Pages

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Spotlight: Excerpt & Giveaway for The Wayward Assassin by Susan Ouellette

The Wayward Assassin by Susan Ouellette Banner

The Wayward Assassin

by Susan Ouellette

March 1-31, 2022 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

The Wayward Assassin by Susan Ouellette

Revenge knows no deadline.

Although told to stand down now that the Chechen rebel who killed her fiancé is dead, CIA analyst Maggie Jenkins believes otherwise and goes rogue to track down the assassin. Soon it becomes clear that failure to find Zara will have repercussions far beyond the personal, as Maggie uncovers plans for a horrific attack on innocent Americans. Zara is the new face of terrorism–someone who doesn’t fit the profile, who can slip undetected from attack to attack, and who’s intent on pursuing a personal vendetta at any cost.

Chasing Zara from Russia to the war-torn streets of Chechnya, to London, and finally, to the suburbs of Washington, D. C., Maggie risks her life to stop a deadly plot.

Praise for The Wayward Assassin:

“Ouellette, herself a former intelligence analyst for the CIA, imbues the exciting action with authenticity. Readers will want to see more of the wily Maggie . . .”
Publishers Weekly

“Every once in a decade you read a book like The Wayward Spy, which is thrilling, addictive, and sends you reading more thrillers, but you’ll go back to this stunning book by Susan Ouellette and reread this tour de force.”
The Strand Magazine, a Top 12 Book of the Year

Book Details:

Genre: Thriller
Published by: CamCat Books
Publication Date: March 15, 2022
Number of Pages: 416
ISBN: 0744304784 (ISBN13: 9780744304787)
Series: The Wayward Series, Book 2 || Each is a Stand Alone Book
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads | IndieBound.Org | CamCat Books

Read an excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

CIA Headquarters, August 16, 2004

Maggie Jenkins strode across the parking lot to the sidewalk that led her past the “Bubble,” the CIA’s white, dome-shaped auditorium. Just ahead, she paused at the bronze statue of Nathan Hale, the first American to be executed for spying for his country. A half dozen quarters lay scattered at his feet, left there by superstitious CIA employees hoping to garner good luck before deploying overseas. She fished around in her purse for a quarter, which she placed carefully atop Hale’s left shoe.

In just a few minutes, Maggie would learn whether her six-month deployment to the US embassy in Moscow had been approved. Even though Warner Thompson, the CIA’s deputy director for operations, had advocated on her behalf, there were several others, including an Agency psychiatrist and a team of polygraphers who were not convinced that she should be stationed overseas. She’s not ready yet, the shrink had opined, as if she were a piece of fruit not quite ripe enough for picking.

“Wish me luck,” she said to the statue as she turned for the entrance ahead. The CIA’s headquarters comprised two main buildings, both seven stories high, which were linked together by bright hallways with large windows overlooking a grassy courtyard. Maggie worked in the original headquarters building (OHB), which had been built some forty years earlier during the height of the Cold War. From the outside, OHB was a concrete monstrosity with no aesthetically redeeming value, at least in Maggie’s opinion. It reminded her of Soviet architecture—heavy on the concrete, light on the beauty.

And other than the expansive marbled foyer and the posh seventh-floor executive offices, OHB’s interior also was nothing to write home about. Every floor between the first and the seventh looked exactly the same—drab, hushed, windowless hallways lined with vault doors. Behind those heavily fortified doors sat rows of cubicles, a few conference rooms, and cramped offices here and there for mid-level managers.

Maggie pulled open the heavy glass entry door and ducked into a pristine lobby gleaming with white marble-clad walls. Ahead, the Agency’s bright blue logo covered a massive swath of the gray-and-white checked granite floor. To the right stood the Memorial Wall, which was emblazoned with black stars honoring dozens of Agency officers who’d perished in the line of duty. Maggie stopped and bit down on her lip.

The wall was an awesome, solemn reminder of lives given in the defense of freedom. Every time she walked past it, the sharp points of the eighty-fourth star—Steve’s star—ripped another gash in her heart. He’d been working under cover, so no outside friends or relatives had been invited to the ceremony. Warner had sat with her, stoic, as she clutched his hand and stared at the parade of speakers, not hearing a word they said.

She turned her gaze from the wall, slid her badge through the security turnstile, and offered a polite hello to the officer manning the front desk. She bypassed the elevator that she took every day to the fourth floor and made a beeline for the spacious employee cafeteria. In the far corner sat Warner Thompson, nose buried in the Washington Post.

“Morning,” she offered.

Warner rattled the paper and folded it lengthwise. “Coffee?” He pushed a Styrofoam cup across the quartz tabletop and smiled at her. His full head of hair had grayed considerably since last year, but it worked on him, enhancing his gray-flecked eyes and tanned complexion.

“Thanks.” Maggie sat.

“You ready?”

“I guess.” She sipped the coffee, still piping hot and perfectly sweetened. Warner knew her well. “What do you think they’ll say?”

“There’s no reason they should deny you the posting.”

“The psychiatrist thinks I’m obsessed with Zara.”

