Monday, April 27, 2026

Book Review: King Coyote by Rachael Meyers Jones

King CoyoteKing Coyote by Rachael MeyersJones
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Exciting summertime adventures paired with a hard-won coming-of-age story.

King Coyote by Rachael Meyers Jones is a wonderful and exciting summertime coming-of-age story as a pre-teen navigates his parents' impending divorce, loneliness, and a fish-out-of-water stay in rural Vermont. King is twelve years old when he is dropped off for the summer at his cousin's house in Northeast Vermont, while his parents work through the process of separating and setting up two households back home in Boston. When he and Nat were much younger, they had been inseparable: their families even shared a duplex. But when their grandfather had died, Nat's parents had relocated to the family farmstead in Vermont, and the two had not seen each other since. This summer, the cousins are thrust back together and finally have their comfortable relationship restored enough to work through the really big feelings they've both kept tamped down.

King is the engaging main character whose hurt radiates from every pore. It will take the summer and a lot of adventure for him to realize he can't fix the change in his parents' feelings for each other. While reuniting with Nat gives him the sounding board he needs, it is his feeling of responsibility for the small, scraggly coyote he names Coal that eventually pulls him out of his sadness and allows him to gain some perspective.

Intruding on his healing are the awkward encounters with the few white people in the area, who see him as someone to fear because of the color of his skin. His cousin knows what's going on but chooses to look the other way, at first. Nat, the only child of mixed ancestry at her school, had found their attitudes isolating, with most people choosing to ignore her, only seeing her white heritage, while others rudely overstepped basic common boundaries and personal space: a confusing and painful situation for her that her Black father tried to help her understand and overcome. While no answers are found on the teens' adventure into the wilderness, they come away from the experience with more confidence in themselves to handle whatever comes their way in the future.

The description of the Vermont setting and the kids' summertime activities on the mountain are, for the most part, vivid, glorious, and idyllic. Their freedom to roam and relax without cellphones, videogames, and streaming services is a renewal, especially for King, who had much more access to this back in Boston. They gain knowledge, self-reliance, trust, and build resilience from their experiences, but still realize the toll their unexpected and impulsive absence had on their frantic parents.

I recommend KING COYOTE to readers of middle-grade fiction and adventure stories, especially those who enjoy a natural or wilderness setting.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy through Toppling Stacks Tours.

View all my reviews

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Everyone is Perfect Here by Jane Haseldine

Everyone Is Perfect Here by Jane Haseldine Banner

EVERYONE IS PERFECT HERE

by Jane Haseldine

April 6 - May 1, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Everyone Is Perfect Here by Jane Haseldine

There’s no such thing as perfect.

To the outside world, English professor Carly Bennett is a rising star…. poised, confident and on a fast-track to success. But behind her professional facade lies a childhood shattered by betrayal and her mother’s mysterious death.

Fifteen years earlier, Carly was shipped off to boarding school after being accused of threats she never made and exiled by her beloved mother and wealthy stepfamily. Throughout, Carly clung to her one ally, her stepbrother Julien…. until she discovered he masterminded her downfall.

Julien, now a psychiatrist, reappears in Carly’s life, apologetic and bearing news: before a fatal break-in, Carly’s mother planned to bring Carly home. Vindicated, Carly investigates her mother’s cold case. But doing so unearths memories that cause Carly to question her sanity and finally face the truth.

Was she responsible for her mother’s murder or is something more sinister at play in her former stepfamily’s still perfect world?

Praise for Everyone Is Perfect Here:

"This tense psychological thriller, where nothing is as it seems, will keep you on edge until the final reveal"
~ Kirkus Reviews

"This was a well-written and complex drama that immediately grabbed my attention, quickly becoming a page-turner as I had to know how this was going to end."
~ Dru Ann Love, Agatha, Anthony & Macavity Award-Winning Author, Raven Award Recipient

Book Details:

Genre: Domestic Suspense
Published by: Severn House
Publication Date: April 7, 2026
Number of Pages: 301
ISBN: 9781448320127 (ISBN10: 1448320127)
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub | Severn House

Read an excerpt:

ONE

Present Day, Los Angeles
Carly Bennett

Light blue on dirty blonde.

Creative writing professor Carly Bennett did a quick scan of her face from its reflection in the window that overlooked the University of Southern California quad and smoothed a crease in her pencil skirt.

If Carly had known that the dean of the English department would schedule a last-minute meeting with her, she would’ve picked a better outfit than one that screamed, “I had no time to take this to the cleaner, so I ran a fast iron over it. But thank God the skirt is black so no one can see the stain from when my coffee cup lid jimmied its way free this morning.”

Nothing like near first-degree burns on your thigh from an errant Starbucks Pike to jolt a person awake during LA’s slog of a commute.

No matter. Here she was.

And she’d be ready. Even though she needed to master her prep on the fly.

Carly turned the corner to the English department’s Office of the Dean and forged through her speaking points that she’d deliver to her boss, Bert Scanlon.

“Making the LA Times’s ‘Thirty-Under-Thirty’ list was a complete surprise, but I’m so happy that the article will shine a spotlight on the great work our team is doing under your leadership.”

