Wednesday, June 22, 2016
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Blog Tour: Leaving Blythe River by Catherine Ryan Hyde
Author: Catherine Ryan Hyde
Publisher: Lake Union Publishing
Date of publication: May 2016
Seventeen-year-old Ethan Underwood is totally unprepared to
search for his father in the Blythe River National Wilderness. Not only is he
small, scrawny, and skittish but he’s barely speaking to the man after a
traumatic betrayal. Yet when his father vanishes from their remote cabin and
rangers abandon the rescue mission, suddenly it’s up to Ethan to keep looking.
Angry or not, he’s his father’s only hope.
With the help of three locals—a fearless seventy-year-old
widow, a pack guide, and a former actor with limited outdoor skills—he heads
into the wild. The days that follow transform Ethan’s world. Hail, punishing
sun, swollen rapids, and exhausting pain leave him wondering if he’s been
fooled yet again: Is his father out here at all? As the situation grows
increasingly dire, Ethan realizes this quest has become about more than finding
his dad.
From the bestselling author of Pay It Forward comes
a story of nature revealing human nature—the trickiest
terrain. Navigating an unforgiving landscape, Ethan searches himself for the
ability to forgive his father—if he finds him alive.
Leaving Blythe River is a coming of age story involving seventeen year old Ethan who decides to search for his missing father after forest rangers abandon the search for him. Joining him are three locals who help him in the search. After finishing and thinking about the book, I have to say while I did like some of it, I didn't love it. I have seen rave reviews, so I must be in the minority.
What I did like about the book was the way the author was able to draw you into the adventure. Her descriptions of the wilderness helped place me right into the search along with Ethan. I also liked Ethan's character. I enjoyed watching him grow as he searches for his father. I also thought the side characters added some nice flavor to the book.
So while I liked those things, I felt there were other things that kept me from fully enjoying the book. I felt like there was not enough background information on Ethan and his parents as a whole. I found it odd that his father all of a sudden goes from being a businessman (?) to moving to the mountains and running 20 miles a day. It isn't until toward the end of the book that we find out he climbed Mount Everest when Ethan was born and likes extreme sports. That is when we also find out his mother is into all of that stuff as well. Also, what happened to Jennifer? I found the ending to be a bit over the top and I didn't really buy into it. I also got kind of tired of people always questioning Ethan's age. I think after the first couple of times I got that he was short and young looking.
This is the first book by this author that I have read. I never had the pleasure of reading Pay it Forward. I feel like this book would do well with the YA crowd. Pick it up and give it a shot.
About Catherine Ryan Hyde
Catherine Ryan Hyde is the author of thirty published and
forthcoming books. Her bestselling 1999 novel Pay It Forward,
adapted into a major Warner Bros. motion picture starring Kevin Spacey and
Helen Hunt, made the American Library Association’s Best Books for Young Adults
list and was translated into more than two dozen languages for distribution in
more than thirty countries. Her novels Becoming Chloe and Jumpstart
the World were included on the ALA’s Rainbow List; Jumpstart
the World was also a finalist for two Lambda Literary Awards and won
Rainbow Awards in two categories. More than fifty of her short stories have
been published in many journals, including the Antioch Review, Michigan
Quarterly Review, the Virginia Quarterly Review, Ploughshares, Glimmer
Train, and the Sun, and in the anthologies Santa
Barbara Stories and California Shorts and the
bestselling anthology Dog Is My Co-Pilot. Her short fiction
received honorable mention in the Raymond Carver Short Story Contest, a
second-place win for the Tobias Wolff Award, and nominations for Best
American Short Stories, the O. Henry Award, and the Pushcart Prize. Three
have also been cited in Best American Short Stories.
Ryan Hyde is also founder and former president of the Pay It
Forward Foundation. As a professional public speaker, she has addressed the
National Conference on Education, twice spoken at Cornell University, met with
AmeriCorps members at the White House, and shared a dais with Bill Clinton.
Connect with Catherine Ryan Hyde
Catherine Ryan Hyde’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:
Tuesday, May 24th: Peeking
Between the Pages
Thursday, May 26th: Kritter’s
Ramblings
Friday, June 3rd: Write
Read Life
Monday, June 6th: Just
Commonly
Monday, June 13th: Puddletown
Reviews
Tuesday, June 14th: Patricia’s
Wisdom
Wednesday, June 15th: The
Magic All Around Us
Thursday, June 16th: Book
Dilettante
Monday, June 20th: FictionZeal
Tuesday, June 21st: From the TBR Pile
Wednesday, June 22nd: Hoser’s Blook
Thursday, June 23rd: I’d
Rather Be at the Beach
Friday, June 24th: Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews
Monday, June 27th: Bibliotica
TBD: Sweet
Southern Home
Labels:
Adventure,
Catherine Ryan Hyde,
Kari,
TLC Tour,
YA
Monday, June 20, 2016
Blog Tour: Greetings From Utopia Park by Claire Hoffman
Author: Claire Hoffman
Publisher: Harper
Date of publication: June 2016
Wednesday, June 22nd: Rambling Reviews
Publisher: Harper
Date of publication: June 2016
When Claire Hoffman’s alcoholic father abandons his family,
his struggling wife, Liz, tells five-year-old Claire and her seven-year-old
brother, Stacey, that they are going to heaven—Iowa—to live in Maharishi’s national
headquarters for Heaven on Earth. For Claire’s mother, Transcendental
Meditation—Maharishi’s method of meditation and his approach to living the
fullest possible life—promises world peace and Enlightenment just as their
family is falling apart.
