Embracing Hope – Review

38152216Introducing Ann Laurel’s first Christian contemporary romance series – Valley Springs. Meet 5 couples from Valley Springs and take the journey through life’s struggles and hardships into the fullness of a life of love and happy endings.

Book One – Embracing Hope. Single mother Riley struggles with raising her baby, Zeke, by herself. Too many wrong choices lead her down a path of destruction. Young Pastor Micah set in motion help for single mothers and extends his hand to Riley. Will she accept his help before it is too late?

Valley Springs Novel Series – Embracing Hope, Embracing Life, Embracing Purpose, Embracing Love, and Embracing Courage – can be read as stand-alones or within the series.

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VANESSA KINGS'

3 of 5 Stars

Sadly, I didn’t like the book, I struggled to finish it, I would’ve given less stars but it was probably my own fault for diving in something blindly.

First of all, it’s written in 3rd person, which I’m not used to read, I think first person would’ve been a lot better to show Riley’s feelings and struggles through the story.

Second, it’s a Christian book, I know, it says it in the description, but does it need to be so preachy? I’m not religious and I’ve read Christian romances before and they only mentioned it a few times or made the first character very devoted and it was a clean romance, which is fine, but when the hero is a Pastor, you know you are in for a hell (not pun intended) of a preaching ride.

Third, I feel like it could use a 2nd round of editing, the words “as” and “for” are used so many times, I can’t even explain how frustrating it was to read them again and again, as she waited, as she laid, as she read, as she rolled her eyes, as she considered to stop reading, as she rolled her eyes again, as she continued reading despite everything.

And fourth and last, Riley is the most immature mother I’ve ever read. The second time she held her baby, she he told him she was going to be the best mama for him, and made me smile, and then she go out partying and neglects her son? No, just no. I know she was struggling, but when you can’t root for your main character and instead you want social services to find a better home for that baby, it means something is wrong with the character developing.

I feel like I’m turning the book to pieces, it’s not my intention to be mean or harsh, but as I was given the book to read and give my honest opinion, here it is. I wish I could recommend it, but unless you are a strong religious person and can look past the editing issues, this isn’t really the right book for you.

ABOUT THE(1)

61TjygkBy9L._UX250_Ann Laurel writes inspirational western historical and Christian contemporary romance. All of her books are guaranteed to make you feel good when you reach the end.

Ann lives with her husband and children in the beautiful Ozark Mountains in the south. She enjoys raising Godly children, volunteering with her church, homemaking, and writing.

Ann plans to publish more western historical and Christian contemporary romances. All books are guaranteed clean and sweet.

Coming soon – her first contemporary romance series – Valley Springs. Five novels surrounding the small rural community of Valley Springs.

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Becoming Charlie – Review

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My name is Charlie, and I’m invisible. Well, not literally, but until one of the most popular guys at Eden High saved my life, nobody even knew I existed. Sean Reese gave me more than my life back that night. He gave me friendship.
And maybe, just maybe, I can save him, too.

Will he still be my friend when he finds out my secret?

 

 

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Read Becoming Charlie Part 2 wattpad_logo_140

VANESSA KINGS'

5 of 5 stars

I loved it. The journey that Charlie and Sean start after she was bullied by some of the “popular” kids of her school, it’s one to cherish. They became best friends, no doubt of it, and it changed Charlie’s life completely.

It’s not only a sweet story about 2 friends, it’s also a tool to open the eyes of all those girls that think being invisible will make them go through high school easier. Sean shows to Charlie that is not the best way and that she will regret a lot of things when she’s older. He helps her to discover herself, to regain a part of her life that was lost and to become the girl that she always wanted to be even when she didn’t know she wanted it.

I’m currently reading the part 2 in wattpad, and waiting the full release to complete this beautiful story.

ABOUT THE(1)

26734454_1642836619088407_4934065906267794955_n“Far from crazy, but equally as far from normal. There are voices in my head and I occasionally talk to them.” – Kristie Haigwood

K. S. Haigwood is the author of the Save My Soul, Eternal Island and Moonrising series. By day, she is a CNC Machinist, but by night and weekend, she saves the world or destroys it in a single bound, depending on what mood she is in and if she has had her coffee. In addition to being an award winner for the ‘Life Changing Read Award’, she has also been nominated twice for Best Indie Book 2016 in the Paranormal category.

