so I started surfing the web, you know, just clicking around aimlessly.”
As a technophobe of the highest order, Sam didn’t know because she’d never done that and certainly not at work, where she was usually too busy to pee, let alone surf.
Josh took a series of deep breaths, and Sam’s anxiety ramped up a notch. “I saw this story about a baby who was kidnapped thirty years ago. They had this age-progression photo showing what he’d look like now, and…” He gulped. “It was me.”
“Wait. What?”
With trembling hands, Josh retrieved his cell phone from his pocket and called up a web page, zeroing in on a digitally produced photo that did, in fact, bear a striking resemblance to him.
“Those photos are produced by computers. They’re not exact.”
“That’s me! And it explains why I’ve never felt at home or accepted in my family. What if they took me?”
“Hang on a minute. What evidence do you have to suspect that your parents participated in a criminal act to bring you into their family?”
He seemed to make an effort to calm down. “They’re extremely accomplished people and so are my siblings. My brother is a board-certified neurosurgeon. He went to Harvard for undergrad and medical school. My sister is an attorney, also Harvard educated, Law Review, the whole nine yards. And then there’s me. I barely made it out of state college after having spent most of my five years there on academic probation. After four years working for the federal government, I’m a GS-9 at Veterans Affairs, where I shuffle paper all day while counting the minutes until I can leave. The only reason I have that job is because my father, who has never approved of a thing I said or did, pulled strings to get me in. They’re all Republicans while I’m a liberal Democrat who fully supports your husband. I hope he runs in four years, by the way.”
“None of that proves your parents kidnapped you.”
“Will you take my case? Please? I need to know for sure. This would explain so much of why I’ve felt like a square peg in my own family my entire life.”
Sam held up a hand to stop him. “I’m a homicide cop, not a private investigator, but if you really believe a crime has been committed, I can refer you to someone within the department—”
“No.” He shook his head. “I want you. You’re the best. Everyone says so.”
“I’m honored you think so, but I’m on a leave of absence for the next few days, so I’m not able to take your case personally.”
“It has to be you. You’re the only one I’d trust to do it right.”
“The Metro PD has plenty of very qualified detectives who could look into this for you and help determine whether a crime has been committed, Mr. Hamilton.”
“You don’t understand. It can’t be any random detective. It can only be you.”
“Are you going to tell me why?”
He took another series of deep breaths, appearing to summon the courage he needed to tell her why. “It’s… He’s… Well, my dad, you see… He’s Troy Hamilton, the FBI director.”
Holy bombshell, Batman! Sam’s mind raced with implications and scenarios and flat-out disbelief. “You can’t honestly believe that your father, one of the top law enforcement officials in the country, kidnapped a child thirty years ago.”
“I wouldn’t put it past him,” Josh said.
“He’s one of the most respected men in our business. He’s revered.”
“Believe me, I know all about how revered he is. I hear about it on a regular basis.” He looked at her beseechingly. “You have to help me. I don’t know who else to turn to. Besides some of the people who work for my father, I don’t know any other cops, and you’re the best. And… I’m scared.” The last two words were said on a faint whisper.
Sam wanted nothing to do with the snake pit this case could turn out to be, but the detective in her was far too intrigued to walk away. “How’d you get here?”
“I took the Metro.”
She took a look around to see if anyone was watching, but the parking lot was deserted, and the usual band of reporters that stalked the MPD were taking the day off. They tended to do that when it was freezing. “Come with me.” She led him to her car and gestured for Josh to get in the passenger side.
Though she had no idea what she planned to do with him or the information he’d dropped in her lap, she couldn’t walk away from what he’d told her. “Tell me more about this website where you saw the photo.”
“It’s a blog run by parents of missing children.”
“How did you end up there?”
“I read a story about a baby who was kidnapped from a hospital in Tennessee the day after he was born and how his parents have never stopped looking for him. The thirtieth anniversary of the abduction is coming up, so they’ve gotten some regional publicity. There was a link in the story that led to the blog where the age-progression photo was.”
