Sesame Street Book Shirts from Out of Print

www.outofprint.com

Okay guys, seriously, aren’t these shirts just fabulous? Today is the last day to save 5.00 off on any Sesame Street Shirt’s. They have so many to choose from in different colors with different characters.

They cost 25.00 after the 5.00 coupon, plus they have a few options for children. I will need to pick up a few since I have a fabulous pins, necklace and brooch collection from Erstwilder in Australia. You can visit there page at http://www.erstwilder.com Check out my collection below.

Erstwilder Products

They are just fabulous. There products are super amazing. I recommend you check out there website.

Mom and me at Bookcon
I wish I had one of the shirts from Out of Print that day 🙂

Here is the link one last time 🙂 http://www.outofprint.com/

Publisher’s Weekly Most Anticipated Books of Fall 2019

I received this information on an email from Publisher’s Weekly. Thought this had wonderful books that can help you choose your next read. Check them out! https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/tip-sheet/article/80811-the-most-anticipated-books-of-fall-2019.html

Fiction

The Testaments by Margaret Atwood (Doubleday/Talese, Sept.) – In this sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, Atwood picks up 15 years after Offred stepped into the unknown.

The Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates (One World, Sept.) – Coates’s first novel, set in mid-19th-century Virginia, is about a man born into bondage who develops a mysterious power after nearly drowning, joins an underground resistance, and plans his escape.

Find Me by Andre Aciman (FSG, Oct.) – Aciman revisits the characters of Call Me by Your Name two decades after their first meeting. Elio moves to Paris and has a life-changing affair, while Oliver, now a New England professor with a family, contemplates a trip back across the Atlantic.

Grand Union by Zadie Smith (Penguin Press, Oct.) – The 10 stories in Smith’s first collection range from historic to vividly current and slyly dystopian.

The World Doesn’t Require You by Rion Amilcar Scott (Liveright, Aug.) – In this collection—starred by PW—intelligent robots fail to behave as programmed and the last (and least exalted) son of God tries to redeem himself by leading a gospel band at his elder brother’s church.

Baron Wenckheim’s Homecoming by László Krasznahorkai (New Directions, Sept.) – At the end of his life, Baron Bela Wenckheim returns from exile in Buenos Aires to his birthplace, a provincial Hungarian town, hoping to reunite with his high school sweetheart. The town—a morass of gossip, con men, and politicians—heads inexorably toward its contemporary doom.

Mystery/Thriller/Crime

Blue Moon: A Jack Reacher Novel by Lee Child (Delacorte, Oct.) – Peripatetic vigilante Jack Reacher lands in the middle of a turf war between rival Ukrainian and Albanian gangs in an unnamed American city in his efforts to help an elderly couple who have fallen prey to vicious loan sharks.

The Deserter by Nelson DeMille and Alex DeMille (Simon & Schuster, Oct.) – Two military investigators–Scott Brodie, a hardened ex-soldier with impulsive, rogue tendencies, and Maggie Taylor, a cunning by-the-book Army cop–go in search of Delta Force Capt. Kyle Mercer, who has deserted his post in Afghanistan and fled to Venezuela.

Quantum by Patricia Cornwell (Thomas & Mercer, Oct.) – On the eve of a top secret space mission, NASA pilot, quantum physicist, and cybercrime investigator Calli Chase detects something amiss in the tunnels below a NASA research center. Clues suggest that Calli’s missing twin sister, Carme, may somehow be involved.

Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror

A Song for a New Day by Sarah Pinsker (Berkley, Sept.) – Pinsker’s smashing debut, which celebrates human connection and the power of music in a near-future era of isolation and anxiety, brings a much-needed dose of realistic optimism to the post-apocalyptic genre.

Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo (Flatiron, Oct.) – YA powerhouse Bardugo’s first novel for adults sends a broke, desperate teen to Yale, where she discovers the secret societies work nefarious magic. The ghosts and necromancers are spooky, but privilege and power are the real sources of terror.

The Institute by Stephen King (Scribner, Sept.) – This lean and toothy horror novel pits psychic kids against exploitative adults. This variation on one of King’s favorite themes displays his talent for writing intimate, personal narratives without a wasted word.

