Friday, January 25, 2019

January 25 is Special

via GIPHY

It's a special Day--January 25

Let's see - it's my grandson Micah's FIFTH Birthday - wow, great cause for celebration. He shares the date with Robert Burns and Virginia Woolf.

The Winter Olympics began in 1924 - cool. Pun intended.
Batman debuted on TV in 1966. Sorry, poor Robin.

It's Opposite Day...Yeah.

And...It's HAPPY RELEASE DAY for my latest mystery series, Fancy Cat, 
MEOW MAYHEM!

Released through Pelican Ventures LLC
Ebook - $5.99
Print - releasing February 1 in softcover and May 8 in Large Print, library binding

Amazon https://amzn.to/2APwhDp
BN https://bit.ly/2QxZKql
Publisher https://bit.ly/2FjuQRj
Kobo https://bit.ly/2Rj8WUF

After being left at the altar, Ivy Amanda McTeague Preston uproots herself and her cat, an Egyptian Mau named Memnet, from her boring and lonely life to start over at the urging of Mayor Conklin, a fellow pedigreed Mau owner.

Ready to move in a fresh direction, Adam Thompson, accepts the mayor’s invitation and uproots himself and his beloved Mau, Isis, to open a branch of his trendy bookstore and coffee shop in the small town.

When Ivy takes a mysterious message while the mayor is away on business, only her criminology professor mom and Adam believe there’s something rotten in Apple Grove. Then Ivy discovers the community grant money that Adam was allotted to start the store is mysteriously being siphoned off, a dead body surfaces, and the victim’s missing Mau becomes the primary suspect. . .just another day in Ivy’s far-from-boring new life.

In love with Apple Grove and with Adam, Ivy hopes to carry on their romance while saving the town from further mayhem.









Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Deadly Decision by Regina Smeltzer

Deadly Decision

Deadly Decision
Regina Smeltzer
Harbourlight Books, a division of Pelican Ventures LLC
c. 2014
Christian Supernatural
Contemporary Ghost stories
Paranormal Romance

$4.99 eBook
$16.99 Print

Buy on

About the Book
Bill Iver didn't expect anything more than hard work when he offered to help his daughter and son-in-law restore their rented historic South Carolina home, but then he sees two boys in the attic--and his hand passes through one of them. Bill has always believed that being absent from the body meant being present with the Lord, but if that is true, what did he see? And why does the boy dressed in 19th century clothing look familiar while the second boy, dressed in jeans and sweatshirt, look like the missing grandson of the house's owner? What is the connection between the two boys--and Bill? Hesitant to share his experience with his pastor, but consumed with the need to understand, Bill seeks a worldly explanation which leads him down a trail of decisions that are deadly to body and soul. Through the mire, he must undo the consequences of his choices, discover what his visions mean, and uncover an age-old mystery that will bring closure and reconciliation.

My Review
I confess I like scary stories, though the occult and demonology, not so much. While Smeltzer’s story contains elements of the above, those elements did not overwhelm the story. The driving force was supernatural. There is a difference. I also like being surprised, and while Smeltzer had me wondering which side of truth I might end up on, I enjoyed turning pages to follow the adventure.

I also confess Bill, the narrator and main character of this adventure, was not my favorite person. However, the author made him so real that I forgave him his foibles, even if I don’t want him for a close friend. It takes skill to weave a backstory into the present in a way that doesn’t feel like a report, and this Smeltzer did with aplomb. There is a reason for every character’s need to accept the challenge of a quest, and a familial, generational dream was an excellent prompt. On the other hand, using obvious secrets between characters to drive tension was uncomfortable. Other readers may certainly feel different and get a kick out of watching the interplay among family and friends, especially as Bill blunders along, trying to figure out how to be a heroic superdad, yet allow his heart to open.

This tale of misconceptions, age-old family history and a spooky house was fun. Told in first person through the main character’s eyes, readers who enjoy highly inspirational reading that explores some difficult truths behind Satan being alive and well on planet Earth will appreciate a good shiver from Deadly Decision.

Image result for regina smeltzerAbout the Author
Regina Smeltzer writes Christian fiction that reflects God's love for us, his creations. A member of the SCWW and ACFW, she has won the Writer's Digest short story award and was named a semi-finalist in the Genesis Competition. She has served as a public health nurse and college professor for more40 years. She and her husband have four children, who have given her five grandchildren. www.ReginaSmeltzer.com

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Closing Circles with CC Fuller

It is my honor and DELIGHT to introduce debut author Carolyn Cody-Fuller. Dr. Fuller dreamed of writing a novel and worked hard to make it come true.