“So the photo hasn’t been picked up by the media?”
“Not that I could tell, but I was too freaked out by what I was seeing to dig deeper, especially since my thirtieth birthday is next week. I told my boss I had an emergency. I left the office and came right to you.”
“Why me?”
“Are you serious? After the inauguration, the whole country knows what an amazing cop you are. Who else would I go to with something like this?”
Blowing off the comment, she said, “You realize that accusing the FBI director of a capital felony is not something you do without stacks of proof that he was involved.”
“That’s where you come in. I need proof, and I need it fast before that picture gets picked up by the wires or social media and flung around the country. I need proof before he knows that I know.”
Sam had to agree that time was of the essence before this thing blew up into a sh*tstorm of epic proportions. With that in mind, she started the car, pulled out of the MPD parking lot and into weekday afternoon traffic that clogged the District on the way toward Capitol Hill.
“Where are we going?”
“My house.”
She glanced over at him and saw his eyes get big. “For real?”
“Yes, for real.” She paused before she continued. “Look, if you want me to dig into this, I have to do it at home. I’m…off duty right now. I’ve gotta stay below the radar on this or my bosses will be all over me.”
“No one will hear it from me.”
After a slow crawl across the District, Sam pulled up to the Secret Service checkpoint on Ninth Street. Normally they waved her through, but she had to stop to clear her guest. “They’ll need to see your ID.”
Josh pulled his license from his wallet and handed it to her.
She gave it to the agent, who took a close look before returning it to her. “Thank you, ma’am. Have a nice day.”
“You too.”
“What’s that like?” Josh asked. “Being surrounded by Secret Service all the time?”
“About as much fun as you’d expect it to be.”
“Why don’t you have a detail?”
“Because I don’t need one. I can take care of myself.” Thankfully, he didn’t mention the recent siege in Marissa Springer’s basement as an example of her inability to take care of herself. Sam liked to think that was a onetime lapse in judgment, never to be repeated.
Outside their home, her husband’s motorcade lined the street. What was he doing home so early?
She parked in her assigned spot—everyone who lived on Ninth Street now had assigned parking spaces—and headed up the ramp that led to their home.
“Why do you have a ramp?” Josh asked.
“My dad’s a quadriplegic. He lives down the street. My husband installed the ramp so he could come to visit.”
“Oh, that’s cool. Sorry about your dad, though.”
“Thanks.”
Nick’s lead agent, John Brantley Jr., met her at the door. “Lieutenant.”
“Brant. What’s he doing home so early?”
“The vice president isn’t feeling well.”
“Say what?”
a Rafflecopter giveaway
About Marie Force
Marie Force is the New York Times bestselling
author of 50 contemporary romances, including the Gansett Island Series, which
has sold more than 2.3 million books, and the Fatal Series from Harlequin
Books, which has sold more than 1.2 million books. In addition, she is the author
of the Green Mountain Series as well as the erotic romance Quantum Series,
written under the slightly modified name of M.S. Force. All together, her
books have sold more than 5 million copies worldwide!
Her
goals in life are simple—to finish raising two happy, healthy, productive young
adults, to keep writing books for as long as she possibly can and to never be
on a flight that makes the news.
Join
Marie’s mailing list on her website at marieforce.com for news about new books
and upcoming appearances in your area. Follow her on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/MarieForceAuthor,
on Twitter @marieforce and on Instagram at www.instagram.com/marieforceauthor/.
Contact Marie at marie@marieforce.com.