Ack. Too mealy-mouthed. Plus, it made her sound like a big-headed brown-noser. And nobody likes that person.

“Thank you for the kind words. Please know how much I appreciate that you believe in me, and I swear, I won’t let you down.”

Better, and that sentiment was from the heart.

Carly pictured her face, front and center on the page when she’d pulled up the LA Times story that morning and hoped that the people she used to know from her early Malibu days saw it too.

Elitist jerks.

As for herself, Carly had read the write-up, over and over, until she could now recite it in perpetuity.

Carly passed by the USC English department’s wall of fame, which showcased its students’ esteemed awards through the years. She paused when she saw her name, capturing a moment in time from freshman year. Her: scared to near speechlessness amongst the far cooler co-eds but finding strength behind her pen.

Winner of the 2018 Undergraduate Writing Prize—First Place: Carly Bennett

Had she really come this far? Most would’ve marked her a losing bet at age twelve, her personal line of demarcation, but sometimes, even dark horses can come from behind and win the whole damn thing.

Four. Three. Two. One.

“You got this,” Carly whispered.

She reached for the security of her inhaler in her briefcase and entered Scanlon’s office.

Gretchyn Olson, a middle-aged woman with salt-and-pepper hair was working the phone with precision. She held up a single finger when she saw Carly.

While she waited, Carly continued to clutch her briefcase in one hand and placed the other behind her back, where she dug a fingernail into a stray cuticle.

After a beat, Scanlon’s assistant put the call on hold.

“They’re waiting for you,” Gretchyn said. “Hang in there, kid. Sometimes, you need to play the game.”

They? And what game was she talking about?

Carly’s neck felt hot, but she made certain she was smiling when she entered the office, where she locked eyes with Scanlon, who rose to greet her. Scanlon had a Mr. Clean, shiny bald head, and his stomach struggled to stay behind the confines of the clasped gold buttons of his tweed coat.

Seated across from the dean of the English department was an unfamiliar male, who was well dressed, neatly manicured, and appeared to be in his early fifties.

Carly shot the stranger an equally polite smile. Who was this guy?

“Miss Bennett, thank you for taking time to swing by under such short notice,” Scanlon said.

“Of course, sir.”

Maybe the man was another reporter from the paper who covered the education beat and was writing a follow-up article on the English department.

“I don’t believe you’ve met Franklin Yeager. You taught Frank’s son, Landon, last semester.”

In that moment, Carly felt like someone had jabbed an ice pick into her high-flying helium balloon.

The room became very still as Carly struggled to find the appropriate response.

“In all due respect, if this is about my former student, I think any further discussion should be held in private and between the administration, but I was under the impression the incident and disciplinary action had been decided,” Carly said.

A robotic delivery, but at least she got the words out.

“There’ve been some developments that have been brought to my attention. I asked Frank to come in so we could clear the air, so to speak,” Scanlon said. “Please, sit, Miss Bennett.”

Carly kept her place, arms folded, standing above the men, but when Scanlon cleared his throat, she acquiesced and found a seat next to her former student’s father.

“Landon didn’t plagiarize the paper,” Yeager said.

Yes, he did! Carly wanted to scream. Instead, she slipped her hands underneath her legs, in case her palms started to sweat.

“If my son did cheat, I’d be the first to request that USC boot him out the door on his fanny,” Yeager continued. “But I know my kid, and I also know a liar, and Landon is beside himself over this false accusation. I’ll be honest with you, when Landon first told me about the whole mess, I was ready to call my lawyer, but since Bert is an old friend, I thought, why not try and hash things out man-to-man first.”

She had to respond. The words were there, ready to make her point, if only she could find the ability and the guts to say them.

“But he did ch-ch-cheat,” Carly said, despising the catch in her voice.

When was the last time she’d stuttered? Probably a year ago, during her annual review with Scanlon. She wondered if the universe would grant her a reprieve, and somehow the two men hadn’t picked up on her residual speech impediment, which still ambushed her in the worst possible moments, rising like an unkillable weed despite all her years of work to get rid of it.

She shot a glance at Yeager, whose mouth had turned up into a bow that resembled a smirk or, worse, pity.

If she were going down, at least she had to throw a punch.

“I want all my students to excel, and if they need extra time on an assignment, they know I’ll give it to them, and my door is always open if they need additional help. But the paper Landon wrote was a complete replica of one I received from a different student last year. We’re talking down to the semicolon.”

Carly looked to Scanlon, hoping for some back-up, but the dean kept his focus on Yeager.

“Then it wasn’t a case of cheating but purely accidental on Landon’s part,” Yeager said. “Or is the word coincidental? You’re the English whizzes in here, and I’m a businessman who wouldn’t know a semicolon from a hyphen, but I do know mistakes can be made, even by well-meaning young professors. How long have you been a teacher? You look more like a co-ed than a professor, and I mean that in the most complimentary of ways.”

Yeager chuckled, sounding to Carly like the laugh was cover so he wouldn’t sound like a creep.

Too late.

