Saturday, October 21, 2023

24 Hour Read-a-thon Progress Post

 


The day has come and here we go! I'm (hopefully) awake and getting caffeinated! I have my book stack (see below) and will be aiming for 2 books! Lately, I've been a slow reader so I'm not going to push myself, I just am going to enjoy the experience! I'll be updating in chunks and participating in as many challenges as I can. I will probably read here and there amongst these selections, I know my book A.D.D. will probably kick in at some point. If I add or swap a book with another one I'll update that too. 

My theme for this readathon is "spooky/suspenseful" reads. 



Snackage has been procured and or cooked/baked and ready for action! I have fruit, veggies (with dip), brownies, baked bread, soft pretzels and popcorn! Lots of fluids too! Caffeine, H20, tea and seltzer waters! I am so very ready and will be super carbed up! 

Update 1: Starting Time 7am CST-11am CST


Book(s) 

Pages Read: The Pram was 57 pages. I am on chapter 29 in Head Like a Hole that makes it 143 pages. So a total of 200 pages read so far. 

Snacks/Beverages: Coffee with chocolate caramel creamer, and water. Home made bread with butter and Jam. An orange. 

Notes: The Pram was good. I was a bit disappointed by the ending, but it was still a good read. I'll post a review soon. Head Like a Hole is a complete mystery to me, I'm not sure what the heck is going on but I do like it! I'm pleasantly confused! 


Update 2: 11am-2:30pm


Book(s) 

Pages Read: Starting pg: 143 HLAH Finished Head Like A Hole for 233 pages this block

Total pages read: 433 

Total Books Read: 1 novella and 1 book

Snacks/Beverages: Water with pineapple strawberry Mio. Chicken nuggets and fries. small slice of brownie (CALORIES DO NOT COUNT TODAY!!)

Notes: Head Like a Hole was good, confusing but good. I am going to take a small nap (about an hour) and then head into my next book. 


Update 3:  3:30pm-7:30pm


Book(s) 

 Starting with the Story The Life of Chuck-FINISHED

Started on page 1


Pages Read This Block: 78 pages

Total Pages so Far: 511 pages

Total Read So far: 1 novella, 1 book, 1 short story

Snacks/Beverages: Water. Nachos, more nuggies...

Notes: I am slowing down a bit and going to try to ease back on the snackage just a bit. I'm going to take a wee little break and see if that "palate cleanser" helps be get back into the groove again. 


Update 4: 8:30pm-11:00pm


Book(s) Finished 




Pages Read: 346

Total Pages: 857

Total Read So Far: 2 books, 1 novella and 1 short story

Snacks/Beverages: Yogurt covered raisins, water. 

Notes: I love this book. This is my maybe 10th re-read of this book. I'm starting to get sleepy but I'm going to go further. 


Update 5:  12am-2:30am


Book(s) 

Pages Read:  20 measly pages. 

Snacks/Beverages: I tried tea and a little coffee

Notes: Okay, I made it until about 2:30am ish. I tried to stay up. A "lil nap" turned into bedtime. But I am not upset! I did pretty good this readathon! 


FINAL UPDATE:

Total Books Read: 2 books, 1 novella and 1 short story

Friday, October 20, 2023

Pistol Rose and the Wedding That Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn (Blog Tour-Review and Guest Post)

Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn
Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn: 
Publisher:  Swashbuckle Holdings (August, 2023) 
Category: Fantasy, Adult Epic Fantasy, Adventure, Romance, Steampunk 
Tour Dates October 16-November 22, 2023 
ISBN: 978-1962089005 
Available in Print and ebook, 194 pages
  Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War

Description Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn

As a young wilderness girl, Pistol Rose knows nothing of the advanced Strelkie City or the mad king Ward Harrol who sits behind its walls. She doesn't understand why the Strelkie forbid marriage. 

When the king forces the surrounding countryside to change their traditional culture to match his vision, the Punimin resist, and Rose learns everything about how to kill Strelkie and get away with it.