At first this secluded utopia offers warmth and support, and
makes these outsiders feel calm, secure, and connected to the world. At the
Maharishi School, Claire learns Maharishi’s philosophy for living and meditates
with her class. With the promise of peace and Enlightenment constantly on the
horizon, every day is infused with magic and meaning. But as Claire and Stacey
mature, their adolescent skepticism kicks in, drawing them away from the
community and into delinquency and drugs. To save herself, Claire moves to
California to live with her father, breaking from Maharishi completely. After
she works for a decade in journalism and academia, the challenges of adulthood
propel her back to Iowa, where she reexamines her spiritual upbringing and
tries to reconnect with the magic of her childhood.
Greetings from Utopia Park takes us deep into a
complex, unusual world, illuminating its joys and comforts as well as its
disturbing problems. While there is no utopia on earth, Hoffman finds, there
are noble goals worth striving for: believing in belief itself, finding inner
peace, and reaching a firm understanding that there is a larger fabric of the
universe to which we all belong.
Greetings from Utopia Park is a memoir about the author's time growing up in the Transcendental Meditation Movement headed by Maharishi. The largest headquarters in the US is centered in Iowa. Her story is one of poverty, trying to fit in and figuring out how meditation can help her in her life.
I have read other memoirs about growing up in cults/religious organizations and I really enjoyed them. While this one was well written, I had a hard time connecting with it. I think I was expecting more of something along the lines of Troublemaker by Leah Remini. I'm not sure after finishing the book that I really got a sense of the organization as a whole. The author hints several times at possible scandals but never really provides a lot of background on them. I also got the sense, that while she questioned a lot of the teachings and rituals put forth by Marharishi, she was reluctant to really commit to saying anything bad about it.
I am not a meditator, but I have friends who do and they fully believe that it helps calm them and focus them throughout the day. I was glad to see that while the author doesn't live in "Utopia" anymore, she does still use mediation. The ending was a bit fast. I would have liked to see her life with her father in California and college to see how it contrasted with life in Iowa. But sadly, that is kind of glossed over.
I think that people who like memoirs will find this one interesting. While it isn't the best memoir I have read, I still felt compelled to read the whole book.
I have read other memoirs about growing up in cults/religious organizations and I really enjoyed them. While this one was well written, I had a hard time connecting with it. I think I was expecting more of something along the lines of Troublemaker by Leah Remini. I'm not sure after finishing the book that I really got a sense of the organization as a whole. The author hints several times at possible scandals but never really provides a lot of background on them. I also got the sense, that while she questioned a lot of the teachings and rituals put forth by Marharishi, she was reluctant to really commit to saying anything bad about it.
I am not a meditator, but I have friends who do and they fully believe that it helps calm them and focus them throughout the day. I was glad to see that while the author doesn't live in "Utopia" anymore, she does still use mediation. The ending was a bit fast. I would have liked to see her life with her father in California and college to see how it contrasted with life in Iowa. But sadly, that is kind of glossed over.
I think that people who like memoirs will find this one interesting. While it isn't the best memoir I have read, I still felt compelled to read the whole book.
About Claire Hoffman
Claire Hoffman writes for national magazines and holds a
Master’s degree in Religion from the University of Chicago, and a Master’s
degree in Journalism from Columbia University. She was a staff reporter for the
Los Angeles Times and has reported for the New York Times. She serves on the
board of her family foundation, the Goldhirsh Foundation, as well as ProPublica
and the Columbia Journalism School. She lives in Los Angeles, California.
Purchase Links
Tour Stops
Tuesday, June 7th: Book
Hooked Blog
Thursday, June 9th: A
Lovely Bookshelf on the Wall
Monday, June 13th: Life
By Kristen
Wednesday, June 15th: Tina
Says…
Monday, June 20th: From the TBR Pile
Wednesday, June 22nd: Rambling Reviews
Thursday, June 23rd: Becklist
Monday, June 27th: I Brought a Book
Monday, June 27th: Back Porchervations
Tuesday, June 28th: Sharon’s Garden of Book
Reviews
Wednesday, June 29th: 5 Minutes For Books
Thursday, June 30th: Read. Write. Repeat.
Friday, July 1st: Thoughts On This ‘n That
Tuesday, July 5th: Ace and Hoser Blook
Thursday, July 7th: Book Addiction
Purchase Links
Sunday, June 19, 2016
A Buckhorn Bachelor by Lori Foster
Author: Lori Foster
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: June 2016
Adam Sommerville always thought he had it all—great family in a close-knit community, worthwhile job as a high school gym teacher, and no shortage of women eager to be on his arm. But it seems his luck has suddenly run out. Because Buckhorn’s most renowned bachelor has decided it’s time to settle down—and the one woman he wants just put him firmly in the friend zone.
Hiding her true feelings from Adam has been a full-time job for the past five years, but librarian Isabella Presley is determined not to be the latest heart he breaks. The best way to get over her attraction is to find someone else to date—even if it means asking Adam for flirting tips to help her land the perfect guy. But when Adam sets out to convince her the perfect guy is him, will she face her fears for a chance at forever?
Forever ago (OK, 5 years...), I had the pleasure of reading the original "Buckhorn Brothers" series, beginning with Sawyer (read my review). So what a pleasure it has been to be able to head back to Buckhorn County and check in with the next generation. A Buckhorn Bachelor is Adam's book. It was cool to see cute little Adam from Jordan's story all grown up and ready for love.
