Monday, August 25, 2014

Catcher's Keeper Book Spotlight

Catcher's Keeper by JD SperoPublication date: March 1, 2014 by Createspace


What if Holden Caulfield was around when John Lennon was shot? In 1980 John Lennon was killed by Mark David Chapman, who believed he was Holden Caulfield, narrator of the classic “The Catcher in the Rye.” After the shooting, Chapman remained on the scene calmly reading the book, which he later offered to police as his statement. “Catcher’s Keeper” asks the question, “What if Holden could have met Chapman, learned of his plan, and tried to prevent the assassination?”

About the author:

Johannah Davies Spero was born near a pristine lake in the Adirondacks and has lived in various cities such as St. Petersburg (Russia), Indianapolis, Dallas, and Boston. She has pursued her love of narrative through degrees in English, Russian, and teaching—and has worked as an actress, a yoga instructor, a web design entrepreneur, freelance writer, and a high school English teacher. She lives in the Northeast with her husband and three young sons.
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Photo by JC Lines Photography
A more personal note about me and my writing:
When asked how long I’ve been writing, I usually give my standard answer: “Just over a decade.” But truth be told, I have been writing ever since I can remember, filling childhood journals with poems and existential, prepubescent musings. My mother, a high school English teacher, would try to encourage me to read, read, read…but I always felt drawn to put pen to paper and create my own words. If I had known then that reading would make me a better writer, I would’ve taken her advice. But alas, what tween wants to admit Mom is right?

I’ve written five novels to date, and I’m excited to launch Catcher’s Keeper and to share my story with the world!



Follow the Tour!

August 21
Review at Deal Sharing Aunt
August 22
Review at Therian
August 25
Spotlight Feature at A Book Geek
August 26
Interview at Infinite House of Books
August 27
Interview at Pen & Muse
September 1
Interview at Literary Lunes

Also on the Tour
Author Q&A Feature at The Page Turners Book Club




Thursday, August 21, 2014

The Yankee Club Blog Tour and giveaway

The Yankee Club by Michael Murphy
Publication date: August 12, 2014 by Alibi
Source: Publisher via TLC Book Tours for an honest review
Description:

In Michael Murphy’s action-packed Prohibition-era novel of suspense, a mystery writer returns to the bright lights and dark alleys of New York City—uncovering a criminal conspiracy of terrifying proportions.


In 1933, America is at a crossroads: Prohibition will soon be history, organized crime is rampant, and President Roosevelt promises to combat the Great Depression with a New Deal. In these uncertain times, former-Pinkerton-detective-turned-bestselling-author Jake Donovan is beckoned home to Manhattan. He has made good money as the creator of dashing gumshoe Blackie Doyle, but the price of success was Laura Wilson, the woman he left behind. Now a Broadway star, Laura is engaged to a millionaire banker—and waltzing into a dangerous trap.

Before Jake can win Laura back, he’s nearly killed—and his former partner is shot dead—after a visit to the Yankee Club, a speakeasy dive in their old Queens neighborhood. Suddenly Jake and Laura are plunged into a conspiracy that runs afoul of gangsters, sweeping from New York’s private clubs to the halls of corporate power and to the White House itself. Brushing shoulders with the likes of Dashiell Hammett, Cole Porter, and Babe Ruth, Jake struggles to expose an inconspicuous organization hidden in plain sight, one determined to undermine the president and change the country forever.


My Take:
I wasn't sure what to expect when I agreed to participate in the tour for The Yankee Club. I needn't have worried at all. This was just a straight-up fun read from start to finish. Jake Donovan is such a great lead character - he is funny and sarcastic and a decent guy. Jake returns to New York from Florida to deal with some last minute publication issues on his forthcoming detective novel. See how this will be fun? Jake is a former-detective writing detective novels and the star of a detective novel. 

The reader gets to hang out with a host of great characters besides Jake. Naturally, there is Laura, the love of Jake's life who is currently engaged to a millionaire banker of the outwardly-suave-and-handsome-but-also-probably-evil variety. But I think my favorite characters besides Jake, were Gino,the guy from his old neighborhood who owns a speakeasy and Frankie, Jake's driver who drinks way too much to be a driver.

