Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Last to Fall (Gossamer Falls, #3) by Lynn H. Blackburn

Last to Fall by Lynn Blackburn Banner

LAST TO FALL

by Lynn H. Blackburn

March 2 - 13, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Last to Fall by Lynn H. Blackburn

GOSSAMER FALLS 

She's caught in a deadly game. He's the only one who can help her win.

Bronwyn Pierce has poured everything into The Haven, her family's exclusive mountain resort in Gossamer Falls. But when financial discrepancies surface and the numbers suggest something far darker than simple mismanagement, she's forced to call on the one person with the skills to help her: Mo Quinn, a former Army intelligence officer, her first love, and the last person she ever wanted to trust again.

Mo has spent years avoiding the woman he once loved and the secrets that tore them apart. But when Bronwyn calls, he can't walk away--especially when it's clear someone wants her gone for good. As they dig deeper into the treacherous motives behind a blackmail scheme, their proximity reignites long-buried feelings neither of them are ready to face. And when the evidence points to an unexpected culprit, Mo faces an impossible choice: trust the proof in front of him or trust his heart.

With danger closing in and no one else to turn to, Bronwyn must break years of silence with Mo to uncover who's trying to destroy The Haven. They'll have to risk everything--including their hearts--to expose the truth before it's too late.

The finale to Blackburn's Gossamer Falls series is an exhilarating romantic suspense novel packed with tension. This gripping read will hook fans of the family rivalry, bodyguard, small town, second chance romance, and forced proximity tropes.

Book Details:

Genre: Christian Fiction, Romantic Suspense, Romance
Published by: Revell
Publication Date: March 3, 2026
Number of Pages: 368
ISBN: 9780800745387 (ISBN10: 0800745388)
Series: Gossamer Falls, Book #3 | Learn more on Amazon, Goodreads, & Baker Book House
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Christianbook | Goodreads | BookBub | Baker Book House

Read an excerpt:

 

 

Author Bio:

Lynn Blackburn

Lynn H. Blackburn is the award-winning author of Never Fall Again, as well as the Dive Team Investigations and Defend and Protect series. She loves writing swoon-worthy Southern suspense because her childhood fantasy was to become a spy, but her grown-up reality is that she's a huge chicken and would have been caught on her first mission. She prefers to live vicariously through her characters by putting them into terrifying situations while she sits at home in her pajamas. She lives in Simpsonville, South Carolina, with her true love, Brian, and their three children.

Catch Up With Lynn Blackburn:

LynnHBlackburn.com
Subscribe to Lynn's Newsletter
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads - @lynnhugginsblackburn
BookBub - @LynnHBlackburn
Instagram - @LynnHBlackburn
X - @LynnHBlackburn
Facebook - @LynnHBlackburn
Pinterest - @LynnHBlackburn

 

Review:

5 stars!

A wonderfully satisfying tale of romance, suspense, forgiveness, and second chances. 

Last to Fall, the final book in author Lynn H. Blackburn's excellent Christian romantic suspense trilogy, Gossamer Falls, is a well-done and satisfying story of abiding friendship, forgiveness, and second chances. This is Bronwyn Pierce's and Montgomery "Mo" Quinn's story and the perfect conclusion to the trilogy. 

The Haven's CEO, Bronwyn Pierce, knows something isn't right in the company's financial reports, but whatever it is, it's so subtly hidden that she's unable to pinpoint it on her own. With only family members and in-laws on the Board of Directors and in management, though, chances are the culprit, if there is one, is going to be a relative, so she turns to the only people she can trust: her childhood friends Cal, Meredith, and Mo Quinn. Unfortunately, a mistake in her past has caused a years-long rift between her and Mo, a forensic accountant and the one person she knows who can figure this all out. But the longer she puts off asking for help, the worse the atmosphere on the Board is getting. Although she's brought their company to new heights of success, some members are looking for any excuse to oust her in favor of someone more malleable, and it's starting to look like someone may be taking more sinister and permanent measures to get rid of her. 

I loved this story from the very beginning! The two rival families, the Pierces and the Quinns, are mending their differences, at least among the younger members. But Mo and Bronwyn's troubles go deep, with a load of hurt and trust issues to overcome before they can begin to heal. 

The author creates a brooding, expectant, atmospheric feeling early; the perfect setting for what's to come. So much happens during the wee hours of the morning, when everyone is sleep-deprived and less alert, with their defenses down. However, Bronwyn, Mo, and their group rise to the challenge, which is proven early on during a suspicious power outage at the resort. 

Bronwyn and Mo are such a vulnerable pair, and their refusal to even speak directly to each other prevents them from reconnecting and overcoming their past hurts. I liked how the author used quick flashbacks to tell their shared backstory and explain why things were the way they were between them in the present. 

I recommend LAST TO FALL to readers of romantic suspense, especially those who enjoy faith-based stories.



Tour Participants:

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LAST TO FALL by Lynn H. Blackburn

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Book Review: Elmer Kelton's The Familiar Stranger by Steve Kelton & John Bradshaw

Elmer Kelton's The Familiar Stranger (Hewey Calloway, #5)Elmer Kelton's The Familiar Stranger by Steve Kelton
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A round-up of Hewey Calloway tales told as his adventures during a long trail ride to Canada.

