Refuge from the World

by Kim McMahill

 

(The Beartooth Chronicles, #1)
Publication date: March 19th 2024
Genres: Dystopian, New Adult, Young Adult

Ashley McPhee arrived in Beartooth with her mom, Sara, when she was three years old. Ever since Ash can remember, life has been simple and peaceful. She enjoyed a carefree childhood, tending honey bees with her mom and spending time with her best friend, Caleb Solomon. But, life in their idyllic mountaintop community is changing.

After learning of the government’s plan to use a geoengineering process to cool the planet, Ash and Caleb realize they need to step up and take an active role in the community. Along with fear for how the process might impact their food supply, Ash learns her mom’s health is failing.

Sara doesn’t want Ash to face an uncertain future alone and nudges her and Caleb into marriage. Even though they have known each other most of their lives, Ash and Caleb’s relationship has changed drastically in a short period of time. They embrace the challenges of learning about each other, dealing with tragedy and grief, protecting their community from deadly predators and ruthless neighbors, and experiencing epic adventures, while trying to find solutions to a rapidly changing environment and deteriorating world.

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / iBooks / Kobo

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Enjoy this peek inside:

Ash fell into step next to Caleb without talking. They had known each other for so long that they could be together without saying a word, and it didn’t feel awkward. When they reached the lake, they sat down on one of the large boulders scattered around the shore and stared out at the water.

“The lake level goes down a little more each year,” Caleb said.

“I’ve noticed. It used to be up to that cluster of rocks over there when we would go fishing when we were younger.”

“Rain isn’t enough to keep it full. The last time I remember seeing snow up here was when I was seven, and it didn’t stick around. Seems kind of ironic that so much of the planet is flooded, yet many worry about having enough fresh water to drink and to irrigate crops.”

“Why did we stop fishing?” Ash asked.

“I didn’t stop fishing. I still go fishing at least once a week. When you started taking a more active role in the beekeeping and tree nursery, you were available less and less. I go first thing in the morning, and that’s when you and your mom do most of your work.”

“I miss going fishing with you. I’ll see if Mom cares if we change around the schedule a bit unless you don’t want me tagging along like I did when I was younger.”

“I miss it too. I would love for you to tag along even though you always out-fished me.”

He put his arm around her and pulled her close. Ash laid her head on his shoulder and stared out at the lake. They sat like this sometimes, not as much as they used to, and she missed this too. She loved the feel of his arm around her and the warmth of his body next to hers, but never read too much into the gesture. Today, especially, she was in no hurry to break the connection.

“Are you going to the community meeting tonight?” he asked, finally breaking the silence.

“Yes. I keep getting these unsettling feelings, and I hope to find out if it’s just my imagination or if there is something I should be worried about. First, I find out you’ve been tasked with building weapons, then I had an odd conversation with your dad, found out we’re having an off-cycle community meeting, and all of a sudden Mom is all over me about marrying Tyler Hewitt.”

“What!” Caleb shouted as he scooted away and turned his body to face her. “You’re not seriously considering marrying that old man, are you?”

“No, but apparently, they’ve talked about it. I pointed out to Mom that he’s eleven years younger than she, but eighteen years older than me. In Tyler’s defense, I can only think of a couple of other eligible women between his age and mine.”

“He has no defense. For him to even be thinking about it, is wrong. When he moved here, you were what? Three? Four? Why now?”

“I think Mom is worried about getting old and leaving me alone. I don’t think she’s been feeling well, but I don’t know if it’s anything serious.”

Caleb stood up and paced. Ash watched him, confused by his reaction.

“I don’t plan to marry Tyler or anyone else not of my choosing. But, I’m not sure why you would care anyway since you’ve got eyes on Evelyn.”

“Where’d you hear that?”

“Apparently, her mother has been telling people that you two have been spending time together.”

“That’s not true. She tagged along when I was delivering deer meat the other day to the storehouse, but that was it. I most certainly didn’t ask her to come with me, and all she did was ask me questions about Dillon. Besides, she’s just a girl.”

Ash chuckled. “If people are happy to pawn me off on a man eighteen years older, a mere four years between you and Evelyn is nothing.”

She watched as Caleb retreated to the water’s edge. He picked up a flat stone and skipped it across its glassy surface. Ash walked to his side and stood next to him.

“We’d better get back. The meeting starts in a couple of hours, and I should help Mom with dinner,” Ash said as she turned to leave.

Caleb grabbed her arm and pulled her back until she was facing him. “Let’s hear what they have to say tonight. If there is some reason why everyone needs to get married, you’re marrying me.”

“And, what if there is no need?” she asked softly.

“Well, maybe we should anyway.”

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About Author Kim McMahill:

Kim McMahill started out writing nonfiction, but her passion for adventure, stories of survival against the odds, and speculating about the future of humanity and our planet, soon turned her attention towards fiction. She has published eleven novels, over eighty travel and human-interest articles, and contributed to a travel story anthology. Growing up in a beautiful mountain west community, traveling the world, and enjoying a twenty-year career with the National Park Service, has given her the opportunity to live in amazing places, experience incredible adventures, and witness many changes in our world, all of which have helped shape her stories.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram / Bookbub

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An Escape Goat: A Zen Goat Mystery
by Janna Rollins

 

 

An Escape Goat: A Zen Goat Mystery
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – New Hampshire
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Level Best Books (March 12, 2024)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 265 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CW1DMVTL

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After finding long-lost family through a DNA test, Callie heads to Bobwhite Hollow, New Hampshire, to meet a great-uncle she never knew existed. Charmed by the village and more than half in love with her new family, she decides to stay and open a goat yoga studio and retreat space.

When retreat guest Angilene Claudson turns up dead with a wine glass shattered at her side and Callie’s favorite goat lapping up the spill, the death is written off as an accidental overdose. But when the goat gets sick, Callie’s gut tells her it wasn’t an accident at all. With her new business on the line and a possible murderer staying in the guesthouse, Callie sets to work to uncover the truth and keep her family safe.

About Janna Rollins

When Janna Rollins isn’t writing, she likes to thumb through New England-based magazines and drool over the pictures. She has a love for red barns, goats, and genealogy. Janna can be found showing her socially awkward side on Facebook or sharing pictures of her tiny one-acre farm on Instagram. She is a member of Sister In Crime, and also writes the Hometown Hardware Mystery series as Paula Charles. Janna lives in Southwestern Washington with her husband and a whole menagerie of furry and feathered critters.

Author Links: Website / Facebook / Instagram / Goodreads

Purchase Links: Amazon – More to Come

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

May 6 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

May 6 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading – REVIEW  

May 6 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – AUTHOR GUEST POST

May 7 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

May 7 – Sneaky the Library Cat’s Blog – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

May 7 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

May 8 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

May 8 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – REVIEW

May 8 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

May 9 – CelticLady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

May 9 – Hearts & Scribbles – SPOTLIGHT

May 9 – Mochas, Mysteries and Meows – CHARACTER GUEST POST

May 10 – Novels Alive – REVIEW

May 10 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

May 10 – Reading Is My SuperPower – REVIEW

May 11 – Elizabeth McKenna – Author – SPOTLIGHT

May 11 – Carla Loves To Read – REVIEW

May 12 – Cozy Up With Kathy -REVIEW

May 12 – StoreyBook Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

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I am thrilled to be hosting a spot on the WIFWULF  by Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly, & Dailen Ogden Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours.

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Check out my review and make sure to enter the giveaway!

