Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contemporary. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2016

True friends can make all the difference


A Friend Like Filby by Mark Wakely

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A Friend Like Filby is a heartfelt, amusing story you won't soon forget. If enough readers nominate it, the novel will be published by Kindle Press and you'll receive a free copy of the eBook when the campaign ends! Read the first three chapters for free and nominate it for free today!

Book Description:

True friends can make all the difference.

George has been fascinated with the idea of time travel ever since the shocking death of his mother when he was ten, and hopes someday to find a friend like Filby, the closest friend of the time traveler in the 1960 movie The Time Machine. George’s high school friends, Dave and Nancy (AKA Onion), struggle to understand his odd obsession. The story takes place during the three friend’s senior year, with a major revelation in store for George on graduation day.


  
Excerpt from Chapter One - SO IT BEGINS

             It’s early.  Real early.  Dave and I were the first ones to arrive.  It’s as quiet as a morgue, with most of the hallway lights still off.  With no one else around, I was surprised the doors were open since the place is usually locked down like the prison it vaguely resembles.

            Dave picked me up right at dawn.  Since he has a car and I don’t, I reluctantly agreed to roll out of bed way ahead of my regular schedule.  Real early was still better than the dreaded school bus from hell I had to take on occasion when a ride from Dave wasn’t possible.  Dave said he had “something to do,” and now I know what it is.  Dave’s standing on a classroom chair, yelling into a security camera.  Never mind that it doesn’t record sound; I guess Dave’s expression and unfriendly gestures are enough to get his message across.  The chair seat is flexing and groaning under Dave’s weight and I’m standing by apprehensive, waiting for the seat to splinter and for Dave to come tumbling down like Humpty Dumpty, cradle and all and whatnot.

            He’s still angry about some decision the school administration announced yesterday regarding student organization budgets or benefits or something.  Not that Dave really cared about any of that; he just loves any opportunity to act offended at anything the administration does.  I guess putting it all on tape for some unsuspecting security guard or secretary to see was his way of making his displeasure known.

            The second week of our senior year and already Dave is in rare form.  He’s screeching now in full rant, his face just inches away from the camera lens.  It was a beautiful performance, gloriously obscene, a marvel of four-letter words strung together like a true maestro.

            When he was finished, he gave the camera an obscene gesture with both hands.

            Spent and out of breath, he climbed down from the chair and dragged it back where it belonged.

            Dave calls our school “The Big Brown Box,” where we’re “processed” and “churned out like obedient zombies.”  I guess its Dave’s calling to be a rabble rouser, but I’m not sure you can make a living at it.  If you could, though, Dave would make a very good one.

            “So.  How was the rant?” Dave asked, still out of breathe but beaming with pride.

            I thought a moment, comparing it to his past performances.

            “Oh, I don’t know.  I’d give it a solid B, maybe a B plus.”

            Dave seemed pleased with the grade.

            “Thanks.  It wasn’t a personal best, but it was pretty good, wasn’t it?’

            “Sure, Dave.  Sure.”

            I patted the big guy on the back, and then we headed off to the cafeteria to sit at our favorite table and wait for them to open so we could get our usual morning cup of joe.

*           *           *

            Our Big Brown Box was one of those sprawling eyesores of a building-- ominous, pompous and dreary, not unlike a few of our teachers.  Built in what seemed like record time, it towered over the neighborhood.  Metal detectors by the main doors were installed our sophomore year, as were the surveillance cameras and doors that locked electronically when classes began.  The joke was they were either trying to keep the bad guys out or the inmates in.  Even the drug-sniffing dog they brought in unannounced on occasion seemed afraid of the place and always bolted out the door when its job was done.

            “Hear that, people?” Dave said loudly one morning when all those electronic locks kicked in with their usual thunk that reverberated down the halls.  “Homeland Security cares about you.”