Elmer Kelton’s The Familiar Stranger is the fifth Hewey Calloway volume, a collaboration of the unpublished writings of Kelton himself and his son, Steve Kelton, and was finally brought to completion by John Bradshaw. In this book, Hewey Calloway is at loose ends in Durango, Colorado, left there after his last wrangling job went sideways. He decides to visit a friend, a retired Texas Ranger, as he considers his next move. Along the way to Hanley’s, a chance encounter at a remote cabin with a young man with smallpox puts Hewey’s conscience and health to the test.

Hanley Baker is living in the mountains in a cabin left to him by a fond uncle, and he is not terribly enamored of the situation: the place is too difficult to farm or do much else with. So, when Hewey gets a wild hair to check out Canada, he doesn’t have to do much convincing for Hanley to come along as well. On the trail to Canada, Hewey rubs up against a diverse range of characters. While some are just down on their luck, others are in trouble of another shape and kind, and his past kindness to the sick young man and his consideration in return come back for a second round.

The storytelling is compelling, even when the writer is only recounting a simple day in the lives of the two old friends as they make their way north through the wild, untamed wilderness. More adventurous scenes are handled equally well and choreographed to convey the ongoing action vividly and to perfection. What results is a well-told tale of cinematic quality.

Although the fifth book in the series, readers new to Hewey’s adventures should have no trouble reading and enjoying this one as a standalone. I recommend ELMER KELTON’S THE FAMILIAR STRANGER to readers of western action and adventure stories.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy through RABT Book Tours and PR.



View all my reviews

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Murder Plays Second Fiddle (Pearly Girls Mystery, #2) by Heather Weidner

 

Murder Plays Second Fiddle
The Pearly Girls Mysteries, Book Two
by
Heather Weidner

About Murder Plays Second Fiddle

MURDER PLAYS SECOND FIDDLE COVER 3 

Murder Plays Second Fiddle (The Pearly Girls Mysteries)

Cozy Mystery
2nd in Series
Setting - Ivy Springs, Virginia in the Blue Ridge Mountains
Publisher: Keylight Books
Publication date: January 13, 2026
Print length: 256 pages
Hardcover ISBN-13: 979-8887981161
Paperback ISBN-13: 979-8887981154
Digital ISBN-13: 979-8887981178
ASIN: B0D8SG9JFZ

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The Pearly Girls return to solve a high school reunion murder in this sequel to Murder Strikes a Chord.

Event planner Cassidy Jamison and her not-so-helpful sexagenarian staff of Roxie, Kate, Aileen, and Ruthanne are up to their elbows with a high school reunion committee’s constantly changing requirements for an event that must be the most elaborate and memorable at all costs.

When well-known reporter, Darcy Branch, and former cheerleader, Brittany Mahoney, are found dead on her property, Cassidy and the gang have to find the killer before the party’s over. And the more Cassidy and her Chihuahua mix, Elvis, dig for clues, the more deadly secrets they uncover—including one that changes everything she knows about her family’s history.

The Pearly Girls need to solve the case before the Class of 2009 goes down in Ivy Springs history as the deadliest reunion.

Click to Purchase!


About Heather Weidner

Heather Weidner

Through the years, Heather Weidner has been a cop’s kid, technical writer, editor, college professor, software tester, and IT manager. She writes the Pearly Girls Mysteries, the Delanie Fitzgerald Mysteries, The Jules Keene Glamping Mysteries, and The Mermaid Bay Christmas Shoppe Mysteries.

Her short stories appear in the Virginia is for Mysteries series, 50 Shades of Cabernet, Deadly Southern Charm, Murder by the Glass, First Comes Love, Then Comes Murder, and Crime in the Old Dominion, and she has non-fiction pieces in Promophobia and The Secret Ingredient: A Mystery Writers’ Cookbook.

She is a member of Sisters in Crime: National, Central Virginia, Chessie, Guppies, and Grand Canyon Writers, International Thriller Writers, and James River Writers, and she blogs regularly with the Writers Who Kill.

Originally from Virginia Beach, Heather has been a mystery fan since Scooby-Doo and Nancy Drew. She lives in Central Virginia with her husband and a crazy Mini Aussie Shepherd named Cooper.


Tour Participants


March 2 – Books1987 – SPOTLIGHT
March 3 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT
March 4 – Jody's Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT
March 4 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
March 5 – Christy's Cozy Corners – REVIEW
March 5 – Sapphyria's Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
March 6 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, CHARACTER GUEST POST
March 7 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT
March 7 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT
March 8 – Boys' Mom Reads! – SPOTLIGHT
March 9 – Maureen's Musings – SPOTLIGHT
March 10 – Sneaky the Library Cat's Blog – CHARACTER INTERVIEW
March 10 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – SPOTLIGHT
March 11 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT
March 11 – Sarandipity's – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
March 12 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
March 13 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR GUEST POST
March 14 – Reading Is My SuperPower – REVIEW
March 15 – StoreyBook Reviews – AUTHOR GUEST POST


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Monday, March 09, 2026

Review Tour: The Quantum Revelations by Stuart Heinrich

 



THE QUANTUM REVELATIONS

by
Stuart Heinrich

This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by
Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

SciFi / Mystery / Thriller
Publisher: Endless Tree Books, LLC
Publication Date: July 31, 2025
Page count: 480 pages


SYNOPSIS:

The world is on the brink of an apocalyptic climate crisis and quickly spiraling out of control into a dystopian nightmare. As everything collapses around them, two scientists struggle for relevance in their quest to build the world’s first practical quantum computer. They discover so much more. A mystery of physics that goes deeper than they could have ever imagined...


