Posts Tagged ‘giveaway’

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Deck the Halls With Homicide: Killer Chocolate Mysteries
by Christina Romeril


Deck the Halls With Homicide: Killer Chocolate Mysteries
Cozy Mystery
3rd in Series
Setting – Harriston, Montana (fictional)
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently Published
Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 28, 2025
Print length ‏ : ‎ 326 pages
Paperback
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1069554103
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1069554109
Digital
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1069554116
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FKMD2SMX

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Perfect for fans of Jacqueline Frost and Vicki Delany, when a holiday decorating contest turns deadly, twin sisters Alex and Hanna trade tinsel and twinkle lights for tracking the twists and turns of a cunning killer.

Alex and Hanna, owners of Murder and Mayhem book and chocolate shop, are hoping for a quiet holiday. That is, after Alex is finished judging the Deck the Halls contest organized by Vanessa, nicknamed “The Dragon.” The whole experience has turned Alex’s usual festive spirit a little grinchy. Instead of inspiring holiday cheer with fun lawn displays, the contest has turned cutthroat and decorations have started disappearing. After Alex’s beau, Tom, is seen in a heated argument with the Dragon about his stolen trimmings, Alex finds him dressed as Santa, kneeling over Vanessa’s dead body…with one of his missing candy cane decorations buried in her chest. It’s no surprise he becomes the sheriff’s top suspect.

Alex and Hanna quickly amass a cast of suspects deeper than Santa’s reindeer roster, including an old family friend tasked by their mother with romantic interference; a nosy reporter eager to reveal Alex’s previous murder-y exploits; and the victim’s psychologist-to-the-stars husband with a spicy secret. But as they try to catch a crafty killer, Alex also grapples with the escalating wrath of Tom’s daughter, and a mysterious psychic dropping cryptic clues, while Hanna deals with her own Christmas crisis.

Murder puts a bitter spin on the twins’ sweet confections and they must find the killer and wrap up the case to keep Santa off the naughty list.

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About Christina Romeril

Christina Romeril grew up in Kitchener, Ontario, and has been devouring stacks of books since third grade when the Trixie Belden series sparked a love of mysteries. She has lived on both coasts of Canada as a former member of the Canadian military. As an Alberta transplant, she is fascinated by mountains and loves to spend time with her husband and two Chihuahuas, Nacho and Paco, exploring Waterton National Park in the Canadian Rockies.

Author Links: Facebook / Website / Instagram

Purchase Links – Amazon   Bookshop.org    B&N    Kobo    Apple Books

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

November 3 – Jody’s Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT

November 3 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

November 3 – @bibliophile_foodie – REVIEW

November 4 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – SPOTLIGHT

November 4 – Sarandipity’s – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 4 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 5 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

November 5 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

November 5 – Wine Cellar Library – SPOTLIGHT

November 6 – Salty Inspirations – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 6 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 6 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

November 7 – Angel’s Book Nook – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

November 7 – View from the Birdhouse – REVIEW

November 7 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

November 8 – Melina’s Book Blog – REVIEW

November 8 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading Books – REVIEW

November 8 – Deal Sharing Aunt – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

 

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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.

 

Royally Off-Limits

By Kate O’Keeffe

 

(Royally Kissed, #4)
Publication date: November 6th 2025
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Contemporary, Romance

He needs a royal redemption arc. She needs to keep her distance. The public wants a story, preferably a romantic one.

I called him Ledonia’s most eligible man-child in a headline. Now I’m living at his palace.

After my no-holds-barred exposé on Prince Maximilien goes viral, the royal family doesn’t banish me—they hire me. Apparently, the King and Queen think damage control looks like me filming an exclusive behind-the-scenes series on their charming, cocky, scandal-prone son.

Prince Max isn’t thrilled. In fact, he downright despises me. Which is fine. Because the feeling? Entirely mutual.

But the thing is, I didn’t expect him to be smarter, deeper, and somehow even hotter in royal pajamas. And I definitely didn’t expect to start falling for a man I’ve built a career out of publicly roasting.

There’s just one problem: He has no idea who I really am.

He may be a real-life prince, but I’m royally off-limits.

Enemies to lovers

Hidden identity

Forced proximity

One bed

Slow burn, kissing only

And a Labrador puppy called Toffee

Romantic, fun, and swoon worthy, Royally Off-Limits is a laugh-out-loud romp about a prince who has lost his way and a woman with a hidden past who has everything to lose. It’s The Princess Diaries for grown-ups meets The Hating Game. If you love opposites attract, forced proximity, slow burns, snarky banter, and a royal who accidentally falls hard, this one’s for you.

All the titles in the Royally Kissed series can be read as standalone novels or as part of the series.

Goodreads / Amazon

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Enjoy this peek inside:

Good people of Ledonia! Hold on to your fascinators because your ever-devoted royal correspondent is reporting on the most spectacular display of royal ridiculousness in recent memory!

I’m calling it The Scene of Aquatic Chaos, aka man-child Max getting up and personal with royal carp.

Every royal watcher’s favorite, Prince Maximilien, has provided us with enough entertainment to fuel my column for the next century. And trust me, darlings, this story is positively dripping with drama (quite literally, as you’ll soon discover).

It’s a perfectly civilized palace garden party. Cucumber sandwiches, pots of tea, children politely enjoying a slip ‘n slide, and our beloved royal family mingling with distinguished guests beneath the afternoon sun.

So far, so regal.

But then our himbo Max decided to transform this genteel gathering into something resembling a nature documentary gone spectacularly wrong.

After what sources describe as “a martini or two”, our Prince McHottie Junior apparently lost a bet with his friends. The stakes? A fully clothed journey down the children’s slip ‘n slide.

Now, one might think a twenty-seven-year-old prince would possess enough rudimentary knowledge of physics to calculate that about two hundred pounds of royal muscle hurtling down a children’s water slide might produce some unexpected results.

One would be mistaken.

What followed, according to multiple horrified witnesses, was nothing short of aquatic pandemonium. Our dear prince launched himself torpedo-style down the slide, landing in an 18th-century decorative fishpond, the very same pond that houses descendants of ceremonial carp gifted by the Thai King to the country of Ledonia over 200 years ago.