Romance

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert (Avon, Nov.) – Dynamic protagonists fuel this delightful, heartfelt contemporary, in which a chronically ill woman trying to improve her life unexpectedly falls in love with the man who’s helping her work her way through her bucket list.

Bringing Down the Duke by Evie Dunmore (Berkley, Sept.) – Strange bedfellows—a duke toeing the Tory Party line and a penniless suffragette breaking the glass ceiling at Oxford—turn out to be deliciously compatible in Dunmore’s pitch-perfect Victorian romance.

Don’t You Forget About Me by Mhairi McFarlane (Morrow, Sept.) – Beneath this rom-com’s wry humor are immense emotional depths as reunited high school sweethearts try to bridge the gap between their very different memories and interpretations of shared events.

Poetry

Arias by Sharon Olds (Knopf, Oct.) – Olds has long made a career of addressing the taboo and reconsidering the mundane. The Pulitzer Prize–winning poet considers political consciousness and internal lives through “arias,” each defined by its own particular music.

Father’s Day by Matthew Zapruder (Copper Canyon, Sept.) – The fifth book from Zapruder investigates what it means to be a father and citizen amid the 21st century’s uncertainties. His humor and lyrical precision lend themselves to questions about the present and our collective future.

The Problem of the Many by Timothy Donnelly (Wave, Oct.) – Contemporary and capacious in their scope, Donnelly’s poems examine civilization, calling upon figures including Alexander the Great and Prometheus in the poems’ wild, imaginative examinations.

Feed by Tommy Pico (Tin House, Nov.) – Exploring the separation between solitude and loneliness, the fourth book in Pico’s Teebs tetralogy asks universal questions through poems of formal and tonal diversity rich with striking juxtapositions.

Comics/Graphic Novels

Commute: An Illustrated Memoir of Female Shame by Erin Williams (Abrams ComicArts, Oct.) – This “sharp and splendidly drawn memoir will strike a strong chord in the current moment,” per PW’s starred review of Williams’s narrative of her daily commute through the gaze of men, with piercing flashbacks.

Making Comics by Lynda Barry (Drawn & Quarterly, Nov.) – Influential indie cartoonist Barry follows up her bestselling Syllabus. Professor Skeletor (as she calls herself) doodles comics-making exercises, inspiring students to tap their inherent creativity.

Rusty Brown, Part I by Chris Ware (Pantheon, Sept.) – Sui generis stylist Ware details the painfully ordinary lives of Nebraskan Rusty Brown, who loves Supergirl, and his family, teachers, and classmates, in dizzyingly telescoping detail that crosses time and genres.

Memoir

Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA by Amaryllis Fox (Knopf, Oct.) – Fox delivers a gripping memoir about the near decade she spent working for the CIA to help stop terrorism.

On the Plain of Snakes: A Mexican Journey by Paul Theroux (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Oct.) – Travel writer Theroux finds a Mexico that’s vibrant but shadowed by violence, corruption, and America in this dark-edged but ultimately hopeful travelogue.

Ordinary Girls by Jaquira Diaz (Algonquin, Oct.) – Díaz’s strong debut memoir charts her poor, violent childhood in Puerto Rico and Miami and her bumpy transition from girlhood to womanhood.

Parisian Lives: Samuel Beckett, Simone de Beauvoir, and Me by Deirdre Bair (Doubleday/Talese, Nov.) – By turns scholarly and salacious, biographer Bair has loosened decades of polite tongue-biting to write the backstory in what she calls a “bio-memoir” of two influential writers.

Literary Essays/Criticism/Biographies

Axiomatic by Maria Tumarkin (Transit, Sept.) – In a remarkable tour de force, cultural historian Tumarkin presents five extended essays which pick apart commonplace sayings and tease out the lingering effects of trauma and grief.

Elements of Fiction by Walter Mosley (Grove, Sept.) – Mosley, the prolific author of the Easy Rawlins detective novels, presents his second writing guide, after 2007’s This Year You Write Your Novel, with a monograph whose richness of insight belies its short length.

Gilgamesh: The Life of a Poem by Michael Schmidt (Princeton Univ., Sept.)  Schmidt shares the multi-millennia story of one of the world’s oldest known works of literature, an epic at once unimaginably ancient and enduringly relevant.

