A Terrible Fall of Angels by Laurell K Hamilton-Review & Giveaway

A Terrible Fall of Angels (Zaniel Havelock 1) by Laurell K Hamilton-Review, Interview & Giveaway

A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS
Zaniel Havelock #1
by Laurell K Hamilton
Release Date: August 17, 2021
Genre: adult, paranormal, Urban Fantasy

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date August 17, 2021

Meet Detective Zaniel Havelock, a man with the special ability to communicate directly with angels. A former trained Angel speaker, he devoted his life to serving both the celestial beings and his fellow humans with his gift, but a terrible betrayal compelled him to leave that life behind. Now he’s a cop who is still working on the side of angels. But where there are angels, there are also demons. There’s no question that there’s evil at work when he’s called in to examine the murder scene of a college student—but is it just the evil that one human being can do to another, or is it something more? When demonic possession is a possibility, even angelic protection can only go so far. The race is on to stop a killer before he finds his next victim, as Zaniel is forced to confront his own very personal demons, and the past he never truly left behind.

The first in a new series from the author of the Anita Blake and Merry Gentry series.

•••••••••

REVIEW:For those of you who’ve read other works by her, this is different from what your use to.

Angels that walk among us and Demons that no longer hide in the shadows!

Unhappy with the life he life was going, Zaniel Havelock left the College of Angels, walking away from all his friends and everything he’d had become comfortable with. But the one he he couldn’t seem to give up was his ability to communicate with the angels.He now uses those said talents to aid him in his job in the police force, but it’s a branch not many get on. It’s the paranormal unit of the police force. Zaniel works alongside colleagues with different faiths and special skills (psychic’s mainly) This task force is charged with keeping the peace between humans/angels/demons. And it’s not an easy thing to do most days.

So we have a new case for Zaniel to work…..At first glance it’s a case for homicide, but upon closer inspection there seems to be an angelic side to this case.

Could an Angel have killed the victim? Why?

We also have demons to contend with, and like angels there are demons that are different from their kind. What are they up to? And when they start doing things they shouldn’t be able to do, Zaniel has no choice but to reach out to old friends. But with old friends come the old betrayals and secrets, and it’s those secrets that he’s keen to see kept buried!!

There is a religious tone to this book, but not enough to put me off from reading it. And with a new book/series comes the obligatory backstory and world building, which happens to be one of my favourite parts in a book.

Now It makes a change to see a male in the lead in this authors work, it’s usually a kicka$$ female. And the use of bedroom antics is missing too. It seems to be focusing on the detective work rather than orgies and bed hopping! a story a lot good versus evil. About personal choices and how the wrong choice can take you down a path that’s hard to turn from. It’s a murder/mystery story with an angsty romance thrown in (Zaniel is married!)

So who did kill our victim? Is there something more going on? I’m hoping we don’t have to wait too long for the next book out.

Copy supplied by the publisher

? Reviewed by Julie B.

TRC:  Hi Laurell and welcome to The Reading Café. Congratulations on the release of A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS.

Laurell: Thank you so much, I’m so excited to finally be able to share the book with readers.

TRC:  We would like to start with some background information. For our followers who do not know Laurell K Hamilton, would you please tell us something about yourself?

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Laurell: I pioneered the genre of Urban Fantasy which would become Paranormal with the Anita Blake series and then the Merry Gentry series. I also created the idea of reverse harems, though I preferred the term hisem. I write mysteries set in alternate modern America where the supernatural is a given. In the Anita Blake series, it would be like waking up tomorrow with vampires, zombies, shapeshifters and more are real, and everyone knows about them. Anita starts out as a consultant for the local police and a vampire hunter because vampires are considered too dangerous to be imprisoned. If they kill someone, a warrant of execution is issued and a vampire executioner hunts them down. Anita also doesn’t date vampires or any supernaturals at the beginning of the series. Twenty-eight books later, a lot has changed.

For Merry Gentry, Celtic myth and folklore is real and the fey were kicked out of Europe after the last Great War in the 1700s. President Thomas Jefferson offered them a new home here in America where they used the indigenous site of the Cahokia mounds in Illinois as their new fairy mounds, their sithens. For those who aren’t familiar with the Cahokia, it was an abandoned site long before America was a country. Merry is the first faerie princess born on American soil, but when A Kiss of Shadows begins, she’s hiding from her relatives int the Unseelie court because there were too many assassination attempts. She’s in Los Angeles working as a private detective for Grey’s Detective Agency that specialises in supernatural problems, magical solutions.

TRC:   What challenges or difficulties did you encounter writing and publishing your first book? The new series?

LAURELL:  The book that launched my career, Guilty Pleasures was the first Anita Blake novel. It was rejected over two hundred times, because in the late 1980s there was no market for mixed genre. The fact that vampires in my world weren’t secret but just legal citizens and known to everyone were the reason a lot of horror editors rejected it. I got some lovely rejection slips. Horror editors thought it was fantasy, who thought it might be science fiction, who thought it was mystery. A lot of editors loved the book, but they couldn’t figure out how to market it, so they passed. This was before self-publishing or online publishing was really an option if you wanted a career. Admittedly it was also a time when there were enough traditional publishers to have two hundred separate rejections from major houses. Times have changed a lot since Berkley first offered me a contract for the first three Anita Blake Novels. As for publishing my newest book, A Terrible Fall of Angels, there was no problem with my publisher because I’m one of their bestselling authors with two bestselling series already under my belt. It’s my 41st novel.

TRC:  Would you please tell us something about the premise of A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS?

LAURELL:  The powers of Heaven and Hell have a treaty to prevent Armageddon, which is publicly known and part of history. This treaty saved the world from the final battle that would have ended everything as we know it. There are rules about how many demons can come up to Earth and what they can and can’t do to torment humans. Detective Zaniel Havelock and the other members of the Metaphysical Coordination Unit are part of a group that literally polices the angels and demons that come into contact with the mortal world. The nickname for their unit is the Heaven and Hell Squad. They are also called in when other supernatural crimes happen, but Zaniel’s ability to communicate with angels makes him the go-to expert whenever Celestial beings are involved.

How many books do you have planned for the ZANIEL HAVELOCK series?

LAURELL:  Between four and thirteen. Of course, when I started the Anita Blake series, I thought thirteen and I’m working on book twenty-nine, so I won’t really know until I get there.

TRC:  What kind of research/plotting did you do, and how long did you spend researching /plotting before beginning A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS?

LAURELL:  The sticky note with the first line of the book was up on my office wall for almost ten years. I hadn’t been reading, watching, or even thinking about angels at the time, at least in the front of my head. I’ve learned to pay attention to my subconscious and those signals from my muse, so I started searching for nonfiction books about angels, rereading Biblical teachings or insights about the angelic and other world religions. A lot of people forget that when you speak of angels, messengers of God, for Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, you’re talking about the same angels. I also researched the lives and folklore around the saints and prophets. As I was finally sitting down to write Zaniel’s story I found books on modern new age and magic about angels. The changing attitude towards them from Biblical times to now was fascinating to me both as a person and as a writer.

TRC:  Do you plan a cross-over story line between the new series and your Anita Blake series?

LAURELL:  No, though an interview question from the local Kirkwood Library did give me an idea where all my universes could collide. I don’t think I’ll do it, but it’s intrigued me.

TRC:  Do you have plans to continue the Anita Blake series or are you going to concentrate on ZANIEL HAVELOCK?

LAURELL: I’m currently writing the next Anita Blake novel and I have no plans to stop writing Anita.

TRC:  Do you believe the cover image plays a deciding factor for many readers in the process of selecting a book or new series to read?

LAURELL:  I think covers have become even more important in the age when so many people decide what to read from a thumbnail image online.

TRC:  When writing a storyline, do the characters direct the writing or do you direct the characters?

LAURELL:  I’m a character driven author. I’ve thrown out entire plots, and up to a third of a novel because a character had a better idea.

TRC:  The mark of a good writer is to pull the reader into the storyline so that they experience the emotions along with the characters. What do you believe a writer must do to make this happen? Where do you believe writers fail in this endeavour?

LAURELL: Robert Frost said it years ago, “No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader.” If the writer doesn’t care deeply about what they’re writing how can they make anyone else care? A lot of writers make the mistake of jumping on trends and writing what’s hot without giving themselves a chance to find their own unique voice as a writer. Even if the writer makes a living or a career out of imitating a style that’s not truly their own, they are still cheating themselves and the readers. They cheat themselves by having missed the stories and worlds that only they could have written. They cheat the readers because if you are only imitating someone else’s voice/world/character then it shows. It can be fun, but it’s never as good as the original. It’s like the difference between a masterpiece and a good copy. The imitation never moves you as much as the original art. Some part of you knows a fake when you see it or read it.

TRC:  What is something that few, if anyone, knows about you?

LAURELL:  I’m a huge Disney fan.

TRC:  On what are you currently working?

LAURELL: The twenty-ninth Anita Blake novel, but I will have to stop briefly to finish a short story I’m writing for the anthology, No Game for Gentlemen. I’m also making notes on the next Zaniel Havelock book, and the next Merry Gentry novel.

LIGHTNING ROUND

Favorite Foodtea

Favorite Dessertcupcakes

Last Movie You Sawthe new Suicide Squad

Dark or Milk ChocolateMilk

Last Vacation DestinationFlorida Keys

Do you have any pets?Two cats, two Japanese chins, all rescues.