CLICK TO PURCHASE!

| Amazon | BAM! |

ENJOY AN EXCERPT:

The wall opposite him, his designated viewing surface, was instantly replaced by a giant rectangle showing a news broadcast from somewhere out in the ocean.
 
A dark haired female correspondent reported from the deck of a ship, her hair whipping in the wind. In the distance behind her was a backdrop of fire, as jets of flame shot directly out of the ocean.
 
“I’m here in the East Siberian Arctic Sea, where an unprecedented and apocalyptic sight is unfolding before our very eyes,” she said. “These methane plumes are a truly surreal and terrifying sight, as if the very ocean itself is engulfed in an inferno.”
 
Skyler’s stomach twisted in a knot of anxiety as he watched the grim scene. How was it that reality was somehow always even worse than his most pessimistic imagination? He considered turning the broadcast off, but he found himself unable to look away.
 
The correspondent continued, “I’m told that these fires are fueled by methane bubble columns released as the subsea permafrost thaws. Somehow, the methane has been ignited, possibly by lightning strike, and the fires continue to burn relentlessly. This is the first time we’ve seen an event like this, but our science correspondents are saying it’s not surprising, and there’s no cause for alarm. These fires are unlikely to have any significant impact on atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations.”


REVIEW:


4 stars!

Fascinating and frightening and completely absorbing! 

The Quantum Revelations by Stuart Heinrich is a riveting science fiction tale that is fascinating, frightening, and completely absorbing. Teasing and teaching, with its plot of humanity on the path to the end times, I couldn’t put this book down. 

The main character, Skyler Wexler, is a doctoral student in quantum physics, working on a classified, grant-supported project at the MIT Lincoln Laboratory, when he makes a breakthrough that could advance his field of study and garner him global recognition, and maybe even the approval of his renowned but emotionally distant physicist father. But what he thinks he’ discovered and what the reality is may be two very different things. But with society on the brink of collapse due to an accelerating climate crisis, it may not matter. 

Skyler’s story is compelling reading, from the book’s explosive opening to its almost gentle, eye-opening conclusion. The author presents a vividly wretched picture of the U.S., suffering from the effects of an accident in the Arctic ice and the denial of impending doom cultivated by an all-too-powerful president and news media, and the many parallels to current conditions lend the tale a definite feeling of realism. Skyler and his lab partner, Zara, are relatable, regular students, and I was quickly invested in their stories: Skyler with his desire for parental approval and Zara with her hospitalized, comatose mother. 

While there is plenty of action, investigation, and plot twists, there is a lot of discussion about the hypotheses that make up quantum physics and much of that are Skyler’s internal monologues as he struggles with determining what his experiment has produced, the current state of the field, discarded alternate hypotheses, which are then repeated when he has someone to argue with or share his thoughts. His ruminations help clarify what’s at stake for those not conversant with the science, and they lay out Skyler’s thought processes, but this tended to go on a little long. And, if long passages of theoretical head-scratching are not your thing, just know the payoff is coming. I loved that Skyler had his own breakthrough after a casual observation by the girl next to him on his flight home from a professional conference that netted him nothing in the way of insight into his research problems. 

I recommend THE QUANTUM REVELATIONS to readers of hard science fiction.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Stuart Heinrich is a computer scientist with a PhD from NCSU and a passion for studying the fundamental nature of reality and physics. He is known for his unique theories on the Relativity of Existence (ROE), the Maximally Biophilic Principle (MBP) and Quantum Fluid Dynamics (QFD).

Goodreads |


 

Book Review: Apple Dumpling Murder (Christmas Catastrophe Mystery, #2) by Trixie Silvertale

Apple Dumpling Murder: Paranormal Cozy Mystery (Christmas Catastrophe Mysteries Book 2)Apple Dumpling Murder: Paranormal Cozy Mystery by Trixie Silvertale
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Sugar and spice and murder!

Apple Dumpling Murder is the second book in author Trixie Silvertale’s fun and festive Christmas Catastrophe Mysteries, a cozy mystery series featuring none other than Santa’s daughter, Cindy Claus. With its naïve but good-hearted and oftentimes literal-thinking main character and the murder of a beloved community figure, I was compelled to get to the bottom of this dirty deed, rooting for Cindy, Keith, and Arti the entire time.

Cindy Cherubim Claus is the main character and the daughter of the famous Claus at the North Pole. She’s a half-elf, a quarter human, and a quarter angel, and has settled in Silver Shoals to open a bakery and do what she loves doing more than anything else: bake delicious pastries and treats. Cindy (and everyone else in the bakery) is shocked and surprised when her landlord, Ronnie Schmenkel, announces he’s going to leave her the building she’s leasing from him in his will. Uncomfortable with this generous intention, she goes to Ronnie’s house to ask him to reconsider this gift. However, someone else has been there before her, and Cindy finds Ronnie dead on the floor of his home, the victim of a deadly bash on the head with a rolling pin. When the murder weapon has her fingerprints on it, she becomes suspect number one.