“He has a point.” Warner leaned forward, elbows on the table. “I told you not to bring her up in your evaluation sessions. If she’s still alive, we’ll find her, Maggie. I promise.”

“There’s no ‘if’ about it.” She waited until a man with a breakfast tray settled at a nearby table, then lowered her voice. “I saw her fleeing the farmhouse in Georgia. Who do they think set fire to the place after I escaped with Peter?”

Warner winced, obviously uncomfortable with the reminder of Peter, his former case officer, the one who’d been intimately involved in the murder of Steve, another case officer, and his protégé, nine short months ago. That Steve also had been Maggie’s fiancé made saying what he had to say all the more difficult. “The point is, the Agency needs to think that you’ve moved on from what happened in Georgia before they send you to such a sensitive overseas posting.”

“Moved on? Warner—”

He raised a hand to stop her. They’d had this discussion dozens of times since the previous November. Maggie had made it perfectly clear that there was no moving on, no closure, as people said these days, until she found Zara. “You know what I mean. You have to toe the party line and say you believe that everyone involved in Steve’s murder is dead. Period.”

“I still don’t understand why they won’t at least consider the possibility that Zara got away.”

Warner rubbed his forehead. “Because the Agency wants this to go away. A star operations officer was murdered by a terrorist and the terrorist is dead. It’s a simple, straightforward narrative. They don’t want the press finding out that another Agency employee and a senior US congressman were involved in Steve’s death. Everything is about the war on terror, Maggie. If the media found out that CIA and elected officials were mixed up with terrorists, there would be hell to pay.”

Maggie quoted the Biblical phrase inscribed on a wall in the CIA’s lobby. “The truth shall make you free.” She snorted. “The truth, unless it’s too embarrassing?”

Warner exhaled and shifted in his seat. “Both of us are lucky that the FBI investigation didn’t uncover . . . everything.”

He was right, of course. Last year, Maggie had destroyed classified documents and withheld other evidence from the FBI to protect them both. And Warner had been entangled, albeit unwittingly, with a Russian who had ties to both Zara and the congressman. Had the FBI known any of this, neither of them would be CIA employees today.

Maggie waved to a coworker who stared from the nearby coffee station. Warner didn’t frequent the employee cafeteria, so his appearance was sure to raise eyebrows. She’d grown accustomed to sidelong glances inside the Agency’s walls. Everyone recognized her. The media had splashed her face all over television and the internet after Congressman Carvelli’s death. There were some who whispered about her using her fiancé’s death to advance her career. Fortunately, they were in the minority. Most who knew about her role in uncovering the terrorist plot considered her a hero, a designation she refused to embrace. Her actions may have saved thousands of lives, but her motivation had been personal—to clear Steve’s name.

He was no traitor, and she’d proven it.

Maggie glanced at her watch. “We’d better go.”

Warner nodded. They grabbed their coffees and headed for the elevator bank. “Remember, you believe Zara died in the fire at the farmhouse,” Warner reminded her on the way up to the fourth floor.

“That’s what I told the shrink last session, but then he talked to the polygraph people.” Since leaving the House Intelligence Committee to return to the CIA earlier this year, she’d endured three marathon polygraph sessions. Every time, the stupid machine registered deception in her response to questions about whether she intended to violate government policies for her own benefit. “Now he thinks I’m up to something.”

Warner shrugged. “Aren’t you?”

Maggie laughed despite herself. “Always.”

***

Excerpt from The Wayward Assassin by Susan Ouellette. Copyright 2022 by Susan Ouellette. Reproduced with permission from CamCat Books. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Susan Ouellette

Susan Ouellette is the author of The Wayward Spy, a thriller that Publishers Weekly calls a “gripping debut and series launch.” She was born and raised in the suburbs of Boston, where she studied international relations and Russian as both an undergraduate and graduate student. As the Soviet Union teetered on the edge of collapse, she worked as a CIA intelligence analyst. Subsequently, Susan worked on Capitol Hill as a professional staff member for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI). Since her stint on Capitol Hill, she has worked for several federal consulting firms. Susan lives on a farm outside of Washington, D.C. with her family.

Catch Up With Susan Ouellette:
www.SusanOuellette.com
Goodreads
BookBub - @susanobooks1
Instagram - @susanobooks
Twitter - @smobooks
Facebook - @SusanOuelletteAuthor

 

 

Tour Participants:

Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!

 

 

ENTER TO WIN:

This is a giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Susan Ouellette and CamCat Books. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.

 

 

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Virtual Book Tours

 

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Review: Beneath the Stairs by Jennifer Fawcett

Author: Jennifer Fawcett
Publisher: Atria Books
Publication Date: February 2022

Few in sleepy Sumner’s Mills have stumbled across the Octagon House hidden deep in the woods. Even fewer are brave enough to trespass. A man had killed his wife and two young daughters there, a shocking, gruesome crime that the sleepy upstate New York town tried to bury. One summer night, an emboldened fourteen-year-old Clare and her best friend, Abby, ventured into the Octagon House. Clare came out, but a piece of Abby never did.