I really enjoyed Adam and Issy together. Issy has been in love with Adam for a long time but has never flirted or acted on her feelings. With a little push from Adam's cousin Amber, Issy finally goes after what she wants. I loved Adam's "aha" moment when he realized that Issy had been in his thoughts all along. In fact, I just plain loved the novella.
I'm not going to tell you any more. Just go read it. It's sweet, sexy and funny. It will make you want to start back at the beginning. Now I need to go and read Back to Buckhorn and A Buckhorn Summer to catch up on Garret and Lisa's stories. I really hope that Amber and Noel get a book soon! Theirs looks to be an exciting story!
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: June 2016
Adam Sommerville always thought he had it all—great family in a close-knit community, worthwhile job as a high school gym teacher, and no shortage of women eager to be on his arm. But it seems his luck has suddenly run out. Because Buckhorn’s most renowned bachelor has decided it’s time to settle down—and the one woman he wants just put him firmly in the friend zone.
Hiding her true feelings from Adam has been a full-time job for the past five years, but librarian Isabella Presley is determined not to be the latest heart he breaks. The best way to get over her attraction is to find someone else to date—even if it means asking Adam for flirting tips to help her land the perfect guy. But when Adam sets out to convince her the perfect guy is him, will she face her fears for a chance at forever?
Forever ago (OK, 5 years...), I had the pleasure of reading the original "Buckhorn Brothers" series, beginning with Sawyer (read my review). So what a pleasure it has been to be able to head back to Buckhorn County and check in with the next generation. A Buckhorn Bachelor is Adam's book. It was cool to see cute little Adam from Jordan's story all grown up and ready for love.
I really enjoyed Adam and Issy together. Issy has been in love with Adam for a long time but has never flirted or acted on her feelings. With a little push from Adam's cousin Amber, Issy finally goes after what she wants. I loved Adam's "aha" moment when he realized that Issy had been in his thoughts all along. In fact, I just plain loved the novella.
I'm not going to tell you any more. Just go read it. It's sweet, sexy and funny. It will make you want to start back at the beginning. Now I need to go and read Back to Buckhorn and A Buckhorn Summer to catch up on Garret and Lisa's stories. I really hope that Amber and Noel get a book soon! Theirs looks to be an exciting story!
Labels:
Contemporary Romance,
Kari,
Lori Foster,
Novella
Saturday, June 18, 2016
The Feathered Bone by Julie Cantrell
by: Julie Cantrell
published by: Thomas Nelson
publish date: January 26, 2016
In the pre-Katrina glow of New Orleans, Amanda Salassi is anxious about chaperoning her daughter’s sixth grade field trip to the Big Easy during Halloween. And then her worst fears come true. Her daughter’s best friend, Sarah, disappears amid the magic and revelry—gone, without a trace.
Unable to cope with her guilt, Amanda’s daughter sinks in depression. And Amanda’s husband turns destructive as he watches his family succumb to grief. Before long, Amanda’s whole world has collapsed.
I kinda started this book with the attitude that this was going to be another Katrina story. Perhaps, I shouldn't have let that cloud my judgement because I kept waiting for the book to be all about Katrina and it never was really. Yeah, it does happen, but fortunately it doesn't take over the rest of the story.
The story is about the kidnapping of Sarah. Amanda is chaperoning a school field trip with her daughter, Ellie, and her best friend Sarah. When it starts to rain there is a mad dash for the bus and they realize Sarah didn't make it on to the bus. She disappears without a trace. Months go by with no sign of her. Amanda's life is falling apart. Her daughter is falling into a deep depression over the loss of her best friend and the guilt that she feels as the last person to see her. Her husband has left her for a much younger woman. What they don't know is that Sarah is out there alive and waiting for someone to find her.
This book was pretty rough. Emotionally, it was hard core. I think I cried through about the quarter of the book. It's about human trafficking so there's aspect too, but it's not really graphic. It's just sad for that poor girl. It was a good story and it was very well written. I would recommend this book, with the warning that it is gut wrenching.
published by: Thomas Nelson
publish date: January 26, 2016
In the pre-Katrina glow of New Orleans, Amanda Salassi is anxious about chaperoning her daughter’s sixth grade field trip to the Big Easy during Halloween. And then her worst fears come true. Her daughter’s best friend, Sarah, disappears amid the magic and revelry—gone, without a trace.
Unable to cope with her guilt, Amanda’s daughter sinks in depression. And Amanda’s husband turns destructive as he watches his family succumb to grief. Before long, Amanda’s whole world has collapsed.
I kinda started this book with the attitude that this was going to be another Katrina story. Perhaps, I shouldn't have let that cloud my judgement because I kept waiting for the book to be all about Katrina and it never was really. Yeah, it does happen, but fortunately it doesn't take over the rest of the story.
The story is about the kidnapping of Sarah. Amanda is chaperoning a school field trip with her daughter, Ellie, and her best friend Sarah. When it starts to rain there is a mad dash for the bus and they realize Sarah didn't make it on to the bus. She disappears without a trace. Months go by with no sign of her. Amanda's life is falling apart. Her daughter is falling into a deep depression over the loss of her best friend and the guilt that she feels as the last person to see her. Her husband has left her for a much younger woman. What they don't know is that Sarah is out there alive and waiting for someone to find her.
This book was pretty rough. Emotionally, it was hard core. I think I cried through about the quarter of the book. It's about human trafficking so there's aspect too, but it's not really graphic. It's just sad for that poor girl. It was a good story and it was very well written. I would recommend this book, with the warning that it is gut wrenching.
