Archive for the ‘Excerpt’ Category

 

Little Did We Know

by Cara Dee

 

(The Mclean Tales, #1)
Publication date: July 11th 2025
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, LGBTQ+, Romance

The Mclean Tales #1 • BDSM • Friendship • Found Family • Humor • Origin Story

At Mclean House, everyone knows about the eight founding members. If you need help with anything in the community, you send them a message or approach them at the house. Lucas is the kind Daddy Dom with patience for days, Macklin the funny switch who sure knows how to switch sides as well, and Greer is the primal Master with a huge heart and a devil on his shoulder. Colt has that devil on his shoulder too, actually. Lucian, another Master, is into high protocol and creative punishments. Penelope loves to host events and runs a tight ship. Last but definitely not least, the men who came up with the idea to start a community. River and Reese are the scary, sadistic twin brothers—until you get to know them and see the sweethearts under the ink, of course.

The eight founders find their happily ever afters in the Game Series, but this book isn’t about that. It’s about what happened before. The story very few know so far. How they met, how they became friends, and how they started exploring together.

So let’s go back to the beginning. It’s a cold night in Baltimore, and Lucas is about to catch the scowl of someone at an event where he feels completely out of place.

Author’s note: Are you new to the Game Series? This is the perfect book to jump right in and get to know the main characters.

Disclaimer: No fighter pilots or Marines were injured by each other’s insults in the making of this book, River apologizes in advance if he offended any vampires or people from Chicago, and Lucian solemnly swears that his cleaning service didn’t find anything embarrassing at his place after the night they all remember, except possibly something that belongs to Greer.

Disclaimer two: Sorry for lying. River isn’t apologizing for anything.

Goodreads / Amazon / All Retailers / Direct from Cara

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Enjoy this peek inside:

“I’m dominant,” I felt the need to say.

Reese’s smile widened. “Even better. A Dom who needs to get fucked? Do you struggle with that bit?”

I narrowed my eyes. “Only if the other guy—or guys—think they can boss me around. And for the record, Doms can be bottoms too.”

He chuckled and leaned back in his seat. “I know.” He lifted his gaze to something behind me—or someone, rather—and it was River returning with two bottles of beer. Reese scooted farther in, and River sat down next to him. “Lucas West here is a Dom who occasionally needs to get fucked like a savage.”

For chrissakes!

“Really.” River hitched his brows at me and took a swig of his beer. “Does he beg?”

Okay, that one got me. Annoyance tore through me, and I instantly considered calling it a night. I could still drive after two beers, and I hadn’t finished this one anyway. My plan had been to nurse it for a while. My actual plan—and the whole reason I’d chosen to drive—was because I’d thought I’d be in Baltimore.

“He fucking does not,” I stated. “He’s not that interested either.”

*
“Hey, gorgeous. Did you get your asshole prettied up for us?”

I stopped short, and it felt like he’d dumped a bucket of cold water over me. Water or embarrassment. Or defiance—or anger!

Who the fuck was this guy?!

I made eye contact with River. “Is he always like this?”

He shrugged a little and took a swig of whatever drink he’d mixed. “More or less. It’s how he digs for information. It ain’t subtle, but it’s effective.”

Information about what? And how exactly? Through shock value?

“If there’s information you want about me, you could start a conversation and ask,” I pointed out. “It’s how normal people get to know each other.”

River chuckled quietly. “Not sure we know what’s normal.”

“Fuck normal,” Reese said bluntly.

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About Author Cara Dee:

Romance Across the Spectrum.

I’m often awkwardly silent or, if the topic interests me, a chronic rambler. In other words, I can discuss writing forever and ever. Fiction, in particular. The love story—while a huge draw and constantly present—is secondary for me, because there’s so much more to writing romance fiction than just making two (or more) people fall in love and have hot sex.

There’s a world to build, characters to develop, interests to create, and a topic or two to research thoroughly.

Every book is a challenge for me, an opportunity to learn something new, and a puzzle to piece together. I want my characters to come to life, and the only way I know to do that is to give them substance—passions, history, goals, quirks, and strong opinions—and to let them evolve.

I want my men and women to be relatable. That means allowing room for everyday problems and, for lack of a better word, flaws. My characters will never be perfect.

Wait…this was supposed to be about me, not my writing.

I’m a writey person who loves to write. Always wanderlusting, twitterpating, kinking, cooking, baking, and geeking. There’s time for hockey and family, too. But mostly, I just love to write.

~Cara.

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Welcome to my stop on the virtual book tour for Theirs Until Always organized by Goddess Fish Promotions.

Author Mae K. Knight will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B&N Gift Card to a randomly drawn winner. Don’t forget to enter!

And you can click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

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Theirs Until Always

By Mae K. Knight

 

 

Genre: Contemporary Why Choose Romance

Synopsis

Adam:

Men like me don’t get happy endings.
When my demons talk to me, I talk back.
I heeded their call when they demanded my parents’ death.
I even listened when they ordered my own.
And they nearly won.
Until her.
One night changed my life. Then I lost it all. I lost her.
Now, I’ll do anything to get my sunshine back.
But can a sinner like me be willing to share after learning I’m not the only one craving her light?

Jordyn:

When a man shows you his red flags, run.
But running from Adam is easier said than done.
When he re-enters my life, my world implodes with the secrets he’s keeping.
Can I forgive him and learn to live in his shadows? To be the light he thinks I am?
Or will his darkness consume me?

Abel:

Witnessing your twin nearly die, hardens something in you.
I’ll do whatever it takes to keep Adam breathing.
As kids, he’d protected me, even though that was my job as the older brother.
Now, it’s my turn to protect him.
You can run little sunshine, but you won’t get far.
If Jordyn’s what my brother needs to keep his demons at bay, then I’ll claim her for us.
She’ll be ours, always.

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Enjoy this peek inside:

I hum a tune under my breath, slightly dancing in place as I move forward in the line, wiggling my body back and forth.

Caffeine makes me happy.

And I enjoy the excuse to get out of the house, to feel like an actual human being instead of a robot answering calls and dealing with insurance prior authorization claims—my work-from-home job. It pays decently, but I still pinch pennies, and these little treats are worth every dime.

For mental health.

Nodding to myself in agreement, I smile when it’s my turn at the counter, spitting out my order by memory alone without needing to look at the menu. I’m reaching down for my purse when a familiar pair of tattooed fingers enter my line of sight, tapping a card to the terminal before I’ve a chance to grasp my wallet.

Whirling around, I gape up at Adam, soaking in the sharp angles of his face, piercing aqua eyes, and aristocratic nose. Metal glints in the light, a piercing on the edge of his bottom lip and three hoops through the upper helix of his left ear, leaving the right undecorated.

I’ve missed him so much I could kiss him.

I don’t, though, blinking and taking a step back upon realizing we’re holding up the line.

He places a hand on my hip, guiding me away from the counter to the area where completed orders get placed. Stunned, I let him.

“W-what are you doing here?” I mumble then mentally say fuck it, reaching a hand out to grasp his bicep.

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About Author Mae K. Knight:

Mae K. Knight is a self-published author based in Louisiana, who enjoys writing “trauma boys” as her readers coined them, BIPOC FMCs that look like her and fast, smutty stories that leave you craving for more. When not writing, she’s reading monster romances penned by her fellow indie authors, studying for her nursing degree, or lifting heavy weights in the gym to feel like a bad bitch on a competition platform.

If you want to read more of her work, check out her website: https://maeknight.carrd.co, buy signed paperbacks directly from her: https://mackandmae.shop or go directly to her Amazon page for her KU titles: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Mae-K.-Knight/author/B0D3674KWR.

Facebook / Goodreads / Threads / TikTok

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Fire Mountain by Dana Mentink

FIRE MOUNTAIN
by Dana Mentink
June 30 – July 25, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

Synopsis:
Elements of Danger

 

Fire rains from above as they fight to discover the truth and stay alive.

In the shadow of a threatening volcano, long-haul trucker Kit Garrido wakes up in her crashed big rig, unable to recall what happened or why she’s suddenly in possession of someone’s baby. Fiercely independent, she has to admit that perhaps this time she could use a little help. As the threat of eruption grows, former cop Cullen Landry refuses to leave his cabin in the evacuation area, which is why he’s the only one left who can help Kit escape the crumpled cab of her truck. He doesn’t want to get tangled up in the mystery of the beautiful woman with an abandoned infant, but when he sees the bullet hole in the windshield and the bloody handprint on the interior, he realizes that he’s in this thing, like it or not. When two armed men with ill intent approach, the race is on to stay alive, discover the truth, and find the baby’s missing mother–all while a deadly mountain rains fire from above.

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Praise for Fire Mountain:

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Fire Mountain comes in hot! An eruption of taut suspense and a crackling romance that Mentink’s fans will devour. A real stay-up-all-night read!” ~ Jessica R. Patch, bestselling author of the FBI: Strange Crimes Unit series “A masterful blend of high-octane suspense and heart-pounding mystery. Mentink delivers an explosive thriller where danger lurks on every page, with a volcanic backdrop that mirrors the simmering tension of this unforgettable story. Clear your schedule—you won’t be able to put this one down.” ~ Lynette Eason, bestselling, award-winning author of the Lake City Heroes series “Dana Mentink is at the top of her game in this heart-pounding thrill ride. Danger explodes onto the page as Kit and Cullen fight to survive a volcanic eruption while relentless killers pursue them. An action-packed, gripping suspense, Fire Mountain will keep readers riveted until the end!” ~ Elizabeth Goddard, award-winning author of Storm Warning

 

Book Details:

Genre: Christian Romantic Suspense 

Published by: Revell Publication Date: July 1, 2025 Number of Pages: 320 ISBN: 9780800746520 (ISBN10: 080074652X) Series: Elements of Danger, Book 1 || Amazon | Goodreads 

Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub | Baker Book House

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MY REVIEW

I love stories where nature plays a part in the struggle to survive. Never read one with a volcano though. Things were hot right from the get go.

Long haul truck driver Kit Garrido comes to after crashing her rig with no idea how it happened or why she has someone’s infant. Where is the child’s mother? Did the volcano’s impending eruption cause the crash? Why is there a bullet hole in her windshield? And who left the bloody hand print in her cab? She needs answers ASAP.