Twenty years later, an adult Clare receives word that Abby has attempted suicide at the Octagon House and now lies in a coma. With little to lose and still grieving after a personal tragedy, Clare returns to her roots to uncover the darkness responsible for Abby’s accident

Beneath the Stairs is definitely a slow burn thriller.  It involves the Octagon House that everyone says is haunted and evil.  When Clare and Abby were 13, they went into the house and came out a bit changed.  In present day, Clare returns to her home town after her friend Abby seemingly tries to commit suicide in the Octagon House.  Now she must face the events of her childhood in order to figure out what really happened to Abby in present day.

I think this is a good book to go into without knowing a lot of information up front. I ended up really enjoying the story. As I said, this is a slow burn thriller with a twist of supernatural.  It tells the story in the present day and the past as Clare slowly begins to remember what happened in the house.   It takes its time telling the story, but the pay-off is worth the journey.  I liked Clare's character.  She was a great narrator for the story.  The atmosphere inside the house, especially the basement was really creepy.  If you aren't a fan of dark basements, this book will not help your fear.  I'm glad my basement is very well lit and cozy!   I highly recommend picking this one up.


Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Review: This is Crazy by Natasha Madison

Author: Natasha Madison
Publisher: Dreamscape Media, LLC
Publication Date:  May 2020

Zara Stone
All my life, I’ve said I will never date a hockey player. I know better because I’ve seen and lived it all. My father is a hockey god, my brother is the captain of the most successful NHL team in the world, and my brother-in-law also plays in the league. Their lives are complicated, so I went in the opposite direction.
I fell in love with a scholar. But instead of proposing marriage, he broke up with me.
Three months later, I saw his engagement picture on Instagram. I couldn’t let him get away with that. No, it didn’t matter what, I was going to make that man see that I did
not need him.

Evan Richards
I was in the running to pass my point record from last year, ready to claim the number one spot in the league. On top of my game, I was riding my career high wave.
Then, Hockey’s Princess, Zara Stone tweeted me. She wanted me to crash her ex’s wedding.
The worst that could happen? A PR nightmare. The best? A fun night with a beautiful woman.
It started out as a game—something I’m good at. Her crazy idea twisted into something I wasn’t looking for, something neither of us wanted.

When push comes to shove, one thing runs through my mind:
This is Crazy. Also, this is crazy right.

This is Crazy was a bonus borrow on my library's Hoopla account.  Bonus Borrows come around every couple of months and allow you to sample several books without using your monthly borrows.  I'm glad I took a chance on this one.  This is Crazy is a sports romance featuring Zara and Evan. IT all starts with a tweet.  I thought these two were adorable together.  I loved how Evan was all in from the start.  He has definitely made it to my book boyfriend list.  Zara was a perfect match for him.  They had amazing chemistry and I loved their banter

The secondary characters were fun.  The close family dynamic made for a fun read.  I think this is a spin-off form another series so I'll have to seek out Zara's older siblings' stories.  I just loved their bond with Zara and each other.  Evan's sister was a piece of work though.  I'm not sure I would ever warm up to her.  This was a really sweet and fun romance without a lot of angst.  I highly recommend it.  


Monday, March 7, 2022

Blog Tour: Review of Accidentally Perfect by Marissa Clarke

Author: Marissa Clarke
Publisher: Entangled: Amara 
Publication Date: February 22, 2022
Mass Market Paperback: 400 Pages

Workaholic Lillian Mahoney has given everything to her job. The hugely popular lifestyle show she helped create monopolizes her time, energy, creativity, and anything remotely resembling a life. But all it takes is the show’s womanizing, egomaniac star throwing a massive hissy on live TV to utterly implode Lillian’s career in a New York minute.

Now Lillian’s hiding out in the gorgeous and completely unknown seaside village of Blink, Maine. Out of gas. A stolen wallet. A broken heel. And worse, she’s somehow managed to completely piss off the town’s resident hunk, Caleb Wright. She’ll show that hot, grumpy single father exactly what she’s made of.

But Blink isn’t quite what Lillian expects–and neither is Caleb…or his feisty teen daughter she can’t help but love. And while her entire life and career are in shreds, Lillian might just discover what happens when she gives her bad first impression a second chance…


My thoughts:

Accidentally Perfect is a small town romance featuring Lillian and Caleb.  Lilian is a big city girl who is on a forced vacation in the small town of Blink, Maine.  For me, this was just OK. It was cute and quaint, but almost too much.  I kind of felt like there was nothing new here and I've read this before. I didn't really feel any chemistry between Lillian and Caleb.  The one thing I did like was the secondary characters in the town.  They added a bit of flavor to the book.  I think if you are a fan of the Hallmark channel, you will like this one.  It just dragged for me.


About Marissa Clarke

Marissa Clarke is a multi award-winning, RITA® nominated author of romance for adults and teens. She lives on an island in the middle of a river. Seriously, she does. When not writing, she wrangles her rowdy pack of three teens, two Cairn Terriers, and one husband.