Last book you readThe Wizard’s Butler by Nathan Lowell

TRC:  Thank you Laurell for taking the time to answer our questions. Congratulations on the release of A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS. We wish you all the best.

LAURELL: Thank you for inviting me.

Laurell K. Hamilton is the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series and the Merry Gentry, Fey Detective series. With more than 40 novels published and 20 million books sold, Laurell continues to create groundbreaking fiction inspired by her lifelong love of monster movies, ghost stories, mythology, folklore, and things that go bump in the night. She lives in St. Louis with her family. In her free time, Laurell trains in Filipino martial arts with a specialization in blade work. Learn more online at laurellkhamilton.com, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

 

Laurell K Hamilton’s publisher (Penguin/Random House)  is graciously offering a paper copy of A TERRIBLE FALL OF ANGELS to ONE (1) lucky commenter at The Reading Cafe.

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THE RANGER by Julia Justiss -Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

THE RANGER (The McAllister Brothers 3) by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

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ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 27, 2021

He can’t resist a puzzle…

When Texas Ranger Brice McAllister spies a sexy woman in short shorts gardening in her backyard, he can’t help but flirt. She shuts him down hard, and Brice is astonished when he realizes this alluring woman is also the aloof and dowdy librarian—complete with thick-framed glasses and a shapeless dress—who helped him research land deeds earlier that day. He’s instantly intrigued and sets to discover more—namely, why she’s clearly hiding herself.

She can’t attract attention…

After one side of her crime family is involved in her fiancé’s death, Maria Giordano puts half a continent between herself and her L.A. home and family. She moves to Whiskey River and reinvents herself as “Mary,” a serious and plain librarian. Her only indulgence is her garden and cooking with her neighbor’s young daughter. And then she meets Brice.

Maria has every reason to avoid and resent a man with a badge, but when she needs protection, the last man she thinks she can trust is the first one she turns to.

••••••••••

REVIEW: Book three in this series. You don’t need to read the previous two stories, they all stand on their own. But we do have an ongoing story from the previous books (but not really necessary to read them as we are given a brief summary of what went on)

Brice is the youngest and the last single McAllister brother.Home whilst he waits to testify in a case he was working, he’s a Texas Ranger, and loves the job.And while Brice is visiting his brothers he’s going to look into a few things for his brothers.He has no intention of settling down on the ranch with his brothers, well that is until he meets a frosty young librarian…..

Maria now goes by the name of Mary. She’s keeping a low profile. She’s hiding from her family! Why? Well it’s a long story, and it’s one she’s not willing to share.

Brice has to try hard to win her trust, and it’s not easy, there are many times she’s wants to bolt. But when danger comes knocking on her door, Brice is the only one she thinks to turn too!

I have to admit, I probably liked this one better than the last two.Brice was just so patient with her.I also liked how Mary was around her neighbour and young daughter.The suspense was pretty good too, you know someone or something is going to happen to Mary.It was great catching up with his brothers and their lives.

Slow burn romance that focuses on the interaction of two people, rather than the physical side of this relationship. And the story holds up pretty well without too much smut coming into play.

Can Mary trust Brice enough to tell him of her past?

Your going to have to read the book to find out?

Reading Order and Previous Reviews
The Rancher
The Cowboy

Copy supplied for review

? Reviewed by Julie B

 

