Where I share my love of books with reviews, features, giveaways and memes. Family and needlepoint are thrown in from time to time.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Scrambled by Kathryn Jones (Book Excerpt and Giveaway)


Scrambled
by Kathryn Jones

What happens to an unhappy woman who leaves her husband only to discover that she may have just made a terrible mistake? So horrible, her choice threatens to end her very life?

Susan believes that the grass is greener on the other side. Not that her current life is bad, necessarily; it’s just boring and lifeless, kind of like the old matted rug on her dining room floor. Susan thinks her marriage has just grown—well, old. Her husband, Bob, has gained tremendous weight and continues to gain, and his health suffers. She must work at a job she hates full-time to provide the little sustenance they have. He, on the other hand, works very little (because of his health) and prefers spending his days watching television or surfing the Internet. Besides, there’s her problem of not getting pregnant that can’t help but contribute to his unhappiness.

Can Susan continue to live her life at the hotel knowing that she might be killed herself or imprisoned for life? Will she be able to find the real murderer with the help of the eccentric Ms. Martha Boaz?


Please enjoy Chapter 1 of Scrambled, courtesy of Kathryn Jones.  She is also offering an ebook copy of Scrambled to one of my readers!  Just enter through the rafflecopter below.



Eating Out

Six months later a thought occurred to her that the fat man had been the catalyst; her last straw, her wake up call.
“Are you open?” the man had asked. His voice had been deep and yawning like the Grand Canyon.
“Of course.” She looked up. The man was fat—even more endowed than her own husband who’d gained a mere seventy pounds since their wedding day 20 years ago. Fat oozed like soft butter from his great waistline. His black and white checkered shirt, though buttoned, gaped to his belly, revealing a matted mass of hair. She tried not to stare at it. The word “pig,” came to mind.
“Did you find everything all right?” she asked.
“Just ring me up,” he growled, scratching his unshaven face. “I have an appointment.”
If someone had said, ‘Make a wish, Susan,” she would have wished for freedom in that moment—freedom from the customer, and all those to follow; freedom from her horrible job and marriage, freedom from unavailable friends and broken down cars. She would work a bit somewhere else, and then travel to some exotic location. Perhaps Paris or Hawaii…
“Miss!”
Susan felt the crisp dollar bill in her hand. “Sorry, sir,” she said, handing the disgruntled customer his change. She watched his back-end leave the store. Blubber, bump. Blubber, bump. Blubber, bump…
It was the fat man who had finally given her the courage to take care of herself for the first time. Perhaps it was not a conscious choice, but it was definitely a choice. She left work that day never to return, got on a bus, leaving her rotten car in the parking lot—her fat husband wondering where she’d gone. She hadn’t looked back.
Occasionally, like today, when the hotel lights burned deeply into her skull, and her eyes felt heavy from the tasks of serving, she would remember. The terrible times when she tried to get pregnant. His anger about her job, or the way she folded his underwear. She would think about the way he spoke to her; hardly, and then, harshly, as if the words he had meant to say to her long ago needed to come out now in one heated rush.
Also, the short moments of tenderness—her broken-down heap of a car that had still managed to get her to work, the doughnuts and candy bars that always made it into the kitchen cupboards and then quite naturally were fed by him into her open mouth—because he always shared what he bought for himself. All those moments that made her life one with him. And now she was left with an aloneness she couldn’t begin to understand.
“Jenny?” The pounding on Susan’s front door made her blink. She would never get used to her new name even if she lived to be a hundred years old. She stood, walked to the solid piece of wood called her door, and peered wearily out the keyhole even though she didn’t need to.
“What is it this time, John?” Tonight, John seemed to be wearing some sort of pullover sweater and blue jeans. His short, red hair was combed down the middle, and splayed to either side like the opening entrails of a fish. She might have laughed if she hadn’t cared for him. He was the dorkiest man she’d ever met, albeit the nicest.
“Cup of sugar?” She could see the white cup held eagerly in his left hand. He pushed it forward to the keyhole.
“I’m tired tonight.”
She removed her eye from the keyhole, wondering if he blushed. He always turned red whenever she spoke of anything having to do with sleep, or darkness, or her new down comforter. She wasn’t sure why unless certain words created in him a desire for something he would never get from her. Was it her imagination, or could she feel him going red beyond the door? And he was probably grinning too, now that he’d managed to breathe a little more evenly.