She also writes young adult novels as Mary Lindsey for Penguin USA. www.marylindsey.com. She loves to connect with readers and can be found at www.marissaclarke.com and on Instagram at @maryl_marissac.

Features:
Saturday, February 26th: @reading.is.my.happy.place
Monday, February 28th: @lovemybooks2020
Monday, February 28th: @readingforamoment
Wednesday, March 2nd: @z.readz.bookz
Thursday, March 3rd: @backporchpages
Friday, March 4h: @nerdy_book_lover_1987
Sunday, March 20th: IG @welovebigbooksandwecannotlie and TT: @welovebigbooks
TBD: Sunday, February 27th: @bookswritingandmore
TBD: Tuesday, March 1st: @everlasting.charm

Reviews:
Monday, February 28th: @pickagoodbook
Tuesday, March 1st: Books and Bindings
Friday, March 4th: SusanLovesBooks
Monday, March 7th: From the TBR Pile
Wednesday, March 9th: @nsiabblog
Thursday, March 10th: What is That Book About
Friday, March 11th: @literannie
Sunday, March 13th: Girl Who Reads
Monday, March 14th: @nurse_bookie
Wednesday, March 16th: Living My Best Book Life and @livingmybestbooklife
Friday, March 18th: @randi_reads
Wednesday, March 23rd: @jenniaahava
Friday, March 25th: Buried Under Books
Sunday, March 27th: She Just Loves Books and @shejustlovesbooks
Wednesday, March 30th: @fashionablyfifty
Thursday, March 31st: Cheryl’s Book Nook and @beastreader
Monday, April 4th: @webreakforbooks
TBD: Wednesday, March 2nd: Books Cooks Looks

Sunday, March 6, 2022

Spotlight: Excerpt from Murder at the CDC by Jon Land

MURDER AT THE CDC by Jon Land Banner

Murder at the CDC

by Jon Land

February 14 - March 11, 2022 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Murder at the CDC by Jon Land

2017: A military transport on a secret run to dispose of its deadly contents vanishes without a trace.

The present: A mass shooting on the steps of the Capitol nearly claims the life of Robert Brixton’s grandson.

No stranger to high-stakes investigations, Brixton embarks on a trail to uncover the motive behind the shooting. On the way he finds himself probing the attempted murder of the daughter his best friend, who works at the Washington offices of the CDC. The connection between the mass shooting and Alexandra’s poisoning lies in that long-lost military transport that has been recovered by forces determined to change America forever. Those forces are led by radical separatist leader Deacon Frank Wilhyte, whose goal is nothing short of bringing on a second Civil War. Brixton joins forces with Kelly Lofton, a former Baltimore homicide detective. She has her own reasons for wanting to find the truth behind the shooting on the Capitol steps, and is the only person with the direct knowledge Brixton needs. But chasing the truth places them in the cross-hairs of both Wilhyte’s legions and his Washington enablers.

"A wonderful mystery novel, riveting until the last page."
--Strand Magazine

"A terrific tale that never lets up."
--Sandra Brown

Book Details:

Genre: Political Thriller
Published by: Forge
Publication Date: February 15, 2022
Number of Pages: 304
ISBN: 978-1250238894
Series: Margaret Truman's Capital Crimes, #32 | Each is a stand alone work.
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

PROLOGUE

December, 2016

The tanker lumbered through the night, headlights cutting a thin swath out of the storm raging around it.

“I can’t raise them, sir,” said Corporal Larry Kleinhurst, walkie-talkie still pressed tight against his ear.

“Try again,” Captain Frank Hall said from the wheel.

“Red Dog Two, this is Red Dog One, do you read me? Repeat, do you read me?”

No voice greeted him in response.

Kleinhurst pressed the walkie-talkie tighter. “Red Dog Three, this is Red Dog One, do you read me? Repeat, do you read me?”

Nothing again.

Kleinhurst lowered the walkie-talkie, as if to inspect it. “What’s the range on these things?”

“Couple miles, maybe a little less in this slop.”

“How’d we lose both our lead and follow teams?”

Hall remained silent in the driver’s seat, squeezing the steering wheel tighter. Procedure dictated that they rotate the driving duties in two-hour shifts, this one being the last before they reached their destination.

“We must be off the route, must have followed the wrong turn-off,” Kleinhurst said, squinting into the black void around them.

Hall snapped a look the corporal’s way. “Or the security teams did,” he said defensively.

“Both of them?” And when Hall failed to respond, he continued, “Unless somebody took them out.”

“Give it a rest, Corporal.”

“We could be headed straight for an ambush.”

“Or I fucked up and took the wrong turn-off. That’s what you’re saying.”

“I’m saying we could be lost, sir,” Kleinhurst told him, leaving it there.

He strained to see through the big truck’s windshield. They had left the Tooele Army Depot in Tooele County, Utah right on schedule at four o’clock pm for the twelve-hour journey to Umatilla, Oregon which housed the Umatilla Chemical Depot, destination of whatever they were hauling in the tanker. The actual final resting place of those contents, Kleinhurst knew, was actually the Umatilla Chemical Agent Disposal Facility located on the depot’s grounds, about which rumors ran rampant. He’d never spoken to anyone who’d actually seen its inner workings, but the tales of what had already been disposed of there was enough to make his skin crawl, weapons that could wipe out the world’s population several times over.

