Goodreads Monday

Goodreads Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren's Page Turners. To take part, you simply choose a random book from your TBR and show it off. Don’t forget to check out her blog and link back to Lauren’s Page Turners.

I've never been one to go back and read all the classics.  I've read a few because well school.  I picked this up for my Kindle a couple of years ago since it's free public domain.  It's been translated to English and everything for me.  I've picked it up a time or two and then gotten distracted.  I've got to make time to change that.  Perhaps sharing it here will shame me into reading/finishing it?

Introducing one of the most famous characters in literature, Jean Valjean—the noble peasant imprisoned for stealing a loaf of bread—Les Misérables ranks among the greatest novels of all time. In it, Victor Hugo takes readers deep into the Parisian underworld, immerses them in a battle between good and evil, and carries them to the barricades during the uprising of 1832 with a breathtaking realism that is unsurpassed in modern prose. Within his dramatic story are themes that capture the intellect and the emotions: crime and punishment, the relentless persecution of Valjean by Inspector Javert, the desperation of the prostitute Fantine, the amorality of the rogue Thénardier, and the universal desire to escape the prisons of our own minds. Les Misérables gave Victor Hugo a canvas upon which he portrayed his criticism of the French political and judicial systems, but the portrait that resulted is larger than life, epic in scope—an extravagant spectacle that dazzles the senses even as it touches the heart.
Les Misérables
Give it up, what's a classic you just haven't read yet.  I can't begin to judge this is just the first of many that will find there way here.


BOOK REVIEW: Bible Story Coloring & Activity Book by B&H Publishing Group

Filled with more than 200 coloring pages and more than 150 activity pages for young children, this Bible Story Coloring and Activity Book from The Big Picture Interactive provides hours of fun. Here are some of the great activities your kids will love:
Word searches
Mazes
Connect the dots
Hidden messages
Fill in the blank
Secret code
Matching
Find it
Unscramble
and more!


When I was recently looking through the available books at B&H/LifeWay this one jumped up and screamed MooMoo, and perhaps Goobie but definitely Moo.  I knew that Munchkin would think himself too mature for such nonsense but I've not had him around to try him out on it.  Goobie either, though he is finally home!  Moo however was enamored and excited and couldn't wait to get busy.  She gave it 5 stars right out of the gate!  And a gleeful giggle with 'thanks Meme'.

From my perspective however there were a few things I loved, a few I liked and a few I wish were a bit better.  I loved that it was organized the same as the Bible making it ever so easy to match the pages and activities to help flesh out a Bible story, even going so far as to give the related passages on the bottom of the activity pages.  I loved that there were a variety of different activities.  Not all kids are good at all the different activities offered so it was easy to play to individual strengths to help deepen Biblical understanding.  I liked that with the different activities and coloring pages things were geared also for different age groups.  Perfect example.  I really thing that Goobie will like this book and a lot of the understanding is geared to his age (4) however a lot of the activities aren't truly age appropriate for him yet and some of the coloring pages give me a quake as they are quite detailed.  Just as with Munchkin (9) he thinks he's so much more worldly and does read and comprehend at a level beyond his years.  Parts of this book will be below an appropriate age level for him whereas others will be right on the nose.  Where this would be neat is to use the book over a period of time and only do certain activities so that the stories can be revisited as the activities become more age appropriate.  What I felt needed more was parental interaction.  There's a wee bit in the front of the book but them blam, go kids go.  I think a more comprehensive parents' guide would be beneficial for parents working with their children as well as parents new to faith as a whole.  The desire to raise your children with faith doesn't mean that all parents come from a background of faith.  A more interactive parents' guide would be beneficial for all.

If the other two Minions of Mayhem decide they love the book as well I'm not above getting them their own.  With hours and days and weeks of activities available it's not dramatically priced.  Engaged kids learning Biblical principles to me is a win-win!


I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by B&H/LifeWay.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review.

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Bible Story Coloring and Activity Book


BOOK REVIEW: Weaver's Needle by Robin Caroll

Two recovery specialists.
One murder.
A hunt for the Dutchman's Lost Gold Mine becomes a race of survival.

Former Army MP Landry Parker fell into the recovery specialist role quite by accident—to help her ailing father. Now that she’s on her own, she is determined to prove herself and honor her family legacy.

After being shot in the line of duty, former police officer Nickolai Baptiste became a recovery specialist, and he’s good at his job—maybe even the best.
        