“Come on Jenny.”
“Oh, all right.”
The dead bolt cracked heavily, the double set of chains flicked to the sides of the heavy door, and she turned the knob of her upstairs room. The Hotel Camaro, once a manor in the town of Walnut Hill, city of Hampshire, had plenty of solid wood even where it didn’t seem needed—above her bed, on one of the walls in the living room, even above her head on the carved cornices seen throughout the building. Everything reeked of oldness and renovation—though change would probably not happen in her lifetime—if ever. The owner, Carter Childs, held his money like a tight fisted kid with his only penny; except Carter had many pennies though he told everyone otherwise. The tramps that lived at the hotel were a continuous reflection of the future of the hotel and it’s lower than life standards.
John smiled. His slightly yellow teeth reminded Susan of the eggs she had boiling on the stove.
“You don’t mind getting the sugar yourself?”
“No problem. But are you sure you want eggs?” She could hear his large feet clunking to the pantry as she stirred the boiling eggs with a spoon.
Yes, the egg bomb incident. How could she forget? What had she been doing? Oh, yes. Carter wanted to see her, an overflowing toilet in room 10, he’d said—John’s room. And she’d left the boiling eggs on the stove. When the eggs exploded an hour later she was finishing with the water overflow mishap and had just re-entered the hallway. Carter was beyond angry when he heard. Her hotel room smelled like rotten eggs for days and she’d spent weeks walking outside and breathing in the musty city of Southern Hampshire before permanently returning to her room.
“You do look tired.”
John had the sugar in his white bowl, but like always, he was not returning to the door. “What can I do?”
“I just need some sleep.”
John blushed. “Okay,” he said, looking for a place to sit on the old brown couch—her only couch in the very sparse room.
“You’d better go.”
“Maybe I can help.”
“You promised.”
John rolled his large blue eyes. “I know,” he said, “but you need someone.”
It had taken Susan six long months to trust John with a few facts about her life; others she had made up to cover her identity. Her real name was one of them. That she’d never been married was another—a sure fire mistake she would later see more clearly. Perhaps John would have been less interested in her if he knew she had simply run away from her husband. She wondered what he would think of her if he knew of her shallow thoughts of him that had created this mess in the first place. She wondered if he’d understand that all of her thoughts weren’t shallow, that there was something else she never spoke of with anyone, the surest reason for her departure. Was he searching for her? Would she turn on the television one day only to discover her face on the small screen? Or would he be grateful? Was he pleased that she had left him? Would he want to find her simply to file the divorce papers? She wondered how long it had taken before he’d discovered she was missing. She was glad they had no children, but only for this reason; there would be no family missing her.
Except her mother of course; her father was dead, and her sister who lived in Virginia. Kate would have a fit, perhaps even look for her for awhile, and then she’d get caught up once more in the corporate life and forget all about her. Just like when they were kids and the doll collection was replaced by fake dollar bills and glittering coins purchased as a set from the grocery store. Kate would later become a teller, and then she would work her way up the company from Payroll Manager to Director of Human Resources. In addition to bossing all the people around, she would get her degree in management, leaving Susan behind to take on the menial jobs.
Susan would never attend college, would marry the first man who even took a look at her—her husband, Bob, and they would try to have children—without success of course. In the end, they would sit together, watch T.V. and he would eat and feed her what he’d bought.
Nothing stuck on her bones. But with him, it was almost like, by getting fat, he was getting pregnant instead of her. At first she’d joked about it. And then the joking made him watch television alone in the basement, sneak food at odd hours, and make excuses for his sorry life.
Susan turned to look at John. He had been silent for an unreasonable amount of time. “Sorry,” she started and then realized he was gone.





About the author: When I was young I thought I had to sound like a great writer to be one. It was all so overwhelming; now I know I only need to sound like myself. My ideas come from two primary sources. My work might spark from the enlightening words of a friend, teacher or writing prompt. At other times, I am sitting in a very still space and the words I should write come to me like a powerful and glowing wind.

My favorite tool is the pen. Though computer keys get the words down quicker and easier, I like to put pen to paper, smell the ink, see the words as they are developed and renewed by new phrases or thoughts.