Which told Kleinhurst all he needed to know about whatever it was they were hauling, now without any security escort.

“We’re following the map, Corporal,” Hall said from behind the wheel, as if needing to explain himself further, a nervous edge creeping into his voice.

He kept playing with the lights in search of a beam level that could better reveal what lay ahead. But the storm gave little back, continuing to intensify the further they drew into the night. Mapping out a route the old-fashioned way might have been primitive by today’s standards, but procedure dictated they avoid the likes of Waze and Google Maps out of fear anything web-based could be hacked to the point where they might be rerouted to where potential hijackers were lying in wait.

Another thump atop the ragged, unpaved road shook Hall and Kleinhurst in their seats. They had barely settled back down when a heftier jolt jarred the rig mightily to the left. Hall managed to right it with a hard twist of the wheel that squeezed the blood from his hands.

“Captain . . .”

“This is the route they gave us, Corporal.”

Kleinhurst laid the map between them. “Not if I’m reading this right. With all due respect, sir, I believe we should turn back.”

Hall cast him a condescending stare. “This your first Red Dog run, son?”

“Yes, sir, it is.”

“When you’re hauling a shipment like what we got, you don’t turn back, no matter what. When they call us, it’s because they never want to see whatever we’re carrying again.”

With good reason, Kleinhurst thought. Among the initial chemicals stored at Umatilla, and the first to be destroyed at the chemical agent disposal facility housed there, were containers of GB and VX nerve agents, along with HD blister agent. The Tooele Army Depot, where their drive had originated, meanwhile, served as a storage site for war reserve and training munitions, supposedly devoted to conventional ordnance. In point of fact, the military also stored nonconventional munitions there in secret, a kind of way station for chemical weapons deemed too dangerous to store anywhere else.

The normal route from Tooele to Umatilla would have taken just over ten hours via I-84 west. But a Red Dog run required a different route entirely off the main roads in order to avoid population centers. The point was to steer clear of anywhere people resided to avoid the kind of attention an accident or spill would have otherwise caused, necessitating a much more winding route Hall and Kleinhurst hadn’t been given until moments prior to their departure. A helicopter had accompanied them through the first stages of the drive, chased away when a mountain storm the forecasts had made no mention of whipped up out of nowhere and caught the convoy in its grasp. Now two-thirds of that convoy had dropped off the map, leaving the tanker alone, unsecured, and exposed, deadly contents and all.

Kleinhurst’s mouth was so dry, he could barely swallow. “What exactly are we carrying, sir?”

Hall smirked. “If I knew the answer to that, I wouldn’t be driving this rig.”

Kleinhurst’s eyes darted to the radio. “What about calling in?”

“We’re past the point of no return. That means radio silence, soldier. They don’t hear a peep from us until we get where we’re going.”

Kleinhurst watched the rig’s wipers slap at the pelting rain collecting on the windshield, only to have a fresh layer form the instant they had completed their sweep. “Even in an emergency? Even if we lost our escorts miles back in this slop?”

“Let me give it to you straight,” Hall snapped, a sharper edge entering his voice. “The stuff we’re hauling in this tanker doesn’t exist. That means we don’t exist. That means we talk to nobody. Got it?”

“Yes, sir,” Kleinhurst sighed.

“Good,” said Hall. “We get where we’re supposed to go and figure things out from there. But right now . . .” His voice drifted, as he stole a glance at the map.

Suddenly Kleinhurst lurched forward, straining the bonds of his shoulder harness to peer through the windshield. “Jesus Christ, up there straight ahead!”

“What?”

“Look!”

“At what?”

“Can’t you see it?”

“I can’t see shit through this muck, Corporal.”

“Slow down.”

Hall stubbornly held to his speed.

“Slow down, for God’s sake. Can’t you see it?”

“I can’t see a thing!”

“That’s it, like the world before us is gone. You need to stop!”

Hall hit the brakes and the rig’s tires locked up, sending the tanker into a vicious skid across the road. He tried to work the steering wheel, but it fought him every inch of the way, turning the skid into a spin through an empty wave of darkness.

“There!” Kleinhurst screamed.

“What in God’s name,” Hall rasped, still fighting to steer when a mouth opened out of the storm like a vast maw.

He desperately worked the brake and the clutch, trying to regain control. He’d been out in hurricanes, tornados, even earthquakes. None of those, though, compared to the sense of airlessness both he and Kleinhurst felt around them, almost as if they were floating over a massive vacuum that was sucking them downward. He’d done his share of parachute jumps for his airborne training and the sensation was eerily akin to those first few moments in freefall before the chute deployed. He remembered the sense of not so much being unable to breathe, as being trapped between breaths for an absurdly long moment.

The rig’s nose pitched downward, everything in the cab sent rattling. The dashboard lights flickered and died, the world beyond lost to darkness as the tanker dropped into oblivion.

And then there was nothing.