 

 

WIFWULF 

Authors: Jackson Lanzing, Collin
Kelly, & Dailen Ogden (Illustrator)

 

 

Pub. Date: May 7, 2024

Publisher: Vault Comics

Formats:  Paperback, eBook

Pages: 112

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Find it: Goodreadshttps://books2read.com/WILWULF

 

Angela Carter’s The Company
of Wolves 
and Emily Carroll’s Through the Woods meet Squad (Maggie
Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle), in WIFWULF – a tale of
transformation, blood, and beauty that calls to the wild freedom of our true
selves within each of us.

A haunting story of deep loneliness, raw wounds, wild magic, and the freedom
of transformation.

Wif. Noun, Old English: A Woman; this word is also the
origina from which the word “wife” is derived. Contrast with “wer,” a man.

Wulf. Noun, Old English: A Wolf, a wild carnivorous mammal
of the Canidae family, which lives and hunts in packs.

WIFWULF is an original folklore myth telling the story of
Charity Bjornsdotter, a young woman in 1860’s Montana who spends her days in
the woods with her closest friend, a local wolf she calls Silver Slash. Charity
is on the precipice of marriage to the most handsome man in her small village,
the mercurial-yet-beloved Paul Skeld. But as her husband isolates her from
Silver Slash, she begins to feel a call to the wilds…for it is there that her
true destiny awaits. WIFWULF is the harrowing tale of a woman forcibly
separated from that which makes her feel alive, a reinterpretation of the
classic werewolf myth… and the origin story of a new goddess.

A successfully funded, beloved project on Kickstarter, WIFWULF explores
a few facets of trauma but especially speaks to relationship abuse, something
that has touched more than one member of the creative team. It’s a story that
reminds us that even when you feel at your most monstrous, you can find your
way back. But not unchanged.

It is also a story about werewolves. About bloody revenge and deep
loneliness. About the secret, sad meaning behind the howls we hear from the
dark forests on the darkest of nights.

Experience this haunting story in the dark of night, in whatever moonlit warren
you call home – or shed your skin, embrace the night, and run wild with magic –
and become forever changed.

This book contains mature content and may not be for everyone. WIFWULF contains
gore, intimate partner violence, body horror, and animal death.

For fans of Emily Carroll’s Through the Woods, Angela
Carter’s The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories (specifically: The
Company of Wolves)
, works by Kelly Link, Carmen Maria Machado’s Her
Body and Other Parties
Squad by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and
Lisa Sterle, Clarissa Pinkola Estés’ Women Who Run With the Wolves:
Myths 
and Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype, Kelly
Armstrong’s Bitten, Pretty Deadly by Kelly Sue DeConnick &
Emma Rios, By Chance or Providence by Becky Cloonan, Monstress by
Marjorie Liu & Sana Takeda, and the films The Witch and Princess
Mononoke 
(Hayao Miyazaki).

“This just may be the most beautiful ‘werewolf’ story I’ve ever consumed in
any medium.”

— Chris Shehan (The Autumnal, House of Slaughter)

“A luscious, vicious fever dream of a fairy tale about the cages we
find ourselves in and the true cost of freedom. WIFWULF is the kind of story
that lingers.”
 — Jody Houser (Harley Quinn & Poison Ivy,
Stranger Things
)

 

MY REVIEW

This was a rather quick read. And that’s why I was so surprised by it’s impact on me.

Charity was a lovely woman of many layers living two lives. One with her abusive husband and one with the forest and a magnificent black wolf called Silver Slash. When she escapes the one she transforms and becomes a wolf goddess.

How her story unfolds is so poignant. I never expected to have tears in my eyes. The illustrations of those first moments were heartbreaking.

As soon as I finished WifWulf I returned to the beginning and took a lot longer on the second read. I took in everything revealed in the beautiful illustrations. Even the more gruesome ones were in some way beautiful.

I appreciated the second half of the book too. The short stories Silver and Pyre were equally fascinating. There’s also some notes explaining how the story first began and the collaboration that brought it to life. And I thought the index on the symbolic plants in the illustrations answered some questions that were stuck in my head.

There was so much to love in this book and nothing not to.

5 STARS

 

 

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Enjoy this peek inside:

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About Author Jackson Lanzing:

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JACKSON LANZING is one half of New York Times Bestselling writing partnership
known as “the Hivemind,” alongside Collin Kelly. The two met in college, where
they first became bitter rivals before becoming best friends. Their work in
comics includes Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty, Kang the Conqueror,
Guardians of the Galaxy, Batman Beyond: Neo-Year, Dark One (with
Brandon Sanderson), Joyride, and Star Trek — for which they received a 2023
Eisner nomination for Best New Series. They also work in film, TV, games and,
and are incredibly proud of their recently released middle-grade novel Thor
Quest: Hammers of the Gods from Marvel Press. They live a few minutes from one
another in Los Angeles, CA — along with their wives and far too many pets —
where they spend their time reading, debating, playing music too loud, and
enjoying every tabletop roleplaying game they can get their hands on.
 

Twitter | Instagram

 

About Author Collin Kelly:

COLLIN KELLY is one half of New York Times Bestselling writing
partnership known as “the Hivemind,” alongside Jackson Lanzing. The two met in
college, where they first became bitter rivals before becoming best friends.
Their work in comics includes Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty, Kang the
Conqueror, Guardians of the Galaxy, Batman Beyond: Neo-Year, Dark
One
 (with Brandon Sanderson), Joyride, and Star Trek — for which
they received a 2023 Eisner nomination for Best New Series. They also work in
film, TV, games and, and are incredibly proud of their recently released
middle-grade novel Thor Quest: Hammers of the Gods from Marvel Press. They live
a few minutes from one another in Los Angeles, CA — along with their wives and
far too many pets — where they spend their time reading, debating, playing
music too loud, and enjoying every tabletop roleplaying game they can get their
hands on.
 

Twitter | Instagram

 

About Author Dailen Ogden:

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DAILEN
OGDEN
 is a
freelance comic artist, writer, and illustrator based in Colorado. Dailen is
known for their esoteric art and comics, and spends their free time collecting
houseplants and raising a Shepherd puppy, as well as a tarantula and a python.

Website | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook 

 

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2 winners  will receive finished copies of WIFWULF , US Only.

Ends May 31st, midnight EST.

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Tour Schedule:

Week One:

4/29/2024

@darkfantasyreviews

Excerpt

4/30/2024

Two Chicks on Books

Excerpt/IG Post

5/1/2024

The Momma Spot

Excerpt

5/2/2024

Comic Book Yeti

Interview/X Post

5/3/2024

Sadie’s
Spotlight

Excerpt/IG Post

5/4/2024

Fire
and Ice Reads

Excerpt/IG Post

Week Two:

5/5/2024

Books and Zebras

IG Review

5/6/2024

@kaylyn_s_booknook

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/7/2024

100 Pages A Day

Review

5/8/2024

The Litt Librarian

Review/IG Post

5/9/2024

FUONLYKNEW

Review

5/10/2024

@enthuse_reader

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/11/2024

Betwixt the Pages

Review/IG Post

Week Three:

5/12/2024

@bookcred

Review/IG Post

5/13/2024

Country Mamas With Kids

Review/IG Post

5/14/2024

Nonbinary Knight Reads

Review/IG Post

5/15/2024

@jaimes_mystical_library

IG Review

5/16/2024

The Book Critic

Review/IG Post

5/17/2024

@stargirls.magical.tale

IG Review

5/18/2024

jlreadstoperpetuity

IG Review/TikTok Post

Week Four:

5/19/2024

@sparks_books

IG Review

5/20/2024

Two Points of Interest

Review

5/21/2024

shereadstales

Review/IG Post

5/22/2024

@alexandriavwilliams_

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/23/2024

nerdophiles

Review

5/24/2024

MoonShineArtSpot

Review/IG Post

 

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

.