 But throwing her own secret wedding without being caught... is another matter entirely. Rose refuses to give up her lover, Clock Dancin, for the tyrants who threaten her way of life. And most Punimin stand with her–only one is a betrayer.

 In this futuristic medieval steampunk country filled with liars, killers, and wilderuckers, the strongest weapon is love. But using it comes with a heavy cost. 

About Michael Ryan Hahn:




‘Pistol Rose and the Wedding That Parked a War’ is Michael’s debut novel and the first in a planned 7- part series, The Anthem of Ash & Pistols. He previously wrote a standalone horror novella called ‘Children of the Storm’. He recently released an adventure podcast in the style of old radio plays called Fire Pockets. His stories aim to weave exciting action with humor and heart, with complicated villains—probably because of his upbringing. He comes from a big ol' raucous family, and he survived a shockingly bruising (but not altogether unfun) cadre of violently delinquent Boy Scouts to become an Eagle Scout. He loves fight scenes. Michael won a ScreenCraft competition that led to development with Bad Robot. He's a 3x ScreenCraft Finalist, and has 18 other accolades from major screenwriting competitions, including AFF and Final Big Break. As a director, he won Best Feature at GenCon and Best Director at BAFF for his micro-budget, wild sci-fi comedy action feature, ALIEN THEORY He lives in Los Angeles with his wife. In his spare time, he designs custom habitats for cats.* The habitats are highly popular with the cats. 

Buy Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn

Amazon


GUEST POST:

Pistol Rose Guest Post for Melissa’s Must Read Faster

How to Write by the Seat of your Pants: Outline or No?

Half of me is a massive fan of outlining. It all begins with an idea of a theme or an argument (that I keep quite secret and to myself), as a kind of story motivator. I wouldn’t call it a “moral of the story,” it’s a little more buried than that. And I don’t bother hoping that people will discover it, it’s more like a holy relic locked in an altar if I’m feeling lofty, or a joke written on a scrap of paper and buried in concrete if I’m feeling, well what’s the opposite of lofty, bunkery? It’s there for me alone. The seed of the apple tree. If I have that little nugget stowed in my pocket, then every strain of story that appears can more readily connect to it. And for some reason, that just feels better to me than reverse-engineering it. It’s a litmus test to know if an arc or a subplot or whatever belongs.

Naturally, I break the litmus test half the time, and wrestle over whether something should be allowed to belong despite its failure to adhere to form. Maybe half of my well-intended plans make it into the outline? The outline is an arranged marriage between feelings and action beats, something like a movie in a lot of ways. And once I’ve thought about the story for a month or so, the outline itself takes a day. It’s important to me to write it all out in a single day, if I can. Sometimes it takes two or three. But the faster the outline materializes, the more alive the story feels. I like to see it all at once.

I tend to write one paragraph per planned chapter. Ideally, each planned chunk will tangle with the Big Stakes that I set out at the beginning of the outline, so everything is moving forward all the time. That paragraph, and sometimes it’s more than one, serves as a kind of writing prompt more than an instruction list. I can write about one chapter in a sitting, 10 to 20 pages, and a good prompt can fuel that through, for the most part.

Often, I’ll get about halfway through the outline, have all these grand plans and intricate designs, and then some character will decide to up and wreck everything. Change of plans. Or it will become clear that it is quite time for this character over here to die for his crimes, and that alters the plan for what follows, somewhat. That’s the half of me that doesn’t like outlining. The half that wants an organic surprise. I’ve written chapters where I didn’t know how it was going to end… and been so thankful I had that outline to run back to, crying with my bruises, to guide me back on track.

The balance seems to be in having a well-thought-out plan and in having the freedom to roam from it. Like being an outdoor cat who likes to sleep inside at night. Whether they admit it or not, such felines are never short on pride or humility, which makes for an adventurous combination.