Friday, June 17, 2016
Troublemaker by Linda Howard
Author: Linda Howard
Publisher: William Morrow
Date of publication: May 2016
For Morgan Yancy, an operative and team leader in a paramilitary group, nothing comes before his job. But when he’s ambushed and almost killed, his supervisor is determined to find out who’s after the members of his elite squad—and why. Due to worries that this unknown enemy will strike again, Morgan is sent to a remote location and told to lay low and stay vigilant. But between a tempting housemate he’s determined to protect and a deadly threat waiting in the shadows, keeping under the radar is proving to be his most dangerous mission yet.
The part-time police chief of a small West Virginian mountain town, Isabeau “Bo” Maran finally has her life figured out. She’s got friends, a dog, and a little money in the bank. Then Morgan Yancy shows up on her doorstep. Bo doesn’t need a mysterious man in her life—especially a troublemaker as enticing and secretive as Morgan.
After finishing Troublemaker, I felt like the old Linda Howard was back. I've read and reviewed a lot of her earlier works and she has some really good romances built into suspense stories. In this stand alone romantic suspense, Morgan is shot by an unknown assailant. his boss sends him to a remote town to recuperate while the agency he works for tries to put the pieces together. Isabeau "Bo" takes him in to her home as a favor for her ex-stepbrother.
I really enjoyed the book. I will admit that I thought the mystery was lackluster. It was a bit anti-climatic. For me, the romance overpowered the suspense part of the book. But, I was OK with that. I loved Morgan and Bo, loved them together, loved them apart, and loved how they took the time to fall in love. Let's not forget the adorable and eerily smart Tricks the dog. She was a fun and integral character to the story. The other secondary characters around the town rounded out the story nicely. I'd love to have Loretta in my corner any day.
I highly recommend this one. I think fans will enjoy it as much as I did. If you haven't picked up a book by Ms. Howard before, start with this one and give her a try.
Publisher: William Morrow
Date of publication: May 2016
For Morgan Yancy, an operative and team leader in a paramilitary group, nothing comes before his job. But when he’s ambushed and almost killed, his supervisor is determined to find out who’s after the members of his elite squad—and why. Due to worries that this unknown enemy will strike again, Morgan is sent to a remote location and told to lay low and stay vigilant. But between a tempting housemate he’s determined to protect and a deadly threat waiting in the shadows, keeping under the radar is proving to be his most dangerous mission yet.
The part-time police chief of a small West Virginian mountain town, Isabeau “Bo” Maran finally has her life figured out. She’s got friends, a dog, and a little money in the bank. Then Morgan Yancy shows up on her doorstep. Bo doesn’t need a mysterious man in her life—especially a troublemaker as enticing and secretive as Morgan.
After finishing Troublemaker, I felt like the old Linda Howard was back. I've read and reviewed a lot of her earlier works and she has some really good romances built into suspense stories. In this stand alone romantic suspense, Morgan is shot by an unknown assailant. his boss sends him to a remote town to recuperate while the agency he works for tries to put the pieces together. Isabeau "Bo" takes him in to her home as a favor for her ex-stepbrother.
I really enjoyed the book. I will admit that I thought the mystery was lackluster. It was a bit anti-climatic. For me, the romance overpowered the suspense part of the book. But, I was OK with that. I loved Morgan and Bo, loved them together, loved them apart, and loved how they took the time to fall in love. Let's not forget the adorable and eerily smart Tricks the dog. She was a fun and integral character to the story. The other secondary characters around the town rounded out the story nicely. I'd love to have Loretta in my corner any day.
I highly recommend this one. I think fans will enjoy it as much as I did. If you haven't picked up a book by Ms. Howard before, start with this one and give her a try.
Thursday, June 16, 2016
Throwback Thursday: Desert Heat by J.A. Jance
by: J.A. Jancepublished by: Avon Books
publish date: 1993
Life is good for Joanna Brady in the small desert community of Bisbee. She has Jenny, her adored nine-year-old daughter, and solid, honest, and loving husband, Andy, a local lawman who's running for Sheriff of Cochise County. But her good life explodes when a bullet destroys Andy Brady's future and leaves him dying beneath the blistering Arizona sun.
I've never read a J.A. Jance book. My library just added a bunch of the audiobooks so I figured it was a good time to try one out. I decided to start with the first book in the Joanna Brady series.
So Joanna's husband is a deputy in the tiny little town of Bisbee (recognize that from the movie Tremors???) and he's running for Sheriff, but he dies under mysterious circumstances. The Sheriff's Department is ready to write it off as a suicide, but Joanna knows that her husband was murdered and she's intent to prove it. However, questions come to light about the life Andy may have been leading. Joanna herself becomes the target of a DEA investigation. She must clear her name and figure out what is going on in her town.
I liked this book. It was a bit older but it was still good. There wasn't anything in it that dated it so I didn't feel like I was reading a 20 year old book. These are what I'd classify as airport or beach books. They're quick and easy. I'd recommend starting this series if you haven't already.
Labels:
Autumn,
J.A. Jance,
Series,
Throwback Thursday
Wednesday, June 15, 2016
Blog Tour: Excerpt of Defender by Diana Palmer
Author: Diana Palmer
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: June 28, 2016
Friday, June 10th: A. Holland Reads – excerpt
Publisher: Harlequin
Date of publication: June 28, 2016
The man who shattered her trust is back to protect her… New
York Times bestselling author Diana Palmer delivers a breathtaking story of
second-chance love.