            Even though our senior year had just begun, oddly enough I was already getting a bit nostalgic, and was thinking lately about my freshman year.  Freshman year was essentially hell week that never ended.  Yeah, we were the scum, the newbies, the dorks and freaks and nerds and geeks that nobody loved or wanted.  There were notable exceptions, of course-- the few girls with supermodel looks already and an even smaller number of jocks with overactive thyroids who towered over the rest of us and made first team without even breaking a sweat.  (Actually, Dave was one of those.)  But like I said, they were the exceptions.  The rest of us had to bow and scrap to the upperclassmen, even those who had little status otherwise.  It got old fast to find all your stuff in the trash if you left it unattended for even a minute, or have someone cut in line in front of you just because you’re new. 

Read more on the nomination page A Friend Like Filby 


Mark Wakely is also the author of:

"I actually read it twice to make sure I hadn't missed anything the first time through- the plot twists and turns are just so clever. It's one of those rare novels you find yourself thinking about and reacting to for days afterwards- to me, that's not just good fiction, that's great fiction." ~ Linda Yung

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Expat

Expat


A story of redemption and renewal by way of Taipei ~ Review by MGoodwin
With frenetic Taiwan as the backdrop, this novel captures a relationship in decline, marred by uncertainty, loneliness, and suspicion. The expat lifestyle and its trappings--drivers, maids, banquet dinners--alienate Lace, the once doting wife, and push her in search of new relationships to fill the ebb of her own marriage. As the novel progresses, her own life begins to mirror that of a coterie of Expat friends, who share tales of infidelity and alcoholism over long lunches at the American Club, where grilled cheese is served alongside tears, angst, and longing for home. The story reaches a fever pitch when loss of friends, family, and love threatens everything Lace has. Highly recommend.

She is faced with people who aren't who they claim to be… #mysterybook EXPAT! #contemporary #romance"

Book Description:
The story takes place in the early 1990's, long before anyone had heard of the term "globalization". It is set in Asia and is seen through the eyes of an expatriate named Lacey. She is a young professional who decides to become a stay-at-home mom. Her husband is offered a job in Taiwan and they decide to accept. Lacey is going to live like a queen. She will have a driver, cook, maid and paid vacations. She will have more money than she ever dreamed of. However, almost immediately, she is faced with people who aren't who they claim to be…. and aren't who she wants them to be.

This world is full of excitement, new experiences, feng shui, underground cities, lies, misconceptions and heartbreak. As Lacey struggles with her marriage, struggles with her new role and struggles with betrayal, she also struggles with her identity.

Unfortunately, loneliness and frustration travel the ocean. Far away from home, people's frailties surface... the highs one experiences are higher, the lows are much lower. Lacey meets a captivating man named Steve. She flirts with betrayal and ultimately becomes a victim to his charm.


On Amazon!

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

CHANCE: A Legal Thriller

CHANCE

CHANCE: A Legal Thriller

This book is in the Hot New Releases TOP 20 on Amazon!

Death does not offend me, and violence does not surprise me. 

Book Description:

A young, hot-shot Florida lawyer with a gambling problem takes on a case to defend a Sudanese man who is accused of killing a doctor complicit in a church massacre in his homeland.

Meet the Authors!


Jamie Mason Cohen is a high school teacher who once worked for Saturday Night Live creator, Lorne Michaels’ in New York City.

He is the author of LIVE FROM YOUR CLASS, Everything I Learned about Teaching, I Learned from Working at Saturday Night Live. He is a TEDx Speaker and the Winner of the TED-Huff Post International Teaching award, “The SOLE Challenge.” He lives in Toronto, Ontario with his wife and two children.



Jimmy Gary Jr. is a WVU alumni and actor who plays CO Felix Rikerson on the Netflix series, “Orange is the New Black.”

He is a strong supporter of “Green Hope,” services for women who are released from Rikerson Island prison and battling substance abuse. He lives in New York with his wife and four daughters.

Excerpt: CHANCE: A Legal Thriller (Kindle Locations 92-99).

The monk took a breath and gazed into the eyes of the detective. His steady nature and even face gave nothing away. “To ignore death is to live your life without ever looking forward and to ignore the preciousness of the moment,” Tenzin remarked. “. Death does not offend me, and violence does not surprise me. A man is dead, and there is nothing to be done but to learn from this event.”