Characterization is one of K.S. Haigwood’s strongest points. You can understand each characters’ predicaments and you can almost foresee their reactions. But. There’s always a but, with this author, because Haigwood can deliver enough twists and turns to turn a tornado on its head. Just as you think you’ve figured where the story is going next, she’s duped you again.

The whole of her novels are littered with good chuckle moments, and even in the darkest hour, the thinnest hint of a silver lining is still visible among the clouds.

Shock therapy for body and soul, delivered at a hundred miles an hour with the humor and charisma of a trendsetter, Haigwood is certain to be hailed the new wonder-drug to cure all ills.FacebookButtonTwitterButtonVisitWebsiteAdd-to-Goodreads

 

The Last Suttee – Book Tour

NEW RELEASE…

“You must come at once if you want to stop the suttee from happening again…” This phone message summons Kumud Kuthiyala back to Neela Nagar, the blue town of her youth, and the shackled life she thought she had left behind forever…

As a nine-year-old, Kumud witnessed the brutal and horrifying suttee ritual when her beloved aunt immolated herself on the burning pyre of her dead husband. Years later, Kumud summoned the courage to escape the isolated and primitive town of her youth to start a new life in Ambayu, a metropolitan city. She began as office help at Save Girls Soul Orphanage Center and progressed to become its director. At SGSO Center, she becomes a warrior for women’s education and equal rights. She teaches young women to protect themselves from outmoded practices and rituals that victimize women.

Then a phone call informs Kumud that the suttee of a sixteen-year-old is inevitable. She has vowed that she will never let it happen again. Still haunted by her aunt’s suttee, she leaves everything behind, including her love, Shekhar Roy, to end the barbaric custom that scarred her for life, and to save the young bride from committing suttee.

As Kumud travels back to the town of her youth, long-buried memories resurface and force her to remember the life from which she fled. The town that greets her is full of contradictions. It has electricity and clean water, and a new school is open to low castes, yet superstition and prejudice abound. How can she convince the town that their centuries-old tradition is cruel and barbaric, that a widowed young woman deserves the right to live? Can she change the minds of the townspeople and the Five Elders before it’s too late?

Available to buy from…
Amazon.co.uk   Amazon.com   Barnes and Noble   Kobo   iBooks

“A stunning story of one woman’s struggle to stop the ritual of suttee. The novel weaves centuries old traditions with the stark march toward twenty-first century. It progresses with surprising plot twists, a ticking clock, and stubborn and powerful antagonist who challenges the protagonist, Kumud, to stand up to the orthodox and close-minded community”  – Bestselling author, Kathleen Shoop 

Read an excerpt HERE

About the author
An author, artist, world-traveler and the founder of the Mindful Writers Group, Madhu Bazaz Wangu was a professor of arts and religions of India before becoming a full time writer. She has a doctorate in the Phenomenology of Religions from the University of Pittsburgh and a post-doctoral fellowship from the Harvard University. For twenty-five years, she taught at the University of Pittsburgh and Chatham College in Pennsylvania, Wellesley and Wheaton Colleges in Massachusetts, and Rhode Island College.

In 1997, Dr. Wangu voyaged around the world with students and faculty members from various American Universities for the Semester-at-Sea program. She loved the experience so much that each year she has been revisiting places of historical significance in different countries, observing the cultures, meeting the people and enjoying their cuisine.

In 2010, she founded the Mindful Writers Group, and in 2015 started a second one. She encourages writers of all levels and genres to delve deeper in their work by body-mind-heart meditation. Her CD, Meditations for Mindful Writers was released in 2011. She guides writers in meditation and writing marathons. Twice each year, Mindful Writers Groups gather for writing retreats. There, surrounded by nature, they practice sitting and walking meditations in-between long writing sessions.

Madhu B. Wangu has published numerous essays and four books on Hindu and Buddhist goddesses and Indian religions. She has held five one-person art exhibitions in India and US. Her collection, Chance Meetings: Stories About Cross-Cultural Collisions and Compassion, was published in 2015 and her debut novel, The Immigrant Wife: Her Spiritual Journey, in 2016. Currently, she is writing her second novel, The Last Suttee and a guidebook for mindful writing.

Find the author on the following sites…
Website   Facebook   Twitter   Google+   Goodreads   Amazon 

VANESSA KINGS'

The Last Suttee gripped me from the first page. From then on it did not let go. Not only is it a book that you can’t put down, but it also has a powerful message, dealing with ancient Indian rituals. The images, though strong, convey these practices which have been recently outlawed in a sense that makes you think how these customs came to be.