When Paul Fiore disappeared from Isabel Grayling’s life, he
told himself it was for all the right reasons. She was young and innocent, and
he was her millionaire father’s lowly employee. Three years on, Paul is the FBI
agent assigned to Isabel’s case. Too late, he realizes what life in her Texas
mansion was really like back then—and how much damage he did when he left.
Once love-struck and sheltered, Isabel has become an
assistant district attorney committed to serving the law, no matter how risky
it gets. But right now, the man she can’t forgive is the one thing standing
between her and a deadly stalker. She knows Paul won’t hesitate to protect her
life with his own. But if she can’t trust herself to resist him, how can she
trust him not to break her heart all over again?
Excerpt:
Just as
Paul’s hand moved the soft cotton fabric of her shirt higher, his mouth poised
over hers, his dark eyes burning with desire, sirens became audible, moving
closer to them.
He felt as if he were coming out of a trance. He looked down at
what he’d done and flinched. What the hell had he been about to do? His face
contorted as he pushed Isabel up from the seat and turned away while she
frantically worked at putting her bra back on.
A police car pulled up beside them and a tall policeman got out,
noting the shattered glass of the back window and the small limb that had done
the damage.
“Are you folks okay?” he asked with concern.
“Yeah, thanks,” Paul said, breathing in deeply. “I thought we’d
bought the farm,” he added on a chuckle while he tried to divert the officer’s
attention so that his hunger for Isabel wouldn’t be visible. He turned to her.
“You okay, Miss Grayling?” he asked formally.
“I’m…fine,” she said. “A little shaken, that’s all.” She smiled
for the policeman and looked around at the shattered back glass. “We were
lucky,” she added when she noticed the devastation all around them.
“Very lucky. NOAA’s calling it a downburst,” the policeman
said. “Did a lot of damage on this city block and just swept right over
everything else.” He shook his head. “Go figure.”
Paul got out of the car, his hunger finally tamed by doing math
problems in his head. He grimaced when he saw the back windshield.
“I guess I’d better get her home and call the insurance company,”
Paul said. “She’d just signed up for law school, too.”
The policeman smiled at her. “I’ve got a son who just graduated
from it,” he confessed. “He’s going into corporate law.”
“I’m going to get a job with the Jacobsville district attorney’s
office when I graduate,” Isabel said shyly. “I’ve been plaguing them for
years.”
He laughed. “Not a job many people want. But good luck to you.”
He shook his head as he surveyed the damage. “Need to go to the emergency room?
We can take you over, if you want,” he added, indicating his partner, who was
standing by the patrol car.
“I’m fine. Not a scratch,” Isabel said. She couldn’t look at
Paul. “My nerves are pretty raw, that’s all.”
“Mine, too,” Paul said with a grin. “The car should be fine,
once I remove the tree from it,” he added with pursed lips.
“Let us help you with that.”
The men got the limb out of the back window and one of the
officers wrote up some notes on the damage for the insurance company. Paul
said he’d get back with them about a copy of the report in a few days. Then he
got Isabel back into the car, cranked it, waved to the police officers and
started back toward Jacobsville.
Isabel was too shocked and uncertain to speak, and Paul was too
angry at himself.
He turned on the radio to listen to the news, which was just
reporting the damage in the small area where the downburst had happened. He
kept it on and remained doggedly silent all the way back to Comanche Wells
while Isabel stared out the window and ground her teeth at a moment that would
live in her mind and her heart as long as she drew breath.
About Diana Palmer
The prolific author of more than one hundred books, Diana
Palmer got her start as a newspaper reporter. A New York Times bestselling
author and voted one of the top ten romance writers in America, she has a gift
for telling the most sensual tales with charm and humor. Diana lives with her
family in Cornelia, Georgia.
Connect with Diana
Purchase Links
.
Diana Palmer’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:
Monday, June 6th: Stranded in Chaos
Wednesday, June 8th: Stuck in Books – excerpt
Thursday, June 9th: Reading Reality
Friday, June 10th: A. Holland Reads – excerpt
Monday, June 13th: Written Love Reviews
Tuesday, June 14th: Mignon Mykel {Reviews}
Wednesday, June 15th: From the TBR Pile – excerpt
Friday, June 17th: Worth Getting in Bed For
Monday, June 20th: The Sassy Bookster – excerpt
Wednesday, June 22nd: Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews
Thursday, June 23rd: Diary of a Stay at Home Mom
Friday, June 24th: Books a la Mode –
excerpt
Monday, June 27th: A Bookaholic Swede – excerpt
Tuesday, June 28th: A Chick Who Reads
Tuesday, June 29th: Bookaholics Not-so-Anonymous
Thursday, June 30th: What I’m Reading
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Blog Tour: Q&A with Dorothea Benton Frank, author of All Summer Long
Author: Dorothea Benton Frank
Publisher: William Morrow
Date of publication: May 2016
All Summer Long follows one charming New York
couple–prominent interior designer Olivia Ritchie and her husband, Nicholas
Seymour, an English professor and true southern gentleman. They are seemingly
polar opposites, yet magnetically drawn together and have been in love for more
than fourteen years.
As they prepare to relocate to Charleston, South Carolina,
Olivia, the ultimate New Yorker, has reservations about the promise she made to
retire in the Lowcountry, where Nick wants to return home and lead a more
peaceful life. They are moving north to south, fast pace versus slow pace, and
downsizing. Nick is ecstatic. Olivia is not. She can’t let Nick know that their
finances are not what he thought. Her client list is evaporating, their
monetary reserves are dwindling, and maybe that house she picked out on
Sullivans Island needs too much work. Thank God for her assistant, Roni
Larini, her right (and sometimes left) hand.