With a satisfied sigh, Brice McAllister finished the last of his take-out burger and leaned back in the Adirondack chair on the deck of his brother Grant’s newly refurbished cabin, sipping a soda water and admiring the view across the Balcones hills and down to the narrow valley through which the creek ran.
“Got to admit, Great Grandad chose a prime site to build his cabin,” he said to his brother Duncan, who dropped his lean frame into a chair beside him. “Can see practically to three counties from here.”
“Course, when he built it, there were still Comanche raids in the area as well as marauding outlaw bands,” Duncan said. “He needed to be able to see to three counties to protect his family.”
“I’m just glad Grant decided to redo the place. It’s a showpiece.”
“Credit my lovely wife,” Grant said, coming out to join them. “The grunt labor of ripping out floors and walls, drywall, painting and finishing was mine, but the touches that make it so special are all her.”
“She’s a terrific designer,” Duncan said. “The place is modern and comfortable, but it’s still a cabin. Nothing frou-frou or cutesy, despite being furnished by a girl.”
“Speaking of wives, did you married guys get a special dispensation from your better halves to allow you meet for lunch here today? I mean, now that you can’t come and go when you please,” Brice said, adding a “bauk-bauk-bauk” chicken sound imitation.
“He’s inferring we’re hen-pecked,” Duncan said to Grant.
“Nah, he’s just jealous. Because we go home to two beautiful, hot, talented babes at night and he just has an empty condo in Austin,” Grant replied. “So sad. Not even a dog to keep him company.”
“Well, he’s the youngest. He always was a little slow,” Duncan said, grinning.
“If I weren’t so comfortable in this chair, I’d get up and whup you,” Brice said.
“You could try, but I wouldn’t advise it,” Grant said.
“Hmm… Recon Marine or Texas Ranger…which one would I put my money on?” Duncan mused.
“Enough brotherly mutual admiration,” Brice said dryly. “I’ve just finished up a case and am cooling my heels, waiting to be summoned to testify at the trial, so I thought I’d rummage around and see if I can turn up anything on those harassment incidents you’ve told me about.”
“I’d bet you anything Marshall Thomason is behind them,” Duncan said.
“Just because the two of you have detested each other since high school isn’t enough reason to put him under surveillance,” Brice said.
“Maybe not, but something isn’t right there,” Duncan said. “Is it only coincidence that Harrison started having all sorts of problems—fence lines cut, brush damning up creeks—after she inherited the Triple A? With Thomason approaching her in his slick rich-boy way, commiserating on how hard it was for a city girl with no experience to try to carry on her Daddy’s ranch, and how he’d be happy to take it off her hands for a good price if she decided to go back to her accountant’s job in Dallas?”
“And there have been more incidents since you two got hitched and reunited the two parts of the Triple A,” Grant said. “Worst of which was losing Halsey.”
Duncan shook his head. “Her father’s prize herd bull, who was almost like a pet. She still hasn’t gotten over the shock of finding him dead on the road after a gate was “somehow” left open. Brice, you know none of us would leave a gate open, ever, especially not one near a road with blind curves and 18-wheeler traffic. We’re just lucky the truck driver wasn’t killed too.”
“If it weren’t for Grant’s wife’s great ideas about using the Scott Ranch house as a conference center, bringing in some additional income, we would be in a pretty difficult situation, losing Halsey’s stud fees. We were counting on them for a lot of our operating cash over the next several years,” Duncan said.
“Thomason’s been nosing around all the ranchers, trying to get ones teetering on the brink of solvency to sell out,” Grant added.
“Maybe so,” Brice allowed. “That still doesn’t provide proof that he’s guilty of anything except wanting to build condos on every piece of land in the Hill Country that boasts a fine view.”
A chorus of disgusted groans met that observation. “So far only some of the low-landers have sold out. Good ranch land, but not the vistas like this one that would inspire the moneybag lawyers and doctors from Austin and San Antonio to buy the property for their weekend getaway houses,” Grant said.
“True,” Brice said. “So why would he want that land? It’s not like he can build some big housing development out in the middle of nowhere. The roads from Whiskey River aren’t wide enough and the speed limits are too low for people to want to live here and commute into San Antonio or Austin.”
“I wouldn’t put it past him to do it out of sheer meanness,” Duncan said. “And the satisfaction of thinking he can get away with it.”
“Maybe,” Brice said. “But I’m thinking something about land must be the key, if he is behind it. I thought I’d stop by the Whiskey River library later and look at the maps and property records. They have copies of some of the deed books from the county records office in Johnson City.”
“Go for it, little brother,” Grant said. “I should finish stringing the rest of the electric wire on the road-side boundary fences this week, so at least we’ll know immediately if we have any more breaks. I’ve been thinking about installing some security cameras pointed at the gates, too. Although someone bent on mischief could just cut the fences; they wouldn’t need to open a gate.”
“It might be worth it. Sometimes just having the bad guys know you’ve added surveillance is enough to convince them to attack someone else,” Brice said.
Finishing up his water, Grant said, “Speaking of fencing, I’d better get back to work. Unlike you law enforcement wusses, who can lounge around waiting on court dates, we ranchers have to work every day.”
“Why do you think he went into law enforcement?” Duncan said, grinning.
Brice gave him a narrow look. “Maybe I need to whup you instead of Grant. Yeah, we’re wusses alright. Only have to get up before dawn and stay out all hours on a stake out, tracking the bad guys through pouring rain or in the icy darkness, and getting shot at by hostage-taking crazies.”
Duncan and Grant sobered, exchanging looks. “We were sorry to hear about Tad. Seriously, we appreciate what you do, protecting us. And the dangers you face. Take care of yourself, won’t you?”
“Always. Sorry to be touchy. It’s only been a week since the funeral, though.”
He’d lost one of his best friends from police academy days ten days ago—shot in the face while doing a routine traffic stop for a burned-out tail light. But the driver had been a mule for a drug dealer, and panicking about being pulled over, had opened fire as soon as Tad tapped on his window.
The cost of the game. All the brothers knew that Brice, detailed out of the Texas Ranger Special Operations Division in Austin and a sharpshooter when a SWAT squad was called out, could be the one in the sights of a gun-toting criminal some day.
“Well, thanks for meeting me for lunch,” Brice said, trying to return to a more up-beat mood.
“Will you be around Whiskey River for awhile?” Duncan asked.
“A few days, probably. Might as well stay here rather than go back to Austin. It’s a shorter drive to the courthouse in Johnson City.”
“You’re welcome to bunk in at the house,” Duncan offered.
“Or stay here at the cabin,” Grant said.
“Hmm… take up residence with one of my newlywed brothers? Probably not. I might camp up at our old site on the ridge. Or I could get a room at Hell’s Half Acre B&B downtown, where I could walk to the diner or Booze’s or the steak house if I’m wanting something fancy.”
Grant grinned. “That might be fitting. The swinging single dude staying in a former bordello.”
Duncan shook his head. “You might not want to stay with us, but you know our lovely wives are at least going to want to feed you if you stay in the area.”
“Well, I might not turn down an invite to some meals.”
“I should think not,” Duncan said. “I do a better steak than Barron’s and Grant makes some mean tacos and enchiladas.”
“Dinners for sure, then, “ Brice said. “I’ll text you and let you know my plans.”
The threesome rose and carried their drinks and takeout bags back into the cabin. “We’ll look to see you again soon, then, little brother,” Duncan said.
“Thanks for hosting us for lunch at the cabin,” Brice said. “It’s still the best view in three counties.”
“Anytime,” Grant said. “With you chasing the bad guys all over central Texas, we don’t get to see you all that often.”
“Well, I’ll try not to hang around long enough for you to tire of my company,” Brice said.
“Good luck at the library,” Duncan said. “I hope you turn up something useful.”An hour later, after checking into a room at the B&B and parking his truck in the lot, Brice blew out a breath of relief as he walked into the cool air-conditioned dimness of the Whiskey River library. Even at midday, the high ridge on which Grant’s cabin was located got a good breeze, and sitting in the shade on the deck, being outdoors was still pleasant. After walking two blocks in town from the B&B, with no breeze and heat rising in waves off the roads and sidewalks, the air conditioning felt great.
Not that he’d ever admit it to his brothers, he thought, smiling, unless he wanted to get ribbed about going soft. They’d all grown up cutting hay, chasing down stray cows, and mending fencing all through the year. Ranch work didn’t stop for weather, whether the stifling heat of late summer or the cold driving rain of January. His boyhood spent in the open had prepared him well for August two-a-day football practices in high school, too.
But being able to tolerate the heat and enjoying it were two different things.
Though, being off duty, he wasn’t wearing a badge, most of the patrons in the reading room still looked up as he walked over to the librarian’s desk. A broad-shouldered former offensive lineman who stood six foot, six, in jeans, boots, western shirt and signature white Stetson, tended to attract attention even without the Ranger star on his chest.
Most of patrons here, though, were long-time residents he knew well, who, respecting the library silence rules, threw him a wave or a nodded rather than calling out a greeting. Walking up to he desk, he doffed his hat and smiled at Shirley Lane, who’d been the head librarian as long as he could remember.
“Hi, Miss Shirley. How are you?” he said in a low voice.
“Why Brice McAllister, as I live and breathe! My, you’re looking good—all grown up and a Texas Ranger!” She shook her head.
“Yeah, I expect you thought I would end up behind bars rather than holding the keys,” he teased.
“Now you three boys kicked up some larks growing up, but I always knew you were good kids. How have you been?”
“Doing fine. And you?”
“Well, it’s been a bit lonely since I lost Warren, but I’m managing. What brings you in?”
“I want to look at the old and current county maps. Then match them up to the deeds of ownership and maybe tax records of income tax paid on mineral rights. Where would I find those?”
“The maps are all kept in the reference room. Some of them are fragile, so I’m afraid you can’t borrow them. But you’re welcome to look at them and take any notes you want. The original deeds and tax records are at the County Courthouse in Johnson City, but for a small fee, you can access them online.”
“Great. Let me pay you the fee, and then I’ll go look at the maps. In the reference room, you said?”
“Yes. Mary Williams is the reference librarian. Tell her what you need and she’ll pull out the maps for you.”
“Thank you, ma’am,” he said, tipping his hat.
“You need anything else, just let me know.”
After paying his fee and thanking Shirley for her help, he walked down a short hallway to the reference room, where rare or fragile or historic books and records were kept. In addition to walls of bookshelves and cabinets with wide, shallow drawers that held the maps, the room contained tables and chairs where patrons could sit while they viewed the materials, several of them also holding desktop computers linked into the library internet system.
The room was empty except for a dark-haired woman who was facing way from him, replacing some books onto a shelf. “Hello, ma’am,” Brice called out when he walked in, not wanting to startle her. “Miss Shirley said you’d help me find some maps.”
The woman turned toward him. “Certainly, sir. Which maps do you need?”
Her name hadn’t rung a bell, and when she turned to face him, he confirmed that he had never met her. Tall for a woman, which made the top of her head reach about to his chin. Lustrous dark hair pulled back severely into a bun. Dark eyes that might be pretty, although the heavy dark-rimmed glasses she wore made it difficult to tell. Skin with a slight olive tint said she might be Hispanic, despite the bland Anglo name. Which might have been a married name, except Brice noted she wasn’t wearing a wedding ring.
She was, however, wearing a dark, shapeless, long-sleeved dress out of some sort of material that looked like burlap that might just be the ugliest thing he’d ever seen on a woman. Though by her unlined face and air of vitality, he’d estimate her to be about his own age–late-twenties, maybe, the granny-hairdo and unattractive clothing made her seem older.
Smiling, he held out his hand. “Brice McAllister, Miss Williams. I grew up around here—you may know my brothers, Duncan and Grant, who run our family place, the Triple A ranch. I don’t recall seeing you around town before, so you must be new here.”
She gave him a brief smile, but didn’t shake his hand. “I’ve worked at the library for about a year. Now, what was it you wanted me to find for you, Mr. McAllister?”
He didn’t consider himself irresistible to women, but Brice usually got a warmer response to an introduction and a smile than that.
O-kay, so she didn’t do friendly. Must be from a big city somewhere. Taking the time to say hello and chat briefly when you encountered someone was pretty much the minimum standard of politeness in a small town like Whiskey River.
But he could do all-business, too, if that was what she preferred.
“I’d like to look at all the city and county maps, from the first surveys to the last. Also access deed records and property taxes, which Miss Shirley told me I could do online. I paid her the fee.”
She nodded. “If you’ll have a seat at one of the tables, I’ll locate the maps and bring them over, along with the network password and the internet address for the county deeds and records office.”
He did as instructed, choosing a table near the window where the light would be good. Once he had the map location and owners pinned down, he could check to see whether taxes had ever been paid for mineral rights on any of the properties. There were lucrative deposits of oil and gas all over Texas, the nearby Permian Basin containing one of the largest.
He could understand Marshall Thomason wanting to buy out ranchers who might be sitting on valuable oil reserves, but as far as he knew, there was no guarantee the Triple A had any. They had certainly never authorized any company to explore and find out. So why would Thomason want their land?
Maybe he didn’t. Maybe, if he was in fact behind the incidents, it was just pure meanness, trying to aggravate a man his name and status didn’t impress, who’d never shown him the deference Thomason felt his wealth and his important family connections deserved.
With nothing to do but wait, Brice found himself watching Miss No Nonsense Librarian. With her severe hairdo, glasses and ugly dress, she could be a caricature of the Old Maid Librarian. What had soured her on life? he wondered.
Her demeanor might shout “old maid—men stay away” but her movements were graceful, almost athletic. Brice wondered if she’d been a gymnast or a dancer. Certainly she balanced the wide, unwieldy maps she was extracting from the map case with ease. He caught himself before he invited a snub by asking if he could give her a hand.
Miss Williams would probably tell him, with a disapproving stare, that she was fully capable of Doing It All Herself.
The occupational hazard of law enforcement—meeting someone, he instinctively began to evaluate them, figure out their background, decide whether the way they presented themselves matched their appearance. Miss Mary Williams was something of a puzzle. But he figured if the woman had had a bad experience with men and wanted to avoid them, becoming a reference librarian where she dealt mostly with dusty maps and moldy papers was probably an excellent occupation.
Dressing like she did, too, would eliminate any second looks that might notice the pretty eyes and dark hair and prompt a man to try to get to know her better.
A few minutes later, after extracting a card from her desk drawer and scrawling a note on it, she brought the maps over and spread them carefully on a table adjacent to the one he’d chosen with the computer.
“Some of the maps are too large to fit on the computer table, so I’ll leave them here. You can review them and move over to do your online search. Here’s the password and IP address.” She handed him the card. “You may view the maps for as long as you like, or until the library closes. As I’m sure Miss Shirley told you, reference materials can’t be checked out. Just leave them on the table when you are finished. I’ll put them away later.”
“Thank you, Miss Williams,” he said, trying another smile.
Which received no more response than the first. Returning a short nod, Mary Williams walked back to her desk and back to her work, doing an excellent job of ignoring him.

