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Saturday, November 30, 2024

Spotlight: Excerpt from You Can't Hurt Me by Emma Cook

 


Emma Cook
ISBN: 9781335430489
Publication Date: November 5, 2024
Publisher: Hanover Square Press

Meet Eva, who can’t feel pain, and Anna, who can’t escape it.

Everyone has heard about the case of Eva Reid. Ever since she was born, she’s been immune to physical pain – she can get a paper cut, break a limb, and even give birth without feeling a single thing. Her rare condition has long-captivated reporters and researchers – including Dr. Nate Reid, Eva’s husband and acclaimed scientist renowned for his work in The Pain Laboratory. Also among them is Anna Tate, a ruthless journalist with a dark past of her own.

When Eva is suddenly found dead inside her home, it raises a flurry of questions around the last night of her life – and who might’ve been involved. Anna finds herself growing increasingly obsessed with Eva’s case: her cloistered, painless existence, her promising career as a psychotherapist, and especially her toxic relationship to Dr. Reid, whom she met and married as his former patient. But what other secrets could they be hiding?

When Dr. Reid embarks on the process of writing a book about Eva, Anna makes sure she’s first in line to work on the project with him. As she slowly inserts herself into their home and seeks to uncover what’s fact and what’s fiction, shocking discoveries await her – and not everyone may come out unscathed…
 
Buy Links:
HarperCollins
Bookshop
Barnes & Noble
Amazon
Books-A-Million
Target
 

Excerpt:


1

7 December 2022, 7:30 p.m. 

I am a ghost in the room tonight. A shadow no one will notice, exactly as it should be. Guests arrive, flowing toward the heat and hum of the glass atrium at the back of the bookshop. Turning my back to them, I retreat farther into the deserted aisles of Anthropology, reach for a slim volume, inhale the flutter of air as my thumb zips through the pages. I wait for that aroma, dry and sweet, biscuits and sawdust to work its usual magic, a sensory hit that never fails to reassure me. Until now. Books used to be an escape. A window to another world that for a short time might alter me in some unfathomable way. But I’ve been too close to them, seen how they can taint and twist the truth. 

I slip into the atrium packed with a hundred or so more guests. It is easy enough to lose myself here, hovering at the back behind a pillar. I’ve been paid to melt away into the ether, but I doubt they’ll be looking out for me. 

So why risk coming along at all, what will it solve? His book is displayed on a table next to me in a tower of carefully spiraled spines, a DNA strand to show every angle. On top a hardback copy is perched upright, his name embossed across the front in glossy black. I imagine teasing out the bottom copy, watching them topple to the floor. The cover is luxuriant, creamy, a lily in one corner. It could be a bereavement card. 

In a way, it is. Loss in fifty shades of vanilla. In those pages resides a version of his wife, Eva, much-loved, much-missed, much-constructed, packaged up for public consumption. The other ghost in the room tonight. 

It is his back I see first as he walks through the crowd. Briefly he turns around and from my vantage point I watch him, this stranger who only three months ago I thought I knew so well. He pauses to chat to someone, draws his fingers through the back of his hair, letting his hand rest at the nape of his neck, something I know he does when he’s tired or anxious. He looks a little older this evening, a little grayer, a scattering of salt at his temples, a silvery haze of stubble at his jawbone. I see now, or is it wishful thinking, how the past few months have punished him too. He is leaner perhaps, his face more angular. His brow bones protrude a little, lending him an almost hawkish glare. 

From my vantage point, I spy an attentive young woman as she approaches him, offering up an open copy of the memoir, the shadow of a smile as they connect. Even from here I can see she is transfixed, caught up in whatever he is telling her, that way he has diverted the conversation and channeling it elsewhere. 

He pauses, bites his lip, and I see something new in his expression, a tentativeness perhaps as he excuses himself from the guest, disappears into his public persona. Slowly he climbs the spiral staircase to a gallery that circles the room and by the time he’s at the top, he has become Dr. Nate Reid, any shade of hesitation vanished. 

Priya, his editor, is already there, smiling down at the crowd. Everything about her is sharp and precise, the cut of her pale silk dress cinched at the waist, the razored line of her dark glossy bob tucked neatly behind each ear. She taps her ring against a champagne flute and the clamor subsides. 

“Hello, everyone. Thanks so much for coming tonight. I’d like to start by saying what a privilege and an honour it has been working on this book.” She turns and raises her glass to him, her hand touching his arm. 

“Nate’s instinct for storytelling is rare and inspiring. Many of us are used to hearing about Dr. Reid as a distinguished neuroscientist and TV personality, so it has been even more impressive to discover his gift for personal writing, his unflinching honesty and extraordinary ability to let the reader in.” 

As she hands it over to him, there’s a peal of applause. Unflinching honesty? Here’s to fantasy fiction. 

He clears his throat and steps toward the balcony edge. “I’d like to return Priya’s compliment and say how deeply satisfying it has been collaborating with her.” He touches her hand. “One silver lining in my journey is that it has brought me here tonight. To be here with so many friends who have given me their unstinting support. In a strange sort of way, it’s like Eva’s last gift to me. I feel very loved.” 

He falters, falls silent for a moment. 

Priya passes him a glass of water and there is a tingling anticipation as the silence stretches. 

“When I started this book, I was overwhelmed. My first thought was, why would anyone do this? Then I realized here is a golden opportunity. My chance to help others in a similar situation. There are more of us around than you’d think.” He looks down at us, as if seeking out other grief-stricken souls in the crowd. “No one can really bear the truth that every minute of our life hangs by a thread. However much we think we can script our own existence and try to ensure nothing bad can ever happen to us, it does and it will.”

His index finger silently strikes the iron balcony rail, in sync with the rhythm of his words. “To each and every one of us. Tonight, tomorrow, at some point. Of course, that’s why memoirs about grief are so popular. They’re a window to a world that one day we’ll all inhabit, if we haven’t already. It’s only a matter of time.” He grips a copy of the book, raising it up. 