The particular outlining and cobbling-together of this first Pistol book is actually even a little different than my writing process as a whole. It started as a screenplay. Maybe it will reach the screen one day, but I was drawn to the idea of fleshing out the story in book form right now. A lot of people have asked how on earth you can turn a script into a book, because it seems so hard when the training for one mode is so different from the other. The answer is I just did it in layers. Baby steps. I led with what was familiar to me. First was a direct transposition of the script, then a writing pass adding all the direction (action) I might explain if I were filming it, then another pass putting in all the set and art direction, then a dialogue sweep and an inner thoughts sweep, and a point of view controlling sweep to avoid head-hopping as much as possible… and this all of course led to a fine mess.

But then there were bones that almost looked like a book. It didn’t feel organic yet. So, then it was off to the revisions, adding and cutting until a unifying feeling took over, and with a little time, it all came together and made sense. It was like building a house and then deciding to rotate the house ninety degrees, by hand, with the wrong tools.

Which was great, because after going through that, the next writings I’ve done have been much, much faster, and from those, the process I explained above grew.

I suppose you could say that I outline by the seat of my pants.

© Michael Ryan Hahn

 

 

Giveaway Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn

This giveaway is for 2 copies. The winners will have the choice of print or ebook. This giveaway is open worldwide and on November 23, 2023 midnight, pacific time. Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.


MY REVIEW

My first impressions of this book when I received it was "WOW! This is a pretty cover!" I love the artwork, the steam punky font and all of that! I did indeed judge this book by it's cover (at least at first) and I was amped to get started reading it! 

Once I cracked the spine and started reading, I was drawn into this rich history and back story. The first shot seemed a bit quick but hints about character personality and world building were peppered into the action. I really liked how that was done, one thing I dislike in a book is a world building "info-dump" in the beginning, so this book won me over straight away! 

This is a tale that will keep you wanting to see what happens next. You'll feel like you know these characters and their life. The theme itself isn't entirely new, but with the way that Hahn writes it, it feels fresh. You will root for Rose and her people. You will want to continue seeing how everything unfolds. 

This is an excellent start to a series that is apparently going to run for a while, and that delights me! 


Follow Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn

Teddy Rose Book Reviews  
Oct 16 Guest Review Mark with Kickoff & Interview Lyn Romance that's 'out of this world 
Oct 17 Guest Review Gracie & Excerpt Dawn Bound 4 Escape 
Oct 18 Guest Review Sal Gud Reader Goodreads 
Oct 19 Review Melissa Must Read Faster 
Oct 20 Review & Guest Post Linda Lu Goodreads 
Oct 23 Review Lu Ann Rockin' Book Reviews 
Oct 24 Review & Guest Post DT Chantel Amazon 
Oct 26 Review Kathleen Celticlady’s Reviews 
Oct 27 Guest Review Laura & Guest Post Mike Goodreads 
Oct 30 Review Melissa C. Deliciously Savvy 
Nov 1 Guest Review Betty & Excerpt Leslie Storeybook Reviews 
Nov 2 Guest Review Nora BookGirl Goodreads & Amazon 
Nov 3 Review Suzie My Tangled Skeins Book Reviews 
Nov 6 Review & Excerpt Denise Amazon.ca  
Nov 8 Review Bee Book Pleasures 
Nov 9 Review & Interview Liam Goodreads
Nov 13 Review Tammy TTC Books a more 
Nov 14 Guest Review- Betty B. Smitty Goodreads 
Nov 15 Review Cynthia Old Book Shanty 
Nov 16 Guest review-Ellen

  Pistol Rose and the Wedding that Sparked a War by Michael Ryan Hahn

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

My Read-a-Thon #TBR Stack!


 I'm going for a spoopy theme or a supernatural theme! My kindle has tons of "horror/suspense" selections too! I have my snacks, my fluids, and the weekend off! *Pardon the messy copy of Good Omens. The book has traveled through a few moves*


What are you going to be reading? I'm going to update on my blog here, various social media sites. Follow me if you want! I'll follow back! 

Follow Along With My Reading!

Mastodon: https://mastodonbooks.net/@TomesandCobwebs

Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexley

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coraelle/

And FB: 

Personal: https://www.facebook.com/lexley/

Book Blog: https://www.facebook.com/MustReadFasterBookReviews/


I am super duper excited about this weekend! I haven't been able to really do a readathon in a long time and I am PREPARED! 