The characters in this Christmas-centric town are, for the most part, a warm and charming bunch, and her relationship with Keith, the medical investigator, is getting even warmer. The little glimpses of Silver Shoals give close-knit, small-town vibes and a perpetual holiday spirit. With some good suspects to rule out before reaching the final, surprising resolution, the plot offers exciting, intense moments alongside its delightful charm.

I recommend APPLE DUMPLING MURDER to cozy mystery readers who enjoy culinary or holiday-themed stories.

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



View all my reviews

Sunday, March 08, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Fried Chicken Castañeda (Historical Culinary Cozy Mystery, #1) by Suzanne Stauffer

 

Fried Chicken Castañeda by Suzanne Stauffer

About Fried Chicken Castañeda

FRIED CHICKEN CASTANEDA COVER 3 

Fried Chicken Castañeda

Historical Culinary Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting - Las Vegas, New Mexico, in June 1929
Publisher: Artemesia Publishing, LLC
Publication date: May 6, 2025
Print length: 228 pages
Paperback ISBN-10: 1963832051 / ISBN-13: 978-1963832051
Digital ISBN-13: 978-1963832242 / ASIN: B0DZC47WJQ

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At the Castañeda Hotel you'll find romance, gourmet dining, bootleggers, and murder!

Bored with her conventional middle-class life, Prudence Bates escapes Cleveland by heading west to qualify as a Courier for the Southwestern Indian Detours. On the California Limited she meets Jerry Begay, a charming Navajo school teacher. They feel an instant rapport, but he's headed for Gallup, so it's but a brief encounter.

In Las Vegas, New Mexico Prudence is befriended by Castañeda Hotel Harvey Girls Martha and Anne and desk clerk Clara. They take Prudence under their wing and invite her along to dances and the local hot springs.

Four days later, Martha's brother, Tom, is found murdered. Was it because of his bootlegging activities? Or his amorous relationship with Liz Kearney, daughter of the richest man in the area and rumored mob boss? And was that really Jerry Begay whom Prudence saw meeting with Tom in secret the day before he was killed?

Following in the footsteps of her favorite fictional detectives, Tommy and Tuppence, Prudence is determined to solve the murder. But one wrong step and she may end up in the sights of the bootleggers.

Click to Purchase!

| Indigo | Kobo |

About Suzanne Stauffer


 
After 20 years as a librarian and 20 as a professor of library science and library historian, Suzanne Stauffer has moved on to a third career as a mystery novelist. She currently lives in Albuquerque with her Australian husband and brown and white spotted rat terrier dogter, Treme. Her debut novel, Fried Chicken Castañeda (Artemesia Publishing, May 2025), won the CIPA EVVY Bronze Medal in Mystery/Crime/Detection and the New Mexico Book Award for Cozy Mystery.


Author Guest Post


Please welcome Suzanne Stauffer, the author of today's featured book, to the blog!

Plaza Hotel
Plaza Hotel
Hello! Thank you for stopping by. I’m Suzanne Stauffer, author of the 2025 New Mexico Book Award for Cozy mystery winner, Fried Chicken Castañeda, a historical cozy culinary mystery set in 1929 Las Vegas, New Mexico. Yes – there is a Las Vegas in New Mexico. At one time, it was the largest city in the Southwest, and it had the reputation of a “wide-open town.” Billy the Kid was held in the jail there in 1880, after being captured by Sheriff Pat Garrett. The Plaza Hotel, built in 1882, was known as “The Belle of the Southwest.”
Castañeda Hotel



It and the Castañeda Hotel, a Fred Harvey hotel built in 1898, are still open for business.





Las Vegas Public Library
When my husband and I stayed at the Castañeda Hotel and toured the city, including the Carnegie Library that is a scale model of Jefferson’s Monticello, I knew that I wanted to set a story there. It is such a unique little town with such an exciting history.


Indian Detour

A few years before, on a visit to the Grand Canyon, I had learned about the Indian Detours of the late 1920s and early 1930s and the Couriers, the women who guided them. I remarked to my husband that they would be an excellent setting for a cozy mystery series when I retired. 

I bought the only book written about them, The Southwestern Indian Detours by Diane H. Thomas, and discovered that the Detours originally left from the Castañeda! Now I had my setting – I just needed to retire. LOL! And then COVID happened and lockdown and, while I was still teaching online (library science at Louisiana State University), I wasn’t doing any service (aka committee meetings) or much research (I couldn’t get to the libraries, archives, and other repositories of historical materials) ... so, I started work on what would become Fried Chicken Castañeda.

Painted Desert
The works of Tony Hillerman were another influence. Although my father was in the military and we moved around quite a bit when I was young, we had settled in Utah by the time I was in junior high school. My father’s family had settled in northern Utah in the 1850s and I was even born in Salt Lake City. We spent our summers at the National Parks in the Southwest and visiting relatives (on my mother’s side) in Holbrook, Arizona. Hillerman’s descriptions of the natural wonders of the Southwest always made me homesick when I read them while working in New York City. I wanted to share that beauty with others who have not yet experienced it, and encourage them to discover it.

