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

Monday, June 21, 2010

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? 6-21-10



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!

It is really just Monday?  Feels like half my week is gone already! So I don't know whether it is good that it is just Monday and I still have all week or if it is bad that it is only Monday and that means it is going to be a LOOONNNGGG week.

I didn't have a What are you Reading? post last week so let's get updated for the last 2 weeks.

Currently Reading:
Secret Lives of Husbands and Wives by Josie Brown - I should finish this one tonight.  Great book!
To Surrender to a Rogue by Cara Elliott

E-book:
Let's face it - I suck at reading e-books. . .

Bathroom Book:
Starvation Lake: A Mystery by Bryan Gruley

Audio Book:
I have started about 3 but have lost interest - that is - until I put in The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly - Loving this one!

New this week:
The Summer of Skinny Dipping by Amanda Howells
Heart of Lies by M.L. Malcolm
Damaged by Alex Kava
Damaged by Pamela Callow

Books reviewed in the last 2 weeks:
Love on a Dime by Cara Lynn James
Masked by Moonlight by Nancy Gideon
Never Let You Go by Erin Healy
Strange Neighbors by Ashlyn Chase


Waiting to be reviewed:
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter (audio) by Seth Grahame-Smith
101 Things I Learned in Fashion School by Matthew Frederick and Alfredo Cabrero
Heart of My Heart by Kristin Armstrong



Ready - Set - Read!

Strange Neighbors by Ashlyn Chase (Book Review)

Title: Strange Neighbors
Author: Ashlyn Chase
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
My synopsis/thoughts: After years of taking care of her father and brother after her mother died, Merry is finally moving out on her own and into the city.  Little does she know how unusual her new neighbors are going to be.  Her landlord, the handsome baseball player Jason Falco, is not just her landlord, but quickly becomes her boyfriend.  But he has a rather large secret that might send Merry 'flying' in the other direction.  Then there is the vampire in the basement who seems to be keeping an unusually close eye on Merry's business.  Combine that with the ghost that lives in the vacant apartment and his quest to discover who killed him and the 2 attractive 'witch' cousins who have there own phone sex business and you can bet that there is usually something unusual afoot. 

When I first started reading this book, to be honest, I thought it was a little juvenile in it's references to the attraction building between Merry and Jason (like Jason thinking with his little head or the ghost being horny), but it started to grow on me.  I sort of took it to be a tongue-in-cheek paranormal romance so all the little cliches started to bother me less.  When you have shapeshifters, witches, vampires and ghosts all living together in the same apartment building, there has to be some humor.  It was a quick book to read and I started to get invested in the characters, in that I would like to learn more about their back stories and how they all arrived at this apartment building.  I am not sure that I would ever re-read this book, but I would read other books about these characters.  It looks like she has one coming out in 2011 called Strange Confessions or The Werewolf Upstairs about Roz, Merry's girlfriend who is a lawyer and moves into the building. . .

~I received this book in exchange for my review from Sourcebooks.~

Strange Neighbors
Publisher/Publication Date: Sourcebooks, June 1, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4022-3661-7
354 pages

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Two week Mailbox Melee (6/7 - 6/19)

Bison roam the Black Hills of South Dakota
Mailbox Monday is hosted at The Printed Page . Please visit Kristi and Marcia  and take a look at what packages everybody else got this week!



Evernight
by Claudia Gray
(Paperback Swap Wish List book!)

At the eerily Gothic Evernight Academy, the other students are sleek, smart, and almost predatory. Bianca knows she doesn't fit in.

When she meets handsome, brooding Lucas, he warns her to be careful -- even when it comes to caring about him. But the connection between them can't be denied. Bianca will risk anything to be with Lucas, but dark secrets are fated to tear them apart. . . and to make Bianca question everything she's ever believed.



Perfectly Dateless
by Kristin Billerbeck
(July book tour)

The prom countdown has begun.

Daisy Crispin has 196 days to find the right date for the prom. There's only one problem -- her parents won't let her date or even talk to a guy on the phone. Oh, and she's totally invisible at school, wears lame homemade clothes, and possesses no social skills. Okay, so maybe there's more than one problem.

Can she talk her parents into letting her go to the prom? Or will they succeed at their obvious attempts to completely ruin her life?

Perfectly Dateless is hilarious, shocking, and totally real. You'll fall in love with Daisy's sharp wit and resourcefulness as she navigates the world of boys, fashion, family, and friendship.




The Reapers are the Angels
by Alden Bell
(Henry Holt/August)

For twenty-five years civilization has survived in meager enclaves, guarded against a plague of the dead. Temple wanders this blighted landscape, keeping to herself and keeping her demons inside her heart. She can't remember a time before the zombies, but she does remember an old man who took her in and the younger brother she cared for until the tragedy that set her on a personal journey toward redemption. Moving back and forth between the insulted remnants of society and the brutal frontier beyond, Temple must decide where ultimately to make a home and find the salvation she seeks.




My Give a Damn's Busted
by Carolyn Brown
(Sourcebooks/September)

He's just doing his job. . .
If Hank Wells thinks he can dig up dirt on the new owner of the Honky Tonk beer joint for his employer, he's got no idea what kind of trouble he's courting. . .

She's not going down without a fight. . .
If any dime store cowboy think's he's going to get the best of Larissa Morley -- or her Honky Tonk -- then he's got another think coming. . .

As secrets emerge, and passion vies with ulterior motives, it's winner takes all at the Honky Tonk.

Into the Beautiful North
by Luis Alberto Urrea
(Hachette - watch for giveaway)

Nineteen-year-old Nayeli works at a taco shop in the remote Mexican village of Tres Camarones and dreams about her father, who left for America years ago.  Recently, it has dawned on Nayeli that he isn't the only man who has abandoned Tres Camarones.  In fact, there are almost no men remaining -- they've all gone north. This has also been noticed by a group of particularly nasty drug dealers, who, seeing an easy opportunity, plan to take over the town.

But at a showing of the movie The Magnificent Seven at the village's decrepit theater, Nayeli has a vision: she will go north and recruit a group of men to return to the village. She will bring back her own "Siete Magnificos" to protect -- and repopulate -- her home. She and her friends head out for America, gathering a wild group of allies for a journey into the strange and beautiful land of their dreams and fears, the mythical place into which their fathers vanished. Their destination: a small town in Illinois, where Nayeli hopes to discover her father, her warriors, and -- if she's lucky -- her destiny.

Filled with unforgettable characters and prose as radiant as the Sinaloan sun, Into the Beautiful North is the story of an irresistible young woman's quest to find herself on both sides of the fence. With it, Luis Alberto Urrea has given us his most joyful, funny, and powerful novel yet. 