As they find themselves pondering the next step of their
lives, Olivia and Nick travel with her billionaire clients and their friends
and are swept up in the world of the ultra-rich, exploring the globe with a
cast of zany eccentrics over one tumultuous, hot summer. All as Olivia grapples
with what lies ahead for her and Nick.
This is a story of how plans evolve and lives change in
unexpected ways, how even those who have everything are still looking for
something more. Even the most successful people can often struggle to keep
things together. All Summer Long asks the ultimate question:
Can money buy happiness? From Sullivans Island to Necker Island to Nantucket to
the beaches of Southern Spain, we’ll come to recognize the many faces of true
love; love that deepens and endures, but only because one woman makes a
tremendous leap of faith. And that leap changes everything.
Enjoy this Q&A with Dorothea!
In ALL SUMMER LONG, many of the characters are struggling with
money issues --- some don’t have enough, others want more, some think money
will buy them love and/or happiness. Can you tell us how you came upon this
theme for your latest novel?
My husband has worked
in and around the investment banking world for his entire career. As a
result we have come to know people who are firmly in the one percent. I
can say without reservation that money cannot buy you happiness but it’s better
to have some than not.
You seemed to enjoy pushing the limits of bad behavior with some
of the characters here, such as Ellen, the nanny from hell, and Dorothy, a
conniving, back-stabbing clothes hanger, among others. Is it hard to push those
limits yet keep the characters from becoming absurd? How do you keep from
crossing that thin line of credibility? Are any of these unattractive people
based on some you’ve come across in real life?
These terrible women
in my novel are the bathroom mirror personalities of many people I know.
What I have done is allowed them to do and say the things they think that they
would never have the nerve to do or say in real life.
As the author, what do you think the odds are of Bob Vasile
putting aside his adulterous habits in order to fully recommit himself to his
marriage and life with Maritza? Do you think he can change?
I believe in the power
of love. Many things happen in the name of it. Eyes are opened,
countries change hands. I’d like to think that Bob is finally going to calm
down and behave, not because he worries about Maritza cleaning his clock but
because he discovered that he deeply loves her and their daughter. And I
think the time they spend in the Nantucket house restores some kind of normalcy
to their lives.
Which location did you enjoy writing about the most: New York
City, Isle of Palms, or one of the fabulous locales visited with the Vasile
party?
Even as a daughter of
the Lowcountry of South Carolina, fully committed to its geography with all my
heart, I absolutely enjoy other places too. I have spent almost half of
my life in and around New York because it’s fabulous. The energy, the
creativity, the availability of top drawer anything at your fingertips is like
a drug. But it’s exhausting too. So I cherish the leisurely pace I
find in the Lowcountry and vacations in other places as well because we all
need time to refuel.
Let’s say it’s time to downsize the Frank household. Would you
compare yourself to Olivia, who has a tendency to hoard every beautiful object
that comes across her path, or are you more of a purger? What five things would
definitely make the move?
I purge. Five
things? I have a chandelier shaped like a pineapple that in the 1930’s
hung with seven others in a brasserie in Paris. I’d take the 1860 ship’s
skeleton clock we have because the movement is endlessly fascinating. I’d have
to pack my mother’s Bible, a wonderful picture I have of my father taken on a
battlefield during WWII and my great grandmother’s sugar shell, which even though
it’s not worth a fortune it is a treasure that reminds me of her gentility.
Truth time: Have you ever been to Necker Island? Swum with a
dolphin? Been on a luxury yacht like Le Bateau de l’Amour? If not,
what is the most “over the top” place you have been or thing you have done?
There’s no way I’m
getting mixed up with a dolphin in the name of a good time and the wildest
thing I have ever done is between me and my confessor. But let’s leave it
at this – I have a weakness for gorgeous boats.
ALL SUMMER LONG is filled with lots of what I call “eye candy for
the mind” --- descriptions of furnishings and accessories, fabrics and baubles,
all aspects of Olivia’s profession as an interior designer and decorator. Do
you use a decorator, or are you more in Dorothy’s (unnecessary annoyances!)
camp? How would you describe your personal style?
I have used a
decorator from time to time to gain access to fabrics and showrooms closed to
the public but mostly my sister jumps in when I need help. And to be honest,
at this stage in my life, I pretty much know what I like and don’t like.
Nothing tastes like summer so much as a simple tomato sandwich, a
delight that Nick introduces to Olivia upon their arrival to South Carolina.
I’m guessing it is also a favorite of yours, so here’s the big question: What
brand of mayonnaise do you use?
Dukes. And when
I’m out of it I make my own.
You split time between your home in New Jersey and the Low
Country. Do these homes have separate personalities, or would there be no
question as to who lives in both? Does your heart reside in both places, or
will the Low Country always be home with a capital H?
Our home in NJ is a
hundred year-old English manor house and it was slowly furnished over
twenty-five years with a lot of English antiques, old Persian rugs and Asian
ceramics because that’s what looks right here. Our home on Sullivan’s
Island is an ancient clapboard statement in minimalism, mainly because I
haven’t quite figured out what to do with it yet. But it bears only the
slightest resemblance to NJ. All the walls on the island are varying
shades of ivories and the palest grays on the spectrum. The art work is
all post 1990. And I have more than a few white pieces of upholstered
furniture. Still, somehow both houses reflect our taste, despite the
differences in their styles. But it’s capital H for the island, even if
we do have some major structural issues facing us.