Cullen Landry, a former police office, is holed up in his cabin. No volcano is going to force him out. But, Kit and the baby, fondly tagged as Tot, will. How can he not help them. His instincts scream danger.

I loved all three of these characters. Kit was gutsy and capable of handling most things on her own, but she’s smart enough to know when she needs help. Cullen stands tall, a fierce protector who’s gruff exterior hides a soft heart. And Tot brings this out in both of them.

Yes, the threat of an erupting volcano made this an intense read. Not knowing what caused the wreck and if the bullet hole meant someone was after them did too. But what got me most of all was how powerful the characters were. How their emotions affected me. I don’t think I relaxed once. Not until the last page.

5 STARS

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Read an excerpt:

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About Author Dana Mentink:

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Dana Mentinkr

Dana Mentink is a USA Today and Publishers Weekly bestselling author. She’s written more than 50 mystery and suspense novels for Love Inspired Suspense, Harvest House, and Poisoned Pen Press. Winner of two ACFW Carol Awards, a Holt Medallion Award, and a Romantic Times Reviewer’s Choice Award, Dana lives in Northern California with her husband.

Learn more at:

DanaMentink.com Amazon Author Profile Goodreads BookBub – @DanaMentink Instagram – @dana_mentink Threads – @dana_mentink Facebook – @dana.mentink

 

 

Tour Participants:

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

 

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Enter Now for Your Chance to Win!

This is a giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Dana Mentink, Revell, & Baker Book House. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.

 

Can’t see the giveaway? Click Here!  

 

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

 

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The End of the World has Never Been This Incompetent!

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The Synchrotron

by Rain Hunter

Genre: Science Fiction Comedy

✔️A deadly virus.
✔️A
world overrun by monsters.
✔️
Six scientists on a dangerous mission to cure the world.
We are screwed…

They only wanted a
Nobel Prize. Instead, they will have to save the world.

It was going to be the experiment of the year. Preparing to blast x-rays
through a piece of palladium at the most dazzling European synchrotron, Anna
and five of her fellow scientists expected a few hiccups.

Not a horde of hungry spleen-eating zombies.

The world has succumbed to the virus, leaving only scattered
survivors.

When Anna and her friends realise that the infected can be cured back into
humans, they pledge to find a cure no matter the cost. Equipped with a lab
wrench and questionable lab ethics, Team ID26 are humanity’s last hope.

But what is the price of saving the world?

Running out of time, Anna and her friends will face the
impossible choices between life and death, morality and cure. When the future
of the world is at stake, what will they have to sacrifice?

**Only .99cents!!**

Amazon * Bookbub * Goodreads

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Day 17, 21st of February, Wed

Steve didn’t call back. After I’d checked my phone for the millionth time, Kay patted me on the shoulder and took my phone away for safekeeping. I guess she meant my poor heart, not the phone.

“I heard that’s called ghosting,” Edsie told me.

“I heard that’s called tone-deaf, Edsie,” Kay bit back on my behalf.

Some say there are no heart wounds that a bucket of ice-cream cannot heal. How about treating those with instant noodles?

No?

Our noodle supplies are running dry, and even the chocolate bars we’ve hauled through the Ring back to ID26 won’t last us more than a day or two.

On a positive note, we’ve progressed on the spleen front.

After consulting Google Images, we agreed that the blob we initially identified as the pancreas was the spleen, the key to transforming people into blood-thirsty monsters.

We wrote and attached new labels.

“What do we do with the rest of it?” Tanya asked after we put the spleen aside and packed the other Ali’s organs into plastic sample boxes.

“Bin it. We’ve got the spleen,” said Dan.

“I’ll throw it into the biological waste,” Tanya said, loading the boxes onto a small trolley.

She was going to wheel Ali’s remains back to the wet lab. We could officially rename that wet lab into “Spleen-eaters’ Mortuary”. As one of them, Ali belonged there, too.

“I’ll help you,” said Edsie. “What if you have another seizure?”

Kay, Dan and I stared at them in confused silence while Edsie grabbed the trolley and rolled it out of the hutch. Tanya picked up the hammer and followed him.

Okay. What have I missed?

Since Tanya started taking her meds again, she seemed to be back to her usual self, no issues with her whatsoever, apart from this unexpected feat of helpfulness from Edsie. Had he been bitten?

“What now?” Kay asked after the door closed behind them.

“I don’t know. That’s weird. I’ve never heard him offer help before,” I said.

“No. What do we do with that?” Kay pointed at the chunk of flesh on the workshop table. It smelled rancid and unhealthy. Was it a typical smell of a slowly rotting spleen, or did the presence of the virus make it foul?

“If the virus is in his cells, we should find and isolate it,” I said.

“No shit,” said Dan.

“Microscope?” I suggested.

“We have to cut it very thin for a microscope,” said Kay.

“Not with a knife, I suppose.”

“It’s not a piece of meat, Anna, of course not with a knife. With a microtome. I even know where we can find one,” said Kay.

 

Quotes from reviewers:

 

“Like The Martian meets Zombieland—serious survival mixed with dark humour and fast action”

“surprisingly deep for post-apocalyptic science fiction”

“a mix of science, survival, and zombie action with added dark humour, this book will keep you hooked”

“a totally different take on the genre!”

“absolutely loved it!”

“surprisingly robust contemplations on life scattered throughout this fast-paced book”

“Sad. Humorous. Suspenseful.”

 

Quotes from the book:

 

Sunday! What a holy day for our unholy undertakings!

 

Before I start hyperventilating, let me focus on the facts. Dan says that when emotions are bigger than you, facts never are; they are short and precise.

Octopuses have three hearts.

A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus.

Although zombies are a fictional concept, there are “zombie” ants that are infected by fungus and jump off heights, killing themselves.

Ah, crap, ignore this last one!

 

We didn’t see it, Dan! In the movies, zombies are always dead, right? But our zombies – no, our spleen-eaters – they are alive. The virus doesn’t kill them, so we can… cure them. Right?”

“We? As if, in us, the five chemists? Since when does a doctor in your title involve treating monsters back into people?

 

A couple of years after we’d dealt with COVID-19, the UN, WHO, and other important people got together to prepare the world for the next outbreak. Their plan, called “Lock and Block”, prescribed establishing a total area lockdown within 24 hours. Isolate the area, move in the military, fence off the perimeter, and shoot anyone who tries to escape.

The last one’s a joke. Sort of.

 

“How did you know they would make good samples?”

Have I told you about Louise’s proprietary stare? Here it was, telling me all I needed to know about my level of intelligence.

“Good brain samples are the ones that you do not need to scrape off the floor,” she explained, in case the stare was not sufficient.

 

If something walked out on us in search of a late-night dinner, I’d have to fight it off with only my charisma.

Zero chance, then.

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If your book was made into a film, who would you like to play the lead?

 

I’d love to have an unknown actor play Anna, the main character. Anna is a narrator, she is full of backstory and opinions, and I would not want the previous roles to overshadow this. On the contrary, I’d love someone famous to play Dan. I’d think Vin Diesel or Jason Statham. Why these guys? Because Dan in the book is bald, has tattoos from his previous – not so intellectually-driven – life and knows how to make Molotov cocktails. With all that, he is a British Chemistry professor, and I thought it would be hilarious for, say, Jason Statham to be a chemistry professor, for once. Hasn’t he played a mechanic, a taxy driver, a courier, a diver, etc? Why not a scientist? He’s bald, too.

Have I mentioned? I have a soft spot for good irony. Life has a habit of dumping it on us by the bucketload, and if you’re not careful, it’s easy to mistake irony for failure. You need a certain kind of immunity to tell the difference.

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What is similar between science and postapocalyptic
survival?

Everything that can, will go wrong.”

Rain Hunter is a writer of post-apocalyptic science fiction.
Having spent years as a materials researcher, Rain intricately weaves
scientific precision into the stories. “I’ve had a fun lab run over the years
and might have picked some degrees on the way,” laughs Rain. “But the most
important thing for my books is that the science has to be real. No more
can-and-know-it-all characters! If I know how to cook meth from baking soda and
cough syrup, I won’t be able to start a rocket engine, full stop. Even in fiction!”

Rain is a huge fan of the zombie genre, both in movies and
books. “I’d kill to be a zombie extra in a film. Even if they smash my brains
out in the first two seconds. Sign me up anytime.”

Dark humour and irony are the main ingredients in Rain’s
novels. “I am sure the world will die laughing. That’s what I would do.”

Rain lives in Birmingham (England), which serves as a main
inspiration for the goriest post-apocalyptic scenes. In their spare time, Rain
plays a harp in the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Nah, not really.

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Welcome to my stop on the virtual book tour for Arabesque organized by Goddess Fish Promotions.

Author M G da Moto will be awarding a $25 Amazon or B&N Gift Card to a randomly drawn winner. Don’t forget to enter!

And you can click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

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Arabesque

By M G da Moto

 

 

Genre: Historical Psychological Drama

Synopsis

A woman living alone in a coastal Sussex town in 1998 plants a copper beech sapling at 3 a.m. on a dark, cold night. Why?

A ballet dancer in 1960s East Germany is oppressed, longs for escaping with his little daughter but not his wife. Why? Will he make it?

In 2022 Karsten von Stein, widower and principal of the Royal Ballet, with two young children, meets Ivone Benjamim, a Portuguese, newly-arrived principal dancer. They discover a magical chemistry when dancing and soon it transfers to their private lives.

Against the background of ballet and its dancers, a woman called Grace tells her story from a rehab centre. Obsessive, delusional she begins believing Ivone robbed her of the man of her dreams—Karsten. And then a skeleton is found in a garden…What connects all these people and their stories?

You’ll be the audience facing the stage of this balletic novel.

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Enjoy this peek inside:

Prologue

Southeast England, late November 1998

She looks out of the window. Dark night. Black but clear. Twinkling dots punctuate the raven velvet of the sky. Stars shimmer cold and icy. Their light slightly wavering. She knows it is the Earth’s atmosphere. But that’s neither here nor there. It doesn’t matter a jot. Not at this moment anyway.