Dewey's Nine Lives
by Vicki Myron with Brett Witter
(From Shelf Awareness)

Dewey's Nine Lives is comprised of nine inspiring, funny, and heartwarming stories about cats told from the perspective of "Dewey's Mom," librarian Vicki Myron. The amazing felines in this book include Dewey, of course, whose further never-before-told adventures and amazing legacy are chronicled, but several others whom Vicki found out about when their owners reached out to her. Vicki learned, through extensive interviews and story sharing, what  made these cats special, and how they fit into Dewey's community of perseverance and love. From a divorced mother in Alaska who saved a drowning kitten on Christmas Eve to a post-traumatic-stress disorder-suffering veteran whose heart was opened by his long relationship with a rescued cat, these Dewey-style stories will inspire readers to laugh, cry, care, and, most important, believe in the magic of animals to touch individual lives.



The Tale of Halcyon Crane
by Wendy Webb
(From Henry Holt)

When a mysterious letter lands in Hallie James's mailbox, her life is upended. Hallie was raised by her loving father, having been told her mother died in a fire decades earlier. But it turns out her mother, Madlyn, was alive until very recently. Why would Hallie's father have taken her away from Madlyn? What really happened to her family thirty years ago?

In search of answers, Hallie travels to the place her mother lived, a remote island in the middle of the Great Lakes. Most of the stiff islanders are unwelcoming, and she soon realizes her family's dark secrets are enmeshed in the history of this strange community. And then there's the grand Victorian house bequeathed to her --  maybe it's the eerie atmosphere or maybe it's the prim, elderly maid who used to work for her mother, but Hallie just can't shake the feeling that strange things are starting to happen. . .





Online with God
by Laurie Lazzaro Knowlton
(First Wild Card Tour/July)

Finding God in the universe of computers and cell phones isn't as easy as googling his name, but He's there all the same. And what girl wouldn't want Him with her as she tries to make her way through a galaxy of emails, text messages, IMs, chat rooms -- and middle school relationships?  Written as a girl's personal blog to God, Online with God teaches you how to stay safe while using today's technology. This ninety-day devotional contains relevant Scripture verses, tips on making safe choices, and prayers for all the confusing times in your life. As you read it, you'll realize that God listens when you blog as well as when you pray. After all, He's the Lord of the universe -- including cyberspace.





Babushka's Beauty Secrets
by Raisa Ruder and Susan Campos
(Hachette - watch for giveaway)

Don't spend a fortune to look flawless.

Esthetician to the stars Raisa Ruder learned her time-tested beauty techniques from her Ukrainian grandmother (or babushka, as they say in the old country). Now everyone can discover the all-natural, better-than-Botox secrets the Hollywood stars use to shine on the red carpet!  Ruder reveals her sought-after beauty recipes that can fight wrinkles, give you plump lips, and eliminate crow's-feet and acne -- all by using inexpensive, everyday grocery items like eggs, honey, vegetable oil, and strawberries (and a splash of vodka for freshness!). At last, by popular demand, Raisa Ruder opens up her babushka's secret pantry and shares her most amazing and effective beauty advice:

  • Skin-saving souffles -- whipped-up wonders that shrink pores, brighten skin, and diminish lines

  • Must-have mustard wrap -- an invigorating treatment that smoothes the thighs and reduces the appearance of cellulite

  • Hot hair -- a cayenne pepper blend that leaves locks silky, soft, and full.

  • Pedi pure -- a soothing, smoothing foot scrub made with vitamin E and lavender oil

  • Lustrous lashes -- a simple castor oil serum that thickens and lengthens

  • Perfect pucker -- a moisturizing mask to light up your lips.



The Hanging Tree
by Bryan Gruley
(August tour for Kaye Publicity)

When Gracie McBride, the wild girl who had left town eighteen years earlier, is found dead in an apparent suicide shortly after her homecoming, it sends shock waves through her native Starvation Lake. Gus Carpenter, executive editor of the Pine County Pilot, sets out to solve the mystery with the help of his old flame and now girlfriend, Pine County sheriff deputy Darlene Esper. As Gus and Darlene investigate, they can't help but question if Gracie's troubled life really ended in suicide or if the suspicious crime-scene evidence adds up to murder.

But in such a small town it's impossible to be an impartial investigator -- Gracie was Gus's second cousin; Darlene's best friend; and the lover of Gus's oldest pal, Soupy Campbell. Yet with all the bad blood between Gus and Gracie over the years, Gus is easily distracted by other problems. His employer is trying to push him out, the locals are annoyed that his stories have halted construction on a new hockey rink, and Darlene's estranged husband has returned to reclaim his wife.

When Gus tries to retrace Gracie's steps to discover what happened to her in the eighteen years she was away from Starvation Lake, he's forced to return to Detroit, the scene of his humiliating past. And though he's determined to find out what drove Gracie back home, Gus is unprepared for the terrible secrets he uncovers.

The second book in Bryan Gruley's irresistible Starvation Lake series, The Hanging Tree is a compelling story about family and friendship, sex and violence, and the failure of love to make everything right.



Sweetheart
by Chelsea Cain
(Paperback Swap Wish List)

With Heartsick, Chelsea Cain took bookshelves by storm, introducing two of the most compelling characters in decades: serial killer Gretchen Lowell and her obsessed pursuer, Portland detective Archie Sheridan. The book spent four weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and garnered rave reviews around the world. But the riveting story of Archie and Gretchen was left unfinished , and now Chelsea Cain picks up the tale again.

When the body of a young woman is discovered in Portland's Forest Park, Archie is reminded of the last time the police found a body there, more than a decade ago: It turned out to be the Beauty Killer's first victim, and Archie's first case. This body can't be one of Gretchen's-- she's in prison -- but when, with the help of reporter Susan Ward, he uncovers the dead woman's identity, it becomes another big case. Trouble is, Archie can't focus on the new investigation because the Beauty Killer case has exploded: Gretchen Lowell has escaped from prison.

Archie hasn't seen her in two months: he's moved back in with his family and sworn off visiting her. Though it should feel like progress, he actually feels worse. The news of her escape spreads like wildfire, but secretly, he's relieved. He knows he's the only one who can catch her, and in fact, he has a plan to get out from under her thumb once and for all.

Chelsea Cain has topped her own bestselling debut thriller with this unputdownable, unpredictable, edge-of-your-seat read.



This Must Be the Place
by Kate Bacculia
(Henry Holt/July)

When Arthur Rook learns that his vital, creative wife, Amy, has been killed in an accident, he realizes to his horror that he has no idea what her last wishes would have been. Blindsided by the sudden loss and delirious with grief, he flees his home and job in Los Angeles, guided only by a pink shoebox full of Amy's keepsakes. Among the contents, he finds an unmailed postcard written sixteen years earlier, addressed to a woman he's never heard of.  Arthur follows it to the Darby-Jones boardinghouse in the sleepy town of Ruby Falls, New York.

There, he finds more answers than he bargained for in Mona Jones, Amy's best friend from childhood, now the proprietor of the Darby-Jones and a professional baker of wedding cakes. It turns out that Mona and her daughter, Oneida, two quirky kindred spirits, have a lot to learn from Arthur as well. As the three gradually unveil one another's secrets, they are forced to choose whether the truth will ruin them or teach them about love: how deeply it runs, how strong it makes us, and, even when all seems lost, how it brings us together and gives our lives meaning.