A potential client pits Landry and Nickolai against one another to find the Dutchman’s Lost Gold Mine map that was stolen from her murdered husband, and the potential payday is too enticing to pass up. The trail takes them from New Orleans to Weaver’s Needle in Arizona where legend claims the mine is hidden. Landry and Nickolai are no strangers to adventure, but the unlikely partners quickly discover there’s someone after the treasure and there are those who want to ensure the lost mine in Arizona’s Superstition Mountain stays lost forever.

Can Landry and Nickolai work together despite their distrust of each other to save the legend before more innocent lives are lost? Will they find the real treasure isn’t the gold, but something more valuable. . .true love and understanding?


I'm really struggling with this review. The description grabbed my attention when I saw it available on NetGalley.  Seriously?  It's a mystery people!  What it had it description however left it lacking in other areas.  I choose to read through some other reviews for a bit of inspiration in getting my thoughts to screen.  And realizing that I really need to trim my fingernails to help cut down on the typos!  I digress.  I found reviews I agreed with wholeheartedly.  I found reviews that I'm not sure we read the same book.  I found reviews that brought up issues I'd never thought about.  And then I realized that I was simply procrastinating.  I needed to write this review, I was just hesitant to do so because I knew there wouldn't be a good way to get my thoughts to the screen.  I'm pretty sure it's all gonna come out sideways and I'm sorta OK with that.

I want to end on the positive so I'm going to cram a lot of drawbacks here in the middle.  Pace.  The book had a few pacing issues.  It seemed to drag along, throw in unnecessary details, and things that could have built suspense didn't quite show up to the party.  Tires and fires and brakes...weren't quite the oh my they needed to be.  While these were dragging down the story the romance between the competitors and main characters was on FIRE!  It was just a smidge too fast for me.  I get that drama brings people together but I mean for gravy sake they didn't know each other, the are pitted against each other but the 'flame' appears in a week or so?  Really?  I don't think so!  

Let's talk about faith for a moment.  This is a Christian book from a Christian publisher.  That doesn't mean I have huge expectations of faith at every corner, honestly it's hard to tastefully pull that off without feeling like you are being beaten with it.  I have a couple problems with the faith elements in this book.  First and foremost, the introduction of faith and basically the way it was addressed through easily the first half of the book felt awkward.  It's wasn't just sorta sitting there and it wasn't just sorta discovered.  It felt abrupt and awkward.  It got better in the second half but it felt more like a Bible beating at that point because of the weak introduction earlier on.  The other thing that sorta bothered me was the shaman angle with the Apache.  Please, don't think I'm judging, as it is a huge part of our cultural history.  The fact that it's there doesn't bother me in the slightest.  The weird interspersed chapters of this spirit journey kinda bother me as they didn't connect anything until the end, by then it was too late to redeem them.  What bothers me about them is that they carry the conclusion.  What could have been a converging of faith and ideas became the opposite.  I feel like the Apache vision overshadowed what God could have accomplished and detracted from any Christianity that could have been taken from the story.

All that said, if you are still with me, I did enjoy the story.  Even through the bumps and bruises and potholes and awkwardness this book has the potential to be something amazing.  In the right hands it will be a well loved story.  The characters grew on me, the intrigue did develop and embrace me, and I have hope for the future of these characters and wouldn't mind another trip through the pages with them.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by NetGalley.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review.

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Weaver's Needle

About Robin Caroll
“I love boxing. I love Hallmark movies. I love fishing. I love scrapbooking. Nope, I've never fit into the boxes people have wanted to put me in.” ~Robin Caroll is definitely a contradiction, but one that beckons you to get to know her better.

Robin’s passion has always been to tell stories to entertain others and come alongside them on their faith journey—aspects Robin weaves into each of her 26 published novels.

When she isn’t writing, Robin spends quality time with her husband of twenty-six years, her three beautiful daughters and two handsome grandsons, and their character-filled pets at home.

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BOOK REVIEW: Manuscript for Murder by Chautona Havig

Alexa Hartfield. Author, local celebrity, fashion connoisseur. She chose Fairbury for its close proximity to Rockland, its small town atmosphere, and its low crime rate.

Then someone made her life a literary cliché. A mysterious accident with a light bulb sparked an interesting idea for her latest novel—and for Fairbury’s new serial killer. The first replication infuriated her. The second left an even worse taste in her mouth. The third blasted more than her self-confidence, and the fourth beat her down so far she’s considering giving up writing completely.

Who is killing Fairbury’s citizens, and furthermore, why and how are they using her novels to do it?