Carly fought to speak up and defend herself. But she remained still and silent, stuck between two powerful, rich males who were doing a very fine job of reeling in the young, errant female who didn’t know her place.

“This is my second year at USC.”

“Miss Bennett is still relatively new to our school as a professor, but she’s a rising star in our English department and did quite well as a student here before joining our professional fold.”

The heat that Carly had felt in her neck earlier had now exploded into a full-blown, five-alarm inferno, despite Scanlon throwing her a pseudo-bone.

Carly had crossed her legs and put a hand to her throat to try and cover her growing rash when she noticed Yeager was staring at something on the bottom of her black high heel. Whatever it was seemed to give him great satisfaction.

“Mr. Scanlon . . .” Carly pleaded, but the dean interrupted.

“I appreciate that you hold your students to the highest of standards, as you should, but since Frank is a trusted friend to the school, this time, we’ll expunge the previous disciplinary action and wipe the slate clean. Landon can resubmit the assignment and finish up the course through independent study, so he won’t lose credit. I have your word that Landon will be more careful in his work going forward, Frank?”

“You bet. My kid is a good boy, and I knew we could wrangle this problem to the ground. You have my word on my kid and on my continued support. Generations of Yeagers have supported this school, and we’ll continue the tradition. “Fight on for ol’ SC, our men fight on to victory!” Yeager warbled, hitting the notes of the USC fight song slightly off-key but with great confidence in his delivery.

When Yeager stood to shake the dean’s hand, Carly looked to the bottom of her high heel and saw a Macy’s close-out sale sticker still affixed to its outsole.

Her previous high-flying balloon was now bits of spent plastic that an entitled rich boy and his adult minions had tossed into the dumpster.

“No hard feelings, OK? New teachers can make mistakes with the best of them,” Yeager said.

He extended his hand to Carly.

You sold your integrity for a buck, and to a total cheese bag when you know I’m right! Carly wanted to scream to Scanlon.

Instead, Carly remained quiet and stared at Yeager’s outstretched hand.

Scanlon cleared his throat again.

“Miss Bennett, the matter has been settled,” Scanlon answered.

The dean’s eyes narrowed, and Carly followed his cue.

She reached for Yeager’s hand, gave it a quick shake, and regretted it the second her skin touched Yeager’s.

“That will be all, Miss Bennett.”

This was so unfair. She had to stand her ground.

“Is there something else you wanted to say?” Scanlon pressed.

Carly paused, searching for the words. They were right there, but when she jumped from the platform to catch the brass ring, she missed and spiraled into freefall.

“Miss Bennett?” Scanlon asked.

“Th–th–th–thank you, sir.”

She couldn’t remember leaving the office, but there she was, back in the lobby. Carly hurried past Gretchyn, and by the time she reached the corridor, she was certain that she heard the two men laughing from behind the office door.

“HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!”

*

After escaping the humiliation-fest in Scanlon’s office, Carly lowered her head so she wouldn’t have to make eye contact, or worse, engage in fake, idle chitchat after her fall, and continued her fast walk to the USC faculty bathroom. She had ten minutes until her advanced creative writing class started, which was threading the needle a bit, but the familiar vice was constricting her chest, and if she didn’t take a pull from her inhaler soon, she’d be in the throes of a full-fledged, not to mention very public, asthma attack.

She struggled for air and rushed into an open stall. Once inside, she slammed the door, snatched her inhaler from her briefcase, and gave it a quick shake. She heard the familiar whistling sound coming from her throat and shoved her rescue inhaler into her mouth.

Feeling like a five-hundred-pound man was now sitting on her chest, Carly fought to stay calm. She closed her eyes, forced herself to hold her breath for the requisite ten seconds between puffs and prayed for the corticosteroid to kick in.

When the tightness in her lungs loosened, she could see, plain as day, her old practice phrase, the one she’d started reciting at boarding school to help conquer her stutter.

When her breathing steadied to a normal inhale-in, exhale-out, she whispered the words aloud to find her center.

“The girl wore her hair in two braids, tied with two blue bows.”

Not bad. Her voice was clear and strong this time, unlike her herky-jerky performance earlier.

How had she let herself choke, and on such an epic scale?

Feeling like she was no longer dry-drowning from her asthma attack, Carly took one more hit of her inhaler. She squeezed the metal canister and pictured Scanlon’s and Yeager’s mugs, having a big old chuckle at her expense.

“Never again,” Carly whispered, not quite believing it, but at least it was a start.

She rose from crouching position in the stall, straightened her shoulders, and then shot her middle finger in the air.

“That’s bravery right there, giving the bird to a restroom door instead of standing up for yourself. Next time will be different.”

Carly exited the stall and was relieved to see the faculty bathroom was still empty.

She splashed cold water from the sink onto her face, then patted her sticky armpits with a wad of paper towels from the dispenser on the wall. A poor girl’s spa day.

Having no idea how much time had passed since the start of her asthma attack, Carly worried that she was late for her next class. She grabbed her phone from her briefcase to check the time and gasped.

On the home screen was a photo memory, which captured a hoped-for promise never to come.