“Eva was an extraordinary person, someone who radiated optimism, a hunger for life. As many of you are aware, she was best known as a sculptor, her work was widely regarded. She also made headlines around the world when I first diagnosed her with a rare medical condition, congenital analgesia, the inability to experience pain. But pain is nature’s alarm system helping to protect us, or as C.S. Lewis once put it, ‘God’s megaphone to rouse a deaf world.’ The value of pain is only evident when you see its absence. Which was why Eva was the most fearless person I ever knew, but the most vulnerable too.” 

Guests lean in, heads tilt and crane. One woman tucks loose hair behind her ear in the hope of catching more. That voice. Gentle, well-spoken. Articulate and low. Gravel and smoke. He’s lectured around the world, been interviewed by the New York Times and doorstepped by the Sun. As his reputation grows, his words became quieter, loaded with a particular power. 

A waitress passes with a tray of champagne and reluctantly I shake my head. It’s been five months since I touched a drink. Five months since that night at Algos House. Now I can’t help wondering if everything would have turned out quite as it did if I’d kept a clear head the whole time. I sip on a flute of orange juice, watch as he effortlessly ramps up his performance. 

“I wanted to examine how you carry on after something like this, how to accept the horror of it. To come back home one evening and discover, in an instant, that my wife had died. How do you begin to make sense of it?” 

How indeed. 

“Death is the great leveler, even for those who appear to be invincible.” He pauses, eyes shining. “Because it shows us who we really are, and reveals how much we truly love the person we have lost. Here’s to Eva. Tonight is for you.” 

He raises his glass as a tide of rapturous applause swells. It takes a moment or two, as the clapping subsides, to identify another noise in the crowd. A shriek. Like a contagion it spreads through the room, palpable and urgent. 

“Murderer! We know what you did!” 

I swallow hard. There are ripples of movement close to the door, security staff swarm, a scuffle ensues. “Justice for my sister!” she shouts, saying something else inaudible before she is bundled outside and removed from the event, leaving the crowd murmuring in her wake. I know I should leave but I’m frozen to the spot. 

Back up at the gallery, Priya steps steadily in front of him. “Well, I guess grief affects us all in different ways,” she says. “And hopefully Nate’s book will offer comfort and understanding to anyone who’s suffered great loss. As a publisher, I couldn’t ask for more. Nate’s on his way down now to sign copies so do buy one and see what all the fuss is about.” 

He appears, unphased, unflustered, his enigmatic reserve intact. There is nothing like the fury of a scorned woman to add intrigue, allure even. Priya knows this, so does he. Scandal swirls around him, somehow raising his stock rather than dimming it. I watch as he works the room. 

“Well, that was all highly entertaining, wasn’t it?” says a woman next to me, her breath ripe with wine and crisps. “Who was she?” 

“I’m not sure,” I lie. “Eva’s sister, I guess?” 

“Ah, the disgruntled sibling desperate for the true story to be told. Delicious.” She regards me for a moment and there’s a flicker of recognition in her eyes. 

She seems familiar, but I can’t quite place her. “Maybe a bit misery memoir for my liking,” she says, her tone conspiratorial. “But a great idea. Whoever got him to do it was completely on the money. Even more so if the sister doesn’t like it. I’m Jane. Jane Burton by the way. Mail On Sunday. And you?” 

I should have known; the over-highlighted hair and green quilt jacket are a giveaway. She swooshes the bubbles around her mouth and studies me as if I’m a puzzle to be solved. There’s that familiar glint in her eyes that I have grown to recognize down the years, a precise and very familiar brand of curiosity, watching from the sidelines, prying, insinuating, picking away. It’s part of the job, until it becomes part of you. 

“So you’re covering the book,” I ask. 

“Yes, we ran first serial last Sunday. Triumph over tragedy, the usual.” She shrugs lightly. “Still, if you cry, you buy, they say.” She smiles briefly, moves in a little closer so I can see a smear of fuchsia lipstick on her front tooth. I’m repelled by something in her that feels too close to home. I shudder slightly, step away from her, but she inches closer, as if we’re both coconspirators. 

“Good-looking, isn’t he? In that rather obvious way.” She crooks her head to one side, her eyes slide over him. 

“I guess, I hadn’t really noticed.” 

“What a horrible thing to happen. I don’t think you ever get over something like that, do you?” 

“I hear he’s doing pretty well.” 

“I wonder if he wrote it all himself?” Her steady look unnerves me. “A lot of them get help these days, don’t they?” 

“I wouldn’t know. If they choose to have a ghostwriter, it’s usually kept a secret.” A flush prickles my neck and spreads upward. 

I make my excuses and head for the exit, via Memoir & Autobiography for old time’s sake. The siren-call of those glittering lives on display spilling all—fame, grief, misery and addiction. “Read all about me, me, me,” they seem to echo, screaming for attention. I walk to the end of the aisle and stop in my tracks. There he is with Priya, standing just yards away. 

Something in me deflates, and I know that it’s all over. He talks quietly, rapidly, and Priya nods in affirmation, her head dipped. 

They carry on, deep in conversation. As I walk briskly past them toward the door, he looks up and our eyes lock. Priya reaches for his arm, but he pushes her away, starts toward me as I turn to the exit. 

“Wait,” he shouts after me. But I don’t turn back. I have spent too long under his skin and now it’s time to burrow out. I won’t be another acolyte like Priya. I don’t deserve Eva’s fate. 

I take off my heels, stuff them into my bag and start to run. Away from him. Still, I hear his voice, urgent and cracked, calling my name. I turn a corner and break into a sprint, my bare soles slap the cold wet pavement. Keep going, I tell myself, my breath ragged, my lungs burning. Only two questions keep circling. 

What did you do to Eva? 

What could you do to me?


Excerpted from YOU CAN’T HURT ME by Emma Cook, Copyright © 2024 by Emma Cook. Published by Hanover Square Press, an imprint of HarperCollins.


 
About the Author:
Photo Credit:
Linda Nylind


Emma Cook has been an editor at the Guardian for 16 years, commissioning on Guardian Weekend, editing her own section Do Something and now assistant editor and travel editor on the Observer magazine. She has written for a range of titles including the Guardian, the Independent, the Times, the Daily Telegraph, ES Magazine, Elle and Psychologies. She is an alumna of the Faber Academy's six-month Writing A Novel course, and You Can't Hurt Me is her debut novel.