The result? Seven fish sent airborne in a spectacular display, captured in my trending TikTok (link below), featuring a child’s call of “Cannonball”. Because let’s face it, no quote says ‘dignified monarchy’ like a fully grown man in a pond.

Fear not, fish lovers among us. Every dislodged fish was scooped off the lawn and returned to the pond unscathed.

So, here’s to you, man-child Max, himbo extraordinaire, for reminding us that even princes are human, that aristocratic carp can fly, and even the most sophisticated garden parties can become disasters worthy of trending TikTok fame.

Your ever-devoted royal correspondent,

Fabiana Fontaine xx

#ManChildMax
#RoyalCannonball
#SpiceUpTheGardenParty

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About Author Kate O’Keeffe:

Kate O’Keeffe is a USA Today bestselling author known for her fun, feel-good romantic comedies brimming with humor, heart, and happily ever afters. A native of New Zealand, Kate has crafted numerous popular series, garnering a devoted international readership.

With a flair for witty banter and irresistible heroines navigating the ups and downs of modern dating, Kate’s novels showcase strong friendships, comedic entanglements, and the of course sometimes bumpy but always hopeful road to love.

When she’s not writing, Kate can often be found reading romcoms, binging her favourite shows, or spending time with her friends and family in the beautiful Hawke’s Bay region of New Zealand.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Instagram / Bookbub

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Royally Off-Limits Blitz

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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.

 

The Bell Tolls at Traeger Hall by Jaime Jo Wright Banner

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THE BELL TOLLS AT TRAEGER HALL
by Jaime Jo Wright
October 20 – November 14, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

 

 

Synopsis:
An abandoned estate encased in stagnant darkness . . . A haunting legacy intent on silencing all within reach . . .

In 1890, the ominous tolling of the bell announces that death has come to Traeger Hall, leaving orphaned Waverly Pembrooke to piece together the puzzle behind her uncle’s and aunt’s murders. Bound by the terms of her uncle’s eccentric will, Waverly finds herself alone in a manor shrouded by death and questioning the reasons for her uncle’s paranoia. A madness hovers over Traeger Hall, and Waverly–as well as the people of nearby Newton Creek–are ill-prepared for the woe that has descended.

In present day Newton Creek, whispers of a family curse still cling to the century-old, abandoned property of Traeger Hall. When Jennie Phillips takes possession of the estate after her mother’s passing, she is intent on solving the mystery of the Traeger murders. Yet a modern cold case suggests that untimely deaths and mysterious occurrences still plague the property. And as thorny truths surface, Jennie realizes the dark legacy threatens not only the town and the Traeger descendants . . . but also, chillingly, Jennie herself.

Book Details:

Genre: Dual Timeline Gothic Suspense

Published by: Bethany House Publishers Publication Date: October 21, 2025 Number of Pages: 336 ISBN: 9780764243806, paperback

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

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Enjoy this peek inside:

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About Author Jaime Jo Wright:

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Jaime Jo Wright

Jaime Jo Wright is the author of thirteen novels, including Christy Award-winner and ECPA bestseller The Vanishing at Castle Moreau, Christy Award and Daphne du Maurier Award-winner The House on Foster Hill, and Carol Award-winner The Reckoning at Gossamer Pond. Jaime has also written two Publishers Weekly bestselling novellas. She lives in Wisconsin with her family and fabulous felines.

Catch Up With Jaime Jo Wright:

JaimeWrightBooks.com Amazon Author Profile Goodreads – @JaimeJoWright BookBub – @JaimeJoWright Instagram – @JaimeJoWright Threads – @JaimeJoWright YouTube – MadLit Musings Spotify – MadLit Musings

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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

 

 

Win Big! Enter Now for Your Chance to Win!

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

THE BELL TOLLS AT TRAEGER HALL by Jaime Jo Wright (book + gift card)

Can’t see the giveaway? Click Here!

 

 

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

 

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That Boy

By Briar Black

 

(The Cheshire Set, #3)
Publication date: November 6th 2025
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Holiday, Romance, Suspense

Building an impossible tea farm in the Cheshire countryside was Sofia’s second chance. A way to prove herself. A fresh start. She knew it would be graft. She anticipated a degree of isolation. But with Christmas imminent and the farm failing, her thoughts have grown darker. She’s searching for something — an ineffable force to make this year the magical wonderland she always craves and never finds.

Yet with the farm failing there’s no time to fix her ailing social life. Sofia resigns herself to another lonely holiday.

Enter Matt.

Delaware Grange’s twenty-one-year-old assistant gamekeeper. Nice enough, a bit dopey.

As she hunkers down for winter, Sofia thinks she’s prepared for everything. Nothing could prepare her for Matt. For the abrupt awareness of him. For the way he’s far more capable than he seems. Thoughtful. Considerate. Quietly intelligent.

Way sexier than he appears.

Suddenly impossible to ignore.

But Matt isn’t what he seems. A darkness runs beneath Delaware Grange — insidious, creeping, buried deep.

Sofia was little more than a challenge, a box for Matt to check, an assignment to complete. Until he fell.

Hard.

Now all he sees is her. All he wants is her. And all he knows is she has no idea who he truly is. While Sofia fights her feelings in the face of forbidden fruit, and Matt wrestles with the reality of his true purpose on the estate, the pair fall into an intoxicating, passionate, volatile romance.

As winter deepens and Christmas closes in, two lonely souls struggle to find peace in each other, and trust becomes the most dangerous choice on the estate.

Falling for Matt threatens everything Sofia has worked so hard to build. Falling for Sofia might just be the making of Matt.

That Boy is a high-heat, secret-identity romance where desire, deception, and devotion collide in a snowy small-town Christmas.

While not required, it is highly suggested to read Nightshade before That Boy.

Author’s Note: Each novel in The Cheshire Set can be read as a standalone, but the following order avoids spoiling the reading experience of earlier books.

Recommended Reading Order for The Cheshire Set:

  1. Bane
  2. Nightshade
  3. That Boy

Eve Was Framed, a prequel novella to Bane, isn’t strictly part of The Cheshire Set but is available for free download on the author’s website.