Closing Circles
Carolyn Cody-Fuller

Fiction
c. 12-8-2018
Hardcover or E-book format

Buy the book on

About the Book
Years ago, life separated the sisters, Lavender, Hyacinth, and Oleander Sipp. Now, it seems that life has conspired to bring them back to the place where each of their stories began, their family farm in rural Georgia. After experiencing more than a few setbacks, Lavender, the youngest of the sisters has come home to do nothing . . . and that's just fine with her. She's soon joined by the oldest sister, Hyacinth, and all is right with the world. Just when Lavender and Hyacinth begin to settle into their peaceful routine, middle sister Oleander blows in with all the fury and bluster of a twister ready to lay claim on her part of the family land. Oleander brings with her old grudges, mainly against Lavender, and a boatload of big ideas as to what they should do with the farm.

As the Sipp sisters fight over the future of their family legacy, another battle from a distant relative is brewing and it may prove to be their biggest challenge yet.

My Review
I love family drama. I love being able to virtually plant myself in another part of the US to experience a different reality for a while. I love watching a story cycle around itself without absolute resolution, but also without cutting me off in the middle of a plan.

Closing Circles is anything but routine. Three sisters instinctively know that, despite rivalry between two younger siblings, home is their haven. The choices they made had both great joy and great despair, and when the despair side overwhelmed them, they came home, one by one. When middle sister, high-energy Oleander, decided she had spent enough time licking her wounds, she kicked an idea to revitalize the home farm into a relevant project. Lavender, the youngest sister who narrates the tale, has her own ideas. Together they soon learn their greatest challenge lies not in their own rivalry or current arguments, but in family. When the weave that holds their family together begins to unravel, they must choose whether to fight each other in the present or fight for the future.

Loaded with engaging characters in a setting the reader will want to call home, Closing Circles will stay with you, calling for you to examine your own choices and encourage you to rise above anything petty consuming your life.

While Closing Circles ends with the expectation of another adventure, I’m not left out of breath. I’m left wanting more, but in a good place while I’m waiting. I watched this novel come alive under the author’s dedicated fingertips. I am truly honored to share this wonderful story of family weathering life’s calamities and coming out stronger.

About the Author
Carolyn Cody-Fuller is a retired children’s librarian who enjoys writing, reading, and volunteering at her church, St. Philip’s Episcopal. Having spent her entire working career advocating for literacy and power of a good book, Cody is excited to publish her first novel, which is a reflection of her life growing up on a farm in small town in Georgia. She’s a member of the South Carolina Writers Association and has attended Novel-in-Progress Bookcamp for several years. In addition to writing, Cody believes in the power of community, and has served on numerous committees and advocacy boards for children and families.

Friday, January 11, 2019

New YA fantasy from R Chris Reeder

The Changeling's Daughter


The Changeling’s Daughter
R. Chris Reeder
Young Adult Fantasy
Coming of Age/Quest
December 13, 2018

Black Rose Writing
Paperback $20.95
Buy on Amazon 

About the book
Fourteen-year-old Brynn McAwber discovers a terrible truth about herself and her family and must undergo a perilous quest to another world, to save a friend and redeem her soul.

Unusual things have been happening to Brynn McAwber. A strange little man keeps showing up at her door. She's being watched by a mysterious woman with a sword strapped to her back. And her body keeps...disappearing.

When Brynn discovers the terrible truth about herself and her family, she embarks on a perilous quest, which takes her far from Indiana, far from the world she knows, into the Land of Annwfyn, home of brownies and bwbachods, xanas and zephyrs, goblins and gods.

This is the story of a girl who finds out she's supposed to be the villain, but decides to be the hero anyway.

My review
A most unusual and amazing anti-hero questing fantasy not just for young people has arrived.

Up front caution: although I could watch this story unfolding in epic technicolor and would recommend it to teens with an advanced reading level, I caution parents who care that a fair amount of profanity when a couple of shock value uses would have been enough, some gore, and a generous vocabulary boost this story into a tween/early teen caution level. Some parents may want to check it out first.

For the rest of us, Reeder’s maiden fantasy is a delight. I admit I intended to read enough for a good review, but didn’t look up except for touchdowns during the Packers-Bears football game until I was finished. Using an anti-hero, in this case a typically-misunderstood creature of folklore hiding in plain sight, as a champion certainly isn’t new, but the author’s ability to recombine fantasy elements into a true hero’s journey makes for a fresh, entertaining read.