I enjoy traveling to wherever the character takes me. This often means even I am surprised and warmed at the outcome. In the end, when my writing is done, I like to watch the eyes of the reader whenever I can. Their reflective expression gives me the greatest glimpse into what my writing has become.

Before I was one, I loved to read books-or at least, pretend to. I couldn't walk yet but I would crawl to the bottom shelf for what I wanted. My Grandma says my books were placed near the floor for that very reason, and my mother speaks of me pulling my favorite book from the shelf and crawling back to the couch with the book safely in tow.

I would sit on the couch and pretend to read, speaking the language of some foreign diplomat-or perhaps, the tongue of angels, my mother wasn't quite sure which, and when I was done, I would crawl back to the shelf for another story.

When I am not writing I'm reading. I am an avid reader of the scriptures and books of spiritual merit. I have been married 32 years and enjoy teaching and working with youth and children-including my own three girls, three grand-daughters and grandson.

A published writer since 1987, I have published books, newspaper and magazine articles for teens and adults.










Scrambled
Publisher/Publication Date:  Amazon Digital Services
ASIN: B00914APYC
256 pages


Monday, September 17, 2012

The Rebel Princess by Anne M. Strick (Blog Tour with Giveaway)

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VIRTUAL BOOK TOUR September 10 - October 5

September 10 - Reading Addiction Blog Tours - Meet and Greet
September 10 - Book Reviews and More - Giveaway/Guest Post/Excerpt/PROMO
September 11 - 
September 12 - The Book Faery Reviews - Excerpt/PROMO
September 13 - Kimmie's Bookshelf - Giveaway/Excerpt/PROMO
September 14 - LoveLiveLife Reviews- Review/Guest Post/Giveaway/Excerpt

September 15 - Library Muse - Giveaway/Excerpt/PROMO
September 16 - Firestar Books - Interview/Giveaway/PROMO
September 17 - Books and Needlepoint -Giveaway/PROMO
September 18 - What's on the Bookshelf - Guest Post/Giveaway/Excerpt/PROMO
September 19 - My Escape - Giveaway/Excerpt/PROMO
September 20 - Dive Under the Cover - Review/Excerpt
September 21 - My Miscellaneous Bookshelf - Review/Giveaway/Excerpt
September 22 - The Bookshelf - Giveaway/Guest Post/PROMO
September 24 - My Reading Addiction - Review/Giveaway/Excerpt
September 25 - Debbie Jean's Blog - Review/Giveaway/Excerpt
September 26 - My Chaotic Ramblings - Guest Post/ Excerpt/PROMO
September 27 - My Cozie Corner - Review/Giveaway
September 28 - Reviews By Molly - Review/Giveaway
September 29 - 
September 30 - Jenn Renee Read - Review/Guest Post/Giveaway
October 1 - Gothic Angel Book Reviews- Review/Giveaway/Guest Post/Excerpt
October 2 - Book Lovin Mama's - Review/Guest Post/Giveaway
October 3 - Beth Art From the Heart - Review/Excerpt
October 4 - Reader Girls - Review/Giveaway/Excerpt
October 5 - The Adventures Within- Review/Interview/Guest Post/excerpt


The Rebel Princess

by Anne M. Strick

Synopsis:

An insider's first-ever behind-the-scenes scoop on how movies are REALLY made: gritty,  grinding, tunnel-vision labor, back-stage intrigue, explosive dramas, parties, and relationships that last a night or a lifetime. Larger-than-life characters who live life with fervor, and contend with their own inner demons and one another, all in the pressure cook er of a location shoot in the exotic world of Mexico.  This romp of a story  follows 

the making of a movie from pre-production through wrap.  A hotly passionate love story elevate the stakes.

Complete  with sex,  suspense and a possible murder.




 Anne M.Strick has spent over twenty years in the movie industry. She has worked for Universal, Warners, Paramount and EMI, as a Unit Publicist, Project Coordinator and National Publicity Director,  and  with such Hollywood legends as Jack Nicholson, James Earl Jones, Sean Penn, Arnold Schwarzenegger, David Lynch, Sting and Dino De Laurentiis, among many others.  She has published theater reviews, articles in Parents Magazine , Frontier and The Nation, and six books: two novels, two self-help books, one memoir (a best-seller in Italy); and a non-fiction, scholarly critique of our adversary trial system. (”remarkable”) . Born in Philadelphia, and educated at Bennington College and UCLA, she lives in Los Angeles.