Through the novel’s protgonist, Kumud, a voice is created that stands not only against the barbaric ritual, but also resonates to our time in each woman’s struggle.

Why I Wrote the Novel, THE LAST SUTTEE

On the morning of September 5, 1987, I was going through the Hillman Library card catalogue at the University of Pittsburgh when a friend stopped by. She told me something I would never forget. She said that an eighteen-year-old Indian woman, named Roop Kanwar, had immolated herself on the pyre of her dead husband. I was dumbfounded. Suttee in the twentieth century? It couldn’t be. But The New York Times confirmed the news. The ritual, known as suttee, was witnessed by the townspeople and thousands more came to see it from nearby villages and towns. When the news was leaked the following day, the town was swarmed for days by Indian and international journalists. I was stunned and speechless, my legs laden with lead. At that frozen moment, the seed for this book was planted.

The kernel stayed dormant, but the incident continued to sear like a wound at the back of my mind. The distress was raw, but I was not yet emotionally ready to write about what had happened and how it had affected me. In the ensuing years, I trawled libraries, bookstores, and the Internet, learning about the history of suttee and the cultural and religious traditions in which it is rooted. I studied records of the shrines dedicated to women who had committed suttee. I read the history and mythology of the namesake goddess, spelled Sati. Critically and carefully I analyzed the photographs of Sati temples and studied the engravings, drawings, and paintings of the goddess Sati and the suttee ritual that had been made by British, European, and Indian artists and travelers.

Suttee is a centuries-old Hindu ritual. This ancient belief still persists in some remote corners in India. The belief is if a widow cremates herself with her dead husband, the couple will live in heaven as they did on earth. Furthermore, such a sacrifice guarantees a place in heaven for seven generations for both sides of the family.

The ritual is rooted in the myths of two goddesses: Sati, Shiva’s wife, and Sita, Rama’s wife. Here are summaries of the myths:

Goddess Sati is the daughter of the high priest Daksha. Shiva, the world renouncer, is so awed by her yogic skills and asceticism that he grants her a boon. Sati asks to marry him. He agrees. Daksha dislikes Shiva. He finds Shiva unconventional and unkempt. Despite her father’s opposition Sati marries Shiva and they live in his mountain abode in Himalayas. 

Daksha plans a great sacrifice. He invites all the important divine beings, except Shiva. Sati feels disgraced by the way in which her father has treated her husband. On the day of the great sacrifice, she throws herself in the fire pit meant for the sacrifice. And burns herself to death. When Shiva discovers what has happened to his wife, he is outraged. He pulls out Sati’s half-burnt body, holds it on his shoulders, and in anguish and lamentations whirls around the world. 

Goddess Sita is an ideal Hindu wife. Her husband, Rama, is the center of her life. His welfare, reputation, and wishes are most important to her. One day, the demon king Ravana abducts her and takes her to his golden palace. He lies to her that he has killed Rama. Sita is horrified. She moans and tells him that it must have been her fault that her husband was killed. She warns Ravana she could burn him to ashes with the fire of her chastity, but she won’t because she did not have her husband’s permission. 

In the end, Rama defeats Ravana and brings Sita home. There he severely tests her loyalty because she has spent days under the control of another man. Sita is shocked at such an accusation. She protests her innocence. She says she has remained wholly devoted and completely faithful to him. Rama persists. 

Grieved by his false accusation, Sita asks for a funeral pyre to prove her innocence. A pyre is built, and Sita stands atop it with hands folded. Agni, the god of fire, refuses to harm her because she is innocent and pure. She returns to Rama unscathed. Yet he banishes her to a forest. 

Sati and Sita are faithful and chaste wives, and they are devoted to their husbands. The lives of these goddesses are defined by their husbands. Although their dedication and chastity are exemplary, they pay a heavy price for being wives. In both myths, fire plays an important role. Whereas Sati voluntarily kills herself, Sita is saved by Agni. Their god/husbands are alive when the women jump into the sacrificial pit or on the funeral pyre. But ordinary women’s lives are no myths. When a woman is forced into being a suttee, neither her husband nor the god of fire will save her.

The suttee ritual was outlawed by British Raj in 1829. The ritual was described as “heinous rite” when cases surfaced about widows being tied to their husband’s pyre even after being intoxicated with bhang or opium. Many reports of widows escaping and being rescued by strangers were also recorded. Still, more than a century later, scattered instances of the custom have been reported, such as Savitri Soni’s in 1973 and Charan Shah’s in 1999.