The Light Beside the Sea
by Connie di Marco

 


The Light Beside the Sea (A Zodiac Mystery)
Traditional Mystery
5th in Series
Setting – San Francisco, California
Publisher – CMA Literary (May 6, 2024)

Paperback ‏ : ‎ 341 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8989009596
Digital Print length ‏ : ‎ 318 pages
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D393JQ87

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San Francisco astrologer Julia Bonatti has been haunted for years by the hit and run death of her fiancé, Michael Sefton. The driver of the vehicle was never apprehended. The lone witness to the accident spoke to no one and now is dead. Even the cold case detective assigned to the case died before any resolution was found. Every time Julia thought she might be getting close to an answer, each clue led only to a dead end.

Michael, a graduate student, had just returned from an archeological dig in Guatemala when he was killed. But why did he mail his journal to Julia for safekeeping before his return home? What was he afraid of? Why did another graduate student fall to his death on that trip? And now, another man connected with that journey has been murdered closer to home. And the murderer hasn’t finished.

When Julia finally finds the courage to delve into the journal Michael sent to her years before, she learns of the undercurrents, jealousies and anger between members of the group. She begins to understand the pressure and fear her fiancé was coping with and his suspicions of their University mentor who was most likely engaged in unethical and illegal behavior.
But events soon take a darker turn when Julia finds a likeness of the Maya god Hunhau, god of death and the underworld, on her doorstep. A strange man covered with markings and tattoos keeps appearing to her but no one else seems to see him. With guidance from another professor she’s introduced to a world she never knew existed.

Is the man she sees human? And is he under the sway of the Maya god of death?

Will he unleash evil or is he here to right a wrong done to his people?

Julia must move quickly or her death will be the next.

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Enjoy this peek inside:

The young man shivered in the cold storage unit.  He rubbed his hands together briskly in an attempt to stay warm and keep his fingers flexible.  He must remain steady to complete the delicate work required.  A harsh overhead light flooded the space, illuminating from above, but leaving long shadows on the concrete floor.  A work light clamped to the bench allowed him a clear view of the shards of pottery laid out before him.

He breathed deeply, willing himself to concentrate.  These pieces would need to be matched perfectly if these artifacts were to have any value at all.  He’d been chosen for this task because of his craftsman-like ability, his extreme attention to detail and his love of these objects.  Each piece brought back, smuggled back actually, under great duress.  He had no ethical objections as to how all these pieces, perhaps two hundred when all was said and done, were retrieved from their native country.  They would be well-cared for, displayed and lauded.  Museum quality pieces, in fact.  Far better here in the U.S., being restored in an anonymous storage space than laying in the dust of an illiterate and superstitious population.

He was sweating in spite of the cold.  But now at least his hands were steady as he gently lifted two pieces that promised to fit together perfectly.  Some microscopic shards might be missing, but he was sure he could recreate this precious piece almost as it once was when first made.  He wiped perspiration from his forehead with his sleeve and then rubbed his hands on a nearby towel.  He pulled thin cotton gloves over his fingers and with the back of his wrist, pushed his eyeglasses up the bridge of his nose.  He was hungry and tired but he didn’t want to stop.  This work was too important.  If done perfectly, it would ensure his own success at the university.  Nothing would stand in the way of his doctorate now.

He moved a magnifying glass on a flexible arm closer, studying the two pieces of pottery carefully.  He smiled in relief, even the tiny grooves would mesh perfectly.  An odor assailed his nose, breaking his concentration.  He looked around the utilitarian space.  Was something burning outside the unit, some substance that gave off a strange pungent odor?  Who knew what went on in a place like this?  A warehouse of impersonal rented spaces.  For all he knew, people were living here, hunkered down in gritty storage units.  He pushed away the thought that these precious items could be in danger from some idiot.  Perhaps a homeless person had started a fire to stay warm.  Could be anything.  He shook his head to drive the thought from his mind and refocus on his work.

The smell became stronger.  He pulled his eyes away from the magnifying glass and looked around.  He was alone in the small space but couldn’t escape the feeling of a presence nearby.  A shiver ran up his spine.  Nerves, he thought.  He was imagining things, but he hadn’t imagined that odor.  He turned back to his task and shuddered as if fingers had stroked the back of his neck.  His heart was racing.  He took a deep breath and willed himself to concentrate once more.  He really was imagining things.  As he bent to his task, he felt it again.  Some . .  thing was here.  Something was in this space.  His hands began to shake.  He gently placed the two pieces of pottery on the workbench and stood up, pushing the rolling chair away.  He rubbed his eyes.  Was that a sound?  Perhaps a rat?  He shivered uncontrollably.  His nerves were getting the best of him.  Perhaps he was too exhausted to do the job he needed to do.  He should return in the morning after a good night’s sleep.  That, and a decent meal.

He eyes swept the space.  The odor was gone now, dissipated.  But still.  He couldn’t shake the impression he was being watched, that someone or something was close to him.  Something quite . . . unpleasant.  He pulled off the fine cotton gloves and straightened the small work bench.  He couldn’t admit it to himself, but he was spooked.  It was more than exhaustion or hunger.  Something was wrong.  What it was he couldn’t put a name to, but perhaps tomorrow, in the light of day, he could shake this feeling.

He switched off the work light and pushed the magnifier away.  The overhead light left long shadows around the space, empty except for his small work area and a few crates.  Yes, he thought, his imagination was working overtime.  There was no one here.  No one in this unit with him.  He shook his head to dispel the feeling.  He grabbed his jacket and backpack, fishing his car keys out of his pocket, and lifted the corrugated metal door to the corridor.  Blinded temporarily by the bright neon lights, he glanced in both directions.  Empty.  Not a soul at this hour.  He flicked the switch inside the storage unit, plunging it into darkness and stepped out.  He closed and locked the entrance and headed down the hallway to the exit door.  A sudden chill ran up his spine.  He turned quickly only to face a deserted hallway.  He regretted his decision to leave but it was too late to go back now.  If he was honest with himself, there was no way he wanted to be locked in that storage room.  Not tonight.  He had to get out of here.  A panicked feeling rose in his chest.

He hurried down the long corridor, almost in a trot.  He’d be fine, he thought, if he could just get to his car.  Only a few yards from the rear exit.  It would take only a moment or two.  He pushed through the outer door and took a deep breath of the chill night air.  He felt better immediately.  Nothing was wrong.  He was just exhausted.  He hurried across the concrete parking area and pushed the fob to unlock his car.  He glanced back at the brightly lit doorway he had just exited.  A man stood by the doorway under a glaring outdoor light.  A large bare-chested man with dark skin, his torso covered in markings, glyphs or tattoos that overran the skin of his body, trailing up his neck, his face painted with black and red vertical stripes.  Dark eyes burned deep in a solemn face, a heavy collar of feathers, beads and animal claws encircled his neck.  A chill ran through him again.  The stranger looked like a . . . medicine man, a shaman of sorts from the jungles he had visited not too long ago.  What was this strange creature doing here?  In San Francisco?  It wasn’t just his imagination.  Someone had been close all along, had followed his progress down the corridor.  The man’s black eyes stared directly at him.  A deep sense of fear overwhelmed him.  Panicking, he wrenched his driver’s door open.  His world went black as the blow struck.  The tattooed man was the last thing he would ever see.

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About Connie di Marco

Connie di Marco is the author of the Zodiac Mysteries featuring San Francisco astrologer Julia Bonatti, a woman who never thought murder would be part of her practice.  The fifth book in this series, The Light Beside the Sea, has just been released.

Writing as Connie Archer, she is also the author of the national bestselling Soup Lover’s Mysteries from Berkley Prime Crime.  You can find her excerpts and recipes in The Cozy Cookbook and The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook.  Connie is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Crime Writers Association, International Thriller Writers and Sisters in Crime.