It's no secret that Chautona is one of my new favorite authors.  When this book came up for tour with Celebrate Lit I had to jump at the chance to get it and also insist that Kristin from A Simply Enchanted Life did as well.  I mean what is the point in having a book bestie without also sharing new favorite authors so they can love them too?  While not my favorite Chautona noel thus far, 'Manuscript for Murder' has all the elements I need in a book.  Defined characters to love (and despise), a mystery that keeps me a bit on edge, and satisfying conflict and drama and conversation.  And...oh the ands I could add.

Alexa is so far from cliche' that she becomes cliche'.  I love that about her.  She's the embodiment of her own person down to the choice of wardrobe that brings so many questions and sometimes unwanted attention.  While setting herself up to live and dress as she wishes (part of non-cliche') she draws attention to herself for her period-esque wardrobe that adds to her allure as a murder mystery writer (making her cliche').  Wardrobe aside she's like that in most every facet of her life.  She makes her own choices, much to the dismay of her family, goes where she wants when she wants.  And writes books about murder, and justice.  And she explains it so much better than I ever could.  

However, when her work in progress comes to life the rest becomes back drop and filler.  I mean it's not even a book yet that someone can read and copycat, it's a work in progress that no one has seen.  No. One.  Well, outside the parts she writes while her cop friend Joe is hanging around the house.  Writes sorta kinda maybe on purpose to try and create a diversion.  Even that comes to life.  The red herring becomes a herring, the what the gravy becomes grits and gravy it really just turns full circle and I don't have enough 'Fizzyisms' to cover it all.  What does seem possible is and what seems impossible isn't and it wraps you up in a nice warm shawl and becomes and amazing book.

Why?  I know you are begging for me to tell you why it's only 4 stars if I loved the book and adore the author.  Well, it pains me to state this but I felt sorta lost through parts of the book.  Hints were dropped that left me confused for long parts of the story which I felt like detracted from other things.  I get why it was handled that way and I get that I'm frequently more confused than not.  But...  I feel like the way some things from Alexa's personal life was revealed throughout the book would almost have been better if the hints hadn't been dropped.  And that things were hinted and and danced around that were never quite resolved for me.  That's me though, not you.  This book is an amazing mystery (and yes it did keep me guessing almost until the end) with all the things I never realized a murder mystery needed until I met Alexa. 

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by CelebrateLit.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review. 

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Manuscript for Murder (The Hartfield Mysteries, #1)

About Chautona Havig 
 I am fortunate enough to live in the great state of California (in the Mojave Desert) with my husband Kevin and five of my nine children. My eldest is married with five children, so I have the fun of a son-in-law and grandbabies to enjoy. I’ve graduated six out of my nine children from our home school, and they’re all doing quite well in their lives. My younger children keep me from getting too selfish, and someday I’ll be fully retired as their teacher. I have to say, I’m lookin’ forward to it. Teaching about gerunds was fun the first time… not so much anymore. I salute all of those in the education field. You are my heroes.

When I’m not writing (which I admit isn’t often) I enjoy blogging (a totally different kind of writing, trust me), paper crafts, sewing, smocking, photo editing, and old music. No, really, I like OLD stuff… the Beatles are too newfangled for me. Yeah,I know they’re before my time… but I like stuff before my PARENTS time.

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BOOK REVIEW: A Name Unknown by Roseanna M. White

Rosemary Gresham has no family beyond the band of former urchins that helped her survive as a girl in the mean streets of London. Grown now, they concentrate on stealing high-value items and have learned how to blend into upper-class society. But when Rosemary must determine whether a certain wealthy gentleman is loyal to Britain or to Germany, she is in for the challenge of a lifetime. How does one steal a family's history, their very name?

Peter Holstein, given his family's German blood, writes his popular series of adventure novels under a pen name. With European politics boiling and his own neighbors suspicious of him, Peter debates whether it might be best to change his name for good. When Rosemary shows up at his door pretending to be a historian and offering to help him trace his family history, his question might be answered.

But as the two work together and Rosemary sees his gracious reaction to his neighbors' scornful attacks, she wonders if her assignment is going down the wrong path. Is it too late to help him prove that he's more than his name?


When this book came up for a tour with Celebrate Lit I KNEW I had to read it.  What's not to like?  Set in England at the cusp of World War I a London street orphan meets a reclusive friend of the King.  Two worlds collide sorta thing with intrigue and sass thrown in for good measure.  Intrigue on both their parts, sass most definitely is all Rosemary.  It's more than just a romance at a time of impending war.  But it's also more than just a romance.  Peter has a hard time expressing himself in person.  He's also got a pretty big secret, bigger than just his lineage; though that's a big deal to him as well.  Rosemary steps in to find his history but ends up finding a whole lot more.