The most notorious and controversial case, however, was of Roop Kanwar. Indian people either publicly defended Roop’s action or declared that she had been murdered. Following the outcry that followed Roop Kanwar’s suttee, the government of India enacted the Rajasthan Sati Prevention Ordinance on October 1, 1987. The law makes it not only illegal to commit suttee but also illegal to glorify the ritual or coerce a woman to commit suttee. Glorification includes erecting a shrine to honor the dead woman or converting the place where immolation took place into a pilgrimage site. Derivation of any income from such activities is also banned. The law makes no distinction between a passive observer and an active promoter. Everyone is held equally guilty.

The seed for writing a book inspired by Roop Kanwar’s suttee finally sprouted in November 2009, when I wrote its first draft as part of National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), a nonprofit internet organization that supports writers in an effort to complete the initial draft of a novel in one month.

It would take me seven more years to finalize the draft.

The story continued to incubate. I developed the characters, sketched the settings, wrote the narrative and dialogue. But to birth a healthy novel and bring it to life, I had to experience the environment in which Roop Kanwar was born, lived, and died. I needed to converse with the people who allowed it to happen. I wanted to know the antagonist and protagonist’s viewpoints.

I visited India for a month in 2013 for that purpose. I went to the small towns of Deorala, where Roop Kanwar committed suttee, and Jhunjhunu, home of an imposing marble temple dedicated to faithful women who sacrifice their young lives immediately after their husbands’ deaths. The visit stirred feelings of remorse and wonder. Why did people celebrate sacrificial death? How does blind faith hide behind the stunning structure? Domestic and temple architecture, middle and high schools, ancient mansions with bedroom walls made of mirror-mosaics (some now converted to five-star hotels) were breathtakingly beautiful. The local flora and fauna were intriguing, and men and women’s attire colorful. I fell in love with the place. But I wasn’t there as a tourist. I was there to fulfill a quest, to do something about an event that jolted the core of my being.

Meeting with the people of Deorala opened my mind to the fact that a community’s worldview can be so different from my own. Yet my sorrow and awe about Roop Kanwar and my feelings about other widows like her were not alleviated by talking to Roop’s father-in-law, her brother-in-law and his wife, or their neighbors. Nor did I blame them after visiting her neglected and unkempt suttee site. However, the visit helped me better understand the point of view of the town residents. A magnificent temple dedicated to the goddess Sati, which locals honor and regard highly, further clarified their worldview.

My interview with Roop Kanwar’s father-in-law took place in the verandah outside the room where Roop lived with her husband. This was the room where she dressed herself in bridal attire and decked herself in jewelry before following her husband’s dead body to the cremation site. The room has been turned into a shrine, and Roop has become an ishtadevi, a manifestation of Narayani Satimata, a local goddess higher in the pantheon of the thousands of village goddesses of India.

When I asked to go to where Roop performed suttee, her father-in-law declined to walk along, but he did ask other men to take me there. I treaded the path that evidently Roop Kanwar, most probably intoxicated with bhang, walked with the help of two women. They followed her husband’s litter, which four male relatives carried. I was told a lamenting crowd of men, women, and children followed the dead body and Roop as they headed toward her husband’s funeral pyre.

Facing the desolate ground where the ritual had taken place twenty-six years earlier, I shed tears of pain for an eighteen-year-old who didn’t know better, and who no one came to rescue.

The characters in this novel are fictional, but the setting is historic. Writing it does not feel like redemption, for I still ache for the women of the world who are engulfed in outmoded traditions, who are uneducated and dependent. Women with so much potential to offer their families, their communities, and, most importantly, to themselves.

Undoubtedly, the world over, women have made tremendous progress. Yet, the path to elevating women’s social status has many roadblocks, and the process is slow. I sincerely hope The Last Suttee not only helps remove a block or two but also adds substance to the process of change.

Follow the Book Tour

018836-glossy-silver-icon-symbols-shapes-square-2 I received this book to review through Beck Valley Books Book Tours, I have volunteered to share my review and all the opinions are 100% my own.

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Tragedy and Desire – Review

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Surviving a recent breakup and the impending anniversary of her parents’ unsolved murder, Perla Fae resists the advances of a sexy as hell, bad boy billionaire in an effort to protect her heart.

Jax Maddox – wealthy, powerful, and a force to be reckoned with – has set his sights on the elusive beauty, but it’s not her heart he’s after. Or is it?