Monday, October 16, 2023

What Am I Reading?

I am going to try to get 2 books read this week! I'm trying to train my brain to focus whilst reading, so that this weekend I can be a superstar for the Read-a-Thon! I have the weekend off and snacks prepared, and all that good stuff so I am excited AF! 

So what's on my roster this week?

Here they be!


 


I will be posting my readathon TBR a little later in the week. I do hope to make it as long as I can! I'm aiming for some spoopy reads. Tis the season! Are you guys going to be doing the 'thon?

What are you all reading this week? Lemme know! Maybe I'll put some rec's on my list! 

Thursday, October 5, 2023

Death and the Sisters by Heather Redmond (Blog Tour & Review & Giveaway)

Death and the Sisters by Heather Redmond Banner

Death and the Sisters

by Heather Redmond

September 25 - October 20, 2023 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Death and the Sisters by Heather Redmond

The tangled relationships between Frankenstein author Mary Shelley, poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, and Mary’s stepsister Jane Clairmont form the backdrop for an intriguing historical mystery, set in London in 1814, that explores the complex dynamic between sisters and the birth of teenaged Mary’s creative genius.

London, 1814: Mary Godwin and her stepsister Jane Clairmont, both sixteen, possess quick minds bolstered by an unconventional upbringing, and have little regard for the rules that other young ladies follow. Mary, whose mother famously advocated for women’s rights, rejects the two paths that seem open to her—that of an assistant in her father’s bookshop, or an ordinary wife. Though quieter and more reserved than the boisterous Jane, Mary’s imagination is keen, and she longs for real-world adventures.

One evening, an opportunity arrives in the form of a dinner guest, Percy Bysshe Shelley. At twenty-one, Shelley is already a renowned poet and radical. Mary finds their visitor handsome and compelling, but it is later that evening, after the party has broken up, that events take a truly intriguing turn. When Mary comes downstairs in search of a book, she finds instead a man face down on the floor—with a knife in his back.

The dead man, it seems, was a former classmate of Shelley’s, and had lately become a personal and professional rival. What was he doing in the Godwins’ home? Mary, Jane, and Shelley are all drawn to learn the truth behind the tragedy, especially as each discovery seems to hint at a tangled web that includes many in Shelley’s closest circle. But as the attraction between Mary and the married poet intensifies, it sparks a rivalry between the sisters, even as it kindles the creative fire within . . .

Praise for Death and the Sisters:

"Death and the Sisters is a terrific blend of gritty history with a mystery that will keep readers turning pages. Impeccably researched and imaginative, Redmond’s first Mary Shelley Mystery immerses readers in the drama of young Mary Godwin and her family, as well as her budding romance with Percy Shelley, as they work together to solve a wonderfully bookish murder. I thoroughly enjoyed this series kick-off and can’t wait for the next story!"
~ Susanna Craig, author of The Lady Knows Best

"Death and the Sisters is a rip-roaring murder mystery with twists and turns that introduces teenaged Mary Godwin, not yet the author of the immortal work Frankenstein, as an amateur detective. Redmond's foray in the world of rational atheists in early 19th century London is a mesmerizing, forceful delight."
~ Eilis Flynn, author of The Riddle of Rym

"Crafted with vivid historical detail, an artfully twisted plot, and engaging characters, Death and the Sisters is an excellent start to what I hope will be a long-running series."
~ Dianne Freeman, author of the award-winning Countess of Harleigh Mysteries

"It might be the way London comes to life in all of its dark and gritty complexities, or the dynamics between Mary and her step-sister, Jane, as they set out to find the killer of the man who they discover dead in the bookshop. Everyone is a suspect—even Percy Shelley who has caught the eye of the women in the household. Propulsive and immersive, Heather Redmond is at the top of her game until the intense and satisfying end."
~ Mary Keliikoa, author of Hidden Pieces

"An intrepid cast of characters, a stunningly atmospheric 19th-century London, and a riveting murder… Highly recommend."
~ Melissa Bourbon, bestselling author

Book Details:

Genre: Historical mystery
Published by: Kensington
Publication Date: September 2023
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 9781496737991 (ISBN10: 1496737997)
Series: Mary Shelley Mystery, 1
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | Kensington

Read an excerpt:

“Come, Mary.” Jane flopped onto her bed. “Tell us a story about the prisoner ghosts wailing.”