Brynn’s family secret stems not simply from their traditionally accepted roles but also how they are perceived by others. When Brynn’s best friend Makayla suddenly turns against her, Brynn’s loyalty and character are tested in ways that help her understand and grow into the kind of person she’s meant to become. Makayla’s defection is not the only weird thing happening to Brynn these days. When faced with disaster, Brynn’s options are to do the right thing by her friend no matter the odds, or be the expected generic typecast of her kind. Knowing Makayla would never willingly abandon her gives Brynn the strength to fight not just for physical rescue, but for the decision to live a meaningful, positive family lifestyle.

Told through the eyes of Brynn, the fourteen-year-old main character, The Changeling’s Daughter is a lovely adventure for readers who enjoy a good old-fashioned questing tale with surprising heroes unafraid to challenge even themselves.

About the author
R. Chris Reeder grew up in the Pacific Northwest, attended college in Walla Walla, Washington, and has lived and worked across the country and around the world. 

He has had careers as a Shakespearean actor, an international courier, and a singing activist, but is now perfectly content in his current vocation of stay-at-home father. 

He currently resides in Madison, Wisconsin, with his wife, two children, and a cat named Monster Jack.

www.rchrisreeder.com
www.facebook.com/rchrisreederauthor

Friday, January 4, 2019

Helene Louiesa Mynhardt dissects apartheid in her memoirs

Memoirs Of A Play-White: The Autobiography  Other Writings   From Destitute to Plenitude: Breaking Through Barriers of Poverty

Memoirs of  Play-White
Autobiography/Memoir
Helene Louiesa Mynhardt

Released
Reach Publisher's Services, South Africa

Paperback $12.99
Kindle $2.99
Buy on Amazon
Buy $7.99 on Barnes and Noble

About the Story:
Louiesa, an impoverished child, was raised by her unemployed single mother. She was employed part time as a student, earning a lucrative salary. The reason was unclear to her until she was confronted by a furious co-worker. The author explains how siblings from the exact same parents were classified differently and gives details about how children with a darker complexion were abandoned by fair-skinned parents. The author further explains in great detail, deep rooted segregation not previously exposed to the world during apartheid: how racial classification destroyed family unity and friendships. Forceful resettlement according to race destroyed family life and friendships.

Apartheid was abolished for one day during 1985 and all races lived in harmony next to each other. For once in the history of apartheid blacks were given a privilege denied to whites. South Africa sent two contestants to the Miss World pageant representing whites and non-whites respectively. The outcome of the results stunned the National Party and the entire world. Blacks created their own entertainment with much success, attracting international stardom and subsequently departing from S.A. due to racial biases and political interference with irrational censorships. Journey with the author while experiencing her personal encounters: death penalty, gang violence, teenage pregnancies, alcoholism and starvation. She endured extreme weather conditions without proper clothing.

This is truly an inspirational story of hope and transformation. Readers are invited to journey through the remarkable life of the author who dreamt of freedom from poverty barriers, worked hard towards it with dogged determination and succeeded. During the first democratic elections the ANC party did not win an outright majority due to the coloured votes. The author takes the reader on a journey into the lives of the coloured race during apartheid, sparing no detail.


My Review
Mynhardt’s autobiographical memoir begins with the story of her grandmother and mother, women of Xhosa heritage who’d we’d call today victims of servitude in their small villages. To those of previous generations, life was hand-to-mouth, making and raising babies with little male support.

By the time Mynhardt’s mother Doris gave birth to her, Doris had been widowed and shunned by Muslim in-laws. Her successful food vendor shops had been taken and her first children eventually removed. Doris raised her daughter Elena in poverty. Elena was officially named Helene by a zealous administrator who registered the birth in order to potentially provide better opportunities with an Afrikaans-sounding name.

When it came time to Helene to decide how to take control of her own future, she chose to continue her education even if she didn’t like it all that much and it was expensive, and became a fair typist. Her self-confidence led her to step into the world of finances in the mid-seventies, applying for a job at a bank. She worked her way through several departments and promotions, too often fighting for her personal rights as well as rampant fraudulent practices.

Told in a jarring, journalistic and forthright manner, readers are taken on a journey of the dark underworld of abuse, apartheid, and social casting in South Africa, from the 1950s through the first democratically elected black president in 1994.