Human Relations and Other Difficulties: Essays by Mary-Kay Wilmers (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Oct.) – This collection from the longtime London Review of Books editor showcases a distinctive sensibility—astute, eclectic, and often acidic—in essays which often consider “difficult” women, including Germaine Greer, Patty Hearst, Marianne Moore, and Jean Rhys.

History

The Ghosts of Eden Park: The Bootleg King, the Women Who Pursued Him, and the Murder That Shocked Jazz-Age America by Karen Abbott (Crown, Oct.) – Abbott tells the wild true tale of Prohibition-era bootlegger George Remus and his shocking downfall at the hands of a federal agent who was having an affair with his wife.

Country Music: An Illustrated History by Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns (Knopf, Sept.) – This voluminous and hugely entertaining introduction to country music coincides with the release of the eponymous PBS series, by producer and writer Duncan and producer and filmmaker Burns.

The Queens of Animation: The Untold Story of the Women Who Transformed the World of Disney and Made Cinematic History by Nathalia Holt (Little, Brown, Oct.) – Holt recounts how women worked their way into Disney’s boys’ clubs.

Politics/Current Events

Audience of One: Donald Trump, Television, and the Fracturing of America by James Poniewozik. Liveright, Sept.) – PW’s review called this cultural history, which juxtaposes Trump’s rise with television’s evolution from a three-network monopoly to a series of echo chambers, “trenchant” and “brilliantly witty.”

Transaction Man: The Rise of the Deal and the Decline of the American Dream by Nicholas Lemann (FSG, Sept.) – Lemann recounts the changing organization of American society, politics, and business by profiling FDR “brain trust” member Adolf Berle, Harvard Business School professor Michael Jensen, and LinkedIn cofounder and venture capitalist Reid Hoffman.

The Years That Matter Most: How College Makes or Breaks Us by Paul Tough (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Sept.) – Education journalist Tough questions the American belief that college is the great economic equalizer in a study that PW’s review called “well-written,” “persuasive,” and “fascinating.”

Music

Janis: Her Life and Music by Holly George-Warren (Simon & Schuster, Oct.) – In this excellent biography, George-Warren paints a complex portrait of singer Janis Joplin.

Year of the Monkey by Patti Smith (Knopf, Sept.) – As she wanders between waking and dreaming in a year filled with the death of a close friend and the political turmoil of the 2016 election, musician and National Book Award–winner Smith contemplates dreams and reality in this luminous collection of anecdotes and photos.

Face It by Debbie Harry (Dey Street, Nov.) – The singer of the New Wave band Blondie and star of art-house movies Videodrome and Hairspray looks back on lots of sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll in this rough-and-tumble memoir.

Science

The Hidden World of the Fox by Adele Brand (Morrow, Oct.) – Brand shares a lifelong fascination with the red fox, from childhood to her adult work as a mammal ecologist, in this smart and accessible book.

How To: Absurd Scientific Advice for Common Real-World Problems by Randall Munroe (Riverhead, Sept.) – The former NASA roboticist behind the popular webcomic xkcd proposes unusual and unnecessarily elaborate ways of accomplishing mundane tasks (such as, to cross a river, freezing it.)

Something Deeply Hidden: Quantum Worlds and the Emergence of Spacetime by Sean Carroll (Dutton, Sept.) – In this challenging and provocative book, Carroll, a theoretical physicist, explores what quantum mechanics explains, and leaves unanswered, about how the universe works at a microscopic level.

Wildhood: The Epic Journey from Adolescence to Adulthood in Humans and Other Animals by Barbara Natterson-Horowitz and Kathryn Bowers (Scribner, Sept.) – Biologist Natterson-Horowitz and science journalist Bowers reveal eye-opening commonalities between human teens and their counterparts throughout the animal kingdom.

Religion/Spirituality

Astro Poets by Alex Dimitrov and Dorothea Lasky (Flatiron, Oct.) – Twitter astrologists with over 500,000 followers Lasky and Dimitrov explain how the ancient practice can relate to modern concerns in this guidebook mined from their popular tweets.

God Land: A Story of Faith, Loss, and Renewal in Middle America by Lyz Lenz (Indiana Univ., Aug.) – In the aftermath of the 2016 election and while going through a divorce, journalist Lenz embarked on an investigative trip across the middle of America to understand the evangelical voters who supported Donald Trump. Lenz diligently tracks a “resurgent ‘muscular’ and patriarchal Christianity,” per our starred review.