For next few hours, Brice looked over maps, checked the deed and tax records online and made some notes. Only a few of the farms and ranches on the back road along which Duncan told him Thomason had purchased properties had ever recorded paying taxes on mineral rights or royalties. Even on those, the amounts paid were low, indicating that the area probably wasn’t rich with easily obtainable oil and gas. If the reserves on the ranches that had been tapped were modest, there was less likelihood that a neighboring property would contain a big enough bonanza of oil, gas, onyx or gypsum to make it worthwhile for Thomason to purchase it.
Of course, he’d only done a cursory search. Warranty deeds for property that didn’t specifically mention the mineral rights supposedly indicated those rights belonged to the property owners. But sometimes, previous owners leased or sold mineral rights without filing a separate mineral rights deed, leaving the status of the mineral rights cloudy, even if the new owner had a valid warranty deed. New landowners in Texas were always advised to have a detailed title search done before they tried to exploit any mineral assets on their property, a laborious and often expensive proposition.
Given the little he’d uncovered, he didn’t think it probable that Thomason, more concerned about his own profits than enriching anyone else, would have wanted to hire the expensive expertise of a “landman,” a specialist whose sole job was to trace out mineral rights from surface property rights, usually on behalf of an oil or gas company interested in drilling on the property.
The only thing the properties possessed in common was a border along the county road that formed the western barrier of the Triple A. Which, his instincts told him, if Thomason were trying to sabotage operations and make the Triple A so unprofitable that Duncan and Grant were forced to sell off part of the land, it didn’t appear to have anything to do with mineral rights.
Still, the fact that the property bordered the Triple A made him suspect that, if there were in fact harassment and Thomason was behind it, the reason still had to be something about the land. Though he had no idea what.
Standing, he stretched out his back, stiff from bending over the maps, and walked over to the reference desk, where Miss Williams sat working on a desktop computer. “I’m finished with them, ma’am,” he said. “Sure I can’t bring them over to the desk for you?”
“No, thank you, I’d prefer to handle them myself.”
Miss Shirley would have asked him if he’d found what he needed, or whether she could get him something else, or at least bid him goodbye. Mary Williams, after giving him another short nod he took as a dismissal, returned her attention to her computer and went back to ignoring him.
It shouldn’t have annoyed him—what did it matter whether Whiskey River’s reference librarian liked him or not? But her barely polite demeanor and extreme disinterest seemed…deliberate, somehow. Not antagonistic, exactly, but…wary.
Why should a woman he’d never met before be wary of him?
The question tweaking his lawman’s curiosity even further, with a frown, he walked out.

 


 

Award-winning historical romance author Julia Justiss has written more than thirty-five novels and novellas set in the English Regency and the Texas Hill Country.

A voracious reader who began jotting down plot ideas for Nancy Drew novels in her third grade spiral, Julia has published poetry and worked as a business journalist.

She and her husband live in East Texas, where she continues to craft the stories she loves. Check her website for details about her books, chat with her on social media, and follow her on Bookbub and Amazon to receive notices about her latest releases. For special subscriber giveaways, discounted books, character sketches and more, sign up for her newsletter at:

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Say Goodbye by Karen Rose – Review & Giveaway

Say Goodbye by Karen Rose – Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

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Description:
For decades, Eden has remained hidden in the remote wilds of the Pacific Northwest, “Pastor” keeping his cult’s followers in thrall for his personal profit and sexual pleasures. But the Founding Elders are splintering, and Pastor’s surrogate son DJ is scheming to make it all his own.

When two of Eden’s newest members send out a cry for help, it reaches FBI Special Agent Tom Hunter, whose friend and fellow FBI Special Agent Gideon Reynolds and his sister, Mercy, are themselves escapees of the Eden cult, targeted by the Founding Elders who want them silenced forever. The three have vowed to find the cult and bring it down, and now, they finally have a solid lead.

Neutralizing Eden’s threat will save captive members and ensure Tom’s new friends can live without fear. But when his best friend, ex-Army combat medic Liza Barkley, joins the case, it puts her life—and their blossoming love—in danger. With everything they hold dear in the balance, Tom and Liza, together with Gideon and Mercy, must end Eden once and for all.

 

 

Review:

Say Goodbye by Karen Rose is the 3rd and final book in her Sacramento arc, which is the 25th book in her Romantic Suspense series.  I am a big fan of Karen Rose, as her suspense thrillers are amazing, and unputdownable.  In this third arc, Rose gives us another fabulous book that is once again 640 pages. Rose always creates fantastic heroes and secondary characters, as well as evil villains; and this does not change in this book, as she writes another masterpiece.  Refresher: This arc revolves around a cult, Eden, who have been hidden for many years. The cult treats their women like slaves, and the young girls are forced to marry an elder (who have multiple brides) and have sex at the age of 12. The elders are all evil, and in Say Goodbye, Pastor and DJ Belmont take center stage, with Belmont being a horrific killer.

Say Goodbye was a tense, exciting, action filled story that kept me on the edge of to my seat from start to finish.  I thought the previous two books in this arc was amazing, but Say Goodbye was even better.  The nice thing about the Sacramento arc is that many of the characters from the previous books, play major parts in this one. Gideon (first book hero), his sister Mercy (second book heroine) work with all their friends to protect them, as well as a couple of others having escaped from Eden (Amos-Abilgail).

Tom and Liza are the leads in this story, with Gideon, Mercy, Rafe, Daisy, and the Sokolov family, and other FBI/Police friends working together to find DJ Belmont before he kidnaps or kills Mercy.  I loved the entire big family vibe, as they were all great.  Tom has been best friends with Liza since she was 17, and he was 20.  Liza just returned from being injured (was in army), and is openly welcomed by the Sokolov family and friends, especially Daisy and Mercy.  Liza has always had strong feelings for Tom, but though he has feelings for her, he is hesitant to move on, still grieving the murder of Tory and their unborn child.

What follows is an intriguing, tense, exciting, and edge of your seat suspense storyline that had me holding my breath so many times.  This was very tense from all the way through, especially with the evil Belmont constantly threatening everyone around Mercy and Gideon.  Pastor, who was sick in this book, was also evil, having started the cult, and hid all the money. As we raced to the wild climax, I prayed for the demise of the evil people and their cult.  Tom was a good hero, though I did find him somewhat annoying, not being able to open himself truly to Liza.  Liza was a fabulous heroine, who was willing to put herself in danger, to help find Eden and save her friends.

Say Goodbye is an intense thriller, with non- stop action all the way.  As I have said before, Karen Rose never fails to give a fantastic well written thriller that is intense, always on the edge, with fantastic characters, evil villains and a wonderful couple you care for. If you love suspense, with a touch of romance and a thriller all the way, then look no further then Karen Rose.

Reviewed by Barb

Copy provided by Publisher

 

EDEN, CALIFORNIA
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 10:30 P.M.Hayley Gibbs winced as her belly scraped against the doorjamb lead‑ ing into the clinic. Dammit. She’d underestimated her current—
and increasing—size yet again. Damn pregnancy.
She gave her stomach a soothing pat. Not you, she silently told her unborn child. Her daughter. I’m not mad at you, Jellybean. Never you. She was mad, however, at her mother. She was beyond furious with the woman. And scared of her at the same time. The fury was nothing new. The fear . . . well, that was new. At least this kind of fear. It had always been the fear of not having enough to eat, or of where they’d live the next week, or what her mother would do if she learned that Hayley was having sex with her high school boyfriend Cameron, or
that her little brother Graham was shoplifting electronics.
Then she’d found out what her mother would do if she found out. Move us here. To this hellhole in the middle of fucking nowhere. From which Hayley was going to escape or die trying.
She just needed to get into the clinic’s office.
Drawing a breath, she eased her way through the clinic door and
quietly closed it behind her. She stood statue‑still, listening for the sound of anyone else. But it was silent.
Thank you, she mouthed, not sure whom she was thanking. Prob‑ ably not God, or not her mother’s God, at least. The God Hayley wanted to thank would help her keep her baby safe. The God she wanted to thank definitely wouldn’t approve of these . . . monsters.
Eden was full of monsters and her mother had dragged Hayley and her brother here, kicking and screaming.
Hayley rubbed her fingertips over the thick chain welded around her neck.
Welded. Around. My. Neck.
It wasn’t jewelry, despite the locket that dangled from it. It was a collar. It was ownership.
It was also empty, at the moment. The locket. But after the baby came, her locket would be filled with her wedding photo. She was technically married now—and had been since the day they’d arrived in this awful place. Luckily her “husband” didn’t want to “consum‑ mate” their union with another man’s bastard in her belly, so she hadn’t been forced into sex. Yet.
He didn’t want their wedding photo sullied with the evidence of her sin. He’d have the photo taken after the “bastard” was born. Which gave her a little more than six weeks.
Hayley’s gut churned at the thought of being the fourth wife Brother Joshua would have—at the same time. Polygamy abounded in Eden, and Hayley wanted no part of it.
She hadn’t wanted any of it. She just wanted to be with her boy‑ friend and live their lives the way they’d always planned since their first homecoming dance in the ninth grade.
No, this baby wasn’t what she and Cameron had planned, at least not now. They were only seventeen, after all. But Cam’s parents had stepped up and said that they could live with them once the baby came, that they could still go to college.
But her mother hadn’t agreed. The next thing Hayley had known,she and Graham had been forced into the back of some guy’s truck.
And now I’m here.
Here in Eden. Here in the clinic, closed at the moment. If she got caught . . . She shuddered at the very thought. But she had to try. She was more afraid to stay in Eden than she was of any punishment. And Pastor—the creepy leader of this creepy cult in the mountains—he terrified her. The people here obeyed him like robots.
She rubbed her stomach as it lurched again. Come on now. Don’t worry, Jellybean. I’ll get us out of here before you arrive. I promise.
So now she had to. She’d just promised her daughter.
Her daughter. She was going to have a daughter. She and Cameron had seen the baby on the ultrasound back at the ob‑gyn’s office in San Francisco, had heard her heartbeat. Cam had cried, his hand clutching hers as they’d stared at the small screen.
I love you, Cam, she whispered inside her own mind. I love you both. They hadn’t chosen a name yet, so they called her Jellybean for now. Her daughter didn’t even have a name, but Hayley would have given up everything to protect her. Which meant getting them out of this place, with its clinic that would have been considered medieval
even in Little House on the Prairie days.
She looked around the dark room, shrouded in shadow. There was no ultrasound here. No oxygen if the baby needed it. No painkillers. At all. Just a bed with stirrups and straps.
Hayley didn’t want to know what the straps were used for.
She did know that women died in childbirth here. She’d heard the whispers.
It would be God’s punishment for her sin, one woman had said.
She’s a whore, another had added.
And then one old crone had whispered words that had chilled her to the bone: Sister Rebecca will take the baby and raise it as her own.
Even if she lives? the first woman had asked.
Even if the whore lives, the crone had confirmed. God wouldn’t want any baby to be raised by that Jezebel.