Goodreads / Amazon

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Enjoy this peek inside:

‘Twas The Gloam Before Christmas…

A quiet, introspective moment between Matt and Sofia after a near-disaster. As they talk about “The Gloaming”—that melancholy space between Halloween and Christmas—their chemistry deepens and the novel’s central themes of loneliness, yearning, and rediscovery of light emerge.

“What’s the Gloaming?”

“Oh. Right.” I shifted, trying to find a way to lean that didn’t hurt my shoulder. It was useless. Until someone could pop it back in, I was doomed to dull agony. “It’s that feeling that threatens to drown you…” I paused, swallowing hard and staring out the window.

The world nearly drowned me tonight.

“This time every year.” I finally managed. “You know?”

Keep talking. Stay conscious. Don’t toss your cookies into his lap.

“That…overwhelming urge to…cover everything in cheer. But…” I took a little more water. “…the more you try, the less cheerful you feel. So you just keep…adding more.”

He chuckled.

“Hoping the cheer finds you before you’re…” Another tiny sip of water. “…crushed by baubles and fake fir garlands.”

He stared at me.

Great. Now he thinks I’m a total weirdo.

“I get it.” A slow smile spread across his face. “You’re staring at all the decorations. Watching the snow fall. And somewhere inside you’re sure you love Christmas. But you never quite seem to feel it.”

“Yes!” I sat up, and momentarily thought I’d blackout from the effort.

He eased me back into the sofa.

“Nailed it.” I swallowed. Talking was so much effort. Thinking was weirdly worse. “It’s a coping mechanism, I guess.”

He nodded, but when I didn’t continue, he made a winding motion with his hands.

“Every year this…fog descends. When Halloween’s over. This looming sense of…dread.”

“And it’s right when everyone else is getting excited.”

I nodded. “Exactly. Not me.” The wind howled savagely by, rattling the window and making us both jump. I turned my face away from the glass, not wanting to think about the carnage outside. “I’m sat there like a…miserly Scrooge.”

“Scrooge was never that pretty.”

I shook my head. “Don’t flirt with me.”

“Keep talking then.”

I didn’t want to. I just wanted to sleep.

My eyes drifted, and he nudged my knee with his. “Sof?”

With gargantuan effort, I rallied. “Welcome to Gloamas!” I wheezed. “Not quite Christmas. Not quite apathy. Some…twisted netherworld.”

He permitted me another tiny sip of water for my effort.

I swallowed it and continued, “You’re stuck for weeks. Longing to be…joyful and merry. But…that ineffable light is…absent.”

Matt pursed his lips. “So…it’s not gloomy, it’s gloamy. You’re in the twilight. Daylight’s gone. You know it will be back at some point, but in the interim, you’re left with a hollow echo—”

“How you…loved Christmas…as a kid,” I managed. “Desperately wish to…feel it all.”

He grinned. “But for now, the light’s faded. Until the sun rises, you’re left wisting after a feeling.”

I stared at him. “And someone to share it with.”

Matty shifted a little closer. He was still soaking wet from the rain. Must have been freezing. Yet he hadn’t complained. Hadn’t even seemed to notice. I leant into him and shivered. More at the thought of how cold he must be than anything else. But he stripped off my blankets (now soaked) and wrapped me in two new dry ones.

The phone rang, and he shot up to grab it.

“She’s okay, I think. Conscious, talking, the bleeding’s stopped. Her shoulder’s bad, but—”

A pause as whoever was on the other end of the line spoke.

“Are you sure it’s safe?” He peered out of the window. “The rain’s still coming down hard.”

Another pause.

“Okay. We’ll be here.”

He hung up. “Sounds like the storm’s passing. It’s lightening up at the house, and the rain’s almost stopped down there. They’re on their way up. By the time they get here, it should have cleared.”

“The track will be murder.” I tried to sit up.

He moved and blocked me, forcing me to stay still. “Easy.”

“Give me the phone.”

“They’ve already left, Sof.”

I struggled some more.

“Stop!”

Calm. But firm. Commanding.

I’ve never heard him speak like that before.

“Stop.”

Softer. Eyes searching mine.

My heart fluttered.

“We’d all gladly risk a bit of fucking mud to get you safe. You must know that?”

My breath caught. My chest constricted painfully. His jaw was locked. The look in his eyes was…feral.

And so fucking hot.

There’s really something wrong with me.

Satisfied I wasn’t about to bolt for the door, he sat back down. Glanced around.

“Is that why all your decorations are so…weirdly depressing?”

“They’re not.” I sniffed.

“They really are, Sof. Like…they’re full of the festive spirit but don’t quite hit the mark.”

He glanced at my forlorn little tree. Which, in fairness, was at least standing vertically now. I’d come in one day to find him scrambling around on the floor, fiddling with the screws on the base to get it standing straight.

He was right. The baubles were desolate.

I loved them.

“I like them.” Matt wrapped the blankets tighter around me. “They’re comfortingly depressing. How Christmas should be. It always just…kind of reminds you of all you’re missing in life.”

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About Author Briar Black:

Briar has been a professional copywriter for many years (far more than she cares to admit). She began her career working for large companies and agencies before realising she could do it all for herself. Now, she happily writes for businesses and entrepreneurs she’s passionate about and dreams of the day her fiction becomes popular enough for her to retreat into fictional worlds full-time. Growing up in Cheshire and falling in love with its countryside, small towns, and villages, she’s enjoyed creating a fictional world that reflects her own.

Website / Goodreads / TikTok / Instagram

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That Boy Blitz

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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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Claws for Concern (Maddie Sparks Mystery)
by Lesley A. Diehl


Claws for Concern (Maddie Sparks Mystery)
Cozy Mystery
3rd in Series
Setting – Upstate – New York
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Epicenter Press
Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 14, 2025
Print length ‏ : ‎ 246 pages
Paperback
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1684922704
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1684922703
Digital
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1684922710
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FJP3JP7J

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Maddie Sparks, senior amateur sleuth, sets aside her writing when her son, a defense attorney, is accused of murdering one of his clients, a high school friend and the woman the authorities believe murdered her estranged husband.