The Preacher’s Wife: The Precarious Power of Evangelical Women Celebrities by Kate Bowler (Princeton Univ., Oct.) – By profiling celebrities in mega-ministries (such as Joyce Meyer, Beth Moore, and Victoria Osteen) as well as other Protestant women, Bowler, associate professor at Duke Divinity School, lays bare the “delicate dance between professed submission to men and implicit independence from them” that many Christian women successfully navigate as they push up against the “stained-glass ceiling” of traditional gender roles.

Unfollow: A Memoir of Loving and Leaving the Westboro Baptist Church by Megan Phelps-Roper (FSG, Oct.) – Phelps-Roper, granddaughter of Fred Phelps, founder of the Westboro Baptist Church, divulges about her childhood, the beliefs of her church, and the Twitter conversations that eventually led her to change her mind.

Elevator Pitch Tour

Release Day September 17, 2019

Blurb

It all begins on a Monday, when four people board an elevator in a Manhattan office tower. Each presses a button for their floor, but the elevator proceeds, non-stop, to the top. Once there, it stops for a few seconds, and then plummets.

Right to the bottom of the shaft.

It appears to be a horrific, random tragedy. But then, on Tuesday, it happens again. And when Wednesday brings yet another high-rise catastrophe, one of the most vertical cities in the world — and the nation’s capital of media, finance and entertainment — is plunged into chaos.

Who is behind this? Why are they doing it? What do these deadly acts of sabotage have to do with the fingerless body found on the High Line? Two seasoned New York detectives and a straight-shooting journalist must race against time to find the answers before the city’s newest, and tallest, residential tower has its Friday night ribbon-cutting.

Early Reviews

“An engrossing, fast-moving, well-twisted modern-day plot with believable characters … Fans of psychological thrillers and the author’s previous books will love this. Warning: it might leave some readers a bit uncomfortable next time they enter an elevator.”

Joe Hill, New York Times bestselling author of The Fireman and the new story collection Full Throttle, said: “This novel moves as fast as a falling elevator and hits with just as much force. Linwood Barclay is a stone cold pro and Elevator Pitch is a shameless good time.”

Stephen King had this to say: “One hell of a suspense novel.”

And Mark Billingham shared, “You will not put this book down.”

The Ireland and U.K. Tour Itinerary

Saturday, Sept. 7th, 4 PM
No Alibis Bookstore, Belfast
Tickets are free
To reserve, contact david@noalibis.com or call 02890 319601
@NoAlibisBooks

Tuesday, Sept. 10th, 6:30 PM
Waterstones Nottingham
Tickets £5 / £4 for Waterstones cardholders
To book, see Waterstones.com/events or call 0115 947 0069
@WaterstonesNG

Wednesday, Sept. 11th, 6:30 PM
Waterstones Edinburgh West End
In conversation with Ian Rankin
Tickets £3, redeemable against a copy of Elevator Pitch
To book, see Waterstones.com/events
@Waterstones_Edi

Thursday Sept. 12th, 7 PM
Waterstones Newton Mearns, Glasgow
Tickets are free
To reserve, call 0141 616 3933
@WatNewtonMearns

Friday, Sept. 13th, 6 PM
Waterstones Milton Keynes – Midsummer Place
Tickets £3, redeemable against a copy of Elevator Pitch
To reserve, see Waterstones.com/events or call 01908 395384
@WaterstonesMK

Saturday, Sept. 14th, 2:30 PM
Chiswick Book Festival w/ Mark Billingham
Tickets £8
To book, see ChiswickBookFestival.net
@w4BookFest

The U.S. Tour Itinerary

Tuesday, Sept. 17th, 7 PM
Hudson Library & Historical Society
96 Library St.
Hudson, OH 44236

Wednesday, Sept. 18th, 7 PM
Poisoned Pen
4014 N Goldwater
Scottsdale, AZ 85251

Thursday, Sept. 19th, 6 PM
Hosted by Booksmart @ Magic City Books
221 E. Archer
Tulsa, OK 74103

Friday, Sept. 20th, 3 PM
Barr Memorial Library
62 W Spearhead Division Ave., #400
Fort Knox, KY 40121

Saturday, Sept. 21st, 1 PM
Kansas City
Raven Bookstore
6 E 7th St.
Lawrence, KS 66044

Q&A

Bookreporter Interview

Stay tune for my review once I receive the book I won.