CHAPTER 1

“The hand of God is upon You! He is my shepherd and I shall not want!”

Those were the last words high school sophomore Ben McDonald heard before the shooting started. He and the other students clustered around him from the Gilman School in Maryland were on a school field trip to the Capitol Building from their Baltimore prep school, the first such trip taken since academic life returned to a degree of normalcy following the endless coronavirus nightmare. Everyone had shown up in their school uniforms, the buses had left on schedule, and the students felt like pioneers, explorers blazing a trail back into the world beyond shutdowns and social distancing.

The reduction in Capitol tour group size was still in force and had necessitated the two bus-loads of students to be divided into five groups of fifteen, give or take, three chaperones allotted to each. Ben and his twin brother Robbie’s group had gone first and they had found themselves lingering on the Capitol steps, taking pictures and chatting away with their local congressman and senator who’d come out to greet and mingle with the students on the steps at the building’s east front.

“Why are you still wearing a mask?” one of them had asked the congressman, but Ben had already forgotten the answer.

He remembered checking the time on his phone just before he heard the first shots. Ben thought they were firecrackers at first, realizing the truth a breath later when the screams began and bodies started flying.

“I am doing the Lord’s work! I am a sacrifice to his word!”

Somehow Ben gleaned those words through the screams and incessant hail of fire. The shots were coming so fast he wasn’t sure if the shooter was firing on semi or full auto. The boy never actually saw him as more than a shape amid the blur before him, enveloping his vision like a dull haze. The thin sheer curtain drawn over his eyes didn’t keep him from recording bodies crumpling, keeling over, tumbling down the steps. The force of a bullet’s momentum slammed a classmate into him, sparing Ben the ensuing fusillade that turned the other boy’s back into a pin cushion.

My brother!

The panic and shock of those initial seconds had stolen thought of Robbie from him. He wheeled about, covered in the blood of boy who had dropped off the scene.

“Robbie!”

Did he cry out his name or only think it? The steps around him looked blanketed in khaki and blue, pants and blazers that made up his Gilman uniform. The sound of gunfire continued to resound in his ears, but he wasn’t sure the shooter was still firing because no more bodies seemed to be falling. People were running in all directions, crying and screaming, Ben remaining frozen out of fear for his brother.

“Robbie!”

He saw his brother’s sandy blond hair draped down from one of the marble steps onto another. Nothing else at first, just the hair. Maybe he had dove atop a friend who’d been wounded to spare that kid more fire—that was Robbie. But there was no one beneath Him, and . . . And . . .

He wasn’t moving, his arms stretched to the sides on angles that looked all wrong. Ben dropped to his knees next to Robbie, his pants sinking into pooling patches of blood which merged and thickened beneath him. He felt something pinching him along right side of his ribcage and saw his blue shirt darkening with a spreading wave of red in the last moment before he collapsed next to his brother.

***

Excerpt from MURDER AT THE CDC by Jon Land. Copyright 2022 by Jon Land. Reproduced with permission from Jon Land. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Jon Land

JON LAND is the USA Today bestselling author of fifty-eight books, including eleven in the critically acclaimed Texas Ranger Caitlin Strong series, the most recent of which, Strong from the Heart, won the 2020 American Fiction Award for Best Thriller and the 2020 American Book Fest Award for Best Mystery/Suspense Novel. Additionally, he has teamed up with Heather Graham for a science fiction series that began with THE RISING (winner of the 2017 International Book Award for best Sci-fi Novel) and continues with BLOOD MOON, to be published in November of 2022. He has also written six books in the Murder, She Wrote series of mysteries and has more recently taken over Margaret Truman's Capital Crimes series, with his second effort, MURDER AT THE CDC, to be published in February of 2022. Jon is known as well for writing the film DIRTY DEEDS, a teen comedy starring Milo Ventimiglia and Zoe Saldana, which was released in 2005. A graduate of Brown University, he received the 2019 Rhode Island Authors Legacy Award for his lifetime of literary achievements.

Catch Up With Our Author:
JonLandBooks.com
Goodreads
BookBub - @JonLand2
Twitter - @JonDLand
Facebook - @JonLandAuthor

 

 

Tour Participants:

Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!

 

 

Join In and Enter to Win:

This is a giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Jon Land. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.

 

 

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Virtual Book Tours

 

Saturday, March 5, 2022

Review: A Night to Die For by Lisa Schroeder

Author: Lisa Schroeder
Publisher: Underlined
Publication Date: March 2022
 
All Mario wants is one normal night before he graduates. He's spent most of high school riding solo and gaming with his only friend, Lucas. But when his mom asks him to take Elana Dexter to the prom as a favor to her father, his mother’s boss, he figures this might be his chance to be less of a loner.

Only, the night takes a turn quickly. First, Mario gets crowned Prom King alongside the school’s it-girl, Maribelle Starr. Which is weird enough. But what’s weirder is that when they put the crown on his head, hundreds of worms slither out of it and all over Mario. Just when Mario thought the night couldn’t get any worse, he sees something on the side of the road while driving Elana home. That something is Prom Queen Maribelle Starr—murdered and left for dead.