 

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VANESSA KINGS'

4 of 5 stars

I went through so many different thoughts while reading this!

First, when I started reading this book, I was immediately pulled into the story; it starts with a heartbreaking scene that will leave you both angry and sad at the same time. Then someone else gets in the picture and I thought it was going to be a regular Romance in the work place. And then Mr. Maddox calls Perla to his office and makes her sign an NDA, and I rolled my eyes and thought “another 50 Shades remake”.

But then the story changed, and we were starting to know more about Perla and her sister’s past, their family and how they got to where they are now, and my perspective and opinion changed once again.

This isn’t the regular Billionaire & Cinderella story, Perla is nowhere close to being a Cinderella in this story, despite everything she had to go through in her life, with family and relationships, and despite the fact that she decided she didn’t want to take any more chances to get her heart broken, she is a strong, sweet and fun girl, that shows a great growth through the pages of the book and who I learned to love and cheer for until the end.

The book also has a suspense twist that separates it from the regular Romance stories. With different POVs and enough action to keep you guessing what’s going to happen next.

It was a great read, I would’ve loved to read more interactions between the characters, and not so many monologue-type thoughts, more dialogue would’ve been good, but I enjoyed the story and I’m looking forward to book 2.

ABOUT THE(1)

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Nicole R. Locker is a resident of Lubbock, Texas, USA. She has a Master of Science in Psychology and a love for pit bulls, Pilates, and romance novels. (And men with Irish accents!) By day, Nicole supervises a team of 11 social workers, and by night, she likes to escape reality and write about Alpha men who can handle their business.

 

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Wolf’s Challenge – Review

32314081Taking risks, especially risks of the handsome male variety, is currently out of the question for Sydney Reid. She will make no exceptions for tall, gorgeous Derrick Porter. Never date a player–it’s rule number one in Sydney’s book, and the charming lawyer constantly devouring her with his eyes is every inch the reason. Despite her best efforts to keep Derrick in the friend zone, sparks fly between the two of them, and Sydney isn’t entirely sure she wants to throw water on the flames.

Can Derrick convince the shy, sexy Sydney to give him a chance, something more than her elusive “maybe”? More importantly, should he? Derrick has a few secrets, the least shocking secret being that he can transform at will into a powerful wolf. He’s still trying to forgive himself for being at the wheel during the accident that killed his son. Losing Sydney when she learns the truth might break him, but he’s pretty sure not having her would be just as bad.

And with an obsessed stalker on their tails, more than their hearts are at issue.

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VANESSA KINGS'

3 Stars

I was looking for a wolf shifter story for a while, I wanted a story where the shifter changed into a real wolf and not those awful hairy men with large teeth and claws. Wolf’s Challenge seemed to be what I was looking for, so I was very excited to start reading this story.

Sydney is a single mom that had several bad experiences with past relationships, she doesn’t want to make the same mistakes, so she had a few rules to avoid certain situations. No players. That was the first rule and why she shoved Derrick off the instant she met him. Why? Because of his sunglasses and chatting with two girls before their running practice. That was my first eye rolling to the book, a man is allowed to chat with girls and wear sunglasses early in a Sunday morning, right?

The judgmental part, made it a bit hard to connect with Sydney and root for her, but I could deal with it, after all, her past was the reason why she was like that, and when we learn more about the details of what happened with her ex boyfriend, it makes it a bit more understandable.

Derrick was nice, the feelings of guilt and need for closure were present in all of his present actions, the fear of rejection and to lose it all again, made him retreat more than once, even when he knew what was the right thing for him. Reading from his point of view was heartwarming and I can say he is my favorite character of the story, along with Angel, Sydney’s adoptive daughter.

Things that made it hard to love the book: Editing issues, missing words, and repeated words, made it hard for the story to flow and distracted me more than once during the most inconvenient scenes. We all know we are not perfect, but a second round of editing could benefit the book a lot.

Reasons why I give the book 3 stars and not a lower rating: It’s not just a shifter romance, it also has a mystery to solve, a crazy bipolar woman to hate, an entire new world to discover, and it opens the doors for the next books, because wolf shifters are not the only strange creatures out there, there are several other kinds that are mentioned and briefly introduced during the story, and I would love to read more about them.