Friday, November 29, 2024

Pre-Order Blitz for Bleeding Heart by Tricia T. LaRochelle

 


Danger lurks in the shadows as Sara and Scott's idyllic holiday takes a sinister turn. With a violent convict named Randy Meyers on the loose, every moment becomes a battle for survival. Will their love withstand the looming threat, or will it crumble under the weight of uncertainty? Pre-order this steamy, holiday, romantic suspense from Tricia T. LaRochelle today!
 
Title: Bleeding Heart
Author: Tricia T. LaRochelle
Release Date: 12/03/2024
Genres: Contemporary Romance, Romantic Suspense
Page Count: 256 pages
Tropes: Second Chance Romance, Strong Heroine, Female Friendships, Self Discovery, Against All Odds, Holiday Romance
 

Sara Williams yearns for a tranquil existence as she embraces her new life as a teacher and wife. Her ultimate desire is to cultivate a sense of security and simplicity alongside her husband, Scott.
But the escape of a notorious convict, Randy Meyers, disrupts Sara's and Scott’s newfound stability, unleashing a wave of fear and uncertainty.

While danger looms, Sara is offered an unforeseen opportunity that threatens her future with Scott. Amidst the chaos of Christmastime, Sara and Scott's love is put to the ultimate test. With each twist and turn, they must decide: will they let fear dictate their destiny, or will they embrace the unknown with open arms?
The heart that beats the hardest is the one that refuses to bleed out hope. Dive into Sara’s world and witness the true mettle of the Christmas spirit
.
 
Pre-Order on Amazon
Add to Goodreads Here!

 
About Tricia T. LaRochelle


Since she was a little girl, award-winning author Tricia T. LaRochelle has been obsessed with tragic love stories. No beach reads for her. Bring on the grit with a double side of turmoil. She likes to feel the character’s anguish as they fight to overcome obstacles to be together. Growing up in central Vermont, she has seen her share of tragedy but remains a hopeful romantic. She now lives in central Virginia, where she continues to foster the possibilities of how love can conquer all.

Flickering Heart, part of her Sara Browne series, won a Gold Medal in the 2023 Readers’ Favorite Contest for New Adult and was a first-place winner in the 2022 Incipere Awards for romance. Revive received an Honorable Mention in the 2022 Incipere Awards for romance in the same series. Her stand-alone contemporary, Sun in My Heart, won second place in the 2024 Bookfest Awards for Romance-Contemporary Romance-New Adult and a Bronze Medal in the 2024 Readers’ Favorite Contest for New Adult Fiction. Her next installment in the Sara Browne Series, Bleeding Heart – A Holiday Romance launches December, 3rd 2024.

Subscribe to her newsletter at tricialarochelle.com and receive updates and opportunities to win prizes or follow her on X, Threads, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, or Pinterest.
 
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This promotional event is brought to you by Indie Pen PR

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Review: A Woman Underground by Andrew Klavan

Author: Andrew Klavan
Publisher: Mysterious Press
Publication Date:  October 2024

Cameron Winter can’t stop thinking about the first girl he ever loved, Charlotte. His unresolved feelings for her have prevented him from truly moving forward with anyone new even all of these decades later. In an effort to distract himself—and his therapist—from his romantic struggles, Cameron instead begins to recount a story from his time as a CIA operative when he was sent on a mission to find a missing colleague last seen at the villa of a notorious Turkish sex trafficker. It has been years since he traveled the world for the government, but he is still troubled by this particular case. Now working as an English professor, Winter seeks a quiet life—except when his “strange habit of mind,” his penchant for sleuthing, leads him to investigate crimes whose complexity excites his curiosity.

When a mysterious visitor turns Winter’s attention to a book that appears to detail what happened to Charlotte he realizes he might be able to find and save her. The dark tale, filled with White Nationalist rhetoric, disturbing characters, and cold-blooded murder has him worried for her life. But how much of this story is true? Why does someone want him to investigate? And what is it about this current investigation that has him thinking about that missing spy those many years ago? In his most personal case yet, Winter must delve deep into his past to confront a dangerous threat lurking in his present.

I have been a huge fan of this series.  I love Cameron Winter as a character. I was really looking forward to reading this one.  This time around, his attention is brought to a book that seems to lead to the answer of what happened to the first girl he ever loved.  He also spends time relaying one of his cases from his time as a spy in order to distract himself from the mystery.  

I have to be honest, I wasn't a huge fan of this installment.  I was disappointed.  The story took a while to get going and overall it felt largely unfocused. Winter didn't seem to have the same voice that he has had in the past.  I did find that it picked up about 2/3 of the way in.  There were a couple of twists that I didn't call, but they weren't really enough to save the book for me.  I'm hoping this isn't the last book with this character.  I would love to read more books with him in it in the future.  This one just missed the mark.


Sunday, November 24, 2024

Blog Tour: Review of Biker Under My Tree by Winter Travers



Series: Thirteen Bikers for Christmas
Author: Winter Travers
Release: November 19, 2024
Genre/Tropes: MC Romance; Holiday/Christmas Romance; Age Gap
Goodreads: https://bit.ly/40b8XME
Bookbub: https://bit.ly/4hplimK
 
Snow Haggar is up to her elbows in cookie dough, juggling a booming holiday baking season that’s busier than ever. Right when she needs all hands on deck, her helpers for baking and deliveries fall through and leave her scrambling to keep up with the mountain of orders piling up. Enter Bones, her leather-clad, tattooed neighbor with a talent for custom bikes and a roguish grin that’s as distracting as the view she has of him from her kitchen window.
 
Seeing her struggle, Bones offers his help—along with the muscle of his biker friends—to get her orders out before Christmas. As they race to make deliveries together, the sparks between them burn hotter than her oven, and Snow begins to wonder if her sweetest holiday treat might just be Bones himself.
 
This Christmas, Snow’s getting more than she bargained for—because Santa might’ve just delivered the perfect biker under her tree.
 