Although Maddie knows her son is innocent, she also suspects he is hiding something. Before she can confront him, he disappears during the first snowstorm of the season. When he reappears, he is shocked to discover his house has been torched. He confesses he and the murdered woman had been seeing each other.

Did the client kill her husband to be with Maddie’s son? To make sense of the murders and the arson, Maddie takes a close look at her son’s friends from high school. Do people change over time, or do they carry their past grievances into the present? In getting to know her son’s friends, she finds that teenage passion can sometimes lead to murder. It’s simply a matter of Maddie determining which friend is hiding a killer’s face.

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About Lesley A. Diehl

Cows, Lesley learned growing up on a farm, have a twisted sense of humor. They chased her when she herded them in for milking, and one ate the lovely red mitten her grandmother knitted for her. Determining that agriculture wasn’t a good career choice, instead, she uses her country roots and her training as a psychologist to concoct stories designed to make people laugh in the face of murder. Unusual protagonists appear in many of Lesley’s works, including Desdemona, the crime-fighting potbellied pig, a hobo turned county sheriff  and Lesley’s zany back-home-on-the-farm relatives (The Killer Wore Cranberry, all six anthologies). She is the author of several cozy mystery series (The Eve Appel Mysteries, Laura Murphy Mysteries, The Big Lake Murder Mysteries and her newest from Camel Press, Maddie Sparks Mysteries, featuring a senior sleuth and her rescue cat). Her cozy mysteries have won several Readers’ Favorite Awards and a short story Sleuthfest Award. Find out more at www.lesleyadiehl.com.

Author Links : Website / Blog / Facebook / Goodreads / Amazon 

Purchase Links
Amazon      Barnes and Noble     Bookshop

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

November 3 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading Books – REVIEW  

November 3 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 4 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

November 5 – Jody’s Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT

November 5 – Sarandipity’s – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 6 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

November 6 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW

November 7 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST

November 7 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

November 8 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – REVIEW

November 8 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

November 9 – Wine Cellar Library – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 9 – Cassidy’s Bookshelves – REVIEW

November 10 – Angel’s Book Nook – SPOTLIGHT

November 11 – @bibliophile_foodie – REVIEW  

November 11 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

November 12 – Sneaky the Library Cat’s Blog – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

November 12 – Infinite House of Books – SPOTLIGHT

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For a list of my reviews go HERE.

To see all of my giveaways go HERE.

 

A Wyoming Family Holiday: A Clean and Uplifting Romance

By Virginia McCullough

 

(Back to Adelaide Creek, #5)
Published by: Harlequin Heartwarming
Publication date: October 28th 2025
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Holiday, Romance, Women’s Fiction

Can saving a town landmark…

Restore her faith in love?

When attorney Sloan Lancaster returns to Adelaide Creek to care for his father, he’s shocked at Winding Creek Rehab and Care Center’s run-down state. He considers moving his dad but is drawn to his high school crush Bethany, in charge of the facility’s restoration. Moved by Bethany’s community spirit and her adorable young daughter, Heidi, Sloan makes an anonymous donation to the center as the holidays bring them all closer. But when Sloan’s identity is revealed, Bethany pulls away, anxious about conflict of interest. Can she overcome her fears to embrace Sloan’s support—and build the loving family she’s always wanted?

From Harlequin Heartwarming: Wholesome stories of love, compassion and belonging.

Back to Adelaide Creek

Book 1: The Rancher’s Wyoming Twins
Book 2: The Doc’s Holiday Homecoming
Book 3: His Wyoming Surprise
Book 4: Finding His Wyoming Sweetheart
Book 5: A Wyoming Family Holiday

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Apple Books / Kobo

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Enjoy this peek inside:

Sloan Lancaster raised the hood of his jacket and raced through the downpour, skirting the water overflowing dips and deep potholes in the asphalt parking lot. This, plus the rundown brick and wood exterior, was all he needed to conclude that the Winding Creek Rehab and Care Center was past its prime. Especially dreary was the aging paint job, once white, but now a dull, dirty gray. Sloan summed up his first impression of this facility in one word: neglected.

As he ducked into the hands-free revolving door a commotion in the lobby caught his attention. Women and men in scrubs or lab coats were pushing and pulling furniture across the carpeted floor, while a couple of burly guys in maintenance uniforms dragged an oversized tarp into the far corner of the room where rainwater ran down the wall.

Two women a few feet in front of him struggled to pull a couch across the middle of the lobby. He approached from behind and called out, “Wait, let me help with that. Tell me where you want it.”

A woman spun around. “Thanks. We can use the help.” Her eyes opened wide in surprise. “Sloan?”

“Bethany?” He struggled to find his next words as he grasped the wooden armrest on one end. “I’d know you anywhere.” It was true. He hadn’t seen her since high school and she’d barely changed at all.

Not the time to ask a lot of questions. He made his early morning workouts pay off as he dragged the couch to the only empty spot on the other side of the lobby big enough to accommodate it. The space was already filled with a hodgepodge of tables and armchairs that had escaped the leaking roof and ceilings.

Bethany pushed the couch from the other end. Her expression turned serious as she straightened up and put her hands on her hips. “You’re here to see your dad, I assume. Medical transport brought him here a couple of hours ago.”

Her burgundy pantsuit and crisp tailored white shirt gave her a professional look in the style of the women lawyers at his firm. That led Sloan to guess that his old friend Bethany Hoover was an administrator in this place, where, for better or worse, his dad was now a patient. The worn out exterior and general disarray in the lobby weren’t filling him with positive feelings about that.

The opposite, in fact.

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About Author Virginia McCullough:

A writer all her adult life, Virginia McCullough has had the opportunity to write the stories of her heart in her novels, including Girl in the Spotlight, the first book in her Two Moon Bay series for Harlequin Heartwarming. (Book 2 is scheduled for release in January 2018). Her award-winning romance and women’s fiction titles include The Jacks of Her Heart, Amber Light, Greta’s Grace, The Chapels on the Hill, and Island Healing.