I enjoyed that the mystery that Jake starts out investigating - finding the killer of his friend - turns into something else entirely. The scope of the story changes dramatically and there are many dubious characters that Jake must contend with. The reader gets to follow Jake as he figures out who is trustworthy and who is not -- but not always as quickly or as easily as he might wish. Things are not always as they seem. I appreciated how Murphy brought real people into the story and managed to make it work really well. 

I really liked The Yankee Club and will happily recommend it to anyone - especially those who like historical/period fiction and mysteries. This was one of those books that was just fun to read. I enjoyed the mystery and the danger, but I was also confident that Jake could handle whatever was thrown at him - with a little help from his friends, of course.




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 About Michael Murphy

Michael Murphy is a full time author and part time urban chicken rancher in Arizona. He lives in Arizona with his wife of forty-one years and the four children they adopted this past year. In August, Random House Alibi will publish his ninth novel, a historical mystery set in the prohibition era, The Yankee Club.


Michael Murphy’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:

Monday, August 4th:  Reading Reality
Tuesday, August 5th:  5 Minutes for Books
Wednesday, August 6th:  Bibliotica
Friday, August 8th: ImaginativeMinds*
Monday, August 11th:  The Book Binder’s Daughter
Tuesday, August 12th: Read a Latte
Wednesday, August 13th: “I Think I’m Obsessed!” Book Reviews
Thursday, August 14th:  The Reader’s Hollow
Friday, August 15th:  Mystery Playground  – Author Guest Post “Drinks with Reads”
Monday, August 18th:  Joyfully Retired
Tuesday, August 19th:  Life by Kristen
Tuesday, August 19th: Dwell in Possibility
Wednesday, August 20th:  Nightly Reading 
Thursday, August 21st: A Book Geek
Friday, August 22nd:  From the TBR Pile
Monday, August 25th:  Laura’s Booklist
Friday, August 29th:  Harlie’s Books



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Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Lighthouse Island Blog Tour

Lighthouse Island by Paulette Jiles
Publication date: July 29, 2014 by William Morrow
Source: Publisher via TLC Book Tours for an honest review
Description:
A beautiful and captivating dystopian tale resonant with love and hope from the acclaimed poet and New York Times bestselling author of The Color of LightningStormy Weather, and Enemy Women
See the rain forests . . . northern beauty, misted nights. Come to Lighthouse Island . . .
In the coming centuries, Earth’s population has exploded and covered the planet with endless cities. It is an unwelcoming world for Nadia Stepan, abandoned at age four and left with only a drawing of the Big Dipper and her mother’s parting words: “Look to the North Star, and we will always be there.” Nadia grows up dreaming of the vacation spot called Lighthouse Island, in a place called the Pacific Northwest where she believes her long-lost parents must be.
In the meantime, this bright and witty orphan finds refuge in neglected books, and the voice of Big Radio that emanates from an abandoned satellite, patiently reading the great classical books of the world.

When an opportunity for escape appears, Nadia strikes out in search of a dream. She faces every contingency with inventiveness and meets a man who changes the course of her life. Together, they head north toward a place of wild beauty that lies far beyond the megalopolis: Lighthouse Island.


My Take:
Lighthouse Island is one of those books that just seemed like something I would like. It is dystopian, it is literary, it is adult. So, yes, I liked it.

The reader is introduced to Raisa as just a girl whose parents left her on the street. She becomes one of many orphans who are growing up in a strange, dry, anonymous part of what was once the U.S.  She likes to be alone, but everyone wants her to to be with the group; she can't watch television because it hurts her eyes, but that is the main source of entertainment for everyone. She doesn't fit into their mold. Her name is changed to Nadia for some strange, unexplained reason having to do with her medical care. 

Things feel weird and vague. Sometimes it seems like Nadia is walking through a vague, foggy dream - or nightmare - might be more accurate. There is no sense of time or place or even person-hood. The world building is done gradually since the reader experiences everything through the eyes of either Nadia or James, a wealthy man who was paralyzed in a fall and ends up helping Nadia. The world Nadia and James inhabit it a strange and uncertain one where people pretend not to see anything that might make them a target, and for the most part, just seem to accept that this is how things are. There is little reflection on things or questioning the system. The few who do end up in prison or on the newest show that broadcasts live executions. 