Touching the Clouds
by Bonnie Leon
(July book tour/Revell)

Kate Evans is an adventurous and independent young woman with a pioneering spirit. When she leaves her home in Washington State to follow her dream of being an Alaskan bush pilot, she knows it will be an uphill battle. But she never expected it to be quite like this. As the lone woman in a man's world, she finds that contending with people's expectations is almost as treacherous as navigating the wild arctic storms.

When she crosses paths with a mysterious man living alone in the forbidding wilderness, she faces a new challenge. Can Kate break through the walls he has put up around his heart? And will fear keep her from realizing her dreams?

Book 1 in the Alaskan Skies series, Touching the Clouds will draw you in with raw emotion and suspense, all against the stunning backdrop of the Alaskan wilds.



In the Name of Honor
by Richard North Patterson
(Henry Holt/June)

The McCarrans and the Gallaghers, two military families, have been close for decades, ever since Anthony McCarran -- one of the army's most distinguished generals -- became best friends with Jack Gallagher, a fellow West Pointer who was later killed in Vietnam. Now a new generation of soldiers faces combat, and Lieutenant Brian McCarran, the general's son, has returned from a harrowing tour in Iraq. Traumatized by wartime experiences he will not reveal, Brian depends on his lifelong friendship with Kate Gallagher, Jack's daughter, who is married to Brian's commanding officer in Iraq, Captain Joe D'Abruzzo. But since coming home, D'Abruzzo also seems changed by the experiences he and Brian shared -- he's become secretive and remote.

Tragedy strikes when Brian shoots and kills D'Abruzzo on their army post in Virginia. Brian pleads self-defense, claiming that D'Abruzzo, a black-belt martial artist, came to his quarters, accuses him of interfering with his marriage, and attacked him. Kate supports Brian and says that her husband had become violent and abusive. But Brian and Kate have secrets of their own, and now Captain Paul Terry, one of the army's most accomplished young lawyers, will defend Brian in a high-profile court-martial.  Terry's co-counsel is Meg McCarran, Brian's sister, a brilliant and beautiful attorney who insists on leaving her practice in San Francisco to help save her brother. Before the case is over, Terry will become deeply entwined with Meg and the McCarrans -- and learn that families, like war, can break the sturdiest of souls.



Grace Under Pressure
by Julie Hyzy
(Kaye Publicity/June)

Everyone wants a piece of millionaire Bennett Marshfield, owner of Marshfield Manor, and letters are coming in daily from those claiming to be poor relations. The elderly, reclusive heir trusts no one but his aged curator, Abe. But when Abe is killed in a case of mistaken identity, the tide changes. . .

Although shaken by the murder, Grace Wheaton, whose lifelong dream has been to work at the manor, steps up to the challenge of assuming Abe's job. But now some of the letters arriving for Bennett have taken a nasty turn, demanding millions -- or else. When an uninvited stalker shows up at the manor and at Grace's home, she and handsome groundskeeper Jack Embers must protect their dear old Marshfield. But to do this, they'll have to investigate a botched Ponzi scheme, some torrid Wheaton family secrets -- and sour grapes out for revenge.



Red Hook Road
by Ayelet Waldman
(From Shelf Awareness)

As lyrical as a sonata, Ayelet Waldman's follow-up novel to Love and Other Impossible Pursuits explores the aftermath of a family tragedy.

Set on the coast of Maine over the course of four summers, Red Hook Road tells the story of two families, the Tetherlys and the Copakens, and of the ways in which their lives are unraveled and stitched together by misfortune, by good intentions and failure, and by love and calamity.



Proust's Overcoat
by Lorenza Foschini
(From Shelf Awareness)

Proust's Overcoat unravels an unusual true story of passion and possession. The head of a perfume company in France, Jacques Guerin was an avid reader, a well-known bibliophile, and a collector. And among all of the artists and authors Guerin collected, he identified most deeply with Marcel Proust. When, by chance, illness brought him under the care of the great writer's brother, Dr. Robert Proust, Guerin stumbled into a tense and tangled relationship with the late novelist's family.

Shamed by Marcel's extravagant writings, embarrassed by his homosexuality, and offended by his disregard for bourgeois respectability, his survivors willfully began to destroy their inherited mountain of notebooks, letters, and manuscripts. Guerin, consumed by envy and desire, ingratiated himself with Marcel's heirs in the attempt to safeguard these precious objects both for himself and for posterity. Throughout the rest of his long life, Guerin continued to placate Proust's relations with cash and kindness in exchange for Marcel's remaining manuscripts, furniture, and personal effects. After years marked by relentless determination, Guerin at last was able to save a prize relic he came to covet more than any other: the moth-eaten overcoat Marcel Proust had worn every day and used as a blanket every night while writing in bed. Like the novelist's second skin, this coat was as close as Guerin could ever come to meeting Proust himself. It was the personal prize of his collection.

Keeping his hard-won trophies all to himself, Guerin would reach the age of ninety before his own imminent death convinced him to share his treasures with the world. Part mystery, part history, Proust's Overcoat introduces the reader to many intriguing characters and their various concerns for material possessions, each player contributing a piece to this curious and compelling story.



Last Writes
by Sheila Lowe
(Kaye Publicity/July)

Claudia's friend Kelly learns that she's an aunt when her estranged half sister, Erin, shows up at her home in desperate need of help.  Erin and her husband have been living quiet lives as members of the Temple of Brighter Light in an isolated compound. But now her husband and young child have disappeared, leaving behind a cryptic note with a terrifying message.

Seizing an opportunity to use her special skills as a forensic handwriting expert, Claudia becomes one of the few outsiders ever to be invited inside the temple's coumpound. She has only a few days to uncover the truth about Kelly's missing niece before the prophecy of a secret ancient parchment can be fulfilled and a child's life is written off for good. . .



The Mist
by Carla Neggers
(won this from the author - along with a T-shirt!)

Things looked bad when Lizzie Rush finally found hard evidence that thrill-seeking billionaire Norman Estabrook heads an international criminal network. But when he disappears after a deadly Boston bombing, the worst is yet to come.

From nowhere arrives the mysterious Brit, Will Davenport. Lizzie isn't sure which side he's on, but his particular talents may help end the violence. Now, emerging from a year of secrets and lies as a double agent straddling two worlds, Lizzie has little choice but to trust a man answering to no one. When the mist clears -- and the frightening truth is revealed -- nothing in Lizzie's life will ever be the same again.



April and Oliver
by Tess Callahan
(Hachette - watch for giveaway)

Since childhood, April and Oliver have been soul mates who shared a palpable attraction. Now, after years of being separated, their wildly different paths collide with the sudden death of April's brother. The sensual tension builds as Oliver, the responsible, engaged law student, finds himself drawn more than ever to the reckless, mystifying April. But even as Oliver attempts to "save" his childhood friend from her grief, her menacing boyfriend, and herself, it soon becomes apparent that Oliver has some dark secrets -- ones he hasn't revealed to anyone.