Carly ran her finger over the image of her mother and studied her twelve-year-old self. The photo had been taken by her then soon-to-be stepbrother Julien, on the day she’d met him and the rest of the Whites.

A pang of melancholy cut through her. Everybody would’ve believed her if she were a rich boy.

***

Excerpt from Everyone Is Perfect Here by Jane Haseldine. Copyright 2026 by Jane Haseldine. Reproduced with permission from Jane Haseldine. All rights reserved.

 

Author Bio:

Jane Haseldine

Jane Haseldine is a journalist, former crime reporter, columnist, and newspaper editor, and has also worked in politics as the deputy director of communications for a governor. Jane is the author of the Julia Gooden mystery series from Kensington Publishing and her upcoming domestic suspense novel, Everyone is Perfect Here, from Severn House.

Catch Up With Our Author:

www.JaneHaseldine.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @JaneHaseldine
Instagram - @janehaseldineauthor
X - @janeeyre77
Facebook - @janehaseldinebooks

 

Review:

4 stars!

Unsettling and twisty psychological domestic thriller. 

Everyone Is Perfect Here is a new psychological domestic thriller by author Jane Haseldine, and features unsettling family drama and shocking plot twists that will keep readers on the edge of their seats from start to finish. USC English professor Carly Bennett has finally gained hold on a satisfactory life after her tragic childhood that culminated with the murder of her mother and police suspicions that she was somehow involved. But when she discovers the body of a campus janitor in her office and the stepbrother who betrayed her all those years ago suddenly reconnects, it seems all her old nightmares are coming back to haunt her … or worse. 

Carly Bennett was the victim of psychological manipulation as a child and is now facing similar circumstances as an adult, but who exactly is behind it all? Ava Patel is her strong, vibrant, and loyal best friend, doing her darndest to get to the bottom of what's going on, and she's such an exciting element in the story. I'd love to see her appear in another book. 

The plot unfolds from multiple points of view, including Carly's flashbacks to her childhood, when she and her mother, Emily, first became part of the White family. I loved how the author sets readers up with clues pointing in one direction while sprinkling clever indicators that perhaps things weren't what they seemed throughout the tale. I was delightfully fooled. 

I recommend EVERYONE IS PERFECT HERE to readers of psychological or domestic thrillers.





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Children's Book Review - Zog's Big Question: An Interplanentary Tale of Wonder, Belief, and Big Questions by Adam Rice, illustrated by Mac Rice

Zog's Big Question: An Interplanetary Tale of Wonder, Belief, and Big QuestionsZog's Big Question: An Interplanetary Tale of Wonder, Belief, and Big Questions by Adam Rice
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Fun, sweet sci-fi tale that simplifies a complicated concept.

Zog’s Big Question by Adam Rice and colorfully illustrated by Mac Rice delves into the quandary of faith versus science and helps young readers come away with a more comfortable understanding of this complex concept. Zog is a young Questling on the planet Luminos, where the inhabitants are cute, blue, water-drop-shaped creatures with triangular arms and legs and two expressive antennae. They also base their lives and culture on scientifically-proven facts and eat the bounty of the Knowing Fruit Tree. While they may sound comical, they exude a calm and friendly persona that children will find fun and completely non-threatening. Zog has heard that the inhabitants of the planet Terra accept some big ideas without scientific proof, and, finding this totally perplexing, decides to investigate the curious rumor in person. So, he leaves his home in a “borrowed” spacecraft and travels to Terra to see the truth for himself.

While the story was not what I expected, I enjoyed it nonetheless, finding clarity in the simple explanation of how and why faith and science can be complementary. However, I do think a more specific book description, or blurb, regarding the focus on faith is needed as the one provided is so broad, it is a little misleading. I appreciated that while the central characters on Terra, Sam and Max, come from a Catholic-like church, the story emphasizes all religious traditions and not just those of a Christian viewpoint. I liked that the children took Zog to a secular institution for answers, too.

Zog is engaging, and children will easily relate to his curious nature. The illustrations are rendered in calming blues on Luminos, with one drawing very reminiscent of a setting from the movie Avatar, and, once Zog is on Terra (Earth), greens are emphasized, too. At over 40 pages, it is more of a chapter than a picture book, and would be suitable for reading aloud at home, in Sunday school, or in religion classes. I would definitely like to see Zog return in future stories to tackle other adventures.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Goddess Fish Promotions Book Tours.


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Saturday, April 25, 2026

Children's Book Review: Wonder in the Garden (in English & Spanish) by Talia Aikens-Nuñez

Wonder in the GardenWonder in the Garden by Talia Aikens-Nunez
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Light-hearted and colorful children’s picture book with a fun story that introduces basic Spanish vocabulary.

Wonder in the Garden is a light-hearted and colorful new children’s picture book by veteran children’s author Talia Aikens-Nuñez about a day in the life of a girl and her dog, Nube, as they help with the home garden. Besides the fun story, readers are introduced to some basic Spanish vocabulary useful in daily life.