Connect with Marie
Marie Force’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:
Monday, June 27th: Bewitched
Bookworms – Fatal Affair
Tuesday, July 5th: A
Splendid Messy Life – Fatal Affair
Wednesday, July 6th: Book
Binge – excerpt
Thursday, July 7th: Book Reviews
and More – excerpt
Monday, July 11th: Reading
Reality – Fatal Affair
Wednesday, July 13th: Mignon
Mykel Reviews – Fatal Affair
Thursday, July 14th: Stranded
in Chaos – Fatal Affair
Tuesday, July 19th: A
Bookaholic Swede – excerpt
Wednesday, July 20th: Dog-Eared
Daydreams – Fatal Affair
Thursday, July 21st: The
Romance Dish – excerpt
Friday, July 22nd: A
Holland Reads – excerpt
Monday, July 25th: Romancing the Book – review and
excerpt
Monday, July 25th: Becky
on Books – Fatal Flaw
Tuesday, July 26th: The
Sassy Bookster – Fatal Identity
Wednesday, July 27th: From the TBR Pile – excerpt
Thursday, July 28th: Books and Bindings – the entire
Fatal series
Friday, July 29th: Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews
Monday, August 1st: Books a la Mode –
excerpt
Tuesday, August 2nd: Open Book Society – Fatal
Affair, Fatal Justice, Fatal Consequences
Wednesday, August 3rd: Dog-Eared Daydreams – Fatal Justice
Thursday, August 4th: Buried Under Romance – Fatal
Affair
Friday, August 5th: Dog-Eared Daydreams – Fatal ConsequencesThrowback Thursday: The House on Tradd Street by Karen White
Author: Karen White
First published in 2008 by
A brilliant, chilling début featuring a Charleston real estate agent who loves the histories inside old manors. Melanie Middleton hates to admit she can see ghosts. A man she recently met died, leaving his historic Tradd Street home; complete with a dog and family of ghosts anxious to tell their secrets. Jack Trenholm, a gorgeous writer obsessed with unsolved mysteries, has reason to believe diamonds from the Confederate Treasury are hidden. He turns the charm on with Melanie, to discover he's the smitten one.
This book was a random audio pick from my library. When I was looking through the site looking for a "throwback" book, I thought the synopsis sounded good. Unfortunately, I only got about halfway through the book. It's about a woman who inherits a house that is falling apart. She has to live there for a year before she can sell. Oh, and she can see ghosts.
While parts of the book were interesting, I found it to be really slow. Not much really happens in the first half of the book. I found Melanie to be kind of annoying. She has control issues, is really uptight and generally unlikable. There were a few things about the plot that had me shaking my head. Who appoints a known alcoholic to be the executor of a trust that has a lot of money? Also, Melanie is 39 and didn't know when prohibition happened. I found this unlikely, especially for a woman who specializes in selling old houses in the Charleston area. She didn't seem to know anything about the history of the houses or of the area she grew up in. As for romance, it was almost non-existent and I didn't feel like sticking around to see if anything developed with Jack. I say skip this one. But, if you manage to get through it, there are 3 other books featuring Melanie. Maybe she gets better over time?
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Excerpt & Giveaway of Right Through Me by Shannon McKenna
We are celebrating the release
of Right Through Me by Shannon
McKenna!
Check out the excerpt and giveaway below!
NYTimes and USA Today bestselling author Shannon McKenna
launches The Obsidian Files with RIGHT THROUGH ME, a pulse-pounding tale of
thrilling suspense and searing passion. A beautiful fugitive and a biotech
tycoon with strange powers must face the lethal rage of a vicious enemy bent on
their annihilation.
Publisher: Self
Date of publication: July 2016
Stranger, speak softly...
Biotech tycoon Noah Gallagher has a deadly secret: his clandestine training as a super-soldier gives him abilities that go far beyond human. Yet he's very much a man. When Caro Bishop shows up at his Seattle headquarters with a dangerous secret agenda, his ordered life is thrown into chaos. Caro is a woman like no other—and her luminously sensual beauty cloaks a mystery he must solve.
Caro's lying low, evading a false charge of murder. She means to clear her name, and she'll do whatever it takes to survive—but seducing a man like Noah is more than she bargained for. His amber eyes have the strangest glow when he looks at her—she could swear he sees the secrets of her heart. The desire smoldering in Noah's eyes awakens her own secret hunger, but Caro has to resist his magnetic pull. Anyone close to her becomes a target. The only right thing to do is run, far and fast, but Caro can't outrun Noah's ferocious intensity—or deny the searing passion that explodes between them.