“I’ll have to think it up,” Mary said and then began to quote. “‘This relation is Matter of Fact, and attended with such Circumstances as may induce any Reasonable Man to believe it.’”

“What’s that?” Jane asked. The floor creaked as she kicked off her slippers and knocked them to the floor.

“Defoe, I think,” Mary said, already considering the form of her story. If only Mother had written such fanciful tales, to give her ideas on how to construct them. “I’ll consult his works in the bookshop for further inspiration. It seems like quite a good start to a ghost story.”

Mary placed her slippers next to Jane’s and walked down in her stocking feet, hugging the wall so as not to set off the worst of the creaking stairs. If Mamma heard her, she’d be set to mending something. Her stepmother never thought about the cost of candles when she could make her daughters work themselves into exhaustion after dark.

The bookshop’s interior door hung open. Very odd, as Mamma was particular about making sure that the smells of domestic life, particularly cooking odors, did not damage the books.

Mary shrugged, glad she had come downstairs, because if Mamma had been the first to notice, she’d have no doubt blamed Mary. She lit the lantern kept in readiness for customers who wanted to browse in the dark corners.

While she knew exactly where Defoe was kept, she first went to a back corner of the shop and dropped to her knees, then pulled out a much-loved volume that Mamma kept in stock because she knew that it sold, even though it was anything but highbrow or philosophical. Ann Radcliffe’s The Romance of the Forest. Feeling a little breathless, like a Gothic heroine about to swoon, she opened the book to her favorite page. With the lantern held over the engraving, she examined the bare legs of the man removing a blindfolded girl from a house.

She bit her lip as she looked over the engraved musculature, feeling a familiar shiver dance up through her body. Did Shelley have legs so magnificent? He certainly possessed the broad shoulders and narrow waist of the figure on the page. She set down the lantern when it shook in her hand.

“Oh, to see a form like that,” she whispered to herself. None of her Scottish suitors had possessed a body she wanted to caress. As such, none of them had enticed so much as a kiss from her. After a last heated glance, she closed the book and tucked it away again.

The next shelves were in front of the bow windows. The Juvenile Library was shelved there, at the perfect height for children. Works of historical merit were on the other side. Mary rose.

Her foot twisted as she took the first step. She grabbed for the edge of the bookcase with one hand, the other gripping the lantern tightly. Her fingers were trembling by the time she righted herself. She reached down and swiped at her foot. Something sticky coated her fingers. What was on the floor?

“Honestly,” she muttered to herself. More cleaning. She set the lantern on the bookcase and walked past the windows. Slatted lines from the shutters were illuminated by the oil lamp that burned all night at the corner of the road.

Distracted by the sudden reflected light, she tripped again. “Blast,” she cried.

When she tried to take another step forward, her way was blocked by something solid. Confused, she prodded it with her foot. It felt warm, dry, and slightly yielding. She backed up to take the lantern in her hand again, then cupped the side of it with her hand to keep the illumination from the road. When she reached the mass again, she held the lantern out over the floor.

Her mouth dropped open when she saw what lay in front of her. A man, like something out of a painting of the French Revolution, was sprawled on the floor. Facedown. She swept the lantern over his body. Her hand shook as she saw first one knife, then another.

The first was impaled in his back. The other, in the mysterious recesses between his legs.

“Faith!” Wobbly, Mary blinked hard, then forced herself to kneel down beside the sprawled figure, to touch the man’s hand.

Still warm. She squeezed it, feeling that strange sensation of callused male flesh under hers, then dropped the hand. What was she doing? Molesting a corpse?

She scooted back, her eyes closed, then opened them again, feeling her lips tremble at the sight of the dark blue velvet coat, the dark stain around the knife gleaming wetly in the light. She knew that coat. Shelley! That fine figure of a man, ended so cruelly. They had just seen him leave not twenty minutes earlier. Had he been accosted in the street and dumped here?