Darkness is the important thing. No moon. New moon. Why do people refer to a new moon when there is no moon or when one cannot see the moon from our revolving, ever turning blue dot? The moon is still up there in the sky. It’s just that at some point during its orbit its farther side from us is facing the sun. So the side facing us is dark and we can’t see it. As simple as that.

Tonight is new moon. An ideal night. She opens the window quietly and glances at the houses to her right first, then to her left. Like hers they are all immersed in silent darkness. People sleep. She looks at the luminous hands of her alarm clock on the side table. The shorter hand points at the number three, or close to it, and the long hand at somewhere between ten and fifteen. Probably around 3:12 in the morning. Her house stands almost but not quite alone on top of the hill. To her right, looking from her bedroom window that faces the back garden, there are two houses. The one closest to hers is empty.

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About Author M G da Moto:

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M G da Mota profile image

M G da Mota is Margarida Mota-Bull’s pen name for fiction. She is a Portuguese-British novelist with a love for classical music, ballet and opera. Under her real name she also writes reviews of live concerts, CDs, DVDs and books for two classical music magazines on the web: MusicWeb International and Seen and Heard International. She is a member of the UK Society of Authors, speaks four languages and lives in Sussex with her husband. Her website, called flowingprose.com, contains photos and information.

 

Website / Facebook / LinkedIn / Instagram 

 

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

 

 

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A supernatural thriller of vengeance and occultic magic.

A powerful American leader is reborn as a black child in an
African hut.

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The Fake Ghost

by Nuzo Onoh

Genre: Supernatural Horror, Magical Realism

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A dark farce and a
supernatural thriller of rebirth, betrayal, vengeance, occultic magic,
mysterious invocations and creepy rituals–from Nuzo Onoh, recipient of the Bram
Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement and “the Queen of African Horror.”

 

Set both in Nigeria and the USA, The Fake Ghost follows
the whacky and sinister travails of the President of the United States, reborn
as a black child in a tiny African hut. As the child grows, he insists on being
called POTUS and hears disturbing voices in his head that often cause him to be
cruel and selfish. Until one day an accident separates the linked souls. With
the help of a medicine-man, the president must find a way to free his trapped
soul and return to the United States to prevent a dastardly political plot
against him. But first, he must enter a diabolical blood pact, which might
return to haunt him with devastating consequences.

“Sometimes shocking, fantastical and hilarious, but
also tinged with hope, this ghost will haunt you long after the final
page.” —Tim Lebbon, author of The Last Storm

 

**Releases Aug 12, 2025!**

Amazon
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* Deadsky
Publishing
* Goodreads

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Life isn’t fair. Why don’t I have a real dad like President King? He couldn’t ever imagine the president raising a fist or a belt to his daughter.

“Anyways, if things work out swell, you’ll soon be visiting the Big Apple or any one of our marvellous states. We’ve got fifty-four states since we split Texas and California into two. America is now the greatest, and you, lucky boy, are now speaking with the ruler of the entire damn world—”

“China is the new ruler since—”

“Fuck China!” The president snarled. “I’m the most important guy in Terra Firma. Hell! Even aliens from Mars speak with me, and I ain’t kidding you.”

POTUS’ eyes widened into saucers. “No way! Your Excellency, you’ve actually seen real aliens, like in the films, Liberation Night and Independence Day and Women in Green and Men in Black. Real mothership aliens?”

President King preened, chest all puffed out, a grim smile on his face. “Yep. This is top secret, right? I’m not supposed to tell that we got aliens running wild amongst us, but take it from me, there are loads of them and—”

“Are there any aliens that are famous?” POTUS cut in, his heart thudding with excitement—Oh my God! Just wait till I tell Frankie. Mega wicked!

“Sure. Listen, promise you won’t tell, right? Swear on your life, and I’ll give you a coupla names.”

“I swear on my life,” POTUS crossed his heart feverishly. His love affair with sci-fi was only second to his boxing reruns on archive hologram channel.

“Okay. You know the actor guy, Tom Cruise? Yep! He’s one of the Martians.”

“No way! Tom Cruise?” POTUS’ ears were literally burning—Tom Cruise is an alien! Oh my God!

“Yep! Ever ask yourself how come he does all his own stunts despite his age? I mean, the guy’s older than me in human years, right? Last time I checked, he was almost seventy years old, and he’s still scaling walls and jumping parachutes and driving cars over cliffs. Hell! It’s even rumoured the guy never bleeds, never sleeps, and never been sick either. Now, who wouldn’t want that kinda power, right? A real charmer and superman, literally,” the president shook his head, his eyes glittering with admiration. POTUS could tell he liked alien Tom Cruise a lot.

“Are there women aliens too, Your Excellency?”

“Sure thing. The singer broad, Taylor Swift. Yep. Little green girl, I’m afraid. Psycho-bitch is a cloner and can split herself into thirteen alien Taylors, ensuring she has enough of herself to wreak chaos on humanity whenever she wants. Why do you think she always wears those creepy number 13 earrings? The alien bitch claims she was born on the 13th of the month and turned 13 years on a Friday the 13th, but we know who her real parents are and trust me, they ain’t humans; alien mummy and daddy, just like their spawn. As I said, that psycho bird is the mistress of chaos. She can sow anarchy, cause riots, and destruction just by showing her friggin’ face and opening her big mouth to spout garbage. And boom! Instantly, humanity turns into crazy zombies; wild, rabid squad dogs who just want to cancel out everyone without having a friggin’ idea why they’re doing it. And she has thirteen clones to help her sew unrest around the world. Most times you see her having a concert in different countries, it’s actually one of her thirteen alien clones performing. But as I said, this is top secret, got it? Just between the two of us, right?”

“Right,” POTUS nodded. He was so relieved Rihanna wasn’t amongst the named aliens. It would’ve killed him if his all-time celebrity crush was one of the little green people from Mars. She might be older now, but he still had endless hologram recordings of her in her hay days to feed his besotted eyes.

Something niggled him.

“Your Excellency, are all the aliens white people, or do we have any black aliens too?”

President King barked a grim laugh. “Sure thing. We got loads of black aliens, even yellow ones. They hold annual Alien Zoom meetings to catch up with their alien stuff. I hear Will Smith’s been begging them to let him into the meetings but they keep voting him out. I reckon the alien motherfuckers think he has too many lethal Men in Black anti-alien arsenals. So, they don’t trust him and who can blame them? Mind you, Will’s no alien, but the fashion designer guy that used to be a singer, Pharrell Williams, and the F1 champion, Sir Lewis Hamilton…” he paused and nodded grimly as POTUS’ eyes goggled. “Yep! Sorry to disappoint you, kiddo, but they’re both little green men too. Not forgetting the Korean megastar singer, Taemin. That guy doesn’t even need to hide the fact that he’s an alien. He looks like one and moves like one. Little wonder they call him the reincarnated Michael Jackson, who was another alien freak, by the way. Yeah, these alien fuckers have got their people practically in every country, although we have the most in America. I’m guessing Martians know a quality country when they see one. Fuck China!” The president glided closer till he was practically whispering. “You see, they send them down with special powers. The aliens we gotta fear are the singers and the drivers.”

President King caught the stunned look on POTUS’ face and nodded again with that hard smile that POTUS was starting to admire. It was a smile of power, of strength, of knowledge and ruthlessness. It was the kind of smile that said the president had the aliens well sourced and could handle them with ruthless ease.

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Nuzo Onoh is an award-winning Nigerian-British writer of
speculative fiction She is a pioneer of the African horror literary genre.
Hailed as the “Queen of African Horror”, Nuzo’s writing showcases both the
beautiful and horrific in the African culture within fictitious narratives.
Nuzo’s works have featured in numerous magazines, podcasts and anthologies, as
well as in academic studies. She has given talks and lectures about African
Horror, including at the prestigious Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies,
London. She is a Bram Stoker Lifetime Achievement Award recipient. Nuzo holds a
Law degree and Masters degree in Writing, both from Warwick University,
England. She is a certified Civil Funeral Celebrant, licensed to conduct
non-religious burial services. An avid musician with an addiction to JungYup
and K-indie, Nuzo plays both the guitar and piano, and holds an NVQ in Digital
Music Production. She resides in the West Midlands, United Kingdom.

Linktree * Bluesky * Substack * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

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The Heartbeats of Aloha

By Brooke Gilbert

 

 

 

(Under the Hawaiian Stars)
Publication date: July 1st 2025
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Romance

𝙎𝙚𝙥𝙖𝙧𝙖𝙩𝙚𝙙 𝙗𝙮 𝙩𝙧𝙖𝙜𝙚𝙙𝙮, 𝙧𝙚𝙪𝙣𝙞𝙩𝙚𝙙 𝙗𝙮 𝙛𝙖𝙩𝙚. 𝘾𝙖𝙣 𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙨𝙚 𝙨𝙩𝙖𝙧-𝙘𝙧𝙤𝙨𝙨𝙚𝙙 𝙡𝙤𝙫𝙚𝙧𝙨 𝙛𝙞𝙣𝙙 𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙞𝙧 𝙬𝙖𝙮 𝙗𝙖𝙘𝙠 𝙩𝙤 𝙚𝙖𝙘𝙝 𝙤𝙩𝙝𝙚𝙧?

Reef has been in love with Luna since they were kids. As a secret romance novelist, he pours his unrequited feelings into his books, reliving their love on the page. But when Luna’s uncle proposes a fake relationship to thwart a stunt her PR wants to pull, Reef’s wildest dreams and worst fears are about to collide.

Luna never stopped loving Reef, even when she broke his heart to protect him. Music became her refuge, but fame brought unexpected complications. Now, fate has brought them back together, but the demons of their past threaten to consume them both.

As Reef and Luna navigate their rekindled feelings amidst a whirlwind of secrets, heartache, and desire, they’ll discover that sometimes reality is even more extraordinary than fiction. When their truths come to light, will their love survive, or will they wish they’d left the past buried in the sands of time?