Author Links: Blog / Facebook / Twitter/X / Instagram / Goodreads

Purchase Links – Amazon

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

May 6 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

May 7 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR GUEST POST

May 8 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

May 9 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

May 10 – Brooke Blogs – SPOTLIGHT

May 11 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

May 12 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

May 13 – StoreyBook Reviews – AUTHOR GUEST POST

May 14 – Socrates’ Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

May 15 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

May 16 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

May 17 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW

May 18 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

May 19 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – REVIEW

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

 

KNIFE RIVER by Baron R Birtcher Banner

KNIFE RIVER
by Baron R Birtcher
April 15 – May 10, 2024 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

Synopsis:
A sheriff fighting to keep the peace in 1970s Oregon faces a shocking secret from his town’s past, in this crime thriller from the author of Reckoning.

There are rules in the West no matter what era you were born in, and it’s up to lawman Ty Dawson to make sure they’re followed in the valley he calls home. The people living on this unforgiving land keep to themselves and are wary of the modern world’s encroachment into their quiet lives. So it’s not without some suspicion that Dawson confronts a newcomer to the region: a record producer who has built a music studio in an isolated compound. His latest project is a collaboration with a famous young rock star named Ian Swann, recording and filming his sessions for a movie. An amphitheater for a live show is being built on the land, giving Dawson flashbacks to the violent Altamont concert. Not on his watch. But even beefed up security can’t stop a disaster that’s been over a decade in the making. All it takes is one horrific case bleeding its way into the present to prove that the good ol’ days spawned a brand of evil no one wants to revisit . . .

 

Book Details:

Genre: Crime Thriller

Published by: Open Road Media Publication Date: April 23, 2024 Number of Pages: 338 ISBN: 9781504086523 (ISBN10: 150408652X) Series: The Sheriff Ty Dawson Crime Thriller Series

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

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MY REVIEW

Praise for Knife River mentions the television series, Longmire. I loved that show and Sheriff Ty Dawson is every bit as pragmatic and tough as Sheriff Longmire.

The story begins with a prelude hinting at something that happened in 1964 in Meriwether County, Oregon. Twelve years later, in 1976, the ghosts of the past come back to haunt those that survived it.

I love western settings. My father and I would stay up late watching them on the television and my brother shared his Zane Grey books with me. I had my fingers and toes crossed that this book would have a hard to solve mystery, but also some rough and tumble cowboys. Those tall drinks of water with their sweat stained cowboy hats and dusty boots. Boy did I get all of that, and more. A particular quote from the book spoke volumes.

“I believe you told me you were born seeing the world between a horse’s ears.” I said. “Wouldn’t be right for me to keep a man from his birthplace.”

I’m kind of a character driven story kind of gal also. I need to be able to put a face to them. To connect with them. Whether in a good or bad way. Author Baron Birtcher really did use his storytelling skills to breathe life into his characters. It was so easy to put faces to names. I imagined how they moved. Their stride. Whether they stood still or waved their arms for emphasis when they talked.

The author also painted pretty pictures with his descriptions of Meriwether and the Diamond D ranch.  One quote in particular put me there.

“Smells like horse sweat and juniper out here,” she said. “Smells like home.”

I knew from the moment I read the first page that this would be one of those books that couldn’t be put aside for later. I started it before I went to work. Came home for lunch and read until I was late returning. And came home and stayed up to finish it. There are not that many books that grab me like this one did. Knife River now sits in a place of honor on my book shelf. The shelf where I keep those books that I loved so much I wanted them where I could easily find them. Some books are meant to be read more than once. This is one of them.

5 STARS

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Read an excerpt:
Prelude:
FACING WEST
SOME SAY THAT to be born into a thing is to be blind to half of it. Oftentimes, the things we seek and discover for ourselves are those we hold most dear. Any cattleman will tell you that a ranch is a living thing. Not only the livestock that graze the meadowland, but the blood that nourishes the hungry soil, the trees that inhale the wind, and the rain that carves runnels into the hardpan that, in time, grow into rivers. The Diamond D is no different in that respect, some would even say it was the beating heart of Meriwether County, Oregon. As both a stockman and the sheriff of this county, I believe this to be true. But the events that unfolded in the autumn of 1964 cast a cloud across that land. Not just across my ranch, but the entire valley, though they didn’t bear their terrible fruit until nearly a dozen years later, in the spring of 1976. The incidents still haunt me, though others paid a steeper price than I; some with their lives, or the lives of their loved ones, while some forfeit their sanity, and still others with their souls. That is where this story begins.  