Buy Links (Kindle Unlimited):
Books2Read: https://books2read.com/bikerundermytree
Amazon Universal: https://mybook.to/BikerUnderMyTree_WT
Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CPGKXRC5
Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B0CPGKXRC5
Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CPGKXRC5
Amazon AU: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0CPGKXRC5
 
My Thoughts:
    Biker Under My Tree is a really cute romance.  Snow and Bones have lived next door to each other for a year without ever speaking.  But that doesn't mean they haven't been looking.  When Snow needs help with her baking business and the Christmas rush, Bones is more than happy to jump right in.  They were really cute together.  The awkwardness in the beginning while getting to know each other was adorable.  I also loved Bones's friends and how they just embraced Snow in order to help her.  The story is a quick read and one I highly recommend.
 




Author Bio:

Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestselling author Winter Travers is a devoted wife, mother, and aunt turned author who was born and raised in Wisconsin. After a brief stint in South Carolina following her heart to chase the man who is now her hubby, they retreated back up North to the changing seasons, and to the place they now call home.
Winter spends her days writing happily ever afters, and her nights being a karate mom hauling her son to practices and tournaments.. She also has an addiction to anything MC related, puppies, and baking.
 
Social Media Links:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/wintertravers
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wintertravers
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wintertraversauthor/
Website: www.wintertravers.com
Amazon Author Page: https://amzn.to/2HD0UAm
Mailing List: https://www.wintertravers.com
Goodreads: https://bit.ly/2vAJPm1
BookBub: https://bit.ly/2HQtk7y

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Spotlight: Excerpt from The Maui Effect by Sara Ackerman

 


Author: Sara Ackerman
Publication Date: November 19, 2024
ISBN: 9780778369561
Format: Trade Paperback
Publisher: Harlequin Trade Publishing / MIRA
Price $18.99
 
Buy Links:
HarperCollins
BookShop.org 
Barnes & Noble
Amazon
 
Taylor Jenkins Reid meets The Hundred Foot Wave in this dazzling new romance by USA Today bestselling author Sara Ackerman.

'Iwa Young’s life is high in the Maui rainforest. As a field biologist, she’s happiest in company with trees and birds and waterfalls. When a developer arrives with plans for a so-called Eco Resort in the middle of a forest full of endangered species, 'Iwa puts all her energy into the fight to protect it. But a chance encounter threatens to distract her. His name is Dane Parsons, and he’s a big wave surfer from California. 'Iwa has a few unbreakable rules, and at the top of her list: Never Date A Surfer.

Dane Parsons is part of an underground group of big wave riders and his connection to the ocean runs deep. When he meets 'Iwa he can’t get her out of his mind. But 'Iwa wants nothing to do with Dane until he offers to help protect her beloved forest and waterfall. Always on the hunt for the ultimate ride, Dane suddenly glimpses something even greater, but just out of reach.

In this thunderous love story, we travel deep into the Maui rainforest and hop across the globe from Maui to Mavericks to Portugal, chasing waves the size of nine story buildings–where the unthinkable is always just one breath away.

 
Excerpt:

THE BLUE ROOM

Dane

Pe’ahi, Maui, January 3, 2012

The Hawaiian ocean was more blue than he remembered, and it smelled faintly of salt and sea foam. Dane sat on his surfboard watching rays of sun pierce the surface and descend into the depths. Farther out above the trench, the water shone indigo, and inside over the coral shelf, a dappled turquoise. Bathwater warm, smooth as blown glass, deadly. There were sounds—a light splash, the low rumble of whitewater meeting rock on the shoreline—but he didn’t hear them.

Someone is going to die.

An old man on the cliff had spoken these words to him just as he was scrambling down the rocks to get in the water, and he was having a hard time shaking it off. The man was thin as a twig and wrinkled, with a shock of white hair against his sun-beaten skin. A complete stranger. He touched Dane’s shoulder and looked him straight in the eye, pinning Dane in place for a few seconds, before he pulled himself away. His shoulder still burned.

Now he focused on the horizon and matched his breath to the rise and fall of the swells. Reaching down with both hands, he scooped up water and splashed himself to cool off. The air was thick with a salty haze, windless, hot and lazy. Usually by this time—early afternoon, the waves were blown out and ragged from the wind. But today was perfection. Even the locals were saying the conditions were epic.

All he needed was one wave.

The Maui offshore buoys showed an afternoon pulse, which meant that the swell could get even bigger before it faded away. No doubt it was a gamble to paddle out on his biggest board, a mint green beauty, but risk was his thing, the only constant he knew. While most people moved away from risk, Dane had always sought it out. Not consciously, but looking back, he had been the kid to climb the tallest tree, skateboard down the steepest road or take the highest jump on his bike, and later, often the only one to paddle out on those winter days when the whole horizon was closing out.

He checked his watch. Eighteen minutes since the last set rolled in, but it seemed like days. He could feel the island behind him, a massive volcano with a dollop of white snow on her peak, but he refused to look. Never turn your back on the sea. Anyone raised around the ocean knew this.

Four minutes left in the heat and Dane had nothing to show for it. He had missed the only rideable wave on the last set by being too far out. His last hope was the tide. It had just bottomed out, and now began to fill back in, the whole ocean heaving toward the island. All he could do was wait. Mother nature called the shots out here, there was no way around it.

Two minutes left and he was starting to sweat, when he noticed a bump on the horizon. He stood up on his board to get a better look. Definitely a set. Kicking his board out in front of him, he fell back in the water and crossed himself. This was it. Sliding back onto his board, he adjusted his vest, took a deep breath and started paddling toward the horizon.

A live wire ran under his skin, electrifying every cell, every muscle. It was a familiar feeling, and it meant game on. The first wave in the set rose up like a liquid mountain and began to feather, but already he could tell it wasn’t the one he was waiting for. Too small and a little too west. Let someone else have it. When he reached the top of that one, he got his first look at what was coming—a blue wall of water taller than a small building and farther out than he had thought possible. Lined up perfectly and swinging straight for him.