So, with lockdown, I had the time and I had a setting – Las Vegas, New Mexico in 1929. I just needed a main character, an amateur sleuth. I decided on Prudence Bates, a 25-year old librarian in Cleveland, Ohio. They say write what you know, and I was a working librarian for roughly 20 years. Prudence, who reads mysteries voraciously, is bored with her job. She wants excitement, glamour, intrigue. She attends the promotional meeting on the Indian Detours given by Anita Rose in 1929 (yes, Anita Rose is a real person and she promoted the Detours through the East and Midwest in 1929, stopping in Cleveland), learns about the Couriers, and decides that this is what has been missing in her life. Unfortunately for her, while she was the right age (at least 25), and a college graduate, she was not a native of New Mexico, and that was another requirement.

La Fonda Hotel

Our Prudence is not discouraged by this. She decides to head out to La Fonda Hotel in Santa Fe to plead her case in person.

Along the route, she’ll spend a week at the Castañeda soaking up local atmosphere. It’s 1929, so of course, she takes the train from Chicago (where she makes a point of eating at the Fred Harvey restaurant), sleeping in a Pullman berth and eating in the Fred Harvey dining car. Her dining companion for one meal is Sally Johnson, a Harvey Girl at the La Fonda. And ... unexpectedly, she meets Jerry Begay, a thirty-something Navajo school teacher on his way to Gallup ... so it’s a brief encounter between strangers on a train, two ships passing in the night, and, in 1929, a forbidden love.

Montezuma Hotel

Once in Las Vegas, she tours the town, visiting the landmarks and monuments that constitute the pride of Las Vegas, including the Plaza Hotel. She makes friends with Harvey Girls Martha and Anne and desk clerk Clara, who invite her to a YMCA dance and to soak in the hot springs above Las Vegas at the Montezuma Hotel.

Before she knows it, she finds herself embroiled in bootlegging, murder, and mystery. Who killed Harvey Girl Martha’s brother, Tom, and why? Was it because he was selling poisoned bootlegged liquor to the local Indians? Or was it because of his amorous activities with Liz Kearney, daughter of the richest man in town and rumored mob boss? And was that really Jerry whom Prudence saw meeting with Tom the day before? 

Read it and find out.

Tour Participants


March 2 – deal sharing aunt – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
March 2 – Maureen's Musings – SPOTLIGHT
March 3 – Jody's Bookish Haven – SPOTLIGHT
March 4 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
March 4 – Sapphyria's Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
March 5 – Sarandipity's – CHARACTER INTERVIEW
March 5 – Books1987 – SPOTLIGHT
March 6 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT
March 7 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT
March 8 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT
March 8 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – AUTHOR GUEST POST
March 9 – Christy's Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST
March 10 – Sarah Can't Stop Reading Books – REVIEW
March 11 – Ascroft, eh? – AUTHOR GUEST POST
March 12 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – REVIEW, RECIPE
March 13 – Elizabeth McKenna - Author – SPOTLIGHT
March 13 – StoreyBook Reviews – CHARACTER GUEST POST
March 14 – fundinmental - SPOTLIGHT
March 15 – Boys' Mom Reads! – REVIEW
March 15 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, AUTHOR INTERVIEW

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Saturday, March 07, 2026

Book Tour: I Was A Teenage Death God by M.J. Beasi



I Was A Teenage Death God
by
MJ Beasi
YA Fantasy
Publisher: Page Street YA
Publishing Date: March 3, 2026
Page count: 368 pages
SYNOPSIS:

Seventeen-year-old Charlie can’t touch anyone without stealing bits of their life away, which would be enough of a curse without Lou—a ghost—forcing them to steal that life for her own use.

Lou has kept Charlie in line for years by threatening to take life directly from their twin sister, Sam. But when Lou goes after their friend and secret crush Ravi, Charlie refuses, and Lou makes good on her threat.

As Sam’s health rapidly declines, Ravi discovers that Charlie may not be the only person born with their unusual power. The trio embark on a weekend road trip to meet a pair of self-proclaimed “Death Gods” who may be the key to saving Sam and understanding Charlie’s abilities . . . . But with all roads leading back to Lou, Charlie is forced to face a dark legacy—one that calls their humanity into question.

CLICK TO PURCHASE!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

M.J. Beasi is a YA author, songwriter, former singer, voice teacher, and the founder/director of a teen opera workshop in western Massachusetts. Born and raised in Michigan, M.J. moved to Pittsburgh to study vocal performance at Carnegie-Mellon University, then on to New York to make a career in music and theater. On tour, M.J. was known for scouting out each new city as a potential future home, but it was love that finally lured M.J. to New England and a new career blaspheming Handel with a group of brilliant teens. As a librettist/adapter, M.J. has written Il sogno d’Arianna, an English-language narrative adapted from the madrigals of Claudio Monteverdi, an expanded adaptation of Henry Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, and a queer adaptation of Handel’s Rinaldo. Their own songwriting and vocals are featured on their 2002 album, Dorrie’s True Story. M.J.’s debut novel, I WAS A TEENAGE DEATH GOD, will be released in early 2026 from Page Street Publishing.

