Guest Blog Post: Self-Care By Sarah Dickinson

 As we tread through the New Year, we find some, if not all, of our resolutions falling by the wayside. However, one doesnโ€™t have to wait till December 31st and the rush of holiday feels and stress to decide to make changes. Any day is a good day to take care of yourself, and one of the best things you can do is introduce some self-care into your life.

  With self-care becoming a growing topic I want to be clear about what itโ€™s not. It isnโ€™t a license to make unhealthy choices or shirk responsibility. Itโ€™s not about spending sprees or throwing around money you donโ€™t have. In a world full of consequences, the last thing it should encourage is a bucket full of regrets when you must face the music from your choices.

  Our world is ever -spinning and growing, and ever rushing us from one moment to the next. Self-care is about the pause where you allow yourself to smell the roses, as it were. Where the must crucial aspect is an honest internal dialogue. Taking a few moments to quietly address and asses your needs whether they are emotional, physical or mental. Once you figure out what you are in need of to achieve balance you then select an activity to improve that.

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 So here are some simple things you can do every day to both provide yourself with care as well as opening up dialogue within yourself, so it becomes second nature.

  1. GET MORE SLEEP. Countless studies show that the majority of us are not getting enough sleep. We probably all know better sleep equals better mood, but did you know it also helps prevent weight gain, improves memory, hand eye coordination as well as strengthen your heart? It truly is one of the best things you can give yourself and will help you in making the most of your day. It will make the good days sweeter and provide the strength to get through the bad ones. Yes, despite what many other articles will tell you bad days are sure to be par for the course. Thereโ€™s no amount of self-help, positive perspective or vitamins that can guarantee a great day every day.
  2. LEAVE YOUR PHONE OFF FOR 1 HOUR. You may wonder how this even applies to self-care. Well, it does, on two levels. Studies show us time and time again that all this technology, social media, and unbound access to more information than any human could every use has a definite downside. It impacts our self-esteem, self-worth, stress levels, concentration, as well as wear down our ability to read most nonverbal cues. Another benefit is this routine time disconnected allows you to reconnect to yourself. You will hear and grow that inner voice that is telling you what it needs. You can spend an hour when you wake up without your phone, or at least an hour before bed. Use this time to read, journal, or even day dream.
  3. TAKE 10-15 MINUTES OUTSIDE. Remember when you were younger and your best days were spent outside, with friends having adventures? Maybe you were on your bikes till the sun went down, or ended the day sitting on a porch with a cold drink or frozen treat. Whatever the case may be, and probably without you realizing it, your mind and body reaped the rewards of the fresh air and the sun shinning on your face. However, the world of adulting leaves us very little time to kick off our shoes and walk through the grass. Endless errands, appointments and responsibilities keep us in our cars, offices, or other building. before we get up to do it all again tomorrow. So, carve out just 10 minutes each day to find your way outside. To feel the sun on your face, the breeze on your skin and the smells that surround you as you take a deep breath.
  4.  SAY NO. I canโ€™t say this enough, we spread ourselves too thin. We may have the best of intentions, but we do. Women more so then men feel the inner conflict of guilt that leads them to agree to things they donโ€™t have the time, funds, or plain interest in doing. We mostly do this to prevent hurt feelings or guilt. Thereโ€™s only one way I can say this, and thatโ€™s bluntly. No matter who they are, no matter what you may have to offerโ€ฆ. they can make it without you. Your involvement alone is not enough to make or break any personโ€™s event or favor. They will get by without you, you need you for every moment of your life. Say yes when you can, or when you want to, but say no when you canโ€™t. Every single time, no matter the reason. 
  5. DO YOU. This is the part thatโ€™s different for everyone, but every single day you need to do one thing solely for your own personal joy. It doesnโ€™t matter how many people depend on you, whether itโ€™s at work or home. From children to coworkers there will always be someone you have to make time for. If you are willing to give it to them then thereโ€™s no reason to keep it from yourself. It may be getting yourself your favorite treat on your way to work, taking control of the playlist for your commute and singing out loud, or giving yourself a small upgrade when youโ€™re at the store. It can also be the big things once in a while. Like making up a bucket list, spending a day off going on an adventure, buying that outfit youโ€™ve been eyeing, or having a date night once a week at a new restaurant

  I like to tell people that the end of my 30โ€™s marked major changes for me. I became a mother young, and wife even younger. I lived my life for everyone else. My children, husband, parents, friends and any person in between. Then I got in over my head with a person who meant the world to me. Unfortunately, they also suffered from addiction and I found myself being called upon for favor after. The experience of those years led to two major moments. The moment I changed my perspective about almost everything in my life, and the moment I decided to share my story. I learned how to listen to myself. To figure out who I am, what I want and what I need. I also learned how to take all that love, focus, and support I gave to almost everyone and to finally start giving it to myself as well. When I decided to share my story, I spent almost two years writing my novel. Silver Spoons: Oneโ€™s Journey through Addiction. Despite how many or few copies I may sell Iโ€™ve already reaped the benefits of writing it. I saw a dream come to life in finishing a novel, pride at accomplishing something not everyone can do, and peace. I found peace with hearing people tell me their stories. We sadly live in a world where everyone knows an addict or someone who loves an addict.

   With all of these experiences and while I have your attention. I would love nothing more than everyone reading this to take care of themselves. Love yourself, nurture yourself, and craft your own stories. I promise you, youโ€™ll never regret that choice 

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Book Summary

Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction takes an intimate and raw look at the current face of addiction and recovery. Talking about the current opioid epidemic, we follow a young couple while one of them goes through the recovery process. Told through letters, we get an understanding of their relationship as it struggles through his addiction and resulting recovery. From detox, rehab, sober living and the 12 steps of A.A, you get a raw and honest look at the effects of addiction and how they affect relationships.

AUTHOR NOTE: There is explicit and graphic content.

Print Length: 380 Pages

Genre: Women’s Fiction

Publisher: Independently Published

ISBN-13: 978-1717868947

ISBN-10: 1717868940

Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction is now available to purchase at Amazon.com.

About the Author, Sarah Dickinson

Sarah Dickinson is a lifelong resident in beautiful upstate New York. Mother of two amazing daughters and three equally awesome rescue dogs, she is the author of Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. She currently attends college and is in the midst of switching careers. When she isn’t doing it all, she reads comic books, blogs, and takes weekend getaways.

You can find the author online at:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Silver-Spoons-Ones-Journey-Through-Addiction-916257075228829/

Blog: https://wordpress.com/stats/day/sarahvdickinson.art.blog 

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

Goodreads Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19325669.Sarah_Dickinson

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— Blog Tour Dates

January 27th @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Visit our blog today and you can read an interview with the author of Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction and also enter to win a copy of the book!

http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com

January 28th @ 12 Books

Stop by Louise’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

www.12books.co.uk

January 29th @ Joyful Antidotes

Make sure you visit Joy’s blog today and read her review of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://www.joyfulantidotes.com

January 30th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog again where you can review Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about 5 reasons why you should consider a change in lifestyle.

www.12books.co.uk

February 1st @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Make sure you visit Anthony’s blog today where he shares a spotlight of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 2nd @ A Storybook World

Deirdra will be highlighting Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction with a spotlight post.

http://www.astorybookworld.com/

February 3rd @ Jill Sheets’ Blog

Visit Jill’s blog today and read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about 5 reasons to consider a change in your relationships.

http://jillsheets.blogspot.com/

February 4th @ Coffee with Lacey

Join Lacey over at her blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://coffeewithlacey.com/

February 10th @ To Write or Not to Write

Visit Varsha’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://sreevarshasreejith.blogspot.com/

February 10th @ StoreyBook Reviews

Make sure to visit Leslie’s blog today and check out an excerpt of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://storeybookreviews.com/

February 12th @ The Faerie Review

Visit Lily’s blog today and read her review of the powerful book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

http://www.thefaeriereview.com/

February 13th @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again where you can read a guest post by author Sarah Dickinson. Make sure you check out her easy self-care tips to add to your daily routine.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 14th @ Jessica Belmont’s Blog

Visit Jessica’s blog today and you can read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://jessicabelmont.wordpress.com/

February 16th @ And So She Thinks

Make sure you visit Francesca’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. You can also read an interview with the author!

https://andsoshethinks.wordpress.com/

February 18th @ Choices

Visit Madeline’s blog and you can read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about how to be self-aware in your writing.

http://madelinesharples.com/

February 19th @ It’s Alanna Jean

Make sure you visit Alanna’s blog and read a guest post by Sarah Dickinson called, “5 Reasons to Consider a Change in Career.”

http://ItsAlannaJean.wordpress.com

February 20th @ The Frugalista Mom

Visit Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read her review of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction by Sarah Dickinson. Also, win a copy for yourself too!

https://thefrugalistamom.com/

February 21st @ The  Frugalista Mom

Stop by Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about how to raise a confident (but not arrogant) child.

https://thefrugalistamom.com/

February 23rd @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Stop by Anthony’s blog and you can read his review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. 

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 24th @ Armed with a Book

Visit Kriti’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

February 25th @ Armed with a Book

Make sure you visit Kriti’s blog again when she interviews the author Sarah Dickinson.

First Cut by Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A medical examiner new to the San Francisco area finds herself embroiled in a harrowing case involving a murder to cover up the actions of a ruthless drug lord in authors Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchellโ€™s โ€œFirst Cutโ€. 

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The Synopsis

Wife and husband duo Dr. Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell first enthralled the book world with their runaway bestselling memoir Working Stiffโ€”a fearless account of a young forensic pathologistโ€™s โ€œrookie seasonโ€ as a NYC medical examiner. This winter, Dr. Melinek, now a prominent forensic pathologist in the Bay Area, once again joins forces with writer T.J. Mitchell to take their first stab at fiction. 

The result: FIRST CUT (Hanover Square Press; Hardcover; January 7, 2020; $26.99)โ€”a gritty and compelling crime debut about a hard-nosed San Francisco medical examiner who uncovers a dangerous conspiracy connecting the seedy underbelly of the cityโ€™s nefarious opioid traffickers and its ever-shifting terrain of tech startups.

Dr. Jessie Teska has made a chilling discovery. A suspected overdose case contains hints of something more sinister: a drug lordโ€™s attempt at a murderous cover up. As more bodies land on her autopsy table, Jessie uncovers a constellation of deaths that point to an elaborate network of powerful criminalsโ€”on both sides of the lawโ€”that will do anything to keep things buried. But autopsy means โ€œsee for yourself,โ€ and Jessie Teska wonโ€™t stop until sheโ€™s seen it allโ€”even if it means the next corpse on the slab could be her own.

The Review

A brilliant read, this novel perfectly blends the expertise and gritty reality of forensic work and the work of the medical examiners office with the harrowing and heart-pounding action that comes with a good thriller. 

The story cuts into the complex web of lies uncovered by Jessie Teska, from drug kingpins and dirty lawyers to collegues she thought she could trust and beyond. Haunted by a painful past, Jessie finds herself fighting to uncover the truth behind a horrific crime, with only her brilliant mind and determination to aid her in her fight against politics, criminal empires and more. 

The Verdict

A fantastic thriller for anyone who enjoys a heavy mix of medical forensics and suspense, authors Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell have created a masterful story that will give readers a protagonist to root for, a story to engage with and a brilliant race to the finish that will keep readers on the edge of their seat. If you havenโ€™t yet, grab your copy of Final Cut today!

Rating: 10/10

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About the Authors

Judy Melinek was an assistant medical examiner in San Francisco for nine years, and today works as a forensic pathologist in Oakland and as CEO of PathologyExpert Inc. She and T.J. Mitchell met as undergraduates at Harvard, after which she studied medicine and practiced pathology at UCLA. Her training in forensics at the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner is the subject of their first book, the memoir Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner.
T.J. Mitchell is a writer with an English degree from Harvard, and worked in the film industry before becoming a full-time stay-at-home dad. He is the New York Times bestselling co-author of Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner with his wife, Judy Melinek.

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TWITTER:

FB: @DrWorkingStiff

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BUY LINKS:

Harlequin 

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Amazon

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iBooks

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EXCERPT

PROLOGUE

Los Angeles
May

The dead woman on my table had pale blue eyes, long lashes, no mascara. She wore a thin rim of black liner on her lower lids but none on the upper. I inserted the twelve gauge needle just far enough that I could see its beveled tip through the pupil, then pulled the syringe plunger to aspirate a sample of vitreous fluid. That was the first intrusion I made on her corpse during Mary Catherine Walshโ€™s perfectly ordinary autopsy.

The external examination had been unremarkable. The decedent appeared to be in her midthirties, blond hair with dun roots, five foot four, 144 pounds. After checking her over and noting identifying marks (monochromatic professional tattoo of a Celtic knot on lower left flank, appendectomy scar on abdomen, well-healed stellate scar on right knee), I picked up a scalpel and sliced from each shoulder to the breastbone, and then all the way down her belly. I peeled back the layers of skin and fat on her torsoโ€”an ordinary amount, maybe a little on the chubby sideโ€”and opened the womanโ€™s chest like a book.

I had made similar Y-incisions on 256 other bodies during my ten months as a forensic pathologist at the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coronerโ€™s Office, and this one was easy. No sign of trauma. Normal liver. Healthy lungs. There was nothing wrong with her heart. The only significant finding was the white, granular material of the gastric contents. In her stomach was a mass of semidigested pills.

When I opened her uterus, I found sheโ€™d been pregnant. I measured the fetusโ€™s foot length and estimated its age at twelve weeks. The fetus appeared to have been viable. It was too young to determine sex.

I deposited the organs one by one at the end of the stainless-steel table. I had just cut into her scalp to start on the skull when Matt, the forensic investigator who had collected the body the day before, came in.

โ€œClean scene,โ€ he reported, depositing the paperwork on my station. โ€œSuicide.โ€

I asked him where he was going for lunch. Yogurt and a damn salad at his desk, he told me: bad cholesterol and a worried wife. I extended my condolences as he headed back out of the autopsy suite.

I scanned through Mattโ€™s handwriting on the intake sheet and learned that the body had been found, stiff and cold, in a locked and secure room at the Los Angeles Omni hotel. The cleaning staff called the police. The ID came from the name on the credit card used to pay for the room, and was confirmed by fingerprint comparison with her driverโ€™s license thumbprint. A handwritten note lay on the bed stand, a pill bottle in the trash. Nothing else. Matt was right: There was no mystery to the way Mary Walsh had died.

I hit the dictaphoneโ€™s toe trigger and pointed my mouth toward the microphone dangling over the table. โ€œThe body is identified by a Los Angeles County Medical Examinerโ€™s tag attached to the right great toe, inscribed LACD-03226, Walsh, Mary Catherineโ€ฆโ€

I broke the seal on the plastic evidence bag and pulled out the pill bottle. It was labeled OxyContin, a powerful painkiller, and it was empty.

โ€œAccompanying the body is a sealed plastic bag with an empty prescription medication bottle. The name on the prescription labelโ€ฆโ€

I read the name but didnโ€™t speak it. The hair started standing up on my neck. I looked down at my morningโ€™s workโ€”the splayed body, flecked with gore, the dissected womb tossed on a heap of other organs.

That canโ€™t be, I told myself. It canโ€™t.

On the clipboard underneath the case intake sheet I found a piece of hotel stationery sealed in another evidence bag. It was the suicide note, written in blue ink with a steady feminine hand. I skimmed itโ€”then stopped, and went back.

I read it again.

I heard the clipboard land at my feet. I gripped the raised lip of my autopsy table. I held tight while the floor fell away.


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Q&A with Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell

Q: Do you plan your books in advance or let them develop as you write?

A:The idea for First Cut was prompted by some of Judyโ€™s actual cases when she worked as a San Francisco medical examiner. She has real experience performing autopsy death investigation, and she also has the imagination to apply that experience to a fictional framework for our forensic detective, Dr. Jessie Teska. Judy invented the story, and together we worked it up as an outline. Then T.J. sat in a room wrestling with words all dayโ€”which he loves to doโ€”to produce the first complete manuscript. Thatโ€™s our inspiration plus perspiration dynamic as co-authors.

Q: What does the act of writing mean to you?

A: It is, and has always been, something we can do together, an important part of our marriage. Weโ€™ve collaborated as a creative team since we were in college together many years ago, producing and directing student theater. Weโ€™ve also spent twenty years raising our four children, and have always approached parenting as a partnership. We find it easy to work together because we write like we parent: relying on one another, each of us playing to our strengths. It helps that, in our writing process, we have no overlapping skill set!

 Q: Have you ever had a character take over a story, and if so, who was it and why?

A: Oh, yes! Thatโ€™s our heroine, Dr. Jessie Teska. She has elements of Judy in her, and elements of T.J., but Jessie is a distinct individual and a strong-willed one. Weโ€™re often surprised and even shocked by the ways she reacts to the situations we put her in. There are times weโ€™ll be writing what we thought was a carefully laid-out scene, and Jessie will take us sideways. Sheโ€™s coming off T.J.โ€™s fingertips on the the keyboard, both of us watching with mouths agape, saying, โ€œWhat the hell is she up to?โ€

Q: Which one of First Cutโ€™s characters was the hardest to write and why?

A: Tommy Teska, Jessieโ€™s brother. Heโ€™s a minor character to the bookโ€™s plot, but the most important person in Jessieโ€™s life, and heโ€™s a reticent man, downright miserly with his dialogue. Tommy carries such great emotional weight, but it was hard to draw it out of him, especially because so much of his bond to our heroine is in the backstory of First Cut, not in the immediate narrative that lands on the page. Weโ€™re now working on the sequel, Cross Cut, and finding that Tommy has more occasion to open up in that story.

Q: Which character in any of your books (First Cut or otherwise) is dearest to you and why?

A: The late Dr. Charles Sidney Hirsch, from our first book, the memoir Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner. Dr. Hirsch is not just a character: He was a real person, Judyโ€™s mentor and a towering figure in the world of forensic pathology. Dr. Hirsch trained Dr. Melinek in her specific field of medicine and imbued in her his passion for it. He was a remarkable man, a great teacher and physician and public servantโ€”a person of uncompromising integrity coupled with great emotional intelligence.

Q: What did you want to be as a child? Was it an author?

A: Judyโ€™s father was a physician, and though she never wanted to follow in his immediate footstepsโ€”he was a psychiatristโ€”she has always wanted to be another Dr. Melinek. T.J. has always been a writer, but also has theater training and worked in the film industry. As much as we enjoyed authoring the memoir Working Stiff, and as happy as we have been with its success, we are even more thrilled to be detective novelists.