“Did you learn something?” Grant wondered aloud.

“It was a clear and stark reminder that no one is guaranteed the amount of life they wish,” he answered, peering over the detective’s shoulder at the crime scene. “However, it was also a reminder that the impact you make today may be the last one you make.”

Grant tapped his pen on the pad, unsure of what to write. “We have your number,” he finally decided.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Dead Things

Dead Things SM

  Opportunity to get a FREE COPY of LT Kodzo's latest novel* - Dead Things

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Book Description:

Can a half-Ute boy survive abusive white men?

Sixteen-year-old Jimmy Hunter loves dead things. Decaying fossils and buried men no longer have the power to bite or abuse. Jimmy’s problems exist with the living. The half-Ute-Indian boy must survive the angry white men his mother insists on dating without killing them. Because like it or not, he has killed. The list he keeps has over 500 names on it. He doesn’t want to add any more. Can Jimmy escape to the reservation for the life he’s dreamed of? Or will he die trying?

“I understand that cultures can be very different, but people at their heart are the same.”

~ LT Kodzo (Author Q & A)

LT Kodzo

Award-winning Author of Locker 572 releases her second book Dead Things.

EXCERPT: CHAPTER 1

Q: What does the word dinosaur mean?

A: Terrible lizard.

“I love dead things.”

The noise in the classroom stopped.

The PowerPoint presentation behind Jimmy illuminated the dim room in a creepy blue.

His tenth-grade English teacher frowned at him. She probably thought he was going to talk about zombies or ghosts or something dumb. But he wasn’t. Jimmy actually did love dead things.

The real dead.

The decayed and silent and harmless dead.

He cleared his throat to continue, but Mrs. Harris stopped him before he could say another word.

“Tell us your name,” the teacher said.

Jimmy rolled his eyes. He hated the introduction ritual, not just because it was stupid, but because he didn’t like his full name. James Hunter was his father’s name, and Jimmy wanted nothing to do with that dead, white man. But he currently had a bigger problem facing him. In order to get out of the F-zone in English, he had to finish his two-hundred-word, oral essay.

He bit the inside of his lip. Not a single student smiled at him. A couple kids refused to even make eye contact. He tossed his long, black braid over his shoulder and asked, “Do I get all of my points if I start over?”

Mrs. Harris squinted at him before addressing the entire class. “I will make this one exception, but you all know better. I’ve told you all year how important it is to introduce yourself during public speaking events. I will dock anyone else five points if I have to remind you again.”

To emphasize her point, she jabbed her index finger toward a couple of boys in the back. One of them whispered, “great,” while the other flipped Jimmy off from under his desk.

Whatever. Making his bullies angry didn’t matter. He didn’t prepare his “I Love Blank” assignment for them anyway. He did it for his grade. Parent-teacher conferences were in two days and Pyen wouldn’t like that he was failing English. Not that his mother would do anything harsh. She left that task up to whatever white boyfriend she had at the time. She always blabbed to them about him.

“We’re waiting.” Mrs. Harris tapped her pencil on the clipboard.

The class laughed. That didn’t bother Jimmy either. When you weigh over two-hundred-fifty pounds at sixteen years old, you get used to laughs. Instead, Jimmy stood up tall and cleared his throat.

“My name is James Hunter.” He barfed out the hideous title, then added the facts everyone already knew. “I’m a sophomore at Fife High in Puyallup, Washington, and I’d like to present my oral essay titled ‘I Love Dead Things’.”

He glanced at the teacher and she nodded. A girl in the front row leaned forward and pulled long sleeves over bruised wrists. Jimmy didn’t know her, but he recognized the reason for winter flannel while the rest of the school embraced spring in summer shorts. He advanced the presentation. “According to Merriam-Webster, the word ‘dead’ means something is no longer alive.

“It can no longer feel. It can no longer move. Therefore, it can no longer hurt you.”

He exhaled. Thirty-two words done, one-hundred-sixty-eight to go. While he was used to being fat, he still didn’t like standing exposed to the critical eyes of his classmates.