From Destitude to Plentitude 

Released June 2018
Reach, South Africa
$7.99 Nook 

Buy on Amazon 
$2.99 Kindle
$12.99 Print

About the Book:
In this book, author writes about her triumphant entrepreneurial victory from an impoverished background. As a self-made entrepreneur, she identified and successfully pursued a business opportunity with her employer who granted her a rare chance to be placed on their panel as an external vendor (debt collector) before BEE became law. Although Louiesa treated her business partners as equal she did not receive the same reciprocation from them. Find out how laws are altered and manipulated to benefit the rich at the expense of the poor. The possible reason why South Africa is unable to narrow the gap between the rich and the poor is scrutinized. Read about how the change in government policy on dividend taxation saved the day. 

Journey with the author, as she faced numerous business challenges on her own, ranging from fraud to sexual harassment, cultural barriers, and external auditors investigating fraudulent payments. Follow her story of how she witnessed firsthand racism towards fellow panel members. Without legal qualifications or any help, she became the legal representative in court cases representing their business. Her carefully planned strategies resulted in arrests and imprisonment. Numerous other interesting stories are included to analyse and explain the overall life challenges and constraints that ordinary, poor and struggling South Africans face. 

The reason why the South African white race could not be “pure” is also explored with ample examples. Find out how fair-skinned parents abandoned darker-skinned children and how a coloured child was born to white parents. South African legislation was intended to serve everybody. However, manipulation and alteration from its original meaning and intention resulted in benefiting the rich at the expense of the poor. Find out possible reasons why the author alleges poor people in South Africa became poorer due to the debt trap they found themselves in. The government is constantly changing the laws but finding it difficult to keep up with ongoing manipulation. The author identifies exploitation of the poor and the vulnerable by big businesses. 

This is truly a remarkable journey in the life of Louiesa who did not allow poverty barriers to curb her success. Her dogged determination made it possible for her to succeed despite many obstacles that she sees as prohibitive poverty barriers to many ordinary South Africans. She believes that South Africa is the world’s most unequal society and it is difficult to manage constant manipulation. The author further shares interesting information about how one thousand South Africans were reclassified under what is today known as the chameleon dance. 


My review:
Mynhardt's frank and critical autobiography challenges conceptions and misconceptions of world trade. Whatever you thought you understood about apartheid and progress, it's worse. Here's one example of the regulatory practices Louiesa fights: Some of South Africa’s laws were ambiguous and left open to interpretation. There were a few ambiguous rules that were not illegal but when raised as a defence, it would be illegal for someone to pursue that matter. One of the examples of these laws was the “in duplum rule” mentioned previously, which stated that no one was allowed to pay more than double the original loan amount, inclusive of interest and legal fees. Rich, educated debtors with legal representatives knew about this rule and could raise a defence that they were not willing to pay more than what the “in duplum rule” stipulated. And as soon as someone mentioned this rule, the vendors were not allowed to pursue the matter and the file had to be withdrawn and closed. This rule was a defence that was only applicable when mentioned. Since it was not a law but merely a defence, it was not illegal to disregard this rule - unless raised as a defence. However, big businesses had outdated computer systems that did not take this rule into account, which meant their systems continued to charge interest. Sometimes a person would pay 10 times the amount he was legally supposed to. Although EDS computer systems promised to introduce sophisticated to one of the South African banks, their system did not work in the South African market because it was unable to stop the interest when reaching the “in duplum” limit (pp 98-99).

The book is memoir, essay, deconstruction of a devastating socio-economic practice, yet a triumph to persistence. Mynhardt's story of dealing with today's business culture is teeth-rattling, annoying, absurd at times, and sometimes heart-wrenching, but provides an air of triumph.

Begin your journey with Mynhardt's Memoirs of  Play-White. You'll be able to answer a resounding yes the question Louiesa was asked, “Do you honestly think that you have lived such a fantastic life that readers would be interested in reading about it?”

About the Author

Louiesa Mynhardt is a self-made entrepreneur, founding member and Managing Director of Sterling Debt Recoveries that is a leading collection agency, founded in 1998. She has a 40% shareholding in this business. Sterling Debt Recoveries provides efficient, large scale services on a commission basis to large credit-granting institutions. She is a novice author who was born in Kliptown, Johannesburg in the late 1950s and is married to Harold. They have two daughters studying abroad.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Southern romantic charm with Victoria Pitts Caine


Cotton
by Victoria Pitts Caine

Released October, 2018
full length romance 
Ebook $2,99
Print $12.99

Buy on Amazon
 Cotton
About the Book
Running from a life of poverty, 16 year old Cotton Ramsey escapes the Savannah River bottomland to New York. Twenty years later, she has changed her name and runs a large pharmaceutical company, which belonged to the family of her late husband. When Beau Simpson, her first love, arrives to deliver the news of her daddy’s untimely death, the life she struggled to leave behind calls her home.