Born and raised in Chicago, Virginia has been lucky enough to develop her writing career in many locations, including the coast of Maine, the mountains of North Carolina, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and currently, Northeast Wisconsin. She started her career in nonfiction, first writing articles and then books as a ghostwriter and coauthor. She’s written more than 100 books for physicians, business owners, professional speakers and many others with information to share or a story to tell.

Virginia’s books feature characters who could be your neighbors and friends. They come in all ages and struggle with everyday life issues in small-town environments that almost always include water—oceans, lakes, or rivers. The mother of two grown children, you’ll find Virginia with her nose a book, walking on trails or her neighborhood street, or she may be packing her bag to take off for her next adventure. And she’s always working on another story about hope, healing, and second chances.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Instagram / Bookbub / Newsletter

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A Wyoming Family Holiday Blitz

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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.

 

The Mist and the Flame

Coral-Li St. Helen

 

(The New Bardiverse, #1)
Publication date: September 15th 2025
Genres: Fantasy, Historical, Young Adult

What’s really behind the story of star-crossed lovers Romeo and Juliet?

Let’s start with the truth about Rosaline—Romeo’s actual first love. Rosaline scorns romance and instead craves magic. To free herself from Romeo’s amorous attention as well as her dull life in Verona, she uses her limited sorcery skills to bring him and Juliet together. Renaming herself Foschia Luminosa, she then gleefully runs off to join a school of magic.

Just when Lumi’s dreams are about to come true, disaster Syra, the intimidating witch who runs the school, denies her entry and demands she return to Verona. She must repair the damage done by her spell or the young couple is doomed and Lumi will be outcast forever.

As tragedy looms ever nearer, Lumi reluctantly teams up with a mysterious, sullen girl calling herself Fiamma Fredda, an orphan of unknown parentage. Freddi is an astonishingly skilled fighter, but who is she, and does she really want to help—or is she using Lumi for her own purposes?

Join Lumi and Freddi in their thrilling quest to save Romeo and Juliet, learn of Freddi’s origins, and grapple with Syra’s own dark past. They—and you—are in for a great many surprises along the way…

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Apple Books / Kobo

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Enjoy this peek inside:

On the particular day that started it all, our tutor, Grigio, gave me something to translate which turned out to be an old recipe for a potion to be used for suppressing painful memories. It called for various common herbs which I knew Friar Lawrence grew in his garden, so I ran to him the first chance I got to ask for the ingredients. That, I found out later, was how the school at La Fortezza became interested in me. Friar Lawrence and, incredibly, my tutor both looked out for potential candidates to recruit for this secret school. Most of the tutor’s pupils, my cousin Juliet included, merely did the translation (perfectly, in her case). The very few with the curiosity to see if it would work, those were the ones that interested them.

But I knew none of that at the time; I was only interested in making the potion work. Initially, it didn’t, and I figured out there had been an ingredient omitted—possibly deliberately, so Grigio’s students wouldn’t have the complete formula. That was laughable—and insulting. I immediately began experimenting on my own, trying to figure out the missing item. (This extra step, apparently, made La Fortezza very interested in me.) My creations, placed discretely in various rooms, made me sneeze (not magical), made the cook giggle (possibly magical, since she generally had a dour disposition), and made my parents look at each other in a way I hadn’t seen in years (which was uncomfortable to witness but also possibly magical). I noted these combinations of ingredients down and, not satisfied, kept trying.

When I couldn’t quite come up with the perfect formula on my own, I sought the friar again. If Grigio was a young man who seemed like an old one, Friar Lawrence was, if not old, then middle-aged at least, but cheerful, jovial, and youthful in every aspect of his demeanor. To put it another way, he was possibly the only priest that people my age actually liked, someone who talked to you like a person and not just a sinner. In his little garden behind the church he welcomed me with delight, a dirt-crusted trowel in one hand and some mysterious wrinkled root in the other, immediately asking how my potion had gone.

“Not well, thank you. It didn’t work, but I think I know how I can fix it—with your help, if you would.”

“I would be most delighted to help,” he said, eager curiosity shining in his eyes. He put down the trowel and root, dusted his cassock off (though his hands were dirty too and he really only ended up shifting the soiling of the garment to different sections), and gestured me toward a bench where we both sat. “Now, how did you know it didn’t work?”

“I tried. A lot. The closest I got was when I tried it on Bruno, but even then it still wasn’t right.”

“Bruno?”

“The old dog I found wandering around outside our gate. I named him Bruno. Poor thing. He had been treated very badly, we think by a man or several of them—he is afraid of men. I wanted to see if I could help him forget his suffering. He seemed to be calmer when I sprinkled one particular herbal powder mix around him, but he still growls and shrinks away when a man goes by, so he hasn’t completely forgotten.”

The friar smiled. “That was kind of you to try, though a human subject might have been more able to communicate what they were experiencing.”

I shrugged. I wanted to try it on the dog because I wanted to alleviate his suffering. His big brown eyes were deep with sorrow. How could I do otherwise? I went on impatiently, “I know why it didn’t work—there’s an ingredient missing, isn’t there?”

Friar Lawrence tilted his head. “Yes and no. Well, yes and yes, I suppose. The recipe as you received it is in fact missing an ingredient, but that ingredient alone—stridolo petals, I believe—will not make this work. The real missing ingredient is you. Bruno calmed down because you were calm. Bruno cannot forget whatever suffering he went through, no matter what herbs you use, because you can’t forget it—because you never remembered it in the first place.”

“Of course not. I wasn’t there.” Now I frowned. Did I, too, have to be beaten and starved by cruel men for both of us to forget? Wasn’t there an easier way to help my poor sad-eyed friend? There was a limit to what even I wished to experience. “How can I make these things work without, well, going through terrible things?”

“It is a long and difficult journey to take, Rosaline. But I can try to show you the first steps.” He shifted a little on the bench so that he was facing me. “Think of a happy memory from your childhood, but don’t tell me about it.”

His simple request startled me. Was he going to read my mind?

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About Author Coral-Li St. Helen:

Coral-Li St. Helen is the pen name of a writer who lived all over the United States before settling down roughly in the middle. She loves reading and writing, hiking and napping, coffee, noodles, her spouse and her dog.