A young girl, her extended family, and her pet dog live together with a large, productive garden and orchard on their property. As she and Nube frolic through the fruit and vegetables, the Spanish equivalents of simple sentences, reactions, and observations of what they encounter are provided. The narrative is fun and full of life. Young readers and listeners will smile over the joyous play of the girl and her rascally dog. It is a fun way to see and hear simple Spanish words and sentences in a relatable context.

This story is vividly illustrated with colorful scenes by artist Irena Freitas. With clear visuals, little readers and listeners will have fun discovering all the wonderful details included on every page.

I recommend WONDER IN THE GARDEN as a wonderful option for use at home or in the classroom with single-language or bilingual speakers and readers.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Goddess Fish Promotions Book Tours.



View all my reviews

Friday, April 24, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Murder Under A Bitter Moon (Mona Moon Mystery, #15) by Abigail Keam

 

Murder Under A Bitter Moon

A 1930s Mona Moon Historical Cozy Mystery

by

Abigail Keam


About Murder Under A Bitter Moon

 

Murder Under A Bitter Moon: A 1930s Mona Moon Historical Cozy Mystery 

Historical Cozy Mystery
15th in Series
Publisher: Worker Bee Press
Publication date: April 20, 2026
ASIN: B0F92Y5XB7

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Mona Moon adores Kentucky Derby week, enjoying all the festivities. She is hosting a ladies’ tea and a Derby breakfast herself. The celebration at Moon Manor will include her former professor and mentor, Dr. Beryl Farris. Mona is delighted to have an old friend visit but is concerned when Dr. Farris confesses that someone has been threatening her. Worried, Mona assigns Pinkertons to protect the professor.

The night before the Kentucky Derby race, Mona is preparing to attend Ed Bradley’s famous Derby Ball. The entire Mooncrest Farm is aflutter with excitement and gaiety for the upcoming event. Celebrities, politicians, and prominent citizens will be enjoying shrimp grits, burgoo, cornbread, country ham, and mint juleps while dishing the latest gossip at this yearly event. Mona’s anticipation is dashed when she discovers Dr. Farris is missing! And Mona fears the worst!

Click to Purchase!


About Abigail Keam


 
Award-winning author Abigail Keam writes the Mona Moon Mystery series—a rags-to-riches 1930s mystery series, which weaves real people and events into the story. “I am a student of history and love to insert historical information into my mysteries. There is an addendum at the end of the mystery to give more information. My goal is to entertain my readers, but if they learn a little something along the way—well, then we are both happy.” Miss Abigail currently lives in a metal house with her husband and various critters on the Palisades bordering the Kentucky River.
 



AWARDS

2010 Gold Medal Award from Readers’ Favorite for Death By A HoneyBee
2011 Gold Medal Award from Readers’ Favorite for Death By Drowning
2011 USA BOOK NEWS-Best Books List of 2011 as a Finalist for Death By Drowning
2011 USA BOOK NEWS-Best Books List of 2011 as a Finalist for Death By A HoneyBee
2017 Finalist from Readers’ Favorite for Death By Design
2019 Honorable Mention from Readers’ Favorite for Death By Stalking
2019 Murder Under A Blue Moon voted top ten mystery reads by Kings River Life Magazine
2020 Finalist from Readers’ Favorite for Murder Under A Blue Moon
2020 Imadjinn Award for Best Mystery for Death By Stalking
2022 Finalist in Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Finalist for Best Historical Category – Murder Under A Full Moon
2022 Finalist the Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Award for Best Historical Category – Murder Under A New Moon
2022 Death By Chance: A Josiah Reynolds Mystery Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Finalist for Best Cozy Mystery
2022 Top Ten Mystery Novel by Kings River Life Magazine for Murder Under A Bridal Moon: A 1930s Mona Moon Mystery
2022 Top Ten Mystery Novel by Kings River Life Magazine for Murder Under A British Moon: A 1930s Mona Moon Mystery


THE MONA MOON MYSTERY SERIES
1930s Historical Mysteries




TOUR PARTICIPANTS


April 22 – Connie‘s History Classroom – REVIEW
April 23 – Jody's Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT
April 23 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT
April 24 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – SPOTLIGHT
April 24 – Salty Inspirations – SPOTLIGHT
April 25 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT
April 25 – StoreyBook Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
April 26 – Christy's Cozy Corners – SPOTLIGHT
April 26 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT
April 27 – Sarandipity's – SPOTLIGHT
April 27 – Sarcastically Yours, Jen – SPOTLIGHT
April 28 – Cozy Up With Kathy – SPOTLIGHT
April 28 – Sapphyria's Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
April 29 – Elizabeth McKenna - Author – SPOTLIGHT
April 29 – deal sharing aunt – SPOTLIGHT

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Thursday, April 23, 2026

Book Tour & Giveaway - Circus Bim Bom: A Cold War Adventure by Cliff Lovette


Circus Bim Bom
A Cold War Adventure
by
Cliff Lovette

Historical Fiction/Cold War Fiction w/romance subplots
Publisher: Bim Bom Books
Date Published: March 1, 2026
Page count: 478 pages

SCROLL DOWN FOR GIVEAWAY!