 

 

Karen Rose’s publisher is graciously offering a HARDCOVER of SAY GOODBYE to ONE (1) lucky commenter at The Reading Cafe

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The Railway Countess by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

The Railway Countess (Heirs in Waiting 2) by Julia Justiss-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

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ABOUT THE BOOK:Release Date June

She didn’t want to marry

Least of all a Viscount!

Marcella Cranmore wants to avoid marriage and continue using her mathematical expertise to help her railway engineer father—but her mother insists on her having a season. At her first ball, Marcella’s relieved to see someone she knows, railway investor Crispin D’Aubignon. Conversing with the viscount is safe, for she’s as off-limits to him as he is to her…except that is only increasing the fascination!

Heirs in Waiting

One day these Oxford gentlemen will inherit estates, titles and wealth.

But for now, they’re forging their own paths in life…and love!

•••••••

REVIEW: Marcella doesn’t want, or need a husband thank you! Marriage will put an end to her passion of helping her father build and design trains. But promising her mother and grandfather to attend a season in London, is becoming a frightful bore! Why can’t she allowed to work in the field she loves? Oh yes, that’s right, she’s a woman! And women were for decoration and procreation only! To be seen and not heard! Not for Marcella, she wants a partnership or nothing.

Crispin is sick of his father wanting him to marry for money! Avoiding him at all costs is becoming rather tiresome! But if he doesn’t then his poor mother has to face her husband’s wrath! He likes to earn his money the honest way, to work for it! Whereas his father wants to inherit or for his son to get a dowry for his new wife!

So when they meet each other, an alliance is formed, a front will be provided for both parties. And when it’s all done, no one will be hurt, and everyone else will be none the wiser…..

In theory it sounds like a great plan, but neither expect to grow fond of one another. Neither expected more from this arrangement, but it does. So can Crispin woo the lovely young Marcella? And will she believe he wants her for her brain and not the dowry that comes with marriage? And if this other suitor puts his claim out there, who will Marcella choose?

I’ve read book one in this series. But it’s not necessary to read in order.

It’s a sweet romance, so if your looking for smut, you won’t find it here. What you will find is a beautifully written story. With a strong female character and a hero who is willing to listen and be a modern man, rather than a chest thumping Neanderthal!

There is humour and quick wit. A rival for the fair Marcella’s hand, and parents that want what’s best for their children (even if the children don’t want it!)

I did like the scene where Marcella dresses as a man (unheard of in those days) but Crispin is having a hard time focusing on the task at hand ?

I also liked that Marcella had a brain and it was being utilised by her father. He saw her potential and nurtured it.