ABOUT THE(1)

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A few years ago, I read my first romance novel and I was hooked, so much so that I decided to give the idea of writing a story a chance. My style is more gritty than sweet and I look forward to writing many more stories with strong heroines and imperfect but determined characters. Love, courage, hope, and second chances are a few of my favorite themes. When I’m not writing about sexy, strong-willed characters facing nearly insurmountable obstacles, I enjoy spending time with my family, usually hiking or swimming or finding a new place to explore.

 

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Heartless (Amato Brothers, #1) – Review

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My obsession was born of innocence and good intentions, and it began the day I spotted a handwritten journal lying in the bushes outside a townhouse on Lexington Avenue. It was raining sideways that morning, and my plan was to return it the next day; safe and dry.

Only I kept it.

I kept it, and I read it.

A week later, overwhelmed with curiosity and feeling guilty for harboring secrets that didn’t belong to me, I tried to return it.

Only I wasn’t expecting to meet him.

Unapologetically heartless and enigmatically sexy, he claims he knows nothing about the journal I found outside his place, but the reticent glint in his blue-green gaze tells me otherwise.

There’s something different about him; something damaged yet magical, and I’m drawn to him; pulled into his orbit.

There’s just one problem.

The more I get to know him, the more I’m positive the journal belonged to him . . .

. . . and the more I find myself hoping, selfishly, that I’m wrong.

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4 of 5 stars

Aidy is a makeup artist living in New York with her sister and her nephew.  Her days are pretty much the same, focusing on her career and thinking about her future when her sister marry next year and she has to move out. She doesn’t have time to date, that’s why when she finds a journal on the porch of someone’s house during a rainy day, she takes it home and read it, day dreaming about the love story written in it.

When she decides to take the journal back, she is confronted by the house’s owner, Alessio “Ace” Amato, aka, the Lexington Avenue Asshole (at some point I thought the book should be renamed to that). He accuses her of being a stalker and a crazy chick that only wants his autograph, not exactly the best way to meet someone that you pictured as the romantic and heartbroken writer of the journal.

Aidy and Ace keep running into each other in the next days, which makes Ace think that she really is a crazy stalker, until they decide to sit and talk about it, giving her a chance to defend herself and make it clear that there is absolutely no interest on getting to know him or seeing him anymore. Yet.

Their story is some sweet, funny, and tangled mixture of events that lead them into falling helplessly for each other, until the trials of the past interfere and threaten with destroying everything they built.

Overall, I enjoyed the book, it kept me wondering if something else was going to happen, because the last few books I read didn’t end well, so I was a little scared that something bad was coming. Also, it is a bit short, and maybe the characters could have a little more development, especially Ace, we don’t get to read a lot of his daily life like with Aidy.

This is the first of five books, the next ones will tell the stories of Ace’s brothers, which makes significant to point out that this story doesn’t have a cliffhanger, and the next books can be read as standalones.

ABOUT THE(1)

13583077Wall Street Journal bestselling author Winter Renshaw writes stories that are sexy, conflicted, and laced with heart. Her books include the Never series, the Arrogant series, and the stand-alone novels Vegas Baby and Dark Paradise.

Loretta Rawlins brings the calm, steady balance from her dual career as actor and inspiring yoga teacher to her love of narrating audiobooks. She has narrated over sixty titles, with some of her favorites being mysteries and inspirational nonfiction. Loretta currently calls Atlanta, Georgia, home.

Nelson Hobbs lives on the sand with a classical guitar in one hand and a glass of sangria in the other. His villa on the beach is lined wall-to-wall with a coveted library of romantic classics. His voice resonates in this paradise which has led to the natural transition to audiobook narrator.

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Degranon: A Science Fiction Adventure (Taldra Book 1)

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An Iroquois family gets tangled in a war between two repressive planets.

Revised, third edition eBook, published in 2016.

On the planet Valchondria, no illness exists, gay marriage is legal, and everyone is a person of color. However, a group called the Maintainers carefully monitors everyone’s speech, actions, and weight; the Maintainers also force colorsighted people to hide their ability to see in color. The brilliant scientist Taldra loves her twin gay sons and sees them as the hope for Valchondria’s future, but one of them becomes entangled in the cult of Degranon, while the other becomes stranded on the other side of a doorway through time. Can they find their way home and help Taldra save their world?

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VANESSA KINGS'

This very rich sci-fi story captivated me from the beginning. From the main topic of a land where there are no minorities, no differences between races or sexual orientations, to the writing style that transports you into the story in an effortless way, I read this book in record time, unable to put it down.