Yet April knows. Is it really her life that's unraveling, or is it his own?  The answer awaits at the end of a downward spiral. . .towards a surprising revelation.




Stein, Stoned
(A Harry Stein Soft-Boiled Murder Mystery)
by Hal Ackerman
(Kaye Publicity/July)

A soft-boiled detective story where The Big Lebowski meets Fletch.

In the sixties, Harry Stein was the foremost authority on cannabis, writing a book on indoor cultivation and inventing thirteen different hybrids. Nowadays, he stays straight to keep joint custody of his daughter. But when a crop of "orchids" goes missing, Stein must re-enter the haze he thought he'd left behind.



Percival's Planet
by Michael Byers
(Henry Holt/August)

A novel of ambition and obsession centered on the race to discover Pluto in 1930, pitting an untrained Kansas farm boy at the rundown Lowell Observatory against the greatest minds at Harvard.

It's 1928, and Clyde Tombaugh, the farm boy who will discover Pluto, is grinding a lens for his own telescope under an immense Kansas sky. Meanwhile, a thousand miles away in Arizona, the staff of Lowell Observatory resumes the long-interrupted search for Percival Lowell's missing Planet X. When a chance letter brings Clyde to the observatory to join the hunt, he is thrown headfirst into the romantic entanglements of a young Harvard-educated scientist and his beautiful wife as she slips into insanity. The friendship that grows up among this improbable trio -- and among the other seekers and dreamers in Flagstaff -- leads this least-likely astronomer to the point of self-discovery, through a chase that crosses an entire solar system.

Elegant and sweeping, this vividly imagined novel of the historic search for the ninth planet brings to life the magnificent effort to discover something stranger -- and more surprising -- than anyone could have imagined.



Evil at Heart
by Chelsea Cain
(Paperback Swap Wish List)

Gretchen Lowell is still on the loose.  These days, she's more of a cause celebre than a feared killer, thanks to sensationalist news coverage that has made her a star. Her face graces magazine covers weekly and there have been sightings of her around the world. Most shocking of all, Portland Herald reporter Susan Ward has uncovered a bizarre kind of fan club, which celebrates the number of days she's been free.

Archie Sheridan hunted her for a decade, and after his last ploy to catch her went spectacularly wrong, remains hospitalized months later. When they last spoke, they entered a detente of sorts -- Archie agreed not to kill himself is she agreed not to kill anyone else. But when a new body is found accompanied by Gretchen's trademark heart, all bets are off and Archie is forced back into action.  Has the Beauty Killer returned to her gruesome ways, or has the cult surrounding her created a whole new evil?

Chelsea Cain  continues to deliver heartstopping thrills and chills in the latest entry in this dynamic bestselling series.


What did you find in your mailbox?

Never Let You Go by Erin Healy (Book Review)

Title: Never Let You Go
Author: Erin Healy
Publisher: Thomas Nelson

About the book: Losing everything has Lexi clinging to her daughter.  Hell is determined to loosen her grip.

It's been seven years since disaster struck her family.  Lexi Solomon has held it together since then -- just barely. 

But now Lexi is losing it.  The husband who deserted her is back in town, wanting to see their daughter Molly.  Her sister's shameless murderer is up for parole. An unsavory old friend is demanding payment for debts that Lexi knows nothing about and can't begin to meet.

And something else is going on -- something Lexi feels but can't explain.  A dangerous shift is taking place between this reality and the next.  Forces beyond her imagination are vying for control.

A rare novel that will satisfy a wide range of readers, Never let You Go explores the high-stakes decisions played out in the thin spaces between heaven and earth. As the enemy's grip tightens around Lexi, she will have to decide what's truly worth holding on to. (back cover)

My thoughts:  Sorry about the canned synopsis, but I finished this book a couple of books ago and didn't feel like I could remember the details strong enough to give a good description.  What I do remember is the definite struggle between good and evil and the entities that both of these took.  Lexi and Molly were the "good" from the very beginning of the book - Then there was Ward and Craven - both evil - the kind of person who makes you feel slimy just by being in the same room with them.  Even just reading about them gave me shivers down my spine.   I liked the conflict that developed between them and how Lexi discovered what she had to do in order to survive.  This is a faith based book without being over the top.  It was an enjoyable read.

~I received a copy of this book from Phenix and Phenix Publicity in exchange for my review.~


Publisher/Publication Date: Thomas Nelson, May 4, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-59554-750-7
338 pages

Masked by Moonlight by Nancy Gideon (Book Review)

Title: Masked by Moonlight
Author: Nancy Gideon
Publisher: Pocket Books

My synopsis/thoughts:  This story revolves around Charlotte Caissie, a New Orleans detective and Max Savoie, the right hand man of mob boss Jimmy Legere - the man Charlotte believes is responsible for her father's death.

Charlotte has always kept men at an arm's length - due to an assault that she suffered with her best friend Mary Kate when they were still in high school.  Mary Kate was an orphan living at St. Bart's and Charlotte spent much time there when her father went undercover or had to be gone nights as a police detective.  At seventeen they were snatched off the streets by some of Jimmy Legere's men and assaulted and raped to try to get information.  Charlotte would not break and stayed by Mary Kate's side.  She never knew who rescued them or how.  Mary Kate did though.

Max Savoie was the only one that Charlotte let get in her personal space.  Even though he was a suspected murderer who worked for Jimmy Legere, she always felt strangely comfortable and comforted in his presence.  Max was drawn to Charlotte in much the same way.  Max had been abandoned with his mother (who had been murdered) in the swamps.  Jimmy Legere had found him and taken him in.  He had raised him and given him love and shelter, despite what he was.  See, Max is a shapeshifter.  Not knowing how he became one, or if there are others, he has only Jimmy to answer to - and he is loyal to a fault.  Unfortunately this put Charlotte and Max on opposite sides of the law.  Then Jimmy gets killed and leaves his entire fortune and business to Max.  Will he be able to become the new mob boss and still claim the woman he loves?

I enjoyed reading this book - You could feel the attraction between Charlotte and Max, but it was not rushed or over the top.  Both characters were very strong and very loyal to their beliefs - with much internal struggle where their feelings for one another were concerned.  It was one of the quickest books that I have read lately as I did not want to put it down!  I can't wait for the second book in the series - Chased by Moonlight which is due out at the end of the month.