The Fall by James Preller

Goodreads Blurb

Through his journal a boy deals with the death of a classmate, who committed suicide as a result of bullying.

The summer before school starts, Sam’s friend and classmate Morgan Mallen kills herself. Morgan had been bullied. Maybe she kissed the wrong boy. Or said the wrong thing. What about that selfie that made the rounds? Morgan was this, and Morgan was that. But who really knows what happened?

As Sam explores the events leading up to the tragedy, he must face a difficult and life-changing question: Why did he keep his friendship with Morgan a secret? And could he have done something—anything—to prevent her final actions?

As he did in Bystander, James Preller takes an issue that faces every student and school in the country, and makes it personal, accessible, and real.

My Review: I rated 5 out of 5 stars

Stop being a follower and be a leader against bullying! Wow, this had to be a hard book to write. You get to feel each regret, fear, confusion and desperation. I felt horrible for both Max and Morgan. In today’s world there has been so much bullying that has caused teenagers to commit suicide. Sometimes the smallest little irrelevant problem, becomes the issue of torture in every form. This book showed you the thoughts of the bully and how he secretly was a friend to the victim, but due to his friends who started the bullying, he needed to continue or he would be the one being bullied. When your actions takes a life, your life will never be the same. Be kind and love one another. Stand up for others and don’t encourage or stay quiet when someone or a group of people are bullying others.

Author Biography

James Preller (born 1961) is the children’s book author of the Jigsaw Jones Mysteries, which are published by Scholastic Corporation. He grew up in Wantagh, New York and went to college in Oneonta, New York. After graduating from college in 1983, James Preller was employed as a waiter for one year before being hired as a copywriter by Scholastic Corporation, where he was introduced (through their books) to many noatable children’s authors. This inspired James Preller to try writing his own books. James Preller published his first book, entitled MAXX TRAX: Avalanche Rescue, in 1986. Since that time, James Preller has written a variety of books, and has written under a number of pen names, including Mitzy Kafka, James Patrick, and Izzy Bonkers. James Preller lives in Delmar, New York with his wife Lisa and their three children.

ARC Release, Sept 2019: Dasher by Matt Tavares

Blurb

Dasher is a brave little doe with a wish in her heart. She spends her days with her family under the hot sun in a traveling circus, but she longs for a different life – one in which her hooves tread in soft, cold snow under the glow of the North Star.

And one day, when the opportunity arises, Dasher seizes her destiny and takes off in pursuit of the life she wants to live. It’s not too long before she meets a nice man in a red suit with a horse-drawn sleigh. And soon, with the help of a powerful wish, Christmas will never be the same.

http://matttavares.com/dasher.html

My Review

A magical book that will transform dreams, hopes and wishes, to a happily ever after. Santa’s slay was first pulled by a horse named Silver Bell. Dasher and her family were owned by a mean circus owner, who treated them badly. Dasher dreamed of following the North star and finding a location with snow. Dasher found an opportunity to escape and followed the North star, where she was magically surprised to find a jolly man in a red suit, in need of making children happy. She loved children also, since they treated her nice and gave fed her carrots, her favorite. It’s a story that will inspire you to dream and fight for that dream. Children will learn how Santa came about having all the wonderful reindeer’s that guide his slay on Christmas Eve. This book will bring magic and a Christmas miracle.

Author Biography

Matt Tavares was born in Boston, and grew up surrounded by books and reading. From the time he was very young, his mother read to him every night, and his family made countless trips to the public library. Years later, as a studio art major at Bates College, he rediscovered his love for picture books, and decided to try to make his own.

For his senior thesis project, Matt wrote and illustrated a story called Sebastian’s Ball, which eventually became Zachary’s Ball, Matt’s first published picture book. Zachary’s Ball went on to win a Massachusetts Book Award Honor, and was named one of Yankee Magazine’s 40 Classic New England Children’s Books.

Since then, Matt has published eighteen more books and has won several awards, including three Parents’ Choice Gold Awards, an Orbis Pictus Honor, and two ALA Notable books. His artwork has been exhibited at the Museum of American Illustration, the Brandywine River Museum, and the Mazza Museum of Picture Book Art.