CHAPTER ONE

LAMBS AND LIONS hold no sway over the springtime here in Meriwether County. Some years it will snow through mid-May, other times the golden sun rides high and bright, and the river flows fast, clear and deep with high-country melt on the first day of March. Most years, it’s both, with Mother Nature keeping her whims to herself until she alone decides to turn them loose upon us. But this particular Saturday morning was unusually quiet, not even a breath of breeze stirring the leaves of the cottonwoods that grew thick and untamed along the creekbank. I was standing outside on the gallery, sipping my coffee as I leaned on the porch rail, watching my wife, Jesse, hammer the last nail into a birdbox she had made. She must have felt my eyes on her, as she looked up from her work and smiled. A few moments later, she stepped up the stairs to where I stood and kissed me on the cheek, smelling of sawdust and lemongrass tea. “The bluebirds are back,” she said. “I just saw them.” “You haven’t lost your knack for building those things.” “Plenty of practice. You got home late last night.” I had spent the previous day transporting a man all the way from Lewiston up to the Portland lockup to await his trial. He stood accused of murdering his own wife and young child. It had been a long, depressing day, and by the time I completed the intake paperwork, locked up the substation in Meridian, and finally drove home to the ranch, Jesse was already asleep. But this morning, everything in her expression seemed overflowing with hope and expectation. Springtime was her season and always had been. “Want a hand putting that thing up?” I asked. She replied by handing it to me, together with the hammer. She watched me hang the birdbox on a post beside the vegetable garden, outside the kitchen window where I knew she’d spend her quiet mornings secretly observing the bluebirds as they built their nest and reared their brood. “You plan on helping Caleb pick the new cowboys today?” She asked me when I came back inside. It was the time of year when we hired a few temporary hands for Spring Works, when we’d round-up the cattle and calves from every corner of the ranch; we’d vet, brand and sort the livestock, and mend a perpetual string of breaks in the wire along miles of fenceline before we turned the herd out to the pastures for summer grazing. The Diamond D employed three permanent cowboys in addition to me and old Caleb Wheeler—our foreman for more than three decades—but with 63,000 deeded acres and another 14,000 under a Land Management lease, Spring Works was more work than the five of us could handle in the short span of time required to get it done. Every year a couple dozen hopeful itinerant riders, ropers, rodeo bums and saddle-tramps would answer the call for a temporary employment opportunity, and every year Caleb Wheeler got more riled up about what he viewed as the eroding quality of the contemporary American cowboy. He’d cuss and grump and holler about it, but he’d end up settling on three or four hands he reckoned could help us get the job done with a minimum of aggravation. “I’m staying out of it this year,” I said, and Jesse grinned. “Figured I’d lay in a cord or two for the woodshed instead, before the weather gets too hot.” “I saw some deadfall down by Corcoran’s,” she said. “That’s where I was headed.” “Make you some lunch to take with you?” “I don’t intend to be out that long.” “Good to hear,” she said, and winked at me before she turned, and stepped inside the house.   * * *   HALF AN HOUR later I was straddling a fallen spruce, angling the chainsaw to buck the trunk into three-foot rounds that I’d later split into quarters with the long-handled axe. The solitary labor, the sweat staining my shirt, and the burn down deep inside my muscles were a welcome balm after the week I’d had, and the air was rife with the smell of pine tar, sap and chain oil. I looked up and caught some movement in the distance, where the BLM forest gave onto an open range already knee deep with wildflowers and whipgrass. I recognized Tom Jenkins’ roping horse moving hellbent-for-leather across the flats, with young Tom leaning across her withers, one hand on the reins and the other holding his hat in place on top of his head. His mount was an admirable animal, a grullo Quarter Horse that stood nearly seventeen hands, fast and thick through the chest. Tom Jenkins handled her well, and he was beelining in my direction like he had something on his mind. I killed the power on the chainsaw and set it in the bed of the military surplus jeep I use when I do ranch work, stepped over to the fence and took a splash of water from the canteen I’d hung in the shade of a young cedar. I didn’t have to wait long before Tom pulled up in a skidding stop inside a cloud of dust, throwing a cascade of torn earth and pebbles through the barbed strands of the wire. “Mr. Dawson,” he said and touched a finger to his hat brim, sounding nearly as breathless as his horse. “I was hoping that was you.” “What are you doing out here all by yourself?” I asked, but suspected I already knew the answer. When I’d first met Tom Jenkins, he was nothing but a kid with a limp handshake, no eye-contact, and the familiar slope-shouldered gait and posture of the typical aimless teenaged slacker. At that time, he’d been well on his way to serious trouble, the variety and scope of which would have landed him in a six-by-eight jail cell where the other inmates would have eaten him alive. He is the nephew of my neighbor to the south of me, Snoose Corcoran, whose sister had sent the kid up here from California’s central valley to his uncle’s ranch in southeastern Oregon in hopes of putting some distance between young Tom and his unquestionably poor choices of acquaintances. Ill-equipped to deal with the boy himself, Snoose begged me to take the kid on as a maverick, and I’d reluctantly agreed. After six months working side by side with trail hardened cowboys on the Diamond D young Tom Jenkins’ attitude had been readjusted, straightening both his spine and fortitude. Now, at barely 18 years of age, Tom had assumed the reins of the floundering Corcoran cattle operation from his uncle Snoose, who had been gradually disappearing into a bottle. “Cow and a calf went missing from my place,” Tom answered. “Fence busted by the westward line, and I figured them two mighta headed for the water.” My ranch hands ended up nicknaming the kid “Silver,” after he’d astonished us all by stepping up and winning a silver buckle for the Diamond D in the team roping event at the annual rodeo. I knew Tom secretly treasured the handle they’d bestowed, wore it like a medal, but I never spoke it; that was between my men and him. “Where’s your uncle?” I asked. His shrug spoke sorrowful volumes. “So, what set you hightailing over here to see me, son?” I asked. “What’s the trouble? Besides the missing beeves.” “I was up there on the other side of the tree line,” he said. He twisted sideways in his saddle, took off his hat and gestured with it toward a distant stretch of blue sky. “There was an eagle making low passes over the meadow, so I stopped to watch it for a minute. It was so still and quiet out there, I could hear the eagle calling out while it was gliding on the thermals.” “You don’t see something like that every day,” I said. “Not even out here in the boondocks.” “No sir, that’s a fact,” Tom said. “But, while I sat there watching that creature flying, all of a sudden and out of nowhere, a helicopter come buzzing across the ridge, you know the one…” “Big stone bluff, looks like somebody cut it down the middle with a KA-BAR knife.” “That’s the one,” he said. “Well, that chopper came in fast, and went straight toward that bird…” The young man’s voice trailed off, his face contorted like he’d encountered a foul odor. “They circled it as it flew, like they were teasing it. Two men inside the—whattaya call it?” “Cockpit.” “Yeah, the cockpit. Then they started closing in on him, chasing it. The guy in the passenger seat had a rifle in his hands. I could see the barrel sticking out.” What Tom was describing to me was not only a despicable and loathsome act, it was a serious crime. The mere harassment of a protected species is a federal offense; hunting and killing one merely for the sick thrill of it was another matter entirely. “What happened, Tom?” He swallowed drily, shook his head and looked down at the ground between us. “He shot that bird right out of the sky, sir,” he said. “That eagle wasn’t even doing nothing, just gliding circles on the wind, and those assholes—sorry, sir—they shot him cold dead.” I could imagine the creature’s confused and lonely cry as it spiraled down, bleeding, terrified and helpless, to the earth. “You pretty sure about the location, Tom?” “About four, five miles thataway, near the bluff, where the river makes that sharp bend to the south.” “Did you get a look at either of the men?” “Naw, they were too far away and moving pretty fast. But I got a good look at the whirlybird.” I asked him for a description of the helicopter, and I knew right away he was referring to a Bell H-13, known to soldiers as a “Sioux.” They’d been in common use as scouting and medical evacuation aircraft by the military. I’d seen them every day when I was stationed in Korea. “Like the choppers on that TV show?” I asked. “Yes, sir. Exactly like on M*A*S*H.” “Big glass bubble on the front? No doors? Looks kinda like a dragonfly?” “Yes, sir.” “Did you see any numbers written on it? On the tail? Or maybe on the underside?” Tom Jenkins pressed his hat back on his head and gazed up at the empty sky beyond the forest, like he could return that beautiful animal to where it rightfully belonged through sheer force of his will. The high peaks beyond the meadow were streaked with deep blue shadows in the sunlight, their cloughs and gorges washed in purple and topped with snow so white it hurt your eyes. “I’m sorry, sir,” he said. “I don’t remember seeing numbers or anything like that.” His face took on the aspect of defeat, as though some personal failure had cost the animal its life. “You did good, Tom. You did the right thing coming to me straight away. There was nothing else you could have done.” He nodded once, his lips pressed tight, and he leaned down to adjust a stirrup that needed no adjustment. “You want some help finding your cows?” I asked, thinking he might appreciate the company. “I can do it, sir, but thank you. I can haze ’em back home on my own.” “You gotta get eyeballs on the critters first. I can help you, son.” “Thank you just the same, Mr. Dawson… Sheriff… Hell, I don’t even know what to call you.” His expression softened for the first time since he’d showed up, a brief and fleeting smile, then his focus drifted far away again. “Something else, Tom?” “Just wondering.” “Wondering what?” “Do you think you can catch those guys who shot that bird?” “I’m going to try my damndest.” His eyes remained fixed on the horizon. “What’ll happen to ’em if you do?” I drew a bandana from the back pocket of my jeans, removed my hat, and dried the sweat that had been leaking from beneath the band. “It’s been against the law to kill an eagle since the 1940s. If you’re not an Indian, you can’t even possess a single feather. If you get caught, you pay a steep fine and then they send you off to jail. If you’re a rancher, you could lose the leases on your land.” Tom turned his gaze back on me, and I noted for the hundredth time that this young man no longer bore any resemblance to the person he had been on the day he first arrived here from California. “That punishment don’t seem tough enough,” Tom said. “Not for what I seen ’em do.” “No, it doesn’t.” He clucked softly to his horse, and reined her back in the direction from which they’d come. “I’d better get a move on,” he said. “Be careful out there, son,” I said to his retreating back, but my words were lost in the distance. *** Excerpt from KNIFE RIVER by Baron R Birtcher. Copyright 2024 by Baron R Birtcher. Reproduced with permission from Baron R Birtcher. All rights reserved.