The Heartbeats of Aloha is a poignant, swoon-worthy standalone in the International Soulmate series. Immerse yourself in:

  • A heart-melting second chance romance
  • The lush, tropical beauty of Hawaii
  • A fake relationship that feels all too real
  • Deep, nuanced portrayals of mental health and disability
  • Unforgettable characters, including an adorable canine companion

If you love emotional journeys filled with tender moments, sizzling chemistry, and the healing power of love, then Brooke Gilbert’s moving story is a must-read.

Let the rhythm of the islands guide you to your next great romance. Grab The Heartbeats of Aloha today and lose yourself in Reef and Luna’s unforgettable love story!

Content note: This book contains discussions of anxiety, depression, and panic attacks.

Goodreads / Amazon

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Enjoy this peek inside:

As soon as the doors closed, I turned to her. “Luna,” I breathed. I didn’t know what to do, but I was being drawn to her, the tether from earlier pulling at me even harder. I placed my hands on either side of her hips, grabbing the cold railing with everything I had, desperate to be close to her.

Then I leaned into her slightly. “He’s just an idiot who’s upset he lost the best thing he’s ever had. Nothing in the world could make me want to ‘return’ you. If you were mine, I’d do anything to keep you.”

Her eyes became even glossier as they drifted up to meet mine. “You don’t even know what it is.” She looked away. “I didn’t think I needed to tell you since this is all . . .”

“This is all what?” I asked her more pointedly. Her lips parted, but she said nothing. I could see the ghost of the word ‘fake’ on them. I gripped the railing tighter. “I never wanted any of this to be pretend. Not one second of it has been for me. Has it been for you?”

She shook her head methodically, as if knowing what she was unleashing, and my lips curved upward at her response. Especially when her body gravitated toward mine like she couldn’t stand to be apart.

I started to remove my glasses, knowing this was the first time my feelings and intentions would be on full display for her. The first time, nothing would be covered up under the guise of Louis’ plan.

“Luna, why did you write One More Hour? Was what you said on stage true?” I asked with urgency.

But her face said it all. I didn’t need the words her lips mouthed so sensually . . .“Yes . . . It was you I wanted. I’ve always wanted you. I still do.”

As I went to pull off my glasses, she stopped me, shaking her head emphatically. I felt like a dork, with the goofiest grin on display.

“What? You want me to keep them on? I was trying to look less like a nerd.” I laughed nervously as I leaned even closer to her, my hands clutching the railing beside her.

“Yes, they have to stay on. It’s required.” But she was only halfway teasing, and I loved it. “Do you know how many fantasies I’ve had about this?”

“No, why don’t you tell me?” I began coyly.

“Enough to have a bet with myself about how fast I can fog them up.” She smirked.

“Oh, I’m seeing the appeal now. Maybe this nerd thing can have some perks,” I mumbled. But all my cockiness left me as I became overwhelmed by her. Especially as she reached up for the collar of my dress shirt and tugged me toward her. The smell of the plumeria flower in her hair and the scent of Luna overcoming any hesitation. I wanted to bottle her scent along with this moment.

Our faces were only inches apart, warmth radiating between us. And I was ready to close any of the distance between us. Need taking over in a way I’d never known, when she breathed out, “Why didn’t you ever kiss me?”

“I couldn’t tell if you wanted me to.” A pain twisted at her cheeks with my words.

There was a hard tug on my shirt collar. A very clear sign of her want. And with that, all space and time vanished. It was just her lips on mine as I leaned into every part of her. Every part I knew intimately and loved . . . all of her. Allowing myself to taste her for the very first time.

I pulled back suddenly, and her eyes looked simultaneously confused and incredibly disappointed.

“Wait,” I interjected, and her face fell. I pushed off of the handrails and moved toward the elevator pad. Quickly, I pulled the emergency button, halting the elevator.

“Reef, you can’t do that.” Her eyes flashed with mixed amusement and sheer concern.

With a confidence I didn’t know I possessed, I strode back over to her. “Oh, but I think I already did.” I readjusted my glasses to look at her, the ones that were already fogged up. “Now, where were we?”

She laughed as my hands slid around the back of her thighs to pick her up, gently propping her against the elevator railing. Her legs seamlessly wrapped around me like they were always meant to be there.

“Oh yeah, here.” The words tumbled out of me.

Luna only laughed harder and then raked her hands upward through my hair, pulling me in with more force this time. I met her heady passion with a strong desire of my own this time. But I was becoming increasingly aware that I had kind of cornered her. And what started out feeling sexy now felt like it could cause anxiety. And that’s the last thing I ever wanted. I spun us around, effectively swapping our positions, hoping to give her more space and control. I was absolutely fine with her cornering me.

Luna looked at me and her legs squeezed even tighter around me as her fingers dug deeper. Sending shockwaves through my scalp and back. I guess I’d made the right call. Especially when her lips melted over mine and then started roaming, making use of my neck in ways no one had ever properly done before. I had gotten everything wrong in my novels. No kiss I wrote could ever compare to this. I was going to need to make a few revisions.

“Miss!” the intercom burst forth from the elevator speaker. We looked at each other with wide eyes. “Miss, please disentangle yourself and step away from the gentleman.” I started laughing and Luna gave me a look that said it wasn’t funny. “We’re going to be overriding the elevator panel and resuming normal functions as soon as . . . you . . . huh hmm . . . Remove yourself.”

But Luna just stayed glued to me, like a scared monkey. Her face was a mixture of shock and embarrassment. “Ma’am,” the booming voice rang out, “Please don’t make me call security.”

“Yeah, stop mauling me, Luna. Geez.” Now she was laughing, too, as I helped her stand beside me. She seemed as off balance as I felt. Her knees even buckled at the point of contact with the floor. With a sly smile, I pointed to the other corner of the elevator. “You better go over there, just to be safe.”

She just shoved me lightly, like when we were kids, and the elevator started moving. The booming voice thanked us for our ‘cooperation,’ no matter how unenthusiastically we had complied with the request. And then Luna’s long, petite fingers found their way in between mine. A peaceful reverberation echoing throughout my body when she did. She was like that first cool breeze coming off the ocean at the end of the hottest day. She was my happy place. Everything that made our island special, she encompassed it all so well. The heartbeats of this place were the people. The heartbeats were her.

My eyes dared to glance over at her, and the intimacy of this moment changed me. I would never look at love the same way. She had just cracked something wide open inside of me. Right at the place that had been scarred so many years ago, and then forever placed herself inside it.

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About Author Brooke Gilbert:

Brooke Gilbert is a Tennessee native, a microbiology graduate of the University of Tennessee, and a border collie mom. She is, as you may have already guessed, a hopeless romantic and a lover of Jane Austen. When she isn’t writing, she works as a jewelry designer, an audiobook narrator, and a graphic designer. Her writing features characters with autoimmune disorders, something she deals with herself. She believes it is important for these types of characters to be seen in modern literature and started writing so she could see someone like herself in literature. She is considered a medical mystery and has several rare autoimmune disorders. These disorders caused her to withdraw from Physician Assistant School, but she is happy to be pursuing her dreams of designing, creating, and writing. She thanks God for leading her heart on this new path and recites “perhaps this is the moment for which you were created” in times of doubt (Esther 4:14).

She loves watching classic films (thrillers and romantic comedies, too), reading, playing the ukulele, painting, dancing, Pilates, and spending time with her dog, family, and friends. One of her favorite quotes is from Flashdance: “When you give up on your dreams, you die.” She believes that if you’re waiting to pursue your dreams, stop waiting and start doing. Your time is now. And may you never stop being a hopeless romantic. Contrary to popular belief, it’s a very good quality. She’s still looking for her Mr. Darcy. Visit brookegilbertauthor.com to connect and stay updated on her latest projects.

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The Everest Enigma by Jeannette de Beauvoir Banner

THE EVEREST ENIGMA
by Jeannette de Beauvoir
June 16 – July 11, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

Synopsis:
AN ABBIE BRADFORD MYSTERY

 

Abbie Bradford is at a crossroads.

Fresh off earning her doctorate in history, she’s unsure of her next move—until bestselling novelist Emma Caulfield, an acquaintance of Abbie’s brother, presents an irresistible challenge: join her on a grueling trek from Kathmandu to Everest Base Camp in Nepal. When the adventure takes a deadly turn, Abbie starts to question Emma’s true motives as she finds they may hold the key to unraveling a century-old mountaineering mystery—if they can survive long enough to solve it.

Book Details:

Genre: Women Sleuths, Mystery, Thriller 

Published by: Beckett Books Publication Date: May 15, 2025 Number of Pages: 280 ISBN: 9798992594201 (Pbk) Series: An Abbie Bradford Mystery, Book 1 

Book Links: Amazon | Goodreads

Enjoy this peek inside:
Chapter 1

I saw my first dead body when I was nine years old.

That sounds scary, but oddly enough, it didn’t feel that way at the time—something about the resilience of childhood, I expect.

We’d gone to Algeria for my father to take celestial measurements in the Sahara, and one day the local expat group asked him to accompany a doctor going to see a woman in a village outside of town—she was an American, they said, and would be reassured by the presence of other Americans.