When Matt’s not working in his studio on his latest book project, he travels the country speaking (and drawing) at schools, libraries, conferences, and bookstores. He has presented at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Eric Carle Museum, the White House Easter Egg Roll, and he’s even done a few book signings at Fenway Park.

Matt lives in Maine with his wife, Sarah, and their two daughters. 

Author on Tour

Three Dark Crowns (Three Dark Crowns #1) by Kendare Blake

Goodreads Blurb

When kingdom come, there will be one.

In every generation on the island of Fennbirn, a set of triplets is born—three queens, all equal heirs to the crown and each possessor of a coveted magic. Mirabella is a fierce elemental, able to spark hungry flames or vicious storms at the snap of her fingers. Katharine is a poisoner, one who can ingest the deadliest poisons without so much as a stomachache. Arsinoe, a naturalist, is said to have the ability to bloom the reddest rose and control the fiercest of lions.

But becoming the Queen Crowned isn’t solely a matter of royal birth. Each sister has to fight for it. And it’s not just a game of win or lose…it’s life or death. The night the sisters turn sixteen, the battle begins.

The last queen standing gets the crown. 

My Review

Three queens born, but only one will stand with the crown. It has an interesting plot filled with love, revenge and power. Each queen has a gift and with that gift only one will survive after fighting the other sister’s for the crown. Let the strongest sister win the crown.

Author Biography

Kendare Blake is the author of several novels and short stories, most of which you can find information about via the links above. Her work is sort of dark, always violent, and features passages describing food from when she writes while hungry. She was born in July (for those of you doing book reports) in Seoul, South Korea, but doesn’t speak a lick of Korean, as she was packed off at a very early age to her adoptive parents in the United States. That might be just an excuse, though, as she is pretty bad at learning foreign languages. She enjoys the work of Milan Kundera, Caitlin R Kiernan, Bret Easton Ellis, and Richard Linklater.

She lives and writes in Gig Harbor, Washington, with her husband, their cat son Tyrion Cattister, red Doberman dog son Obi-Dog Kenobi, rottie mix dog daughter Agent Scully, and naked Sphynx cat son Armpit McGee.

ARC Release Day Sept 11: The Bull Rider’s Second Chance by Leah Vale

Blurb

Feuding families, a legacy to prove and redemption…

To fulfill a deathbed promise to her mother, Caitlin Neisson must face her fear of bulls to learn how to be a rodeo bull fighter in order to protect her bull riding-wannabe youngest brother. She also needs to find him a teacher before he puts himself in danger. Too bad the best man for the job is her family’s number one enemy. He has a bad attitude and an even worse reputation. To complicate matters, he’s sexy and she begins to suspect his bad boy reputation hides a warm heart that just might melt the ice in hers.

…there’s more at stake outside the rodeo arena

Bodie Hadley was nearly killed by a bull in a rodeo arena and carries the weight of guilt for the death of another. Can he gain redemption by helping Caitlin, a member of the family his family has been feuding with for decades? Or will the weight of additional guilt crush him if he refuses her plea?

My Review: I rated 4 out of 5 stars

This was such a great story. I loved how fierce Caitlin is. When she puts her mind into doing something, she doesn’t let even a near run with a bull stop her. She was a wonderful character that truly surprised you throughout the story. She went for what she wanted and that included the hot Bodie Hadley, who was off limits because of a feud between his and her family. In honor of keeping a promise to her mother and the support and love for her family, she was willing to sacrifice her fears of bull’s and put herself in danger, in order for her younger brother to become a bull rider. The chemistry between Bodie and Caitlin was right on. Will Bodie help Caitlin with the promise she made to her mom? You will need to read to find out. The book has some heartbreaking moments but it also had a mystery to solve after Caitlin had two near miss with two bulls and of course some hot sexy romance. I loved that I truly didn’t have a clue who the culprit was that was trying to harm Caitlin. The long time family feud reminded me of Romeo and Juliet. You serious need to pre-order this book.

Author Biography

Having never met an unhappy ending she couldn’t mentally “fix,” Leah Vale believes writing romance novels is the perfect job for her. A Pacific Northwest native with a B.A. in Communications from the University of Washington, she lives in Central Oregon, with a huge golden retriever who thinks he’s a lap dog. While having the chance to share her “happy endings from scratch” is a dream come true, dinner generally has to come premade from the store.  http://www.leahvale.com/

Pre-Order Always Look Twice by Elizabeth Goddard

Check out this book cover. It is very captivating and leaves you thinking maybe you should be very careful with that camera. If you love a book with suspense and secrets, then you need to make sure you pre-order this book. I will be reviewing this book soon, so keep an eye out for it.