I loved Rosemary.  She's spunky, sassy but at her core she's got a great heart.  She puts those she loves first.  And what she lacks in knowledge and experience she makes up for in confidence and a willingness to do whatever it takes.  Even when she's not confident she's confident she'll figure it out as she goes.  I think we could all use a little bit of that in our lives. I think the moment that she found her faith, being comforted by someone who never trusted her and made her existence at the Manor miserable, was a defining moment. How can she keep herself and her family safe AND do what she knows is right?  Peter, however; dear sweet adorable lovable Peter.  He is only confident about his faith, his loyalty and his childhood bestie.  Oh and his ability to write.  His letters with Rosemary every day bring faith to her.  And grow their relationship in a way that is lost today.  Peter is the perfect male lead, strong where it matters and so solid in his faith that anything can be overcome.  And does.

I'm really struggling with reviewing this book without revealing all sorts of plot points and spoilers and secrets. The 'mystery' get me guessing right up to the reveal and you know that always adds to my rating, not that there's an option above 5 stars.  Rosemary and Peter and the entire cast created a seamless life and environment that I was able to relax into.  I loved this book however, LOVED it.  I am desperate to read the next book in this series. I know I've said this a few times lately but seriously you have to read this book.  I'm grateful that it now sits on the bookshelf where I can return to it over and over when I want to.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book through Celebrate Lit and Net Galley.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review. 

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A Name Unknown (Shadows Over England #1)

About Roseanna M. White 
Roseanna M. White pens her novels beneath her Betsy Ross flag, with her Jane Austen action figure watching over her. When not writing fiction, she’s homeschooling her two children, editing and designing, and pretending her house will clean itself. Roseanna is the author of a slew of historical novels and novellas, ranging from biblical fiction to American-set romances to her new British series. Spies and war and mayhem always seem to make their way into her novels…to offset her real life, which is blessedly boring.
Being educated at St. John’s Collete (the Great Books School) taught Roseanna to ask questions, to value conversation, and to never accept the simple answer without exploring it for herself. She and her family make their home in the mountains of West Virginia where she and her husband both grew up. Roseanna is a member of ACFW, a frequent speaker at writers events and also small groups of readers, and an unabashed email addict.

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SPOTLIGHT: Manuscript for Murder by Chautona Havig


Click here to pick up your copy.

About the Book

Book title: Manuscript for Murder
Author: Chautona Havig
Release date: October 13, 2012
Genre: Mystery

Alexa Hartfield.

Author, local celebrity, fashion connoisseur. She chose Fairbury for its close proximity to Rockland, its small town atmosphere, and its low crime rate.

Then someone made her life a literary cliché. A mysterious accident with a light bulb sparked an interesting idea for her latest novel—and for Fairbury’s new serial killer. The first replication infuriated her. The second left an even worse taste in her mouth. The third blasted more than her self-confidence, and the fourth beat her down so far she’s considering giving up writing completely.

Who is killing Fairbury’s citizens, and furthermore, why and how are they using her novels to do it?

About the Author

Chautona Havig lives and writes in California’s Mojave Desert with her husband and five of her nine children. Through her novels, she hopes to encourage Christians in their walk with Jesus.












Guest Post from Chautona Havig

How Arrows & My Obsession with Vintage Clothes Inspired Murder

A swath of fabric cut across my bedroom at an odd angle but that angle ensured that I could stretch it all out. With painstaking precision, I pinned every last piece to the fabric, disgusted at the enormous waste stretching out before me.

The pattern called for three and a half yards. I’d crammed it into two at most.

Just as I picked up the scissors for the first cut, Mom popped her head in the door to see how I was doing. I pointed out the waste. “Grandma said patterns always told you to buy way too much, but I’ve got enough to make another dress!”

Mom stepped closer. I want to say a cigarette hung from her lips, but let’s face it. No way would Mom ever allow the ashes to drop on the carpet. But it felt like one was there, nonetheless. Mom pointed. “Chautona, I don’t know anything about sewing, but I think those arrows are there for a reason.”

And with that, she turned away.

I stared down at the pattern. My arrows zig-zagged all over the place. A glance at the directions showed all arrows going exactly the same direction. Straight up and down the fabric.

You know, if I’d been doing this for the first time in 2017, I could have just zipped on over to “the Google,” as Mom calls it, and looked up why. Instead, I grabbed a thick sewing manual I’d bought for a buck at Pick-N-Save and flipped through it until I found a section on laying out patterns.