“I could have loved such a being.” Tears sprang to her eyes, and she let them fall, keenly feeling her sensibility. Hadn’t he said he was a new father? And his poor young wife, not even twenty yet, a widow.

“Mary?”

Drat that Jane. Could she not offer up a moment’s solitude to anyone?

Her stepsister’s footsteps came closer, along with the bobbing of a candle flame.

“Don’t come any closer,” Mary warned. She set the lantern down.

Ignoring her, Jane came down the space between the bookshelves and turned in the nook in front of the windows.

“What are you doing?” she asked.

Mary scrambled to her feet, hoping to block her sister’s view. The candle wavered as Jane took in the scene. She gasped loudly.

“What,” Jane asked, “is that?”

“Knives,” Mary said. “Murder has been done here.”

“What?” Jane repeated, some frantic power coming into her voice. “Papa?”

“No,” Mary said, grabbing the candleholder before the candle dropped. “Shelley.”

She saw what was going to happen and held up her other hand, hoping to forestall it. But she failed, and Jane, coming closer, screamed. Mary bent under the onslaught and grabbed her sister’s hand.

“Hush,” she begged, pulling her away. “We have to tell Papa before the watch comes.”

Though Jane resisted, Mary pulled her through the bookshop, then forced her to sit on the steps and hold the candle while she went back for the lantern. She set it on the table in the hall.

“Stay here,” she commanded.

“But,” Jane whispered. “But the body.”

“Papa will know what to do.”

“But the watch.”

“Papa should call them, not us. Do you want him surprised?”

“The bookshop,” Jane said next.

“Yes, it’s very bad,” Mary agreed.

“It isn’t S-Shelley,” Jane stuttered. “He just left.”

Mary pulled the handkerchief from her sleeve and tucked it into Jane’s unresisting hand. “It must be,” she said. “Who else? Cry quietly, please.” Hoping her sister obeyed, she picked up her skirts and ran up the steps to her father’s library.

***

Excerpt from Death and the Sisters by Heather Redmond. Copyright 2023 by Heather Redmond. Reproduced with permission from Heather Redmond. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Heather Redmond

Heather Redmond is an author of commercial fiction and also writes as Heather Hiestand. First published in mystery, she took a long detour through romance before returning. Though her last British ancestor departed London in the 1920s, she is a committed anglophile, Dickens devotee, and lover of all things nineteenth century.

She has lived in Illinois, California, and Texas, and now resides in a small town in Washington State with her husband and son. The author of many novels, novellas, and short stories, she has achieved best-seller status at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other retailers. Her 2018 Heather Redmond debut, A Tale of Two Murders, has received a coveted starred review from Kirkus Reviews.

Catch Up With Heather Redmond:
www.HeatherRedmond.com
Goodreads
BookBub - @heatherredmond1
Instagram - @hiestandheather
Twitter - @heatheraredmond
Heather Hiestand Redmond's Reader Group on Facebook

 

MY REVIEW

This was a great historical fiction mystery! I started this book rather blind, only having read the blurb on the back. I was sucked right in from the start and really enjoyed nearly everything about this book. The mystery element and the historical element were combined super well and made this book super fun! I was thoroughly entertained. 

I loved how well written and well developed the characters were. The story flew fast and kept me reading steadily! I really am excited that this is the first book of a series and can't wait for more!

I am delighted to recommend this book to anyone that enjoys this genre! 

 

Tour Participants:

Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and opportunities to WIN in the giveaway!



This linky list is now closed.

 

 

ENTER FOR A CHANCE TO WIN:

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

 

 

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

 

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

This is How He Collects Them by Eric Woods (Book Tour & Review *With Giveaway*)



Horror

Date Published:10-13-2023


photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

A series of haunting nightmares draws five former residents of a New York City high-rise back to their one-time home. But this is not a reunion. These five strangers have never met. But they are connected.