Blurb

At the advice of her therapist, homicide survivor Harper Reynolds has traded her job as a crime scene photographer for a more peaceful life taking photographs of the natural world. But her hopes for a life surrounded by the serenity of the outdoors are dashed when she inadvertently captures a murder being committed in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. She flees the scene in fear–and loses the camera.

Former Green Beret Heath McKade is a reserve deputy in an understaffed county who has been called in to protect Harper, a childhood friend he is surprised to see back in the area. When Harper learns that the sheriff’s department can’t find any evidence of the murder she witnessed, she is determined to do what she can to see that justice is done. What neither Harper nor Heath could know is how many explosive secrets from the past will be exposed–or how deeply they will fall for each other.

In this suspenseful page-turner, bestselling author Elizabeth Goddard keeps you on the edge of your seat as you discover that uncommon justice lies just on the other side of fear.

Here is the link to the author page https://elizabethgoddard.com/books/always-look-twice/ She also has a monthly giveaway, go check it out!

https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780800729851

The Missing Ones(Hester Thursby Mystery #2) by Edwin Hill

Goodreads Blurb

Hester Thursby has given up using her research skills to trace people who don’t want to be found. A traumatic case a few months ago unearthed a string of violent crimes, and left Hester riddled with
self-doubt and guilt. Caring for a four-year-old is responsibility enough in a world filled with terrors Hester never could have imagined before.

Finisterre Island, off the coast of Maine, is ruggedly beautiful and remote—the kind of place tourists love to visit, though rarely for long. But not everyone who comes to the island is welcome. A dilapidated Victorian house has become home to a group of squatters and junkies, and strangers have a habit of bringing trouble with them. A young boy disappeared during the summer, and though he was found safely, the incident stirred suspicion among locals. Now another child is missing. Summoned to the island by a cryptic text, Hester discovers a community cleaning up from a devastating storm—and uncovers a murder.

Soon Hester begins to connect the crime and the missing children. And as she untangles the secrets at the center of the small community, she finds grudges and loyalties that run deep, poised to converge with a force that will once again shake her convictions about the very nature of right and wrong . . .

PRAISE FOR THE MISSING ONES

“A brilliantly composed mystery…a hurricane of suspense with squalls of twists that’ll just take your breath away. A salty, stormy and seductive read.”

– Mario Giordano, author of Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions and Auntie Poldi and the Vineyards of Etna

“Darkly textured and gorgeously twisted, this atmospheric novel of suspense proves Edwin Hill is a major talent. A master class in setting and character, and with penetrating psychological insight, this story is seamless and surprising and devastating—as turbulent and unpredictable as a New England gale.”

Hank Phillippi Ryan, best-selling and award-winning author of THE MURDER LIST 

My review: Rated 4 out of 5 stars

A mystery that will keep the secrets hidden til the very end. Another mystery thriller that will leave Hester running to for her life, while protecting others. So much was going on in this story. We get to see the background story on Daphne and the reason for leaving her daughter and family behind. Two children go missing in Finisterre Island, it will leave you mind boggling on who could possibly steal a child in a small island? You will find drugs are taking over the island and cops cannot be trusted. The plot was well thought out. The characters will leave you loving or hating them. Hester will continue to be superwoman in a world that will rage all it’s hate and anger at her. Overall, people just don’t change and they have a closet full of skeletons. Great mystery with plot twist throughout the whole novel. Don’t forget to read book one Little Comfort.

Author Biography

Edwin Hill is the author of the critically-acclaimed Hester Thursby mystery series. His first novel, Little Comfort, was nominated for an Agatha Award for best debut. The second in the series, The Missing Ones, will be available in September of 2019. 

Visit his website for more information. 

(A note from the author on rating other writers: I used to be more critical of writers’ work but these days only rate books that I’ve read and liked, and mostly give fives. Once in a while, I’ll throw in a four to a well-established author whose earlier work was even better than their current work. Anything below a four, I keep to myself.)