A couple of minutes later, I flew down the stairs. “The book says that the long, smooth edges are called selvages. The arrows are supposed to run parallel or the dress might hang wonky.”

Here, I can guarantee Mom took a puff of that cigarette. Man, I hated those things. “Well, like I said. I don’t know anything about sewing, but they looked important.” She blew a puff of smoke.

That’s when I suspected that Mom knew more about sewing than she’d let on.

What does this little sewing lesson have to do with mysteries and murder?

Well, see. This was a test dress. I’d only decided to learn to sew because I’d also decided that I wanted Nancy Drew’s wardrobe. In 1982, you couldn’t buy trim, neat clothing from the 50’s. I had Gunne Sax skirts and preppy tops with ruffles that my parents hated. When they found out I wanted a sewing machine to make clothes like that, they got me one.

Yep. I cut my reading teeth on Nancy Drew and didn’t stop there. I read all the youth mysteries—Bobsey Twins, Trixie Belden, Hardy Boys, Meg Duncan (she was a fave, too), and when I got a little older, Phyllis Whitney.

I loved the challenge of seeing events play out—and figuring out why. Why told me who. You get to where you can figure out things rather easily. But if you make me doubt my ideas, that’s good enough. I love that.

Is it any wonder that one of the first books I conceived was a mystery? I’d never put the ideas together until I began working on this post, but really… is it any wonder that I gave that author a love of vintage fashion? Too funny. But those arrows on that pattern? They taught me pretty cool lessons as a kid. Like Mom said:

“Those arrows are there for a reason.”

Isn’t that what God’s directional arrows in His Word are like? They’re there for a reason. They keep us from getting all wonky. It’s why Alexa writes the kind of books she does. I never could, but as she says when she describes telling someone why she writes horror/suspense,

“I tried to describe a world where we never see justice—where sin surrounds us, but the only response we see is a sweet romance or a heartwarming tale of doing good to our neighbors… And God is a God of more than love and mercy. [He’s also a God of] justice.”

Alexa writes what she does to help people sort out those crossed arrows and see that there is a point to it all—that eventually justice and mercy converge paths into one rather than criss-crossing all over the place, trampling each other. She doesn’t write Christian fiction, but I don’t know how a Christian can write fiction without some part of faith shining through. In Alexa’s, and I hope in mine as well, there’s an overarching theme that illustrates that the Lord hasn’t forgotten the people He created.


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Goodreads Monday

Goodreads Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren's Page Turners. To take part, you simply choose a random book from your TBR and show it off. Don’t forget to check out her blog and link back to Lauren’s Page Turners.
 Library book sales are one of my favorite things in the world.  Books, lots and lots of books at really really good deals.  I don't necessarily make it to the sales myself but I have friends who love me.  Friends who bring me boxes and bags of books.  This is one of those finds that I'd honestly never heard of but sounds interesting.  I'm not sure I'd like a movie version but the book version is calling my name from that stack on the bookshelf.


A cycle of violence and retribution is set in motion as two haunted men are engulfed by the emotions surrounding an unexpected and horrendous death.

Ethan, a respected professor at a small New England college, is wracked by an obsession for revenge that threatens to tear his family apart. Dwight, fleeing his crime yet hoping to get caught, wrestles with overwhelming guilt and his sense of obligation to his son. As these two men's lives unravel, Reservation Road moves to its startling conclusion.

Reservation Road (Movie Tie In Edition)
Is there a movie cross over sitting on the shelf waiting for your attention?  Share it below!

BOOK REVIEW: The Weight of Lies by Emily Carpenter

In this gripping, atmospheric family drama, a young woman investigates the forty­-year­-old murder that inspired her mother’s bestselling novel, and uncovers devastating truths—and dangerous lies.

Reformed party girl Meg Ashley leads a life of privilege, thanks to a bestselling horror novel her mother wrote decades ago. But Meg knows that the glow of their very public life hides a darker reality of lies, manipulation, and the heartbreak of her own solitary childhood. Desperate to break free of her mother, Meg accepts a proposal to write a scandalous, tell-all memoir.

Digging into the past—and her mother’s cult classic—draws Meg to Bonny Island, Georgia, and an unusual woman said to be the inspiration for the book. At first island life seems idyllic, but as Meg starts to ask tough questions, disturbing revelations come to light…including some about her mother.