Q: What does a day in the life of Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell look like?

A: Judy is a morning person and T.J.โ€™s a night owl, so we split parenting responsibilities. Judy gets the kids off to school and then heads to the morgue, where she performs autopsies in the morning and works with police, district attorneys, and defense lawyers in the afternoon. T.J. takes care of the household and after-school duties. If we work together during the day, itโ€™s usually by email in the late afternoon. T.J. cooks dinner, Judy goes to bed early, and heโ€™s up lateโ€”at his most productive writing from nine to midnight or later.

Q: What do you use to inspire you when you get Writerโ€™s Block?

A: We go for a long walk together. Our far corner of San Francisco overlooks the Pacific Ocean, bracketed by cypress trees and blown over with fog, and serves as an inspiring landscape. We explore the edge of the continent and talk out where our characters have been and where they need to get, tossing ideas back and forth until a solution, what to do next on the page, emerges. Getting away for a stroll with our imaginary friends is always a fruitful exercise!

Q: What book would you take with you to a desert island?

A: T.J. would take the Riverside Shakespeare, and Judy would take Poisonous Plants: A Handbook for Doctors, Pharmacists, Toxicologists, Biologists and Veterinarians, Illustrated.

Q: Do you have stories on the back burner that are just waiting to be written?

A: Always! We are inspired by Dr. Melinekโ€™s real-life work, both in the morgue and at crime scenes, in police interrogation rooms, and in courtrooms. Our stories are fictionโ€”genre fiction structured in the noir-detective traditionโ€”but the forensic methods our detective employs and the scientific findings she comes to are drawn from real death investigations.

Q: What has been the hardest thing about publishing? What has been the most fun?

A: The hardest thing is juggling our work schedules to find uninterrupted time together to write. The most fun is meeting and talking to our readers at book events, especially those who have been inspired to go into the field of forensic pathology after reading our work.

Q: What advice would you give budding authors about publishing?

A: Itโ€™s all about connectivity. Linking up with other writers, readers, editors, and research experts is a crucial way to get your work accomplished, and to get it out to your audience. Yes, ultimately itโ€™s just you and the keyboard, but in the course of writing your story, you can and should tap into the hive mind, online and in person, for inspiration and help.

Q: What was the last thing you read?

A: Judy last read The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist by Radley Balko and Tucker Carrington, and T.J. last read The Witch Elm by Tana French.

Q: Your top five authors?

A: Judyโ€™s are Atul Gawande, Henry James, Kathy Reichs, Mary Roach, and Oliver Sacks. T.J.โ€™s are Margaret Atwood, Joseph Heller, Ed McBain, Ross Macdonald, and Kurt Vonnegut.

Q: Book you’ve bought just for the cover?

A: T.J.: Canary by Duane Swierczynski. Judy: Mรผtter Museum Historical Medical Photographs.

Q: Tell us about what youโ€™re working on now.

A: First Cut is the debut novel in a detective series, and weโ€™ve recently finished the rough draft of Cross Cut, its sequel. We are in the revision phase now, killing our darlings and tightening our tale, working to get the further adventures of Dr. Jessie Teska onto bookshelves next year!

Interview Questions by Anthony Avina

1) Tell us a little bit about yourself. How did you get into writing?

Iโ€™m a Georgia girl married to a New Yorker. I have three children and seven adult grandchildren. After I retired from teaching thirty-one years, my husband accepted a promotion that took us from Atlanta to Shreveport, LA. I didnโ€™t know anyone and did not want to be bored, so I enrolled in LSUS and took Fiction Writing from Sarah Hamer, who inspired her students to write. I was hooked.

2) What inspired you to write your book?

Ambition? Every writer wants to write a book someday. Three years after I stepped into my first writing class, I was invited to join eight other writers and publish an anthology of short stories based on one theme and location.

3) What theme or message do you hope readers will take away from your book?

The message in my book is that everyone has issues to overcome. My characters work through those obstacles and find resolutions. Often it is a matter of finding and knowing their own strengths.

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4) What drew you into this particular genre?

Iโ€™m a fan of literary work rather than commercial fiction; therefore, my stories do not fit into the cookie cutter patterns of one genre, such as fantasy, mystery/thriller, romance, or science fiction.

5) If you could sit down with any character in your book, what would you ask them and why?

If I could ask one of my characters a question, I would ask Misty how she felt on holidays and her birthday all those years after her father disappeared?

6) What social media site has been the most helpful in developing your readership?

Facebook has been a helpful media site, because most of my readers are active on Facebook. Some are not active on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Instagram.

7) What advice would you give to aspiring or just starting authors out there?

My advice to novice writers is: write most days, read in your genre, learn your craft by attending workshops, stay positive, join a critique group, get feedback, leave your ego at the door, and find a good editor. Write on! 

8) What does the future hold in store for you? Any new books/projects on the horizon?

Future? My life will continue to center on my family, friends, and writing. I have two book on the horizonโ€”Bittersweet, and Driven.

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Book Summary

Come visit Georgia within these pages as you read heartwarming stories shaped by local traditions and legends. The characters live life to the fullest through joys and hardships. Inhale the essence of Georgiaโ€™s revitalized small town squares while eating hand- scooped ice cream on a park bench. Each town has its own magic. Sometimes the most real things in life are things we cannot see but those that deeply touch us, as the folks in these tales learn. Share smiles and shed tears as you travel the curving road of life with these Georgia characters. Are you ready for an unforgettable experience of hope, faith, trust, reconciliation, and love?

Print Length: 259 Pages

Genre: Short Story Anthologies

Publisher: Touch Not the Cat Books

ASIN: B07FXVRZGG


Georgia Stories on My Mind is available to purchase on Amazon.com. 

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About the Author, Jackie Rod

โ€œA good book transports me to another time and place. It lets me feel the sensation of heroes and heroinesโ€” dark loneliness, deep passion, a fatherโ€™s pride and a motherโ€™s grief.โ€ Jackie Rod is a fiction writer, loving wife of a legal beagle, and mother of three children who has blessed her with seven fantastic grandchildren. After Jackie retired from teaching, her love of words and stories led her to begin writing fiction. Reading and traveling enrich her life and she jumps at the opportunity to teach a workshop or attend a writing conference. She belongs to five writing chapters/groups. Jackieโ€™s work can be found in twelve published books on Amazon, in several Metro Atlanta libraries, and independent bookstores.

You can find Jackie at: 

www.facebook.com/JackieRod

www.Twitter.com/Softnsilk 

www.LinkedIn/com/in/jackie-rod-32bba255 www.Pinterest.com/JackieRod

www.JackieRod.blogspot.com 

www.Instagram.com/jackierod039

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— Blog Tour Dates

Today @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Grab your coffee and join us as we celebrate the launch of Jackie Rod’s blog tour of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can read an interview with the author and win a copy of the book.

https://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com/

January 14th @ Lori’s Reading Corner

Visit Lori’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about editing. You can also enter to win a copy of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.lorisreadingcorner.com

January 15th @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy C. Hall’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 16th @ Caroline Clemmons Blog

Stop by Caroline’s blog today and you can see a spotlight of the book and an interview with author Jackie Rod. Also win a copy of the book!

http://carolineclemmons.blogspot.com/

January 18th @ A Day in the Life of Mom

Visit Ashley’s blog today and you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about how time is limited and precious. Plus, you can enter to win a copy of the book!

https://adayinthelifeofmom.com/

January 20th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Make sure you stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also win a copy of the book!

January 21st @ Amanda Diaries

Visit Amanda’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://amandadiaries.com/

January 22nd @ Look to the Western Sky

Stop by Margo’s blog where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a cheerleader for others. You can also win a copy of the book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Don’t miss it!

https://www.margoldill.com

January 22nd @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy’s blog today and reading Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a homegrown Georgia peach.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 23rd @ And So She Thinks

Visit Francesca’s blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the value of critique groups and writing groups.

https://andsoshethinks.wordpress.com/

January 24th @ Coffee with Lacey

Come by Lacey’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.coffeewithlacey.com

January 25th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Enter to win a copy of the book as well!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

January 26th @ The Frugalista Mom

Visit Rozelyn’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about precious moments.

https://thefrugalistamom.com

January 27th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.12books.co.uk/

January 28th @ A Storybook World

Join Deirdra at her blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the importance of conferences.

http://www.astorybookworld.com/

January 30th @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog today where he will be spotlighting Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories On My Mind.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

January 31st @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again where you can read his review of the book Georgia Stories On My Mind and you can win a copy of the book!

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 1st @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Come by Ali’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Plus you can win a copy of the book!

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 3rd @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog where you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read her guest post about family and friends.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 4th @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Visit Ali’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about how reading changes your life.

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 6th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the joys of life. Don’t miss this one!

February 7th @ The Frugalista Mom

Stop by Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also enter to win a copy of the book!

https://thefrugalistamom.com

February 8th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog again and you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read the author’s guest post featuring writing tips. Don’t miss!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

February 9th @ Leonard Tillman’s Blog

Visit Leonard’s blog and read his review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

February 10th @ Madeline Sharples Blog

Visit Madeline’s blog and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about marketing on social media.

http://madelinesharples.com/

February 11th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog again and you can read Jackie Rod’s touching guest post about wisdom. Don’t miss it!

http://www.12books.co.uk

February 12th @ It’s Alanna Jean

Visit Alanna’s blog where you can read a guest post by the author about faith, hope, and love.

https://itsalannajean.wordpress.com/

February 16th @ Joyful Antidotes

Visit Joy’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://www.joyfulantidotes.com

Spotlight: Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction by Sarah Dickinson

Hello everyone. Today I am happy to be working with Women on Writing Blog Tours to present a special spotlight for author Sarah Dickinson’s book, Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. Let’s take a look at the book, what it’s about, and what you can expect on this book tour.

Book Summary

Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction takes an intimate and raw look at the current face of addiction and recovery. Talking about the current opioid epidemic, we follow a young couple while one of them goes through the recovery process. Told through letters, we get an understanding of their relationship as it struggles through his addiction and resulting recovery. From detox, rehab, sober living and the 12 steps of A.A, you get a raw and honest look at the effects of addiction and how they affect relationships.

AUTHOR NOTE: There is explicit and graphic content.

Print Length: 380 Pages

Genre: Women’s Fiction

Publisher: Independently Published

ISBN-13: 978-1717868947

ISBN-10: 1717868940

Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction is now available to purchase at Amazon.com.

About the Author, Sarah Dickinson

Sarah Dickinson is a lifelong resident in beautiful upstate New York. Mother of two amazing daughters and three equally awesome rescue dogs, she is the author of Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. She currently attends college and is in the midst of switching careers. When she isn’t doing it all, she reads comic books, blogs, and takes weekend getaways.

You can find the author online at:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Silver-Spoons-Ones-Journey-Through-Addiction-916257075228829/

Blog: https://wordpress.com/stats/day/sarahvdickinson.art.blog 

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

Goodreads Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19325669.Sarah_Dickinson

— Blog Tour Dates

January 27th @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Visit our blog today and you can read an interview with the author of Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction and also enter to win a copy of the book!

http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com

January 28th @ 12 Books

Stop by Louise’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

www.12books.co.uk

January 29th @ Joyful Antidotes

Make sure you visit Joy’s blog today and read her review of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://www.joyfulantidotes.com

January 30th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog again where you can review Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about 5 reasons why you should consider a change in lifestyle.

www.12books.co.uk

February 1st @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Make sure you visit Anthony’s blog today where he shares a spotlight of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 2nd @ A Storybook World

Deirdra will be highlighting Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction with a spotlight post.

http://www.astorybookworld.com/

February 3rd @ Jill Sheets’ Blog

Visit Jill’s blog today and read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about 5 reasons to consider a change in your relationships.

http://jillsheets.blogspot.com/

February 4th @ Coffee with Lacey

Join Lacey over at her blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://coffeewithlacey.com/

February 10th @ To Write or Not to Write

Visit Varsha’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://sreevarshasreejith.blogspot.com/

February 10th @ StoreyBook Reviews

Make sure to visit Leslie’s blog today and check out an excerpt of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://storeybookreviews.com/

February 12th @ The Faerie Review

Visit Lily’s blog today and read her review of the powerful book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

http://www.thefaeriereview.com/

February 13th @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again where you can read a guest post by author Sarah Dickinson. Make sure you check out her easy self-care tips to add to your daily routine.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 14th @ Jessica Belmont’s Blog

Visit Jessica’s blog today and you can read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

https://jessicabelmont.wordpress.com/

February 16th @ And So She Thinks

Make sure you visit Francesca’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. You can also read an interview with the author!

https://andsoshethinks.wordpress.com/

February 18th @ Choices

Visit Madeline’s blog and you can read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about how to be self-aware in your writing.

http://madelinesharples.com/

February 19th @ It’s Alanna Jean

Make sure you visit Alanna’s blog and read a guest post by Sarah Dickinson called, “5 Reasons to Consider a Change in Career.”

http://ItsAlannaJean.wordpress.com

February 20th @ The Frugalista Mom

Visit Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read her review of the book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction by Sarah Dickinson. Also, win a copy for yourself too!

https://thefrugalistamom.com/

February 21st @ The  Frugalista Mom

Stop by Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read Sarah Dickinson’s guest post about how to raise a confident (but not arrogant) child.

https://thefrugalistamom.com/

February 23rd @ Author Anthony Avina Blog

Stop by Anthony’s blog and you can read his review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction. 

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 24th @ Armed with a Book

Visit Kriti’s blog today and read her review of Sarah Dickinson’s book Silver Spoons: One’s Journey Through Addiction.

February 25th @ Armed with a Book

Make sure you visit Kriti’s blog again when she interviews the author Sarah Dickinson.

Georgia Stories On My Mind by Jackie Rod Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

An anthology of life and lifeโ€™s struggles through tales of the South bring a collection of stories and lessons together beautifully in author Jackie Rodโ€™s novel โ€œGeorgia Stories On My Mindโ€. 

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The Synopsis

Come visit Georgia within these pages as you read heartwarming stories shaped by local traditions and legends. The characters live life to the fullest through joys and hardships. Inhale the essence of Georgiaโ€™s revitalized small town squares while eating hand- scooped ice cream on a park bench. Each town has its own magic. Sometimes the most real things in life are things we cannot see but those that deeply touch us, as the folks in these tales learn. Share smiles and shed tears as you travel the curving road of life with these Georgia characters. Are you ready for an unforgettable experience of hope, faith, trust, reconciliation, and love?

Print Length: 259 Pages

Genre: Short Story Anthologies

Publisher: Touch Not the Cat Books

ASIN: B07FXVRZGG

The Review

Beautifully written, heartwarming and personal brings this anthology to life perfectly. The author has found a way to connect with readers on a personal scale that showcases how connected we are to each other and our life as a whole. Stories of love lost and found again, of being honest with ourselves and speaking to the dead so that we may find a way to live fully and more make this anthology shine brightly. 

The characters are relatable and the story itself is evenly paced, with each individual story delving into local legends and myths of the area that locals will be able to identify with while giving new readers unfamiliar with the legends a fresh perspective on life overall. 

The Verdict

Finding oneโ€™s way in life is never easy, and most often experience something new and unique in their own way. This novel does an excellent job of creating a vast array of stories that readers will be able to recognize and identify with as the characters experience love, loss, heartbreak and connections that everyone is looking for in life. Brilliantly written and a truly powerful read, be sure to grab your copy of โ€œGeorgia Stories On My Mindโ€ by Jackie Rod today!

Rating: 10/10

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Georgia Stories on My Mind is available to purchase on Amazon.com. 

About the Author, Jackie Rod

โ€œA good book transports me to another time and place. It lets me feel the sensation of heroes and heroinesโ€” dark loneliness, deep passion, a fatherโ€™s pride and a motherโ€™s grief.โ€ Jackie Rod is a fiction writer, loving wife of a legal beagle, and mother of three children who has blessed her with seven fantastic grandchildren. After Jackie retired from teaching, her love of words and stories led her to begin writing fiction. Reading and traveling enrich her life and she jumps at the opportunity to teach a workshop or attend a writing conference. She belongs to five writing chapters/groups. Jackieโ€™s work can be found in twelve published books on Amazon, in several Metro Atlanta libraries, and independent bookstores.

You can find Jackie at: 

www.facebook.com/JackieRod

www.Twitter.com/Softnsilk 

www.LinkedIn/com/in/jackie-rod-32bba255 www.Pinterest.com/JackieRod

www.JackieRod.blogspot.com 

www.Instagram.com/jackierod039

— Blog Tour Dates

Today @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Grab your coffee and join us as we celebrate the launch of Jackie Rod’s blog tour of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can read an interview with the author and win a copy of the book.

https://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com/

January 14th @ Lori’s Reading Corner

Visit Lori’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about editing. You can also enter to win a copy of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.lorisreadingcorner.com

January 15th @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy C. Hall’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 16th @ Caroline Clemmons Blog

Stop by Caroline’s blog today and you can see a spotlight of the book and an interview with author Jackie Rod. Also win a copy of the book!

http://carolineclemmons.blogspot.com/

January 18th @ A Day in the Life of Mom

Visit Ashley’s blog today and you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about how time is limited and precious. Plus, you can enter to win a copy of the book!

https://adayinthelifeofmom.com/

January 20th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Make sure you stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also win a copy of the book!

January 21st @ Amanda Diaries

Visit Amanda’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://amandadiaries.com/

January 22nd @ Look to the Western Sky

Stop by Margo’s blog where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a cheerleader for others. You can also win a copy of the book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Don’t miss it!

https://www.margoldill.com

January 22nd @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy’s blog today and reading Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a homegrown Georgia peach.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 23rd @ And So She Thinks

Visit Francesca’s blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the value of critique groups and writing groups.

https://andsoshethinks.wordpress.com/

January 24th @ Coffee with Lacey

Come by Lacey’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.coffeewithlacey.com

January 25th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Enter to win a copy of the book as well!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

January 26th @ The Frugalista Mom

Visit Rozelyn’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about precious moments.

https://thefrugalistamom.com

January 27th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.12books.co.uk/

January 28th @ A Storybook World

Join Deirdra at her blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the importance of conferences.

http://www.astorybookworld.com/

January 30th @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog today where he will be spotlighting Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories On My Mind.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

January 31st @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again where you can read his review of the book Georgia Stories On My Mind and you can win a copy of the book!