SYNOPSIS:

"There are no accidents in life, only opportunities wearing different clothes."

When the first privately owned Soviet circus arrived in 1990 America as the Soviet Empire unraveled, its elite performers expected to build cultural bridges through spectacular shows. Instead, this prestigious troupe faced a perilous journey through Cold War America.

Circus director Yuri had to navigate treacherous waters where American mobsters, Soviet agents, and political forces circled like predators. Young aerialist Anton dreamed of becoming a clown against his family's wishes, while forbidden romances and unexpected connections bloomed between Soviet performers and Americans who saw past the ideological divide. As high-stakes conspiracies threatened to tear the circus family apart, they had to choose between the authoritarian chains of home and the uncertain promise of freedom.

As The Ringmaster reminds us, "The best Soviet stories are like vodka—they burn with suffering, intoxicate with conflict, keep you stewing in reflection, and yearning for your heart's desire." This genre-bending tale explores whether human connection can transcend ideology—and whether storytelling can bridge the divides that separate us.

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Author's Edition 

Bim Bom Books 

The Author's Edition comes with:
• Signed bookplate
• Digital circus poster
• Charter Bim Bom Book Club Membership
• Exclusive access to "Rabbit Hole" chapters

ENJOY AN EXCERPT:

Meanwhile, Katyana prepared for her entrance as Alek presented her with two
coconuts from his prop bag.
 
Katyana, confused, asked, “What are those for?”
 
Alek exclaimed, “Clap them together like this—they sound like horse hooves!”
 
Katyana sneered at their rancid odor and tossed them back. “I’ll pass, thank you! I don’t need your stinkin’ coconuts!” With a swish of her tail, she trotted off.
 
As Katyana trotted around the ring, Alek mimicked Sir Lancelot’s servant from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, trailing her while clapping his coconuts. Katyana galloped away, leaving Alek struggling to catch up. He sputtered, tossed his coconuts, and collapsed in a heap.
 
Katyana’s transformation unfolded quietly at first; her precise equine mimicry felt natural. But as she kicked and neighed, performers and crew watched, transfixed.
 
Her crystal-studded costume scattered fractals of light as she embodied a graceful mare. The light technician noticed and followed her movements with a spotlight.
 
Engrossed in her performance, Katyana was oblivious to the attention she attracted. For the first time, she wasn’t performing to meet expectations or uphold a legacy. The weight of five generations of Kantemirovs lifted from her shoulders. A piercing whinny escaped her as her blond hair swirled and her headdress traced figure eights in the air. Charging across the ring, she stomped and nickered, then reared up with a spirited squeal, arching her back and swishing her tail before lunging forward in a flurry of hooves.
 
She paused and snorted, exploding from a trot to a gallop, clearing a teetertotter board, her front hooves landing in a single bound. The onlookers fell under her spell. Though Katyana felt exposed and uncertain, they saw only magic—a creature born of light and movement who stepped from a fairy tale into their ordinary world.
 
The circus kids clustered at ringside. Anton sat frozen, witnessing Katyana as he had never seen her—graceful, powerful, unbound.
 
Josef nudged Tiko with a knowing grin. “Our fierce lion seems quite bewitched watching this mare,” he whispered. Josef recognized something shifting in his friend. This wasn’t just admiration; this was discovery.
 
Tiko caught Anton’s expression and Katyana’s glance back at him.
 
Katyana continued her cantering, trotting, and galloping. Her angel wings fluttered as she leaped.
 
Suddenly, the arena resonated with the orchestral soundtrack of The Little Humpbacked Horse. This was Nina and Rita’s doing. Katyana turned to see the sisters in the sound booth, cheering her on to perform the Dance of the Tsar Maiden.
 
The familiar tune stirred something profound inside Katyana. Her ballet training merged with horsemanship as she performed a unique fusion of The Little Humpbacked Horse ballet—part prancing mare, part Tsar Maiden—a creation wholly her own.
 
Katyana launched into a graceful cabriole, her hooves scissoring through the air. Smoke billowed around her feet like slow-moving clouds.
 
She leaped and galloped around the ring, her high-flung headdress trailing behind. She performed an arabesque—reaching skyward, back arched, leg extended, toes pointed—before flowing into a slow canter. Her blond mane, tied in crossed ribbons, flicked with each step.
 
Katyana whinnied and stomped, her movements blending horse and dancer. The sequence culminated in brilliant pirouettes, her precise footwork belying her equine guise, until her final spin erupted into a whirlwind of hooves and muscle.
 
Rita leaned into the microphone. “Ladies and gentlemen, behold our very own countess of the ring!” Nina giggled, adding, “She moves like poetry in motion. She is making the Kantemirov dynasty proud!”
 
When the music stopped, so did Katyana. Her spell broke the moment she realized she had an audience. Her natural shyness flooded back, sending her into a hasty retreat toward the exit, though pride and excitement still colored her cheeks. She felt exposed, vulnerable—had she revealed too much? But the applause followed her, and for once, she didn’t mind being seen.
 