One of my favorite things about Nadia is how she is able to instinctively capitalize on the inefficient bureaucracy of her world. People are at the mercy of whatever agency or department is currently rounding people up or hunting people down, or searching for evidence of some vague crime or intent. It is all very disconcerting and menacing. There are lots of rules that make little sense and many limitations on freedoms. Nadia, of course, sees the fact that no one knows what any one else is doing or who they are working for, so she takes on a persona and makes up titles and occupations as needed to talk her way out of situations. She is usually pretty successful.

I kept wondering while I was reading the book about who was actually in charge of the country. Was there anyone actually in charge? It seemed like the so-called leaders that were shown on the screen were just figureheads, someone from central casting even. Or was everything run by competing departments? I think the book brings a lot of current issues to the reader's attention by taking these issues to extremes and showing the victims and results.

I will admit that Light Island may not be for everyone, but I really enjoyed it. Even the lack of quotation marks didn't bother me. In fact, I thought it worked well with the story. It seemed to reflect the uncertainty in which the people lived.




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Paulette JilesAbout Paulette Jiles

Paulette Jiles is a poet and memoirist. She is the author of Cousins, a memoir, and the bestselling novels Enemy Women and Stormy Weather. She lives in San Antonio, Texas.

Paulette’s Tour Stops

Wednesday, July 30th: No More Grumpy Bookseller
Tuesday, August 5th: BookNAround
Thursday, August 7th: BoundbyWords
Wednesday, August 13th: The Steadfast Reader
Monday, August 18th: Love at First Book
Wednesday, August 20th: A Book Geek
Friday, August 22nd: Read. Write. Repeat
Monday, August 25th: she treads softly
Wednesday, August 27th: Fuelled by Fiction
Thursday, August 28th: Giraffe Days

TBD: Book Snob






Thursday, August 14, 2014

Moonflower Book Spotlight

Title: Moonflower: A Memoir of Healing
Author: Tara Edin
Publisher: Tara Edin
Pages: 156
Genre: Memoir
Format: Kindle
Purchase at AMAZON
Blooming was her Birthright. Darkness the Unexpected Catalyst.
Tara is an incest, rape and sexual abuse survivor, who suffered from PTSD for many years but was misdiagnosed with mental illnesses instead. This took her down a near-fatal path ultimately ending in an accident, which nearly claimed her life at age 29. Most only know the abridged version of the story, yet the real story holds many truths and miracles that must be shared. With a second lease on life, Tara faces the sexual abuse and betrayal from her younger years with support from a compassionate zen therapist. Tara begins to recreate her life with a new spirituality that feeds her soul and encompasses her painful past, giving life to the love that has always been her birthright. With lucid prose and powerful poetry, Tara details her soul’s transformation from darkness to light, offering her readers the gifts of honesty, empathy, and empowerment.
Moonflower is Part Memoir, Part Self-Help & Part Spiritual Odyssey.
Rape, incest and sexual assault are unspoken controversial topics that still fester behind closed doors in the 21st century as survivors are still being told to “Get over it,” or worse, “It didn’t even happen.” It takes years to heal from such life-altering, traumatic experiences, and many survivors are doing this work alone. There is a great need for testimonies from those who have emerged from their ordeals stronger.
This revealing story uncovers the aftermath of abuse that often leads to unstable relationships, repeated abuse, and mental or physical dis-ease. Although Moonflower covers difficult topics such as emotional and sexual abuse, the author sifts through these experiences to offer her readers the gifts and lessons that can be drawn from such setbacks.
There is no cookie-cutter journey to healing, but there is great power in sharing our stories. Moonflower exhibits the power of the self and spirit in the healing process. It stretches beyond what may be considered a “normal” path and braves a non-traditional spiritual road to wellness, inspiring others to broaden their perspectives of the healing experience. Readers will be inspired by Tara’s fiery spirit and deep reflective soul, cheering her on as she finds her way back to herself.


Thursday, August 7, 2014

Agben School Spotlight



Title: The Agben School
Author: Jo Sparkes
Publisher: Oscar Press
Pages: 384
Genre: Fantasy
Format: Paperback
Purchase at AMAZON

Agben had stood for a thousand years. A mysterious school housing more than students, it was the seat of the powerful Women of Agben, and the center for harnessing the potency of herbs. Few knew all that transpired within the walls.


And now Marra stood at its gate.