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 1st @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Come by Ali’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Plus you can win a copy of the book!

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 3rd @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog where you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read her guest post about family and friends.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 4th @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Visit Ali’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about how reading changes your life.

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 6th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the joys of life. Don’t miss this one!

February 7th @ The Frugalista Mom

Stop by Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also enter to win a copy of the book!

https://thefrugalistamom.com

February 8th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog again and you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read the author’s guest post featuring writing tips. Don’t miss!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

February 9th @ Leonard Tillman’s Blog

Visit Leonard’s blog and read his review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

February 10th @ Madeline Sharples Blog

Visit Madeline’s blog and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about marketing on social media.

http://madelinesharples.com/

February 11th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog again and you can read Jackie Rod’s touching guest post about wisdom. Don’t miss it!

http://www.12books.co.uk/

February 12th @ It’s Alanna Jean

Visit Alanna’s blog where you can read a guest post by the author about faith, hope, and love.

https://itsalannajean.wordpress.com/

February 16th @ Joyful Antidotes

Visit Joy’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://www.joyfulantidotes.com

Spotlight: Georgia Stories On My Mind by Jackie Rod (Blog Tour)

Hello everyone. Today I am happy to share with you this special spotlight on the novel Georgia Stories on My Mind by author Jackie Rod. First, here is a little bit about the book itself.

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Book Summary

Come visit Georgia within these pages as you read heartwarming stories shaped by local traditions and legends. The characters live life to the fullest through joys and hardships. Inhale the essence of Georgiaโ€™s revitalized small town squares while eating hand- scooped ice cream on a park bench. Each town has its own magic. Sometimes the most real things in life are things we cannot see but those that deeply touch us, as the folks in these tales learn. Share smiles and shed tears as you travel the curving road of life with these Georgia characters. Are you ready for an unforgettable experience of hope, faith, trust, reconciliation, and love?

Print Length: 259 Pages

Genre: Short Story Anthologies

Publisher: Touch Not the Cat Books

ASIN: B07FXVRZGG


Georgia Stories on My Mind is available to purchase on Amazon.com. 

About the Author, Jackie Rod

โ€œA good book transports me to another time and place. It lets me feel the sensation of heroes and heroinesโ€” dark loneliness, deep passion, a fatherโ€™s pride and a motherโ€™s grief.โ€ Jackie Rod is a fiction writer, loving wife of a legal beagle, and mother of three children who has blessed her with seven fantastic grandchildren. After Jackie retired from teaching, her love of words and stories led her to begin writing fiction. Reading and traveling enrich her life and she jumps at the opportunity to teach a workshop or attend a writing conference. She belongs to five writing chapters/groups. Jackieโ€™s work can be found in twelve published books on Amazon, in several Metro Atlanta libraries, and independent bookstores.

You can find Jackie at: 

www.facebook.com/JackieRod

www.Twitter.com/Softnsilk 

www.LinkedIn/com/in/jackie-rod-32bba255 www.Pinterest.com/JackieRod

www.JackieRod.blogspot.com 

www.Instagram.com/jackierod039

And now, I am happy to share with you all a wonderful guest post from the author herself, Jackie Rod.

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Family and Friends

Faith, family, friends and purposeful work are the blessings of life. Today we will focus on family and friends, major components of our lives. They can bring us our greatest joys and our greatest sorrows. Usually it falls somewhere in between. We tend to apply our values and viewpoints to our family and friends, even if their perspectives may not be in line with ours. 

Most of the time we identify with friends who hold similar values. In times of trouble we can turn to them for solace and comfort. In times of triumph we celebrate together. 

Family members, on the other hand, may have viewpoints diametrically opposed to ours. Often arguments can last for years and affect participation at holiday gatherings and other family events. Some people had rather miss an event than have to deal with their anger and feelings of hostility toward others. 

Over the years the actual differences of opinion may be forgotten, but the hard feelings remain and are never addressed. Folks can be stubborn. Of course, these same things might hold true for friends and neighbors with whom you disagree. We could write them off and discontinue any relationship rather than address the issue and try to work it out.

Some people are toxic and need to be eliminated from our circles so that our zin is not out of balance. Perhaps a good therapist would offer techniques and strategies for us to get over our hurt feelings and anxiety.

In the end, we all get on with our lives and make allowances for those we love and overlook the failings of best friends, at least the ones we continue to talk to.

Addressing the misunderstandings can begin a process of healing. Put away the pettiness. Forgiveness is a powerful force. 

Remember the joy you receive each day from a wonderful family and friends. Notice the light in their eyes when you flash your beautiful smile. Stay bonded, stay thankful, and stay blessed.


— Blog Tour Dates

Today @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Grab your coffee and join us as we celebrate the launch of Jackie Rod’s blog tour of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can read an interview with the author and win a copy of the book.

https://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com/

January 14th @ Lori’s Reading Corner

Visit Lori’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about editing. You can also enter to win a copy of her book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.lorisreadingcorner.com

January 15th @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy C. Hall’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 16th @ Caroline Clemmons Blog

Stop by Caroline’s blog today and you can see a spotlight of the book and an interview with author Jackie Rod. Also win a copy of the book!

http://carolineclemmons.blogspot.com/

January 18th @ A Day in the Life of Mom

Visit Ashley’s blog today and you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about how time is limited and precious. Plus, you can enter to win a copy of the book!

https://adayinthelifeofmom.com/

January 20th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Make sure you stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also win a copy of the book!

January 21st @ Amanda Diaries

Visit Amanda’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://amandadiaries.com/

January 22nd @ Look to the Western Sky

Stop by Margo’s blog where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a cheerleader for others. You can also win a copy of the book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Don’t miss it!

https://www.margoldill.com

January 22nd @ Cathy C. Hall’s Blog

Visit Cathy’s blog today and reading Jackie Rod’s guest post about being a homegrown Georgia peach.

https://c-c-hall.com/

January 23rd @ And So She Thinks

Visit Francesca’s blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the value of critique groups and writing groups.

https://andsoshethinks.wordpress.com/

January 24th @ Coffee with Lacey

Come by Lacey’s blog today and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.coffeewithlacey.com

January 25th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Enter to win a copy of the book as well!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

January 26th @ The Frugalista Mom

Visit Rozelyn’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about precious moments.

https://thefrugalistamom.com

January 27th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog and read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

http://www.12books.co.uk/

January 28th @ A Storybook World

Join Deirdra at her blog today where you can read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the importance of conferences.

http://www.astorybookworld.com/

January 30th @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog today where he will be spotlighting Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories On My Mind.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

January 31st @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again where you can read his review of the book Georgia Stories On My Mind and you can win a copy of the book!

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 1st @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Come by Ali’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. Plus you can win a copy of the book!

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 3rd @ Author Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog where you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read her guest post about family and friends.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

February 4th @ Ali’s Bookshelf Reviews

Visit Ali’s blog today and read author Jackie Rod’s guest post about how reading changes your life.

http://alisbookshelfreviews.blogspot.com/

February 6th @ Memoir Writer’s Journey

Stop by Kathleen’s blog today and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about the joys of life. Don’t miss this one!

February 7th @ The Frugalista Mom

Stop by Rozelyn’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind. You can also enter to win a copy of the book!

https://thefrugalistamom.com

February 8th @ Bookworm Blog

Stop by Anjanette’s blog again and you can read an interview with author Jackie Rod and read the author’s guest post featuring writing tips. Don’t miss!

http://bookworm66.wordpress.com

February 9th @ Leonard Tillman’s Blog

Visit Leonard’s blog and read his review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

February 10th @ Madeline Sharples Blog

Visit Madeline’s blog and read Jackie Rod’s guest post about marketing on social media.

http://madelinesharples.com/

February 11th @ 12 Books

Visit Louise’s blog again and you can read Jackie Rod’s touching guest post about wisdom. Don’t miss it!

http://www.12books.co.uk/

February 12th @ It’s Alanna Jean

Visit Alanna’s blog where you can read a guest post by the author about faith, hope, and love.

https://itsalannajean.wordpress.com/

February 16th @ Joyful Antidotes

Visit Joy’s blog today and you can read her review of Jackie Rod’s book Georgia Stories on My Mind.

https://www.joyfulantidotes.com

Harlequin’s Holiday Blog Tour Promotion

I am honored to be sharing with everyone today six amazing holiday reads from six amazing authors. Thank you to Harlequin Press for giving me time to share these amazing reads with everyone. Be sure to check out these amazing books, along with their excerpts and promotional posts.


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A WEDDING IN DECEMBER 


Author: Sarah Morgan

ISBN: 9781335147271

Publication Date: 9/24/2019

Publisher: HQN Books

Buy Links: 

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Twitter: @SarahMorgan_

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Author Bio: USA Today bestselling author Sarah Morgan writes hot, happy, contemporary romance and womenโ€™s fiction, and her trademark humor and sensuality have gained her fans across the globe. Described as โ€œa magician with wordsโ€ by RT Book Reviews, she has sold more than eleven million copies of her books. She was nominated three years in succession for the prestigious RITAยฎ Award from the Romance Writers of America and won the award three times: once in 2012 for Doukakisโ€™s Apprentice, in 2013 for A Night of No Return and in 2017 for Miracle on 5th Avenue. She also won the RT Reviewersโ€™ Choice Award in 2012 and has made numerous appearances in their Top Pick slot. As a child, Sarah dreamed of being a writer, and although she took a few interesting detours along the way, she is now living that dream. Sarah lives near London, England, with her husband and children, and when she isnโ€™t reading or writing, she loves being outdoors, preferably on vacation so she can forget the house needs tidying.

Book Summary:

This funny, charming and heartwarming new Christmas novel is USA TODAY bestselling author Sarah Morgan at her festive best!

In the snowy perfection of Aspen, the White family gathers for youngest daughter Rosieโ€™s whirlwind Christmas wedding. First to arrive are the brideโ€™s parents, Maggie and Nick. Their daughterโ€™s marriage is a milestone they are determined to celebrate wholeheartedly, but they are hiding a huge secret of their own: they are on the brink of divorce. After living apart for the last six months, the last thing they need is to be trapped together in an irresistibly romantic winter wonderland.

Rosieโ€™s older sister, Katie, is also dreading the wedding. Worried that impulsive, sweet-hearted Rosie is making a mistake, Katie is determined to save her sister from herself! If only the irritatingly good-looking best man, Jordan, would stop interfering with her plansโ€ฆ

Bride-to-be Rosie loves her fiancรฉ but is having serious second thoughts. Except everyone has arrivedโ€”how can she tell them sheโ€™s not sure? As the big day gets closer, and emotions run even higher, this is one White family Christmas none of them will ever forget!

EXCERPT

From Chapter One

 Maggie

When her phone rang at three in the morning, ripping her from a desperately needed sleep, Maggieโ€™s first thought was bad news.

Her mind raced through the possibilities, starting with the worst-case scenario. Death, or at least life-changing injury. Police. Ambulances.

Heart pounding, brain foggy, she grabbed her phone from the summit of her teetering pile of books. The name on the screen offered no reassurance.

Trouble stalked her youngest daughter.

โ€œRosie?โ€ She fumbled for the light and sat up. The book sheโ€™d fallen asleep reading thudded to the floor, scattering the pile of Christmas cards sheโ€™d started to write the night before. Sheโ€™d chosen a winter scene of snow-laden trees. They hadnโ€™t had a flake of snow in the village on Christmas Day for close to a decade. They often joked that it was a good thing their last name was White because it was the only way they were ever going to have a White Christmas.

She snuggled under the blanket with the phone. โ€œHas something happened?โ€ The physical distance between her and Rosie made her feel frustrated and helpless.

Everyone said global travel made the world smaller, but it didnโ€™t seem smaller to Maggie. Why couldnโ€™t her daughter have continued her studies closer to home? Oxford, with its famous spires and ancient colleges, was only a few miles away. Rosie had done her undergraduate degree there, followed by a masterโ€™s. Maggie had loved having her close by. Theyโ€™d taken sunlit strolls along cobbled streets, past ancient honey-colored buildings and through Christchurch Meadows, golden with daffodils. Theyโ€™d followed the slow meander of the river and cheered on the rowing crews. Maggie had hoped, privately, that her daughter might stay close by, but after Rosie had graduated sheโ€™d been offered a place in a US doctoral program, complete with full funding.

Can you believe it, Mum? The day sheโ€™d had the news sheโ€™d danced across the living room, hair flying around her face, twirling until she was dizzy and Maggie was dizzy watching her. Are you proud of me?

Maggie had been proud and dismayed in equal measure, although sheโ€™d hidden the dismayed part of course. That was what you did when you were a parent.

Even she could see it was too good an opportunity to turn down, but still a small part of her had wished Rosie had turned it down. That transatlantic flight from the nest left Maggie with email, Skype and social media, none of which felt entirely satisfactory. Even less so in the middle of the night. Had Rosie only been gone for four months? It felt like a lifetime since theyโ€™d delivered her to the airport on that sweltering summerโ€™s day.

โ€œIs it your asthma? Are you in hospital?โ€ What could she do if Rosie was in the hospital? Nothing. Anxiety was a constant companion, never more so than now.

If it had been her eldest daughter, Katie, who had moved to a different country she might have felt more relaxed. Katie was reliable and sensible, but Rosie? Rosie had always been impulsive and adventurous.

โ€œIโ€™m not in hospital. Donโ€™t fuss!โ€

Only now did Maggie hear the noise in the background. Cheering, whooping.

โ€œDo you have your inhaler with you? You sound breathless.โ€ The sound woke the memories. Rosie, eyes bulging, lips stained blue. The whistling sound as air struggled to squeeze through narrowed airways. Maggie making emergency calls with hands that shook almost too hard to hold the phone, the terror raw and brutal although she kept that hidden from her child. Calm, sheโ€™d learned, was important even if it was faked.

Even when Rosie had moved from child to adult there had been no reprieve.

Some children grew out of asthma. Not Rosie.

There had been a couple of occasions when Rosie was in college when sheโ€™d gone to parties without her inhaler. A few hours of dancing later and sheโ€™d been rushed to the emergency department. That had been a 3:00 a.m. phone call, too, and Maggie had raced through the night to be by her side. Those were the episodes Maggie knew about. She was sure there were plenty more that Rosie had kept to herself.

โ€œIโ€™m breathless because Iโ€™m excited. Iโ€™m twenty-two, Mum. When are you going to stop worrying?โ€

โ€œThat would be never. Your child is always your child, no matter how many candles are on the birthday cake. Where are you?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m with Danโ€™s family in Aspen for Thanksgiving, and I have news.โ€ She broke off and Maggie heard the clink of glasses and Rosieโ€™s infectious laugh. It was impossible to hear that laugh and not want to smile, too. The sound contrasted with the silence of Maggieโ€™s bedroom.

A waft of cold air chilled her skin and she stood up and grabbed her robe from the back of the chair. Honeysuckle Cottage looked idyllic from the outside, but it was impossibly drafty. The ventilation was a relief in August but froze you to the bone in November. She really needed to do something about the insulation before she even thought about selling the place. Historic charm, climbing roses and a view of the village green couldnโ€™t compensate for frostbite.

Or maybe it wasnโ€™t the house that was cold. Maybe it was her.

Knocked flat by a wave of sadness and she struggled to right herself.

โ€œWhatโ€™s happening? What news? It sounds like youโ€™re having a party.โ€

โ€œDan proposed. Literally out of the blue. We were taking it in turns to say what weโ€™re thankful for and when it was his turn he gave me a funny look and then he got down on one knee andโ€”Mum, weโ€™re getting married.โ€

Maggie sat down hard on the edge of the bed, the freezing air forgotten. โ€œMarried? But you and Dan have only been together for a few weeksโ€”โ€

โ€œEleven weeks, four days, six hours and fifteen minutesโ€”oh wait, now itโ€™s sixteen, I mean seventeenโ€”โ€ She was laughing, and Maggie tried to laugh with her.

How should she handle this? โ€œThatโ€™s not very long, sweetheart.โ€ But completely in character for Rosie, who bounced from one impulse to another, powered by enthusiasm.

โ€œIt feels so right, I canโ€™t even tell you. And youโ€™ll understand because it was like that for you and Dad.โ€

Maggie stared at the damp patch on the wall.

Tell her the truth.

Her mouth moved but she couldnโ€™t push the words out. This was the wrong time. She should have done it months ago, but sheโ€™d been too much of a coward.

And now it was too late. She didnโ€™t want to be the slayer of happy moments.

She couldnโ€™t even say youโ€™re too young, because sheโ€™d been the same age when sheโ€™d had Katie. Which basically made her a hypocrite. Or did it make her someone with experience?

โ€œYou just started your postgradโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not giving it up. I can be married and study. Plenty do it.โ€

Maggie couldnโ€™t argue with that. โ€œIโ€™m happy for you.โ€ Did she sound happy? She tried harder. โ€œWoohoo!โ€

Sheโ€™d thought sheโ€™d white-knuckled her way through all the toughest parts of parenting, but it turned out there were still some surprises waiting for her. Rosie wasnโ€™t a child anymore. She had to be allowed to make her own decisions. And her own mistakes.

Rosie was talking again. โ€œI know itโ€™s all a bit fast, but youโ€™re going to love Dan as much as I do. You said you thought he was great when you spoke to him.โ€

But speaking to someone on a video call wasnโ€™t the same as meeting them in person, was it?

Maggie swallowed down all the words of warning that rose up inside her. She was not going to turn into her own mother and send clouds to darken every bright moment. โ€œHe seemed charming, and Iโ€™m thrilled for you. If I donโ€™t sound it, itโ€™s because itโ€™s the middle of the night here, and you know what Iโ€™m like when Iโ€™ve just woken up. When I saw your name pop up on the screen, I was worried it was your asthma.โ€

โ€œHavenโ€™t had an attack in ages. Iโ€™m sorry I woke you, but I wanted to share my news.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m glad you woke me. Tell me everything.โ€ She closed her eyes and tried to pretend her daughter was in the room with her, and not thousands of miles away.

There was no reason to panic. It was an engagement, that was all. There was plenty of time for them to decide if this was the right thing for them. โ€œWeโ€™ll have a big celebration when you and your sister are here for Christmas. Would Dan like to join us? I canโ€™t wait to meet him. Maybe weโ€™ll throw a party. Invite the Baxters, and all your friends from college and school.โ€ Planning lifted Maggieโ€™s mood. Christmas was her favorite time of year, the one occasion the whole family gathered together. Even Katie, with her busy life as a doctor, usually managed to beg and barter a few days at Christmas in exchange for covering the busy New Year shift. Maggie was looking forward to spending time with her. She had a niggling suspicion her eldest daughter was avoiding her. Every time Maggie suggested meeting up, Katie made an excuse, which was unlike her because she rarely refused a free lunch.