Click HERE for Julie’s review of book one THE BLUESTOCKING DUCHESS

?Reviewed by Julie B

Copy supplied for review

Bristol, England, March 1834

“If it can be done, it will certainly be a magnificent achievement,” Crispin D’Aubignon, Viscount Dellamont, murmured to himself as he stood reviewing his notes outside the office of Richard Cranmore, the engineer surveying the final leg of the proposed Great Western Railway.
With the substantial return he’d earned on his investment in the Liverpool & Manchester, he was always looking for other promising railway ventures. If he received the answers he anticipated from the engineering assistant he would be consulting in just a few moments, he’d be ready to sink some money into this new scheme.
Review completed, he walked in to find the bare outer office deserted. Not surprising, since the firm’s main headquarters was back in London and this suite of rooms had been rented only for the duration of the local survey. But the front door had been left unlocked, which indicated there should be someone on the premises.
Proceeding toward the inner office, he called out, “Hello! Is anyone here?”
He’d been about to add his name and the reason for his visit when he reached the doorway and stopped short.
Seated behind the desk of the inner office was a woman. Not just a woman, he realized as she looked up at him inquiringly, but a young and very attractive one.
Though her gown wasn’t as outlandishly elaborate as those in the first stare of fashion, he recognized the material as expensive and the cut and fit as expert. Glossy dark hair with glimmers of auburn glistened from the elaborate arrangement of curls pinned to her head, and the eyes turned up to him were a beautiful green, framed by long dark lashes. The pale skin of her face looked petal-soft, her nose aquiline and lovely. Lush lips and a temptingly curved figure produced an immediate jump in his pulse and a prickling awareness in the rest of his body.
No gently-born woman worked, and offices employed only male clerks. So what sort of woman could she be? The chere-amie of one of the engineers?
Before he could settle his rattled brain and produce speech, she said, “Can I help you?”
A little embarrassed to have been caught frankly staring at her, Crispin stammered, “V-viscount Dellamont. I’m here to consult with a Mr. Gilling?”
Surprise widened her eyes. “Lord Dellamont? Excuse me, but I was expecting someone…older. Most potential investors are,” she explained. “Austin—Mr. Gilling—should arrive shortly. Indeed, when I heard someone walk in, I thought it was him.”
She rose from behind the desk, her tiny waist emphasized by the wideness of her skirts. Though she was rather tall for a woman, the top of her head should just about reach his chin, Crispin thought. He could wrap both arms almost completely around that small frame, if he were to embrace her.
And ah, would he like to embrace her! Just who was this enticingly lovely woman?
“If you’d step back into the front room, you can wait there,” she was saying. “I apologize that our reception area is so…bare. Not expecting to be in Bristol long or to be receiving investors or clients here, my father didn’t consider it worth renting the quantity of furniture and comforts we have at the London office. Would you like a cup of tea? I can send Father’s assistant to the shop at the corner.”
“No, thank you.” Though the girl made a “shooing” motion, directing him toward the outer room, Crispin lingered, compelled to find out more about this lovely creature.
Then the significance of what she’d just said registered. “Your father?” he repeated. “You are…Richard Cranmore’s daughter?”
“Yes. Since there is no one to perform proper introductions, I’ll introduce myself. Marcella Cranmore, my lord.” She gave him a curtsey that was long on grace and exaggerated deference.
If she were truly the respected engineer’s unmarried daughter, that would make her a member of the rising merchant elite—who were known for their straight-laced morals. No chance of a casual, pleasurable encounter with a woman of that background, regrettably. The price of getting to know this young woman better would be marriage—which should prompt him to terminate the conversation immediately.
Just then, the outer door opened and a young man of about his own age bustled in. “Ah, Austin, there you are,” the young woman said, gifting the newcomer with a dazzling smile.
The engineer returned a fond one of his own. After sparing Crispin only a cursory glance, he said, “Sorry I’m late, Marcella. Some problems with the equipment at the site—it’s rather hard to access. But your father was insistent that I return as soon as possible, since he was expecting a visit by some fancy nob who’s already dropped a pile of blunt buying shares in other railroad ventures.”
The lady’s smile wavered. “Viscount Dellamont?”
“Yes, that was the name.”
She inclined her head toward Crispin. “He’s already arrived.”
Gilling turned toward him, as if seeing him for the first time. “Lord Dellamont?”
“I have that honor,” Crispin said drily.
Though the young man’s face colored, he gave Crispin a quick bow. “Pleased to meet you, my lord. Austin Gilling, Mr. Cranmore’s assistant chief engineer. No offense meant, I assure you.”
“None taken.”
“If you would be gracious enough to wait a few minutes longer, I need to have Miss Cranmore record some of the measurements we’ve just taken. After that, I will be happy to answer any questions you might have.”
“Let me send for that tea, my lord. We’ll make you as comfortable as possible while you wait, and then Mr. Gilling will give you his full attention,” Miss Cranmore said, giving him a placating smile—as if he were a querulous child who needed soothing.
“If Mr. Gilling is going to be giving you pertinent figures about the approach slope, I’d like to sit in on the discussion.”
“The figures are of a highly technical nature. We wouldn’t want to waste your valuable time, boring you with mathematical details,” she replied.
“Whose significance I couldn’t possibly comprehend?” he suggested, not sure whether he was more amused or offended by her treating him like a rich, self-important, clueless dolt.
Her overly-gracious demeanor slipped a bit. “Are you a trained engineer then, my lord?” she asked with some asperity.
“No. But since I have, er, ‘dropped a good deal of blunt’ in several other railway ventures, I’ve made it my business to become more acquainted with some of the technical issues involved with constructing them.”
“I really can’t see why—“ Gilling began, but Miss Cranmore waved a hand, motioning him to silence.
“If it would please you to know the figures, you are certainly quite welcome to listen. We have no objection to our investors becoming more knowledgeable about the technical aspects of our engineering projects. It can only increase their appreciation and admiration for the work my father’s engineers accomplish.”
Giving Gilling a warning look, as if to remind him he was dealing with an investor whose plump pockets they needed to fund the project that would pay his salary, she said, “Do step back into the office, then. Mr. Gilling, will you bring another chair? And please let me send Timmons for that tea, my lord.”
“If you wish to have some,” Crispin said, curious about what was going to happen next.
And even more curious about why the daughter of a successful, well-known engineer would be sitting at a desk in his temporary office. Her father, he knew, had made a comfortable fortune building railroads and bridges. Even were it not highly unusual to have a female clerk in their office, the family was certainly well enough off that his daughter need do nothing more taxing than help her mother run the household, visit friends, and spend her father’s blunt on clothes and fripperies while her parents lined up prospective suitors.
The tea order dispatched to the assistant who ducked in when Miss Cranmore called him and an extra chair brought by Gilling to the desk, Miss Cranmore resumed her seat behind it, Gilling taking the one he pulled up beside her. While she extracted a notebook from the desk drawer, the engineer pulled a pad from his waistcoat pocket. Once she had taken out her nib pen and opened the inkwell lid, she nodded to Gilling.
“Have you and Father finished all the measurements of the slope leading up from the river?” she asked.
“We have one more section to complete—the slope is rather steep there, so the work goes slowly. We’re having to break the hundred-foot segments into many smaller increments for the forward tape man to be able to keep it level at his chest. Are you ready for the numbers?”
She dipped her nib in the ink. “Ready.”
For the next few minutes, Gilling read off a list of lengths while Miss Cranmore copied them into her log book.
“That’s all I have for now,” Gilling said. “After I speak with Lord Dellamont, I’ll head back out to rejoin Mr. Cranmore. We hope to finish the rest of the measurements today and then can begin figuring the angles necessary to construct the grade.”
The assistant arrived with tea, Miss Cranmore pouring while Gilling put away his notebook. “So, my lord, what would you like to know?” he asked.
“The countryside immediately outside London is flat enough, but as one journeys westward, especially after Chippenham, the land becomes increasingly hilly, with several rivers and a canal to cross. How do the engineers propose to deal with these?”
Gilling angled a look at him. “You are familiar with the terrain?”
“I’m not a professional surveyor, of course, but before investing in any venture, I prefer to ride the route myself. Evaluating the difficulties it may pose and therefore the chances of it being successfully completed. I have to admit, when I first looked it over, I was rather skeptical.”
“And are you still skeptical?” Miss Cranmore asked.
“That’s why I wanted to talk with Mr. Gilling.”
“The route is challenging,” Gilling admitted. “The stations at both Temple Meads and Bath will be elevated and require the construction of viaducts. In addition to bridges crossing smaller waterways, there will be a major bridge to carry the track over the River Avon. The Kennet and Avon canal will have to be diverted, and one major tunnel constructed through Box Hill outside Corsham, on the highest point of the route.”
“Which, I understand, will be the longest tunnel ever attempted?” Crispin said.
“True. But the engineer in overall charge of the project, Mr. Brunel, worked on tunnels with his father, also a superior engineer. No one in England has more experience.”
“How steep will the gradient be?”
“For the majority of the line, no more than 1 in 1000. The Box Hill tunnel will be steeper, of course, but manageable.”
“What about the stone underlying the tunnel? Will it be able to support having so long a cavern carved out of it?”
“Mr. Brunel believes so. He intends to sink shafts along the route to examine the geology of the rock, of course, before the construction begins.”
“How about curves going up and down the grades?”
“No angles more acute than ten degrees, except perhaps in steeper areas where switchbacks will be necessary. But the engine’s speed will be slow enough in those instances not to pose a danger.”
Crispin nodded, the majority of his concerns alleviated. “I think that answers most of my questions.” He ought to head out himself, but he couldn’t quite master his desire to chat further with the intriguingly accomplished Miss Cranmore.
Giving in to that impulse, he said, “I know you’re anxious to get back and complete your work, Mr. Gilling, so don’t let me keep you any longer.”
Gilling nodded back. “The Great Western will be a boon for its investors, I assure you, Lord Dellamont. Mr. Brunel intends to create not only a direct link between London and Bristol, but by constructing of a fleet of fast, transatlantic iron ships, to New York as well.”
If Brunel were successful in doing all of that, an investor’s return on this venture could be huge, Crispin thought. “Thank you, Mr. Gilling. I shall keep it all in mind.”
“Will you be back in the office later, Mr. Gilling?” Miss Cranmore asked as the engineer put his tea cup back on the tray and then rose from his chair.
“I don’t know. It depends on how long the final measurements take.” Dragging his chair back against the wall, he added, “Your father said not to wait here for him, that he’d meet you back at your lodgings.”
“Perhaps you will join us for dinner, then?” she suggested, giving the engineer another of her lovely smiles.
“I would like that,” he replied, returning another smile of his own. “But I’ll need to make calculations on the data we collected today so I can recommend to your father the best way to proceed along the final approach while keeping the angle of rise within acceptable limits.”
“Father and I will be working on the figures as well. We could compare notes,” Miss Cranmore said.
He nodded—as if it were a common occurrence to have a lady figuring angles and slopes. “Thank you for the invitation. I shall certainly join you if I can.” Turning to Crispin with a bow, he said, “Thank you for coming by, Lord Dellamont. Mr. Cranmore is gratified by your interest in our project, as I’m sure Mr. Brunel will be also. My lord, Miss Cranmore.”
Giving them another bow, the engineer walked out. Miss Cranmore, Crispin noted, followed the engineer’s progress out of the office with a wistful look on her face.
Crispin found himself unaccountably annoyed—and a little bit jealous—of the engineer for the favor with which he was treated by this lovely young woman. Which made no sense. They were in no way competing for Miss Cranmore’s attentions. After this one meeting, he would never see her again.
But because of that fact, he meant to take advantage of this opportunity to find out what inspired a girl of her beauty to spend her evening solving geometric equations with her father.
“You needn’t rush, my lord,” she said, at last turning her attention back to him. “Please, finish your tea.”
“Thank you, I shall.”
“You seem…rather well versed in angles and gradients. Have you studied them?”
Crispin smiled. “My classics education at Oxford didn’t prepare me to evaluate the nuts and bolts of technological advances like railway engines—but they fascinate me. I’m convinced the new industrial age represents the future of wealth and economic expansion, and railways the future of transportation.”
“And so you are eager to invest in them.”
“I was fortunate enough to have a great aunt who left me a small bequest. After I left university, I travelled to the north to investigate the companies beginning the transition from using horse-drawn vehicles on rails to harnessing the new steam engines designed by Mr. Stephenson for the Stockton and Darlington. My modest investments in that and several similar ventures were rewarded. So I now follow rather closely the bills introduced into Parliament for the construction of new lines, riding the countryside myself to evaluate the proposed routes.”
“I have to admit, you seem much more knowledgeable than most of our aristocratic investors.” Her face coloring a little, she added, “I’m afraid I may have been…rather too dismissive upon first meeting you.”
“Thinking I was a useless fribble with more money than comprehension?”
“A dandy, anyway,” she added, her flush deepening. “If I gave the impression that my opinion of you was derogatory, I do apologize.”
Crispin suppressed a smile. She’d made it rather obvious that was indeed her opinion of him, but he wouldn’t embarrass her further by pointing that out—and risk having her speedily dismiss him. Because he was even more curious about her now than he’d been upon first meeting her, and wanted to know more.
For how long would he be able to lure her into talking with him?

 

Award-winning historical romance author Julia Justiss has written more than thirty-five novels and novellas set in the English Regency and the Texas Hill Country.

A voracious reader who began jotting down plot ideas for Nancy Drew novels in her third grade spiral, Julia has published poetry and worked as a business journalist.

She and her husband live in East Texas, where she continues to craft the stories she loves. Check her website for details about her books, chat with her on social media, and follow her on Bookbub and Amazon to receive notices about her latest releases. For special subscriber giveaways, discounted books, character sketches and more, sign up for her newsletter at:

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Julia Justiss  is graciously offering an ecopy of THE RAILWAY COUNTESS  to TWO lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe.

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Claimed (Lair of the Wolven 1) by JR Ward-Review & Giveaway

Claimed (Lair of the Wolven 1) by JR Ward-Review, Excerpt & Giveaway

 

CLAIMED
Lair of the Wolven 1
by JR Ward
Release Date: July 27, 2021
Genre: adult, contemporary, paranormal, romance

 

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play /

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 27, 2021

A heart-pounding new series set in the Black Dagger Brotherhood world, with a scientist fighting to save the timber wolves—and getting caught in a deadly trap herself…

Lydia Susi is passionate about protecting wolves in their natural habitat. When a hotel chain develops a tract of land next to the preserve, Lydia is one of the most vocal opponents of the project—and becomes a target.