When not writing or nerding out over Baroque opera, M.J. can be found reading, gaming, obliviously lost in their own inner world, streaming on Twitch at the crack of dawn, or binging cartoons with their spouse and cat. Some of the many keys to M.J.’s heart include rambling takes on musical theater, Vernors ginger ale, oatmeal scotchies, and queer disasters in any setting.

| Website | BlueSky | Facebook | Goodreads | Instagram | Twitch |

March 2nd
Bookcrushin – Book Look
Confessions of a YA Reader – Promotional Post
The Clever Reader – Promotional Post

March 3rd
Never Hollowed By The Stare – Promotional Post
Mx. Phoebe’s Viewpoint – Favorite Quotes

March 4th
The violet west – Creative Post
Books1987 – Promotional Post

March 5th
Betwixt The Sheets – Promotional Post
Nonbinary Knight Reads – Top 5 Reasons to Read I Was A Teenage Death God

March 6th
Ilovebooksandstuffblog – Promotional Post

March 7th
Boys’ Mom Reads! – Promotional Post
Guatemala Paula Loves to Read – Promotional Post

March 8th
The Book Dutchesses – Promotional Post

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Friday, March 06, 2026

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: A Murder of Furies (Ancient Crete Mystery, #3) by Eleanor Kuhns

Murder of Furies by Eleanor Kuhns Banner

A MURDER OF FURIES

by Eleanor Kuhns

February 16 - March 13, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Murder of Furies by Eleanor Kuhns

AN ANCIENT CRETE MYSTERY 

Bronze Age Crete, 1450 B.C.E.

When Tinos, the High Priestess's consort, asks Martis to search for his missing daughter, Martis becomes involved in the dangerous politics between Crete and Egypt. A minor Egyptian prince is courting Hele, the High Priestess's daughter, despite her persistent refusals. And despite the lobbying by Hele's brother, Khoranos, who seeks the Cretan throne for himself.

Then the High Priestess is found murdered, savagely stabbed multiple times. Martis discovers plans to kidnap Hele and she has to be spirited away to safety. Egyptian soldiers occupy Knossos and Khoranos installs his ally as the High Priestess.

Can Martis rescue the High Priestess's daughters and identify the murderer before Khoranos, with Egypt's help, takes the throne? Martis must embark on several dangerous quests to succeed.

Book Details:

Genre: Historical Murder Mystery
Published by: Indie
Publication Date: January 31, 2026
Number of Pages: 274
Series: An Ancient Crete Mystery, Book 3
Book Links: Amazon | Kindle | Goodreads | BookBub

The Ancient Crete Mystery Series

In the Shadow of the Bull
In the Shadow of the Bull
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub
On the Horns of Death
On the Horns of Death
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Chapter 1

Although it was just late March, Crete was already growing hot. Sweating and panting after the bird dance, I pushed my mask to the top of my head. I sucked in deep breaths and flapped the long white sleeves, pinned to resemble wings. Air rushed over my damp arms and legs,

At least my dance was finished. Other dances would also be performed, and, in fact, the next one was already beginning. The younger girls, all maidens and too young to wear the red spotted scarf, were clad in bearskins. They danced to honor the Lady of Animals and Childbirth. I remembered that hot smelly costume from previous years. Now, at almost seventeen, I danced as a bird in a graceful circle of white-clad girls twisting around one another. I thought we really did look like flying birds; not imprisoned by the earth. We each wore the mask of a different species. Although I’d hoped to dance as a gull or an owl, I was only a sparrow.

The other bird dancers removed their masks and scattered into the audience to join friends and family. Except the vulture. Funny, I thought, I didn’t recognize the vulture. Now that I’d begun my agoge and visited the dorms regularly, I thought I knew all the young women – at least by sight. I certainly should know everyone who I danced with.

Despite the identical white gowns and the masks covering the faces, the bodies were difficult to disguise. This girl was heavier, that other one was as slim as a papyrus reed. Although every girl danced the same steps, some jumped higher and some twisted with an extra roll of the hips. Easy to know them even though we weren’t supposed to – for this short space of time we were the creatures represented by our masks. But I did not recognize the vulture. I squinted against the bright sun. I didn’t remember the vulture from the rehearsals either. And surely at least one girl was missing –

“If you’re Martis, the High Priestess’s consort wishes to speak to you,” said a treble voice behind me. I turned and looked first at the grubby little boy and then around at the crowd. I saw no sign of Tinos.

“Where is he?” I asked, my heart leaping.

At one time, I’d thought – hoped – Tinos and I had developed a special connection. But last fall, during the investigation into the murder of the bull dancer, we’d fallen out. I’d seen very little of him since then and only at a distance, as he conducted his duties. Sometimes I imagined we were still close friends. Other times I despaired we’d ever be friends again.

“I’ll take you to him,” the boy said, extending a grimy paw. I took hold and followed the boy through the crowd.