 

 

About Author Baron Birtcher:

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Baron R Birtcher

Baron Birtcher is the LA TIMES and IMBA BESTSELLING author of the hardboiled Mike Travis series (Roadhouse Blues, Ruby Tuesday, Angels Fall, and Hard Latitudes), the award-winning Ty Dawson series (South California Purples, Fistful Of Rain, Reckoning, and Knife River), as well as the critically-lauded stand-alone, RAIN DOGS. Baron is a winner of the SILVER FALCHION AWARD, and the WINNER of 2018’s Killer Nashville READERS CHOICE AWARD, as well as 2019’s BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR for Fistful Of Rain. He has also had the honor of having been named a finalist for the NERO AWARD, the LEFTY AWARD, the FOREWORD INDIE AWARD, the 2016 BEST BOOK AWARD, the Pacific Northwest’s regional SPOTTED OWL AWARD, and the CLAYMORE AWARD. Baron’s writing has been hailed as “The real deal” by Publishers Weekly; “Fast Paced and Engaging” by Booklist; and “Solid, Fluent and Thrilling” by Kirkus. “YOU WANT TO READ BIRTCHER’S BOOKS, THEN YOU WANT TO LIVE IN THEM” ~ Don Winslow, NYT Bestselling author “BIRTCHER IS PART POET, PART PHILOSOPHER, AND A CONSUMMATE WRITER” ~ Reed Farrel Coleman, NYT Bestselling author “REMINISCENT OF THE LATE, GREAT ELMORE LEONARD” ~ Shots Magazine (UK)

Catch Up With Baron R Birtcher: Facebook – @BaronRBirtcher Goodreads BookBub Instagram – @baronbirtcher_author Twitter/X – @BaronBirtcher22

 

 

Tour Participants:

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

 

Win Big! Enter Now for Your Chance to Win!

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

 

 

 

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.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.



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Whiskey with Wolves

by Erica Spray

 

Publication date: May 7th 2024
Genres: Adult, Paranormal, Romance

Sadie Crowe is a runaway hoping to make a better future for herself, but she soon discovers what it means to truly be on her own. While trying to survive bartending in the middle of nowhere, Sadie is swept away by promises of money and an easy life by an enigmatic stranger. The grown-up world makes one dark turn after another, and Sadie must find her way through torment into the light of her future.

Goodreads / Amazon

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About Author Erica Spray:

Born and raised in Southwest Louisiana taught me how to spin stories naturally. The culture, the flair, and the people really made it a magical place as a child. In a lot of my writings I still use Louisiana as the location because in a place as wild and tight-knit as Southern Louisiana, the possibilities are endless.

I knew I wanted to be a writer since I was in middle school. When i was in my thirties I knew that writing was my true calling in life. Just for the record, if something is your true calling, it will never stop calling you. Writing never stopped calling me and i’m glad that I finally listened and decided to take that leap.

You’ll learn pretty quickly that my novels are mysterious and thrilling. I hope to always bring that element of surprise in each book ending. Think you have me figured out? Think again.

Website / Facebook / Instagram

 

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a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

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I am thrilled to be hosting a spot on the THE CEMETERIANS: The Complete Series by Daniel Kraus & Maan House Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours.

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Check out my review and make sure to enter the giveaway!

 

THE CEMETERIANS: The Complete Series

by Authors: Daniel Kraus & Maan House (Illustrator)

 

 

Pub. Date: April 23, 2024

Publisher: Vault Comics

Formats:  Paperback, eBook

Pages: 124

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Find it: Goodreadshttps://books2read.com/THE-CEMETERIANS-The-Complete-Series 

 

The X-Files meets Wake
the Bones
 in THE CEMETERIANS: The Complete Series, an
eerie, genre-blending story filled with horror, magic, mystery, fantasy,
darkness, and bones that grow where they shouldn’t.

Some things won’t stay buried.
After human bones begin growing inside inanimate objects all across the globe,
a renegade scientist and brilliant theologian delve into the cemeteries where
the bones originated, discovering an otherworldly force tired of being buried
in darkness.
The Cemeterians will chill you to the bone.

Written by New York Times bestselling author Daniel Kraus (The
Shape of Water, Trollhunters (both with Guillermo del Toro), Rotters, Graveyard
Girls, The Living Dead (with George Romero) The Teddies Saga, Whalefall 
(his
latest), and The Autumnal (for Vault Comics)) and illustrated
by critically-acclaimed and atmospheric artist Maan House (Witchblade,
Krampus, Project Blue Book
).

For fans of The X-Files, Poltergeist, Glitch, Wake the Bones (Elizabeth
Kilcoyne), Rotters, Graveyard Girls, and The Living
Dead
 (Daniel Kraus), Pet Sematary (Stephen
King), Cemetery Girl (Charlaine Harris & Christopher
Golden), and The Resurrectionist of Caligo (Wendy Trimboli
& Alicia Zaloga)

PRAISE FOR THE CEMETERIANS:
The Cemeterians (Nightfall: Double Feature) was named one of
the “Horror comics to watch for in 2023” – Fangoria

“Tactile, fearsome, haunting — this is horror of the finest quality.” – Multiversity
Comics

“Transformative, boundary-pushing horror.” – Gatecrashers

 

MY REVIEW

If you’re reading my review then I’m sure you read the synopsis and high praise for this wild series. It’s out there. In the best possible way.

Human bones start appearing in inanimate objects, sometimes causing harm or death to those who are there when it happens. What’s causing it? Two people with very different views on science and religion go where no man was meant to go and find out.

I had a blast with the series. When I found out what was really going on, it made me stop and appreciate the story even more. I’d never have seen that coming.

And the illustrations. Horror candy is what I call it. Just….. whoa!

4 STARS

 

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Enjoy this peek inside:

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About Author Daniel Kraus:

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DANIEL KRAUS is a New York Times bestselling
author. His posthumous collaboration with legendary filmmaker George A.
Romero, The Living Dead, was acclaimed by The New York
Times 
and The Washington Post.

Kraus’s The Death and Life of Zebulon Finch was named one
of Entertainment Weekly‘s Top 10 Books of the Year. With Guillermo
del Toro, he co-authored The Shape
of Water
, based on the same idea the two created for the Oscar-winning
film. Also with del Toro, Kraus co-authored Trollhunters,
which was adapted into the Emmy-winning Netflix series. Kraus has won a Scribe
Award, two Odyssey Awards (for both Rotters and Scowler)
and has been a Library Guild selection, YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults,
Bram Stoker finalist, and more.

Kraus’s work has been translated into over 25 languages. He lives with his wife
in Chicago. 

Website | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads

 

About Author Maan House:

House kicked off his professional comics career at Top Cow as
the artist on both Witchblade and Cutter (2014-2015).
During that time, he also illustrated the Krampus: Shadow of Saint
Nicholas, 
the comic adaptation of the movie Krampus, for
Legendary.

In 2018, House illustrated the comic for Project Blue Book, the
accompanying comic (from Titan) for the History Channel’s television series.
He’s also worked on Godkillers (Aftershock), as well as developing
an anthology comic work for the band Anthrax entitled Among the Living,
along with other writers and artists.

Maan House is a Ringo Awards Nominee for Best Cover Artist (2021)
He is based in Montevideo, Uruguay

 

Website | Twitter | Tumblr

 

 

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2 winners will receive finished copies of THE CEMETERIANS: The Complete Series, US Only.

Ends May 31st, midnight EST.