We went along with him because my mother wanted to, and that was back in the good days, the days before she started having serious conversations with the bust of Shakespeare in the front hall of our mansion in Boston’s Back Bay. My family members each embrace obsession in their own way. My younger brother Martin went so mad for God he had to become a priest—albeit an Episcopal one, so he can still enjoy some of the finer things in life. My father, following a patriarchal tradition of obsessive eccentricities, devotes his life to stargazing—and traveling to stargaze—while my older brother Phillip turned those same stars into scientific objects and spends his days teaching astrophysics. And my mother… well, the less said about my mother, some days, the better. I expect we each have something terribly wrong with us. So my parents and I went along the bumpy track in the Land Rover, with the doctor explaining that she’d been screaming, the American woman, something about great birds blotting out the sun. Ergot poisoning, he added. It happens. By the time we arrived, the woman had died, and there was fear still etched in her face, fear of those dark wings she’d seen in the sky. Memorable. And so I saw my first body when I was nine. I wonder, now, if that meant anything, pointed me in a direction I didn’t even know I was taking, that would be revealed only once I went to Nepal. *** The visitor came soon after I was contemplating the dispiriting contents of my refrigerator. I periodically go on diets, and the first step in any diet is clearing out anything remotely delicious from your kitchen. And then, of course, that first night finds you staring at a hard-boiled egg, a can of tomato juice, some healthy-looking grain, and an apple that’s seen better days. I pulled up the online delivery menu from The Q, my favorite local Chinese restaurant. I could go back to the diet tomorrow. So when the buzzer rang downstairs, I flung the door open with enthusiasm achieved only by a person who’s been dieting for a full eight hours. Instead of the delivery guy with a bag full of goodies, however, I was looking at a slightly older-than-middle-aged woman in an anorak with the hood up. “Yes?” She sniffed, wiping an errant snowflake from her cheek. “Are you Abigail Bradford?” “Yes,” I said automatically. “Can I help you?” The gray eyes looked me over, shrewd, intelligent, and extremely thorough. I wondered what she made of what she saw, because I can be a little startling at first: a tall youngish woman, chin-length hair currently an experimental vivid blue, brown eyes behind glasses. “You answered my post,” she said calmly. I stared at her. “Excuse me?” “My post,” she repeated, exasperation creeping into her voice. “I put a post up on the intranet. At Harvard.” At that moment the dinner delivery arrived, the driver impatiently shouldering past her. “Here you go.” I had the tip ready. “Thanks,” I said, grabbing the food and hoping this woman would take the hint and leave. “Well,” she said, eyeing the bag, “you’ll want to get to your dinner.” “Yes,” I agreed. She stepped forward. “So let’s get inside. There’s supposed to be heavy snow after midnight.” She caught my eye. “Well, of course I won’t be staying past midnight,” she said. “But with the timing of things—well, I wanted to do the interview as soon as possible. Of course.” Interview? The wind was screaming down Acorn Street—the most-photographed street in Boston is also one of the narrowest, a perfect wind tunnel—and my dinner was getting cold. I gave up and let her in. Five minutes later we were sitting rather cozily in my living room, her coat and hat hung up in the hall, fire blazing merrily along, boxes of fragrant Chinese food between us. “You’re sure you don’t want anything?” I asked for about the third time. I am nothing if not polite, even to people who are clearly off their rockers. “No, no, you go ahead, dear,” she said, fluffing the pillow beside her, settling in. Seen in the light, she had no-nonsense, short salt-and-pepper hair, with lots of laugh wrinkles around her gray eyes. Nothing distracted, however, from the sharpness in those eyes. “Since your memory is clearly failing you,” she said, “I’ll remind you. I’m Emma Caulfield. I put up an ad for a research assistant to go with me to Nepal.” I’d just opened the chopsticks packet. “Nepal?” “Well, yes, of course, Nepal,” she said, frowning. “Really, dear, do you usually repeat what people say to you? Do you want the job, or not?” I put everything down. There was a glimmer of an idea at the back of my mind. Harvard perforce means Phillip, and this was exactly something Phillip would think was funny. “I have a feeling my brother answered your post on my behalf,” I said carefully. She was unfazed. “Then he must have known you’d want the job.” “Going to Nepal.” She nodded. “Going to Nepal.” I thought about it. It wasn’t actually totally insane. My brothers and I are that most hated of species, trust-fund babies, and Phillip and I have spent a substantial part of our inheritances collecting academic letters after our names, probably to prove something to someone… well, I’ve never quite worked that part out. I was into the second year of holding my doctorate in history, and hadn’t yet found any work in academia. Boston and Cambridge might together be the hub of higher education, but even lectureships are harder and harder to come by, and guarded jealously. And—here’s the thing—truth be told, I was slowly coming to the conclusion that I didn’t actually want a career in higher education. I liked the research part: I liked being a detective, figuring out what really happened, the story behind the story preserved for posterity. Learning about people who weren’t just stick-figures, real people who lived and loved and breathed and should be remembered. Bringing them back to life, somehow, if only on paper. Teaching… yeah, maybe not so much. Faculty interactions, definitely not. And while it’s true I’d never need to work for a living, that didn’t mean I didn’t actually want to. To contribute to the world in some way. I just wasn’t yet seeing how. All that meant, of course, was there wasn’t anything tying me to Boston at the moment. “What,” I asked, “are you going to Nepal for?” “Well, research, of course, dear.” She looked puzzled. “I thought that would be obvious.” I didn’t say anything, and she sighed gustily. “I’m Emma Caulfield,” she said again. “Yes, I got that part.” “I’m a writer.” I continued to stare blankly at her, and she started looking annoyed. “I write historical romances,” she said. “I’m on the New York Times bestseller list.” And there it was. I hadn’t heard of her for good reason: I subscribe to the academic historian’s dim view of historical fiction in general, and historical romances in particular. It’s an automatic judgment we make: slipshod research, damsels in distress, Regency dresses. I met her eyes. “Bodice-rippers,” I suggested, nodding. To my surprise, she laughed. “Well, good for you, Abigail Bradford,” she said. “I was starting to think you didn’t have any gumption at all.” There it was again, that sharp mind behind those eyes. “You fraud,” I said slowly. “You knew I’d react like that.” Emma nodded. She looked thoroughly satisfied. “I am researching my next novel,” she said crisply. “I am going to Kathmandu, and then on to some trekking. I’m planning on getting up to Everest Base Camp, and I certainly don’t want to do that alone.” Her expression dared me to say anything. “I’m good at asking questions, and taking in the scenery, and all that. But I’m not always able to organize what I’m doing, and this time around I need some specialist help. I want you to help research what it was like for people on the mountain, people in the country, people in the world, in the early nineteen-twenties.” She paused, and a trace of something vulnerable slipped into her voice. “I also need someone to—well, to go with me. I used to like traveling on my own, have done it for years, but not so much anymore. There’s too much to keep track of, and I need to be thinking and writing. So I need someone to go with me.” “As a researcher,” I said. She didn’t meet my eyes. “I’ve never done this before,” she confessed. “I’ve always done everything on my own. But this time feels different—and I’m not about to get a reputation for slipshod work, so I need some help. Some research, some organizing, some travel… and someone to tell me when I’m going off in the wrong direction. That’s why I need a historian—you.” Not just any historian: me. I’d remember that, later. “You’re looking for facts?” I asked sweetly. “That must be a first for a romance novelist.” “Historical romance novelist,” she corrected. Her eyes were steely. “So are you in, or what?” I had a feeling I was going to regret this. “I’m in,” I said. “And now, can we eat?” *** I Googled her, of course. The moment she was out the door. Emma Caulfield, it transpired, was indeed a Big Name in the genre. She’d been writing novels for the past thirty-odd years. She’d been part of the big Regency romance movement, had switched things around for a while with an American Colonial period, even set a small series in prehistoric Britain. And she was right: her novels were consistently on the bestseller list. She must be making a fortune. “The romance bestseller list,” I reminded my friend Justine when I told her about the late-night visit. We were still deep in February, and we’d come off the ice-skating at Boston Common to the warmth of my fireplace, a pot of tea, and a bag of popcorn. “You know,” Justine said, stretching out a leg toward the heat, “you could manage to be just a little more judgmental if you tried.” “Do you think?” I smiled and refilled her tea. I was only half-serious. “What I think,” she said carefully, “is that you might be surprised. Romance novels have come a long way since the oh, John, oh, Mary days.” “And you would know this, how?” She laughed. “Come on, Abbie. Sex and the City changed everything. There are feminist romances now. And your Emma Caulfield—she has a good reputation. I think she might surprise you, I really do. God, I think my toes are finally thawing.” She slanted a look at me. “So you’re going with her? To Kathmandu?” I nodded. “I think so.” “You know, you don’t have to, just because Phillip had one of his harebrained ideas.” “Trouble is,” I said slowly, “he’s usually right, and it actually sounds like it could be fun. And… interesting. The work, the travel, the research—there’s a goal, you know? Something that might mean something.” She nodded, her eyes on the flames. Justine knows about my past. Phillip and Martin and I are the thirteenth generation of an old, old Massachusetts family: check it out, the first governor of what would eventually become the Commonwealth was named Bradford, he was on the Mayflower that first miserable winter in Provincetown and Plymouth. Later, during the Gilded Age, the Bradfords became rich beyond understanding, though they had one saving grace—philanthropy. Hospitals, learning institutions, the arts … my ancestors helped build the knowledge-based economy that still characterizes Boston. I have an ambivalent relationship with my family wealth—well, to be fair, with much of my family itself, too—and am always looking for ways to put it to good use; I’m not interested in a trust fund that does nothing but increase itself. I give away a lot of money, in a whole lot of ways, and that’s good, that’s important… but I’d like to be doing something important, too. I just hadn’t yet figured out what. “So what’s the plan?” Justine asked. “What exactly is she researching?” I shut my eyes; I can nearly always visualize conversations when I do. “She’s doing something about an Everest expedition back in the 1920s,” I said. “There was an Englishman called George Mallory who went up and didn’t come down, and there’s controversy about whether he reached the summit or not, which is an important question among mountaineers.” I paused. “And apparently he was incredible eye-candy, as was his wife, so maybe it’s a love story between them.” I found I was smiling. Okay, so maybe there was something more to romance novels than I’d assumed. “She wants me to go to Kathmandu ahead of her, and she’ll join me after she’s done some sort of conference in New York.” “Well, it sounds exotic anyway,” said Justine. “Why not? It might be just what you need while you decide what you’re going to do with your life.” That was, of course, the question. “I’m intrigued,” I admitted. “Phillip was right. It sounds exotic, it sounds interesting, and it’s the other side of the world.” “Top of the world,” said Justine. “Everest’s the highest mountain on Earth.” “I’m not actually climbing Everest,” I reminded her. “No,” she conceded. “You’d need to be a little more of an Outdoors Girl for that. Still, it might lead to other things.” “Like what?” I asked suspiciously. Justine grinned. “Romance?” she suggested. I threw the popcorn at her. *** Excerpt from The Everest Enigma by Jeannette de Beauvoir. Copyright 2025 by Jeannette de Beauvoir. Reproduced with permission from Jeannette de Beauvoir. All rights reserved.