Soon Meg’s search leads her to question the facts of a decades-old murder. She’s warned to leave it alone, but as the lies pile up, Meg knows she’s getting close to finding a murderer. When her own life is threatened, Meg realizes the darkness found in her mother’s book is nothing compared to the chilling truth that lurks off the page.


Oh my grits and gravy...this book.  When I first requested it from NetGalley it seemed like it would be interesting.  A bit of intrigue, a heap of family drama, and a dash of crazy thrown in for good measure.  Oh it had all that but then took it to a completely different level...in a good way.  Meg's mom wrote a cult classic that happened to capitalize on the horror fame of the 70s.  It wasn't necessarily well written but it was well received.  So much so that multiple movies were made of it.  And here we are 40 years later with a re-launch of the book hanging in the balance on the anniversary of the first release.  Meg doesn't really care about any of that.  She's estranged from the mother she felt was never there for her to begin with.  But of course, things happen that put them back together - sorta. Not necessarily in the same room but definitely in the same space.  And most assuredly at odds with each other, again.

This book brought it all to the table for me.  Most importantly, a good mystery.  Throwing in the poor little rich girl (I say that in the nicest way possible) and the attention hungry mother just added fuel.  Oh and don't forget the publishing guy who is out to make a name of himself at anyone's expense.  Or the family on Bonny Island whose lives were forever altered because of this book.  Kitten, or Doro as everyone knows her, was just a child when the book came out.  The huge acceptance the book garnered also brought a lot of fingers pointing in her direction.  Was she the inspiration for the murderous child in the book?  Lots of theories were thrown out, lots of fans created their own sub-culture, and lots of lives were caught in the balance.  Meg sets out to uncover the secrets and learn the truth.  Was the book 'Kitten' really just a work of fiction?  Was this book worth the end result of how it affected Meg's life, when she wasn't even born yet?

This book hit all the right notes, even though I still can't stand Ash - you know that publishing guy who would sell his grandma's soul for a contract.   It kept me guessing, surprised me more than once, and had me checking over my shoulder as I read well into the dark of night. The ending was a bit predictable and trite, after of course it changed paths and kept me guessing.  Once the secrets were out it lost originality but I can't fault like a chapter ya know.   I'm definitely interested in reading more of this author and am seriously contemplating a paperback copy to reside with honor on the bookcase.  Yup, it was THAT good.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by NetGalley.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review.  

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The Weight of Lies


About Emily Carpenter
Emily Carpenter, a former actor, producer, screenwriter, and behind-the-scenes soap opera assistant, was born and raised in Alabama. After graduating from Auburn University, she moved to New York City and now lives in Georgia with her family. She is the author of Amazon bestselling Burying the Honeysuckle Girls and The Weight of Lies.

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BOOK REVIEW: Dog Day Wedding by Rich Amooi

Giovanni Roma was jilted at the altar. Twice. Meeting Natalie is an enchanting distraction—too bad she’s engaged to another man. To top it off, Giovanni’s mother has a mouth with no filter and is obsessed with finding her son a suitable baby-maker.

Natalie DeMarco is a good cop with one problem. Cold feet. Her fiancé is a decent man, but she’s starting to wonder if decent is good enough. Maybe the doubts could be blamed on Giovanni, that guitar-making Italian hunk next door.

Giovanni knows he must do something, but things get out of hand when he learns he’s not the only one who objects to the wedding. 


I've read Amooi's work before and really liked it.  Yes it was cheesy but it was good cheesy and it wasn't over the top.  This story though just didn't flow for me.  There were a few things that were too over the top and not just fun cheesiness.  The story line was good.  An alter runner, same guy two girls.  An unlikely rescue of a runaway dog that leads to him meeting his neighbor's granddaughter.  Of course he doesn't realize that until his busted in his backyard in his underwear.  Don't ask.  He was just left at the alter, again, remember.  The nieghbor is an amazing charter, a really cool man that really made the story better for his role.  Some of the characters really didn't.  Some were confusing and some.  Well some were just too much.  

Giovanni's mother was a force to be reckoned with.  And not in a believable way.  She was too crass, too rude, so far over the top that even the explanation at the end about why she was that way didn't even help redeem her.  I guess, I understand where this woman was coming from but there's a line of too much.  And several times this character crossed this line.  Giovanni's friends were also a but much.  Them I could understand because their weirdness was well written.  Just so many of these characters were classic in their role but at the same time many times too cliche.  Natalie's fiancee Jacks is a perfect example of too cliche.  He lost his believably due to that.  