Nothing else matters—until a vicious enemy bent on the ultimate revenge puts his murderous plan into play. Noah and Caro must battle for their lives...and their love...
Biotech tycoon Noah Gallagher has a deadly secret: his clandestine training as a super-soldier gives him abilities that go far beyond human. Yet he's very much a man. When Caro Bishop shows up at his Seattle headquarters with a dangerous secret agenda, his ordered life is thrown into chaos. Caro is a woman like no other—and her luminously sensual beauty cloaks a mystery he must solve.
Caro's lying low, evading a false charge of murder. She means to clear her name, and she'll do whatever it takes to survive—but seducing a man like Noah is more than she bargained for. His amber eyes have the strangest glow when he looks at her—she could swear he sees the secrets of her heart. The desire smoldering in Noah's eyes awakens her own secret hunger, but Caro has to resist his magnetic pull. Anyone close to her becomes a target. The only right thing to do is run, far and fast, but Caro can't outrun Noah's ferocious intensity—or deny the searing passion that explodes between them.
Nothing else matters—until a vicious enemy bent on the ultimate revenge puts his murderous plan into play. Noah and Caro must battle for their lives...and their love...
Excerpt:
“Look,” he said. “I promised not to
touch you. I can’t keep that promise anymore.”
She drifted closer, a cloud of sunset
colors. Her scent washed over his senses. His supercharged synesthesia
translated her aroma into colors in his head. He wanted to strip her bare. His
hands flexed with the impulse to seize her. It almost overcame him.
“Leave.” His voice was tight. “I
paid you.”
“No,” she said.
“You finished your dance. You said
there could be nothing more. So go.”
“Shhh.” She stretched up, touching
his cheek with soft, cool fingertips. Then, to his astonishment, she pressed a hot,
soft kiss to his jaw.
“This is not helping,” he growled.
She rose up on her bare feet, her
mouth near his. Never quite getting there. No kiss . . . just the caressing
heat of her breath. The teasing promise of . . . maybe . . . almost.
He was so close to losing control, he didn’t
dare inhale.
He stepped back. Not far enough. The
sweetness of her perfume taunted him.
She didn’t move. Not one inch. She
was enjoying this, feeling her power. It made his teeth grind, and his dick
ache.
“You’re still here,” he said.
“I’m not ready to leave.” Her voice
was a drifting whisper. “I like the way this makes me feel.”
“I’m ready,” he said. “And it’s my
goddamn office.”
“Yes. After hours. And we’re alone.
More or less.” She closed the slight distance between them with a single step.
So she was seducing him. He got the
message—but he still didn’t dare breathe.
They both inhaled sharply. She was
flower-petal smooth against the hard, callused skin of his palm. A flash of hot
lust pumped through him.
A swift, shocked ripple went through
her, as if she’d had a small orgasm, and then her hand fastened over his,
holding it firmly in place. As if she welcomed the touch but didn’t dare allow
his hand to wander elsewhere.
“Take the envelope,” he said. “Put
it in your bag, and we’re square.”
Her fingers tightened on his hand.
“I asked for a service, you provided
it, I paid you,” he said stubbornly. All business. Meeting over. Too bad his
dick didn’t get the memo. He was about to explode.
Without saying a word, she turned
and headed to the bathroom, purple veils fluttering behind her.
He didn’t have to wait for her to
return. But he knew that he would.
She was back minutes later, wearing
jeans and a baggy black T-shirt. His exotic dancing maiden was gone but she was
as beautiful as ever. Her real hair was a thick, curly dark cloud, caught up in
back in a tousled knot of twisted ringlets. Some of them dangled around her
face.
“Sorry,” he said stiffly. “That got
out of hand.”
“It’s OK. Not your fault.” She looked down at herself. “I thought it was
better to have this conversation in street clothes,” she said. “To see if the
fantasy melted away for you without the props. Better for both of us to know
right now.”