 

 

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MY REVIEW

This book is right up my alley. I’m an Everest and mountain climbing addict. I watch all the documentaries and some movies too. It fascinates me that people will go to the top of the world, enduring freezing temperatures, life threatening health issues and literally, have there bodies be dying as they continue to strive to reach the ultimate goal…The Summit.

I quickly connected with the main protagonist , Abbie Bradford. She dove right in when a well known author, Emma, asks her to help with the research for her new book. The destination, Nepal, and base camp on Mt. Everest. I have to say, the author, Jeannette  de Beauvoir, not Emma from the book, did excellent research herself. After watching so many shows about Everest, I could picture areas they were at and see the obstacles that impeded their work. Maybe not murder though.

Yes, there’s murder. And in such a harsh environment, so isolated, it won’t be easy to solve. Or to survive as there’s more than one kind of killer out there.

I enjoyed this book right from the opening. I’d anticipated and hoped for a solid mystery and some great characters. Got that and more. The author’s descriptions of the locations and it’s people transported me there and I was engaged right til the end.

4 STARS

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About Author Jeannette de Beauvoir:

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Jeannette de Beauvoir

Jeannette de Beauvoir is an award-winning author of historical and mystery/thriller fiction and a poet whose work has appeared in numerous literary journals and anthologies. She has written three mystery series along with a number of standalone novels; her work “demonstrates a total mastery of the mystery/suspense genre” (Midwest Book Review) She’s a member of the Authors Guild, the Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, and the Historical Novels Society. She lives and works in a seaside cottage on Cape Cod where she’s also a local theatre critic and hosts an arts-related program on WOMR, a Pacifica Radio affiliate.

Catch Up With Jeannette de Beauvoir:

www.JeannettedeBeauvoir.com Amazon Author Profile Goodreads BookBub – @JeannettedeBeauvoir Instagram – @JeannettedeBeauvoir Pinterest – @JeannettedeBeauvoir Facebook – @JeannettedeBeauvoir YouTube – @JeannettedeBeauvoir Medium – @JeannettedeBeauvoir

 

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Echoes on the Wind by Helaine Mario Banner

ECHOES ON THE WIND
by Helaine Mario
June 23 – August 1, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

Synopsis:
THE MAGGIE O’SHEA SUSPENSE SERIES

 

TWO STRONG WOMEN, GENERATIONS APART, CONNECTED BY MUSIC…

In 1943 war-torn France, a young woman on the Night Train to Paris has a chance meeting with two very different men who will change her life, setting in motion a Dual Timeline story that will resonate like ripples on water for generations to come. Many years later, classical pianist Maggie O’Shea is drawn to Brittany by a long-lost letter from her French grandmother and the stirring music of Chopin, whispering like echoes across the years. But as Maggie discovers the secrets of her past, her life spirals out of control, threatening her upcoming wedding and those she loves.

Set against the backdrop of World War II France, Maggie learns her grandmother’s story, chord by chord, through Chopin’s emotional Preludes. And, in one shocking moment, Maggie’s love story will take a heart-breaking turn that will change her life and echo into her future.

Past and present converge in this haunting tale of loss and sacrifice, friendship and family, courage and survival – and the transcendent power of hope, music and love.

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Praise for Echoes on the Wind:

“History, mystery and music. I love this series.” ~ Ellen Kirschman, Author of the award-winning Dot Meyerhoff mysteries

“I am loving it. Your lovely words are my path back to reading. Thank you.” ~ Book Reviewer, The Reading Frenzy

Echoes on the Wind stands alone as a beautiful story… Beyond this is layered a second story of enduring love, of commitment. This story is set in another time and place. A story of family. The two stories are linked by family through time… healing, forgiveness and resolution are finally able to happen. Through all of this, the thread that held it together is the music, the art, and the poetry of the heart that poured forth.” ~ Karen Laird, Reviewer, Shade Tree Book Reviews

Echoes on the Wind presents two love stories – one in the present day and one during World War II. It’s easy to root for Maggie and Michael as the main couple (and Clair and Charles in the past). This book is exemplary in its choice of topic or theme of the story. It is unique but still has strong appeal for most readers in its intended genre.” ~ Writers’ Digest Reviewer

“In this book, readers embark on a poignant journey through the past and the present. Maggie’s story is a careful examination of how one’s ancestral past can influence their present. Most of all, it is a story of female fortitude. Both Maggie and Clair find a strength within themselves that neither of them knew they possessed. Additionally, the incorporation of classical music in the novel is refreshing. This focus is a reminder of the unifying and healing power of the arts, music, and literature. The poetic writing makes this book even more gripping, as readers are completely swept up in Maggie and Clair’s experiences.” ~ RECOMMENDED by the US Review

“Once again, Maggie O’Shea, is the central character, but this entry in the series features a dual timeline that will captivate the reader. Both the contemporary, present-day storyline and the historical thread set in World War II France are so authentically depicted that readers will struggle to determine which setting they enjoy more. Watching how these two plots weave and intermingle continues to surprise, with echoes being the perfect symbolic image. Light the fireplace, put Chopin’s Preludes on the stereo, and settle in for a gripping read you won’t soon forget.” ~ Kristopher Zgorski, BOLOBooks.COM

Book Details:

Genre: Romantic Suspense

Published by: Suncoast Publishing Publication Date: June 18, 2024 Number of Pages: 364 ISBN: 9781735184975 (ISBN10: 1735184977) Series: A Maggie O’Shea Romantic Suspense, Book 4 

Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads

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The Maggie O’Shea Romantic Suspense Series:

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The Lost Concerto by Helaine Mario THE LOST CONCERTO Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads   Dark Rhapsody by Helaine Mario DARK RHAPSODY Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads   Shadow Music by Helaine Mario SHADOW MUSIC Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads

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Enjoy this peek Inside:
OVERTURE

“Like so many things that matter, it began with an accident.” David Ignatius, 12/28/98

NOVEMBER, 1943. THE NIGHT TRAIN TO PARIS

Light and dark.

The bleak November landscape rushed past the train’s window. Black tree branches against the dark night sky, then a sudden flash of light. Then blackness again.

The blackout had claimed the streetlamps and cottage windows. Clair Rousseau stared out the rain-streaked glass, waiting for the next glimpse of light. A lone lantern. Car headlights tilted down, a sliver of gold beyond a cracked curtain. Sheet lightning over distant hills, a glimmer of light on water. But all she saw was the blurred, pale oval of her reflection staring back at her. Dark hair scraped back, framing huge eyes beneath winged brows, sharp cheekbones, the too-wide mouth. No hint of the emotions flowing through her, except for the deep purple shadows beneath her eyes. The dim, four-person compartment was cold, and she pulled her coat more tightly around her body. The seat beside her was still empty, thank God. Across from her, two German officers. One asleep, snoring loudly, his hands slack between thick gray-green uniformed knees. The other awake, a Gauloises cigarette clamped between thin lips, a jagged line of white scars marring his left cheek. The narrow fox-like face stared at her through thick round glasses and wreathes of curling blue smoke. His jacket was heavy with insignia, oak leaves, medals. Military Intelligence, she thought with a sudden chill. A high rank, SD or Abwehr. What was he thinking? The watchful, unblinking eyes made her afraid. Like a snake’s eyes, waiting to strike. She looked away, forcing herself not to reach for her satchel, touch her identity papers for reassurance. The carriage’s glassed door slid back and forth with an unnerving rattle as the train rocked around a bend. From the hallway came the sharp scent of burning coal, wafting back from the old steam engine several cars ahead. A cloud of steam billowed past the window like sudden fog. She could feel the vibration beneath her, hear the rumble of the train’s wheels speeding along the tracks. The lonely call of a train whistle, echoing in the night. A quick flare of light, illuminating the rain like silver threads streaming down the window. Light and dark. Light and dark. Movement at the edge of her vision. A tall figure appeared in the hallway, beyond the door. Her chest tightened. Would she ever feel safe again? A sharp crack of thunder, a sudden bright flash lighting her face. “Mademoiselle Clair?” Startled, her head came up. The stranger had stopped, was staring into the compartment. Across from her, the watchful German stiffened and slid pale eyes toward the voice. Be careful. There was something familiar about the gaunt face, the faint, questioning smile just visible above a thick woolen scarf. She stood quickly, stepping between the German and the carriage door to block the officer’s view. “Oui,” she said softly, peering into the dim hallway. The man nodded and moved closer. Something about those gentle eyes, the arch of silver brows. Memory surged. Father Jean-Luc. She flashed him a warning glance for silence and stepped into the train’s narrow corridor, closing the door firmly behind her. “Mon Père, is it really you?” “Oui, ma petite, c’est moi.” The priest pulled the scarf down to offer a glimpse of his white Roman collar, then lost his smile as he gazed over her shoulder and saw the Germans. “But we cannot talk here. Come with me.” He slipped a hand beneath her elbow and guided her to the end of the dark passageway, where an open exit door led across shifting metal plates to the train’s next car. She felt the sudden bite of night wind on her face, cold and wet with mist. Here the clatter of the train wheels was loud enough to hide their conversation. They sheltered just inside the doorway, in the shadows, away from the rain. Outside, the countryside of France rushed by, then disappeared in a billow of black smoke. In the dim corridor, the planes of the priest’s face were lit by a tiny, flickering overhead bulb. Light and dark. Light and dark. The priest looked down at her, shook his head. “Little Clair Rousseau,” he murmured. “Now such a beautiful young woman. It’s been – what? – four years since we met? You were just thirteen, I think. Playing the piano in your parents’ apartment. Bach, yes? It was so beautiful, so stirring. I hope you are still playing?” She shook her head. “You need hope to create music, Père.” She looked back toward her carriage compartment. The hallway was empty. “But I remember that day. The war was coming. You asked us to help you remove the stained-glass windows from Sainte-Chapelle. To save them from the bombing.” “You were fearless, Clair. I remember watching you, swaying at the top of that impossibly high ladder. The morning light was coming through the stained glass, spilling over you like shimmering jewels. I’ll never forget it. I told myself, Clair means light, she is perfectly named.” He leaned down. “And I can still see your sister, Elle – too young to help us, bien sûr – dancing around the altar.” Her expression softened. “Elle loved to dance. It was the last happy day I can remember.” She lifted her eyes to his, took a breath. “Paris was another lifetime, Père.” “You cannot lose hope,” he told her. “The glass pieces are in a safe place. Beauty and goodness cannot be destroyed. You will see the stained-glass windows back in Sainte-Chapelle when the war is over. I know it.” She shook her head. “I wish I had your faith.” “God has his plans. There is a reason we’ve met by chance on the night train to Paris.” Concern flashed in his eyes. “But you’ve been in Brittany? Dangerous times for a young woman to be traveling alone, Clair.” She looked out at the black trees rushing past the doorway, and felt the blackness deep in her heart. “I am alone now, Père.” “Mon Dieu. What happened?” “My father knew that war was inevitable. Not long after we saved the glass my parents moved us from Paris to the coast near Saint-Malo to be safe. Such irony. They had no idea how dangerous Brittany would become. And then…” She could not stop the sudden rush of tears that filled her eyes. “The Gestapo shot my father last year, in a retaliation roundup for an act of sabotage by the Resistance. He was with the Liberty Network, they had bombed a train track. He stepped forward, admitted it, hoping to save the others. But still they took thirty innocent people from our village, murdered them in the square.” “Oh no, Clair.” The priest made a quick sign of the cross. “I am so sorry. And your mother, your sister?” “I don’t know, Père. I was studying in Paris, I begged them to come stay with me. But Maman refused. When I returned last month to see them, the house was empty. They were just… gone. The neighbors said the Germans took them, in the night. The mayor was told they were being relocated to Poland.” The priest paled. “Désolé. I will pray for their souls.” Anger erupted, spilled out. “Prayers did not help my family! I have no time for prayer now. Or sorrow. Even avenging my father will have to wait. I need all my energy now to find my mother and my sister.” He bent toward her. “I am afraid you are still too fearless for your own good. Tell me what you’re doing, little one.” She turned once more to scan the dark hallway, then leaned closer. “I excelled in languages in my lycée studies these last years,” she whispered. “I am fluent in several languages, including German and English. I hope to find a new job, in the Hotel Majestic in Paris, where the German High Command is quartered. Then I will join the Resistance, find a way to get news of Maman and Elle. I must find them!” He gazed down at her for a long moment, then put a hand on her shoulder. “Perhaps I know of another way,” he murmured. The sound of a door opening. Wavering shadows spilled into the train’s corridor. Then the red glow of a cigarette, a spiral of smoke. She froze as the German officer turned toward them. “Find me at Èglise Saint-Gervais, in the Marais,” the priest whispered quickly. “I am with the Resistance there. You could work with me, we need someone like you to –” A sudden terrifying screech of metal wheels. Clair felt herself thrown to the floor as the train braked, slammed to a shuddering stop. Stunned, Clair reached out, felt the still body of the priest beside her. “Mon Père…” Shouts in German in the darkness, the clatter of heavy boots. When she raised her head she saw flashing blue lights against the night sky. Light and dark. Light and dark.