He clicked to the next slide where an animated, screaming T. rex appeared to climb into the room. “The Tyrannosaurus rex has historically been labeled one of the most ferocious animals to ever walk on land, yet since extinction, his reputation has changed.”

The next page showed images of Barney, plus the horse-like T. rex from the Age of Zombies and the quirky smiles of monsters turned friendly in the old TV show Dinosaurs. Jimmy talked about how most people didn’t even know that the word dinosaur meant terrible lizard. “Their ability to entertain has replaced the true facts related to them.

“While some modern re-creators of this savage beast captured its real desire to kill and destroy”—Jimmy clicked through images from the movie Jurassic Park, and the game Minecraft and a screenshot of Grimlock from Transformers—“the real question is, why would anyone choose to change the idea of something so vicious and present it as tamable?”

He looked around the classroom. Kids that sometimes snickered at him were paying attention. Cool. He exhaled again and shifted his weight from one sore foot to the other. This was actually working out for him. After spending a life studying death, he found a place where his childhood experience proved useful. He swallowed and said, “Dead things are safe things.” He looked directly at the front-row girl. “The dead no longer have the ability to hurt the living.”

He clicked to a pic of a museum with the skeletal remains of frozen beasts.

“They are quiet.”

He clicked on an image of an old lady putting flowers into the mouth of a T. rex vase.

“They are tamed.”

He clicked on his favorite picture and smiled. The green-painted monster that monitored downtown Vernal, Utah. The statue, two states away, was dressed in a cowboy hat eating a gigantic watermelon. He loved this corny image for two reasons. It validated that the dead were honestly tamed and because it stood only twenty-five miles down the highway from the Uintah and Ouray Reservation where his mother was born.

“In our world today, dinosaurs are fun. You can’t say that about most living animals until long after they are dead.” He hadn’t written the report for the girl in the front row or anyone else like her, but he desperately wanted her to hear and understand. Her situation had a solution. He cleared his throat. “So, next time you visit a cemetery or a museum, consider how quiet and calm it is and remember, the dead always rest in peace.”

The End appeared on the screen only to be eaten by an animated clip-art T. rex.

Mrs. Harris prompted the other tenth graders to clap. Jimmy felt his brown cheeks warm as he squeezed his way back to his desk. It was over and nothing bad happened. Until, of course, he sat down.

Plastic crunched beneath his butt.

Crap.

Girl-like giggles came from the boys behind him.

He smelled the applesauce before he felt the broken snack-pack seep through his stretch pants. He placed his hand on the desk and stared forward. The only way these boys would win with this prank was if he acknowledged that it happened. He didn’t move. He sat there without shifting through six other presentations until the bell rang. He’d kept a spare pair of sweats in his locker since freshman year. He refused to let a couple glee-geeks steal this moment from him.

Besides, now that the worst part of his day was over, he started to think about the worst part of his night.

Anxiety crawled around in his gut as the rest of the students filed from the class. In less than an hour, he’d be just another young Indian trying to survive in the white man’s world.

  *****

Opportunity to get a FREE COPY of LT Kodzo's latest novel* - Dead Things

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Thursday, August 27, 2015

The 'N' Word


WARNING: This book is adult in nature. It is for mature audiences only.

Excerpt of Review by Cozimfree

In a very real moment in your mind, there should be little to no eye rolls or teeth gnashing from the cover of this book. You’ve seen it and in some instances lived it up close and personal. In an unrealistic world, you are offended, taken aback. The cover is far harsher than this beautiful story. But you should be curious. The words are abrasive and insensitive at times, but if you just hold on, stay the course. Open your mind and heart to “yeah I guess it’s possible.”

This book is timely. It is a work of fiction with well researched non-fiction facts and issues. Oh yes, before you think it, it is a Tiana Laveen book so she is going to “talk at length” about it. Some have other words for her technique. I call it getting it right. Making sure there are no questions. How you work out your life in the now. It’s not quick. That mess stays with you. You toss it about. It tosses you about. You talk then talk again. Then ruminate. If you don’t, guess what? It’s coming back like metastasized cancer. What you are seeing almost daily now on your social media timelines, news casts, blog posts, maybe even your own personal world has been brought forth for you to take a look at from the other side.