It’s amazing how the author managed to create such complex society, with characters that felt real, with real struggles, doubts, and concerns. I personally found Taldra’s character fascinating, her commitment with her people and her family are exceptional and add a touch of realism that is hard to accomplish in sci-fi stories.

Degranon includes some controversial topics such as religion, oppression, authoritarianism, fanaticism and homosexuality, and although some of those topics are not explicit, they are an important part of the story development, and leave the reader thinking, after finishing the book, in our own society and cultures.

The fact that Simolke spent so many years creating and editing this book truly shows across its pages. I didn’t read the first edition, with lesser homosexual characters, but this one seemed perfect, I think the author reached a balance of the story and characters that make this book very different from others in the same genre.

I really enjoyed the story and I’m looking forward to read the sequel. I believe I had been trapped into the Degranon’s pages, which some might say “It’s just a book” 😉

 

ABOUT THE(1)

Duane Simolke (pronounced “Dwain Smoky”). Education: Belmont University (B.A., ’89, Nashville, TN), Hardin-Simmons University (M.A., ’91, Abilene, TX), and Texas Tech University (Ph.D., ’96, Lubbock, TX), all with a major in English.

Writing published in nightFire, Mesquite, Caprock Sun, Midwest Poetry Review, International Journal on World Peace, and many other publications. Author or co-author of the following books. The Acorn Stories. Stein, Gender, Isolation, and Industrialism: New Readings of Winesburg, Ohio. Holding Me Together. Degranon: A Science Fiction Adventure. The Acorn Gathering: Writers Uniting Against Cancer. The Return of Innocence: A Fantasy Adventure.

Winner, Allbooks Reviewers Choice Award and four StoneWall Society Pride in the Arts Awards.

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I want to eat your books – Spotlight & Review

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He’s limping strangely down the hall with outstretched arms and a groaning drawl. A zombie! Could it really be? You race to class, but turn to see he’s sitting in the desk right next to you!

But odds are you’ll probably be okay, because this is no ordinary zombie. This zombie doesn’t want to eat your brains–he wants to eat your books! And he’s not a picky eater with a taste for all genres from mystery to history! But when the zombie catches a whiff of the school library, the children need to come up with a plan fast before all their books become history!

This monster book is silly and fun, with a strong message about kindness and friendship. The little zombie teaches kids not to jump to conclusions and to give everyone a chance. This is the perfect monster book for little ones who want a thrill but aren’t looking for anything too scary. I Want to Eat Your Books is a monstrously fun story not only for Halloween but all year round!

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VANESSA KINGS'

“I want to eat your books” is a very funny and cute story about the adventures of a group of kids and a zombie that only wants to eat books. The children get involved in a quest to try to save the school’s library when this very particular zombie starts devouring all genres, from non-fiction to horror and history.

Honestly, I laughed on every page of this book, it is very well written and it’s an entertaining story not just for children, but also for grownups.

Through this book, children will learn to take care of their books, to work as a team with a common goal, and to make a habit of reading.

I would recommend it to parents and teachers, as it’s a great tool for the classroom as well as a bed-time story. I’ll definitely save it for when my son is older.

ABOUT THE(1)

karin

Karin Lefranc grew up living in four countries, but she’s finally settled down in Connecticut with her husband and four children. She attended Bard College in New York and had the opportunity to travel the world again while working for IDG Books helping to license the For Dummies® series into over thirty-five languages. Karin is also a certified children’s yoga teacher. This is her debut picture book.
tyler
Tyler Parker received his BFA in illustration from the Maryland Institute College of Art and also has an MA in Sequential Design and Illustration from the University of Brighton. He is the illustrator of more than seven children’s books including Monsters Meet on Mondays and The Ice Cream Shuffle. He currently resides in Seattle, Washington.

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La Corona de Adán

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¿Y si tuvieras en tus manos el mayor conocimiento de la Humanidad? ¿Y si pudieras acceder a secretos milenarios?

Soy consciente de que lo que voy a contar te resultará como poco sorprendente. En algunos momentos te mostrarás escéptico; en otros te haré dudar, pero espero darte pruebas suficientes para que me creas. Para entender mejor mis actos y decisiones, será bueno que conozcas algo más sobre mí.

Acompaña a Marc Sabas y su equipo por la mayor aventura de todos los tiempos: camina por los pasadizos de la tumba de Gengis Khan, sumérgete en las grutas iniciáticas de los Cátaros, conoce los secretos que se esconden en las entrañas del Castillo de Montalbán y bucea en el río subterráneo de la Arcadia, con el objetivo de encontrar la mítica Corona de Adán.