Even the wrap up of the book was just too over the top.  It was hilarious, which Amooi does with flair but oh goodness and biscuits.  You may think I truly did not like this book and you would only be partly right.  I don't see it sitting on my reread list.  However, like I said Amooi does hilarious with a flair.  This book made me laugh so many times (between face-palms of course) even his disclaimer at the beginning is interesting.  I don't regret reading this book but at the same time it's not high on the list of reread either.  I like Amooi.  I will read Amooi again.  But, just know if you can't stand over the top or a lot of four letter words turn you off then this is not the book for you.  If you can take the salt with the pepper then have a go. 

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Dog Day Wedding
About Rich Amooi
Rich Amooi is a former Silicon Valley radio personality and wedding DJ who now writes romantic comedies full-time. He is happily married to a kiss monster imported from Spain. Rich believes in public displays of affection, silliness, infinite possibilities, donuts, gratitude, laughter, and happily ever after.

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BOOK REVIEW: Ties That Bind by Cindy Woodsmall

Ariana’s comfortable Old Order Amish world is about to unravel. Will holding tightly to the cords of family keep them together—or simply tear them apart?

Twenty-year-old Ariana Brenneman loves her family and the Old Ways. She has two aspirations: open a café in historic Summer Grove to help support her family’s ever-expanding brood and to keep any other Amish from being lured into the Englisch life by Quill Schlabach.

Five years ago Quill, along with her dear friend Frieda, ran off together, and Ariana still carries the wounds of that betrayal. When she unexpectedly encounters him, she soon realizes he has plans to help someone else she loves leave the Amish.

Despite how things look, Quill’s goal has always been to protect Ariana from anything that may hurt her, including the reasons he left. After returning to Summer Grove on another matter, he unearths secrets about Ariana and her family that she is unaware of. His love and loyalty to her beckons him to try to win her trust and help her find a way to buy the café—because when she learns the truth that connects her and a stranger named Skylar Nash, Quill knows it may upend her life forever. 


There is something to be said about waiting until an entire series is out before starting it.  Authors and publishers may not like what I'm about to say but it's entirely worth thinking about.  Well, on second thought, don't do everything I am about to say...it is not for the faint of heart and can make you miserable.  It's a pretty well known fact that I took some time off from reviewing and blogging and all the stuff that goes with that.  In that time (entirely too much time!) I didn't focus on the new books or even the old books though I did read a ton on my Kindle library (just without reviewing) like it was a glass of sweet tea.  I missed a lot from some favorite authors.  Maybe a whole series (or honestly several!).  Back in the saddle and more productive than ever before I was given an opportunity to review Cindy's last book in her The Amish of Summer Grove series.  You can't just read the end without starting at the beginning.  So that's where I started with 'Ties That Bind'.  And am ever so grateful that there's no long drawn out wait for me to read the next book...I already have it in the stack.  Bless all of ya'll who made it through the wait for these to come out.  I'd have lost it I'm certain!

Ariana's heart was broken by her childhood best friend Quill when he left the Amish under the cover of darkness (at her expense) with her friend Frieda.  There's a story there, a much larger story that I hope plays out in later books.  Quill, while older, was her first love, really her only love.  She's dated a bit but then meets Rudy and finds love again.  All of this while saving and working toward her dream of the restaurant to help her financially struggling family.  There are so many threads that blend together almost seamlessly that it doesn't feel overwhelming.  Quill has lots of secrets.  Ariana's parents have a pretty big secret - maybe?  Yeah, it's there after all, just took some time to go from maybe to real.  Even Ariana's sister has a secret.  And we all know that secrets have a way of coming out.  And when her parents' secret comes out it's life changing.  For them, for Ariana, for Rudy and another English family as well.  

Skylar Nash is an English girl whose life is about to intersect with this loving Amish family in a way no one could have predicted.  Lifelong fears become life altering secrets that have no way of staying under wraps.  I'm struggling to not give out spoilers but I feel like all I'm doing is dancing with words...and sister don't dance.  At the end of this book we leave Summer Grove with Ariana as she embarks on an adventure (I'm trying to soften the blow people!) to the English world while Skylar finds herself at the doorstep to rebel against what she fears the Amish will bring to her life.  Again, grateful that I don't have to wait a year to read the next book, just a couple of weeks as I work through the ever rotating pile.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by Cindy Woodsmall and WaterBrook & Multnomah Publishing.  I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own.  I was not required to write a positive review. 