~I received a copy of this book in exchange for my review from Pocket Books.~

Masked by Moonlight
Publisher/Publication Date: Pocket Books, May 25, 2010
ISBN: 978-1-4391-4963-8
375 pages
















This tour was actually June 17th - here were some of the other participants:

The Book Lush: http://suchalush.blogspot.com/
The Bibliophilic Book Blog: http://www.bibliophilicbookblog.com/
Starting Fresh: http://startingfresh-gaby317.blogspot.com/
Eclectic Book Lover: http://www.eclecticbooklover.com/
Book Junkie: http://myfoolishwisdom.blogspot.com/
Books, Books Everywhere: http://bookbookseverywhere.blogspot.com/
Rex Robot Reviews: http://www.rexrobotreviews.com/
What Book Is That?: http://whatbookisthat.blogspot.com/
Patricia’s Vampire Notes: http://patricias-vampire-notes.blogspot.com/
Books and Things: http://melissawatercolor.blogspot.com/
Beguile Thy Sorrow: http://beguilethysorrow.blogspot.com/
DK’s Everything Books Blog: http://dkay401-challenges.blogspot.com/
Chrissy’s World of Books: http://chrissysworldofbooks.blogspot.com/
Revenge of the Book Nerds: http://booknerdextraordinaire.blogspot.com/
A Musing Reviews: http://www.amusingreviews.blogspot.com/
I Heart Book Gossip: http://juniperrbreeeze.blogspot.com/
Star Shadow: http://www.starshadowblog.com/
A Journey of Books: http://ajourneyofbooks.halfzero.net/
Taking Time For Mommy: http://takingtimeformommy.blogspot.com/
My Five Monkeys: http://www.tableforseven-julie.blogspot.com/
Michelle & Leslie's Book Picks: http://booksandmakeup.blogspot.com/
Books Gardens & Dogs: http://maryinhb.blogspot.com/
Jeanne's Ramblings: http://www.jeannesramblings.com/
Pam’s Private Reflections: http://hip2bhomeschooling.blogspot.com/
My Guilty Pleasures: http://www.mgpblog.com/
Wendy’s Minding Spot: http://mindingspot.blogspot.com/
Readaholic: http://bridget3420.blogspot.com/
Gnostalgia: http://gnostalgia.wordpress.com/
Cheryl’s Book Nook: http://cherylsbooknook.blogspot.com/
Stephanie Suesan Smith Blog: http://blog.stephaniesuesansmith.com/
The Fiction Enthusiast: http://thefictionenthusiast.blogspot.com/
A Room Without Books Is Empty: http://detweilermom.blogspot.com/

Home Sweet Home

I am happy to be home!  Back on my computer system - no connectivity issues!  Yeah!  I have at least 5 reviews to do that I can think of and many many giveaways - and winners to announce!   Hopefully over the next few days I will be able to get a lot done!  I have a HUGE 2 week mailbox to share.  So many good books coming up this summer I don't know where to start!   But, the unthinkable has finally happened.  I have lost a book!  I am supposed to be reading I Love This Bar by Carolyn Brown and I cannot find it anywhere!  Between getting the house ready for my daughter's graduation earlier this month, and then going to my mom's house I have lost this book!  I even called my mom to see if maybe she had picked it up in the books that I gave to her.  I am bummed because it is the first in a series and I have the next 2 to read this summer already!  My husband tells me I just need to stop looking and it will show up.  I will be sure to let you know if it does!   On to my reviews!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

First Wild Card Tour: Love on a Dime by Cara Lynn James

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!



You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


SEE MY REVIEW OF LOVE ON A DIME.




Today's Wild Card author is:





and the book:


Thomas Nelson (June 1, 2010)
***Special thanks to Katie Bond of Thomas Nelson for sending me a review copy.***



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:






Cara Lynn James is a debut writer who has received numerous contest awards from Romance Writers of America chapters and the American Christian Fiction Writers. She resides in northwest Florida with her husband Jim. They have two grown children, Justin and Alicia; a grandson, Damian; and Papillion named Sparky.





Visit the author's website.



Product Details:



List Price: $14.99

Paperback: 320 pages

Publisher: Thomas Nelson (June 1, 2010)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1595546790

ISBN-13: 978-1595546791



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:




P rolo g u e



N e w Y o r k C i t y , M ay 1 8 9 3



Jack slowed his pace, his courage once more waning at



the sight of the Westbrook home across the way. Anxiety



twisted his stomach in a knot. But in the dusky light,



Lilly’s glow of confidence reignited his own flame. She



understood her parents far better than he did. Since she believed her father



would agree to the marriage, why should he hesitate?



Arm-in-arm they strolled across the road. Among the row of



fine brick townhouses facing them, the Westbrook house stood



three stories tall like all the rest, with long, paned windows overlooking



Washington Park.



Mr. Ames, the ancient butler, opened the front door. Jack and



Lilly entered the dimly lit foyer.



“Where is my father this evening?” Lilly asked the butler.



“In the back parlor, miss.”



“Shall I go with you, Jack?”



“No,” he whispered, squeezing her hand, “I’d rather do this



on my own. Say a prayer all will go well.”



Jack strode toward the parlor, determined to plead his case.



Every nerve ending in his body fired with life—and more than



a few with apprehension. He’d calm himself and then ask Mr.



Westbrook for Lilly’s hand in a respectful tone, solicitous, but



not fawning. He’d restrain his usual brash attitude and hope Mr.



Westbrook would consent to a marriage most would deem unsuitable.



If he weighed the odds of success, he wouldn’t even try.



Jack inhaled a steadying breath and increased his pace down



the narrow hallway leading to the back of the house. Gas sconces



threw a pale light along the Persian runner that muffled his footsteps



to a soft shuffle. The house lay silent except for the noise of



a sledge hammer beating against his chest.



Lord, I need a large dose of Your strength. Don’t allow me to cower.



I’ve never been a quitter and I don’t want to start now.



He hadn’t asked God for much in the past, but this was too



important to rely on his own untested powers.



Jack paused before he came to the door of the back parlor,



straightened his bow tie, and squared his shoulders. Voices stopped



him before he moved forward. He recognized Mrs. Westbrook’s



high, girlish tone. He’d wait for a lull in the conversation, excuse



his entry, and then ask to speak to Mr. Westbrook. Jack waited for



several minutes before he heard his name.



“Thomas, I noticed Jackson Grail seems especially fond of



Lilly. You don’t suppose he wants to marry her, do you?”



Jack winced at the worry in her voice. With his back to the



wall he stepped closer to the parlor.



Mr. Westbrook chuckled. “No, my dear, he’s George ’s friend,



not Lilly’s. She ’s hardly more than a child.”



“For goodness’ sake. Lilly’s nineteen, certainly old enough to



catch the eye of a young man.”



“All right, she ’s not my little girl anymore. But ready for marriage?



No, Nessie, I don’t believe so. She has lots of time to choose



a mate. There ’s no rush.”



“Hmm. I wouldn’t want her to delay too long. I’ve given considerable



thought to her future.”



“I’m sure you have,” Mr. Westbrook murmured. Jack pictured



his wry smile.



“Well, it’s my duty as her mother to guide her. Oliver Cross



or Pelham Mills come to mind as possible suitors. Maybe Harlan



Santerre. He’s such a polite young man and his mother and I have



been friends since childhood. Yes, he’s most definitely my first



choice.”



Jack let out the breath he’d been holding, knowing he should



break away, cease his eavesdropping—



“They’re all acceptable to me. But what about young Grail?