One night, a shadowy figure threatens Lydia’s life in the forest, and a new hire at the Wolf Study Project comes from out of nowhere to save her. Daniel Joseph is both mysterious, and someone she intrinsically wants to trust. But is he hiding something?

As the stakes get higher, and one of Lydia’s colleagues is murdered, she must decide how far she will go to protect the wolves. Then a shocking revelation about Daniel challenges Lydia’s reality in ways she could never have predicted. Some fates demand courage, others require even more, with no guarantees. Is she destined to have true love… or will a soul-shattering loss ruin her forever?

••••••••

REVIEW:CLAIMED is the first instalment in JR Ward’s contemporary, adult LAIR OF THE WOLVEN paranormal, urban fantasy series-a spin off set in the author’s Black Dagger Brotherhood world. This is drifter/handyman Daniel Joseph, and scientist/wolf behaviorist Lydia Susi’s storyline. CLAIMED can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the BDB series is revealed where necessary.

NOTE: The Wolven are first introduced in JR Ward’s LOVER UNLEASHED, and first appear in THE JACKAL.

Told from third person perspective following two intersecting paths CLAIMED focuses on the search for the truth. Someone is poisoning the wolves at the wolf reserve in and around Walters, Upstate New York, and scientist Lydia Susi is desperate to uncover the truth. With the construction of a new hotel on the edge of the wolf preserve, Lydia is determined to prove the people responsible are the same people connected to the chain of hotels. Daniel Joseph, a new handyman at the Wolf Study Project (WSP) has caught the attention of our story line heroine but someone else has targeted our heroine in the process. As the number of bodies connected to the WSP begin to pile up, Lydia is determined to prove the guilty party is part of the hotel chain, and responsible for poisoning the animals she loves. What ensues is the slow building romance and relationship between Daniel and Lydia, and the fall-out as something more sinister is working behind the scenes to take down our story line couple, and the wolves in the Wolf Study Project.

Meanwhile, Xhex, beloved shellan of the Black Dagger Brother John Matthew begins to relive the nightmares of her time at the Sympath colony, a time that is about to come full-circle. Unable to get a straight answer from her brother, she is sent on a mission that will bring her up close and personal with an experiment she thought was long forgotten. JM, Blay, Rehvenge and Vishous make a cameo appearance

CLAIMED is a slow building and twisted story of secrets and lies; of power and control; of specieism, experiments, betrayal and mistrust. JR Ward pulls the reader into an imaginative and dramatic tale of intrigue, murder, and the supernatural. The romance takes a back seat to the story line premise as the author will not be focusing on one couple per book but a continuing saga of events. CLAIMED ends on a cliff hanger-you have been warned.

Copy supplied by the publisher

Reviewed by Sandy


Excerpt provided by Simon and Schuster

 

CLAIMED
Chapter 1Town of Walters, est. 1834
Upstate New YorkLydia Susi’s Destiny came for her in the veil, on a random Thursday in the early spring.
As she ran along the wooded trail, two miles into a loop that would take her through the preserve’s northeastern acreage, she was measuring the glowing line that topped the contours of the mountains. Soon, the stripe would expand to an aura, and after that, the sun would accept the handoff from the moon, and day would arrive.
Her grandfather had always told her there were two twilights, two gloamings, and if you wanted to find your past, you went into the pines in the evening as the sun went down. If you wanted your future to come to you, you went alone into the forest in the veil, during that sacred transition of night into morning. There, he’d told her, when the distinction between that which ruled the light and that which held domain over the dark was at its narrowest, when the moon and the sun reached for each other before the rotations of their orbits tore them asunder, there was when the mortal could brush up against the infinite and seek answers, direction, guidance.
Of course, that did not mean you got good news. Or what you wanted.
But life was not an à la carte buffet where you could choose everything that went on your plate—another words-of-wisdom from a man who had lived to be 101 years old still smoking a pipe and drinking a glass of sima after his dinner year round.
Why limit spring to just Vappu? he’d said.
Lydia had never believed in his superstitions. She was a researcher, a scientist, and the kinds of things that her isoisa had gone on about did not fit in with that Ph.D. in biology she’d bought on layaway from the federal government and was still paying off.
So no, she was not out looking for any prognosti-cation from the universe this morning. She was get-ting her workout done before she headed into her office at the Wolf Study Project. With the way things had been going lately, she was going to blink and it would be seven at night. Short-staffed and under-funded, everything was a fight for resources at WSP, and by the time she locked things up every evening, she was exhausted. So Carpe Cardio was her motto and why she was out in this misty darkness—
Lydia let her stride peter to a halt.
Her breath pumped in clouds that captured and held the moonlight, and as a breeze came across the trail, her body did the same with the chill, grabbing it out of the air and bringing it in under her wind-breaker.
As she shivered, she looked behind herself. The trail she was on was the widest one in the preserve, a highway rather than a street, but she couldn’t see much into the trees. Pines crowded up close to the shoulders of the packed path, and the fog wafting through the craggy trunks and fluffy boughs obscured the forest even more.
In a quick calculation, she figured she was a good three miles from any other human, two miles from her car at the trailhead’s parking area, and a hundred yards from what had caught her attention.
There, up ahead, something was close to the ground, moving.
Fight or flight, Lydia, she thought. What’s it going to be.
She reached around to the small of her back. There were two cylinders mounted on the strap of her fanny pack, and she left the Mace where it was. Clicking on her flashlight and bringing it forward, she swung the beam in a wide arc—
The eyes flashed over on the left, a set of retinas flaring the light back at her as pinpoints. The stare was about three feet from the ground and the pupils were set close together, as predators’ were.
Lydia looked around again.
“I’m not going to bother you,” she said. But like the gray wolf spoke English?
The growl was soft. And then came the rustling. The animal was prowling toward her.
“Oh, shit.”
Except . . .
Lydia kept the beam down on the fallen pine needles as she, too, walked forward. Something was wrong with the wolf, its gait wobbly and uneven. Yet the spirit of the hunter remained undeterred—and she was identified as its target.
She was about twenty feet away when she got a sense of the fully mature male. He was filled out, at a healthy weight of about a hundred and thirty pounds, and his mottled white, gray, and brown fur was thick and lush, especially at the tail. But his head was hanging at a bad angle, and he was dragging his back paws as he continued to close the distance between them.
It was obvious when the wolf was going to collapse. Though his head remained forward, his body listed to the side, his will staying strong even as his rear legs, and then his forelegs, gave out.
He landed on the soft bed of pine needles on his side, and the struggle was immediate, useless paws batting at thin air and ground cover. As Lydia drew a little closer to him, he snarled, flashing long white fangs, his golden eyes narrowing.
“Shh . . .” she said as she kneeled down.
Her hand shook as she got out her cell phone. As she called a number from her favorites, she tried to keep her breathing steady.
In the flashlight’s beam, she could see the grayness of those gums. The wolf was dying—and she knew why.
“God damn it, pick up, pick up—” Her words ma-chine gun’d from her mouth. “Rick? Wake up, I’ve got another one. On the main trail—what? Yes, it’s the same—enough with the talking, get your ass out of bed. I’m on the loop, about two miles into the—huh? Yes, bring everything, and hurry.”
She cut the connection as her voice gave out.
Letting herself fall back to a sit, she stared into those beautiful eyes and tried to project love, acceptance, gentleness . . . compassion. And something got through, the majestic male’s muzzle relaxing, its paws falling still, his flank rising and falling in a shuddering breath.
Or maybe it was dying right now.
“Help is coming,” she said hoarsely to the animal.


 

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J.R. Ward is the author of more than thirty novels, including those in her #1 New York Times bestselling Black Dagger Brotherhood series. There are more than fifteen million copies of her novels in print worldwide, and they have been published in twenty-six different countries around the world. She lives in the South with her family.

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JR Ward’s publisher (Simon and Schuster) is offering a paper copy of CLAIMED  to ONE (1) lucky commenter at The Reading Cafe.

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The Summer Sisters by Sara Richardson-Review & Giveaway

The Summer Sisters (Juniper Springs 2) by Sara Richardson-Review & Giveaway

THE SUMMERS SISTERS
Juniper Springs 2
by Sara Richardson
Genre: contemporary, adult, Woman’s Fiction

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Chapters Indigo / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date July 6, 2021.

The Buchanan sisters share everything—including their inherited Juniper Inn. But when their mother won’t let go of a decades-long feud with their Aunt Sassy to attend the inn’s grand re-opening, the sisters decide a family reunion is long overdue.

Youngest sister Rose is determined to put together an extravagant celebration. Only she needs to convince a certain surly hardware store owner to help finish the inn’s renovations.

After a heartbreaking end to her marriage, Dahlia and her kids are just starting to rebuild their lives. Dahlia’s even considering opening herself up to love again, but will that upset the stability she’s worked so hard to give her children?

Sassy McGrath has never stopped missing her sister, Lillian, and though they’ve both been too stubborn to reconcile, some shocking news might finally change everything. As family bonds are tested, will these two very different generations of women find the strength to believe in themselves and each other?

•••••

REVIEW:THE SUMMERS SISTERS is the second instalment in Sara Richardson’s contemporary, adult JUNIPER SPRINGS story of women’s fiction focusing on the Buchanan sisters (Rose, Magnolia, Dahlia), their mother Lillian, and their aging aunt Sassy.