He scrambled to position himself a little deeper as the wave moved in and lifted him up and up. And fricking up. He turned and went for it. At the top, he hung for a second as he looked down the vertical face of water, half wishing he had wings. Beyond the point of no return, he jumped to his feet and dropped in. The first few seconds were a free fall and he was poised with arms out, as if in flight, while his board miraculously stayed under him. He managed to level out and picked his line. From behind, the lip hurled and thundered and created a bus-sized barrel, spitting out at him.

Still high up on the wave, which felt ready to pitch him at any moment, he felt the burn in his legs, his lungs, his eyes. Spray from the barrel chandeliered down on him and began to blot out the sun and everything else. If this beast closed out, he was done. He’d be held down on the reef for at least a few waves and then washed into a frothy cauldron of whitewater and boulders at the bottom of the cliffs.

Someone is going to die. The words came to him again in a flash, then disappeared. Today was not his day to die.

The avalanche of water behind him was creating its own wind, but he managed to stall for a few seconds in the barrel before getting shot out in the spit. Time slowed, and the outside world slipped away. A feeling of euphoria came over him. Saltwater ran in his veins and he looked down on the scene from a bird’s-eye view. Albatross or petrel or booby. When he hit the shoulder of the wave still standing, his arms shot up skyward and he fell back, landing with a splash in the very water that could have easily taken him. The horn sounded a few moments later, signifying the end of the heat.

The crowd in the channel went crazy; he heard them even underwater. Jet skis, boats, boards, camera guys swimming—all rushed toward him. People yelling, hooting, clapping, cheering. Shirtless men and bikini-clad women. Not a wetsuit in sight. And there was no need to see the score, or the video. Their reaction told him everything he needed to know.


Excerpted from THE MAUI EFFECT by Sara Ackerman. Copyright © 2024 by Sara Ackerman. Published by MIRA Books, an imprint of HarperCollins.




Author Bio:
 
Photo credit:
Sarah Anderson

 Sara Ackerman is the Hawai'i born, bestselling author of historical & romance novels set in the islands. Her books have been labeled “unforgettable” by Apple Books, “empowering & deliciously visceral” by Book Riot, and New York Times bestselling authors Kate Quinn and Madeline Martin have praised Sara’s novels as “fresh and delightful” and “brilliantly written.” Amazon chose Radar Girls as a best book of the month, and ALA Booklist gave The Codebreaker’s Secret a starred review. Find out more about Sara and her books at www.ackermanbooks.com and follow her on Instagram @saraackermanbooks and on Facebook @ackermanbooks.
 

Friday, November 22, 2024

Spotlight: Excerpt from The Jewel of the Blues by Monica Chenault-Kilgore



By Monica Chenault-Kilgore
On Sale Date: November 19, 2024
ISBN: 9781525805066
Graydon House Trade Paperback
Price: $18.99 USD


Buy Links

HarperCollins 

Amazon

Barnes & Noble 

Bookshop.org


Set in the sparkling 1920s jazz era, The Jewel of the Blues pulls back the curtain on all the romance, danger and drama in the bustling backstage life of a young performer.


Billed as the Little Girl with the Big Voice, blues singer Lucille Arnetta Love always dreamed of life under the lights. From traveling family gospel band to lead singer in a riotous vaudeville troupe, Lucille is on the rise. But a devastating family secret, one that’s poised to shatter every dream she’s ever had, casts an inescapable shadow over Lucille’s career.


Decades ago, a botched robbery ended in a suspicious death—and all signs point to Lucille’s own father as the culprit. It’s a secret that Lucille’s family is determined to keep buried—even from Lucille herself. For a time, a fresh start feels possible, especially when Marcus Williams, Lucille’s manager—and sometimes paramour—sets her up with a band to tour the country: Miss Lucille’s Black Troubadours. Lucille’s dream of seeing her name in the bright lights of Broadway may happen yet, if she and the Troubadours can endure the highly competitive, rocky road to fame.


Beneath the dazzling glamour of the vaudeville scene lies a wicked underbelly, as drinking, gambling, salacious love affairs and racial tensions compete to dim Lucille’s shining star. And when shady figures from her father’s past emerge, their thirst for revenge threatens to silence Lucille’s career—and the sultry singer herself—for good.


Excerpt:

Evansville, Indiana
1906 

“Straaaw-ber-ries… Fresh pa-lumms… Suc-cu-lent fresh fruits and vegetables! Cuu-cumbers!” Hank Love swiped the back of his hand across his sweaty forehead before singing out the next verse. “Get your nice, plump straaaw-ber-ries here!” 

Caught in the rapture of the heat and white streaks of baking sunlight, the sweet perfume rolled off the peaches, plums and strawberries. To get Caesar, his steadfast silent partner for the day, to take a couple steps forward, Hank patted the horse’s hind parts. Caesar bobbed his head in compliance and pulled the fruit cart deeper into the cooler alley and out of the sun. The handmade sign advertising Fresh Fruit and Produce posted at the alley’s entryway, along with the wafting fresh fragrance of the fruits and vegetables, would be enough to entice buyers to his makeshift stall. It wasn’t quite noon, and the city streets were filled. But, unfortunately, only a few passersby took the steps off the sidewalk to inspect Hank’s display. 

Hank took a rag out of his pocket to wipe his forehead that was now peppered with beads of sweat. The heat wasn’t the only cause for Hank’s perspiration—it was also worry. He had to sell as much as he could today because he desperately needed money to pay for his tenancy. So far, it didn’t look promising. He had never missed a payment, but he couldn’t count on any leniency from the landlord—not here in Evansville, Indiana. The landlord made no bones about wanting him off the property that Hank and his family had worked for all the years they’d stomped their feet across the dirt. He, his wife, Evelyn, their baby girl, Lucille, as well as the rest of their blood and extended family that lived under the same roof, never lacked for food; they ate what they grew. But coming up with the money to keep the little family on the plot of land had become increasingly tough. Most times Hank was able to put aside his worry and leave it in God’s hands. Month after month, He never failed him. But this month was promising to be a test of faith because the money just wasn’t there. 