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Tour Schedule:

Week One:

4/29/2024

Two Chicks on Books

Interview/IG Post

4/30/2024

The Momma Spot

Excerpt

5/1/2024

Comic Book Yeti

Interview/X Post

5/2/2024

@darkfantasyreviews

Excerpt

5/3/2024

Fire
and Ice Reads

Excerpt/IG Post

5/4/2024

Sadie’s
Spotlight

Excerpt/IG Post

Week Two:

5/5/2024

@enthuse_reader

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/6/2024

@lexijava

IG Review

5/7/2024

FUONLYKNEW

Review

5/8/2024

Fiction Lux

Review/IG Post

5/9/2024

@bookcred

Review/IG Post

5/10/2024

@dana.loves.books

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/11/2024

Nonbinary Knight Reads

Review/IG Post

Week Three:

5/12/2024

Country Mamas With Kids

Review/IG Post

5/13/2024

@jaimes_mystical_library

IG Review

5/14/2024

@evergirl200

IG Review

5/15/2024

The Book Critic

Review/IG Post

5/16/2024

jlreadstoperpetuity

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/17/2024

@sparks_books

IG Review

5/18/2024

shereadstales

Review/IG Post

Week Four:

5/19/2024

@alexandriavwilliams_

IG Review/TikTok Post

5/20/2024

nerdophiles

Review

5/21/2024

MoonShineArtSpot

Review/IG Post

5/22/2024

Betwixt the Pages

Review/IG Post

5/23/2024

GryffindorBookishnerd

IG Review

5/24/2024

Two Points of Interest

Review

 

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

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

Author Karen Hulene Bartell will award 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.

Fox Tale

by Karen Hulene Bartell

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Genre: Paranormal Romance

Synopsis

Heights terrify Ava. When a stranger saves her from plunging down a mountain, he diverts her fears with tales of Japanese kitsune—shapeshifting foxes—and she begins a journey into the supernatural.

She’s attracted to Chase, both physically and metaphysically, yet primal instincts urge caution when shadows suggest more than meets the eye.

She’s torn between Chase and Rafe, her ex, when a chance reunion reignites their passion, but she struggles to overcome two years of bitter resentment. Did Rafe jilt her, or were they pawns of a larger conspiracy? Are the ancient legends true of kitsunes twisting time and events?

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Enjoy this peek Inside:

The kitten crawled on the pillow, purring in my ear as he kneaded my neck and shoulders with his silky paws.

“That actually feels good.” I chuckled at the irony, then exhausted, fell into a deep sleep. I found myself sitting on a shaded, grassy slope. A gentle breeze fluttered against my cheek.

No, not a breeze, Chase.

He caressed my cheek as he swept my hair behind my ear and whispered sweet nothings. His breath tickling, he nuzzled my neck.

Goosebumps slid down my spine.

Then he massaged my back. Ever so gradually, his fingers slid over my nipples, circling and gently pinching my areolas to erection. Then he lifted off my shirt while he tongued and suckled at my breast.

As latent yearnings awakened, I arched my back, enjoying the waves of sensation. With a shudder, I moaned, pulling him toward me in a deep kiss.

His growing erection pressing against my groin, his hands cupped my bottom as he rolled me on top.

Bbbrrringg, bbbrrringg, bbbrrringg.

As the alarm jolted me awake, the heat rose to my cheeks, and I scanned the surroundings to get my bearings. Mortified, I cringed beneath the sheets. What have I done? Then relieved to see only the kitten for a bed partner, I gave a nervous laugh. It was a dream–just a dream.

The kitten uncurled from between my legs, purring.

Embarrassed by the sensations it elicited, I scrambled to my feet. Did the kitten trigger those dreams?

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About Author Karen Hulene Bartell:

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Author of the Trans-Pecos and Sacred Emblem series, Karen is a best-selling author, keynote speaker, wife, and all-around pilgrim of life, who writes multicultural, offbeat love stories. Born to rolling-stone parents who moved often, Bartell found her earliest playmates as fictional friends in books. Paperbacks became her portable pals. Ghost stories kept her up at night—reading feverishly. The paranormal was her passion. Novels offered an imaginative escape. An only child, she began writing her first novel at the age of nine, learning the joy of creating her own happy endings. Professor emeritus of the University of Texas at Austin, Karen resides in the Texas Piney Woods with her husband Peter and her “mews”—three rescued cats and a rescued *Cat*ahoula Leopard dog.

 