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Book Details:

  Delaware at Christmas / The First State in a Merry State

by Dave Tabler

Category: Adult Non-Fiction, 134 pages
Genre: Christmas
Publisher: Dave Tabler
Publication Date: July 1, 2025
Content Rating: G. Family friendly throughout. No sex, violence or foul language.​

Book Description:

Explore the rich tapestry of holiday traditions that have shaped the First State’s festive season across the centuries. From colonial customs to modern-day celebrations, “Delaware at Christmas” unwraps the fascinating stories behind the state’s most cherished Yuletide practices.

Discover how Delaware’s diverse communities have contributed to its unique holiday landscape:

Uncover the origins of iconic traditions like the Wilmington mummer’s parade and beach town “Christmas in July” festivities

Learn about the evolution of holiday decorations, from simple colonial adornments to elaborate Victorian displays

Explore the influence of immigrant communities, including Polish, Italian, and Hispanic holiday customs

Delve into forgotten practices like the holly wreath industry that once thrived in southern Delaware

Examine how wartime and economic shifts shaped Christmas observances throughout the state’s history

Filled with captivating anecdotes, historical photographs, and little-known facts, this book offers a comprehensive look at how Delawareans have celebrated the holiday season from the 17th century to the present day. Whether you’re a history buff, a holiday enthusiast, or simply curious about Delaware’s cultural heritage, this meticulously researched volume provides a joyous journey through time.

“Delaware at Christmas” is an essential addition to any First State bookshelf, offering:

In-depth exploration of religious and secular holiday traditions

Profiles of notable Delawareans who influenced Christmas customs

Insights into how national trends and local innovations shaped Delaware’s experiences

A treasure trove of holiday memories from generations of Delaware families

Unwrap the magic of Delaware’s Christmas past and present with this definitive guide to the state’s holiday history. Whether you’re a lifelong resident or a curious visitor, “Delaware at Christmas” promises to enrich your understanding and appreciation of the First State’s joyous spirit. Buy “Delaware at Christmas” today and embark on a joyful exploration of holiday traditions in the heart of the Mid-Atlantic!

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One of the things that struck me in Delaware at Christmas is how many traditions took shape in settings beyond the family hearth—whether in factories, canneries, churches, or whole towns coming together for house tours and parades. What do you think those public and workplace traditions reveal about the way Delawareans have tried to balance private celebration with community identity?

This gets at something really important about Delaware’s character. Delawareans have consistently found ways to make Christmas both deeply personal and genuinely communal.

Take the holly wreath industry – families worked in their own homes making wreaths, but it was part of a larger economic network that connected rural Sussex County to cities like New York and Philadelphia. The Christmas Seal campaign started with Emily Bissell’s personal connection to tuberculosis through her cousin, but she deliberately took it to the post offices, making it a public health effort that anyone could join for just a penny.

The immigrant communities show this balance particularly well. Polish families preserved their intimate Wigilia suppers at home, but they also created public spaces like the oplatek and kolędy events at St. Hedwig’s Church where the broader Wilmington community could experience these traditions. The Italian Feast of Seven Fishes remained a private family affair, but Italian restaurant owners shared elements of it publicly.

Even the mumming tradition, before it was banned, was about taking private revelry into public spaces – going door to door, performing in streets. When authorities shut that down, Delawareans eventually channeled that energy into Halloween parades and later the satirical Hummers Parade in Middletown.

What strikes me is that Delawareans didn’t see private and public celebration as competing forces. They seemed to understand that traditions needed both intimate family moments and broader community expression to really thrive. The Christmas house tours are perfect examples – private homes opened to strengthen community bonds while raising money for local causes.

Rather than reflecting a single community approach, these patterns suggest that across Delaware’s diverse populations, many groups – though certainly not all – found ways to extend their holiday traditions beyond the family circle when circumstances and inclinations aligned.

So often these traditions carried a sense of ingenuity—whether it was soaking a Yule log to make a holiday last longer, or turning IBM punch cards into wreaths. Why do you think creativity and adaptation play such a recurring role in Delaware’s Christmas story?

The examples in the book do show repeated instances of creative adaptation, though they stem from different motivations. The soaked Yule log that former slave Jeremiah “Old Jerry” Deputy described came from necessity – enslaved people got a holiday only “as long as the log lasted,” so they found ways to make it burn longer. That’s survival ingenuity under constrained circumstances.

The IBM punch card wreaths represent a different kind of creativity – mid-century Americans domesticating new computer technology by turning office waste into familiar holiday decorations. Companies like DuPont were generating millions of these cards, creating abundant raw material for crafters.

Harold Follett’s “ThunderStreak” toy shows another kind of innovation – a Wilmington teacher who turned his college experiments with amphibious air boats into a patented design that Ideal Toy Corporation marketed nationally. He adapted cutting-edge hydrofoil technology into something children could enjoy.

Some creativity emerged from practical necessity. When German immigrants couldn’t afford whole Christmas trees, families would use single decorated branches instead. The mistletoe harvesters developed increasingly sophisticated climbing techniques, moving from dangerous hickory switches to telephone lineman-style “creepers” with spikes.

Religious communities adapted traditions to new circumstances. The Moravian lovefeast found new life in Delaware’s Methodist and Presbyterian churches, with some congregations adding brass quartets to honor the original trombone traditions. Orthodox Christians maintained their Julian calendar celebrations while gradually incorporating bilingual services for American-born generations.

Rather than reflecting some inherent Delaware trait, these innovations seem to emerge from the intersection of available resources, economic pressures, and the universal human tendency to make traditions work within whatever constraints people face.

Some customs in the book seem to resist change—like Amish families deliberately keeping Christmas unadorned, or Irish Catholic households insisting on lighting the Christmas candle year after year. How do you see that tension between preserving older ways and adapting new ones shaping Delaware’s holiday history?

That tension plays out differently across Delaware’s various communities, and the book shows it’s not simply a matter of “old” versus “new.” Some groups maintained strict boundaries around change for theological reasons, while others selectively preserved certain elements while adapting others.