Friends and support stripped from her, the fragile life she’d built for herself now lay in tatters. And the source of this evil hunted her like a deer culled from the herd.


The gateway before her was her only hope.


For as the city itself crumbled, all depended not on a prince trying to save his people, nor the valiant men who’d brought them this far.


Everything depended on finding a magic powder in the vaults of Agben itself.


Everything depended on her.


Book Excerpt:
– PROLOGUE –

Mik was all of ten years old, and had responsibility.
That’s what his mother had told him this morning, when it was time to open the shop. His grandfather was ill, and needed care from time to time.
“Just keep it closed for the morning,” Father had suggested.
“Not with four ships in port,” Mother had snapped back.
So it was his job to mind the shop.
He’d done everything before, of course. Poured out the herbs, wrapped them in paper. Kept them close to himself until the customer paid in coin. “A poor little Mid Isle shop taking credit would go broke in a month,” his mother smilingly explained to any who asked.
Yes, he’d seen it all and he knew what to do.
Until the pretty girl walked in. Maybe 16 years old, he guessed. Maybe more. Her clothes weren’t as nice as many before her, but nicer than some. She had that desert air about her, down to the sandal shoes, but her hair was long in the Missean fashion, not the short cut of the Flats.
She didn’t seem Agben. But she didn’t seem not Agben, either.
It was a dark red hair, braided down her back. When she turned in the sunlight from the door the red flashed at him. Little wisps escaped and curled around her face, making her seem too soft.
Women of Agben were never soft.
Mik realized that responsibility did indeed have weight, just as his father said. He was feeling that weight on his shoulders this very second.
The girl looked over the shelves carefully, and he didn’t interrupt her.
And then she turned to him, and smiled. The smile alone was almost enough to prove she wasn’t Agben. Almost.
“Illsmith,” she said. “Do you have any?”
Mik nodded. “In the back, Miss. How much do you want?”
“Just a handful, please.” Her eyes were blue, he saw, but not the faded blue of his mother and baby sister. Hers were a deep blue, like the sea’s depths as evening fell.
He hurried to fetch her Illsmith.
“And Musk Oil?” she called after him.
Ahh hah! The pretty girl must be of Agben, Mik realized. Illsmith was a desert plant, and Musk Oil from the Great Continent. Those two went together, he knew, to rub on sore muscles and strained shoulders. He knew because one of the Agben women had told his mother so when his father had hurt himself pulling in the big swoopfish.
Mik grabbed a tiny glass bottle of oil – all of ten copper, he told himself – and then the crock of Illsmith. Returning to the girl, he set both on the counter, and produced a paper for the Illsmith. “Twelve copper,” he told her as plucked out a good handful of the herb and wrapped it proper.
Some people frowned when the price was mentioned, but this girl merely pulled coins from a pocket and counted it out.
Mik stooped low, to open the box his mother had told him he shouldn’t know about, and snatch the pretty bauble inside.
He carefully wrapped it in a soft cloth, the kind used for fragile glass on long trips. And then presented it to the girl.
“What is this?” she asked, starting to lift a wrapped corner.
Mik stopped her as old man Tanner strode into the shop. “Take it,” the boy whispered.
“Mik, my boy,” Tanner grinned, looking around for his mother. The old man always wanted advice on a new ache. “Your mother not here this morning?”
The girl hesitated, still staring at him. He snatched up the coin she’d placed on the counter, and tugged the step ladder over to just beneath the Stomach Cure jar.
“That’s right,” Tanner told him. “Just a swig, my boy. Just a swig.”
Mik felt the pretty girl’s eyes on him. Surely she knew no one else was supposed to see that thing. Surely she knew to stick it in her pocket and pretend it didn’t exist.
The girl gave him a last frown, but said no more. By the time he’d wrangled the tonic down from the shelf, she’d gone.



About the Author
A well-known Century City Producer once said that Jo Sparkes “…writes some of the best dialogue I’ve read.”  Her  body of work includes scripts for Children’s live-action and animated television programs, a direct to video Children’s DVD, commercial work for corporate clients. She won the 2012 Kay Snow award for her screenplay, Frank Retrieval.

She’s written numerous articles for internet sites. As a member of the Pro Football Writer’s Association, she was a contributing writer for the Arizona Sports Fans Network, where she was known for her humorous articles, player interviews and game coverage. Jo was unofficially the first to interview Emmitt Smith when he arrived in Arizona to play for the Cardinals.  