We went a distance from the theater, finally pausing at a copse of trees. Tinos waited within, almost unrecognizable without his headdress or jewelry. His long black hair had been pulled back and tied with a string. “Martis,” he said. As his eyes drifted from my hair to my white dress, his eyebrows rose in surprise. I touched my long hair self-consciously. I now wore it in the fashionable style - with most of it tumbling down my back except for the locks pulled in front of my ears.

“You’ve grown up? I always think of you in a boy’s kilt . . .”

“I wear that only when I am bull dancing,” I said shortly, affronted. Did Tinos believe I would be a child forever? I was old enough to marry - although I’d vowed before the Goddess that I never would.

Tinos nodded and stared over my head as though regretting this meeting. I could see he felt awkward, without the easy camaraderie we’d once enjoyed, and I was both sorry and angry with him. I’d looked forward to talking with him once again and now he seemed, well, disappointed. “You wanted to see me?” I asked, my tone taking on some sharpness.

He turned to look at me.

“That’s the Martis I remember,” he said, grinning for the first time. “Still as quick to anger as ever.” I went hot.

Unable to think of a smart response, I tossed my head.

“Have you seen Atana lately. I know you and my daughter are friends.”

I knew Atana of course and I’d made an effort to befriend her. At one point, I’d hoped to see more of Tinos, which hadn’t happened. Atana was only nine so I didn’t spend a lot of time with her.

I turned and looked over my shoulder as though I could see through the trees and the crowds beyond. Atana should have joined the younger girls in the bear dance but, because she was the High Priestess’s daughter, she’d been allowed to dance with the birds. Now I knew who’d been missing.

“Did you see her this morning?” Tinos continued, his words rushing out.

“No,” I said. “Didn’t you?”

“No. We – um - quarreled,” he admitted, his eyes seeking the ground beneath his booted feet. “I haven’t seen or spoken to her for several days.”

“Ah.” I said in understanding. Before I moved to the girls’ dorm, I’d been arguing frequently with my mother Now that I stayed occasionally in the dorm, I saw her less often and so we quarreled less. “I saw Atana at most of the rehearsals,” I said now. “How many days has it been since you’ve spoken to her?”

“Almost three. She’s been avoiding me. It was a very bad quarrel,” Tinos’s eyes slid away from mine. He took a deep breath and looked at me. “I’m worried about her.”

“Surely the High Priestess –“ I began. But Tinos was shaking his head.

“She’s too busy now,” he said. I narrowed my eyes at him. Too busy to wonder where her daughter went? After so many days without seeing me, my mother took pains to seek me out. “Atana talks about you,” Tinos continued. “She says you are her friend.”

I stared at him. Friends? Sure, we were friendly, but she was more like my younger sister. We were the two outsiders. I’d just moved into the dorms, years after most girls my age, and I stayed there infrequently, so I didn’t know any of them well. I didn’t care to. They were all looking forward to marriage’ I wasn’t.

“Where would Atana go?” I asked. Atana, Tinos’s oldest child, was much shyer than her older half-siblings and did not make friends easily. Perhaps because of her position – Atana’s mother was the High Priestess after all, the other girls alternately teased or flattered her.

“That’s it, I don’t know,” Tinos said. A pleat formed between his brows and he suddenly looked tired. “But I am very worried. Will you ask the other girls if they’ve seen her?”

“Why can’t you ask them?” I asked. “They would have to answer you.” As the High Priestess’s consort, I meant. Tinos was the most important man in Knossos.

The fingers on Tinos’s right hand began to twitch nervously. “I can’t,” he said at last. “It wouldn’t be wise. The High Priestess . . .” His voice faded and disappeared.

“What do you mean?” I asked, puzzled.

“Speaking to them would be easier for you.” Tinos tried again. “You see them regularly and no one will find it surprising if you talk to them. My appearance would cause too much comment.” He looked at me and I nodded. I was not so much around the younger girls but I did see them as they ran races and wrestled. “Well then,” he said as though it was all settled. “I just want to know she’s safe.”

“And if I find her?” I asked.

“Tell her I’m worried,” he said. “Would you ask her to come home and visit me. And tell her – .” He paused. “Tell her I’m sorry. Will you do that for me?”

“Yes, all right,” I said. I did not believe this would be so difficult.

“And Martis,” Tinos continued, “if she objects or becomes angry with you, don’t argue.” He shot me a stern look from under his heavy brows. “Understand? Just come and tell me.” I nodded although I didn’t understand. Why would I quarrel with Atana? Why would Atana argue with me? More to the point: what exactly had happened between Tinos and his daughter? That was the real puzzle.

“I have to go now,” Tinos said, glancing at the sky. “It is almost time for the Showing. I’ll see you later.” He turned and started down the slope. I watched until he disappeared behind a thicket of trees.

I slowly made my way back to the throng of people gathered around the theater. I did not think I could force my way through the crowd to rejoin my fellow birds and besides I would not watch the Showing. Every spring the High Priestess and her consort copulated in full view of the people of Knossos. It was important for the fertility of this land. But now that I knew Tinos and knew him well, I couldn’t bear to see that ritual.

I pushed my way through the crowd at the bottom of the paved area. As I squeezed by a woman in the fashionable ruffled skirt and tight jacket, the lady wrinkled her nose and tried to move away. I guessed I stank of perspiration.