Told from three third person perspectives (Rose, Dahlia, Sassy) THE SUMMER SISTERS advances the series approximately eight months after Aunt Sassy ‘gave’ the Buchanan sisters the Juniper Inn, in Juniper Springs, Colorado. Magnolia went home to start a family with her husband Eric, while Rose and Dahlia remained behind to work on the repairs and upgrades at the Juniper Inn.

Dahlia is a divorcee, single mother who has fallen in love with Juniper Springs’ only doctor but Dahlia’s ten year old daughter is struggling in the wake of her parents divorce, and begins to make life difficult for her mother going forward.Believing her children have already suffered enough, Dahlia is willing to push Dr. Ike out of her life, and in doing so, pushes away the man with whom she will fall in love.

Rose, as the youngest, walked away from her last relationship realizing she wasn’t in love with a man who wanted something different but Rose had fallen in love with the local hardware store owner Colt, Aunt Sassy’s ‘step-son’ of a sort, but nothing seemed to have progressed in recent months. When Colt announced he was selling the store, and moving out of state, Rose began to withdraw believing she wasn’t worthy of Colt’s love.

Meanwhile, Sassy’s return from a few months on the road finds the spunky spinster struggling with health issues. When the town’s mayor stepped down, Sassy was voted in as the interim mayor, and walked into a potential minefield of small town problems, falling in love in the process with the man at the center of the controversy.

Rose, Dahlia and Magnolia’s mother Lillian has been estranged from her sister Sassy for years, and neither one is willing to reveal the truth about what happened or why. As the Buchanan sisters struggle with their mother’s anger towards their beloved Aunt Sassy, secrets will be revealed, and a health scare pushes the sisters together, at last.

THE SUMMER SISTERS is an ensemble storyline following several paths and relationships, friendships and love but as individuals, each of the heroines struggles with issues of self-esteem, acceptance, a lack of communication, and a stubborn streak that knows no end. Rose and Dahlia’s love lives are threatened by headstrong women, and persistent doubt, while Lillian’s embattled relationship with her sister Sassy stems from resentment and perceived betrayal at a time when she needed her sister the most. At times, it was a struggle to like or accept any or all of the heroines’ -their immature behavior was often difficult but in the end, forgiveness, acceptance and friendships aka character development overcame any of the aforementioned attitudes and behaviors. The premise is entertaining; the characters are energetic, and colorful; the romances are mostly implied.

Click HERE for Sandy’s review of book one HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS

Copy supplied by Netgalley

Reviewed by Sandy

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Contemporary romance author Sara Richardson has been a communications manager, copy writer, magazine editor, and whitewater rafting guide. The day after graduating with a master’s degree in journalism, Sara realized she was too empathetic to be a journalist and starting writing her first novel instead. A lifelong fascination with true love quickly led her to the romance genre.

Her Heart of the Rockies series was published by Grand Central Forever in 2015. In 2016, her debut novel, No Better Man, was nominated for a RITA in the best first book category. Sara is passionate about writing stories that inspire people to believe in love and always enjoys connecting with readers. Learn more at www.sararichardson.com.

 

Sara Richardson’s publisher (Forever Romance) is graciously offering a paper copy of  THE SUMMER SISTERS  to TWO (2) lucky commenters at The Reading Cafe.

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FOREVER Publisher Summer Romance Giveaway

FOREVER Publisher Summer Romance Giveaway

FOREVER™ Publisher is graciously sponsoring a summer romance giveaway at The Reading Cafe.

TWO (2) lucky commenters will receive FIVE (5) books each:

The Summer Sisters by Sara Richardson
The Summer Cottage by Annie Rains
Accidentally Engaged by Farah Heron
Falling In Love on Willow Creek by Debbie Mason
A Rogue to Remember by Emily Sullivan

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Deeper Than the Ocean by Julie Ann Walker-Review & Giveaway

Deeper Than the Ocean (Deep Six 4) by Julie Ann Walker-Review, Guest Post & Giveaway

Amazon.com / Amazon.ca / B&N / KOBO / Google Play

ABOUT THE BOOK: Release Date May 31, 2021

The former Navy SEALs of Deep Six Salvage thought they could retire to the sea and hunt for treasures of the deep, but when trouble comes to visit, there’ll be hell to pay.

Ray “Wolf” Roanhorse took one look at Chrissy and knew she was the woman of his dreams. There’s a hitch, however. He screwed things up with her. Big time. Now all she wants is to be friends. He’ll have to be his most charismatic and charming self if he has any hope of changing her mind. And winning her heart.

Christina Szarek knows all about sexy, brooding men like Wolf. She grew up watching her mother fall for – and be broken by – plenty of them. If she had her way, she’d avoid Wolf altogether. But they’re partners in the hunt for the Santa Cristina’s legendary treasure. Avoidance is impossible. And the longer she’s near him, the more he chips away at the walls she’s erected against him.

The danger to Chrissy doesn’t only come from her burgeoning feelings, however. There are mysterious players who would see her silenced – for good. And Wolf, with his wicked grin and spec-ops training, is all that stands between her and a date with death in the deep.

•••••

REVIEW:DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN is the fourth instalment in Julie Ann Walker’s contemporary, adult DEEP SIX romantic suspense series focusing on a group of former US Navy SEALs who own and operate a Marine salvage business. This is thirty-four year old, former Navy SEAL Ray ‘Wolf’ Roanhorse, and dive shop owner Christina Szarek’s story line. DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN can be read as a stand alone without any difficulty. Any important information from the previous story lines is revealed where necessary. The DEEP SIX series is a spinoff from Julie Ann’s BLACK KNIGHTS INC series. Wolf and Christina’s story line started in book three RIDE THE TIDE.

SOME BACKGROUND: The DEEP SIX series follows six former military or special ops agents who, upon retirement, set up their own business running secret missions behind the scenes. Searching for the wreck of the Santa Cristina near Wayfarer Island, the Deep Six team continues to encounter terrorists, pirates and drug runners on their hunt for sunken treasure.

Told from several third person perspectives including Wolf and Christina DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN follows the building relationship between thirty-four year old, former US Navy SEAL Ray ‘Wolf’ Roanhorse, and dive shop owner Christina Szarek. Months earlier Christina Szarek reluctantly agreed to a date with story line hero but found the man of the hour in a potentially compromising position with another woman. Fast forward to present day, Christina has agreed to an evening of drinks with our story line hero but a short cut with her best friend Winston finds the couple witnessing potential criminal activity and both are about to pay the price. Finding the woman he loves fighting for her life, Wolf Roanhorse becomes guardian and protector as Christina continues to be the target of a criminal mind. What ensues is the building relationship between Christina and Wolf, and the potential fall-out as Christina’s mother’s sins continue to control our heroine’s present.

Meanwhile salvage partner Spiro ‘Romeo’ Delgado, and Marine archeologist Mia Ennis continue to dance around their attraction to one another but Romeo’s past refuses to let go.

The relationship between Christina and Wolf is one of mutual attraction but Christina struggles with issues of trust having watched her mother’s love life slowly implode. Offering a friends with benefits relationship only, Christina finds herself falling for a man she believes wants something different going forward. The $ex scenes are seductive and passionate.

Once again, there is a large ensemble cast of colorful and dynamic secondary and supporting characters including: Spiro ‘Romeo’ Delgado and Mia Ennis; Mason McCarthy and Alexandra Merriweather; LT Anderson and Olivia; and Bran Pallidino. We are introduced to Christina’s best friend Winston, and his girlfriend Rosa. The requisite evil has many faces.

DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN is a story of betrayal, vengeance, power and control. A tale of one woman’s issues with trust, and one man’s need to prove he is worthy of her love. The character driven premise is intriguing and fascinating; the romance is edgy and intense; the characters are energetic, determine and courageous. DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN is a wonderful addition to the Deep Six series.

Reading Order and previous reviews
Hell or High Water
Devil and the Deep
Ride the Tide

Copy supplied by Netalley

Reviewed by Sandy

Hey all you romantic suspense readers out there! Julie Ann Walker here, celebrating the release of the fourth book in my bestselling Deep Six series, DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN, by sharing with you who I would cast to co-star in the movie based on my book. This is always so much fun for a writer, because we get to indulge in dreams of Hollywood. Ha!

So without further ado…

For the part of the hero, Ray “Wolf” Roanhorse, I would cast Martin Sensmeier. The aquiline nose, the flashing dark eyes, the jaw hewn from granite? Oh, yes. Martin would make an excellent Wolf. What do you think?

For the part of Christina “Chrissy” Szarek, I would cast Blake Lively. Everything about Blake screams island girl, which is perfect for Chrissy’s character since she was born and raised on Key West, runs a dive shop, and is more comfortable in swim fins and goggles than she is in Dior and high heels.

 

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Julie Ann Walker is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of award-winning romantic suspense. She has won the Book Buyers Best Award, been nominated for the National Readers Choice Award, the Australian Romance Reader Awards, and the Romance Writers of America’s prestigious RITA award. Her latest release was named a Top Ten Romance of 2014 by Booklist. Her books have been described as “alpha, edgy, and downright hot.” Most days you can find her on her bicycle along the lake shore in Chicago or blasting away at her keyboard, trying to wrangle her capricious imagination into submission.

Be sure to sign up for Julie’s occasional newsletter at: http://julieannwalker.com

Julie Ann Walker is graciously offering an ebook copy of DEEPER THAN THE OCEAN to ONE (1) lucky commenter at The Reading Cafe.

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