PART 1

“An echo of the past…” Victor Hugo

CHAPTER 1

THE PRESENT PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, MARTHA’S VINEYARD
Light and dark. The stage was shadowed, lit only by a handful of overhead lights. One of the lights began to flicker, a bright flash illuminating Maggie O’Shea’s face for a brief moment, then casting her into darkness. Maggie sat at the Bechstein grand piano, marveling at the power, the responsive touch, the unique tone of the beautiful instrument. Prokofiev deserves no less, she thought. The score propped above the keyboard was marked by penciled notations, heavy lines, arrows and slashes. Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 2 was the ultimate challenge for a pianist, but Maggie had chosen it because it was so emotional, so personal. So incredibly beautiful. It has the most to say, she thought. And, oh, she had so much she wanted to say. Always, since she’d been a young child whose bare feet did not yet reach the pedals, she had spoken through her music. Told the piano her secrets long before she told anyone else. Her earliest memory was of being curled beneath the grand piano, listening to her mother play, surrounded – cradled – by music. Then later, sitting on the piano bench by her mother’s side. The smoothness of the keys beneath tiny fingers, the sound that seemed to magically flow from her shoulders to her fingertips. Seeing the colors, making the piano sing. Making the rest of the world disappear. But this piece – face it, every piece lately – was giving her trouble. Something, some emotion, was just out of reach. Her mentor, the legendary pianist Gigi Donati, would say she was taking the easy way out by mastering technique but not the emotion. She could hear Gigi’s smoky, exasperated voice in the shadows. No, no, no! You are not growing, Maggie, your music is lifeless. Imagine you are kissing your lover goodbye for the last time. What do you feel? Now, again! Maggie sighed. She had been playing the first movement for an hour, with nary a lover in sight. Without Espressivo, as Gigi would demand. She would say, You don’t know the music yet. Take the time. Grow with the music. Illuminate its secrets. Make it yours. The light high above the stage flickered again, slipping her out of the light into darkness. Light and dark, thought Maggie. The story of my music. The story of my life. She closed her eyes, took a deep, shaky breath, and began to play the next phrase of music. Look into the heart of the music, whispered Gigi from behind her. Find its light. Find its soul. A few more chords, and suddenly Maggie’s fingers stiffened, locked, slipped off the keys. Shaking her head, she gathered the sheet music and dropped it to the bench. I just can’t, Gigi. I know what’s wrong, why I can’t play. I just don’t know how to fix it. But deep down, she did know. What she needed was to feel. But once again, part of her was frozen. You will not give up, she told herself. You have so much joy waiting for you. Raising her left hand to stretch tensed tendons, the engagement ring on her finger flashed emerald in the theater lights. The flash of emerald green in a shadowed cabin. The memory washed over her and once again she was back in the moment. She saw Michael’s face, as craggy and strong as the mountains he loved, his granite eyes locked on hers. What are you doing, Michael? It’s called offering you a ring, Maggie. The color of your eyes, the color of the mountains. It’s been hidden in my sock drawer for months. I know it’s a ring. I mean… What are you doing? Jumping off a cliff, it seems. Don’t make me get down on one knee, darlin’. I’ll never get back up. Silver eyes blazing like a torch. Marry me, Maggie. I… You… Oh, Love. I’ll take that as a yes, ma’am. She smiled. Colonel Michael Jefferson Beckett. A man who had fallen in love with her when he didn’t want to, a man she hadn’t wanted to love back. And yet. It just was. Like music. And right this minute he was back in those beloved mountains of his, at his cabin in Virginia’s Blue Ridge. Working on a secret project, he’d told her, with Dov, the Russian teenager in his care. She pictured the battered, rugged face she knew so well. The quirk of his mouth, the spiky silver brows, eyes like river stones locked on her. His stillness, as if he was carved from the mountains he loved. The way he listened… Michael, standing behind her, wrapping her naked body in a woven blanket. Michael, beneath her in the shadowed bedroom, whispering her name against her lips while her hair fell like dark rain around his face. She breathed out in a long sigh. It had been an emotional several months but now, finally, she was letting go of the past. Moving on. Ready to marry again. To spend the rest of her life with the Colonel, Dov and their rescue Golden, Shiloh. She had never expected this gift, this second chance at love. She shook her head, barely recognizing the woman she’d become. For so long she’d thought of herself as a city-girl. But the small cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains was becoming her center. Her home. She heard music differently in the quiet of the mountains. Listened better. Suddenly wanting to hear Michael’s voice, she dialed his cell. Message. “Hey you, it’s me,” she whispered. “Call me tonight, I’ll wait up. I have so much to tell you.” If only… If only she didn’t have to tell Michael the secret she’d been keeping from him these past few weeks. That once again, a vicious murderer was threatening all she held dear. Dane, with his scarred, wolf-like face and mirrored sunglasses hiding his eyes. The one nightmare she could not put behind her. Because now Dane was back in her life. + + + Over 4,500 miles to the East, the man who called himself Dane could not sleep. Still hours before dawn, shadows lay sharp across the tiles of the villa’s bedroom, angling from the terrace doors. Dane sat in a cushioned chair, crutches propped beside him, staring out the glass at the black Aegean far below – waiting for the sun’s light to spill over the horizon and fill the dark water with gold. A sudden shift of the moon, and he caught his breath at his reflection in the window. All the mirrors in the villa had been shattered years ago, by his own hand. As shattered as his life. Now, caught off guard, he stared at the disfigured face of the stranger wavering in the glass. Without warning his mind flung him back several years. He had been standing in the Kennedy Center’s Grand Foyer, his French knife secure under his tuxedo jacket, when he had caught a glimpse of himself in the floor-to-ceiling mirrors. Tall and god-like, he’d had muscles that rippled beneath the silk, a strong carved face, flowing hair the color of wheat, streaked by the Provençal sun. A diamond in his left ear, mirrored aviator glasses that hid tiger-colored eyes. His stride had been long, fast and as powerful as the Jaguar he drove. And then he had crossed paths with Magdalena O’Shea. First, the badly burned hand, thanks to an encounter with Magdalena’s Colonel at a Provençal abbey. He held up his right hand, now encased in a tight black glove. Then the botched plastic surgery in Italy after being forced into hiding. The scarred, distorted face, the loss of an eye. And then, months later… He looked down at his withered legs. The fall. The sickening feeling of spinning into the void. The excruciating pain that followed. The months of unbearable physical therapy. All because of one woman. Magdalena O’Shea. He glanced at his Rolex. Early evening in the states. Firas should have arrived in Martha’s Vineyard by now. He smiled. Until the time came, Firas would be his legs. The image in the glass wavered, dissolved, and Dane turned away. “For death remembered should be like a mirror,” he whispered. “Who tells us life’s but breath, to trust it error.” *** Excerpt from Echoes on the Wind by Helaine Mario. Copyright 2020 by Helaine Mario. Reproduced with permission from Helaine Mario. All rights reserved.

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AUTHOR GUEST POST

MY SECRET TO WRITING A GOOD SERIES…     

 

There is always a Story Behind the Story.  Today, my Story Behind the Story is MY SECRET TO WRITING A GOOD SERIES… 

 

I came to the community of writers late in my life – signing my first book contract at age 68.  So I honestly thought that publishing THE LOST CONCERTO, a classical music romantic suspense novel, would be my first – and last – book.  I never expected to write another.