Book Blurb: They say there are two sides to a story. And two sides to every man… Aaron Pike is one of those men. Aaron is a white nationalist, a Commander in the organization and Nazi who grew up in Frisco City Alabama. He ends up in the prison system, serving a stint for beating a man nearly to death in what is perceived as a racially driven assault.

While serving his term, the recidivist Aaron believes as he's always done that he will serve his time and be right back out on the front lines of the movement. However, fate ushers him down a different path altogether…

Mia Armstrong is an elementary schoolteacher from a conservative, Christian background. She also volunteers at the prison, and is asked to help spread the word about a prison pen pal program. In that process, she runs into Aaron, and before long, the two hit it off. Only there is one problem… Mia Armstrong is African American. The two forge an alliance and that friendship flourishes into pure, unadulterated love.

How can Aaron force himself to hate a woman he adores and loves based on her race alone? Will Mia be able to stay by his side after discovering the darker edge of the man she’s fallen helplessly in love with?

Double book series – BOTH available now!

Double Book Series FB

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Winner at 2015 LA Book Festival

Wantin Instagram

Wantin just won at the LA Book Festival in the romance category. To celebrate, the e-book has been reduced to .99 cents. This book is intended for an adult audience.

Truth Devour tells a prolific tale that goes beyond the human craving for sex. You’re taken on an expedition of the great unknown to discover self in more than one way. As a reader, you visualize what Talia sees and experience every penetration. As her heart breaks so does yours, and unknowingly you submit to the reality that you are more like her than you could’ve ever imagined from just looking at the cover and reading the title. ~ Excerpt of review by McWood Publishing LLC

YouTube: Chapter One - “Intensity” (being read by Author) – Note: For an Adult Audience.


Life is about choices and chances. You make a choice and take a chance. It all starts and ends with you. ~ Truth Devour  truthdevour.com

Wantin is the first book in the adult contemporary romantic trilogy by Truth Devour.

WantinUnrequitedSated

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Her Dakota Man

Her Dakota Man

Her Dakota Man is currently a free download!

Amazon   Barnes & Noble   ITunes   Kobo   Google Play Books

Blurb/Book Description:

Everyone knows that the Dakotas didn’t get the name Badlands for nothing.  Harsh weather and rough living are a way of life.  But single dad, Logan McKinnon, had seen more than his share of bad times after the death of his wife a year ago.  The last thing he needs is Poppy Erickson, an old flame and his late wife’s best friend, showing up unannounced to help after devastating floods nearly washed away their hometown. With no place to stay in town, he has no choice but to offer her a bed at his house.  But can he live under the same roof with a woman he’d once loved passionately without feeling he’s betraying his late wife?

Poppy Erickson had spent the year wondering how all their lives might have been different after hearing the death bed confession of her childhood friend.  She’d left South Dakota years ago because she couldn’t bear to watch the man she loved loving another woman.  But now she knows the truth.  She’ll keep the promise she made to a friend, but will Logan understand when he learns the truth?  More important, can they again recapture the passion that had been between them all those years ago?

EXCERPT:

One look on Logan McKinnon’s face told Poppy that his foul mood had very little to do with the devastating destruction all around the Badlands of South Dakota…and everything to do with her showing up in town after nearly ten years. 

She didn’t have to be standing next to him to feel his anger simmering just below the surface of his composure.  Sitting in her rental sedan was close enough.  What the hell was she thinking coming back home?  Why had she made that ridiculous promise to Kelly?

She parked the car next to his truck and took a deep breath, mumbling under her breath as she pulled the door handle, “This may just turn out to be the stupidest thing you have ever done, girl.”

Truth was, even as pissed off as Logan looked, he was still an amazing sight to see.  Part of her had hoped that she was wrong.  That she’d gotten over him a long time ago.  That she’d take one look at him, make sure he and Keith were okay, and be able to get back in her car and drive right to the airport in Rapids City.

