by Susan Roberts
Now that spring is here and the days are getting longer, we should all have more time to read. I have been able to read several books that are published in April that I highly recommend adding to your reading lists.
April 28, 2018
April 27, 2018
The Ghost Years by Mutch Katsonga ~ A Review & Excerpt
by MK French
Elsie was eighteen years old when she gave birth to her son, but the small family of three seemed to do fairly well. Injured in a terrible car accident, Elsie is ultimately committed to a psychiatric facility and her son is cast adrift. That gets worse over time until finally, he burns all his bridges with family members and fully descends into drugs and alcohol.
Elsie was eighteen years old when she gave birth to her son, but the small family of three seemed to do fairly well. Injured in a terrible car accident, Elsie is ultimately committed to a psychiatric facility and her son is cast adrift. That gets worse over time until finally, he burns all his bridges with family members and fully descends into drugs and alcohol.
April 26, 2018
Hurricane Season by Lauren K. Denton ~ A Review by @SueDonaRoad
by Susan Roberts
I enjoyed Lauren Denton's debut novel, The Hideaway, and had high hopes for her second novel. I wasn't disappointed. This was a well-written novel that kept me turning the pages. It was all about love and family and relationships -not just the relationship between husband and wife but also between sisters who are very different from each other.
I enjoyed Lauren Denton's debut novel, The Hideaway, and had high hopes for her second novel. I wasn't disappointed. This was a well-written novel that kept me turning the pages. It was all about love and family and relationships -not just the relationship between husband and wife but also between sisters who are very different from each other.
April 25, 2018
Arc of Triumph
by Ross M. Kitson
This week marks the release of Avengers 3: Infinity War, which I’m sure everyone with a social media account/ television/ eyes/ ears/ child is aware of. For those with only a passing interest in pumped-up actors fighting through a CGI saturated environment, you’d be forgiven for rolling your eyes and wondering what all the fuss is about. Yet beyond the likely movie profits that’ll rival the GDP of a small third world nation, I think the Avengers 3 marks a key moment in movie history—the culmination of a movie plot.
Image from MovieWeb |
April 24, 2018
The Advice Column Murders by Leslie Nagel ~ A Cozy Mystery Review
by Donna Huber
Last summer I went through a cozy mystery phase and binged a whole bunch of cozies. I feel the craving for quirky characters and fun mysteries again. So I was happy to find The Advice Column Murders on Netgalley. I haven't read the previous two books in the Oakwood Mystery series, but I know for most cozies that's not necessary.
Here's the first paragraph of the first chapter. Would you keep reading?
Last summer I went through a cozy mystery phase and binged a whole bunch of cozies. I feel the craving for quirky characters and fun mysteries again. So I was happy to find The Advice Column Murders on Netgalley. I haven't read the previous two books in the Oakwood Mystery series, but I know for most cozies that's not necessary.
Here's the first paragraph of the first chapter. Would you keep reading?
She felt like death warmed over.
Charley Carpenter stood in the pretty green and white bedroom at her home on Hawthorn Boulevard, her eyes closed as she willed the pain relievers she'd taken to start tackling her insomia-induced headache. Yet another night of tossing and turning had left her dry-eyed and exhausted. She was currently nursing a pounding head, stiff neck, and a sour mood.
April 23, 2018
#Horror Reviews: Haunted by Heather Beck & Lake Silence by Anne Bishop
by MK French
Horror is one of my favorite genres. Today I review an anthology if you need some quick reads and a novel that is part of a larger series.
Horror is one of my favorite genres. Today I review an anthology if you need some quick reads and a novel that is part of a larger series.
April 22, 2018
Dream Job, Wacky Adventures of an HR Manager by Janet Garner ~ An Excerpt
March 2016; 978-1483447476 ebook, print (178 pages); contemporary |
The good thing about being a klutz, or at least a bit off balance, was that she didn’t have to fake falling into his lap.
“Sorry. Sorry!” she said as she scrambled into the seat opposite his.
She had never been this close to him before—the lacquered nails, the pointy Italian leather shoes, the beautifully tailored suit that fit his tall, lean muscular frame like a second skin. And of course the dirty blond hair, luxuriant, swept into a thick ponytail. He looked to be in his late forties—he had a faint scent of the sixties, the strange and the hippie. Her type.
She’d been watching him for over a year. Now was her chance.
“What do you think of the book?” Melie, queen of pickup lines, asked. She smiled sweetly and tried not to let her chin tremble too much when she spoke.
“Oh, this? Piece of crap!”
Succinct. A man of few words. The strong, silent type.
“I kinda liked it,” she ventured.
“Deviant. Dangerous. Dreadful.”
Alliterative critique. He must be bright. She stared at his forehead, longing to reach out to smooth the stray blond hairs from his perfect brow. She watched as he pushed the hair back himself, catching the telltale glint on his finger. Oh no!
Wedding rings on the train always struck her as a personal affront. They hurt her eyes—solid gold bands, so boring really, thrust into her line of vision, folding the Times, whipping out the commuter ticket at the conductor’s voice, popping out of leather gloves like maladroit rabbits just when you least expected it, like a slap of cold water in the face.
“You’re not wanted here,” they seemed to scream out at her, a sound like spoons striking the sides of a stack of wineglasses:
We don’t want you.
We don’t need you.
You’re not wanted here.
DING.
The Ponytail Man seemed to register the change in the weather. He took a long look—she fidgeted. He leaned in so she did too.
“You know, you’re not a bad-looking chick. What did you say your name was?”
“Melanie . . . Melie.”
“Seriously, Mel, the book is well crafted. It held my interest. But those sex scenes, huh? Not too likely. Not many girls will do those things—without being paid.” He chuckled to himself. Then, leaning in even closer (she could smell his cologne), he whispered, “Would you?”
Hmm. Yep. You bet. Can’t wait. Have been waiting so long. Too long. Forever. I could cry. . .
She backed up, grabbed her coat, scarf, hat, gloves.
“My stop! Bye now.”
Exiting, she knew she’d just have to wait for the next train. She was one stop short. If he’d ever even noticed her before, he’d know she got off at Grand Central Station, the same as everybody.
She walked to a bench and sat on the edge, miles away from a bleary-eyed drunk.
“You’re so pretty.”
“Oh, shoot me now,” she muttered to herself as she glared down the tracks, willing the next train to appear.
About the Book
Melanie Kohl is like a hamster on a treadmill, running in place and getting nowhere, starting with her mind-numbing commute to work, her job as Employee Relations Manager/Mrs. Fix-It/Emergency Rescue Team at the large out-of-control Medical Center in New York City, ending each day when she crawls into her basement apartment, bemoaning her sexless, uneventful private life, rocked by disturbing dreams of mayhem and murder.Praise for Dream Job
"Janet Garber utilizes her keen sense of the HR world to create a funny glimpse into what might happen in a company run amok. Her writing style is a joy." Tony Lee, VP Editorial, SHRM"This short novel has a promising premise with its flawed, endearing, and comical protagonist and her zany work environment." Publishers Weekly
"Dream Job” is hands down one of the most engaging and surprisingly good books I’ve read in a long time! I was completely drawn in from the opening pages, and absolutely loved the author’s use of description of the different characters and attention to detail on all fronts. We feel transported not only into Melie’s life, but her amazing life experiences inside and outside the office. . . .it felt like I was living through Melie’s life, from her professional, romantic and social experiences, and it was interesting to see how it all tied together in the end, which I loved! Wonderfully quirky but with serious points, I was really impressed and would recommend this book with the highest of praise." Sherri Warner
Buy Dream Job at Amazon
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