If you were to write a sequel to ALL SUMMER LONG, which couple’s
future would you focus on: Olivia and Nick, and their new life in South
Carolina; or Bob and Maritza, and their attempt to reinvent their life
together?
Bob and Maritza offer
more color – no doubt about that. But I think you still need Olivia and
Nick to put it all in perspective. Would you like to see a sequel?
New York Times bestselling author Dorothea
Benton Frank was born and raised on Sullivans Island, South Carolina. She
resides in the New York area with her husband.
Purchase Links
Tour Stops
Tuesday, May 31st: A
Tattered Copy
Wednesday, June 1st: A
Chick Who Reads
Thursday, June 2nd: bookchickdi
Friday, June 3rd: Stranded
in Chaos
Monday, June 6th: Seaside
Book Nook
Tuesday, June 7th: Books
and Bindings
Wednesday, June 8th: Tina
Says…
Monday, June 13th: 5 Minutes For Books
Tuesday, June 14th: From the TBR Pile
Wednesday, June 15th: Sharon’s Garden of Book
Reviews
Wednesday, June 15th: Staircase Wit
Monday, June 20th: Kritters Ramblings
Wednesday, June 22nd: Diary of a Stay at Home Mom
Thursday, June 23rd: A Soccer Mom’s Book Blog
Friday, June 24th: Queen of All She Reads
TBD: Lavish
Bookshelf
Monday, June 13, 2016
Interview & Review of Under The Surface by Anne Calhoun
We are really excited to have author Anne with us today. She is promoting her latest book Under the Surface. Enjoy her interview and a sneak peek after some thoughts on the book.
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Date of publication: May 2016
Welcome to Eye Candy, the East Side’s
hottest nightclub where the bartenders are hot, the cocktails are fancy, and
danger lurks just under the surface…
Eve Webber, the gorgeous and savvy owner of Eye
Candy, knows better than anyone that growing up on the wrong side of the tracks
comes with certain complications. Determined to run a clean business and fix up
the East Side, Eve’s plans get temporarily stalled when a potential new hire
walks into her bar. The sexual chemistry crackling between them is a potent
distraction…even if she refuses to mix business with the promise of pleasure.
Detective Matt Dorchester lives by strict rules that
have kept him alive in impossible situations. When his latest undercover
assignment has him playing a bartender, his desire for the passionate owner has
him breaking every single one. Eve is in danger and her life depends on his
secrecy. But once their attraction reaches a climactic conclusion, Matt must
make a desperate choice: Tell her the truth about who he really is—or risk a
once-in-a-lifetime love to save her life?
My thoughts:
In Under the Surface, Eve Webber was asked by a friend of the family to helkp launder money through her business. She accepts, then promptly goes to the police with the information. After she agrees to help them in an undercover operation, Matt goes undercover as a bartender named Chad. Sparks are ignited from the beginning. For the most part, I enjoyed this book. It looks like it is a part of a series, but I never felt like I was missing anything. It stands up well as a stand alone.
I liked both Eve. I liked Eve's determination to make it on her own. She is a strong business woman who cares about the community. Matt was a little harder to understand. I felt like I got hints of why he was kind of cold and closed off, but I would have liked more about his background. Maybe more interaction with him and his brother Luke. The couple was good together and I was glad that Eve found out about Matt's real identity early on in the story. That made for a lot less angst over the "lies" between them. So, the romance part was my favorite part of the story.
As for the suspense, there wasn't as much as I would have liked. I guess I was expecting more than I got. The big scene in the end was kind of anti-climactic for me. I also felt like there were some loose ends left open. One other thing kept bothering me throughout the book. Eve makes a big deal about firing a bartender who had sex with a customer in the parking lot. Yet, she has no qualms about hitting on and sleeping with her employee. That just didn't sit right with me. Even if that employee was Matt.
Any way, if you are looking for a couple with heat, definitely check this one out. Eve and Matt have it in spades!
Hi, Kari and Autumn! Thanks for
having me!
Kari& Autumn: What inspired you to become a writer?
Anne: Well, the short answer is that a
lifelong love of reading inspired me to become a writer. The longer and more
realistic answer is that about a decade in corporate America doing everything
from designing executive compensation plans to project management to HR systems
development strengthened my desire to get a job where I could work from home on
my own schedule and call daydreaming “research”.
Kari& Autumn: Where do you come up with the ideas for your books?
Anne: Lots of places! The newspaper is one
of my favorite places to get ideas, especially for the suspense series that
kicks off with Under The Surface. Otherwise, I follow my interests. If I’m
interested in urban gardening, chances are good it will show up as a
character’s work or passion.
Kari& Autumn: What exciting projects are waiting in the wings?
Anne: Going Deep, the sequel to Under The
Surface, and featuring Matt Dorchester’s colleague Conn McCormick will be out
in November. Conn gets roped into playing bodyguard for hometown girl/pop star,
Maud Ward. I love bodyguard tropes, so this was a fun one to write. The third
book in the series, which is Ian Hawthorn’s story, may or may not be called
Reckless, or Falling Hard, or something else entirely, but will definitely be
out next summer. I’m finishing up the manuscript now.
Kari& Autumn: Who is your favorite literary character and why?