He turned to her, standing tall and proud.  His thick dark hair blew in the March wind, fluttering around his face and making him all the more strikingly handsome.

Yep.  Stupid.

He was taller than she’d remembered, and he’d long since lost that too-lean teenage body that had driven her crazy in her youth.  He worked hard on his ranch and it showed in how much his arms and chest had filled with muscles.

Despite the cold, he’d taken off his jacket while he worked in the yard and Poppy had a clear view of just how much his male body had filled out in places she’d dreamed of touching.

Lord, help her.  She was in trouble.  And she hadn’t even stepped out of the car yet.  She pushed the door open and stepped outside to get it over with.  It was either going to be the shortest visit on record…or a life changing experience she’d been dreaming of ever since she was a teenager.

“Hi, Logan.”

Logan starred at he for a long, agonizing moment.  She read the emotional tug of war playing on his face as the sudden chill from the South Dakota winds bit into her exposed skin like a whip.

Then his expression turned hard.  “What are you doing here?”

He must have heard the car drive up.  But Logan’s four-year-old son, Keith, remained focused on the mud puddle he was poking a stick into to even notice anyone was around. That was good.  The next few minutes would go easier for both of them if Keith weren’t aware of the tension.

Logan stared at her as if he’d been startled.  Or maybe too focused on making sure his four-year old son, Keith, was safely playing nearby to notice her car had driven up. 

Or perhaps he’d been too pre-occupied with assessing the damage the recent angry South Dakota weather had done to his property.  Poppy had seen just how Mother Nature had shown no mercy to her childhood town as she drove from the airport to the ranch.  She couldn’t exactly blame Logan for being in a foul mood because of that.   

Seeing her was just the icing on the cake.  

“What the hell are you doing here, Poppy?” he repeated.

She took in a deep breath, smelled the muddy earth and decay all around her, and said, “I came to help.”

He took one long look at her, from her high-heeled boots, up the length of her legs, pausing at her hips. She could almost feel his eyes as if he were staring at the flesh beneath her fresh pair of blue jeans. When his gaze finally reached her face again, she slid her sunglasses to the tip of her nose and stared right back at him in challenge.  A slow smile played on her lips.  She could never last as long at this as Logan before caving into laughter.  But she knew Logan was in no laughing mood.

“Poppy Ericksen.  Rudolph was practically washed off the map from all that rain we had?  After all this time, what makes you think I need anything from you?”

Even though his voice was even, she could tell he was still pissed. But he’d never show it.  Keith was still poking at the mud and puddles on the driveway just a little ways away, completely unaware of present company. 

“What’s the matter, Logan?  You don’t look happy to see me,” Poppy said, pulling her sunglasses off her face with a wary smile.

AUTHOR BIO:

New York Times and USA TODAY Bestselling Author, Lisa Mondello, has held many jobs in her life but being a published author is the last job she'll ever have. She's not retiring! She blames the creation of the personal computer for her leap into writing novels. Otherwise, she'd still be penning stories with paper and pen.

Her first book, All I Want for Christmas is You won Best First Book in the Golden Quill. Her books have finaled in the HOLT Medallion, and the Colorado Award of Excellence contests. In 2011 she re-released her award winning book All I Want for Christmas is You along with a re-issue of her romantic comedy, The Marriage Contract, with a new contemporary romance called The Knight and Maggie's Baby.

In 2012 she reissued the first 3 books of her popular Western Romance Series TEXAS HEARTS including Her Heart for the Asking, His Heart for the Trusting and The More I See. Writing as LA Mondello, her romantic suspense, MATERIAL WITNESS, Book 1 of her Heroes of Providence series made the USA TODAY Bestsellers List.

You can find more information about Lisa Mondello at:

http://www.lisamondello.blogspot.com

https://twitter.com/lisamondello

https://www.facebook.com/LisaMondello.Author

See previous post: Lisa Mondello states, “I started book scrapbooking as a way to get me in the mood of writing a particular scene and to keep track of details.”

Her Dakota Man is currently a free download!