Evansville had become a sundown town. There was a law on the books that colored folks had to be off the road before dusk or risk going to jail—or worse. So Hank needed to sell what he had while the sun was still in the sky, and in enough time to be home by sunset to avoid trouble. There had been racial skirmishes in nearby cities as of late. He, along with his neighbors, raised their voices to protest, but city leaders refused to hear their case. They also included the threat of coming to every Negro’s home within the city limits to discuss the law in detail. Despite the veiled intimidation, the protests continued. Until the law was overturned, Hank didn’t want to take any chances of being a victim of repercussions. 

A stray black cat shot through the alleyway. Startled, both Hank and Caesar jumped. Then Hank froze in his tracks. Following the cat’s trajectory was the progressive padding sound of boots striking cobblestone coming from the street. Hank turned slowly, intending to chase off a random kid who sometimes tried to steal from him, but the sharp click of metal told him he needed to take a different course of action. 

The top of his head went cold when he caught sight of a shotgun barrel pointed directly at him. At the other end of the gun were the steady gray eyes of a grimy white man leaning against the back of the wagon. Caesar danced from side to side from the unexpected weight of the stranger. 

“Whoa boy,” Hank whispered as he gently patted the horse and kept his eyes on the shotgun. The horse’s muscles vibrated, and Hank could tell Caesar’s nervousness matched his own. 

The man pushed away a bushel of cucumbers that went rolling across the ground. “Boy, you better do exactly what I say or today is gonna be your last day.” He hopped in the back of the wagon, kicking aside a box of peaches. A few tumbled over and their rose-colored bottoms hit the stones. 

Caesar threw back his head, gave a deep-throated whinny and jerked the wagon forward. 

The man wriggled his way between the boxes and bushels and lay down flat against the wagon bottom. From clenched teeth, the man squeezed out, “Now, let’s get going—and just ’member I’ve got this gun aimed right at the back of your head.” 

Hank saw the man was bleeding. A growing red stain spread across the front of his jacket, but the man made no effort to conceal his wound. He kept both hands on his shotgun and held tightly to a large sack tucked under his arm. A piercing staccato of gunshots suddenly rang out from the main street and reverberated against the brick walls of the surrounding buildings. Hank whipped his head toward the entrance of the alley and saw the silhouettes of men in long coats with long guns and bags in their arms, whizzing past. In their wake was a chaotic commotion of gunfire, shattering glass and people screaming and shouting. Even from where he stood, Hank could see that the men who raced by looked just like the man who was now hidden from sight, wrapped around bushels and boxes of produce, tucked away in the back of his wagon. 

Caesar suddenly bolted, grapevining his hooves from one side of the alley to the other, tugging on his reins with the intent of escaping the noise. The frightened horse lunged against his reins in every direction, and each time the wagon tipped from one side to the other, sending heads of lettuce and tomatoes flying to the ground. The wagon swayed deeply until it finally flipped over—along with its passenger—crashing against the cobblestones. Spooked even more, Caesar dragged the overturned wagon farther into the alleyway, which dead-ended into the back of another building. 

Hank peered through the capsized wagon’s splintered planks. The man, buried in a rubble of produce, grunted and wheezed. “Get me out of here, nigga! Help me…” 

Hank could see the man’s eyes rolling back into his head. The corner of a broken wagon slat was embedded squarely in the man’s chest. His pleas for help faded against a cloud of footsteps and the grinding sound of vehicles from the street. Hank looked up from the recesses of the alley to see people running in one direction—toward whatever happened—or seeming to chase the new motorized police wagon that had barreled past. Hank couldn’t imagine what possibly occurred to draw such a stream of curious people, but he knew his bleeding passenger had a hand in it. 

Hank peeled back broken wood to try to free the man. It was then the sack that the man had held firmly pressed against his body caught Hank’s eye. It was partially hidden under pieces of fruit and splintered wood. He wasn’t sure what drove him to do it, but Hank slowly reached into the mass of rubble and tugged at the corner of the sack. It was heavy. When he received no resistance—an assurance that the man was dead or close to it—he yanked the bag to release it from between sharp edges of broken slats. Property of Second National Bank and Trust appeared across the bloodstained cloth. Hank looked toward the street. Still, no one came to his rescue or even seemed to notice him. He managed to stuff the sack under his arm inside his jacket. Watching the wagon for any movement, he moved slowly toward Caesar, who calmed at his touch but bucked to give the wagon a final hard kick. 

A shotgun blast exploded from the wagon. Hank fell backward. A spray of splintered wood and pulpy fruit flesh splattered his face. Hank felt searing pain rip through his skin leaving a trail from his cheek to the top of his head. From that point, all Hank heard were the muted sounds of Caesar’s hooves stomping at the ground and screams coming from somewhere in the far distance. All he could see was a blur of purple, orange and red until it faded to black. 

When Hank regained consciousness, searing pain shot from the top of his skull and a hot stream of blood stung his eyes. He winced as each of Caesar’s four legs hit the ground. He held his head, which felt like a heavy sack filled with cotton. He couldn’t recall how he unhitched and mounted the horse or when he left the remnants of his wagon along with the dead man in the alley. He couldn’t remember how he ended up on the silent road leading away from town. Although the road in front of him was a blur, he knew the horse would find his way back home. 

***

When he could no longer focus, Hank let Caesar make his way down the roadway at his own pace, allowing the pain take over and send him back to unconsciousness. When he opened his eyes again, through a gauzy haze Hank saw the small white clapboard church he called home in front of him. He took a deep breath and fell against the horse’s neck, relieved. Through a peephole of light, Hank could barely make out a neat dirt path leading to a prim white two-story house with four windows. White sheets pinned to a clothesline whipped in the light breeze. He slid to the ground, leaning against the side of the building. Hank’s heavy limbs seemed plastered to the spot. The grass was cool and wet beneath him. The bag had fallen open and gold coins spilled out over his legs and the grass that he now saw was tinged red with blood. 

His head rang with a hymn that climbed octaves, piercing through the bright blue sky. It was the beautiful soprano voice of his wife, Evelyn, accompanied on the piano by her father, Reverend John Pike. Her operatic high notes stung, or maybe it was the big black rowdy bees that were buzzing around the windowsill above his head. 

Am I in heaven? Hank thought. 