Entra en la Cripta secreta que los monjes de Císter ocultan en el Monasterio de Veruela, dónde Marc encontró el libro “Club Secreto de los Hombres Sabios “, que le ayudará durante su recorrido por encontrar la verdad. Además de conocer las estrategias secretas para dominar el mundo de Marco Polo, Darwin, Nostradamus, Julio Verne, Da Vinci, Bécquer, Galileo o Vivaldi. Una épica aventura que te llevará a desvelar los mayores secretos que llevan milenios ocultos entre nosotros.

Si eres un apasionado de la aventura, el misterio y la historia esta es sin duda tu novela.

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ABOUT THE(2)

“Lo que más me gusta de este libro es cómo te transporta por varios hechos, países y periodos de la historia. Toda una aventura con visos de realidad. Me encantó el “descubrimiento” del lugar dónde se supone que está enterrado Gengis Kan y el resto de descubrimientos. Desde que acabe el libro tengo una gran curiosidad por todos esos misterios de la historia pendientes de descubrir. la web del autor […], sus fotos y videos son un complemento perfecto a libro. Todo un Indiana Jones del siglo XXI.” by Amazon Customer

“Logra mezclar de una manera natural conocimiento, intriga, aventura y una increíble cartera de personajes que logra hacerte trasladar a todas ubicaciones descritas.” by Emilio Avilés

“El nivel de detalle y estudio que tiene toda la historia te introduce en una auténtica aventura que te sumerge en un fantasía al más puro Indiana Jones o las Aventuras de Tintin! Me encantan los vídeos y recursos que ha ido introduciendo a lo largo del libro. Un 10 en entretenimiento!” by Javier Sirvent

ABOUT THE(1)

Pedro J. Diezma, emprendedor, escritor, conferenciante TEDx e impulsor de la nueva revolución tecnológica. Autor de los libros “El renacer del héroe” (Almuzara, 2013) y “El héroe que cambió su capa por un iPhone” (Almuzara, 2014).

Como parte de su espíritu aventurero y su empeño por superar nuevos retos, ha participado en diferentes exploraciones y viajes alrededor del mundo. Ha logrado varios descubrimientos que le han permitido formar parte del exclusivo Explorers Club of New York, al que han pertenecido personajes de la talla de Neil Armstrong, Roald Amundsen o Matthew Alexander Henson.

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Story of a Secret Heart – Spotlight & Review

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A broken heart hurts, but it can also be fun……

Based on a true story.

As Cassi, a 30-year old single woman, leaves a long-term, unhappy relationship, she struggles with the pain and anguish of a broken heart. When, by chance, she meets a handsome stranger, he introduces her to a world that she didn’t even know existed. As she begins to slowly forget all about her broken heart she learns to have fun again. It is then that her life starts to spiral out of control and all she can do is laugh and hang on tight.

Story of a Secret Heart is about breaking up . . . and breaking down. It’s about the roller-coaster ride of a breakup and all the dating and relationship stories in-between.

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VANESSA KINGS'

Ever been in a bad relationship? Ever discovered that your guy was cheating on you? Now, imagine that this happens when you’re with him and far away from home. And by that, I don’t mean in another city or even another state, but another continent altogether, and left with no friends or family to fall back on.

This is how “Story of a Secret Heart” starts out, as we are introduced to Cassi and her break-up. After that, things start to spin out of control as she meets someone who shows her a world that she had never known, and not necessarily in a good sense.

Through her trials and tribulations, Cassi will have to find her inner strength and keep a smile on her face even in front of adversity. After a few pages, you will surely be rooting for her, as there are many things that you will most likely identify with and other times when you wish you had her strength.

In all, it is not only a deep look at breaking up and picking up the pieces to carry on, but also a lesson in overcoming even the worst of situations.

ABOUT THE(1)

When I turned 30 I was single, alone and heart broken on the other side of the globe. I started writing as sort of therapy at the time, but after people started reading it and said it was actually good, I thought maybe others might like to hear my story. Maybe those going through a hard time will take something away from it.
Apart from that, you will find out so much more by reading the blog and my book, Story of a Secret Heart… but, I love animals, especially cats, and I love to laugh!
The book, Story of a Secret Heart, is the story of how my broken heart became the making of me. Even today, the stories still make me laugh!

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