You say he might be interested in her. He’s got a good head on his



shoulders.”



“But no money in his pocket. Need I say more?”



Jack frowned and tried to swallow, but his mouth was dry.



Mr. Westbrook sighed. “No, my dear. You’re absolutely right.



He’s not suitable, though I do like him.”



“I do as well. And now he’s as finely educated as our own



George. But he would have to strike it rich quickly in order to court



Lilly,” Mrs. Westbrook added. “And that’s highly unlikely.”



“Nearly impossible, I’m afraid. So I hope you’re wrong and



young Grail hasn’t set his heart on Lilly.” Her father sighed. “He’s



an intelligent boy. I’m sure he’d know better. Especially when she



has an ambitious mama anxious to make her the perfect match.”



Mrs. Westbrook laughed. “Thomas, do stop your teasing.”



Jack bumped his shoulder against the curlicues of a large gilt



picture frame. Turning to give it a hard shove, he stopped himself.



He wouldn’t let his temper get the better of him. Leaving the oil



painting crooked, he stumbled down the patterned runner, away



from the awful voices. When he came to the foyer he dropped into



a rosewood chair and ignored the curious stare from Mr. Ames.



Jack buried his head in his hands and tried to gather his wits



before he had to face Lilly. But the Westbrooks’ conversation



resounded through his mind. Poor. Unsuitable. Why had he ever



thought they’d accept him as a son-in-law? His love for Lilly had



banished all reason. He’d lived in a fog of hope these last several



months, but now it cleared.



At the sound of light footsteps he looked up. “What did Papa



say?” Lilly asked, grasping his hands.



He glanced at her without speaking and then saw his own



anguish reflected in her eyes. He so wished his answer could bring



her joy. She gently pulled him into the dimly lit sitting room. The



sheers and heavy velvet curtains blocked all but the final rays of



daylight from seeping through the windows overlooking the park.



They faced each other in front of the unlit marble fireplace, his arms



tight around her slim waist, her hands lightly touching his vest.



“Tell me,” she said in a rasping voice, barely audible.



“I never had the chance to ask, Lilly. When I got to the back



parlor your parents were already discussing appropriate husbands.



And my name wasn’t on the list.”



“That’s because they don’t know we love each other. Papa



has never refused me anything. It might take some persuasion, but



you can do it. We can approach him together.”



Lovely, pampered Lilly, who owned her father’s heart—



except when it came to marriage partners. And marriage among



the rich was certainly a business transaction. Their kind never



married Jack’s kind. He’d gone to St. Luke ’s and Yale with the



wealthy, but as a scholarship student, he didn’t belong to their set



no matter how hard he tried to fit in. Maybe he would’ve accepted



the impenetrable barrier if Lilly hadn’t swept into his life.



He gazed at her, drinking in her passion, memorizing her



large, expressive eyes and flawless skin, her tall, slender form and



thick brown hair framing her face.



Her eyes blazed like blue fire. “Come. We ’ll speak to Papa.



Right now.”



Jack caught her wrists. “No, I can’t. I’m so sorry. He won’t change



his mind. It’s pointless to even ask.” Save me the humiliation.



Her strangled cry pierced his heart. “You won’t even try? We



love each other. Isn’t that worth fighting for?” Lilly’s voice rose



with disbelief.



How could he explain he couldn’t abide her father’s rejection?



He refused to hear again that he wasn’t good enough to court



Lilly—once was enough. And he didn’t want her to elope with



him without her parents’ approval. Jack groaned. As much as he



adored Lilly, he wasn’t acceptable to the family. The daughter of



a prosperous banker, Lilly couldn’t marry a man without a family



fortune.



“We can marry without their consent. You’ll find a good job.



I know you will. Don’t you see, Jack, we don’t need my parents’



permission.”



“But I want their respect.” And he’d never gain their esteem



by stealing their daughter away. He turned from her, running a



hand through his hair. He ’d been fooling himself. How could



he provide for Lilly, care for her in a manner in which she was



accustomed? What could he promise her? A one room apartment



in a dingy part of town while he made his way in the world,



if he ever made it at all. How long before his beautiful, young



and idealistic bride would realize she ’d sacrificed too much for



an improbable dream? He ’d harm her if he stole her from her



family.



He glanced at her and could see in her face the stubborn, naïve



hope that lingered there. But he understood reality as she never



would. He ’d let his love blossom before he should have.



Jack slowly moved away, steeling himself for the hurt yet



to come. “Your parents are right. I’m in no position to marry. I



should never have proposed, because I have nothing to offer.”



Lilly rushed to him and flung her arms around his neck, tears



spilling down her cheeks. “What about our love? Why do you



need more than that?”



“Lilly, we can’t exist on dreams. I have to earn a living. And I



can’t support you on a clerk’s salary. You’d miss your old life.”



Her lovely, soft features hardened. “You must think my love



is too weak to withstand hardship. It’s strong enough to survive



anything. Why do you doubt me so?”



Jack shook his head. “I doubt myself, not you.” What if her



confidence in his abilities weren’t warranted? What if he never



rose above petty clerk, despite his fancy education? A girl from a



society family, proud and successful for generations, could never



be content washing laundry, cooking meals, and scrubbing floors



on her hands and knees. She ’d grow bitter and resentful.



“I can adapt to less. I don’t care about a beautiful home. I only



want you,” she said, her voice rising with frustration.



He wouldn’t argue about the effects of poverty and how it



wore on a person. She wouldn’t understand. “If we came from



the same background, I wouldn’t hesitate to speak to your father.



But we didn’t.”



“But you will. I know it. I’ll wait until you feel ready to marry



me. There’s no hurry. I’m patient. I can wait forever.” She pleaded



with beautiful eyes glistening with tears.



“No, please don’t wait for me.” Jack’s voice cracked like ice.



He wanted her to wait, but he couldn’t ruin her chances of



making a suitable, maybe even a happy marriage. The odds of



succeeding in the business world without connections were small.



If and when he’d proven himself, he’d return and hope she ’d still



want him. And forgive him. But he couldn’t ask her to wait.



He blotted her tears with his handkerchief, but they kept



streaming down her face. Her slender shoulders heaved with soft



sobs. He kissed her again gently and then retreated to his bedroom



before he was tempted to crush her in his arms and beg her to



elope. He’d planned to stay for the week as George ’s guest, but



now he needed to leave quickly.



Within ten minutes he was gone.



Jack’s heart slammed against his ribs. The past two weeks had



been a misery. He couldn’t sleep. He couldn’t eat. Go back, go back!



his mind and heart screamed. You’ve made a terrible mistake!



His stomach roiling, Jack fought to keep a dignified pace and



not run all the way to Washington Square. At last, he stood before



the Westbrook home and tapped the front door knocker against



the heavy wood.



He’d explain he couldn’t manage without her and his infernal



pride had blocked his common sense and their tender love. Would



she accept his apology? They’d work something out. He didn’t



know how exactly, but they would. He knew their union was sanctioned,



indeed designed, by God.