He looked her up and down. Blood
roared in his ears. “That’s not happening.”
Her sig pulsed, excited pinks and
reds. “So?”
“I promised not to touch you, and I
broke that promise. With your help.”
She nodded reluctantly.
“If you stay here, I’ll break it
again. Let me put that right out in the open.”
About Shannon McKenna:
Shannon McKenna
is the NYT and USA Today bestselling author of fifteen action packed,
turbocharged romantic thrillers, among which are the stories of the wildly
popular McCloud series. She’s also the author of the upcoming OBSIDIAN series,
the first of which, RIGHT THROUGH ME, comes out in July of 2016. She loves
tough and heroic alpha males, heroines with the brains and guts to match them,
villains who challenge them to their utmost, adventure, scorching sensuality,
and most of all, the redemptive power of true love. Since she was small she has
loved abandoning herself to the magic of a good book, and her fond childhood
fantasy was that writing would be just like that, but with the added benefit of
being able to take credit for the story at the end. The alchemy of writing
turned out to be messier than she'd ever dreamed, but what the hell, she loves
it anyway, and hopes that readers enjoy the results of her alchemical
experiments. She loves to hear from her readers.
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Need by Joelle Charbonneau
Author: Joelle Charbonneau
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
Date of publication: November 2015
One by one, the teens in Nottawa, Wisconsin, join the newest, hottest networking site and answer one question: What do you need? A new iPhone? Backstage passes to a concert? In exchange for a seemingly minor task, the NEED site will fulfill your request. Everyone is doing it. So why shouldn’t you?
Kaylee Dunham knows what she needs—a kidney for her sick brother. She doesn’t believe a social networking site can help, but it couldn’t hurt to try.
Or could it?
In NEED, the teens of a small town in Wisconsin are invited to a social networking site where for a small price, they can get something they need. The biggest problem is that the stakes keep getting higher. For Kaylee, all she needs is a kidney for her little brother. She quickly finds out that nothing is ever given for free.
I was surprised that I actually ended up liking this book. I had read some negative reviews, so I was a bit skeptical. I thought it was a great commentary on our youth today and the effects of social media. Not to mention that lot of people don't understand the concept of what a true need is over something they want. The story is told through multiple points of view. For me, that really helped enhance the plot. I liked seeing other kids thoughts and how the website affected them. The other thing that I liked was Kaylee. She was a strong character without insta-love to keep her from her goal. That was refreshing. As far as I know this is a stand alone YA. Yay for that as well!
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
Date of publication: November 2015
One by one, the teens in Nottawa, Wisconsin, join the newest, hottest networking site and answer one question: What do you need? A new iPhone? Backstage passes to a concert? In exchange for a seemingly minor task, the NEED site will fulfill your request. Everyone is doing it. So why shouldn’t you?
Kaylee Dunham knows what she needs—a kidney for her sick brother. She doesn’t believe a social networking site can help, but it couldn’t hurt to try.
Or could it?
In NEED, the teens of a small town in Wisconsin are invited to a social networking site where for a small price, they can get something they need. The biggest problem is that the stakes keep getting higher. For Kaylee, all she needs is a kidney for her little brother. She quickly finds out that nothing is ever given for free.
I was surprised that I actually ended up liking this book. I had read some negative reviews, so I was a bit skeptical. I thought it was a great commentary on our youth today and the effects of social media. Not to mention that lot of people don't understand the concept of what a true need is over something they want. The story is told through multiple points of view. For me, that really helped enhance the plot. I liked seeing other kids thoughts and how the website affected them. The other thing that I liked was Kaylee. She was a strong character without insta-love to keep her from her goal. That was refreshing. As far as I know this is a stand alone YA. Yay for that as well!