As if to answer his question, Hank patted the hard ground before digging his fingers into the earth. Pushing hard against the ground, he lifted his body, attempting to stand. He succeeded only a few inches until his knees gave way and he collapsed. 

“Daddy!” A barefoot little girl ran up to him but stopped short a few feet away at the edge of the building. A rustling of skirts followed closely behind the child. 

“Hank! Hank!” Evelyn knelt beside him, delicately touching his face to examine the extent of his injuries. “What happened, Hank? Where’s the wagon?” Jumbled thoughts spilled out in a collage of sentences. “I… I gotta go back… Evelyn, they be looking me…them fruit is gonna spoil… They’re gonna hang me for sure…” 

“Hank, you’re talking gibberish. What’s all this?” Evelyn picked up the bag and a shower of coins fell to the ground. “Where did you get this money?” The little girl, sensing fear and confusion, started to cry. 

Hank mumbled, “Is that my baby…my little angel? C’mere, Lucille.” He weakly waved his hand, motioning the child to come closer. “C’mon over and hug yo’ daddy.” 

The child hesitated at first, but then bounced over, flung her body into her father’s lap and proceeded to pick up a handful of gold coins. “Daddy, are you hurt?” 

Hank winced, gritted his teeth and sucked in his breath before responding in an even tone. “I’m all right, girl. I ain’t hurt.” 

“Good. But what happened to you? You look hurt. Are you sure? I love you, Daddy.” 

“Ah, now that’s the sweetest sound I’d ever wanted to hear.” 

“Get out the way, Evelyn. Let me get this man to the house.” Reverend Pike rounded the corner. The reverend was a commanding figure both in stature and voice. When he spoke, anyone in earshot did exactly as they were instructed. Evelyn stepped aside. 

Reverand Pike bellowed, “Can you stand, Hank?” 

Evelyn instructed the child to go to the kitchen to help the cook. She then joined her father and wrapped Hank’s arm over her shoulder to help lift her husband up the stairs. They reached the stairs to the house, and Hank could no longer lift his leg. His head throbbed and his sight was fading. 

***

Hank, having passed out again, awoke in a gray fog. Wrapped tightly in starched sheets and under a pile of quilts, Hank wrestled with the covers until he freed his arms and torso enough to sit up. He touched the damp, sticky, blood-spotted bandages that were wrapped around his head and half of his face. The slow-moving mechanism in his head ground gears trying to piece together the previous events. Through the haze of cotton gauze, Evelyn’s face came into view. Her knitted brows and lined forehead told him all he needed to know—that he must look like he was on death’s doorstep. Hank shifted his body, swiveled out from underneath the stiff sheets and blankets, but the pain held him locked in his spot on the bed. 

“Don’t even try to move, Hank. Rest. You need to rest. We can talk about what happened later.” “Evie, wipe them frown lines from your face. Don’t worry. I’m all right.” He took a deep breath, puffed out his cheeks to blow away a wave of dizziness. “Ooo, it feels like you pulled a shade down over my eye. He hovered his hand over his left eye. “It feels like sharp knives are poking me in this eye, but I can still see pretty good out of this one.” He gently patted the right side of his face to lightly rub tears running from his good eye. “Yep, I can see my sweet angel.” He tried to give her a smile, hoping it would ease his wife’s fears. “How long have I been out?” 

“Hank, you haven’t been laying here long at all. It’s only been about a half hour or so since we brought you in here and cleaned you up. Now, please lay still till we can get a doctor over here to have a look at you.” 

“Ain’t gonna be no doctor. No need.” Grimacing, a thunderbolt of pain shot through Hank’s head and he plopped back against the headboard. 

“How you doing, Hank?” The reverend’s deep voice cut through the conversation. 

“I’m trying my best to keep him still, Father. Did you find anything out?” 

Before answering his daughter, Reverend Pike leaned in close to whisper into Hank’s ear. “They gonna be looking for that money, Hank.” 

Hank nodded feebly. “But they don’t know I have it. Wasn’t nobody in that alley but me, Caesar and a dead man that’s buried underneath the wagon.” 

“That dead man was one of them bank robbers. Right before we found you, Zeke came running up here saying that the police are looking for three men who took all of Second National’s money. They shot up Main Street and killed some innocent folks as they escaped.” 

Evelyn jumped in. “Robbers? Dead man? Hank, what have you gotten into?” 

Hank stayed silent. Reverend Pike continued, “I don’t want anyone to pin nothing on you. In this town they’ll kill you. Just like that, no questions asked. For safekeeping, we’ll give that money to the freed spirits for now.” 

The reverend was referring to a crawl space under the third pew where only decades before many a black family hid, lying flat on their backs until they were safe from slave owners who ventured north of the Mason-Dixon line in search of their escaped property. 

“In the meanwhile, you and Evelyn can go visit her sister in Kentucky. Eliza Beth and Harper will take good care of all of you.” 

Hank said softly, “No, Rev. I’m not going back that way.” 

“Think about it Hank. You and Evelyn will be safer going down there than staying here.” 

Hank held a hand to his head. “Evelyn, can you go get me some cool water, please? Rev, I need to talk to you for a minute.” 

“Hank, there’s a pitcher of water right by your bed. There’s no need for me to leave.” 

Hank grimaced as he squeezed out, “Woman, please.” Evelyn sniffed, turned and marched out of the room. As she retreated, Hank, having regained some of his strength, recounted the course of events that occurred downtown in the side alley. 

Reverend Pike stayed silent, hovering over Hank as he listened. “Hank, you’ve always been such a determined man. I knew you would break down barriers to get what you wanted. That’s one of the reasons I allowed Evelyn to marry you, even though you didn’t have a penny in your pocket. Her mother, on the other hand, would’ve wanted her to marry into high society—God rest my sweet Delilah. But my Evelyn chose you to love, so I let her. I did that because I believed your ingenuity, devotion to hard work and to the Lord would keep my daughter living a comfortable and safe life.” 

“Rev, I’m doing the best I can.” 