Christmas would give her a chance to dig a little deeper.

In her opinion, Oxford was the perfect place to spend the festive season. True, there was unlikely to be snow, but what was better than a postlunch walk listening to the peal of bells on a crisp, cold winterโ€™s day?

It promised to be perfect, apart from one complication.

Nick.

Maggie still hadnโ€™t figured out how she was going to handle that side of things.

Maybe an engagement was exactly what they needed to shift the focus of attention.

โ€œChristmas is one of the things I need to talk to you about.โ€ Rosie sounded hesitant. โ€œI planned to come home, but since Dan proposedโ€”well, we donโ€™t see the point in waiting. Weโ€™ve chosen the day. Weโ€™re getting married on Christmas Eve.โ€

Maggie frowned. โ€œYou mean next year?โ€

โ€œNo, this year.โ€

She counted the days and her brain almost exploded. โ€œYou want to get married in less than four weeks? To a man you barely know?โ€ Rosie had always been impulsive, but this wasnโ€™t a soft toy that would be abandoned after a few days, or a dress that would turn out to be not quite the right color. Marriage wasnโ€™t something that could be rectified with a refund. There was no reason for haste, unlessโ€”โ€œSweetieโ€”โ€

โ€œI know what youโ€™re thinking, and it isnโ€™t that. Iโ€™m not pregnant! Weโ€™re getting married because weโ€™re in love. I adore him. Iโ€™ve never felt this way about anyone before.โ€

You barely know him.

Maggie shifted, uncomfortably aware that knowing someone well didnโ€™t inoculate you against problems.

โ€œIโ€™m excited for you!โ€ Turned out she could fake excitement as convincingly as she could fake calm. 

Excerpted from A Wedding in December by Sarah Morgan. Copyright ยฉ 2019 by Sarah Morgan. Published by HQN Books.


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AN ALASKAN CHRISTMAS


Author: Jennifer Snow

ISBN: 9781335041500

Publication Date: 9/24/2019

Publisher: HQN Books

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Author Bio: Jennifer Snow lives in Edmonton, Alberta with her husband and four year old son. She is a member of the RWA, the Alberta Writers Guild, Canadian Authors Association and SheWrites.org. Her first Brookhollow book was a finalist in the Heart of Denver Aspen Gold contest and the Golden Quill Award. More information can be found at http://www.jennifersnowauthor.com.

Book Summary:

In Alaska, itโ€™s always a white Christmasโ€”but the sparks flying between two reunited friends could turn it red-hotโ€ฆ

If thereโ€™s one gift Erika Sheraton doesย notย want for Christmas, itโ€™s a vacation. Ordered to take time off, the workaholic surgeon reluctantly trades in her scrubs for a ski suit and heads to Wild River, Alaska. Her friend Cassie owns a tour company that offers adventures to fit every visitor. But nothing compares to the adrenaline rush Erika feels on being reunited with Cassieโ€™s brother, Reed Reynolds.

Gone is the buttoned-up girl Reed remembers. His sisterโ€™s best friend has blossomed into a strong, skilled, confident woman. Sheโ€™s exactly what his search-and-rescue team needsโ€”and everything he didnโ€™t know he craved. The gulf between his life in Wild River and her big-city career is wide. But itโ€™s no match for a desire powerful enough to melt two stubborn heartsโ€ฆ

EXCERPT

CHAPTER ONE

Her arms full of patient files, Dr. Erika Sheraton tipped her head back as Darren, her premed intern, poured a double shot of espresso down her throat. The hot liquid delivered the instant adrenaline boost she needed to get through the rest of her fourteen-hour shift.

Dinner? A quick glance at the clock on the wall above the nursesโ€™ triage station revealed it was almost nine. A late dinner.

โ€œHow are you not vibrating? Thatโ€™s your third in two hours.โ€ Darren crumpled the paper cup and tossed it into a recycle bin as they walked.

โ€œCaffeine stopped affecting me a long time ago. Nowโ€™s itโ€™s about the taste,โ€ she said, only half kidding. Double course loads and all-nighters in college and then med school had prepared her for the long hours she put in now as a general surgeon and caffeine had been her best friend.

The twentysomething looked like he could use a cup himself, as he stifled a yawn. His sandy blond hair poked up in the back as though heโ€™d crawled out of bed at the last possible minute and his hazel eyes were bloodshot. If he was tired now after only eight hours on shift, heโ€™d be reconsidering this particular profession by midnight. The staff at Alaska General Hospital never rested. The revolving doors at emergency constantly rotated with broken bones, heart attacks and bleeding patients filing in. No day was ever the same. Unpredictability kept Erika alert and on her toes.

โ€œAfter these rounds, Iโ€™m going to need you to check in on Mr. Franklinโ€”heโ€™s in recovery. His family is wondering when they can see him.โ€ The manโ€™s entire extended family was camped out in the surgical ward waiting roomโ€”fifteen or sixteen of them at least. They couldnโ€™t see the man, but they all refused to leave. Each one took turns driving the nurses on duty crazy. โ€œMake sure they know only immediate family can go in. He needs his rest.โ€

Darren nodded, but a look of hesitation appeared behind his dark-rimmed glasses.

โ€œWhat?โ€ She checked her watch.

โ€œI justโ€ฆ Well, shouldnโ€™t you talk to them? I know his wife wanted to thank youโ€ฆโ€

Erika shook her head. โ€œKeeping him on the low-cholesterol, low-sodium diet Iโ€™ve prescribedโ€”and off my operating tableโ€”will be thanks enough,โ€ she said, scanning the top folder on her stack.

โ€œOkay, butโ€ฆโ€

She shot him a look.

โ€œNo problem. Iโ€™ll check in on him.โ€

โ€œThank you.โ€ She continued down the hall toward the next high-priority patient.

โ€œDonโ€™t forget, your dad still wants to see you,โ€ Darren said, struggling to keep up to her half sprint.

โ€œI know.โ€ And she could do without the hourly reminders. Her father rarely requested her presence during her rounds, so whatever it was wouldnโ€™t be good. If she put him off long enough, maybe heโ€™d forget. 

 โ€œTop chartโ€”Mr. Grayson. Heโ€™s scheduled for an appendectomy in a few hours,โ€ she said, approaching the manโ€™s hospital room.

Darren nodded as he smiled. โ€œThis old guy is hilarious. Did you know he was a stunt motorcycle driver in the circus in the โ€™80s?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ She knew he had an inflamed appendix and had waited far too long to come in. She knew his vitals and that in an hour, theyโ€™d be prepping him for surgery. Knowing personal details of a patientโ€™s life didnโ€™t make her job any easier or guarantee a better outcome. She juggled the files on one arm as she reached into her pocket for a new set of sterile gloves.

โ€œHey, before we go in there, can I talk to you?โ€ Darren asked, stopping her outside the room. He stared at the checked patterned floor tiles.

Damn. โ€œYouโ€™re requesting a transfer to a different physician.โ€ He wasnโ€™t the first medical student whoโ€™d gotten reassigned. Sheโ€™d made it a month with Darrenโ€”a new record.

Another intern bites the dust.

He nodded, obviously relieved that he hadnโ€™t had to vocalize it himself. โ€œYouโ€™re amazing, Dr. Sheraton, and I feel so fortunate for the opportunity to work with you, but youโ€™re also very busy and unavailableโ€ฆโ€

The sharp sting of the words was familiar. Sheโ€™d heard the same speech from interns and boyfriends alike. Sheโ€™d successfully eliminated the problem in one group right after her first year of residencyโ€ฆinterns were hospital assigned and therefore out of her control.

โ€œI mean I just need all the training I can get and between patients and your research workโ€ฆโ€

She didnโ€™t need an explanation. She was busy. Too busy to have someone following her around in fact. This was totally fine with her. โ€œI understand.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not upset?โ€

โ€œOnly about having to get my own coffee from now on,โ€ she said.

The joke missed its mark and the internโ€™s eyes widened. โ€œI can still do thatโ€ฆโ€

Wow, was she really that scary? She was demanding and expected the students to put in the hours she did. She may not be the friendliest doctor on staff, socializing after work and remembering birthdays and such, but she gave these interns a real picture of their future in medicine. Wasnโ€™t that what they were there for? โ€œI was kidding, Darren.โ€

โ€œOhโ€ฆright.โ€

โ€œDr. Sheraton, please report to emergency. Stat.โ€

The call over the hospital intercom had her handing Darren the stack of folders. โ€œPlease take his heart rate and blood pressure,โ€ she said, practically running to the elevators. โ€œAnd donโ€™t forget Mr. Franklin.โ€

โ€œGot it,โ€ he called after her.

The quiet twenty-six-second elevator ride to the first floor was the closest thing she got to a spa day. It was the only time she was forced to slow to a pace other than her own usual breakneck speed. But even that half a minute was too long. It gave her time to think. Think about her previous surgeries and replay the detailsโ€”what went right, what went wrong, what she could do better next time. Constantly reevaluating herself made her a better surgeon, but too often it left her feeling like she was coming up slightly short of her potential. Her type A personality left little room for failure or complacency. 

Checking her phone in her lab coat pocket, she scanned her schedule for the rest of the evening, evaluating what she could push back if this emergency demanded her immediate attention. The number of things marked urgent made her will the elevator to move quicker. Sheโ€™d be lucky to get out of there by 2:00 a.m.

A text popped up from Darren.

If you change your mind about Mrs. Franklinโ€ฆ

She wouldnโ€™t. She ignored the text from her internโ€”former internโ€”and put the phone away.

As the elevator stopped, she took a deep breath, expecting to see a flurry of organized chaos as the doors opened. Stretchers, ambulance lights flashing and sirens wailing outside, paramedics and nursesโ€ฆ Instead, she ran square into her father.

No emergency, just his six-foot-three frame and his usual neutral expression. It was impossible to read her father, as his face gave nothing away. His emotions were never too high or too low, just infuriatingly balanced no matter the circumstance. His calm presence and rational thinking made him fantastic at his profession, but sometimes he was irritating as shit as a father.

โ€œHi. I was just coming to see you.โ€ Eventually.

โ€œWalk with me,โ€ he said, turning on his heel and nodding.

Her jaw clenched so tight her teeth might snap. This was so like himโ€”assuming she could drop everything at his command. He may run the hospital, but he often had no idea how hectic her schedule was. โ€œCan we talk as I do my rounds, Darren isโ€ฆโ€ 

โ€œMore than capable,โ€ he said, leading the way to his first-floor corner office. โ€œAnd requesting to be transferred, I see.โ€

His tone made her palms sweat. He should be happy that she was pushing these interns to their limits. What awaited them once they graduated wasnโ€™t for the faint of heart. Better to get used to grueling days and nights now, performing on little to no sleep, living on caffeine and leftover Halloween chocolate bars, than to realize they couldnโ€™t cut it when lives were in their hands.

Unfortunately, he didnโ€™t always agree with her beliefs . He wanted the interns to feel at home at Alaska General so theyโ€™d apply here once they graduated. The hospital was short staffed and more doctors would benefit everyone, but Erika preferred to work alongside the best.

Her father had an open-door policyโ€”literallyโ€”so when he closed the office door behind her, she knew the head of General Surgery hadnโ€™t called her in to discuss Thanksgiving dinner plans.

She glanced at his wall calendar as she sat. Especially since Thanksgiving was a week ago.

โ€œDad, this intern thing is just ridiculousโ€ฆโ€

He held up a hand. โ€œThis isnโ€™t about your inability to effectively manage others.โ€

Kick to the gut delivered and received. She clamped her lips together.

He opened his desk drawer and handed her a letter as he sat in the plush, leather chair behind his oversize mahogany desk.

Her eyes widened, seeing the Hospital Foundation logo on the top of the page. โ€œIs this the final approval from the board for the clinical trials?โ€ Theyโ€™d submitted the application six months ago to start trials on a new antirejection drug after years of research, and they were waiting on the formal go-ahead to start with a test group.

Would Darren reconsider staying with her if he knew he could be part of a medical breakthrough? Heโ€™d been a lot of help in the past month.

โ€œJust read it,โ€ her father said.

She scanned the letter from the board of directors, feeling her excitement fade and anxiety rise with each word. โ€œRecommended vacation? What is this?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t like it either, but the board is reviewing policies and making sure we are following them,โ€ he said, the edge indicating heโ€™d been outvoted in this decision. He certainly didnโ€™t believe in time off and had never encouraged her to take any. Her life was her career, just like him.

โ€œBut any day now we will be starting clinical trials on the new drug.โ€ It had taken her father and his team almost three years to get the experimental antirejection product approved for testing on organ transplant patients and theyโ€™d finally gotten it. Theyโ€™d worked around the clock for a year to make sure they did. Subjects were undergoing assessment right now to be ready for the trials.

Now was not the time to take a break.

Her father looked as though heโ€™d made the same argument to the hospital board. โ€œThe team will have to handle it.โ€

So recommended actually meant forced. โ€œWhy now? Iโ€™m fine. I donโ€™t need a break.โ€ At twenty-nine, she was eager to prove herself as one of the top general surgeons in the state. Between her surgical success record and the research time sheโ€™d invested in this new drug, she was close. Helping her father get one step closer to winning the Lister Medal was high on her priority list. โ€œCome on, Dad, you know Iโ€™m good. My last two operations were impossible surgeriesโ€ฆโ€

โ€œImprobable surgeries.โ€

Erika clamped her lips together again, forcing her argument to stay put. It wouldnโ€™t do any good. Three years working alongside her father and sheโ€™d yet to prove herself. Despite two back-to-back improbable surgeries that sheโ€™d performed successfully, he still doubted her abilities. His micromanagement over her research team had driven her insane, but heโ€™d reluctantly agreed to let her run her own set of clinical trials on the antirejection drug, and sheโ€™d foolishly believed she was making progress with him.

Now she was being forced into taking a break.

What the hell was a break? She hadnโ€™t had one since starting university. Sheโ€™d graduated with her bachelorโ€™s in three years instead of four by doubling up on courses and then had applied directly to med school. Sheโ€™d interned at Alaska General and secured a position there shortly after graduation. She couldnโ€™t remember the last day she had off, let aloneโ€ฆshe glanced at the letter. Two weeks?

What the hell would she do with all that free time?

Excerpted from An Alaskan Christmas by Jennifer Snow, Copyright ยฉ 2019 by Jennifer Snow. Published by HQN Books.


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CHRISTMAS IN SILVER SPRINGS


Author: Brenda Novak

ISBN: 9780778308256

Publication Date: October 29, 2019

Publisher: MIRA BOOKS

BIO: Brenda Novak, a New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author, has penned over sixty novels. She is a six-time nominee for the RITA Award and has won the National Reader’s Choice, the Bookseller’s Best, the Bookbuyer’s Best, and many other awards. She also runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity to raise money for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). To date, she’s raised $2.5 million. For more about Brenda, please visit http://www.brendanovak.com.

BOOK SUMMARY: 

Come home to Silver Springs for the holidays, where broken hearts learn to love again…together. 

So much for forever. When Elle Devlin’s rockstar husband ditches her on his way to the top, she takes her two daughters to her sister’s place in Silver Springs for the holidays, hoping family can heal her broken heart. But comfort comes in unexpected packages when she crosses paths with Tobias Richardson.

The moment Tobias spots Elle, he recognizes a sadness he knows all too well. After spending thirteen years in prison paying for his regretful past, Tobias is ready to make amends, and maybe helping Elle is the way to do it. But offering her a shoulder to cry on ignites a powerful attraction, and a desire neither saw coming.

Fearing her reaction, Tobias doesn’t divulge his ex-con status, let alone the shameful details. So when Elle’s ex shows up in Silver Springs and reveals the truth in a bid to win her back, Tobias is sure he’s lost her for good. But, just maybe, this Christmas he’ll receive the forgivenessโ€”and the loveโ€”he deserves.

SOCIAL:

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FB: @BrendaNovakAuthor

Insta: @authorbrendanovak 

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EXCERPT

CHAPTER ONE

Friday, December 6

Tobias Richardson couldnโ€™t help noticing the petite blonde sitting at the old-fashioned counter of the dinerโ€”and not just because she was pretty. He was sure heโ€™d never seen her before. With a population of seven thousand, Silver Springs wasnโ€™t small enough that heโ€™d recognize everybody, especially because heโ€™d only been living here for five months. The town seemed to have gotten a lot smaller since the weather turned, though. It didnโ€™t snow in this part of California, but it was the rainy season and the region was experiencing colder than normal temperatures. Tourists werenโ€™t interested in visiting when it was chill and damp, and the same went for the many residents of LA, ninety minutes to the southeast, who had vacation homes here. This month, and probably for the next two or three, he guessed Silver Springs would be limited to the locals.

He blew on his hands, trying to warm them while waiting for the coffee heโ€™d ordered when he first sat down. Heโ€™d managed to squeeze in a hike after work. He didnโ€™t care that it was dark and wet by the time he was on his way back. He had a 

headlight to guide him to the trailhead and was willing to put up with the rain. But he was chilled to the bone. After such an arduous hike, he was starving, too, and craving a hot shower.

Again, he glanced toward the counter. He didnโ€™t want the woman to catch him staring, but something about herโ€”besides her looksโ€”drew his attention.

She didnโ€™t seem happyโ€ฆ

โ€œHere you go.โ€ Willow Sanhurst, the barely eighteen-year-old girl who worked evenings at the Eatery, stepped between him and the woman who intrigued him, smiled broadly and put his cup on the table with a flourish. โ€œWarming up yet?โ€

โ€œStarting to.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t believe youโ€™ve been out hiking. Itโ€™s December!โ€

โ€œLittle bit of rain never hurt anybody.โ€

Heโ€™d traded out his muddy hiking books for a pair of clean shoes before coming into the restaurant. Other than that, he was only a little damp, so he wasnโ€™t sure why she was making such a big deal of it.

โ€œYou must really like the outdoors.โ€

โ€œI do,โ€ he said.

โ€œSo do I.โ€

He got the impression he was supposed to follow that up with an invitation to go hiking with him sometime, but he didnโ€™t.