She served as an adjunct teacher at the Film School at Scottsdale Community College, and wrote “Feedback  How to Give It  How to Get It” for writers, actors, and other artists.
Her latest book is the fantasy, The Agben School.
For More Information

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Favors and Lies Blog Tour and Review

Favors and Lies by Mark Gilleo
Publication date: July 1, 2014 by The Story Plant
Source: Publisher for an honest review
Description: 
Dan Lord is a forty-year-old private detective with a law degree working the blurred line between right and wrong in the Nation’s Capital. As a self-employed solutions broker and legal consultant, he works for a very select clientele. He doesn’t advertise and only takes cases on referral. But when two people close to him are murdered, Dan's work becomes very personal.
With the assistance of a newly hired female intern, extracting clues from a ladder of acquaintances, Dan bounds through both the underbelly and elite of society, each step bringing more questions and yet ultimately taking him closer to the answer he seeks. A bail bondsman, a recluse hacker, a court clerk, a university student, an old-school barber, a high-class madam, an intelligence officer, a medical doctor, and a police detective are among the list of people Dan must cajole for help. His quest will lead him to discover things he never wanted to know, and put him in the position to reveal things that important people would prefer remain unrevealed.

Tense, ingenious, and filled with the unforgettable characters that have become a Mark Gilleo trademark, Favors and Lies is the most thrilling novel yet from one of the great new voices in suspense fiction.


My Take:
Favors and Lies sounded like it might be an interesting read, so I agreed to review it. I had no idea that it would be so much fun and such an intense page turner. I was hooked from the first few pages. I was intrigued by this guy and had to find out what was going on. I loved the way the first couple of chapters of the book don't really explain things - the reader is just along for the ride while Dan goes about his business. At first it isn't really clear what that business is - he meets with a guy in a bar after a bunch of elusive moves to make sure he isn't followed or recognized. Intriguing. It seems that Dan is the good guy in the situation, but it is all very mysterious. The second chapter, however, is where I was truly hooked. This is where the head-long rush to find out what is going on hit me.

Dan Lord is a great protagonist - smart, tough, wily, stubborn and loyal. When two members of his family are found dead on the same night, he is determined to find answers. When he becomes a suspect in their murders, he is even more determined. And he is pretty angry at the way things are going. Obviously, there is something big going on and Dan is going to find out what it is.

I don't want to discuss particulars because I don't want to give away the good stuff. Suffice to say, I was impressed with the story and was completely entertained. Things are seldom what they seem and Dan has managed to get on a lot of people's wrong sides - which makes for some fun reading. Impressively, I was actually surprised at the big reveal. I really did not see it coming. 

Favors and Lies was such a blast from start to finish. I didn't know what to expect from Mark Gilleo's writing, but I was happily surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. If you like action-packed thriller/mysteries with a super cool protagonist, then you will probably enjoy Favors and Lies



About the Author:

Mark Gilleo holds a graduate degree in international business from the University of South Carolina and an undergraduate degree in business from George Mason University. He enjoys traveling, hiking and biking. A fourth-generation Washingtonian, he currently resides in the D.C. area. His two most recent novels were recognized as finalist and semifinalist, respectively, in the William Faulkner-Wisdom creative writing competition.
http://markgilleo.com


Follow the tour here:
July 01, 2014 - Dive Under the Cover

July 01, 2014 - Teena in Toronto

July 15, 2014 - The Bunny`s Review

July 31, 2014 - A Blue Million Books

August 05, 2014 - A Book Geek


Monday, August 4, 2014

The Forever Man blog tour and review

The Forever Man by Pierre Oulellette
Publication date: July 8, 2014 by Alibi e-original (Random House)
Source: Publisher via TLC Book Tours for an honest review
Description:

From the author of The Deus Machine and The Third Pandemic comes a fast-paced thriller about the power of harnessing life itself—and the deadly secrets it conceals.
Portland, Oregon, was once a beacon of promise and prosperity. Now it’s the epicenter of a world gone wrong, its streets overrun by victims and hustlers, drifters and gangsters. Lowly contract cop Lane Anslow struggles to keep afloat—and to watch out for his brilliant but bipolar brother, Johnny, a medical researcher. Lane soon discovers that Johnny is part of an experiment veiled in extraordinary secrecy. But he has no idea who’s behind it, how astronomical the stakes are, or how many lives might be destroyed to make it a reality.