When Evelyn returned with a new pitcher and a mason jar filled with water, she found the two men nodding their heads in agreement as if there was nothing left to do but execute a plan. A plan that started with packing up the wagon and heading south, and staying with relatives until things died down. The immediate flight would be framed as a trip to visit family and a mission to spread the gospel to the small churches along the trail. 

Reverend Pike hugged his daughter and left the room, leaving the explanations to her husband. “You mean we’re running away? But you didn’t do anything. Why can’t we just return the money and explain to them how it came into your possession? You can say you found it, that is, if someone asks.” 

“You know exactly why, Evelyn. This ain’t the time or place to think that them folks are going to be rational. Besides, no matter what happened, it will be an excuse for them to kick us off the property, endangering your father and the church we built here. I can’t put you and Lucille in danger like that.” 

She quickly spit out, “Well, you already done that, haven’t you? I overheard something about a dead man, a bank robbery and…and just look at you! I don’t appreciate being kept in the dark. You and my father have got it all wrong, keeping things from me. I deserve to know—and have a say in what we do and where we go.” 

After a beat, Evelyn began snatching up the family’s belongings, jamming them into suitcases and carpet bags. She marched from one side of the room to the other, turned and stomped to the dresser, then over to the closet. Her heels dug sharply into the wood floors as if intending to leave a mark. The swish of her apron, skirt and petticoats accented the staccato drumbeat of her steps. “Well, for how long, Hank? And why can’t we just take the train like civilized people?” 

The reverend wanted them to take the train but Hank, being cautious, knew that the family traveling by train down south would make them an easy target to spot if someone just happened to be looking for them. The safest bet to go unseen would be by wagon. Reverend Pike reluctantly offered Jupiter, the dapple-gray workhorse, when Hank insisted Caesar stay behind. 

“No time for that, Evie. Now get some things together so we can head down to your sister’s. We don’t need a lot, just a few things to tide us over for a few weeks.” He knew as he said it that he was lying. 

“Why? What’s the rush? First, you need to see a doctor about your eye and that gash in your head. What about the farm? What about—” 

Hank stopped her midsentence. “Enough with the questions! Get Lucille and let’s go. You got to trust me here, Evie.” 

“I do, husband. I really do. I don’t want to argue. Before God and everyone who loves me, I said my vows to honor our marriage. I’ll go with you anywhere. But Hank, this has gone too far.” 

Peering between strips of gauze, Hank watched the tall, robust woman he’d been married to for over ten years paced back and forth in front of him. She was taller than him, even when she was barefoot. From the view of the bed, she looked even taller. Like her father, she cut a commanding figure. The tight bindings of her apron could barely contain her. The thick, wavy hair piled on top of her head could hardly be restrained by her movements, and spindles of curls dropped around her face. The woman’s smooth walnut brown skin bore a tinge of red across her freckled cheeks. He knew it wouldn’t be easy, and he understood her anger, but he needed his wife to just go along with him. When she finally stopped pacing, a sure sign that the peak of her anger had passed, Hank dropped his head as if it was too heavy to carry. 

Evelyn softened when she saw her husband’s hands pressed against the sides of his face. Still, not quite ready to give up the fight, she continued her protests. “But what about Father? He’s gonna be left here by himself. He’s not going to have a wagon, or a horse or anyone to help with the farm.” 

“The church folk will take care of that. We’ll take Jupiter and leave Caesar so your daddy will have a plow horse. Rev will be okay. Going to your sister’s was your father’s idea anyway. I didn’t agree with him at first, but now I do…one hundred percent.” 

She asked quizzically, “My father told you that we needed to go back down south? I can’t believe that. If it wasn’t for the church and my sister, Daddy said he would never go down south ever again. Besides, sis don’t even know that we’re coming.” 

“She will soon. Your daddy will take care of that. He’ll get word to her in his own way. You know we know how to send messages faster than the government.” 

Hank was now sitting up and pushing himself off the side of the bed. He stiffened and slowly turned his head from one side to the other, wobbling slightly as he adjusted to the darkness and heaviness on the left side of his head. Evelyn rushed to his side to help him stand but he brushed her off. “We’ll take the unpaved roads down to the river. We’ll rest a bit at the Quaker house, then take the ferry over to Kentucky. You know the route.” 

“I haven’t been that way since I was a child. A whole lot of things have changed since then,” she grumbled. 

“Evelyn, my dear wife, please just trust me,” Hank begged. “Both you and Lucille need to come with me. This is important. I’m doing this to keep you and Lucille safe. The Rev too, but I know hell will freeze before your daddy leaves this place. Someone is going to be coming soon. Maybe it’s the sheriff or some other crackers, but they’re going to be looking for me. They know money is missing and they know that one of the men who had a hand in taking it is dead in my wagon. They’re going to have a lot of questions and no matter how I answer them, they won’t be satisfied. I know it. You don’t want to know what they might do if they find me.” 

Evelyn stopped. Her eyebrows rose and her large brown eyes widened. “If you’re so set on going and not telling me the whole story, then maybe you should go by yourself!” 

“Evelyn, I got caught up in some bad action and I did something on impulse. You have to believe that what I did, I did for you and Lucille. On the way down to the Ohio River, I’ll explain everything. You’ll see why. We’ll come back after a while, and we’ll have everything we ever wanted after that.” 

Deep down, Hank knew not a soul would believe the pieces of the story he could remember, but many would understand his motivation. Even his wife would be hard-pressed to believe he took part in a plan to break the law. Apart from his participation in the demonstrations about Evansville’s sundown laws, he had traveled a straight and narrow path to stay alive. 

So when it came time for questions from his closest kin, the police and a group of county sons, Hank and his family were already gone.


Excerpted from THE JEWEL OF THE BLUES by Monica Chenault-Kilgore, Copyright © 2024 by Monica Chenault-Kilgore. Published by Graydon House, an imprint of HarperCollins.



About the Author


Monica Chenault-Kilgore was born and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio and currently lives in Edison, New Jersey. She is a graduate of The Ohio State University School of Journalism. Her published works include
Liberty and Justice for All…Profiles of Middlesex County African American Veterans of WWII and the Korean War which is available in the public library. She formerly worked as a Contributing Reporter for The Home News Tribune and The Courier News newspapers