Monday, July 25, 2016
Blog Tour: The Girl He Used to Love by Amy Vastine
Author: Amy Vastine
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: July 2016
The past will always be between them
He swore he’d never return home. Then a flat tire lands Dean
Presley back in Grass Lake, Tennessee, and he’s forced to confront the woman he
left behind. Faith Stratton was once the love of his life. Now her gifted
brother could be the rising Nashville star Dean needs for his struggling music
label. But it means taking Sawyer away from the horse therapy farm that Faith’s
so proud of. That won’t be easy, especially since those old feelings that
started all the trouble… Well, let’s just say he can’t go back there, because
he doesn’t want to relive the memories of the terrible accident that drove them
apart.
The Girl He Used to Love is another offering this summer from Harlequin's Heartwarming collection. It's the first in a new series by this author. Dean is back in his hometown by what he would describe as bad luck. He vowed never to come back after the tragic death of his sister. He left behind everyone he loved, including Faith. For Faith, everyone seems to always leave her. When Dean wants to make her brother Sawyer a star, she struggles with letting go of yet another loved one.
While I thought the beginning was a little slow, I ended up enjoying Faith and Dean's story. It's not just another second chance story. It's about learning that home is the place you need to go when it's time to heal. Sometimes the place you want to be the least is the place you need to be the most. It was gut wrenching at times, but I enjoyed watching Dean and Faith move beyond past hurts. I loved the ending. The solution that Dean came up with in the end was absolutely perfect! I definitely want to read the next book, Catch a Fallen Star when is comes out in December! I would definitely recommend this sweet, clean second chance romance. It's a great summertime escape!
Amy Vastine
Amy Vastine has been plotting stories in her head for as
long as she can remember. An eternal optimist, she studied social work, hoping
to teach others how to find their silver lining. Now, she enjoys creating
happily ever afters for all to read. This USA Today bestselling
author lives outside Chicago with her high school sweetheart-turned-husband,
three fun-loving children, and their sweet but mischievous puppy dog.
.
Connect with Amy
Purchase Links
Summer Lovin’ TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:
Monday, July 4th: Romantic Reads and Such – Under an Adirondack Sky
Tuesday, July 5th: A Chick Who Reads – The Girl He Used to Love
Wednesday, July 6th: Romancing the Readers – Sophie’s Path
Thursday, July 7th: Wall to Wall Books – Under an Adirondack Sky
Friday, July 8th: Just Commonly – When I Found You
Friday, July 8th: Books A La Mode – Karen Rock guest post
Monday, July 11th: From the TBR Pile – Sophie’s Path
Tuesday, July 12th: Musings of a Bookish Kitty – Under an Adirondack Sky
Wednesday, July 13th: Books and Spoons – When I Found You
Friday, July 15th: Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers – The Girl He Used to Love
Monday, July 18th: Stranded in Chaos – Under an Adirondack Sky
Wednesday, July 20th: Books A La Mode – Amy Vastine Guest Post
Thursday, July 21st: Romancing the Book – When I Found You
Friday, July 22nd: Wall to Wall Books – Sophie’s Path
Monday, July 25th: From the TBR Pile – The Girl He Used to Love
Tuesday, July 26th: Bibliotica – Under an Adirondack Sky
Friday, July 29th: Books A La Mode – Kate James Guest Post
Saturday, July 30th: The Sassy Bookster – When I Found You
Monday, August 1st: A Chick Who Reads – Sophie’s Path
Tuesday, August 2nd: Reading Is My Superpower – Under an Adirondack Sky
Wednesday, August 3rd: Reading Is My Superpower – When I Found You
Friday, August 5th: Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews – The Girl He Used to Love
Monday, August 8th: Why Girls are Weird – Under an Adirondack Sky
Tuesday, August 9th: Musings of a Bookish Kitty – When I Found You
Wednesday, August 10th: Reading Lark – Sophie’s Path
Thursday, August 11th: Romancing the Book – The Girl He Used to Love
Friday, August 12th: Books A La Mode – Catherine Lanigan Guest Post
Monday, August 15th: Romancing the Book – Sophie’s Path
Tuesday, August 16th: Read-Love-Blog – Amy Vastine Guest Post
Thursday, August 18th: Romancing the Book – Under an Adirondack Sky
Sunday, July 24, 2016
Book Spotlight: Giveaway & Excerpt of You and Me Always by Jill Mansell
To celebrate the release of Jill Mansell's latest book, You and me Always, we are giving away a copy of Jill's April release, The One You Really Want.. See the rafflecopter below to enter. US & Canada only please.