Amazon   Barnes & Noble   ITunes   Kobo   Google Play Books

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Five Years – The Meeting

Five_Years__The_Meeting_1_Cover__Smaller

Five Years – The Meeting

UK  USA  CDN  AU

“A parapsychologic writer, Leonard Belmont seeks truth through automatic writing, a process where he lets his inner-most thoughts and ideas flow onto the paper without conscious critique. This autopilot exploration unearths the unconscious secrets our spiritual self keeps from our conscious, critical self.” ~ from the Amazon Biography

Note: I am so very interested in automatic writing and consider this my lucky day to be introduced to this book. I am sure many of you will agree.

Guest Article by Leonard Belmont

Do you remember when you knew you were falling in love?

Do you recall the thoughts, feeling and emotions you experienced when falling in love?

We have all read or hear love stories at one point or another, but this love is story is very different.

In this five part star-crossed love story, author Leonard Belmont takes us on an emotional journey with his automatic writings of the life of a young couple from the moment they laid eyes on each other.

Lovely Language and Relatable Emotion Make This an Engaging Read ~ Review by E. Lucas (Top 500 Reviewer)

“Five Years: The Meeting” is the lyrical, stream-of-thought tale of the first meeting and initial courtship of two young lovers.

Interestingly, the story begins at the end—you go into the book knowing that the love will end and that the narrator is in great pain as he longs for the woman who was the love of his life. From there, the narrative flashes into the past and recounts the first days of the relationship—from his spotting her in French class and falling instantly in love to the first date and the emotions surrounding it all. As they flirt and share interests, discovering more about each other, the relationship slowly blossoms—even as he (and you as a reader) worry at first that the girl is not as interested in him as he is in her, and that she has missed seeing the connection they could have.

Once you hit adulthood, you’ve probably experienced this instant chemistry with someone—and so the author’s strong feelings and amazement that he has found someone so perfect are very relatable. The sentences are thoughtful and precise, almost poetry, which also made this an enjoyable read from a more literary perspective. Small details in the text, such as the changing color of the girl’s hair throughout the seasons, are also really lovely: “The beauty of sunlight./Your hair transforming throughout the seasons./In summer, you seemed blonde, and during the winter darker, almost chestnut./By fall/The gold had started to rust.”

The delicacy of the language as well as the emotions of the story itself are what keep you reading—as does the mystery of why their romance ended, though I assume that will be revealed in later sequels to this work.

Recommended to readers who enjoy out-of-the-box prose and stories about the intensity of first love.

Five Years – The Meeting

UK  USA  CDN  AU

Monday, September 8, 2014

Seduction 6

 

Seduction_6

Great Plot But The Characters Make This a Five-Star Romance 

~ Review by Norma D

This is the third book I’ve read by the same author and all of them share some of the same traits: they are incredibly absorbing, fast-paced and filled with real characters who it is easy to sympathize with and root for. They are classic romances but, in some ways, also feel like you’re reading a mystery or thriller because the plots are so filled with twists and turns and surprises that I found myself unable to wait to see what would happen next.

The story begins with a wedding, always a romantic start, and then gets really interesting from there. Again, the characters are the things that set this book apart. They are well written and fully formed, real people with both good and bad traits. They are, just like real people, complicated and that is what makes them so engaging. I should also say that the women the author features in her books are different from so many in traditional romance novels. They are not passive and do not wait for things to happen to them. They have brains and wills and aren't just pretty adornments.

For anyone who loves romance novels but also loves heroines that are modern and relatable, I highly recommend this book…and the entire series.

Seduction 6: Book 6 (Strong Young Women Series)

is available on Amazon!

Excerpt:

The glistening body kept coming closer and closer. Ana laughed and turned to the side. There was no way she was touching that oil drenched body.

He was shirtless and wearing a fireman’s uniform, minus the shirt which he had just discarded. His pants were being held up by suspenders. His head was covered by a yellow hard hat and he had an axe over his shoulder.

She laughed and looked over at Kelly beside her who had a policeman dancing for her. He too was shirtless and on the waistband of his pants were a pair of handcuffs, and his head was covered with a cop hat.