Even though theyโ€™d already discussed his hike when heโ€™d sat down and sheโ€™d brought him water, and the diner was full of people waiting for a chance to order, she didnโ€™t move away as most waitresses would.

Before bringing the coffee to his lips, he looked up to see if there was something she needed.

As soon as their eyes met, she blushed a deep red, wiped her hands on her ruffled white apron and mumbled some remark about being careful not to burn himselfโ€”that the coffee was hotโ€”before hurrying away.

Damn it. She had a crush on him. Sheโ€™d clearly wanted to say something but hadnโ€™t been able to gather the nerve, and that made him distinctly uncomfortable. After being released from prison in July he was committed to making better choices, to building a productive life. He couldnโ€™t have some high school girl staring at him with the longing he saw shining in her eyes. If she started seriously pursuing him, he was afraid heโ€™d end up in a bad situation just because he was so damn lonely.

With a sigh, he took a tentative sip of his coffee. This was his favorite place to eatโ€”the comfort food and Norman Rockwell vibe reminded him of the wholesome existence heโ€™d always secretly admired. But heโ€™d have to quit coming here. He wouldnโ€™t allow himself to be tempted. His brother, Maddox, said over and over that his first year out of prison would be the hardest, and although Tobias acted as though he was doing fine, that he had his life under control, his journey was not as sure-footed as he let on. Sometimes, especially late at night, he felt as though heโ€™d been cast adrift on a vast ocean and might never find safe harbor. And that sense of being so small and insignificant made him crave the substances that had gotten him into trouble in the first place.

Willow kept looking over at him, obviously hoping to catch his eye. While he poured a dash of cream into his coffee, he considered canceling his meal. He could eat somewhere elseโ€”grab something to go and head home to shower. But just as he was about to slide out of the booth, his phone dinged with a text from Maddox, asking if heโ€™d like to come over for dinner.

Already ate. Enjoy your night. See you at work tomorrow, he wrote back.

He knew his brother worried about him, was trying to help him adjust to life outside prison and didnโ€™t want him to backslide and become like their mother. But Maddox had recently married the girl heโ€™d loved since high school. He deserved to be alone with Jada, his new wife, who was now pregnant, and Maya, their daughter. The last thing Tobias wanted to do was get in the way of their relationshipโ€”again. It was because of him they hadnโ€™t gotten together the first time around, and that had cost Maddox the first twelve years of Mayaโ€™s life.

As he slid his phone in his coat pocket, he saw that it was too late to cancel his food. Willow was once again coming toward him, this time carrying a plate.

โ€œYou texting your girlfriend?โ€ she asked, flirting with him as she put down his meat loaf and mashed potatoes.

He allowed himself another glance at the blonde sitting at the counter. Her meal had come, too, and yet she held her fork, turning it over and over in one hand, staring at her food without taking a bite.

โ€œDid you hear me?โ€ Willow asked.

Putting his napkin in his lap, he picked up his fork. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. Whatโ€™d you say?โ€

She looked over her shoulder in the direction heโ€™d been looking and lowered her voice. โ€œI see youโ€™ve noticed Harper.โ€

โ€œHarper?โ€ he repeated.

โ€œYeah, Harper Devlinโ€”Axel Devlinโ€™s wife. Sheโ€™s been in here before.โ€

โ€œWhoโ€™s Axel Devlin?โ€

โ€œAre you kidding me? Heโ€™s the lead singer of Pulse. Theyโ€™re, likeโ€ฆthe biggest band on the planet!โ€

Heโ€™d heard of Pulse, was familiar with their music and liked it. Heโ€™d also heard the name of the bandโ€™s lead singer many times. Heโ€™d just never dreamed Willow could be referring to that Axel Devlinโ€”although there was no good reason why she couldnโ€™t be. A lot of celebrities came to artsy, spiritually focused Silver Springs. Quite a few, especially movie people, retired here. And he often interacted with Hudson King, a professional football player, at New Horizons Boys Ranch, where he worked doing grounds and building maintenance. Hudson did a lot to help the troubled teens who attended the boarding schoolโ€”both the boysโ€™ side and the recently built girlsโ€™ school on the same property. Heโ€™d donated the money to buy an ice-skating rink both sides could use. โ€œDo they live in the area?โ€

โ€œNo. She and her two kids are staying with her sister for the holidays. I overheard her talking to the owner.โ€

โ€œShe looks a littleโ€ฆโ€ When he let his words trail off, Willow jumped in to finish the sentence.

โ€œDepressed?โ€

โ€œI was going to say โ€˜lost.โ€™โ€

โ€œProbably is. I watched an interview with Axel a few months ago. He said they were splitting up. Maybe thatโ€™s why.โ€

It was none of his business, but Tobias couldnโ€™t help asking, โ€œDid he give a reason?โ€

She seemed to like that theyโ€™d found something to talk about that wasnโ€™t so strained and awkward for her. โ€œBlamed it on the travel. He has to be gone too much. Yada, yada. What else is he going to say? That heโ€™s cheating with a different girl every night?โ€ she added with a laugh.

Tobias felt bad for Harper. It couldnโ€™t be easy to be married to a rock star. She wasnโ€™t that old, likely hadnโ€™t been prepared for that kind of life. If Tobias remembered correctly, Axel was from a small town in Idaho, and he and his band had become famous almost overnight. Now he was sitting on top of the world.

But where did that leave her?

โ€œYou said they have kids?โ€ he asked.

โ€œYeah. Two little girls. I donโ€™t remember their agesโ€”maybe eight and six? Something like that.โ€

So Harper had married Axel before heโ€™d become a big success, and theyโ€™d started a family. That indicated sheโ€™d married for love. โ€œWhere are the kids?โ€

โ€œWith her sister, I guess.โ€ Willow lowered her voice. โ€œIt would suck to be her, right? I mean, she has to see his name and his face everywhere, canโ€™t escape the constant reminder.โ€

Now that he wasnโ€™t paying as much attention to Willowโ€™s hopeful smiles and nervousness when she was around him, Tobias could see others in the restaurant nudging their companions and pointing to Harper. Apparently a lot of people knew who she wasโ€”or word was spreading fast.

Poor thing. He understood what it was like to be the talk of the town. Heโ€™d been only seventeen when heโ€™d been prosecuted as an adult and jailed for thirteen years. Returning to Silver Springs after his release this past summer had been like being put under a microscope. Suffering privately was one thing. Suffering publicly was something else entirely. That took what she was going through to a whole new level.

โ€œShouldnโ€™t be too hard for her to find someone else.โ€ He said it as though he wasnโ€™t particularly invested, but Harper had caught his eye, hadnโ€™t she?

โ€œAre you kidding me?โ€ Willow responded again. โ€œHow will anyone else ever compare?โ€

She had a point. It would be tough for a regular guy to match Axel, financially and otherwise. โ€œTrue.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not interested in her, are you?โ€ Willow looked slightly crestfallen.

Apparently he hadnโ€™t been as careful to hide his feelings as heโ€™d thought. But he was an ex-con, making a modest wage working for a correctional school. Heโ€™d never known his father, and his mother was a meth addict, constantly in and out of rehab. He knew when he was out of his league. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œGood.โ€ A relieved smile curved her lips. โ€œBecause Iโ€™ve been watching you for a while andโ€ฆwellโ€ฆ I hope thereโ€™s someone else in this restaurant you might be interested in.โ€ She finished in a rush, couldnโ€™t quite look at him and then hurried awayโ€”only to return with a slip of paper that had her number on it when she brought the check.

Harper shoved her garlic mashed potatoes from one side of her plate to the other as she listened to the hum of voices in the diner. Although surrounded by people, sheโ€™d never felt so alone.

โ€œIโ€™ve got a number five,โ€ the cook barked out for the waitresses.

Harper checked the menu, which sheโ€™d left open at her elbow so sheโ€™d have something to look at. It was difficult to go out in public right now. After the documentary she did with Axel last year, trying to remove the stigma of depression and using a therapist when necessary, people often recognized her, so she had little privacy.

A number five was a chicken breast with lemon-dill sauce, steamed vegetables and a gluten-free corn muffin. Sheโ€™d ordered a number sevenโ€”peppercorn steak, garlic mashed potatoes and green beans, which had sounded good at first, but the only thing sheโ€™d been able to make herself eat was part of the dinner roll. She doubted it was gluten-free. Axel had made a big deal about staying away from gluten, but he was allergic to it, not her. And although she thought it was probably wise to avoid it, she didnโ€™t care about her diet right now. She didnโ€™t care about much of anything since her marriage had unraveled. Itโ€™d been all she could do just to hold herself together for the sake of her kids, and now Christmas would be here in only three weeks. It would be her and the girlsโ€™ first Christmas without Axel. He was touring Europe and wouldnโ€™t be back until after the first of the year, since his last big concert was scheduled for New Yearโ€™s Eve.

Now that everything had changed between them, they wouldnโ€™t have spent the holidays as they had in the past, anyway.

He mightโ€™ve asked to take the girls, however.

She could only imagine how lonely she would have felt with them gone, and yetโ€ฆshe sort of wished he had taken them. She didnโ€™t feel capable of holding up her end, of putting on a brave face and telling their children that everything was going to be okay when it felt as though the ground had given way beneath her feet. She had no interest in decorating, putting up a tree or buying presents, which was why her sister had insisted she come

for an extended visit, even if it meant having the girls transfer schools for a couple of months. Piper and Everly were at a church Christmas party tonight with their cousinsโ€”twin girls who were older than Everly by four years. But Harper needed to be ready to face them with a smile when they came home.

Her phone vibrated in her pocket, but she didnโ€™t bother to get it out. No doubt it was her sister. Theyโ€™d had an argument before Harper stormed out of the house. Karoline had grown angry when Harper told her how little she was getting for child support. According to her sister, she was letting Axel off far too easy.

He was making a fortune, but Harper didnโ€™t want to fight. She was still in love with him. As soon as heโ€™d made it clear that he didnโ€™t want to be married to her anymore, that he was no longer willing to try to work through their differences, sheโ€™d settled for the first figure his lawyer had thrown out. Otherwise, she was afraid the media would start to claim they were going through a โ€œbitterโ€ divorce. As sheโ€™d told Karoline, sheโ€™d make it on her own somehow, even though she hadnโ€™t worked in an official capacity since the first three years of her marriage, when Axel was trying so hard to get a start in show business and heโ€™d needed her to cover their basic living expenses.

Maybe she was a fool to be so accommodating. But she couldnโ€™t imagine Axel would consider keeping the family together if she turned into a bitch. Besides, she didnโ€™t even know who he was anymore, heโ€™d changed so much. She couldnโ€™t decide what she had a right to demand. Had she let Axel down? Or had he let her down? Heโ€™d always suffered from anxiety and depression. Maybe she hadnโ€™t done enough to help himโ€”

โ€œIs everything okay?โ€

She forced herself to look up. The waitress working the counter had paused in front of her, obviously wondering if there was something wrong with the food.

โ€œFine,โ€ Harper mumbled. She hadnโ€™t really come to eat. She just needed some time alone, couldnโ€™t face going back to her

sisterโ€™s quite yet. As nice as it was of Karoline to provide a refuge during this difficult month, being with her only sibling wasnโ€™t much easier than being alone, because now she had to constantly explain and justify her actions. And with her emotions zinging all over the place, she wasnโ€™t being consistent, couldnโ€™t be consistent. Most of the time, she wasnโ€™t even making a whole lot of sense.

Elvisโ€™s โ€œBlue Christmasโ€ came on the sound system as the waitress moved on to her other customers.

Harper took a sip of her coffee and braved a quick glance around. Although she liked this restaurant, she didnโ€™t feel she belonged in Silver Springs. Why wasnโ€™t she in Denver, where she and Axel had lived after their college days at Boise State?

Because as much as she and Axel had once believed that theyโ€™d be the exception to the rule, that nothing could come between them, theyโ€™d been wrong. Slowly but surely, Axel had lost all perspective and started caring more about his work than he did his family. Fame had destroyed their relationship like so many celebrities before them.

With a sigh, she took the bill the waitress had put near her plate and paid at the register. She owed her sister more respect than to make her worry. She had to go back and face Karoline whether she wanted to or not.

Harper hadnโ€™t put on makeup for weeks, hadnโ€™t done anything with her hair, either, other than to pile it in a messy bun on her head, so it didnโ€™t bother her that it was raining. She was cold, though; couldnโ€™t seem to get warm. Tightening her oversize coatโ€”a castoff of Axelโ€™s from the good old days when they were first marriedโ€”she pushed out of the warm cafรฉ into the bad weather.

Putting her head down, she stared at her feet, bracing against the gusts of wind that whipped at her hair and clothes while stepping over two or three puddles to reach the Range Rover 

Axel had let her keep when they split. If she got desperate, she supposed she could sell it. It had cost a pretty penny.

She was opening the driverโ€™s door when she noticed a tall, lanky man with longish dark hair crossing the lot toward her.

โ€œDonโ€™t be frightened,โ€ he said, lifting one hand in a gesture intended to show he wasnโ€™t being aggressive. โ€œI justโ€ฆ I saw you inside andโ€ฆโ€

Prepared to rebuff him, she set her jaw. She was not in the mood to be hit on. But when she met his eyes, something about his expression told her that wasnโ€™t what this was about. Taking a long-stemmed white rose from inside his coat, he stepped forward to give it to her.

โ€œHang in there. Itโ€™ll get easier,โ€ he said. Then he walked off before she could even ask for his name.ย 


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Christmas from the Heart  


Sheila Roberts

On Sale Date: September 24, 2019

9780778309611, 0778309614

Trade Paperback

$16.99 USD, $21.99 CAD

Fiction / Romance / Contemporary 

304 pages

Summary:

USA TODAY bestselling author Sheila Roberts takes readers to a small, snowbound town, where a young woman fights to save her familyโ€™s charity that brings Christmas to families in need, and a stranded millionaire loses his heart and finds the true meaning of Christmas.

Sometimes you need to look beyond the big picture to see what really matters

Olivia Bergโ€™s charity, Christmas from the Heart, has helped generations of families in need in Pine River, Washington, but this year might be the end of the road. Hightower Enterprises, one of their biggest donors since way back when Oliviaโ€™s grandmother ran the charity, has been taken over by Ebenezer Scrooge the Second, aka CFO Guy Hightower, and heโ€™s declared there will be no more money coming to Christmas from the Heart.

Guy is simply being practical. Hightower Enterprises needs to tighten its belt, and when you donโ€™t have money to spare, you donโ€™t have money to share. Youโ€™d think even the pushy Olivia Berg could understand that.

With charitable donations dwindling, Oliviaโ€™s Christmas budget depends on Hightowerโ€™s contribution. Sheโ€™s focused her whole life on helping this small town, even putting her love life on hold to support her mission.

When Guyโ€™s Maserati breaks down at the edge of the Cascade foothills, heโ€™s relieved to be rescued by a pretty young woman who drives him to the nearby town of Pine River. Until he realizes his rescuer is none other than Olivia Berg. Whatโ€™s a Scrooge to do? Plug his nose and eat fruitcake and hope she doesnโ€™t learn his true identity before he can get out of town. What could go wrong?

Author Bio:

Sheila Roberts lives on a lake in the Pacific Northwest. Her novels have been published in several languages. Her book, Angel Lane, was an Amazon Top Ten Romance pick for 2009. Her holiday perennial, On Strike for Christmas, was made into a movie for the Lifetime Movie Network and her novel, The Nine Lives of Christmas, was made into a movie for Hallmark . You can visit Sheila on Twitter and Facebook or at her website (http://www.sheilasplace.com).

Social Links:

Author website

Facebook: @funwithsheila

Twitter: @_Sheila_Roberts

Instagram: @funwithsheila

Buy Links:

Amazon

Google Play

Barnes & Noble

Apple Books

Kobo

EXCERPT

1

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart 

Date: 2-14-19 

To: Ms. Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises 

Subject: Holiday Joy

 Dear Ms. Thompson, 

Happy Valentineโ€™s Day to you! Iโ€™m following up our January newsletter with a special greeting as this is, of course, the month for love. Love for our sweethearts, our family and friends, and for those in need. As you could see from the newsletter, we put the money our loyal supporters donated to us to good use. So many families benefited from your generous donation to Christmas from the Heart last year and I just wanted to remind you that, even though the holidays seem far away they will be here before we know it. I hope we can count on Hightower Enterprises again this year. We have such a history together. Letโ€™s keep up the good work! 

Warmly, 

Olivia Berg

Christmas from the Heart 

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises 

Date: 2-14-19 

To: Ms. Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart 

Subject: Holiday Joy

Dear Ms. Berg, 

Thanks for reaching out. Our fiscal year is just ending and I havenโ€™t yet received word as to how our charitable donations will be dispersed this year. I will keep you apprised. 

Best, Marla Thompson 

CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 2-14-19

To: Ms. Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

Subject: Holiday Joy

Thank you so much. Looking forward to hearing from you! 

Olivia Berg 

Christmas from the Heart 

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 5-1-19

To: Ms. Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

Subject: Happy May Day!

Dear Ms. Thompson, just wanted to wish you a happy May Day. The flowers here in Pine River are now in full bloom, and our organization has been busy helping people make their dreams bloom, as well. As you know, while our focus is primarily the holidays, Christmas from the Heart tries to help people all year round when needs arise. Of course, Christmas is our big thrust, and as there is no other organization working in this area, we are much needed. As are your kind contributions. I still havenโ€™t heard and I do hope we can count on you.

Warmly, 

Olivia Berg

Christmas from the Heart

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Marla Thompson

Subject: Just checking

Reaching out again in case my last email went astray. Iโ€™m wondering if you have any news for me regarding Hightowerโ€™s involvement with our cause for this coming year.

Thanks!

Olivia Berg

Christmas from the Heart

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Olivia Berg

Subject: Just checking

Ms. Berg, sorry I havenโ€™t been able to get back to you sooner. Iโ€™m afraid I have some bad news for you. It appears that the company is going to be scaling back on their charitable giving this year and funds have already been budgeted for other causes. Iโ€™m aware of the fact that in the past weโ€™ve donated to your organization and Iโ€™m sorry I donโ€™t have better news for you. I do wish you all the best in your search for other funding.

Best, 

Marla Thompson 

CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Marla Thompson

Subject: Just checking

There must be some sort of misunderstanding! Hightower has always donated to Christmas from the Heart. The companyโ€™s founder, Elias Hightower, was my great-grandmotherโ€™s first contributor, and he promised her that Hightower would always be there for this organization. This is a company tradition! Please speak to your director.