All Mario wanted was to go to prom...but somehow, he ended up in hell.


In A Night to Die For, Mario finds a dead body in a ditch and ends up getting charged with her murder.  He says he is innocent.  There are several other people who had means and motive enough to kill hte prom queen.  This may get a little spoiler, but honestly I'm saving you time.  I don't really recommend this book.  I had just way too many issues with it.  

There were way too many perspectives in this book.  A few of them were completely unnecessary.  I listened to the audiobook  and it was narrated by a full cast.  Which was cool, but there were still too many. One thing I actually did like was Mario's friend.  He was a ray of sunshine and the only really likable character. The rest of them were stereotypes and annoying. I couldn't figure out if the author wanted me to like the victim or not.

Lets talk about the detectives.  There is no way that Mario would be charged for murder based on such minute evidence. No detective would arrest someone without really interviewing the crucial other person at the scene or do some ACTUAL detective work.   No DA would issue an arrest warrant based on one piece of small evidence.  Why did they not look for the victim's phone?  The reason behind the cop pushing for Mario to be the killer was awful and ridiculous. If this was real life, I would hope that man quit his job. I will say it again...never talk to the police without a lawyer.  EVER.  Also, tell your lawyer everything.  It will save you a whole lot of time and heartache. 

I wanted to throw this book across the room, but then I would have broken my iPod.  I predicted the killer very easily, I just couldn't figure out the how.  I think I could rant for a long time on this so I'll just end with don't bother with this one.  Save your reading time.




Friday, March 4, 2022

Blog Tour: Review & Excerpt from Eloping with the Lady by Daisy Landish

 


Author
: Daisy Landish
Narrator: Harry Frost
Length: 1 hour 22 minutes
Publisher: Daisy Landish2022
Genre: Historical Romance
Series: The Lady Series, Book 4
Release date: Dec. 30, 2021

Synopsis: Eloping with The Lady is the fourth standalone Regency Romance story in The Lady series.

As the firstborn daughter of the Allington family, Prunella bears the weight of her mother's social-climbing expectations. She knows the rules and has made a point of setting the best example possible for her younger sister Arabella. Prunella's first Season is going swimmingly and she expects to make a most satisfactory match. Until she meets George...

All the stories can be read in any order. Though this is the fourth story, it unfolds before Taming The Lady.

Buy Links for Audiobook #4
Buy on AmazonAudibleiTunes
 


My thoughts:

Eloping with the Lady is the fourth book in this series.  This one is Prunella's story.  In the previous three books, Prunella is already married and her brother is back from his exile in Paris.  This one explains all of those events.  So essentially it takes place before the first book.  This one is by far my favorite of the four I have read so far.  I thought Prunella and George were cute together.  Even though it's quick, I felt a lot of chemistry between them. I loved watching Prunella finally stick up for herself and stop being the "perfect" daughter.   I highly recommend this one.










About the Author: Daisy Landish

When she’s not writing romance books, Daisy Landish enjoys hiking at dawn and riding into the sunset on her trusted steed, Rosebud.

About the Narrator: Harry Frost

Harry Frost is an English voice actor specialising in audiobook narration and production. He’s passionate about the power of the audio medium to bring literature to life in every sense; to turn books into true companions for life as it is lived, rather than things one must escape the world and defer responsibility to read. His studio is in rural Leicestershire, he has recently found an unlikely love of Economics, and he mixes a really good Manhattan.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Review: The Cage by Bonnie Kistler

Author: Bonnie Kistler
Publisher: Harper
Publication Date: February 2022

On a cold, misty Sunday night, two women are alone in the offices of fashion conglomerate Claudine de Martineau International. One is the company's human resources director. Impeccably dressed and perfectly coiffed, she sits at her desk and stares somberly out the window. Down the hall, her colleague, one of the company's lawyers, is buried under a pile of paperwork, frantically rushing to finish.

Leaving at the same time, the two women, each preoccupied by her own thoughts, enter the elevator that will take them down from the 30th floor.

When they arrive at the lobby, one of the women is dead. Was it murder or suicide?

In the beginning of The Cage, two women go into an elevator and only one comes out alive. The rest of the book follows Shay as she tries to prove that she did didn't kill Lucy.  It also follows one other perspective as well.  This isn't exactly a thriller.  It's more of a legal mystery.  I have kind of mixed feelings about the book.  I liked it, I just didn't love it.

I almost DNF'd it. I wasn't a fan of Shay in the beginning. She recounts the events of the five years before the elevator event.  All of her choices were really surprising given her education.  I had a hard time buying that a lawyer would react the way she did after she was laid off.  She didn't want to apply for lower level law firms but has no problem taking a job in a bar when desperate.  I also had a hard time buying that  lawyer would speak to the police without her own representation.  Especially one who had volunteered for the Innocence Project.  

At about the halfway mark, the book got better and I started liking Shay a lot more.    Shay ended up being a lot smarter and conniving than I was expecting.  There were some twists that I enjoyed. The ending was perfect.  I do recommend this one,  If you go into it expecting more of a legal mystery, then you will enjoy it a lot more.