The depressed photographer with telekinetic abilities … the paralegal who reads evil thoughts of strangers … the struggling author who can predict dark futures … the malicious hypnotist … the witch’s daughter …

They have met in their dreams, and they have observed the shadows who follow them until they awaken. Now they want answers. And when the five board the same elevator at the same time, an ominous reality surfaces. They did not return on their own. They were drawn back. Drawn by their nightmares. Drawn by darkness.

Drawn … to be collected.



About the Author

A writer since grade school, Eric Woods resides in Springfield, Illinois and finally published his first novel in 2018. Today he has five novels, two novellas, and one book of stage plays. Most recently, his short story “The Taurus Bull” was featured in HorrorScope: A Zodiac Anthology.

If you want to be spooked in person, Eric hosts the Lincoln Ghost Walk in Springfield (through October). Come take the tour and learn some creepy tales about the 16th President of the United States!

Eric earned a Bachelor’s Degree in English and a Master’s Degree in Communication from the University of Illinois Springfield. He served as a collegiate speech and debate coach for seven years, and has been a local freelance writer since 2005.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Blog

Goodreads

Instagram

TikTok


Preorder Today

Amazon

B&N


MY REVIEW

First of all, I love the concept of this book. Reading the blurb I was like, Yes please!? So I accepted this one for review. It was slightly confusing in the beginning as you are kind of flung flailing into the story. This was my one main complaint with this book, the "cold opening" for lack of a better term (at least my brain can't think of one). But I did continue reading and got used to the shifting perspectives. This isn't a book with one main character but five! I liked that very much. The story weaves and connects with these people and it's an interesting way (if not a little clunky at times) to get the story out. 

I did love the plot. I liked the the concept very much and thought it was creepy and interesting as heck. I was intrigued enough to keep reading, and was glad that I did. I had some issues with the ending but I will not go into it so as not to spoil. 

All in all, this was an interesting book. A little confusing at times, but a good story with interesting characters and a creepy plot. 


RABT Book Tours & PR

Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Mysteries of Mystic Hills by Chris Cannon (Book Blitz and Giveaway)

Murder in Mystic Hills
Chris Cannon
(Mysteries of Mystic Hills, #1)
Publication date: March 27th 2023
Genres: Adult, Mystery, Paranormal

All she wants is a break from adulting… then she rediscovers a world that’s been wiped from her memory.

Preschool teacher Belinda Harbinger’s summer vacation is going off the rails. After receiving a letter stating she’s inherited a tearoom and home, she’s shocked it’s from a beloved aunt she can’t remember… who could speak to the dead. And finding out she has the same power, it’s up to her to solve her mysterious relative’s murder.

Moving to the mystical town, Belinda takes up with a talking cat Familiar and learns she’s the only one who can help her aunt cross over before she becomes a vengeful spirit. But while searching the house for her lost memories, she faces heated magical politics, fresh bodies popping up, and a hidden evil threatening to make her the next victim.

Not knowing who to trust, can she expose a killer and rescue everyone from deadly plays for power?

Murder in Mystic Hills is the spellbinding first book in the Mysteries of Mystic Hills cozy paranormal series. If you like feline sidekicks, quirky characters, and winding trails of clues, then you’ll love Chris Cannon’s humorous hunt for justice.

The complete series:

Goodreads / Amazon

EXCERPT:

We crowded around my butcher block table and my mom said, “You need to know that we love you more than anything or anyone else in the world.”

And there went my appetite. I set my fork down. “This is going to be bad, isn’t it?”

“Not bad,” my mother said. “Just sad in places. I grew up in Mystic Hills. It’s a town situated above an intersection of ley lines, meaning it’s a nexus for magical energy. Most of the population has some sort of gift or magical power. I didn’t. Citizens without magic are encouraged to leave, so I went to college and met your father. When you were born, we knew there was a chance you’d inherited the Harbinger family gift. I took you home to be baptized as Belinda Harbinger. In the rest of the world, you’re Linda James. Every year, on your birthday we took you to visit my family.”

“No, we had birthday parties at home.” I’d been there, I should know.