Anne: Depends on my mood. I love Anne
Elliott, from Jane Austen’s Persuasion. She’s devoted to her family, despite
their lack of respect for her interests and gifts, and has never given up her
love for Captain Wentworth. My second favorite is Miles Vorkosigan. The entire
Vorkosigan saga is one of my comfort reads.
Kari& Autumn: Just for fun, if you could be any animal, what would
it be and why?
Anne: A hawk. It’s such
a different way of being in the world. They’re fierce, deadly, and beautiful.
Excerpt:
One of the most basic components of police work was learning
to control a situation. A good undercover cop adjusted his personality and
attitude to manage the situation according to his objectives. Matt was as good
as they came, and that bluff should have worked.
Except Eve Webber raised the stakes without blinking an eye,
and suddenly white-hot, explicit images of exactly how they’d finish what she’d
started flashed in his brain . . . the skirt that barely covered her upper
thighs, her desk, and that sleek mass of black hair she kept tugging free from
the glossy color on her mouth. Heat flashed through him, the sensation
shockingly intense.
Your job is to keep her alive, not get her into bed.
Eve emerged from her office around seven, iPhone in hand,
and once she started working the room the vibe punched up several notches.
Watching her smile and talk to the customers triggered something he couldn’t
put his finger on.
During a brief lull, he turned to Tom, the steroid-buffed player
working the station next to his. “She looks familiar.”
Tom hit the button on the blender to mix a raspberry
daiquiri. “She won the newspaper’s sexiest female bartender contest two years
running before she switched over to events management at the Met.” “Fucking
moron” was implied at the end of that sentence.
A niggling memory surfaced of the newspaper’s Arts and
Culture section getting passed around before the shift briefing a couple of
years ago, right before he made the leap to detective and started working long-term
undercover assignments. The article’s text meandered alongside a full-length
picture of Eve, hair tumbled into her face, hands braced on the bar behind her,
wearing a white blouse unbuttoned deep in her cleavage, a tight, short black
skirt, black stockings, and heels. Her slim legs were crossed at the ankle, and
the angle of the shot made them seemed endless. He should have been focused on
the briefing, but he’d given the photo a good thorough look before handing it
to his partner, who’d looked even longer.
The provocative shot actually masked what won Eve the
contest. In person she radiated vitality, a sheer visceral force that drew
light, glances, attention. Even more surprising was the way she didn’t hoard
the energy but rather turned it back on whomever she was talking to. Like that
person was the only person in the room. Like she heard what they were saying,
and maybe even what they weren’t saying.
Life flowed into this woman. She amplified it and sent it
back out into the world, and he couldn’t stop watching her.
She checked in with her bouncer, the size of the Hulk, with
gang ink disappearing into the sleeves of his T-shirt.
“That’s not an off-duty cop,” he said.
“Friend of the family,” Tom replied over the music. “Someone
her dad knew.”
“Bars this busy usually hire the pros,” Matt said as he
pulled out a fresh rack of glasses.
“You know what those assholes charge? They’re fucking
expensive,” Tom said as he handed the drink across the bar. “And they’re nosy. Hot
Stuff doesn’t like strangers in her business.”
Matt would bet his Jeep that Eve wouldn’t like being called Hot
Stuff, but if Tom hadn’t figured that out, Matt wasn’t about to enlighten him.
He watched as she cleared a couple of abandoned glasses off the bar in front of
him and handed them to a passing busboy, then came around the corner of the
bar, trailing her fingers along the polished wood. He handed the drink to a
customer and gave her his full attention.
“How are you doing?” she asked, scanning his station.
“You tell me,” he replied, and if he got a little closer
than necessary to hear what she was saying over the thumping dance music, well,
he was just doing his job. Given the heat in the bar, he expected perfume,
something musky and sexy. Instead the faintest scent of mint and rosemary
drifted into the air between them when she tucked her hair behind her ears.
“I’m satisfied,” she said, not backing away. “The job’s
yours if you want it.”
She was less than a breath away from him. A shift of his
weight and a deep inhale, and they’d be breathing together like they were naked
and horizontal. The heat sizzled and popped between them and it didn’t take
training in body language to read the signals. Eve Webber wanted him.
Chad Henderson. His undercover identity, the
man he was pretending to be. Not him.
No matter who he was today, neither he nor Chad could have
her. He was supposed to keep her safe, make sure she didn’t change her mind
about working with the department, monitor any appearances Murphy made in Eye
Candy.
He wanted her.
“I want the job,” he said, not bothering to hide what he
really meant.
She looked at him through the layered, sweeping fall of hair
he wanted to brush back so he could see her eyes, her mouth. “Hang around after
close. I’ll give you the paperwork to fill out and bring back with you
tomorrow.”
He leaned in, as if he needed to speak with her, employee to
employer, but didn’t want to shout over the music. “See you later, boss,”
he rasped.
About the author:
After doing time at Fortune 500 companies on both
coasts, Anne landed in a flyover state, where she traded business casual for
yoga pants and decided to write down all the lively story ideas that got her
through years of monotonous corporate meetings. Her first book, LIBERATING
LACEY won the EPIC Award for Best Contemporary Erotic Romance. Her story WHAT
SHE NEEDS was chosen for Smart Bitch Sarah's Sizzling Book Club. Anne holds a
BA in History and English, and an MA in American Studies from Columbia
University. When she's not writing her hobbies include reading, knitting, and
yoga. She lives in the Midwest with her family and single-handedly supports her
local Starbucks.
Labels:
Anne Calhoun,
Book Excerpt,
Interview,
Kari,
Romantic Suspense
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