The Amish example you mention reflects a deliberate religious stance – they viewed elaborate Christmas decorations as worldly distractions from the holiday’s spiritual meaning. But even they weren’t completely static. The book notes they observed “Old Christmas” on January 6th rather than December 25th, and some families who owned shops catering to non-Amish customers did adopt modest decorations.

The Irish Catholic candle tradition represents a different kind of preservation – families like the Mulherns maintained the practice of lighting candles in windows, though they adapted it for safety by moving the candle from the doorway to the dining room table. They kept the symbolic meaning while adjusting the practical details.

What’s striking is how some communities used preservation as a form of resistance or identity maintenance. The Quakers completely rejected Christmas celebrations as potentially heretical, viewing them as Catholic excesses, and this stance persisted even as other Protestant denominations gradually embraced the holiday. French Huguenots maintained their preference for giving lasting rather than consumable gifts, a practice that distinguished them from their English and Dutch neighbors who typically gave food and drink.

The book also shows how external pressures could force tradition to either bend or break. Christmas Savings Clubs thrived for decades but virtually disappeared by 2006 when credit cards, inflation, and digital banking made them obsolete. The eggnog tradition shifted from being viewed as medicine “for the sick” to becoming a festive indulgence, showing how the same practice could survive by completely changing its cultural meaning.

The question wasn’t whether to change, but what was essential to preserve and what could be modified without losing core meaning.

In Delaware at Christmas you draw heavily on newspapers, oral histories, and even folklore bulletins. How did working with those kinds of sources shape the way you told the story? Did you find yourself writing more as a cultural historian, or sometimes almost as a folklorist trying to capture how people remembered their Christmases?

Those sources really shaped both the content and the tone of the book in ways that sometimes pulled in different directions. Newspaper accounts gave me the official version – when papers covered outdoor Christmas lighting competitions or reported on handbell choir performances, I was getting the public face of these traditions, often filtered through editors who wanted to present positive community stories.

But the oral histories revealed something quite different. When Hetty Francke talked about maintaining authentic Dutch Sinterklaas celebrations in Arden, I was hearing personal memory and lived experience. These voices often contradicted or complicated the newspaper narratives.

The folklore bulletins, like Ruthanna Hindes’ 1952 piece on Old Christmas beliefs, sat somewhere in between – they were scholarly attempts to document what people actually believed and practiced, not what institutions wanted them to believe. Hindes writing about cattle kneeling at midnight was capturing genuine folk belief, even if she approached it academically.

Working with these different source types meant constantly weighing official accounts against personal recollections. When newspapers covered Christmas card etiquette rules, I had to ask whether that reflected how people actually behaved or just how etiquette columnists thought they should behave.

The most revealing moments came when sources contradicted each other. A 1901 newspaper article about Old Christmas painted this romanticized picture of rural Sussex County, complete with problematic “Lost Cause” imagery. But Hindes’ later academic treatment of the same customs was much more objective, focused on documenting beliefs without the nostalgic embellishment.

I found myself shifting between roles depending on the material – being a cultural historian when analyzing the decline of sleigh bell usage, but becoming more of a folklorist when trying to understand why people believed mistletoe had magical properties or maintained wassail toasting rituals.

Let’s end with the present moment. After immersing yourself in centuries of Delaware’s Christmas traditions—sacred and secular, preserved and adapted—what do you hope readers will carry forward into their own holidays? In other words, when someone finishes Delaware at Christmas and then looks around their own table or community gathering, what perspective do you hope lingers with them?

I hope readers come away with an appreciation for how traditions work – not as museum pieces to be preserved unchanged, but as living practices that communities actively shape to meet their needs. “Delaware at Christmas” shows that the most enduring traditions weren’t those that remained rigid, but those that found ways to adapt while keeping their essential meaning intact.

What strikes me most is how many of these customs emerged from people solving immediate problems – families needing seasonal income, communities wanting to include newcomers, individuals trying to maintain identity while fitting into new circumstances. The traditions that lasted weren’t necessarily the most elaborate or well-funded, but those that served real human needs for connection, meaning, and belonging.

When readers look around their own holiday gatherings, I hope they see both the weight of inherited customs and their own agency in shaping what comes next. Every family dinner, every decoration choice, every way of including or adapting traditions for changing circumstances – these are all part of the same ongoing process the book documents.

I’d want them to feel less pressure about doing things “correctly” and more curiosity about why certain practices matter to them. What needs do your holiday traditions serve? How might they evolve to better include new family members, changing circumstances, or community growth? The people in “Delaware at Christmas” weren’t necessarily trying to preserve Delaware Christmas traditions – they were just trying to create meaningful celebrations for their families and communities.

The traditions we have now are the result of countless small decisions made by ordinary people. Readers today are making those same kinds of decisions, whether they realize it or not. That’s both the responsibility and the opportunity of being part of this continuing story.

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Meet Author Dave Tabler:

Ten year old Dave Tabler decided he was going to read the ‘R’ volume from the family’s World Book Encyclopedia set over summer vacation. He never made it from beginning to end. He did, however, become interested in Norman Rockwell, rare-earth elements, and Run for the Roses.

Tabler’s father encouraged him to try his hand at taking pictures with the family camera. With visions of Rockwell dancing in his head, Tabler press-ganged his younger brother into wearing a straw hat and sitting next to a stream barefoot with a homemade fishing pole in his hand. The resulting image was terrible.

Dave Tabler went on to earn degrees in art history and photojournalism despite being told he needed a ‘Plan B.’

Fresh out of college, Tabler contributed the photography for “The Illustrated History of American Civil War Relics,” which taught him how to work with museum curators, collectors, and white cotton gloves. He met a man in the Shenandoah Valley who played the musical saw, a Knoxville fellow who specialized in collecting barbed wire, and Tom Dickey, brother of the man who wrote ‘Deliverance.’

In 2006 Tabler circled back to these earlier encounters with Appalachian culture as an idea for a blog. AppalachianHistory.net today reaches 375,000 readers a year.