Connect with Karen:  Facebook / MeWe / Twitter / Instagram / Goodreads 

Website / Email / Amazon / BookBub / LinkedIn

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a Rafflecopter giveaway

~~~~~

Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.



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Another Side of the Heart

by C.H. Lazarovich

 

Publication date: September 29th 2023
Genres: Adult, Contemporary

One summer. One dog. One chance encounter.

When Mary Devere encounters a young woman the same age as her dead daughter, Mary connects with her, only to discover that the young woman’s father is Antonio, Mary’s first love. Mary finds herself questioning the sacrifices she made to live the life she thought she should, and the difficult choice she made as a teenager that changed her life’s course.

Easy to read. Easy to love.

In a touching, emotional and moving account of a woman in midlife, Mary finds herself navigating her grief surrounding the loss of her only child, questioning her sacrifices to live a life she thought she should, and confronting the memories of the choice she made as a teenager that changed her life’s course, all while placing her back in the arms of Antonio.

From Readers’ Favorite 5-Star author C. H. Lazarovich comes the moving story of a woman’s awakening.

Goodreads / Amazon

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Enjoy this peek inside:

Outside a mourning dove cries in its new nest in the birch tree, at the same time a small fishing boat on the bay glides by. Before washing my hands, I remove my wedding band, put it on a saucer, and think of Mark, wondering where he is. Though I’m a little lonely, I don’t want him here. I think of the other night and seeing Antonio at his house. I know I’ve never felt the same feelings with Mark that I had with Antonio. I don’t remember feelings of wanting him badly to be with me. Did I trade true love for comfort?

Being with Mark has meant there’d always be safety, certainty, and security for me. But as Patsy said, Mark himself has not been a constant for me. He’s a man prone toward selfishness, a man not understanding of his partner’s essential nature. He has tried, but what that’s meant is giving me more things to replace the intangible cravings I’ve had: to be seen, heard, listened to.

I can’t say for sure what my life with Antonio might have been. But I can remember like yesterday the yearnings I had for him, those of both purity and lust.

Someone knocks at the door. “Carmen, the door’s open. Come in.”

Karma, wagging her tail, runs from the kitchen to our visitor, whining happily.

“Carmen?” I yell from the kitchen while chopping a banana. “I’m in the kitchen making a fruit salad. The hammer’s on the table. And thank you for the string beans.” The footsteps come closer, then stop.

“It’s not Carmen.”

I turn, see the dark-and-silver-hair. The square jaw. The unmistakable dimples.

It’s Antonio.

He wears faded jean, a black cotton T-shirt, scuffed black work boots. “I heard you say to come in … I hope you don’t mind.” Karma sniffs his boots, licks his fingertips. He smiles broadly, points at the knife I’m holding. “Or maybe I shouldn’t have. You’re not going to rush at me with that, are you?”

I look down. My knife is aimed at him. “No, no. I was making a … I thought you were my neighbor …” The words fade. I lay the knife on the cutting board, wipe my hands with the dish towel.

His eyes melt my being. He takes an easy step toward me and nods in a familiar way, a primitive way, pulling me in like the moon pulls the sea. He studies me, missing little and holds up a clipboard. He wears a watch with a black complex face and black leather band. “I told you I’d send someone over to take a look at your house.” In one swoop, he examines the cottage.

“My house?” I ask.

He bites his lip. “You said you need some repairs?”

“Oh right,” I say, heat rising in my neck.

“My crews are all over town,” he says. “So you get the boss today. Wanna show me around?”

“Sure.”

He follows me to the front door. I hold it open, giving him unsaid permission to exit first.When he steps over the threshold, the skin of his forearm skims my shoulder.

His movements, even and fluid, arouse me. I watch the braid of back muscles tighten when he descends under the house searching for the cause of a water stain.

Later, I walk him to the door, and I can tell that he, too, is feeling unsure what to do next. He follows up with a half hug, and then, “Are you going to the Fourth of July bonfire at the vineyard?”

I feel flutters. “I saw their flier, but haven’t thought about it, but yes, I’ll go.”

“Good. See you there. And I’ll be in touch about your house.”

I satay at the door and watch him step into his truck. My heart races as he leaves.

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About Author C. H. Lazarovich:

C. H. Lazarovich is the author of “Another Side of the Heart.” The debut novel is sparking excitement with early readers: The story “is so much about marriage, motherhood, abortion, resurrecting an old love, decisions a woman makes about childbearing, youth choices … ” and “The novel owes more to literary fiction with its beautifully nuanced and multi-layered narrative … ” Lazarovich, who lives in southern New Jersey, has been a freelance journalist under her real name Catherine Laughlin for magazines and newspapers, and teaches writing at Temple University Klein College of Media and Communication. Lazarovich has said that she gravitates to stories that chronicle the experiences of midlife women, and that there’s a complexity to the lives of older women that’s often underplayed in the arts. She hopes “Another Side of the Heart” fulfills some of that void.

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Book Details:

The Heaven Spot (A Novel) by Mary Frances Hill
Category:  Adult Fiction (18+),  296 pages
Genre: Thriller/Mystery
PublisherMary Frances Hill
Release date:  February 2024
Content Rating:  PG-13 + M:
The story is about a recovering opioid addict (previously a soccer mom from Virginia) who travels to Florida to solve her estranged daughter’s (a runaway’s) murder and to learn about the life her daughter was leading.

  1. There are curse words. The F-word is used once.
  2. There are no sex scenes, but the mom discovers that her daughter was sexually fluid and in relationships with a woman and an older man. (separately/not a throuple)
  3. There is no graphic violence.
  4. The novel does deal with mature themes like addiction, suicide, and adultery as well as grief, guilt, the power of friendship, and forgiveness. However, given the protagonist’s addiction issues, it can be a bit raw at times.

Book Description:

The Heaven Spot is a modern-day mystery set in Palm Beach, Florida, that depicts opioid addict Maggie Robert’s desperate attempt to come to terms with her estranged daughter, Lilly’s, murder.

When divorcée Maggie Roberts stumbles into her Virginia bookstore for the last time to close up shop, she expects the morning to be rough. The business failure is hers alone. She took all those opioids. She relapsed. She vows to stay clean and regroup. But as she packs up her books, two cops appear and inform her that her estranged daughter, Lilly, has died in West Palm Beach.

Heartbroken, Maggie heads to Florida to find out why Lilly passed and how she lived. But when she arrives in the Sunshine State, she barely recognizes the young woman in the morgue.

​Maggie doubts she’ll ever forgive herself for her past mistakes with Lilly but believes that if she remains local, she can push the detective to focus on Lilly’s case and learn about her daughter. But as she connects the dots, Maggie wonders the unthinkable—could she have played a part in Lilly’s death while relapsing and blackout-high? Can she live with herself if she did?

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MY REVIEW

Character driven stories are among my favorite to read. Getting inside their heads. Being shown their past and the actions that brought them to the present. And being shown why they did what they did. Being compelled to like or not like them. To care about them. All of that makes for a story I can immerse myself in. Walk in their shoes for a few hours. And hope for a happy ending. Or at least some answers to my questions.

The author did all of that. And she made me feel so many feels. Sadness. Joy. Anger. Despair and disappointment. And hope. She made me care about someone it was hard to care about. She even managed to make me care about someone that was no longer alive. Made me see her as an active character in the story.  That’s some good storytelling.

4 STARS

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Interview with Author Mary Frances Hill:
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Question #1—Why do you choose to title your novel The Heaven Spot?

Answer—I opted to go with The Heaven Spot because the murder victim/ protagonist’s daughter is a graffiti artist, and “the heaven spot” is a graffiti term referring to the most dangerous place to paint a piece. Also, the protagonist, Maggie, travels to Palm Beach, Florida, to solve her daughter’s murder, and Palm Beach is a beautiful island. It’s like heaven.

Question #2—What inspired you to write this novel?

Answer—Just prior to writing The Heaven Spot, someone very dear to me passed away. I believe that experience led me to write a story centered on grief. My own experience with grief was very complicated. I wanted my protagonist’s feelings following the death of her estranged daughter to be even more conflicted. This is why I made my protagonist a soccer mom/ opioid addict. Writing coaches always say you should put your characters in horrific situations. I can’t imagine anything more horrific than losing your son or daughter when you are not in a good place with them because of the choices you’ve made.

Question #3—Your novel is set in the Palm Beach/West Palm Beach area. Have you been there?

Answer—Yes. I owned a vacation home in Palm Beach and spent five hot, glorious summers there swimming and walking on the beach. (We rented our place out during the busy winter tourist season.) I love Palm Beach Island and the surrounding areas. The wealth, mix of people, and glitzy, tropical environment lend themselves perfectly to a secret-filled mystery with lots of intrigue and drama. This is why I selected PBI for the setting of my novel.

Question #4—How long have you been writing?

Answer—I began writing when I stopped working as a therapist so I could be at home and raise my children. My children are adults now, so that was almost thirty years ago. I wanted to write what my children were reading, so I started with writing picture books. I progressed to middle-grade and YA novels. Finally, I graduated to mystery novels. I love writing mysteries, especially psychological mysteries. I suppose I’m still a therapist at heart.

Question #5—What is your next project?

Answer—I’m writing another psychological murder mystery with a female protagonist. This one is set in a church preschool in central New Jersey, and the protagonist is the preschool’s director. The story is based on an experience my mother had when she ran a preschool near Princeton in the 1980s. In my novel, one of the moms discovers that one of the preschool dads is the son of a mafia boss and that he’s changed his name and lifestyle in an attempt to distance himself from his famous Italian family. When a body is found in the local lake, rumors and accusations fly. Of course, everyone suspects the dad.

Question #6—Do you ever get writer’s block? What helps you overcome it?

Answer—I don’t get writer’s block in the sense that I can’t think of something to write about. I’m a pantser, meaning I write and don’t outline my first draft. So, I guess you could say that I write through my blocks. However, I sometimes get stuck during rewriting when I realize something is amiss with my plot. When this happens, I talk out the issue with my wonderful critique group friends. They’ve taught me that most plot problems have easy fixes. Getting out into the world, living my life, and taking a break from my keyboard generates tons of ideas and solutions for me, too.

Question #7—One of the main characters in your novel, The Heaven Spot, is a graffiti artist, and another owns an art gallery. Your previous novel, The Worm Man, was about an aspiring artist. Are you a professional artist?

Answer—No. I’m not even an amateur artist, but I love visiting art museums. Also, when I was growing up, my father worked as a music professor in the fine arts department at a university. We regularly had his artist coworkers over for dinner. I spent hours listening to them talk about their projects and lives. I loved their passion. In fiction, you need passionate characters to propel your story forward. That’s likely why I’ve leaned toward writing about artists.

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Meet Author Mary Frances Hill:

Mary Frances Hill was born in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. The daughter of a music professor and an elementary school teacher, Mary obtained a master’s degree in counseling psychology and worked as a therapist before raising two children. Though Mary currently lives in Southern California with her Russian Blue and Scottish Straight cats, her Pyredoodle puppy, her golfer husband, and her adult son and daughter, she spent many happy vacations at her house on Palm Beach Island—the setting of her most recent novel, The Heaven Spot. Mary is an avid dog walker and home renovator and loves binge-watching true crime documentaries and mysteries. Mary’s debut novel, The Worm Man, was published in 2022.

Connect with the author:   Website  ~  Goodreads 
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THE HEAVEN SPOT (a novel) Book Tour Giveaway

 

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Thanks so much for visiting fuonlyknew and Good Luck!

For a list of my reviews go HERE.

For a list of free eBooks updated daily go HERE

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.