My review
A little different take on the rags to riches story, Caine has created a fanciful tale with all the thrills of New York glamour. The story begins with a glimpse of the home life of poor share croppers in the rural south. Cotton is one daughter in a very large, struggling family growing, you guessed it, cotton. By the time she steals her opportunity to make a better life for herself, the story switches to decades later and another glimpse of the life she has won.

Alone, widowed, and running a company which we see very little of on her own, we learn that Cotton has cut ties so completely with her southern family that she doesn’t know of their own turnabout story. In fact, her beloved daddy had done well for the family after Cotton left. When she is informed of his mysterious death by none other than a lost love who also escaped into a glitzy world of unseemly wealth, she is ready to return to leave cold New York for her warm southern roots, no matter how welcome or unwelcome her long-lost siblings make her feel. But Cotton is still so uncertain of herself that she’s willing to let a soaring leap of willful misunderstanding drag her into despair. Along the way, Cotton learns how to appreciate the people around her and see life with a fresh outlook.

Told through two points of view, the reader sees both sides of the story through Cotton, and her love interest, Beau. Readers who love Jackie Collins and other writers of rich and famous romantic heroes and heroines will enjoy this story of learning what really matters.

About the Author
Victoria Pitts Caine resides in Fresno, California. Her first passion is her family, followed closely by writing and exotic gem collecting. Victoria is also an award winning author who has published both fiction and nonfiction articles in Seekers, Short Stuff, HI Families, The Front Porch and The Manzanita Literary Journal. She has also received an honorable mention at the William Saroyan Writer's Conference, special recommendation in the Writer's Journal poetry contest and second place in the Writer's Journal 2004 romance contest.


Friday, December 28, 2018

Sweet romance with Zoe McCarthy

41015066


The Putting Green Whisperer
Zoe M McCarthy

White Rose Publishing
September, 2018

Ebook $5.99
Print $15.99
Buy on Amazon 

Suddenly unemployed, petite and peppery Allie Masterson returns home to Cary, North Carolina to caddy for her father on the PGA Seniors Tour. There, she encounters Shoo Leonard.

The easygoing caddy drives Allie insane, but Shoo's uncanny ability to read the contours of the greens and his determination to overcome a personal hand injury, fascinate Allie. She finds herself agreeing use her sport science degree to become his trainer... and then she falls for him.

Shoo Leonard is grateful to Allie for her singular determination to get him ready for the PGA tour, but he isn't ready for anything more. Still raw from a broken engagement and focused on his career, he's content to be her fist-bumping buddy...but then he falls for her. What seems like a happily-ever-after on the horizon takes a turn when Allie decides she's become a distraction to Shoo's career. Is it time for her to step away or can the putting green whisperer find the right words to make her stay?

My review:
McCarthy’s latest novel digs into the lives of professional golfers and their caddies. When teens reunite as adults, sparks fly all over the place, and not all from romance.

Allie has finished college but has a lot of growing up to do. She’s quick to leap to conclusions about her family and her friends, and especially her faith. Shoo Leonard, nicknamed by his friends as a sure contender in the world of professional golf, is a man of deep faith and commitment. He’s watched what professional golf has done to take apart his family, and doesn’t want the same fate.

Allie and Shoo meet again as caddies on the senior golf tour, and learn they have a mutual passion—Allie to help golfers as a trainer, and Shoo to recover from an accident which might prevent him from realizing his dream. But their personal baggage is a lot to stumble over as their friendship develops.

When Allie realizes that so much of the hurt she’s bottled since her mother’s death was based on false assumptions, she has decisions to make. When clueless Shoo is whapped upside the head with the truth about relationships, his own choices challenge his commitment to his career.

I appreciate learning new things. I’m not a golfer, but I am fascinated by certain aspects of the sport and the role it’s played in other books I’ve read. While I also love that the author doesn’t try to complicate the story by adding useless details other golfers understand, I admit that any technicalities were lost on me. That didn’t mean I couldn’t enjoy the story—a romance is a romance. I liked the interplay between the characters, the camaraderie and rivalry, and learning that glamour doesn’t always trickle down.
The story is told in alternating voice between the main characters, showing their foibles and miscommunications. Recommended for those who enjoy contemporary clean romances, and especially those who are familiar with golf.