Mr. Ames pulled the heavy door open. “May I help you, sir?”



“Yes. Is Miss Westbrook at home?”



The hunched-over butler shook his head. “They’ve all gone



abroad. They sailed yesterday.”



Jack’s cautious optimism collapsed in a heap of despair. “And



when will they return?”



“Next spring.”



Next spring. Jack groaned. “G-Good day,” he mumbled, turning



from the door.



I’m too late. I’ve lost her.





On e



N e w p o rt , R h o d e I s l a n d — J u ly 1 8 9 9



Six years later



With a deep sigh of satisfaction, Lilly Westbrook



whipped the last page of her manuscript out of



the Underwood typewriter. Carefully she shredded



the carbon and threw the messy strips into the wastebasket. No



meddlesome



maid could possibly reconstruct her work and tattle



to Mama.



For a moment, a wave of sadness overshadowed the pleasure



she felt at finishing another story. How she longed to share her



secret with her mother, but as much as Lilly hated deception, she



knew Mama would never understand. Mama was proud of her for



dabbling in poetry, but this?



No. It was best to stay behind closed doors to write her dime



novels.



Lilly shuddered to think of the disgrace she ’d bring upon herself



and, even worse, upon her family, if her secret was revealed.



The very notion of social ostracism weakened her knees and left



her legs wobbly. A twinge of guilt pinched her conscience as it



often did when she considered her concealment. Yet why look for



trouble when her work was progressing so well?





Lilly scrubbed her hands until all evidence of the carbon paper



and inky ribbon disappeared into the washbasin near her bed, then



covered the typewriter Mama had given her as a birthday gift a



few years before. Mama thought a typing machine unnecessary



for a poet, but she wasn’t one to begrudge her children anything



within reason.



Lilly withdrew a letter from her skirt pocket and smiled as she



re-read the last lines.



My dear Lilly,



I want to again express my thanks for all you’ve contributed to



the Christian Settlement House of New York. We so value the time



and effort you have devoted to assisting our young ladies with their



sundry life skills and English fluency. Your exceptional generosity



and financial support have enabled us to continue our work in accordance



with the Lord’s purposes.



Sincerely,



Phoebe Diller, Director



Miss Diller’s kind words sent a rush of warmth to Lilly’s heart



and strengthened her resolve to continue writing. For without the



profits from her novels, she couldn’t afford to donate more than



a few dollars to her favorite charity. How could she possibly quit



writing when her romance novels provided so many blessings to



others?



Lilly locked the final chapter in the rolltop desk by the bay



window and hid the key beneath the lining of her keepsake box.



Time for a well-deserved walk by the sea. She removed her reading



spectacles and placed her straw hat decorated with bright



poppies squarely on top of her upswept hair. After a last furtive



glance toward the desk, she left her bedroom to the morning sunshine



that splashed across the shiny oak floor and floral carpet.





All the way down the staircase she congratulated herself for



typing “The End” of her story, though it was only a few days



before deadline. That was much too close for comfort. She sighed.



Too many social events had disrupted her normal writing routine



this summer. But she had no choice but to force a smile and



attend the functions, even though most of them bored her to



distraction.



She wouldn’t think of that now. At least she’d finished the manuscript



before the deadline and for that she’d treat herself to a few



minutes out of her room. With a light heart, she strolled through



the deserted foyer, past Mr. Ames, the butler, and out the front



door. A beautiful day greeted her with its sun-blessed smile.



As she crossed the veranda, her sister-in-law Irene Westbrook,



seated at the end of the porch, peered over a small, familiar book.



The lurid cover of Lilly’s latest novel, Dorothea’s Dilemma,



popped out in garish color. Lilly stopped short and pressed her



palm over her gyrating heart.



“Oh my,” she murmured. She’d never expected to see one of



her novels in her own home, let alone in the hands of her brother’s



wife.



Irene smoothed her halo of silky blonde curls caught up in a



loose pompadour. She laid the slim paperback on her lap, her eyes



gleaming with curiosity. “Why hello, Lilly. Where have you been



on this beautiful afternoon? Cooped up in your bedroom again?



My goodness, what do you do in there all day?”



“Sometimes I enjoy a few hours of solitude.” Lilly’s nerves



seized control of her voice and it rose like the screech of a seagull.



“I’m sorry I interrupted your reading.” Heat crept into her skin as



Irene watched her, face aglow with interest.



“Do sit down, Lilly.”



She slipped into a wicker chair opposite Irene. A gust of



salty air, typical of Newport’s summer weather, blew in from the



Atlantic and brushed its cool breath across her cheeks. She prayed



it would fade the red splotches that came so easily when embarrassment



struck.



Irene cocked her head. “Is something wrong? You look positively



ill.”



“No, I’m fine.” Though every fiber of her body continued to



quiver, Lilly steadied her breathing. She folded her hands in the



lap of her charcoal-gray skirt and willed them not to shake.



“You aren’t shocked by my novel, are you?” Irene smirked.



“Of course not.” Lilly squirmed around on the soft chintz



cushion and avoided Irene ’s skeptical stare. “Why should I be



shocked?”



Irene leaned forward. “Some people claim dime novels are



trash, and from your reaction I thought you might be one of those



faultfinders. Of course they’re wrong. These books are filled with



adventure and I love adventure.” She rolled the last word around



her tongue like a stream of honey.



Irene, the niece of Quentin Kirby, one of San Francisco’s



silver kings, fancied herself an adventuress, but Lilly inwardly



disagreed. Irene merely appreciated fun and frivolity more than



most. That hardly made her a woman like the heroines of Lilly’s



books. “I’m so sorry, Irene. I didn’t mean to criticize your choice



of books. I just wondered where you obtained your copy.”



“I discovered it in the kitchen while I was searching for a



blueberry tart.” Irene grinned as if Lilly ought to admire her



cleverness.



“One of the scullery maids must have left it there.”



“You took it without asking permission?” Lilly could scarcely



believe Irene had wandered downstairs to the basement kitchen,



the domain of servants who strongly disapproved of visitors,



even the family.



“Why yes. Well no, not exactly. I borrowed it. As soon as I finish



reading, I’ll give it back. Of course.”



Irene tapped the big, red letters spelling out the author’s name



across the cover. “Fannie Cole. She’s a splendid writer, the very



best. Have you ever read any of her books? I devour them like



chocolate.”



Lilly’s heart lurched. “Naturally I’ve heard of her. I believe



her stories are rather popular.”



“They’re enthralling.”



At the sound of the front door squeaking open, Lilly looked



away with relief.



Mama bustled onto the veranda, a frown knitting her eyebrows.



“What’s that about Fannie Cole? She’s quite infamous, I



hear.” Glancing from Lilly to Irene, Mama’s eyelashes fluttered, a



sure sign of agitation. “Oh, I see you have one of her books . . .”