Hopefully, 

Olivia Berg 

Christmas from the Heart

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Olivia Berg

Subject: Just checking

Iโ€™m sorry. The decision is out of my hands.

Marla Thompson 

CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Marla Thompson

Subject: Just checking

Then please tell me who I need to talk to. Whoโ€™s your CFO?

Olivia Berg 

Christmas from the Heart

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

From: Marla Thompson, CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

Date: 5-5-19

To: Ms. Olivia Berg

Subject: Just checking

Our CFO is Guy Hightower, and his email is ghightower@hightowerenterprises.com

Good luck!

Marla Thompson 

CSR Director, Hightower Enterprises

From: Olivia Berg, Director, Christmas from the Heart

Date: 5-5-19

To: Guy Hightower, CFO, Hightower Enterprises 

Subject: Please reconsider

Dear Mr. Hightower, I understand from your corporate social resources director that Hightower isnโ€™t planning on making any donation to Christmas from the Heart this year. There must be some mistake! Surely youโ€™re aware of the long-standing relationship between your company and our organization. Iโ€™m sure I can count on you for some small amount. 

Best, Olivia Berg

Christmas from the Heart

Giving from the heart makes all the difference

Guy Hightower frowned when he saw the email from Olivia Berg in his in-box. Marla Thompson had been forwarding her emails to him, keeping him abreast of Olivia Bergโ€™s varied begging tactics, and had finally even come into his office, trying to dump the load of guilt the woman had laid on her from her shoulders to his.

โ€œDonโ€™t open it,โ€ he told himself. He opened it anyway. Then he read it and swore.

Actually, heโ€™d been swearing ever since meeting with his brothers to discuss the budget back in December. If either of them had listened to him three years ago, they wouldnโ€™t be having to pull the company belt so tight now. This was the problem with being the youngest. It didnโ€™t matter how many degrees you had, how smart you were or what your job title was. Big brothers never listened.

Hard to listen when you were going through your third divorce.

That was Mikeโ€™s excuse. What was Bryanโ€™s? Oh yeah. He was a wuss. He always agreed with Mike, no matter what. And Mike hadnโ€™t wanted to change directions. Never mind that the company was struggling, keep on doing the same thing. The definition of insanity.

Sorry, Little Miss Christmas. Times were tough all over. Hightower had kept its commitment to the more visible causes and turned the little fish loose. And that was how it worked in the corporate world.

He typed his reply.

Dear Ms. Berg, I regret that Hightower canโ€™t help you this year. Weโ€™ve had to reassess our commitments to various causes. Iโ€™m sure youโ€™ll understand.

Then he signed off with the time-honored adios: Respectfully, Guy Hightower.

And if she didnโ€™t understand, well, not his problem. He had his hands full trying to keep the family company afloat. Maybe now Mike would be ready to take his advice and diversify.

Olivia Bergโ€”Livi to her family and friendsโ€”read the email from Guy Hightower a second time. Yes, the message was the same. Really? Really? Who was this man, Ebenezer Scrooge the Second?

She plowed her fingers through her hair, the birthstone ring Morris had given her for her birthday catching in the curls. She was so angry she barely noticed.

With a snarl, she began to type.

You should be ashamed. Your great-grandfather is probably turning in his grave right now. Whatโ€™s the matter with you, anyway, you selfish bastard?

She pulled her fingers off the keyboard with a gasp. What was she thinking? Was this any way to get someone to contribute to her cause? And what kind of language was this? Her great-grandmother would be turning in her grave right now, along with Elias. Adelaide Brimwell had been a lady through and through. So had Liviโ€™s grandmother, Olivia, as well as Liviโ€™s mom. 

The thought of her mother made her tear up. How she wished Mom was still around to advise her. Theyโ€™d always planned that Livi would take over running the organization one day, but neither had dreamed that day would come so soon. Her motherโ€™s heart attack had struck like lightning. Liviโ€™s brother had left town, moving to Seattle, which was just far enough south to keep the memories at bay. Livi had stayed put, holding on to every single one, weaving them together into a lifeline to cling to as she kept Christmas from the Heart afloat.

Oh, Mom. What should I do?

Try again came the answer.

Yes, her mother never gave up. Sheโ€™d chased one potential donor for two years before he finally came through. Livi still remembered the day her mom left the house, clad in a Mrs. Santa costume sheโ€™d createdโ€”requisite white wig along with a frilly white blouse and a red skirt topped with a red-striped apron. Sheโ€™d taken with her a batch of home-baked cookies nestled in a red basket and returned home with a check for five hundred dollars. The man had been a loyal contributor ever since. Livi still took him cookies every year.

โ€œPersistence pays,โ€ she told herself as she deleted what sheโ€™d typed.

She started over.

Iโ€™m asking you to reconsider. Your company is our major donor, and without you so many people will have little joy this Christmas. Any amount you can give will be greatly appreciated.

There. Heโ€™d have to be a heartless monster not to respond to that.

Guy trashed the guilt-inflicting email. What was he, Santa Claus? He had his hands full keeping his company solvent.

But then, people like Olivia Berg never considered the fact that a company might have needs of its own. What made them feel so entitled to sit at the edge of the salt mine while a man slaved away and then greet him with their hands out when he emerged broken and bruised? Maybe some of those people always begging for money should get out there and actually earn a living. Let them work their tails off, putting in seventy-hour weeks. Sheesh.

Anyway, the company had already met their good deed quota for the year. The only cause Guy was interested in now was Hightower Enterprises.

By the end of the workday, Guy Hightower still hadnโ€™t responded to Liviโ€™s last email. โ€œYou are a heartless monster,โ€ she grumbled, glaring at her empty email in-box.

โ€œNo word yet?โ€ her part-time assistant, Bettina Thomas, asked as she shut down her computer.

Livi sighed and shook her head.

โ€œThat is so wrong,โ€ Bettina said in disgust.

It sure was. โ€œTheyโ€™ve been our major donor ever since my great-grandmother founded Christmas from the Heart. Without their contribution how will we put on the Christmas dinner at the community center? How many families wonโ€™t have presents under the tree or Christmas stockings or a Christmas turkey?โ€ There was no Salvation Army in Pine River, no Toys for Totsโ€” none of the usual organizations serviced this area. There had been no need. Christmas from the Heart had it under control.

Until now.

โ€œWeโ€™ve had to reassess our commitments,โ€ Livi quoted. The words left a bad taste in her mouth and she frowned. โ€œIt sounds like something your boyfriend says when heโ€™s dumping you.โ€

โ€œThey are dumping us,โ€ Bettina pointed out. โ€œBut donโ€™t worry. We have time. Weโ€™ll find someone else to come through.โ€

โ€œNot like Hightower. There must be something I can do,โ€ Livi mused.

โ€œThere is. Go home and eat chocolate.โ€

And try not to think bad thoughts about Guy Hightower.

In all fairness, he probably didnโ€™t grasp the situation. Sheโ€™d call him the next day and invite him to come to Pine River for a visit so she could let him see the need, show him a little of what Christmas from the Heart did for the community. She could take him to lunch, introduce him to some of the people in town, put a faceโ€”or better yet, severalโ€”to Christmas from the Heart. Sheโ€™d top it all off by following in her motherโ€™s footsteps and baking him cookies. Then how could he help but catch the vision his great-grandfather and her great-grandmother had shared?

Yes, that would do it. Sometimes you had to be a little patient, give people a second chance.

Excerpted from Christmas From the Heart by Sheila Roberts. Copyright ยฉ 2019 by Roberts Ink LLC. Published by MIRA Books.ย 


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COWBOY CHRISTMAS REDEMPTION


Author: Maisey Yates

ISBN: 9781335009906

Publication Date: 9/24/2019

Publisher: HQN Books

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Author Bio: New York Times Bestselling author Maisey Yates lives in rural Oregon with her three children and her husband, whose chiseled jaw and arresting features continue to make her swoon. She feels the epic trek she takes several times a day from her office to her coffee maker is a true example of her pioneer spirit. 

Book Summary:

As snowflakes fall in Gold Valley, Oregon, will this rugged cowboy finally win the woman of his dreams?

Cowboy Caleb Dalton has loved single mom Ellie Bell, and her little daughter, Amelia, for years. But since Ellie is his best friendโ€™s widow, Calebโ€™s head knows Ellie willย alwaysย be strictly off-limits. If only his heart got the memo. So when Caleb discovers that Ellie has a Christmas wish listโ€”and hopes for a kiss under the mistletoeโ€”heโ€™s throwing his cowboy hat into the ring. If anyoneโ€™s going to be kissing Ellie and sharing this magical time with her and her daughter, itโ€™s him.

Ellie has dreaded the holidays since losing her husband. But this year, sheโ€™s finally ready to make some changes. She never expects the biggest change to be the heart-stopping kiss she shares with Caleb. For almost five years, Caleb has been her best friend, her rock, her salvation. This Christmas, can Caleb prove heโ€™s also the missing puzzle piece of Ellieโ€™s and Ameliaโ€™s hearts?

EXCERPT

From Chapter Two

Caleb Dalton hadnโ€™t had much to smile about for a long time. It had been a bear of a few years, since his best friendโ€™s death, and while time might ease a wound, it wouldnโ€™t ever bring Clint back.

But that permanence made space for movement, around the grief, around the pain. And finally toward a future heโ€™d been planning for a long time.

Clint had been, honest to God, one of the best men on earth. The hole heโ€™d left behind had been huge, and Caleb had dedicated himself to caring for his friendโ€™s widow and child in his absence.

That had been his life, his whole life, for nearly five years. And it was fair, because it had been Ellieโ€™s life, too.

He cared for Ellie. A hell of a lot. Heโ€™d met her because of Clint, but sheโ€™d been in his life now for more than ten years.

His feelings for Ellie were complicated. Had been from the beginning. But sheโ€™d been with Clint. And there was no doubt Clint was the better man. More than that, Clint was his brother. Maybe not in blood, but in every way that counted.

Caleb had never claimed to be a perfect friend. Clint was one of those people whoโ€™d drawn everyone right to him. He was easy to like. Calebโ€™s own parents had been bowled over by Clint from the time they were kids. 

And Calebโ€™s jealousy had gotten the better of him once when theyโ€™d been younger. Something that made him burn with shame even now.

He hadnโ€™t let it happen when theyโ€™d been adults. No matter how tempting it had been. No matter how much heโ€™dโ€ฆ

A muscle in his jaw ticked.

He gave thanks that there was a space in front of the Gold Valley Saloon, and he whipped his truck there up against the curb, ignoring the honk that came from behind him.

He turned around and saw Trevor Sanderson in his Chevy, giving Caleb the death glare.

โ€œHold your damn horses, Trevor,โ€ he muttered as he put his truck in Park.

He should have been quicker.

Hell, that was life in a nutshell. Sometimes, you were just too late. For parking spots, and for women.

Heโ€™d tried to get that image out of his head. More times than he could count over the past decade. Had tried to erase that first time heโ€™d seen Ellie.

It was at his parentsโ€™ barbecue. Late one summer afternoon.

Heโ€™d been talking and laughing with his brothers, and heโ€™d lifted a beer to his lips and looked out away from the party. Then heโ€™d frozen.

It was like the world had slowed down, all of it centering on the beautiful blonde walking toward him. The golden light from the sun illuminated her hair like a halo, and her smile seemed to light him up from the inside out.

As sheโ€™d gotten closer, heโ€™d taken in every last detail. The way the left side of her cheek dimpled with that grin; her eyes, a mix of green and blue and a punch in the gut. Her lips were glossy pink, and he wondered if it was that stuff that women wore that smelled and tasted like cherries. He couldnโ€™t decide if he hoped that it was or not.

Twenty years old, more experienced with women than he probably should be, and ready right then and there to drop down to his knees and propose marriage to the one walking in his direction.

It took him a full minute to realize that the beautiful blonde was holding hands with someone.

And that that someone was Calebโ€™s best friend on earth.

It was a surreal moment. It had been a sea change in his soul. When his feelings for Ellie had tipped over from nothing to everything.

A revelation he hadnโ€™t been looking for, and one he sure as hell hadnโ€™t enjoyed.

It was like the whole world had turned, then bucked, like a particularly nasty-ass bull, and left him sprawled out on the ground.

It had been the beginning of a thorny, painful set of years. As heโ€™d gotten to know Ellie, as his feelings for her had become knit deep into his heart, into his soul. Sheโ€™d become more than his friendโ€™s woman, and more than a woman heโ€™d desired. Sheโ€™d become a friend to him.

In many ways he was thankful for the depth of the feeling, because it was the reason heโ€™d been able to put aside the lust. The idea that heโ€™d fallen in love with her at first sight.

When Clint had first started dating her, sheโ€™d been in school, so she hadnโ€™t been around all the time. But during the summers, and on breaks, she came around with Clint. 

Went to the lake with them. Went fishing. Came to Christmas and Thanksgiving.

The summers at the lake, though, that had been a particular kind of torture. All of them swimming out in the water, her and her swimsuit. A tiny bikini that had left little to the imagination.

And he had been so very interested in imagining all the things that it did conceal.

And heโ€™d felt like the biggest, most perverse asshole.

Then there had been the time that Clint had asked him to take her out riding.

Just the two of them.

Because Clint trusted him. Of course he did. Why wouldnโ€™t he trust his best friend? So heโ€™d done it.

Had taken her out on the trails that wound behind the Dalton family property, up to the top of a mountain. And he looked over at the view with her, watched the sunset. And everything in him had wanted to lean over and kiss her on the mouth. To act on the feelings that were rioting through his chest.

For just a breath sheโ€™d looked back at him, met his eyes. And heโ€™d thought maybe sheโ€™d wanted it, too.

Yeah, it would have exploded his relationship with Clint, but for a minute it seemed like it might be worth it.

Then sheโ€™d looked away. And then heโ€™d come back to himself.

Clint was his brother. In every way but blood.

And he couldnโ€™t betray his friend like that.

Anyway, Ellie loved Clint.

She didnโ€™t love Caleb.

And no matter how much he might not want to, he had to respect that.

So he hadnโ€™t kissed her. They had ridden back down that mountain, and nothing happened between them. But late at night, Caleb had taken himself in hand and fantasized that it had.

Two days later Clint and Ellie had been engaged.

Caleb had agreed to be the best man.

Sheโ€™d married Clint. And while his feelings for her had remained, theyโ€™d shifted. As theyโ€™d had to.

He wasnโ€™t perfect. Heโ€™d never touched Ellie. Not like a man touched a woman, though that hadnโ€™t stopped him from going over the accidental brush of fingertips, of their elbows touching, over and over in his mind if it had happened on accident.

It hadnโ€™t stopped him from keeping and cherishing secrets with her, even when he knew he shouldnโ€™t. Hadnโ€™t stopped him from pushing some boundaries that not even Ellie had realized heโ€™d been pushing at.

Ellie was the one whoโ€™d realized, for the first time, that he was dyslexic. And heโ€™d sworn her to secrecy. And in that secrecy had come secret reading lessons.

And heโ€™dโ€ฆwell, heโ€™d lost control of his own feelings again. And once heโ€™d recognized that, heโ€™d cut them off. Cut her off.

But then Clint had died, just a month later. And everything changed again.

Since then, his relationship with Ellie was about their coming together to try and fill the gap Clint had left behind. His helping where she needed it.

Helping with the house, with her grief, with Amelia.

That was all.

Excerpted from Christmas Cowboy Redemption by Maisey Yates, Copyright ยฉ 2019 by Maisey Yates. Published by HQN Books.


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COMING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS 

Author: RaeAnne Thayne

ISBN: 9781335504999

Publication Date: 9/24/2019

Publisher: HQN Books

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Author Bio: New York Times bestselling author RaeAnne Thayne finds inspiration in the beautiful northern Utah mountains where she lives with her family. Her books have won numerous honors, including six RITA Award nominations from Romance Writers of America and Career Achievement and Romance Pioneer awards from RT Book Reviews. She loves to hear from readers and can be reached through her website at www.raeannethayne.com.

Book Summary:

Hearts are lighter and wishes burn a little brighter at Christmasโ€ฆ

Elizabeth Hamilton has been lost. Trapped in a tangle of postpartum depression and grief after the death of her beloved parents, she couldnโ€™t quite see the way back to her husband and their two beautiful kidsโ€ฆuntil a car accident stole away her memories and changed her life. And when she finally remembered the sound of little Cassieโ€™s laugh, the baby powder smell of Bridger and the feel of her husbandโ€™s hand in hers, Elizabeth worried that theyโ€™d moved on without her. That sheโ€™d missed too much. That perhaps she wasnโ€™t the right mother for her kids or wife for Luke, no matter how much she loved them.

But now, seven years later, Luke finds her in a nearby town and brings Elizabeth back home to the family she loves, just in time for Christmas. And being reunited with Luke and her children is better than anything Elizabeth could have imagined. As they all trim the tree and bake cookies, making new holiday memories, Elizabeth and Luke are drawn ever closer. Can the hurt of the past seven years be healed over the course of one Christmas season and bring the Hamiltons the gift of a new beginning?

EXCERPT

 Chapter One 

This was it. 

Luke Hamilton waited outside the big, rambling Victorian house in a little coastal town in Oregon, hands shoved into the pockets of his coat against the wet slap of air and nerves churning through him. 

Elizabeth was here. After all the years when he had been certain she was deadโ€”that she had wandered into the mountains somewhere that cold day seven years earlier or she had somehow walked into the deep, unforgiving waters of Lake Havenโ€”he was going to see her again. 

Though he had been given months to wrap his head around the idea that his wife wasnโ€™t dead, that she was indeed living under another name in this town by the sea, it still didnโ€™t seem real. 

How was he supposed to feel in this moment? He had no idea. He only knew he was filled with a crazy mix of anticipation, fear and the low fury that had been simmering inside 

him for months, since the moment FBI agent Elliot Bailey had produced a piece of paper with a name and an address.

Luke still couldnโ€™t quite believe she was in there, the wife he had not seen in seven years. The wife who had disappeared off the face of the earth, leaving plenty of people to speculate that he had somehow hurt her, even killed her.

For all those days and months and years, he had lived with the ghost of Elizabeth Sinclair and the love they had once shared.

He was never nervous, damn it. So why did his skin itch and his stomach seethe and his hands grip the cold metal of the porch railing as if his suddenly weak knees would give way and make him topple over if he let go?