 Contact Links:

Purchase A Rebel Princess:


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Sunday, September 16, 2012

It's Monday! What are you reading? (Sept 17, 2012)



What are you reading on Mondays is hosted by Sheila at One Person's Journey - You can hook up with the Mr. Linky there with your own post - but be sure and let me know what you are reading too! 



Current Giveaways:

Desert Rice by Angela Scott  - ends Sept 17
Taking Charge by Mandy Baggot (ebook)
Last Wish of Summer by Phillip Overton - Ends Sept 22
Pulled by A.L. Jackson - Ends Oct 1

Upcoming giveaways - this week:
Pushing the Limits
What the Heart Remembers
Stuck in a Good Book Giveaway Hop





Currently reading this week: 
You Take it From Here by Pamela Ribon - I am giving up on this one for awhile


Upcoming books:
Freak by Jennifer Hillier
What the Heart Remembers by Debra Ginsberg
The Fine Color of Rust by P.A. O'Reilly
Found by Shelley Shepard Gray


Bathroom Book:

Books reviewed last week: 
The Reunion by Dan Walsh
Pulled by A.L. Jackson
Taking Charge by Mandy Baggot


Books read and needing to be reviewed:
The Goddess Test by Aimee Carter
Goddess Interrupted by Aimee Carter
The Witch is Back by H.P. Mallory
The Search by Shelley Shepard Gray




Until next week ----  Ready - Set - Read!


Mailbox Monday (Sept 17, 2012)



Welcome to Mailbox Monday, the weekly meme created by Marcia from A girl and her books.  This is where I share the titles I have received for review or purchased during the past week.  Mailbox Monday will be hosted in September by Kristen at BookNAround.



The Secret Keeper
by Kate Morton

During a summer party at the family farm in the English countryside, sixteen-year-old Laurel Nicolson has escaped to her childhood tree house and is happily dreaming of the future.  She spies a stranger coming up the long road to the farm and watches as her mother speaks to him.  Before the afternoon is over, Laurel will witness a shocking crime.  A crime that challenges everything she knows about her family and especially her mother, Dorothy -- her vivacious, loving, nearly perfect mother.

Now, fifty years later, Laurel is a successful and well-regarded actress living in London.  The family is gathering at Greenacres farm for Dorothy's ninetieth birthday.  Realizing that this may be her last chance, Laurel searches for answers to the questions that still haunt her from that long-ago day, answers that can only be found in Dorothy's past.  Dorothy's story takes the reader from pre-WWII England through the blitz, to the '60s and beyond.  It is the secret history of three strangers from vastly different worlds -- Dorothy, Vivien, and Jimmy -- who meet by chance in wartime London and whose lives are forever entwined.

The Secret Keeper explores longings and dreams and the unexpected consequences they sometimes bring.  It is an unforgettable story of lovers and friends, deception and passion that is told -- in Morton's signature style -- against a backdrop of events that changed the world. 



Letting Go of Super Mom: Dr. Mommy's 'Get Real' Approach to a Balanced Life
by Daisy Sutherland, DC

***You Are Not Alone***

Women today do it all -- from leading Fortune 500 companies and managing large ministry organizations to running a tight ship at home.  But keeping all those balls spinning can be an impossible task, and the pressure that we place on ourselves to be perfect can be overwhelming.

Letting Go of Supermom is the definitive guide for everything you need to manage your life and your family's life with confidence and grace.  No matter where you are or what your goals, you'll get loads of tips, tricks, and triumphs to help you find the authentic, balanced life you crave, including:
  • Parenting and relationship tools
  • Time-management and organization tips
  • Keys to handling stress - the right way
  • Details on nutrition and wellness
  • Ways to stay spiritually refreshed, and more
So give up the fight to be perfect in every way, never letting things fall, and always being there for everyone.  It is time to quit trying to be supermom and start becoming the person God made you to be. 





The Summer Before the Storm
by Gabriele Wills

Muskoka, 1914.  It's the Age of Elegance in the summer playground of the affluent and powerful.  Amid the pristine, island-dotted lakes, the granite cliffs, and pine-scented forests of the Canadian wilderness, the young and carefree amuse themselves with glittering balls, lavish picnics, and friendly competitions.  But this summer promises to be different when the charming, ambitious, and destitute son of a disowned heir joins his wealthy family at their cottage on Wyndwood Island.