She approached the ring exit, shaking her sweaty mane and dabbing her face with a towel. Her breath came in quick bursts, peach fuzz glistening on her skin as glitter traced down her face and neck.
 
As she passed the star-struck Anton, she tweaked his lion nose and tossed him her damp towel. “That was fun!” she exclaimed as she headed backstage, to resounding applause.
 
The towel carried the scent of her exertion. Anton caught it blindly, the damp fabric warm against his paws.
 
Katyana’s impromptu performance stirred something within her. Everyone saw her differently now—especially Anton, who sensed he was embarking on a new path.”



ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Cliff Lovette is a father, storyteller, and dog lover living in Sandy Springs, Georgia. For over 40 years, he practiced entertainment law, serving as Senior Vice President at LaFace Records and representing artists including Usher and Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes. His passion for bridging historical divides led him to co-produce a groundbreaking reconciliation event between descendants of Buffalo Soldiers and Lakota Native Americans. In 1990, when Bobby Liberman—road manager for the first privately owned Soviet circus touring America—became his client, Cliff discovered the true story that inspired this debut duology.


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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Book Review - HERA: Kingdom of Lies by Betsy Ellor

Hera: Kingdom of LiesHera: Kingdom of Lies by Betsy Ellor
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A riveting reimagining of Greek mythology's portrayal of Hera, the queen of all the cosmos.

HERA: Kingdom of Lies by Betsy Ellor is a vivid and riveting reimagining of the Greek goddess Hera's story, from before her marriage to Zeus to after. The goddess of marriage, motherhood, and family, Hera, is most often portrayed as jealous, quarrelsome, and vindictive, yet she is inevitably standing up to Zeus in support of the people and her dominions' responsibilities. Ellor's story brings together various tales involving the goddess and her relationship with Zeus and presents them in a lively, dramatic, and compelling fashion that had me reading this book from start to finish in one day.

Beginning with her life on the island of Samos, Hera is the queen of a growing population of refugees fleeing from Zeus's war against Kronos (her father) and the Titans. Hera is a gifted and capable leader who is not afraid to get her hands dirty and is revered by the people. She is a confident young woman (in immortal years) who pitches in to serve however she can. The author deftly works in Hera's unique and unbelievable origin story and her rescue from captivity by Zeus, establishing that she has long harbored tender affections for her liberator. When the war is won, she is delighted by his eager courtship, but his ego and man-baby antics quickly disillusion her. Her drastically changed feelings for him resulted in violent and tragic consequences as well as pregnancy. Readers sensitive to this type of story element should take note. The attack is brutal and gut-wrenching to read, but Hera doesn't let it destroy her; rather, she uses it to strengthen her resolve to do what she can to temper Zeus's frequently thoughtless actions and poor decisions that affect their people.

While traditional versions of the same stories often feel dry and dusty, Ellor's fresh narrative really makes Hera's tales, warts and all, come to life. You could feel her emotions, understand her actions, and see how she strives to embody the best of marriage, motherhood, and family. The book closes with the promise of more story yet to come, and I can hardly wait.

I recommend HERA: KINGDOM OF LIES to readers of modern takes on ancient mythologies.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy through WOW! Women On Writing Book Tours.



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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway - Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief (Kate O'Dade Art Crime, #1) by Sheila Sharpe

ARTIST, LOVER, FORGER, THIEF by Sheila Sharpe Banner

ARTIST, LOVER, FORGER, THIEF

by Sheila Sharpe

March 30 - April 24, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

ARTIST, LOVER, FORGER, THIEF by Sheila Sharpe

Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief is a riveting, wildly entertaining, complex, and adrenaline-fueled art crime novel that is as intriguing as it is satisfying. Nick McCoy wants out of the art forgery business but not until he exacts revenge on the man who murdered his family years ago. Kate O'Dade, McCoy's former therapist, comes to him for help after mysteriously receiving a painting of Matisse's Open Window from an unknown benefactor. This seemingly innocent meeting to determine its authenticity sets off a chain of events that will take McCoy, O'Dade, Cromwell and his new team of investigators from San Diego to England, and from art forgery to murder.

Rarely do you find such complex characters, intricate plot, compelling subject, and cunning psychological jousting woven throughout such a memorable story like Sharpe does in Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief.

Praise for Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief:

"Sharpe dives headlong into the murky waters of identity, obsession, and deception in her smart, psychologically charged thriller [Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief]. It explores the blurry line between art and artifice, healing and manipulation, love and control. [T]his is a genre-bending literary thriller that lingers long after the final page."
~ Prairies Book Review

"Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief...is a gripping tale set amidst the opulent yet treacherous world of high-end art crime in San Diego...[It explores] the moral dilemmas of art forgery, theft, and deception, with each character caught between their desires and the consequences of their actions. This stellar examination of art, deception, and forgery kept me riveted."
~ Reader's Favorite 5-Star Review

Book Details:

Genre: Mystery, Literary Fiction, Crime Fiction
Published by: Redwood Publishing, LLC
Publication Date: March 26, 2025
Number of Pages: 332
ISBN: 9781966333142 (ISBN10: 1966333145)
Series: A Kate O'Dade Art Crime Novel, Book 1
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

 

 

Author Bio:

Sheila Sharpe

Sheila Sharpe has been a therapist for more than forty years, specializing in treating trauma, couples, and artists. Being a detective of sorts to determine patients’ issues and their solutions like she does in The Ways We Love, along with her past history as an artist and fascination with art forgery, led to the creation of her new fiction book series, the Kate O’Dade Art Crime novels.