Author: Jill Mansell
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Date of publication: July 2016
The same momentous day, Lily meets Eddie Tessler, an actor fleeing fame who could change her world in unimaginable ways. But her childhood friend Dan has his own reasons for not wanting Lily to get too carried away by Eddie’s attentions.
As secrets past and present begin to emerge, Lily’s not sure what—or who—to believe. But one thing is clear: in the beautiful Cotswold village of Stanton Langley, nothing will ever be the same again…
With over ten million copies sold, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Jill Mansell writes irresistible, funny, poignant, and romantic tales for women in the tradition of Marian Keyes, Sophie Kinsella, and Jojo Moyes. She lives with her partner and their children in Bristol, England.
Enjoy this excerpt:
There he was, sitting in the sun outside the Star Inn. Lily
slowed and parked the van outside Goldstone House, next to the pub. Dan saw her
and waved, and her stomach tightened at the sight of him, as it always did.
There was just something about the languid angles of his body, those long legs
in black jeans stretched out in front of him, the tilt of his head as he
chatted on his phone and laughed at something that had been said.
The tightening didn’t mean anything, though. Lily knew that.
It had evolved as a kind of Pavlovian reaction, a habit that had become
ingrained over the years simply because Dan Rafferty was so physically
attractive. The good thing was that he knew he was attractive and traded on it
shamelessly with all concerned—-so the idea of an actual relationship with him
was the very last thing anyone in their right mind would want.
And since she was in her right mind, thankfully she was
safe.
“Lily, Lily.” Dan’s eyes crinkled, and he pushed his dark
glasses to the top of his head as she jumped down from the van. “My most
favorite girl in the world.”
See? This was what he was like. “And you’re the most
annoying boy.”
“I’m not a boy. I’m a man.”
He was twenty--seven, two years older than she was.
Technically, he might be a man, but when you’d known each other since
childhood, the idea just seemed wrong somehow.
“You used to put frog spawn in the hood of my sweatshirt,”
said Lily. “You’ll always be a boy to me. Where’s your car, anyway?”
“Over in Chipping Norton.” Dan had texted her earlier asking
if she could give him a lift to go pick it up.
“Why?” As if she couldn’t guess.
“Best not to ask. The usual, basically. Good wine and bad
women. Well, one bad woman taking shameless advantage.” He gestured to the
still--full cup of coffee on the table in front of him. “Are you in a big
hurry, or can I get you a drink?”
Lily checked her watch. It was twenty past six. She’d spent
the last three hours delivering a marble--topped table and a set of Victorian
chimney pots to a customer in Chippenham, but work was now over for the day,
and the rest of her evening was free.
“Go on then. I’ll have a Coke.” She joined him at the table,
unsticking the back of her T--shirt from her shoulder blades and flapping the
front of it to cool down her rib cage while Dan disappeared inside to order the
drink.
When he returned, she took the glass and said, “Cheers,
thanks. Why couldn’t Patsy give you a lift back to your car?”
“She’s out. Gone on a date. With a mystery man off the
Internet.”
Lily perked up. “Ooh, what’s he like?”
“No idea.” Dan shrugged. “That’s the whole point of him
being a mystery. She didn’t want me to meet him.”
“Well, after last time with the chap from Chepstow, who
could blame her?”
“Welsh William.” He shrugged. “That wasn’t my fault. He was
the one who challenged me to an arm--wrestling match. He was just showing off,
trying to prove how strong he was.”
“You could have let him win,” said Lily.