Through Jack's introduction into the privileged life of the aristocratic Wyndhams and their social circle -- including captains of industry and financial titans -- he seeks opportunities and alliances to better himself, including in his schemes, his beautiful, headstrong, and audacious cousin, Victoria.

Among their large circle of family and friends are hedonists and intellectuals, charlatans and Bohemians, hypocrites and philanthropists; the witty, the frivolous, the heroic, the autocratic, the caring, and the tormented.  Vividly they bring to life the idyllic lifestyle of endless summers on tranquil lakes.  But their charmed lives begin to unravel with the onset of the Great War, in which many are destined to become part of the "lost generation". 

This richly textured tale takes the reader on an unforgettable journey from romantic moonlight cruises to the horrific sinking of the Lusitania, genteel Muskoka to wartime Britain, regattas on the water to combat in the skies over France, extravagant mansions to deadly trenches -- from innocence to nationhood.

The Summer Before the Storm, the first of "The Muskoka Novels", evokes a gracious, bygone era that still resonates in legendary Muskoka. 


What books came home to you this week?

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Last Wish of Summer by Phillip Overton (Guest post, excerpt and Giveaway!)

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Virtual Book Tour August 18 - September 15

August 18 - Bound to Astound - Review/Guest Post/Giveaway
August 19 - YA Book Addict - Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
August 20 - Literature Lovers' Labyrinth - Review/Interview/Excerpt
August 22 - My Seryniti - Review/Interview/Excerpt/Giveaway
August 23 - A Chick Who Reads - Review/Guest Post/Excerpt
August 24 - Addicted to Books - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway
August 25 - Kimmie's Bookshelf - Excerpt/PROMO
August 26 - Andi's Young Adult Books - Review/Excerpt/Guest Post/Giveaway
August 27 - A Dream Within a Dream - Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
August 28 - Hardcover Feedback - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway
August 29 - My Reading Addiction - Excerpt/Giveaway/Interview/PROMO
August 30 - The Book Faery Reviews- Excerpt/PROMO
August 31 - My Reading Room - Review/Interview
September 1 - Froze8's Blog - Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
September 1 - Little Red Reads - Review
September 2 - Books Books the Magical Fruit - Interview/Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
September 3 - My Devotional Thoughts - Review/Excerpt/Guest Post/Giveaway
September 4 - Bookhaven Extraordinaire - Guest Post/Giveaway/PROMO
September 5 - Good Family Reads - Review/Excerpt
September 6 - My Cozie Corner - Review/Giveaway
September 7 - Sweeping the USA - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway
September 8 - Memories Overtaking Me - Review/Excerpt
September 9 - Whoopeeyoo! - Review/Excerpt/Givewawy
September 10 - Getting Your Read On - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway
September 11 - New Age Mama - Interview/Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
September 12 - Walking on Bookshelves - Review/Excerpt/Giveaway
September 13 - Taking it One Page at a Time - Review/Giveaway/Guest Post
September 14 - Melissa's Eclectic Bookshelf - Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO
September 15 - Books and Needlepoint - Guest Post/Excerpt/Giveaway/PROMO




As the sun prepares to rise on the last day of summer, three friends find themselves totally unprepared for the events that are about to take place around them. For Tanya it is a chance to find peace three years after losing her parents in an auto accident. Deciding she simply can’t continue blaming God for her loss, she places a heartfelt poem in a bottle and throws it into the sea on the eve of her birthday, granting her birthday wish to whoever finds it.

Early the next morning, her best friend Anton and his buddy Johnno find the bottle washed up on the shore and set about putting it to the test. When Johnno falls for the new waitress at
the café where Tanya works, it stirs up feelings of jealousy in Tanya. Surely Johnno couldn’t be the man that God had in mind for her? Suddenly, strange wishes are beginning to come true, but is it all a coincidence? Or is God about to change people’s lives for the better?

Welcome to Kings Beach, where the forecast for the last day of summer promises to be hot, hot, hot, with a definite change in the air.


Please enjoy this guest post from Phillip Overton


10 reasons a paperback is still better than an eBook

With all the fuss being made over the eBooks’ superior attributes when it comes to discussing the latest e-readers and tablets available on the market, it's about time someone rode to the rescue of the humble paperback novel. So as a humble author of one, I give you ten reasons why a paperback is still better than an eBook...