Now Johnny’s gone missing. To find him, Lane follows a twisting trail into a billionaire’s hilltop urban fortress, a politician’s inner circle, a prison set in an aircraft graveyard, and a highly guarded community where people appear to be half their biological age. Hunted by dueling enemies, Lane meets a beautiful and enigmatic woman at the center of a vast web of political and criminal intrigue. And behind it all is a sinister, desperate race to claim the biggest scientific prize of all: eternal life.

My Take:
If you have read much of my blog, you know that I love a good dystopian novel. I also love science fiction, but I don't review a lot of it. The Forever Man is sort of touted as sci fi techno thriller -- which it is, but I also think it easily falls into dystopia as well. The setting for the novel is a near-future version of Portland, Oregon where the economy has continued to benefit the super wealthy at the expense of the rest of the population. Every indication points to the fact that Portland is just a small fraction of the same type of situation for the rest of the country. Things have gone severely wrong for most of the population. Survival has become an issue. 

Law enforcement has been given over to contract cops who only patrol parts of the city - the safer parts. Lane Anslow is one of those cops and he works in the seedier areas trying to bring peace and justice -- which seems like a losing battle at this point. The neighborhoods are run by gangsters and the politicians have questionable ties to some of these gangs. Unfortunately for Lane, he is over forty and is deemed too old to continue as a contract cop. He also has a younger brother, Johnny, who is a brilliant scientist with bipolar disorder. Needless to say, Lane has a lot of stress and little cash or income to support himself or take care of his brother when he hits a downturn.

When Johnny disappears under suspicious circumstances, Lane uses all of his hard earned skills and connections to create a new identity and try to find his brother. This search is where things get crazy - well, even crazier than they were before. 

The Forever Man is about Lane's search for his brother and it is a long and incredibly dangerous and surprising one. Along the way, Lane and the reader encounter corrupt politicians, super wealthy people obsessed with looking decades younger than their actual age, the sharp contrast between the super wealthy and the rest of the population, the secretive and extremely wealthy man that seems to be at the center of many of the strange occurrences, a very unusual prison and ultimately, the search for the ability to live forever. 

I enjoyed The Forever Man very much. Lane is a great leading man and I loved all the action. I was also caught up in some of the other important aspects of the novel -- the examination of some of our shallower human qualities like the strange desire we have to look younger and to live on and on and the constant striving for power. I also thought this near future vision of our world was just a little too close for comfort. It was definitely a great read.




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About Pierre Ouellette

Pierre Ouellette entered the creative realm at age thirteen as a lead guitarist for numerous bands in the Pacific Northwest, including Paul Revere and the Raiders, and later played with such jazz luminaries as saxophonist Jim Pepper and bassist David Friesen. He has had two novels published in seven languages and both optioned for film. He has also authored two biotech thrillers published in paperback under the name Pierre Davis, and directed and produced The Losers Club, a documentary about struggling musicians. Ouellette lives in Portland, Oregon, where he now devotes himself exclusively to writing fiction and playing jazz guitar now and then in a little bar just down the street.

Pierre Ouellette’s TLC Book Tours TOUR STOPS:

Monday, July 7th: No More Grumpy Bookseller
Tuesday, July 8th: From the TBR Pile
Wednesday, July 9th: Crime Book Club
Thursday, July 10th: Patricia’s Wisdom
Monday, July 14th: She Treads Softly
Wednesday, July 16th: Bewitched Bookworms
Monday, July 21st: Reading Reality
Wednesday, July 23rd: Back Porchervations
Thursday, July 24th: Mom in Love with Fiction
Monday, July 28th: The Year in Books
Tuesday, July 29th: Drey’s Library
Wednesday, July 30th: Dwell in Possibility
Monday, August 4th: A Book Geek
Tuesday, August 5th: A Fantastical Librarian
Wednesday, August 6th: Black ‘n Gold Girl’s Book Spot

Thursday, August 7th: My Shelf Confessions




A Man of Honor Blog Tour and Review

  A Man of Honor, or Horatio's Confessions by J.A. Nelson Publication Date: December 9, 2019 Quill Point Press Paperback, eBook & ...