A moment later, he sensed movement inside the foyer of the house. The woman he had spoken with when he had first pulled up to this address, the woman who had been hanging Christmas lights around the big, charming home and who had looked at him with such suspicion and had not invited him to wait inside, opened the door. One hand was thrust into her coat pocket around a questionable-looking bulge.

She was either concealing a handgun or a Taser or pepper spray. Since he had never met the woman before, Luke couldnโ€™t begin to guess which. Her features had lost none of that alert wariness that told him she would do whatever necessary to protect Elizabeth.

He wanted to tell her he would never hurt his wife, but it was a refrain he had grown tired of repeating. Over the years, he had become inured to peopleโ€™s opinions on the matter. Let them think what the hell they wanted. He knew the truth.

โ€œWhere is she?โ€ he demanded.

There was a long pause, like some tension-filled moment just before the gunfight in Old West movies. He wouldnโ€™t have been surprised if tumbleweeds suddenly blew down the street.

Then, from behind the first woman, another figure stepped out onto the porch, slim and blonde andโ€ฆshockingly familiar.

He stared, stunned to his bones. It was her. Not Elizabeth. Her. He had seen this woman around his small Idaho town of Haven Point several times over the last few years, fleeting glimpses only out of the corner of his gaze at a baseball game or a school program.

The mystery woman.

He assumed she had been there to watch one of the other children. Maybe an aunt from out of town, someone he didnโ€™t know.

Luke had noticed herโ€ฆand had hated the tiny little glow of attraction that had sparked to life.

He hadnโ€™t wanted to be aware of any other woman. What was the point? For years, he thought his heart had died when Elizabeth walked away. He figured everything good and right inside him had shriveled up and he had nothing left to give another woman.

Despite his anger at himself for the unwilling attraction to a woman he could never have, he had come to look forward to those random glimpses of the beautiful mystery woman who wore sunglasses and floppy hats, whose hair was a similar color to his wifeโ€™s but whose features were very different.

For the first time since he had pulled up to Brambleberry House, he began to wonder if he had been wrong. If Elliot had been wrong, if his investigation had somehow gone horribly off track.

What if this wasnโ€™t Elizabeth? What if it was all some terrible mistake?

He didnโ€™t know what to say, suddenly. Did he tell them both he had erred, make some excuse and disappear? He was about to do just that when he saw her eyes, a clear, startling blue with a dark, almost black, ring around the irises.

He knew those eyes. It was her.

There was nervousness in them, yes, but no surprise, almost as if she had been expecting him.

โ€œElizabeth.โ€

She flinched a little at the name. โ€œNo one hasโ€ฆcalled me that in a very long time.โ€

Her voice was the second confirmation, the same husky alto that had haunted his dreams every single night for seven years.

The other woman stared at her. โ€œSonia. What is going on? Who is this man? Why is he calling you Elizabeth?โ€

โ€œIt isโ€ฆa really long story, Rosa.โ€

โ€œHe says he is your husband.โ€

โ€œHe was. A long time ago.โ€

The anger simmered hotter, flaring up like a controlled burn that was trying to jump the ditch. He did his best to tamp it down. He would not become his father, no matter the provocation.

โ€œIโ€™m still your husband. Nothing has changed. Until we divorce or you are declared dead, we are very much still married in the eyes of the law.โ€

Her mouth opened again, eyes shocked as if she had never considered the possibility. Maybe as far as she was concerned, her act of walking away without a word had terminated their marriage.

It had in every way except the official one.

โ€œIโ€ฆguess thatโ€™s probably true.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s why Iโ€™m here. I need you to come back to Haven Point so we can end this thing once and for all.โ€ He was unable to keep the bitterness out of his voice. โ€œIt shouldnโ€™t be that hard for you. You know the way. Apparently youโ€™ve been back to town plenty of times. You just never bothered to stop and say hello to me or your two children.โ€

Her skin, already pale in the weak December afternoon light, seemed to turn ashen, and Luke was immediately ashamed at his cruelty. He tried to be better than that, to take the higher ground in most situations. He was uncomfortably aware that this unwanted reunion with his long-missing wife would likely bring out the worst in him.

The other woman looked shocked. โ€œYou have children? I donโ€™t understand any of this, Sonia.โ€

She winced. โ€œItโ€™s so complicated, Rosa. I donโ€™t knowโ€ฆwhere to start. Iโ€ฆ My name isnโ€™t Sonia, as youโ€™ve obviouslyโ€ฆfigured out. He is right. It is Elizabeth Hamilton, and thisโ€ฆthis is my husband, Lucas.โ€

The other woman was slow to absorb the information, but after a shocked moment, her gaze narrowed and she moved imperceptibly in front of Elizabeth, as if her slight frame could protect her friend.

It was a familiar motion, one that intensified his shame. How many times had he done the same thing, throwing his body in front of his mother and then his stepmother? By the time he was big enough and tough enough to make a difference, his father was dead and no longer a threat.

โ€œAre you afraid of this man?โ€ Rosa demanded. โ€œHas he hurt you? I can call Chief Townsend. He would be here in a moment.โ€

Elizabeth put a hand on the other womanโ€™s arm. It was clear they were close friends. The wild pendulum of Lukeโ€™s emotions right now swung back to anger. Somehow she had managed to form friendships with other people, to completely move on with her life, while he had been suffocating for seven years under the weight of rumor and suspicion.

โ€œIt is fine, Rosa. Thank you. Please donโ€™t worry about me. Iโ€ฆI need to speak withโ€ฆwith my husband. We haveโ€ฆmuch to discuss. Go on inside. Iโ€™ll talk to you later andโ€ฆand try to explain.โ€

Rosa was clearly reluctant to leave. She hovered on the porch, sending him mistrustful looks. He wanted to tell her not to waste her energy. Heโ€™d spent years developing a thick skin when it came to people suspecting him of being a monster.

โ€œIโ€™m here,โ€ she said firmly. โ€œIโ€™ll wait inside. You only have to call out. And Melissa is in her apartment as well. We wonโ€™t let anything happen to you.โ€

โ€œNothing is going to happen to me,โ€ Elizabeth assured her. โ€œLuke wonโ€™t hurt me.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be so sure of that,โ€ he muttered, though it was a lie. Some might think him a monster but he suspected Elizabeth knew he could never lay a hand on her.

First of all, it wasnโ€™t in his nature. Second, he had spent his entire life working toward self-mastery and iron controlโ€”doing whatever necessary to avoid becoming his father.

After another moment, Rosa turned around and slipped through the carved front door, reluctance apparent in every line of her body. On some level, Luke supposed he should be grateful Elizabeth had people willing to stand up and protect her.

โ€œHow did youโ€ฆ? How did you find me?โ€

He still didnโ€™t know everything Elliot had gone through to locate her. He knew the FBI agent had spent long hours tracking down leads after a truck driver came forward years later to say that on the night Elizabeth disappeared, the trucker thought she gave a woman resembling Elizabethโ€™s description a ride to a truck stop in central Oregon.

Somehow from that slim piece of information, Elliot had undergone an impressive investigation on his own time and managed to put the pieces of the puzzle together. If not for Elliot, Luke wouldnโ€™t be here in front of this big oceanfront Victorian in Cannon Beach and this familiar but not familiar woman.

Thinking about Elliot Bailey always left him conflicted, too. He was grateful to the man but still found it weird to think of his former best friend with Megan, Lukeโ€™s younger sister. After several months, he was almost used to the idea of them being together.

โ€œI didnโ€™t.โ€ He jerked his attention back to the moment. โ€œElliot Bailey did. Thatโ€™s not really important, is it? The point is, now I know where you are. But then, I guess you were never really lost, were you? We only thought you were. Youโ€™ve certainly been back to Haven Point in your little disguise plenty of times over the years.โ€

It burned him, knowing he hadnโ€™t recognized his own wife. When he looked closer now, knowing what he did, he could see more hints of the woman he had loved. The brows were the same, arched and delicate, and her lips were still full and lush. But her face was more narrow, her nose completely different and her cheekbones higher and more defined.

Why had she undergone so much plastic surgery? It was one more mystery amid dozens.

โ€œWhat do you want, Luke?โ€

โ€œI told you. I need you to come home. At this moment, the Lake Haven County district attorneyโ€™s office is preparing to file charges against me related to your disappearance and apparent murder.โ€ 

 โ€œMy what?โ€

โ€œElliot has tried to convince the woman youโ€™re still very much alive. He hasnโ€™t had much luck, especially considering heโ€™s all but a member of the family and will be marrying my sister in a few months. The DA plans to move forward and arrest me in hopes of forcing me to tell them where I hid your body.โ€

โ€œWaitโ€”what? Elliot and Megan are together? When did that happen?โ€

He barely refrained from grinding his teeth. โ€œNot really the point, is it? This has gone on long enough. Iโ€™m going to be arrested, Elizabeth. Before the holidays, if my sources are right. The district attorney is determined to send a message that men in her jurisdiction canโ€™t get away with making their wives disappear. Iโ€™m going to go to jail, at least for a while. Our children have already spent enough Christmases without one parent. Do you want them to lose the other one?โ€

โ€œOf course not.โ€

He didnโ€™t know whether to believe her or not. How could he? He didnโ€™t even know this woman, despite the fact that she had once been closer to him than anyone else on earth.

โ€œThen grab your things and letโ€™s go.โ€

Excerpted from Coming Home for Christmas by RaeAnn Thayne. Copyright ยฉ 2019 by RaeAnn Thayne. Published by HQN Books.


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Holiday Q&A


HOLIDAY BLOG TOUR Q&A

1.Is it more (or less) challenging to write your book with the holiday element?  If so, what are those challenges?

Brenda Novak: For me, it’s more challenging. Themes of love conquering all and redemption appear in many of my books, which fit nicely at Christmas, so that part’s easy. Trying to weave in the celebration while the characters work through their individual conflicts is what can be tricky. I compare it to a juggler who adds just one more ball. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Sheila Roberts:  I love Christmas. Itโ€™s my favorite holiday. So I find it great fun writing a holiday tale.

Jennifer Snow: My favorite books are those set at Christmas time. If I could write all my romances with a holiday theme, I wouldJ I think the holiday element can make the book easier to write as it provides a timeline and sense of urgency to the story already and also adds a layer of stress to the main characters, whether they love the holiday season or are dreading it. However, it can be challenging to create new, fresh situations and scenes that readers havenโ€™t read before.

RaeAnne Thayne: I adore writing Christmas books, mainly because I love reading them! Thereโ€™s something so comforting and warm about settling in to read a good book set during the holidays. Itโ€™s the perfect way to relax and unwind during all the hustle and bustle. Setting books during this season of hope and joy fits so perfectly with the kind of books I love to write, about families, community, togetherness. It can be a challenge to bring a fresh new angle to Christmas, especially because Iโ€™ve written so many of them, but I find that my characters bring new traditions to each book. 

2.Do you lean more toward humorous or poignant when youโ€™re writing a holiday romance?

Brenda Novak: I definitely lean toward poignant. I’ve had a lot of my readers write me to say they teared up while reading CHRISTMAS IN SILVER SPRINGS. I think it might be a new reader favorite!

Sheila Roberts: I love humor, love to laugh, so somehow, something funny always sneaks into my stories. But because life is the way it is, I like to think I manage some poignant moments as well. Donโ€™t we all love it when a character has a bittersweet moment or is touched by something special, learns an important lesson? I think a story, especially a Christmas story, should touch our hearts.

Jennifer Snow: I love humor and despite what my husband says, Iโ€™m actually very funny;) So, my books tend to be humorous, slightly on the snarky, sarcastic side, but I do like writing heartwarming scenes as well. Good banter between characters is my favorite part of the writing process.

RaeAnne Thayne: Both, I would have to say. My books are tender and emotional, usually about flawed characters trying to find their way to a happy ending but I definitely try to bring lighter moments into the story as well. Christmas is such a time of joy that I find those happy, bright times are easy to find.

3.Whatโ€™s your favorite holiday cookie or dessert?

Brenda Novak: My mother’s homemade cheesecake with sour cream topping is absolutely divine! (You even have to crush graham crackers to make your own crust.) I’ll never forget the first time I tasted it. I was only about ten years old, and it’s been my favorite ever since.

Sheila Roberts: I have to pick a favorite? Oh, thatโ€™s cruel. How about I give you my top three? Red Velvet Cake, frosted sugar cookies and Andes mint cookies (the Andes mint serves as the frosting.) I think I gained five pounds just thinking about those goodies!

Jennifer Snow: Anything chocolate. Cold, hollow chocolate balls are my weakness.

RaeAnne Thayne: I love English toffee but have never found a great recipe for it thatโ€™s easy enough for someone like me.  I also adore snickerdoodles and have used those in several books. I consider them the perfect Christmas cookie!

4. Tell us about your favorite Holiday tradition.

Brenda Novak: I have five children. Each year I enjoy trying to figure out which book I will buy each one–and whether I can get an autographed copy (I get very excited when I can). They get to open their new book on Christmas Eve, which puts it separate from their other gifts. I hope none of them will see this, but I’m all set for this year, and they are all signed! I got George R.R. Martin’s A KNIGHT OF THE SEVEN KINGDOMS, Malcolm Gladwell’s TALKING TO STRANGERS, Mitch Albom’s FINDING CHIKA, Lee Child’s BLUE MOON and Louise Penny’s A BETTER MAN. 

Sheila Roberts: Gathering with my big, extended family for Christmas Eve. Been doing this since I was a child and it is really special – games carols, and, of course, a reading of the real Christmas story from the Bible. That used to be my oldest brotherโ€™s job but we lost him two years ago and now middle brother has taken over. Bittersweet.

Jennifer Snow: I have so many! Christmas is a really big deal for my family. We go all out and usually start decorating and celebrating mid-November. Growing up, it was always a very special time of year. Weโ€™ve had a lot of traditions change throughout the years as weโ€™ve moved provinces, the family has grown and expanded, etcโ€ฆBut, my favorite tradition was always lunch and shopping with my mom on Christmas Eve. It would always be just the two of us. Now, weโ€™ve switched things up a little to do lunch and an annual fashion show to support the local University Hospital Foundation but I still love that one on one time with her as we prepare for the holidays.

RaeAnne Thayne: My family has many cherished traditions. One of my favorites has gone by the wayside now that my kids are older but I still remember it with great delight. Each November I would wrap up 24 Christmas picture books collected over the years (or sometimes borrowed from the library!) and put them in a basket. My children would unwrap a new book each night as a way of counting down to Christmas and thatโ€™s the book we would read for bedtime. It was something we all looked forward to each day, finding out which book we would read that night.

5. What Holiday treat is on your must-make, or must-eat, December to-do list?

Brenda Novak: I’m huge on hot chocolate, and I love mint hot chocolate best. I also love peppermint ice cream! A friend makes a delicious baked Alaska with hot fudge and peppermint ice cream, and it’s amazing! These are all things on my must-have list!

Sheila Roberts: The cake and cookies I mentioned, of course. By the way, Iโ€™ve been making Red Velvet Cake for Christmas ever since my kids were little. Weโ€™d always light candles and sing happy birthday to Jesus. My kids are grown now, but still come home for Christmas. One year I thought it would be nice to try a different cake. Let me tell, you, that went over about as well as Santa not stopping by with presents. Both kids wanted to know where the Red Velvet Cake was. Some traditions you just canโ€™t do away with.

Jennifer Snow: I canโ€™t bake to save my life, though I am obsessed with holiday baking shows. Someday, Iโ€™ll learn.

RaeAnne Thayne: I guess itโ€™s a holiday treat since I rarely make it any other time of year but my family loves my Make-Ahead French Toast recipe made with pecans and a delicious creamy brown sugar sauce. I always put it together Christmas Eve and then throw it in the oven on Christmas morning to bake while weโ€™re opening presents. 

6. What’s the most memorable Holiday gift you’ve ever received or given?

Brenda Novak: I just moved, so while I was sorting through boxes in the attic, I came across a box I’ve kept for most of my life. It contains a “Baby, Alive!” and some handmade clothes for the doll that my mother had someone sew–a gift I received from Santa when I was only six or seven. The clothes are so well made, and they came in the cutest little suitcase, which I also still have. That’s my most memorable Christmas, and I can’t wait until my granddaughter is old enough to inherit my most beloved baby doll, which is still in near perfect shape, despite the many hours I played with her.

Sheila Roberts: I still remember the Christmas when my husband and I were having some lean times. My parents, who werenโ€™t exactly rolling in the green stuff either, gave us a Christmas ornament… wrapped in five ten dollar bills. It saved the day.

Jennifer Snow: My parents gave me an old fashioned typewriter that Iโ€™d been eyeing in an antique store. I love it!

RaeAnne Thayne: One year when times were very tough for us and we were emotionally and financially drained from medical bills for our special needs fragile baby, my amazing husband surprised me with a used laptop I knew we couldnโ€™t afford. I wept when I discovered he had cashed out his hard-earned vacation for the next year so I could use it to write while taking our son to appointments or had to stay overnight at the hospital with him. Itโ€™s ancient and probably wonโ€™t turn on now but Iโ€™ll never part with it.

7. What are some of your favorite novels? What do you like the most when writing 

Christmas/Holiday-themed books?

Brenda Novak: I’m such an eclectic reader, and yet I don’t read Christmas books. I’m not sure why–except that writing one seems to fulfill that need. As far as favorite books, I absolutely devoured WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING, THE TATTOOIST OF AUSCHWITZ and THE NIGHTINGALE, so I would name them as a few of my recent favs.

Sheila Roberts: If weโ€™re talking Christmas, I must say the Charles Dickensโ€™ A Christmas Carol is the best Christmas tale ever written. Brilliant. And such a great message. Wish Iโ€™d written it! ๐Ÿ™‚

Jennifer Snow: My favorite novels are everything Debbie Macomber publishes lol. She was the first romance author I read and I adore her holiday themed stories. The thing I like most about writing Christmas themed books is the way I get to enjoy my favorite season all year round lol. With publishing schedules, Iโ€™m quite often writing Christmas stories in July lol, so itโ€™s fun to be able to stay in that spirit outside of December.

RaeAnne Thayne: I have so many favorite books, itโ€™s hard to choose! I adore historical romances set at Christmas. For some reason, they put me in the holiday spirit like nothing else. What I love most about writing Christmas-themed books is the chance it gives me to think about the things I love most about this time of year, that feeling of joy and hope and promise, and try to recreate that feeling for my readers.