10 - Your bookshelf will look bare with only your Kindle on it.

9 - You can still read a book on a camping trip long after the batteries have gone flat on your iPad.

8 - You still have a use for that handmade bookmark your daughter gave you for Father's Day.

7 - With an eBook, the saying "throw the book at him" would prove way too expensive to be taken literally.

6 - Replacing a school library full of books with a single e-reader would be taking away the make-out place of thousands of teenagers.

5 - You can stand on a stack of books to reach something high up. Try doing that on your Nook or Sony e-reader.

4 - How do you gift wrap an eBook to put it under the Christmas tree anyway?

3 - Second hand bookstores will eventually go out of business.

2 - A printed copy of a book will always be a physical souvenir of an emotional experience.

1 - A printed copy is still easier for authors to sign!

I hope you enjoyed reading this, even if you did read it on your tablet.



Author Bio
Phillip Overton’s writing has been compared to none other than Nicholas Sparks (http://
www.readerviews.com/ReviewOvertonAWalkBeforeSunrise.html), and his latest novel Last
Wish of Summer offers readers the perfect book to spend a summer’s day reading at the
beach. In a book that reminds us to be careful what we wish for, it manages to weave the
wholesome, virginal qualities of the main character Tanya with her band of misfit friends
in their pursuit of being able to reason why a washed up message in a bottle is somehow
granting their every wish come true. Often in a manner that is both coincidental and strangely
bizarre.

Just as a movie adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks novel will appeal to people of all ages, so too
will this story that follows the adventures of a group of twenty-something’s on the last day
of summer. The book not only manages to cut through any pre-conceived ideas we hold on
morals, body-image and social status, but delights in helping us discover what may already be
right under our nose to begin with.

Phillip Overton’s writing has been compared to none other than Nicholas Sparks (http://
www.readerviews.com/ReviewOvertonAWalkBeforeSunrise.html), and his latest novel Last
Wish of Summer offers readers the perfect book to spend a summer’s day reading at the
beach. In a book that reminds us to be careful what we wish for, it manages to weave the
wholesome, virginal qualities of the main character Tanya with her band of misfit friends
in their pursuit of being able to reason why a washed up message in a bottle is somehow
granting their every wish come true. Often in a manner that is both coincidental and strangely
bizarre.

Just as a movie adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks novel will appeal to people of all ages, so too
will this story that follows the adventures of a group of twenty-something’s on the last day
of summer. The book not only manages to cut through any pre-conceived ideas we hold on
morals, body-image and social status, but delights in helping us discover what may already be
right under our nose to begin with.

http://sbpra.com/phillipoverton/
Twitter: @phillipoverton

Links to Buy (currently paperback only)






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Friday, September 14, 2012

The Reunion by Dan Walsh (Book Review)

Title: The Reunion
Author: Dan Walsh
Publisher: Baker


Expert storyteller Dan Walsh pens a new tale filled with the things his fans have come to love – forgiveness, redemption, love and that certain bittersweet quality that few authors ever truly master. Fans old and new will find themselves drawn into this latest story about restoration for the broken and ignored.

Walsh brilliantly weaves together two stories of men embroiled in turmoil – Aaron Miller a Vietnam vet who returned from war only to lose everything and of Dave Russo, a writer unable to love again. The Reunion opens with Aaron, 40 years after the war, slowly putting his life back together. Dave uncovers his heroic actions during the war, leading both men to find a second chance in life and love if they’re willing to take a risk.

Walsh captures genuine emotion in his writing, and according to RT Book Reviews, he “demonstrates that, like Nicholas Sparks, men are capable of writing romantic fiction.”

Walsh has mastered telling stories set in separate time periods. The Reunion is a contemporary story with flashbacks to Vietnam. When Walsh was young, he hated history until he discovered a few non-fiction history books that read like page-turning novels. “They made history come alive,” says Walsh. “Reading became a joy. That’s my goal now, to create that same experience for my readers. I hope they get inspired and thoroughly enjoy themselves.”

Available September 2012 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group.

Dan Walsh is the award-winning author of The Unfinished Gift, The Homecoming, The Deepest Waters and Remembering Christmas. He lives with his family in the Daytona Beach area, where he's busy researching and writing his next novel. Visit www.danwalshbooks.com for more information. 