And then, with a collective sigh, everyone turned to look at the walkway below. The High Priestess, riding sidesaddle on a white bull, was approaching. Her unbound hair tumbled down her back and, instead of skirt and jacket she wore a loose white robe that left her neck and arms bare. Bronze bells hung from the bracelets on her wrists and ankles and they tinkled with every movement. The bull was also decorated; garlands of bright spring flowers festooned his horns and encircled his neck.

Usually, the High Priestess smiled and waved at the people of Knossos but her expression today was uncharacteristically grim.

I turned to look at the top of the stadium. The bull-masked consort waited, glistening with water, as if he had just arisen from the sea. The huge white bull’s head covered Tinos’s head and part of his shoulders, the horns tipped with gold and glittering in the sun. Even though I was not supposed to recognize Tinos, even though who else could it be but the High Priestess’s consort, I’d have recognized him anywhere. His broad shoulders tapered to the narrow waist where the thick twisted scar was just visible as it reached his back. Once a bull leaper, the scar served as a reminder of the bull’s horn that had caught him and ripped open his side.

The white bull came to a halt and the High Priestess’s attendants helped her down. She walked the last few yards to the bed at Tinos’s feet. When she reached him she slid the robe from her shoulders and stepped out of it. But she did not unfasten Tinos’s loincloth, as she had done every one of the nine years previously. Instead, after an awkward few seconds, Tinos slid off the garment himself.

I turned and fought my way through the audience, arriving on the other side of the crowd gasping and trembling. I’d seen this ritual enacted almost every year of my life but a year or two ago I had found I couldn’t watch it anymore. I knew that the bodies coming together on the stage were not the Goddess and Her consort but the High Priestess and Tinos acting their parts. And knowing Tinos and wishing he had his arms around me made everything different.

I set off running, fleeing the central court, to hide in the room in which the dancers changed.

***

Excerpt from Murder of Furies by Eleanor Kuhns. Copyright 2025 by Eleanor Kuhns. Reproduced with permission from Eleanor Kuhns. All rights reserved.

 

 

Review:

5 stars!

Another top-notch historical cozy mystery set in ancient Crete! 

A Murder of Furies is the third book in veteran author Eleanor Kuhns’s excellent Bronze Age Crete Mystery series, and with its riveting murder, political intrigue, and impeccably crafted, highly visual settings, historical mystery fans are sure to be absorbed by this mesmerizing tale just as I was. Martis, the young bull dancer and series sleuth, is drawn into the search for the missing daughter of her friend, Tinos, the consort of the high priestess, Potnia. Atana had stormed off after a heated argument with her father earlier in the week and had been avoiding him, but after her absence stretched to several days and several missed appearances at important religious rites, it is feared that she may have come to harm. The suspense rises when a young priestess, Tino’s younger sister, dies during a public ceremony, when she is bitten by an asp that had been secretly substituted for the sacred serpent that should have been in the basket the girl carried. To make matters worse, the young priestess had just been given Martis’s mother’s place in the ceremony and Nephele would normally have been carrying that basket. 

Martis is such a fun, relatable character, and I love coming back to this series just for her. She’s young and chafes at the restrictions and expectations placed on her by her mother and society for girls of her age and status. She just attained marriageable age, but marriage doesn’t interest her. However, she feels guilty about wanting to follow her own path for her mother’s sake, as she’s lost all three of her other daughters. Martis’s infatuation with Tinos is still causing her some heartache, but she’s perhaps beginning to feel less enamored as she matures. She continues to do all she can to avoid household chores and being stuck at home, though. 

Martis is diligent in her search for the missing Atana, and at the same time, she conducts a pretty logical investigation into the death of Phytia, Tinos’s sister, which includes sneaking into the House of the Priestesses and down to the docks and visiting with Tetis, in a complete disregard of her mother’s admonitions. She does a good job covering all the bases and chasing down any avenue of inquiry she can in pursuit of the truth, even when the stakes shockingly become so much higher. 

I loved the colorful and detailed descriptions of the Cretan settings, on land or in the harbor. The choreography of all the different religious and community ceremonies was fascinating and cinematic. The author really puts her readers smack in the middle of every scene. 

As the political intrigue enters the picture, the suspense intensifies, with the looming threats of betrayal, hunger for power, and jealousy. I was on the edge of my seat, wondering whether Martis would be able to get the answers she needed and if she would even be in a position to thwart the shocking plans that would change everything in her world. 

I recommend A MURDER OF FURIES to readers of historical cozy mysteries.




Author Bio:

Eleanor Kuhns

Eleanor Kuhns is the 2011 Minotaur/Mystery Writers of America winner for first crime novel. She won for A Simple Murder and now has twelve books in the series.

A Murder of Furies is the third in the Bronze Age Crete Series which began with In the Shadow of the Bull.

A lifelong librarian, she transitioned to full time writing during the pandemic. She lives in upstate New York with her husband and her dog.

Catch Up With Eleanor Kuhns:

www.Eleanor-Kuhns.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub - @eleanorkuhns
Instagram - @edl0829
Facebook - @writerkuhns

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