“You have two birthdays. The date of your birth we celebrate here, and the date of your Christening in Mystic Hills which is the anniversary of when you turned six months old.”

“Like a half birthday?” That would fall in the summer. “You’re saying every June you took me to a town called Mystic Hills to stay with an Aunt I can’t remember, who you never told me about until after she died?”

“The bracelet contains your memories,” my mom said. “Teresa collected them at the end of each visit and stored them away in case you ever wanted them.”

“I need more wine.” I went to the fridge and filled my glass before offering it to my guests. “Anyone else?”

My mom smiled. “Yes, please.”

I poured a glass for my mom and grabbed a beer for my dad. “Victor? Cat? Any beverages?”

“I’ll take a beer,” Victor said.

“Do you have any flavored creamer?” the cat asked hopefully.

“You mean like French vanilla coffee creamer?”

“Yes. In a bowl if you don’t mind.”

“Wouldn’t you rather have milk?”

“I’m lactose intolerant,” the cat said.

“Creamer it is.” After passing out drinks in various forms, I said, “Okay, go.”

“First,” my mom said, “I need to know how Teresa died.”

Victor scowled. “It was labeled an accident. But Teresa did not fall and break her neck in her own house. Someone or something pushed her. No one will help us. They are all frightened. Afraid something might happen to them. We need Belinda to come home with us so she can speak to Teresa and find out what happened.”

Wait. What? “If Teresa is dead, how am I supposed to talk to her?”

“That’s your gift,” Victor said. “You see spirits and speak to the dead.”

“Nope.” I pushed my chair back from the table. “I’m a teacher. My gift is teaching preschoolers that they have to share and take turns. I do not talk to dead people.”

“It’s in our blood,” my mom said. “Believe me there are worse gifts.”

“Put on the bracelet,” Victor said. “You’ll understand your duty.”

I pulled the bracelet out of my pocket. “Mom?”

“It might help with the transition. Please remember, we did what we did out of love and concern for you. If we let you remember your time in Mystic Hills, your gift would have blossomed. If you weren’t prepared…well it’s hard to explain to a six-year-old why ghosts are talking to her.”

I’d been about to slide my hand through the bracelet but stopped. “Wait. Ghosts can just talk to me?” I thought I’d need to hold a seance or say a spell.

“Think of yourself as a ghost magnet,” the cat said.

“I’d rather not,” I shot back. “What do the ghosts want?”

“Some have unfinished business, problems they need to solve before they can move on,” Victor explained. “The recently dead don’t always realize what’s happened. It’s your job to help them accept their new reality.”

“If what Teresa told me is true, it can be overwhelming at first.” Mom touched my arm. “You can learn to control it, but you’ll have to do that in Mystic Hills.”

This house and business no longer seemed like such a good deal. Seeing dead people hoping to settle a score didn’t sound fun. “Can I just ignore all of this? Send Victor and the cat back to Mystic Hills with the bracelet?”

“You could,” my mom said.

“But you shouldn’t,” Victor said. “Teresa has been knocking paintings off the walls trying to get our attention. No one will help her. The longer she’s distressed the more vengeful and unstable she’ll become. She won’t be able to cross over if you don’t help. She’ll be stuck here, and all her humanity will drain away. She’ll become a leech.”

“She’ll become a blood sucking bug?” That didn’t make sense.

“No.” Mom wiped at tears sliding down her cheeks. “A leech sucks the life force from its victims trying to gain power. The stronger it becomes the more dangerous it is. The Mystic Hills elders would hunt her down and damn her to hell for eternity.”

Author Bio:

Chris Cannon is a speech therapist by day and the award-winning author of the Going Down In Flames series, the Boyfriend Chronicles, the Dating Dilemma series, the Demon Bound series, and Mysteries of Mystic Hills series by night.

She lives in Southern Illinois with her husband and several furry beasts. She believes coffee is the Elixir of Life. Most evenings after work, you can find her sipping coffee and writing fire-breathing urban fantasies, sweet snarky romantic comedies, or paranormal cozy mysteries. You can check out her website at www.chriscannonauthor.com.

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