My thoughts: Dan Walsh continues to make my list of favorite books.  This one started out like any other book - you know what I mean - just starting to get to know the players, seeing if the storyline was one that was going to grab you, wondering if it was going to keep your attention - and boom - I was hooked and already half-way through.  

I loved Aaron Miller.  He was this unassuming older man who was just living his life trying to make other's lives a little easier.  He was a Vietnam War Vet where he had won the Congressional Medal of Honor, but because of how his life fell apart after the war, he didn't feel like he was deserving of it and never spoke of it.  Like many Vietnam Vets, he came home from the war with lots of psychological/emotional baggage as well as physical wounds that left him hooked on painkillers. All this made him unbearable to live with so his wife sent him packing.

Years later, after he had cleaned up his act, he tried to reconnect with his kids, but his wife shut the door on that idea and told him to just move along.  For twenty years he has lived with the regret that he has never been able to have a relationship or even know anything about his kids.  He finally got away from living on the streets, but his housing now is just a handyman's shed at a trailer park/campground.  From his little shed though, he does what he can to make the lives of the residents a little easier, a little safer, a little less lonely.

Dave Russo is a reporter writing a book to honor his father, who was killed in Vietnam.  He was just recently reunited with his son, Jake, because of the death of his ex-wife. He has realized that he had been valuing the wrong things in life and has vowed to spend more time with Jake.  While interviewing a Vietnam Vet for his research, he is set out on a journey to find Aaron Miller.  Little does he know how far, yet how near, this journey will take him.

I recommend having a box of Kleenex for the last third of this book.  I kept expecting my son to ask me why I was crying, but I guess he is used to seeing Mom cry while reading!  I have also read and reviewed Remembering Christmas and The Deepest Waters

~I received a complimentary copy of this book from Baker Publishing in exchange for my unbiased review.~

The Reunion
Publisher/Publication Date: Baker, Sept 2012
ISBN: 978-0-8007-2121-3
304 pages

ADHD + Writing = &%$#! (Guest Post and Giveaway)


 ADHD + Writing = &%$#!
by Stacey Turis

Writing a book is no laughing matter.   It takes super-human qualities like focus, planning, extended concentration, and self-discipline just to name a few.  Those may not sound like super-human qualities to you, but someone with ADHD would give their big toe to be able to sit down for just ten minutes and focus.  Only an hour ago I started writing this post and realized that I didn’t have my trusty drink next to me.  I went to the kitchen to get a glass and saw a book on the counter that I was supposed to sign and mail out today.  Since I couldn’t sign the book with the peanut butter that was distracting me where it lay in a blob on the counter; I hurriedly wiped it up before setting out to find a Sharpie.  Twenty minutes later, after getting the book signed and packaged, I returned to the kitchen knowing I was supposed to be doing something but not at all remembering what it was.  Since I was already in there, I decided to make myself some lunch and naturally the dishes followed.  Since the kitchen was done, I thought I should just pick up the living room so the “bottom-half” of the house could be considered clean’ish.  After all of that productivity I surely deserved some me time, so I decided to kill some brain cells on Facebook.  I sat down at my computer, looked at the screen and realized that I had completely forgotten about the post I was supposed to be writing.  DAMN – and I still don’t have my trusty drink!  I’ll be right back…


To learn more about Stacey, read my interview with her here.

And enter to win a copy of her book - Here's to Not Catching Our Hair on Fire: An Absent-Minded Tale of Life with Giftedness and Attention Deficit - Oh Look! A Chicken!




a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Under the Sea Giveaway hop (Sept 14 - 20) U.S. only



Come and join me Under the Sea for this Giveaway Hop!  It is being hosted by I Am A Reader, Not A Writer and The Musings of ALMYBNENR.

This hop will be featuring books with mermaids, sirens, selkies, divers, swimming, boating, dolphins, etc - just tied to water in some way.

Please check out my other giveaways in the right sidebar while you are here!

 I will be giving away your choice of one of the following three books:  


The Lady of the Rivers by Philippa Gregory,










  Barefoot in the Sand by Roxanne St. Claire









or
When the Brook Dries Up by Blondina Jeffrey.














a Rafflecopter giveaway











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