Lilly knew her mother couldn’t let this breach of propriety



pass without comment. On the other hand, the kind and ever



tactful Vanessa Westbrook would hate to offend her new daughter-in-



law.



“Mama, Fannie Cole writes harmless fiction. You needn’t



worry.” Lilly smiled her assurance, hoping she’d veer off to



another topic.



Her mother sunk into a wicker chair beside Irene. “Perhaps,



my dear, but you must admit, there are so many more uplifting



novels.” She patted Irene ’s arm, which was robed in a cream silk



blouse that matched the lace of her skirt. “Lillian is a poet, you



know. Her work is delightful. You must read it. I’ll go fetch you



a copy.”



Lilly cringed. “No, Mama. I wrote those poems years ago. She



wouldn’t be interested in the meanderings of an eighteen-yearold



ninny. It’s sentimental tripe.”



“Nonsense, my dear. You’ve always been much too critical of



yourself.”



“Nevertheless, I’m sure Irene would prefer Fannie Cole.”



Who wouldn’t? Lilly thought. Still, she appreciated her mother’s



enthusiasm for her meager literary efforts.



Irene tossed her a wide, grateful smile. “There, that’s settled.”



Mama’s round, girlish face tightened with distaste. “I wish



you wouldn’t read dime novels because . . .” She looked toward



Lilly for support.



“Really, Mama.” Lilly softened her voice, not meaning to



scold. “While some of the dime novels are sensational, others are



written to help working girls avoid the pitfalls of city life. They’re



moralistic tales that encourage virtue. Nothing to be ashamed of



reading.” Or writing.



“Exactly.” Irene beamed. “I couldn’t have said it better myself.



Of course, I read for the story, not the moral lesson, but I’m sure



it’s beneficial for those who enjoy a good sermon.”



Lilly suppressed a sigh of resignation. “No doubt Miss Cole



hopes and prays her words touch the hearts of her readers and



bring them closer to the Lord.” Lilly looked at Mama and Irene,



hoping they’d somehow understand her purpose and approve.



But both looked puzzled over her words.



Irene ’s gaze narrowed. “An odd way to spread the gospel,



don’t you think?”



“Not at all. The Lord is more creative than we are.” Lilly



bristled and then glanced away when she found her mother and



sister-in-law still staring at her.



She’d spoken up much more forcefully than she intended.



With a sinking heart, Lilly realized Mama would never accept her



viewpoint; it flew in the face of beliefs and opinions ingrained



since childhood.



Irene picked up a sheet of paper resting on a small table between



two pots of ferns and waved it like a flag on the Fourth of July. Lilly



immediately recognized Talk of the Town, a gossip rag published



by that scandalmonger, Colonel MacIntyre, the bane of Newport



society. He shot fear into the hearts of all upstanding people and



others who weren’t quite so virtuous. Lilly swallowed hard.



Mama gasped. Her pale skin whitened. “Oh my dear, that’s



hardly appropriate for a respectable home.”



Irene shrugged. “Perhaps not. But if you don’t mind my saying



so, it’s great fun to read. I’m learning the crème de la crème



of Newport are up to all kinds of mischief.” She laughed with



pleasure.



“Listen to this.” Irene leaned forward. “One hears that Miss



Fannie Cole, author of wildly popular dime novels, has taken up residence



at one of the ocean villas for the season. The talk about town



claims this writer of sensational—some might even say salacious—



stories, belongs to the New York and Newport aristocracy. Which of our



fine debutantes or matrons writes under the nom de plume, Fannie Cole?



Speculation runs rampant. Would the talented but mysterious author of



Dorothea’s Dilemma, Hearts in Tune, and several other delectable



novels please come forward and identify herself for her public?”



Lilly’s throat closed. She clamped her hands down on her lap,



but they shook like a hummingbird’s wings. Had a maid or a footman



stumbled across her secret and sold the information? Colonel



Rufus MacIntyre of Talk of the Town paid handsomely for gossip.



No one was safe from his long, grasping tentacles, including some



of the most prominent people in society.



“The colonel has mentioned Miss Cole in his column for the



last two weeks, so I expect we’ll hear more about her during the



summer.” Irene grinned as she studied the sheet. “I wonder who



she is. I’d love to meet her.”



Mama’s mouth puckered into a small circle. “Undoubtedly



someone from the wrong side of the tracks. No one we’d know.”



She punctuated her words with a firm nod.



Irene persisted. “You must have an idea, Lilly. You seem to



know everything that’s going on in society.”



Lilly turned away, sure that a red stain had again spilled across



her pale skin. Her sister-in-law was right. She did listen to all the



tittle-tattle, but she prided herself on her discretion. The foibles



of her set provided grist for her novels, not for spreading rumors



and innuendo.



“You give me far too much credit, Irene.” She hated to dodge



questions to keep from lying, but what was her option short of



confessing? She twisted the cameo at the neck of her tailored



shirtwaist.



Mama wagged her finger. “Mark my words. By the end of



the summer someone will discover Fannie Cole’s true name and



announce it to the entire town. Oh, my. What humiliation she ’ll



bring upon her family. They’ll be mortified.”



“How delicious,” Irene murmured.



Lilly groaned inwardly. Her subterfuge gnawed at her conscience,



worsening day by day, but she couldn’t turn back the



clock and reconsider her decision to write in secret.



She rose. “Will you excuse me? I need to take my walk now.”



With her head held high and as much poise as she could muster,



Lilly descended the veranda’s shallow steps. She strode across



the wide, sloping lawn that surrounded Summerhill, the old



twenty-two-room mansion the Westbrooks rented for the season.



Once she reached the giant rocks that separated the grounds



from the ocean, she picked her way over to a smooth boulder that



doubled for a bench. As she ’d done every day since her arrival



three weeks ago, Lilly settled onto its cold surface. Instead of



watching the breakers pound against the coast and absorb the majesty



of nature ’s rhythm, she rested her head in her hands and let



the breeze brush against her face.



What would happen if her beau, Harlan Santerre, discovered



that she and Fannie Cole were the same person? The wealthy railroad



heir, a guest of the family for the eight weeks of summer,



miraculously seemed ripe to propose. Her mother kept reminding



her how grateful she should be that such a solid, upstanding man



as Harlan Santerre had shown interest in a twenty-five-year-old



spinster with no grand fortune and no great beauty. Mama and the



entire family would be humiliated if her writing became public



knowledge and Harlan turned his attention elsewhere.



Yet the Holy Ghost had urged her to compose her simple stories,



and as she wrote, her melancholy gradually faded. Her enthusiasm



never waned thanks to the joy she received from doing the Lord’s



work.



Why would He allow someone to ruin her and end the good



deeds she accomplished? He should smite her enemies instead. All



her life she ’d trusted the Lord to guide her and protect her, but



never had she needed His help more than now. But would He continue



to shield her?



Trembling, Lilly tossed a stone into the roiling surf and



watched it sink into the foamy white waves. What if the surge



of curiosity aroused by Colonel MacIntyre didn’t fade away and



everything she held dear was threatened?

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