“Me?” Dan looked horrified. “Why? He was an idiot. Patsy
wouldn’t want someone like him anyway.”
Which was true enough. Ah, well, maybe this new one would be
an improvement. Lily swirled the ice cubes in her glass and took a gulp of
Coke, then paused as her attention was drawn to a stocky man on a bicycle
heading down the street toward them. He was wearing an orange cycling helmet
that clashed with his red face and turquoise Lycra leggings. As his legs pumped
the pedals, he appeared to be talking to himself.
By this time Dan had turned and was watching him too. It
wasn’t until the man had drawn closer that they realized he wasn’t riding an
ordinary bike. It was a tandem. Nor was he having a conversation with himself;
he was loudly addressing his cycling companion behind him.
“…and in September of 2013…or it might have been October,
come to think of it… Anyway, that was when I cycled from Ravenglass to South
Shields alongside Hadrian’s Wall, and that’s one hundred and seventy--four
miles in total, so it’s quite a trek, but the views were phenomenal… Then the
following March, I did the Devon coast--to--coast, from Ilfracombe to
Plymouth…”
“Whoops,” Lily murmured as the tandem drew nearer still and
they were finally able to see who was on the back of it. Dan sprayed coffee and
rocked forward on his seat. Clearly mortified as her companion continued at top
volume, poor Patsy saw them watching and made an Oh God face.
And then she and the cyclist were passing the pub, their
legs moving in unison as the pedals turned and the tires made a dry, swishing
noise on the hot, dusty pavement. Patsy’s date was still facing forward, talking
loudly for her benefit as he informed her of the importance of keeping up a
nice, steady rhythm.
Which made Dan, predictably, crack up with silent laughter.
As the tandem moved on, Patsy glanced over at them for a moment, shook her head
in despair, and mouthed the words: Help me.
Oh dear, but it was hard not to laugh. At the junction at
the end of the main drag, the traffic light turned red, and the tandem
dutifully slowed to a halt. Lily and Dan watched as Patsy put her feet down and
turned back to give them a look of mortification and misery, while her date
continued his loud monologue.
“How does she get herself into these situations?” Dan
marveled. He gestured to his sister and mimed diving sideways off the bike.
Up ahead, taking her weight on her feet and raising her
bottom from the saddle, Patsy let go of the handlebars. The traffic light
changed to amber, then to green. Her companion pressed down on the front pedals
and the tandem moved off, leaving Patsy standing in the road behind it.
Evidently still entranced by the sound of his own voice, and oblivious to the
fact that he’d lost his pedaling partner, the man who’d been her date continued
on down the road.
Dan took a quick photo on his phone before the tandem completely
disappeared from view. He grinned at Lily and said, “Ha, brilliant. That’s this
year’s Christmas card.”
****
Patsy stood in the center of the road and watched as Derek
energetically cycled off without her. She couldn’t quite believe he hadn’t noticed
she’d gone.
Why did this kind of situation always seem to happen to her?
Derek had sounded so nice in his emails. He’d given her no cause
whatsoever to suspect he was a secret cycling fanatic with a deep and detailed
knowledge of every single bike path in the UK and a passion for sharing all
this information with her in a maximum--volume, never--ending monotone.
If she’d known, the entire relationship could have been
nipped in the bud before it even had time to become a bud. Some women might not
mind the idea of sailing through life on the back of a tandem, but Patsy
definitely wasn’t one of them.
She sighed and brushed away the loose strands of hair that
were sticking to her forehead. And now Dan and Lily were beckoning her toward
them, no doubt finding her predicament hilarious. What she should have done, of
course, was to tap Derek on the shoulder, politely explain that they might as
well give up now, then shake hands, say good--bye, and wish him better luck
next time.
That would have been the normal way, the dignified way to go
about it.
Oh God, poor Derek. She really shouldn’t have done that to
him.
Then again, poor her.
Jill Mansell's books have sold over ten million copies and her titles include: Making your Mind up, Fast Friends, Good at Games, Sheer Mischief and Solo, among many others.