8.What inspired you to start writing novels? What do you hope are some of the key takeaways from of your latest holiday novel?

Brenda Novak: I caught my daycare provider drugging my children with cough syrup and Tylenol while I was working as a loan officer more than twenty years ago and was so freaked out I quit my job to stay home with them myself. But I needed to figure out a way to make a living. I was searching for something I could do from home when my sister sent me Jude Devereux’s KNIGHT IN SHINING ARMOR, telling me I would love it. She was right. It also gave me the idea to become a novelist. I remember closing that book and thinking, “I wonder if I could do this.” I started the next day!

CHRISTMAS IN SILVER SPRINGS is a touching and poignant story about a man who’s recently been released from prison for a mistake he made just before he turned eighteen, so it’s definitely a redemption story. I would hope that readers take away the fact that love and understanding can change lives.

Sheila Roberts: Iโ€™ve been writing since I was a little girl. I think story tellers just have to tell stories. That imagination muscle demands being used. I hope readers will enjoy Christmas from the Heart, and come away inspired to donate to their favorite worthy causes. There are so many organizations in need. If we all picked one and pitched in we could make a big difference in the world.

Jennifer Snow: Iโ€™ve been writing stories since I was five years old. At fifteen, I submitted my first YA romance manuscript to Harlequin and I think I tried to pitch them a new line lol. I had no idea how publishing worked, but I knew I wanted to be an author. Needless to say, that manuscript was rejected, but the letter from the editor was so wonderfully encouraging, it helped me stick with it through university and pregnancy and marriage and finally I got my โ€˜yesโ€™ from Harlequin in 2012. It was a dream come true and Iโ€™m so happy that I get to do what I love for a living.

In my latest holiday novel, An Alaskan Christmas, the heroine is a work-aholic and sheโ€™s not sure how to balance her career and her love for the hero, so Iโ€™d love for readers to read it and watch the heroine struggle and overcome her own challenges in finding her happily ever after and be inspired by that. We can have it all if we are willing to work for it and be brave enough to follow our hearts.

RaeAnne Thayne: Iโ€™ve always been a voracious reader. When I was in high school while writing for my school newspaper, I discovered I loved telling stories too. I pursued a career in journalism and after graduating from college I started working for a daily newspaper. I loved the challenge of it but still dreamed of writing a romance novel one day, the kind of books I had been devouring since middle school. I finally started my first book when I was home on maternity leave with my first child and have been doing it ever since.

My latest book, COMING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS, is a reunion story about two people who definitely deserve to find the joy of Christmas. Luke and Elizabeth Hamilton have been separated by circumstances beyond their control for more than seven years. Itโ€™s an emotional, tender story about courage, forgiveness and second chances. Their journey back to their happy ending is a difficult one but turned out to be one of the most rewarding books Iโ€™ve ever written. 

9. When did you start writing Christmas/Holiday-themed stories? What was your inspiration for your latest holiday novel?

Brenda Novak: I’ve been doing them for a number of years now. My first was WHEN SNOW FALLS, which I think is still one of my best. 

The inspiration for CHRISTMAS IN SILVER SPRINGS came from the book before it–UNFORGETTABLE YOU. In that book, the hero had a brother in prison. I wanted to explore what Tobias might be like after the life he’s lived so far. My fascination with Dan Reynolds and Imagine Dragons (I’m a huge fan!) supplied the rest of the inspiration, although the rock star in this book wasn’t portrayed in the most positive light, I have nothing but respect for Dan Reynolds, so I had to twist a few things to make a good story. ๐Ÿ˜‰

Sheila Roberts: My first contemporary Christmas novel was On Strike for Christmas (inspired by my husband, who was being naughty). Ever since Iโ€™ve been writing a Christmas story almost every year. This yearโ€™s offering came about because I wanted to write a  Scrooge story of my own, my nod to Mr. Dickens. 

And I guess thereโ€™s no better way to end this interview, after saying thanks for allowing me to join you, than, to quote Mr. Dickens himself. โ€œGod bless us, every one!โ€

Jennifer Snow: My first novel was a Christmas themed storyโ€ฆand so were the next three after that lol. Iโ€™m obsessed with them and plan to write as many as Harlequin will let meJ

The inspiration for An Alaskan Christmas was meeting my local search and rescue and just being in awe of what they do, the challenges they face and how brave and selfless they are. And Iโ€™ve always loved Alaska, so I wanted to set a series there.

RaeAnne Thayne: My first Christmas book was THE COWBOYโ€™S CHRISTMAS MIRACLE, set in my Cowboys of Cold Creek series. It was the only book Iโ€™ve ever written where the story came to me fully formed in a dream! I emailed my editor the next day with a blurb and she loved the idea and immediately offered me a contract. I wrote 15 books in the Cold Creek series and about 10 of those were holiday books!

The inspiration for my current book was really one of those throw-away plot points in a previous book. In my book SNOWFALL ON HAVEN POINT, the hero, a sheriff, was injured while investigating a mysterious tip on a long-cold case of a missing woman. I didnโ€™t know any details about who the woman was, why she was missing or about the people she had left behind. All of that developed while I was writing subsequent books in Haven Point. COMING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS answers all those questions I first had more than four years ago.

The Last Affair By Margot Hunt Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A beautiful and beloved housewife is found brutally murdered, and the seemingly perfect life she was seen leading soon proves to be a mere disguise over a more tragic and cruel reality in author Margot Huntโ€™s novel โ€œThe Last Affairโ€. 


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The Synopsis

Gwen Landonโ€”poster woman for perfect wife, mother, and suburban blissโ€”is found brutally bludgeoned to death behind her Floridian McMansion. Beautiful and beloved by her community, Gwen makes an unlikely victim. But just a scratch below the surface of her perfectly curated world reveals one far more sinister. When looking back over the six months leading up to her death, the question of, โ€œwho would do this?โ€ quickly shifts to, โ€œwho wouldnโ€™t?โ€ 

Commercially successful food blogger and mother of three, Nora Holliday never imagined she would have the nerve, let alone time, to get involved an affair. Trapped in an unhappy marriage, she does whatever it takes to keep it all together. But when Nora runs into Gwen Landon’s husband at a hotel in Orlando, his easy kindness and warmth proves too tempting to resist. As their affair spirals dangerously out of control, it seems things canโ€™t get more complicatedโ€”until Gwen turns up dead.


The Review

One of the most intriguing murder mysteries of the year! Margot Hunt has done a fabulous job of creating a narrative that showcases the mystery of the murder while exploring the intimate lives and decisions of these families in a local community. Expertly crafting the tale to present the crime first, then spending the majority of the book showcasing the various individuals and acts that could lead to who committed the crime, the author creates a story that draws readers in instantly. 

The story showcases that the world is not as black and white as most like to believe, and sometimes the path some take towards affairs come from troubled lives themselves, and their desperate need to find solace can start a chain reaction that leads to dire consequences. A complex cast of characters help drive this narrative forward, with each suffering from their own internal and external problems that continue to help the situation spiral further and further out of control. In this story, no one is innocent, and even the victim herself hides a dark side to herself that could lead to who took her life. 


The Verdict

This was an amazing read that fans of murder mysteries, dramas and thrillers will absolutely love. With thematic and tonal qualities reminiscent of Gillian Flynnโ€™s Gone Girl, this new thriller is something fans will not want to miss out on this holiday season, so be sure to grab your copy of Margot Huntโ€™s The Last Affair today! 

Rating: 10/10


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About the Author

Margot Hunt is a critically acclaimed author of psychological suspense. Her work has been praised by Publisher’s Weekly, Booklist and Kirkus Reviews.

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EXCERPT 

The Last Affair, Margot Hunt

Prologue

Other than the womanโ€™s blood-covered body splayed facedown in the grass, it could have been any typical upscale Floridian backyard.

There was the ubiquitous pool with a water fountain feature, a patio furnished with both a dining set and outdoor sectional couch, and an enormous gas grill capable of cooking hamburgers by the dozen. A large pergola with a tropical vine trained over it covered part of the patio. The dining area was shaded by a black-and-white-striped awning. It was the very picture of suburban domestic bliss. It could have been the set for a commercial advertising anything from laundry detergent to allergy medicine.

Again, except for the dead body.

The area had already been taped off. The first officers on the scene appeared with an ambulance in response to a frantic 911 call placed by the womanโ€™s daughter. The paramedics had assessed the situation, and quickly determined that the woman was dead. The fact that the back of her head had been bashed in with what looked like a paving stone, conveniently dropped next to her prone body, made it immediately clear that it had not been a natural death. The responding officers called the sheriff, who responded by sending in a full investigative team. The medical examiner was now doing a preliminary examination of the body, while police officers combed the area for additional evidence. Two detectives, Mike Monroe and Gavin Reddickโ€”separated by twenty years and sixty poundsโ€”were overseeing the operation, standing at the edge of the patio under the shade of the pergola. It was the third week in April, but this was South Florida and the temperature had already climbed into the low nineties.

โ€œThe paving stone came from the stack out in the front yard. They were delivered last week by the company whoโ€™s installing the driveway,โ€ Detective Reddick said. He was the younger of the two men and had a wiry frame and angular face.

โ€œWeapon of convenience. Suggests it wasnโ€™t premeditated,โ€ Detective Monroe said. He had a ruddy complexion and a full head of thick dark hair, swept back off his face. A strand never moved out of place, even in a strong wind.

โ€œPlus he dropped the weapon, rather than taking it with him. Probably panicked.โ€

โ€œCould be a she,โ€ Monroe said mildly.

Reddick shrugged. โ€œBlunt force trauma to the back of the head? You know the stats. Overwhelming likelihood that itโ€™s a man, and probably someone the victim was intimately involved with. Husband, maybe a boyfriend.โ€

โ€œThe husband was with the daughter when she called it in.โ€

โ€œDoesnโ€™t mean he didnโ€™t do it, and then had her place the call.โ€

โ€œNo, it doesnโ€™t.โ€

The family had been sequestered indoors, both to keep them out of the way, and so that the officers waiting in the house with them could observe anything they did or said. Other than the husband, there was a daughter in her early twenties and a teenage son. The daughter was reportedly distraught, while the husband and son had both been eerily quiet. It was possible they were in shock.

โ€œDo we have an ID on the victim?โ€ Reddick asked.

โ€œItโ€™s her house,โ€ Monroe grunted.

โ€œYeah, but I like doing things the official way, you know? Iโ€™s dotted, tโ€™s crossed, all of that. Building a case, basic detective work.โ€

Despite the chilling scene in front of themโ€”the womanโ€™s body still sprawled on the grass, the back of her head a pulpy, bloody messโ€”the corner of Monroeโ€™s mouth quirked up in a half smile. โ€œSure, kid, tell me all about basic detective work. Iโ€™ve only been doing this for, whatโ€ฆthirty-two years now? The husband IDโ€™d her. Victim is Gwen Landon, age forty-nine. Married, mother of two. Husband said she hasnโ€™t had any recent conflict with anyone.โ€

โ€œOther than the person who caved in the back of her head with a paving stone,โ€ Reddick pointed out.

โ€œWouldnโ€™t be the first time a husband didnโ€™t know his wife as well as he thought he did.โ€

โ€œPossible. But thereโ€™s another possibility, too.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€

Reddick turned to look at his partner. His eyes were small and dark, and he had a habit of squinting when he concentrated intently on something.

โ€œThe husband is a liar,โ€ Reddick said.

The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later by Barbara Barth Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A woman shares the journey her life takes a decade after the loss of her husband and the mission she undertakes to โ€œredefine the impossibleโ€ in author Barbara Barthโ€™s memoir, The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later. 


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The Synopsis

Picking up where The Unfaithful Widow ended, Ten Years Later continues the authorโ€™s journey from widow to a slightly askew woman. A memoir written with warmth and candor on being single again, aging, and finding a creative path surrounded by dogs, friends, laughter, and a bit of craziness. Barbara Barth shares stories on the adventures that followed her first year alone as she moved headfirst into a new life, listening to her heart, sometimes not so wisely, but always full speed ahead. Join her on the ride of her life, from owning an antique shop to moving to a Victorian cottage outside of Atlanta, and all the follies in between. Going into the next decade with six dogs by her side, the author proves you are only as old as you feel, and happiness begins with a grateful heart. A funny and engaging memoir for anyone who wants to be their own superhero facing lifeโ€™s good and bad moments.

The Review

A truly well written, honest and fascinating read, author Barbara Barth has created a fantastic novel that openly and honestly explores life after losing a spouse or loved one, while also exploring the journey to redefine or find your true self in this world. 

While I havenโ€™t read the first book that this novel is a sequel of, the authors straight forward, truthful and eye-catching way of writing will instantly draw readers in, and the following chapters will keep readers engaged as the author explores a year of her life in each chapter for the last decade. 

From her purchase of an antique store to moving into a Victorian home in a historic small town outside Atlanta and the journey she took along the way, the author has created a wonderful work of art that many readers, especially those who are older and feel the pressure put on them by society to become โ€œoldโ€, will find inspirational as the author proves age is just a number, and there is no age limit on following your dreams, pursuing your goals or finding life after loss. 

The Verdict

A thrilling and truly honest memoir that cannot be missed, author Barbara Barth has done an excellent job of creating a narrative readers will not be able to put down once they get started. A fairly evenly paced read that keeps the reader invested throughout, the author showcases a wonderful talent for bridging the emotional aspect of loss and life, and the thrill of adventure that comes with exploring what life has in store for us. Itโ€™s a must read novel and a top memoir of 2019, so if you havenโ€™t yet be sure to grab your copy of โ€œThe Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Laterโ€ by Barbara Barth today!

Rating: 10/10


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About the Author

Author, blogger, sometimes antique dealer, dog hoarder, bedazzled by life. Widowed ten years ago, Barth writes about finding a creative path back to happiness. Her recent move to a 1906 historic cottage brought many surprises, including discovering the Monroeโ€“Walton Center for the Arts where she started the monthly Walton Writers group and is on the MWCA Board as Literary Arts Chair. Barth is a contributor to Walton Living Magazine and a former blogger for The Balancing Act, Lifetime Televisionโ€™s morning show for women. Currently she lives with six dogs, rescue dogs that rescued her. 

Visit her website at https://www.barbarabarthwriter.com/, follow her on Twitter @writerwithdogs, and follow her Amazon author page.

The Unfaithful widow Ten Years Later is available in print and as an ebook at Amazon.com


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Blog Tour Dates

Today @ The Muffin

What goes better in the morning than a muffin? Grab your coffee and join us in celebrating the launch of Barbara Barth’s new book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later. You can read an interview with the author and enter to win a copy of the book.

http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com

November 12th @ All Things Audry

Author Barbara Barth is a guest writer over at Audry’s blog today and will be talking about women friendships.

http://allthingsaudry.blogspot.com/

November 13th @ Words from the Heart

Stop by Linda’s blog and you can read a guest post by Barbara Barth about publishing anthologies.

https://contemplativeed.blogspot.com/

November 14th @ Thoughts in Progress

Visit Mason’s blog today and you can read Barbara’s guest post about starting a writing group. Don’t miss it!

https://masoncanyon.blogspot.com/

November 15th @ The World of My Imagination

Visit Nicole’s blog and read her review of Barbara Barth’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

http://theworldofmyimagination.blogspot.com

November 16th @ Lori Duff Writes

Stop by Lori’s blog today where you can read her interview with Barbara Barth and read her review of Barbara’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

https://www.loriduffwrites.com/blog/

November 16th @ Jill Sheets Blog

Visit Jill’s blog today and you can read Barbara Barth’s guest post about self-publishing.

https://jillsheets.blogspot.com.

November 17th @ A Storybook World

Be sure to stop by Deirdra’s blog today and check out her spotlight of the book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later and enter to win a copy of the book!

http://www.astorybookworld.com

November 18th @ Beverley A. Baird’s Blog

Be sure you visit Bev’s blog and read Barbara Barth’s guest post about starting over at 70. You won’t want to miss this!

http://beverleyabaird.wordpress.com

November 19th @ Look to the Western Sky

Be sure to visit Margo’s blog and read her interview with author Barbara Barth. Don’t miss it!

https://margoldill.com/blog

November 20th @ Anthony Avina’s Blog

Make sure you visit Anthony’s blog today and read Barbara Barth’s guest post about publishing anthologies.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

November 21st @ Cassandra’s Writing World

Stop by Cassandra’s blog today and read her review of The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later. You can also enter to win a copy of the book as well!

https://cassandra-mywritingworld.blogspot.com/

November 22nd @ Karen Brown Tyson’s Blog

Join us at Karen Brown Tyson’s blog where you can read a guest post about self-publishing by author Barbara Barth. Don’t miss it!

November 23rd @ Beverley A. Baird’s Blog

Visit Bev’s blog again and you can read her review of Barbara Barth’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

http://beverleyabaird.wordpress.com

November 24th @ Choices

Be sure to stop by Madeline’s blog and read Barbara Barth’s guest post that will be talking about women friendships.

http://madelinesharples.com/

November 25th @ Wild Woman Writer

Visit Anne’s blog today and you can read Barbara Barth’s blog guest post about starting over at 70.

https://wildwomanwriter2018.blogspot.com/

November 26th @ Life Like A Galaxy Girl

Stop by Alanna’s blog today and you can read her review of Barbara Barth’s memoir The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

http://lifelikeagalaxygirl.com/

November 27th @ Lisa Haselton’s Reviews and Interviews

Visit Lisa’s blog today and you can read her interview with author Barbara Barth and find out more about this incredible author!

http://lisahaseltonsreviewsandinterviews.blogspot.com/

November 28th @ Bibliotica

Stop by Melissa’s blog and make sure you read Barbara Barth’s guest post about grief over the years and finding happiness again.

https://www.bibliotica.com/

November 29th @ Stranded in Chaos

Visit Sara’s blog and you can read her review of Barbara Barth’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

https://strandupdate.blogspot.com/

November 30th @ Anthony Avina’s Blog

Visit Anthony’s blog again and read his review of Barbara Barth’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later.

http://www.authoranthonyavinablog.com

December 1st @ Words from the Heart

Visit Linda’s blog and read her review of Barbara Barth’s book The Unfaithful Widow Ten Years Later. 

https://contemplativeed.blogspot.com

December 2nd @ Women’s Writing Circle

Stop by the blog Women’s Writing Circle and you can read a guest post by Barbara Barth about adopting dogs while all her friends are having grandkids. Don’t miss this one!

http://www.susanweidener.com/