Dave Tabler moved to Delaware in 2010 and became smitten with its rich past. He no longer copies Norman Rockwell, but his experience working with curators and collectors came in handy when he got the urge to photograph a love letter to Delaware’s early heritage. This may be the start of something.​

connect with the author: website ~ facebook ~ pinterest ~ instagram ~ goodreads


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DELAWARE AT CHRISTMAS Book Review Tour Giveaway

 

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CIRCLE OF NINE Series by Valerie Biel Banner

CIRCLE OF NINE
by Valerie Biel
October 27 – December 31, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

 

CIRCLE OF NINE: BELTANY
CIRCLE OF NINE: BELTANY

Brigit Quinn has always felt like an outsider. Growing up in a small town where her mom’s pagan practices are the stuff of local gossip, she’s spent her whole life trying to be normal. On her 15th birthday, Brigit makes the same wish she always has—to just fit in. But the universe has other plans. Instead, Brigit discovers she’s descended from a legendary Celtic tribe—guardians of Ireland’s mystical stone circles. A spellbound book reveals her astonishing family history and the incredible abilities of her ancestors—powers she’ll inherit if she chooses to embrace them. When an ancient evil resurfaces, threatening her family’s legacy, Brigit is forced to quickly make this impossible decision. Will she accept her magical heritage and fight to protect it? Or reject it to live the “normal” life she’s always wanted? This thrilling mix of magic, self-discovery, and Irish mythology will captivate fans of coming-of-age stories with a mystical twist. Lovers of ancient legends, enchanted stone circles, and family secrets will be drawn to Brigit’s journey into a world where her true power could be her greatest strength… or her downfall.

Find CIRCLE OF NINE: BELTANY on Amazon | KindleUnlimited | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

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Enjoy this peek inside:

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Praise for Circle of Nine: Beltany

“This was a truly beautiful read. Valerie Biel has a captivating, almost lyrical quality to her work that helps the flow and the smoothness of the piece wonderfully. You can just feel the words slide along as you read and it’s a remarkable experience. I enjoyed her storytelling as much as I enjoyed the characters and the plot! Circle of Nine: Beltany is a wonderful blend of present and past, mixed with a healthy dose of Celtic mythology to captivate the brainiacs among us.” ~ FIVE STARS from Readers’ Favorite for CIRCLE OF NINE: BELTANY

 

Series Details:

Genre: Young Adult Fantasy

Published by: Lost Lake Press

Find CIRCLE OF NINE series at Amazon & Lost Lake Press

 

About Author Valerie Biel:

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author

Valerie Biel writes award-winning books for middle grade to adult audiences–stories inspired by her travels and her insatiable curiosity. Her young adult fantasy series, Circle of Nine, was inspired by the myth and magic of Ireland’s ancient stone circles. She’s also the author of HAVEN, a contemporary middle grade novel, and BEYOND THE CEMETERY GATE, a mystery suspense story. She’s a founding member of the Blackbird Writers & a member of Sisters in Crime & the Wisconsin Writers Association. When she’s away from the computer, she’s likely wrangling her overgrown garden, reading multiple books per week, or traveling the world–often on trips for the The World Orphan Fund charity she and her husband run. She calls a (tiny) portion of her family’s century-old Wisconsin farm home, but regularly dreams of finding a cozy cottage on the Irish coast where she can write and write.

Catch Up With Valerie Biel:

ValerieBiel.com Valerie’s Substack Newsletter Amazon Author Profile Goodreads – @valerie_biel BookBub – @ValerieBiel Instagram – @valeriebielauthor Threads – @valeriebielauthor X – @ValerieBiel Facebook – @ValerieBielBooks YouTube – @ValerieBielAuthor Pinterest – @ValerieBiel

 

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  

 

Join In:

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

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What Lucy Heard: A PIP Inc. Mystery
by Nancy Jarvis


What Lucy Heard: A PIP Inc. Mystery
Cozy Mystery
6th in Series
Setting – Santa Cruz, California
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Good Read Mysteries
Publication date ‏ : ‎ August 11, 2025
Paperback
Print length ‏ : ‎ 247 pages
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8990936614
Digital
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FLYRXYSD

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Pat Pirard, Santa Cruz Law Librarian newly turned private investigator, is asked to help with jury selection. She has one condition before she agrees: she must meet the suspect and believe he’s innocent. The accused’s story about how his fingerprints got on the murder weapon and why he was at the murder scene seems so outlandish that he convinces contrarian Pat he must be telling the truth. But as she listens to testimony during the trial she fears she’s been duped and is helping a killer get away with murder. Pat’s life turns into a race to solve the crime before the jury reaches a verdict.

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About Nancy Lynn Jarvis

 

Nancy Lynn Jarvis wore many hats before she started writing cozy mysteries. After earning a BA in behavioral science from San Jose State University, she worked in the advertising department of the San Jose Mercury News, as a librarian, as the business manager for Shakespeare/Santa Cruz, and as a Realtor.

Nancy’s work history reflects her philosophy: people should try something radically different every few years, a philosophy she applies to her writing, as well. She has written seven Regan McHenry Real Estate Mysteries; six PIP Inc. Mysteries; a stand-alone novel “Mags and the AARP Gang” about a group of octogenarian bank robbers; edited “Cozy Food: 128 Cozy Mystery Writers Share Their Favorite Recipes,” and short story anthologies, “Santa Cruz Weird,” and “Santa Cruz Ghost Stories.” She also has an ebook on Amazon, which she keeps adding to as she writes more short stories.

Author Links
Website    Facebook    Goodreads

Purchase Link – Amazon 

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TOUR PARTICIPANTS

October 22 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

October 23 – Jody’s Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT

October 24 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

October 25 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – CHARACTER INTERVIEW 

October 26 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – SPOTLIGHT

October 27 – Sarandipity’s – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

October 28 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – AUTHOR GUEST POST

October 28 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT

October 29 – Baroness Book Trove – SPOTLIGHT

October 30 – Wine Cellar Library – CHARACTER GUEST POST

October 30 – Books1987 – SPOTLIGHT

October 31 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 1 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

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November 3 – Infinite House of Books – SPOTLIGHT

November 4 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

 

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