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Ties that Bind (The Amish of Summer Grove #1)
About Cindy Woodsmall
Cindy Woodsmall is a New York Times and CBA best-selling author who has written nineteen (and counting!) works of fiction and one of nonfiction. She and her dearest Old Order Amish friend, Miriam Flaud, coauthored the nonfiction, Plain Wisdom: An Invitation into an Amish Home and the Hearts of Two Women. Cindy’s been featured on ABC Nightline and the front page of the Wall Street Journal, and has worked with National Geographic on a documentary concerning Amish life. In June of 2013, the Wall Street Journal listed Cindy as one of the top three Amish fiction writers.

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SPOTLIGHT: A Name Unknown by Roseanna M. White


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About the Book

Book title: A Name Unknown
Author: Roseanna M. White
Release date: July 4, 2017
Genre: Historical Romance

She’s Out to Steal His Name.

Will He Steal Her Heart Instead?

Rosemary Gresham has no family beyond the band of former urchins that helped her survive as a girl in the mean streets of London. Grown now, they are no longer pickpockets—now they focus on high value items and have learned how to blend into upper-class society. Rosemary’s challenge of a lifetime comes when she’s assigned to determine whether a certain wealthy gentleman is loyal to Britain or to Germany. How does one steal a family’s history, their very name?

As Europe moved closer to World War I, rumors swirl around Peter Holstein. Awkward and solitary, but with access to the king, many fear his influence. But Peter can’t help his German last name and wants to prove his loyalty to the Crown—so he can go back to anonymously writing a series of popular adventure novels. When Rosemary arrives on his doorstop pretending to be a well- credentialed historian, Peter believes she’s the right person to help him dig through his family’s past.

When danger and suspicion continue to mount, though, and both realize they’re in a race against time to discover the truth—about Peter’s past and about the undeniable attraction kindling between them.

About the Author

Roseanna M. White pens her novels beneath her Betsy Ross flag, with her Jane Austen action figure watching over her. When not writing fiction, she’s homeschooling her two children, editing and designing, and pretending her house will clean itself. Roseanna is the author of over a dozen historical novels and novellas, ranging from biblical fiction to American-set romances to her British series. Spies and war and mayhem always seem to make their way into her novels…to offset her real life, which is blessedly boring. You can learn more about her and her stories at www.RoseannaMWhite.com.

 

 

Guest Post from Roseanna White

It’s always a challenge to make a historical setting authentic—especially when it’s set in a region you’ve only ever read about. As I was writing A Name Unknown, I learned so much about Cornwall—all the more when I had the opportunity to visit the gorgeous Penzance region while the book was still in edits! I quickly learned that I had far too many trees in my story, and hadn’t quite captured the uniqueness of the coastal setting. I dove into rewrites with excitement and gusto, ready to make my fictional Cornwall more like the real one.

I studied the Cornish accent, Cornish foods, typical Cornish coloring in hair and eyes. I’ve now gotten rather proficient at making pasties (beef hand pies) from scratch, I’ve special-ordered ingredients to make Cornish ginger cookies called fairings, and I’ve spent quite a lot of time listening to videos of people speaking in a Cornish accent.

Delving into this rich region and its history was a blast! And I’m so excited to get to share the culture of Cornwall—and a taste of their unique flavors—with you. In a special Celebrate Lit giveaway, I’ll be offering not only a signed copy of my book, but also some homemade ginger fairings! Here’s the recipe I used . . . after special ordering the Mixed Spice (reminiscent of pumpkin pie spice) and Golden Syrup (a thick syrup with a bit of a toffee flavor) from Amazon. 😉 (I have a gram scale so did use the weight measurements rather than volume—also, English teaspoons and tablespoons are a bit bigger than American, so I heaped them, and I turned out deliciously.)

GINGER FAIRINGS RECIPE

100 grams butter, cold and diced

225 grams all-purpose flour

¼ heaping teaspoon salt

2 heaping teaspoons baking powder

2 heaping teaspoons baking soda

1 heaping teaspoon ginger

2 heaping teaspoons mixed spice

100 grams superfine (caster) sugar

4 heaping tablespoons golden syrup

Preheat oven to 375 F. Grease baking sheets or line with parchment paper.

Combine flour, salt, baking powder, baking soda, and spices in a stand mixer. Add the butter and beat until mixture forms coarse crumbs. Stir in sugar.

In a small saucepan, warm the golden syrup until it’s clarified a bit; stir into the flour mixture until a dough forms. Roll the dough into walnut sized balls and put on prepared baking sheets a few inches apart.

Bake 8-10 minutes, until golden. Cool a few minutes on the trays and then transfer to a cooling rack.


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