Wednesday, March 2, 2022

February Mini Musings (6 Mini reviews)




Lightning in a Mirror
:  This is the final book in the Fogg Lake series.   It was fine as the last book in a trilogy. It wasn't my favorite of the series.  There were a lot of answers and a nice wrap up.  But I wasn't that excited about the couple.  They were kind of boring and didn't really have any chemistry.  AS a whole though, I do recommend this trilogy.

House 23: This book was just OK.  It was kind of a mixed bag.  I was bored, yet intrigued enough to see what was going to happen.  It was more violent than I was expecting.  I did like the ending, so there it that.  I'm not sure I would really recommend it though.

I Temporarily Do
:  I thought his one was really adorable.  It's a friends to lovers/ marriage of convenience story.  I loved both Emmy and Beckett.  It was just so much fun watching them realize they really loved each other.  I definitely recommend this one.

Spell's Bells:  This one is the third book in the series. I am really enjoying this series.  Emma Hart is a funny and smart character.  I am loving her growing friendships with the people in the town.  We get to learn a little more about her coven in this one.  This is just a really fun light-hearted series and one I highly recommend.

Halfmoon Ridge
:  I really did not like this book.  It was way too long. There were things that happened that were just ignored.  The main character is assaulted and almost raped twice.  She has clear PTSD and it is never taken care of.  She claims not know what a panic attack is and is perplexed that she keeps having them.  Really?  It's 2022.  Who hasn't heard of panic attacks. Once she gets her man, it's all forgotten. The romance was non-existent.  The hero was a jerk to her through most of the book and then all of a sudden he admits he loves her? I don't recommend this one.

Horror Hotel:  This one was Ok.  I was hoping for more of a spooky ghost story. But I didn't get that.  I predicted the murderer fairly early on.  The characters were kind of generic. The ending satisfying, but predictable.

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Spotlight: Who Are You Following by Sadie Robertson Huff

Publisher: Thomas Nelson 
Publication Date: February 1, 2022
Hardcover: 224 pages

If influencers have power over us, who are you allowing to influence you?
In an online world obsessed with follows and likes, it’s important to consider what you’re really searching for. When you follow someone, it’s typically because you want to be like them or live like they do­–but who have you placed as your role models?
In Who Are You Following? bestselling author and social media personality Sadie Robertson Huff dives deep into exploring who we are allowing to influence our daily thoughts and actions. With an excellent grasp of scriptural truths, using current research, surveys, and personal and biblical stories, Sadie draws on her own experience as a social media influencer and addresses topics such as
  • how to go from being liked to being truly loved
  • our true motives for fame
  • being seen from the outside versus being known
  • comparing ourselves to others
  • questioning why did I post that?!
  • how to respond to cancel culture
  • wondering does God still love me?
This book is perfect for young Christians wondering how they can live a vibrant, bold, and uncompromising life of faith in God by following the Messiah–the ultimate influencer. Discover the love, purpose, and fulfillment that is found only in Jesus.

About Sadie Robertson Huff

Sadie Robertson Huff is a New York Times bestselling author, speaker, influencer, and founder of Live Original. Communicating as a sister and friend, Sadie is on a mission to reach the world with the message of Christ. The host of the popular podcast Whoa, That’s Good, which launched in 2018, she continues to top charts and minister to millions of listeners as she engages with current leaders, asking them to answer one question: “What is the best advice you have ever been given?” Live Original, Sadie’s blog, features encouraging and transparent messages from her and her closest friends, and she is also founder of the online community and app LO Sister, which are designed to cultivate sisterhood through Bible studies and workshops. Sadie, her husband, Christian, and their daughter reside in Louisiana.


Instagram features:
Monday, February 28th: @welovebigbooksandwecannotlie
Tuesday, March 1st: @shobizreads
Tuesday, March 1st: @lovemybooks2020
Wednesday, March 2nd: @travelerswife4life
Thursday, March 3rd: @baytownbookie
Thursday, March 3rd: @fashionablyfifty
Friday, March 4th: @secretreadinglife
Friday, March 4th: @literately_speaking
Saturday, March 5th: @beautyinthebinding

Reviews:
Monday, February 28th: @suzylew_bookreview
Tuesday, March 1st: From the TBR Pile – spotlight
Wednesday, March 2nd: @webreakforbooks
Friday, March 4th: Living My Best Book Life and @livingmybestbooklife
Saturday, March 5th: @parksidereads
Monday, March 7th: The Calico Books and @thecalicobooks
Wednesday, March 9th: A Baker’s Perspective
Thursday, March 10th: The Bookish Dilettante
Friday, March 11th: @vivibookshelf
Sunday, March 13th: @djreadsbooks
Monday, March 14th: @kristens.reading.nook
Wednesday, March 16th: @karen_runwrightreads
Friday, March 18th: @jenniaahava
Monday, March 21st: Tabi Thoughts
Wednesday, March 23rd: @rozierreadsandwine
Thursday, March 24th: Diary of a Stay at Home Mom