 

But everyone, including myself, wanted to know what happened next to my Boston pianist Maggie O’Shea.  Introduced in THE LOST CONCERTO, Maggie is grieving the tragic death of her husband and devastated by the loss of her music.  Caught up in a search for her missing godson and a haunting concerto, Maggie journeys to Paris, where she meets a take-no-prisoners Colonel, finds the courage to move on, and discovers what has been lost within herself.

 

But how did she move on?  There are no better words a writer can hear than ‘I did not want this story to end.’  With those eight small words, I realized that Maggie had more story to be told – and so my second book, DARK RHAPSODY, was born.  But the birth was a difficult one.  I was terrified that I had poured every emotion I had into THE LOST CONCERTO, that I never would be able to write a story as good – or better – and, worst of all, that I would disappoint my readers.  Frozen, I turned to my publisher, Patricia Gussin.  Her advice for a series?  “Readers want to get to know and care about a good character.  The challenge is to give readers the character they’ve come to love but add new conflict, flaws and layers, making your character more complex in each book.”  Best advice ever.

And so, determined to explore Maggie’s past, I began book #2, DARK RHAPSODY.  I knew I could give my readers the familiar main characters they had come to love – Maggie, Colonel Beckett and his rescue Golden.  But I had no idea how to propel them forward into brand new depths and stories.

 

Where had story come from in my first book?  Every good series has atmospheric, evocative settings and complex, twisting plots.  But I realized that Maggie and the Colonel truly had come alive when I added three new characters who made their story so much richer – a missing godchild; a chilling Shakespearian actor; and a three-legged rescue Golden Retriever who gave my Colonel much-needed humanity, new layers and humor.  For me, the best way to create richer, more compelling stories for my main characters was right in front of me –  add new characters.  

 

Adding compelling characters to DARK RHAPSODY, my second book, offered the perfect way to explore Maggie’s past – Gigi, an aging, legendary pianist; Finn, a vanished Maestro; a haunted cellist named Hannah; and the faith-challenged Bishop Robbie Brennan.  Whether they had a small role or a larger one, all were pivotal by adding conflict, shining a light on other characters, and sending Maggie in new directions.  These supporting characters each had a story to tell, a history, baggage, flaws, secrets – and inspired new challenges, relationships, and even unexpected romance.  These four new characters gave me all the plot ideas I needed to delve into Maggie’s past – her mother’s mysterious death, her father’s disappearance, a looted Matisse, flashbacks to Vienna during WWII – all propelled by the music of Rachmaninoff.  In any good story, Something Must Happen.   New characters make things happen.  

 

One more note about character.  They don’t all have to be likable.  But the reader must be able to find them relatable, understand what drives them and why they make the choices they make, good or bad.

 

Which brings me to my third book in the series, SHADOW MUSIC.  A life-changing message draws Maggie to Cornwall in a harrowing search for a missing Van Gogh and the truth about her husband’s death.  Robbie Brennan returns, as this fallen priest’s story was far from finished.  I suddenly realized that new readers, discovering my books mid-series, were missing the rich history of my earlier books.  It was a real challenge to share important information from the prior stories without spoiling all the twists and suspense.

Hopefully, in SHADOW MUSIC, new readers would be drawn into Maggie’s new challenges – a rule-breaking nun with a child and a decades-old secret, a betrayed woman seeking revenge, and a sinister Russian character from an earlier manuscript.  And finally, I created one of my favorite characters ever – Dov, a Russian foster-care teen with a terrifying and heart-wrenching past.  Dov not only shines a light on troubled children, he takes the Colonel and his Golden in new, surprising and stirring directions as well.

 

Unexpectedly, these characters also allowed me to explore larger themes of aging, grief, faith, courage, family and forgiveness.  Moving on with grace, the consequences of choices that ripple over decades and have the power to hurt as well as heal – and, always, trying to do the right thing.  I want my readers to ask themselves, “What would I have done?”

 

Sue Grafton, Cara Black, Michael Connelly, Louise Penny, Daniel Silva…  So many writers have taught me what makes a series resonate with readers.  Even after a dozen or more books in a series, there is no “Narrowing Corridor” of good stories for these authors.  Their characters remain compelling, passionate, richly layered and deeply memorable – because they resonate with readers.

I have learned that introducing new characters into the mix will expand those corridors, open unexpected doors, and give me a wealth of new stories.  By now, of course, you know my personal Secret to Writing a Good Series – Character, Character, Character.  They will give you all the emotion, plot, secrets, relationships, romance, conflict and suspense you could ask for.

 

As for my Maggie O’Shea… well, after completing a trilogy, I thought once again that I was finished.  But an unexpected surprise at the end of SHADOW MUSIC  (yes, a surprise to me as well!) drew Maggie back to France in book #4, ECHOES ON THE WIND, a dual-time-storyline with unforgettable consequences – and several new characters to touch your heart.

 

And now it seems that Maggie is not quite done with me yet.  ☺

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About Author Helaine Mario:

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Helaine Mario

Best-selling author Helaine Mario grew up in NYC and is a graduate of Boston University. Now living in Arlington, VA, this mother of two, grandmother of five, and passionate advocate for women’s and children’s issues came to writing later in life. Her first novel, The Lost Concerto, won the Benjamin Franklin Award Silver Medal. Echoes on the Wind is her fifth novel and the fourth in her Maggie O’Shea Classical Music Suspense Series. Royalties from her books go to children’s music and reading programs. Helaine recently lost her husband, Ron, after 57 years together. Her new book echoes with loss, grief, and, ultimately, the healing power of love.

Catch Up With Helaine Mario:

HelaineMario.com Amazon Author Profile Goodreads BookBub – @helainemario Instagram – @helainemario.author Facebook – @helaine.mario

 

Tour Participants:

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

 

 

ENTER FOR A CHANCE TO WIN:

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

 

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Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

 

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

 

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Running is easier than facing my mistakes, than facing him.

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Daddy Issues

Desert Kings MC Book 3

by Candi Scott

Genre: Dark MC Romance

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Kenna

Despite all my good intentions and a metric ton of dry shampoo, my life is
always one step away from falling apart. What’s a girl to do? Run. Hide.
Pretend like all my mistakes never happened.

Running is easier than facing my mistakes, than facing him.

Tall, tattooed, and built like a concrete wall, Puck Kelly is the sexiest man
I’d ever seen. He’s also a Desert King and I’m pretty sure he killed…for me.

The messed up part? That only makes me want him more.

Amazon * Bookbub
* Goodreads

 

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**Don’t miss
the rest of the Desert Kings MC books!**

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Candi Scott is the ultra steamy pen name for award winning
author Leslie Scott.

Author of Two Hearts, One Stone and the Black Water Magic
Series, Leslie Scott has been writing stories for as long as she can remember.
The happier the ending, the better. Currently, she lives and writes amidst her
own happily ever after with her soul mate, son, and domestic zoo. http://www.lesliescottwrites.com

Website * Facebook * X * Instagram * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads

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It was a busy night. The crowd, the music, the strobing lights, and the grabby older man at table twenty had distracted me enough I didn’t pay attention to the Soletskys and their private entrance.

But Dani, the upstairs bartender, pushed a tray at me and pointed toward the purple room. Dimi Soletsky often held court in there. One of the older two Soletskys, he was probably the easiest to deal with. Symon was creepy and Val was scary—in that super sexy, stay the fuck on his good side, way.

I clutched the tray in two hands and glanced down at the fizzy dark soda swirling in a glass beside a familiar, dark bottled import beer. The shimmering purple and velvet curtain swished behind me, leaving chills across my skin. I’d seen this combo before, poured the soda myself a time or two.

My hair was different, darker, curling at the ends where it was dyed a bright purple, very similar to the plush, quilted couches strewn across the room. I hoped it was camouflage enough and shook it in my face, keeping my head down as my heartbeat kicked up faster than the booming bass from the DJ.

Because two Desert Kings were in that room, men I knew far too well. And one I didn’t want to see at all.

The tall, tattooed, flirtatious Jester Vaughn and Puck.

They’d come in the Soletsky’s private entrance, MC business. None of mine, that was for damn sure. A blond woman in a slinky blue dress kneeled between Jester’s legs, her head bobbing up and down. The tall fighter’s light hair was pulled up on the back of his head and the muscles in neck worked, making the Royal Flush of Hearts tattoo flutter.

I still remembered the night he got that tattoo…it was the hand Dylan Merrick beat him with in strip poker. She’d chosen where to put the tattoo and everything. I’d been maybe eighteen but had never forgotten the way his lips had twisted when she showed her hand or the pride on her face.

My best friend. I missed her, too. Avoiding the Kings meant avoiding Dylan.

Focusing on those things kept me from watching the woman suck his dick. Not that it bothered me, I’d seen as much before. I wanted to watch. Hell, there was a time I wouldn’t have minded being that woman. Jester was gorgeous, kinky, and dangerous.

Knowing their habits, I set the bottle down on his side of the table and slid the soda toward Puck’s side. If Jester was gorgeous, Puck was a giant wall of concrete sex appeal. Standing this close, I couldn’t help but tremble a little. I told myself it was from the cool air coming from the vents in the ceiling.

My cheeks warmed and that heat spread all the way between my thighs. I didn’t dare look up at him for fear he’d see me. The room was dark enough, my makeup heavy enough, that I could slide out without anyone noticing. I focused on his boots and the two feminine legs that hung between his—one of the escorts in his lap.

The flare of jealousy burned uncomfortable but familiar. I’d looked enough to know that while she was petting all over him, he wasn’t interested in the same treatment Jester was receiving. That didn’t stop me from wanting to straddle him, hands all over the thick wall of muscle that was his chest.

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Candi Scott is the ultra steamy pen name for award winning
author Leslie Scott.

Author of Two Hearts, One Stone and the Black Water Magic
Series, Leslie Scott has been writing stories for as long as she can remember.
The happier the ending, the better. Currently, she lives and writes amidst her
own happily ever after with her soul mate, son, and domestic zoo. http://www.lesliescottwrites.com

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