The cop grinned and hooked his thumb through the cuffs and the room shrieked. Way to go Stefano, Ana thought.

She looked back at her fireman who had now gotten rid of the axe which Ana was glad to see had just been a prop. He twisted his body like a pretzel and glided towards her.

Stefano came into her line of vision and started snapping, snapping and snapping more pictures. She tried to hide her face, but when she realized there was no choice really, she made a face at him then turned back to her glistening fireman.

At least she had forbidden Hope to take pictures. All the girls knew that pictures wouldn’t go down well with the guys, so had all nixed the idea. However, it looked like Stefano was taking matters into his own hands.

Ana watched her fireman as he pulled his pants off and the women in the room went crazy. It was deafening.

Whoever made that bikini thong needs to be put in jail. Ana’s glanced in shock, then immediately looked towards Kelly who was laughing at her. She heard laughter from Jes and Evelyn who were both to the right of Kelly.

The doctor in front of Jes had lost not only his white coat, but his shirt scrubs and now just wore his pants and a stethoscope around his neck.

In his hand he was holding a large gizmo that looked like the one doctors used when you went for a pap smear. Ana shivered just thinking about how cold that apparatus was.

Her fireman reached over and pulled her from her chair. The women shrieked and encouraged him.

Ana tried to distance herself away but he placed her over his shoulder and continued dancing while she hung there suspended over his shoulder. This couldn’t be happening. She didn’t know where to touch. His back, his thong or his butt cheeks.

 

Seduction 6: Book 6 (Strong Young Women Series)

is available on Amazon!

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Ryker’s Justice

 

rykersjustice

Guest article by Lee Ann Sontheimer Murphy

In the ancient Ozark hills, secrets abound in the remote valleys and caves. Jude Ryker has returned to his roots but there’s more involved than a homecoming. He’s a Department of Justice agent on a mission and there’s more at stake than falling in love. Ryker’s Justice, new from Evernight Publishing, by Lee Ann Sontheimer Murphy.

Excerpt:

She sang the lyrics, eyes closed, her alto voice taking the words and claiming them. Nicole made it into her song, her lament. Jude shared the raw emotions she put into it and he wanted to weep or rage. He ached to pound the steering wheel to vent his feelings, and he wanted to take her with such a powerful rush of desire that he didn’t dare trust himself to share.

Without warning, without thinking, he pulled into the parking lot of a long-closed restaurant as gravel crunched beneath his tires. As soon the truck halted, he touched her hand. “Stop,” he cried, his voice hoarse and harsh. Then Jude twisted the radio off and silence fell between them, heavy as sin, darker than midnight.

Nicole lifted her head and faced him, her eyes brimming with unshed tears. “Jude?” she asked, hesitant.

Clumsy as a bear, desperate as a drunkard in search of drink, he grasped her shoulders and took her mouth with his. From the first impact, want triumphed over common sense and tenderness drowned under the powerful rush of aching need. In those moments, Jude sought to fill his emptiness, to erase his loneliness with Nicole’s vital presence. Desperation mingled with rising desire and he kissed her hard. Her mouth remained immobile beneath his and then yielded, her lips meeting his with the same hungry fire. Nicole wrapped her arms around him and held tight. Her essence, the taste of her mouth, the aroma of her hair and skin, surrounded him and he drank deep. Their connected mouths delivered a rush of pure emotion, enhanced with adrenalin. Jude kissed her until his lungs protested, until his breath came short and his body burned with want.

Something in the kiss awakened feelings he didn’t expect to have for any woman and delivered him from the abyss of his solitary life. He tasted hope on her lips and the impact skewered him, sharp and visceral. Everything he thought he’d wanted and worked for changed in those moments to a new reality. Jude broke away with more turbulent emotion than he’d had during meaningless sex. His feelings were engaged as much as his body, and the combination packed a potent punch.

He stared at her and when she smiled, his heart twisted into a pretzel knot. “Maybe I should sing more often,” she said.

 

Ryker’s Justice is available on Amazon!