Catch Up With Sheila Sharpe:

www.SheilaSharpe.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @sasharpedelmar
Instagram - @sheilasharpe_writer
BlueSky - @sheilasharpeauthor.bsky.social
X - @SheilaSharpe19
Facebook - @sheilasharpenovel

 

Review:

4 stars!

Clever and complex tale of revenge and illusion in the art world. 

Artist, Lover, Forger, Thief is the first book in author Sheila Sharpe’s Kate O’Dade Art Crime series, in which an elusive conman and painting forger puts in motion a devious plan for revenge against the murderer who killed his family. With its clever, complex plot and morally gray main characters, I was quickly drawn into this intricate tale set in the world of art collectors and famous paintings. 

Kate O’Dade is a therapist with many clients from the local artistic community, and she is a painter herself. But after her husband dies, leaving her in debt, she recalls how one of her clients had made a fortune selling copies and forgeries of the works of well-known artists. She starts to consider that maybe financial relief might reside in her own two talented hands. But when a valuable painting is left on her doorstep, she’s drawn back into contact with her former patient, who is now a legitimate preservation and restoration specialist and the director of a wealthy art collector’s private museum, or so it seems. 

Nick McCoy is a talented painter in his own right, but the FBI and Scotland Yard are on his trail for forgery and theft. He’s guilty, of course, but a lack of evidence has kept him operating in the open in trusted positions at museums in both England and the U.S. When he comes face to face with his former therapist, he discovers he is still as attracted to her as he was when he was undergoing treatment. While Kate helped him resolve to leave forgery behind, his plans for revenge against the man who is now his employer are about to come to fruition. 

Such a clever tale, beginning with some messy love triangles and a conman you can never really trust. All the main characters are flawed individuals, morally gray, and desperate in their own ways. Adding to the suspense is the arrival of a top-notch international team of art investigators, led by a detective chief inspector from London who has been chasing Nick for more than a decade. The evil bad guys, Dixon Steele and his depraved son, Simon, are truly awful people, and both are such loose cannons that I never knew what they were going to do next. I was committed to the story, hoping Nick would pull off whatever he had in store for these two. The story’s ending nicely sets up future books in the series. 

I recommend ARTIST, LOVER, FORGER, THIEF to readers of crime fiction, especially those interested in the art world and long cons.




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Book Review: Murder, Local Style (Orchid Isle Mystery, #3) by Leslie Karst

Murder, Local Style (An Orchid Isle Mystery Book 3)Murder, Local Style by Leslie Karst
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

When the local orchid club president is murdered, Valerie steps up to catch the killer.

Murder, Local Style is the third book in veteran author Leslie Karst’s fun and layered Orchid Isle Mystery series, and once again, Valerie must step in to investigate a local death. When the president of her neighborhood’s orchid club dies after eating food she prepared for their club’s annual memorial dinner, Valerie naturally has a vested interest in clearing her name.

Valerie Corbin, a former caterer, graciously agrees to help prepare the annual dinner when one of the two volunteers responsible must go to Oahu to care for her sick mother. Thankfully, only 60 attendees are expected, and most of the menu shopping has been completed. The menu is comprised of local favorites that sound delicious, and there are fun discussions of their preparation woven into the story. As is her tradition, the author provides recipes at the end of the novel. Valerie had only just attended her first club meeting at the invitation of one of her neighbors and was hoping to meet others from the area, but making everyone sick with her cooking wasn’t what she had in mind, so she had plenty of righteous motivation to discover the truth.

Readers get an insider’s view of Valerie and Kristen’s marriage and home life, stressed by the murder and compounded by the building tensions between them and the inconsiderate neighbor next door, who uses loud power tools from dawn to dusk and has a dog that barks incessantly. Kristen’s nephew, Sean, has also come for an extended stay, and he gets upset when he overhears one of Valerie’s possible hypotheses, which would implicate his new island amour, who is also a member of the orchid club. Later, when he disappears for several days without a word to his aunt, Kristen is naturally concerned and upset, and Valerie doesn’t share her urgency to find him, which I found out of character for her. On the other hand, while Kristen has been somewhat supportive of Valerie’s past sleuthing, she’s really not on board this time, even though someone has done their best to point the finger at her wife.

The plot is full of neighborhood gossip and intrigue, with everyone involved living within the same area. Everyone knows everyone else, their families, and all their business, so there are plenty of suspects to consider and some very good red herrings to rule out. As always, the author imbues the story with local flavor, both cultural and culinary.

I recommend MURDER, LOCAL STYLE to cozy mystery readers, especially those who would enjoy a Big Island setting.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Great Escapes Virtual Book Tours.

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