C.A. Milson's Blog, page 175

September 27, 2017

Book Blast – WHEN I FELL FOR YOU

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WHEN I FELL FOR YOU

by Candace Shaw


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GENRE: African American Romance


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BLURB:


Has a wedding planner with a commitment phobia finally found the man to make her fall head over heels in love?


Reagan Richardson loves planning extravagant, classy weddings as the head planner of Precious Moments Events. Though the notion of walking down the aisle has never entered her mind … considering none of her boyfriends have ever lasted long enough thanks to her. However, meeting Dr. Blake Harrison changes all of that in a glance and she finds herself in uncharted territory.


Blake knows all about Reagan’s fear of commitment but that doesn’t stop him from pursuing the ravishing beauty. Breaking down the wall guarding her heart isn’t as easy as he thought but being with Reagan has stirred emotions in him that no other woman ever has. Can he convince her that history isn’t going to repeat itself this time around?


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Excerpt


“And you’re going to try parasailing? I’m driving the speedboat.”


The thought of being attached to a parachute high above the ocean while dragged by a speedboat made Reagan nauseous. “I’m still contemplating, but I will go jet skiing with you.”


“Perfect. Can’t wait either way. I don’t care what we do as long as I see your fine bod in a bikini.”


Heat rushed to her cheeks. Blake always knew what to say to make her weak at the knees. Now she had to go shopping to find a sexy new bikini and a cover-up considering it was a family outing. She couldn’t be too sexy.


“You just concentrate on keeping me safe on the jet ski and the parasailing.”


“So, that’s a yes to the parasailing?”


“Mmm … only if you go really slow.”


“I’ll drive at whatever speed you can handle,” he said in a low, deep voice. “Just scream out my name when you’re comfortable and want me to go faster.”


“You have a dirty mind, Doc.” Not that I care.


“What?” he asked in an innocent manner. “That’s your mind in the gutter. Just want to make sure you can handle the excitement and stamina of it all. It’s a very … uh, thrilling adventure.”


“I bet it is.”


“Can’t wait for you to find out.”


“Are we still discussing parasailing?” she asked, crossing and uncrossing her legs. This conversation was causing her to have the urge to jump in the car and speed to his bed where he’d just finished his nap.


“Were we ever talking about parasailing?”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


AUTHOR Bio and Links:


Candace Shaw writes romance novels because she believes that happily-ever-after isn’t found only in fairy tales. When she’s not writing or researching information for a book, you can find Candace in her gardens, shopping, reading or learning how to cook a new dish.


She lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her loving husband and is currently working on her next fun, flirty and sexy romance.


Social Media and Website Links


Website: https://candaceshaw.net/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorCandaceShaw

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Candace_Shaw

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/candace_shaw/

Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+CandaceShaw08

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5829266.Candace_Shaw

Book Bub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/candace-shaw?list=author_books


Buy Links for When I Fell for You


Amazon: http://amzn.to/2v5UEqB

Amazon Ca: http://tinyurl.com/y74377jx

Amazon UK: http://tinyurl.com/ycvnl3ps

iBooks: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/when-i-fell-for-you/id1273128330?mt=11

Kobo: http://tinyurl.com/y72erpfl

Nook: http://tinyurl.com/yb8t5o2x

Smashwords: http://tinyurl.com/y93qqya4


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RAFFLECOPTER GIVEAWAY


THE AUTHOR WILL BE GIVING AWAY:


$10 Amazon/BN GC


 


Enter to win a $10 Amazon/BN GC – a Rafflecopter giveaway


Filed under: Book Blasts Tagged: #Candace_Shaw, Book Excerpt, Candace Shaw, Goddess Fish Promotions, WHEN I FELL FOR YOU
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Published on September 27, 2017 10:06

September 26, 2017

Book Blast – Wickedly Ever After

Wickedly Ever After: Halloween Hijinks Book Blast


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About the Author


Lotta Smith is the author of Paranormal in Manhattan Mystery series. She fell in love with mystery the moment she developed consciousness. She is especially fond of lighthearted murder mystery stories with a little sprinkle of romance.


She went to medical school hoping to see real corpses and sexy professors. Back then, she was into this kind of mystery series about a smokin’ hot forensic medicine professor and a quirky female student going a-sleuthing, cracking unsolvable cases. Lotta truly, madly wanted to team up with a superhot professor and crack a difficult murder or two. (Note; she got to see the corpses, but sexy professors were nonexistent.)


Lotta loves to hear from her readers. Feel free to drop her a line at lottasmith_author@yahoo.com.


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:
AMAZON AUTHOR PAGE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK

 


About the Book:


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Title: WICKEDLY EVER AFTER: HALLOWEEN HIJINKS

Author: Lotta Smith

Publisher: Independent

Pages: 213

Genre: Paranormal Cozy Mystery


BOOK BLURB:


As the new Mrs. Rowling, life is supposed to be easy for former FBI Special Assistant Amanda Meyer. Marriage to her drop dead gorgeous boss Rick is everything she dreamed of, unfortunately she can’t sleep, and she can’t even blame the ghost of his late stepmom Clara for popping up in the middle of the night with a tricky request.

Someone staged mechanic Fynn’s death to look like a suicide, and now his unhappy ghost is keeping Clara and her dead friends awake all night. Proving he was murdered will keep the newlyweds hopping, and the real trick will be staying alive in this hilariously wicked book in the Manhattan Mystery Series.


 


ORDER YOUR COPY:
Amazon

Book Excerpt:


At exactly three o’clock in the morning, I was in bed, turning over for the umpteenth time. For some unknown reason, I couldn’t fall asleep. In fact, I didn’t have even a blink of sleep.


Okay, so I was pretending not to know the reason for my difficulty, but I could come up with possible reasons. For starters, I had a little too much espresso cake after dinner and a few more cups of strong green tea than the recommended amount at lunch. Also, in the past few hours alone, I had at least thirteen people visit me, asking about the whereabouts of their personal belongings and if I thought their spouses were cheating on them. All of them happened to be former residents of this upscale condo on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, where I called home. The last straw was Mrs. Williams, who kept demanding I return her hearing aid. I kept telling her that I wasn’t the evil woman who hid her belongings, and I shared my hunch that her family might have forgotten to put her hearing device with her; however, she didn’t seem to fathom what I was trying to say—perhaps because she didn’t have her hearing aid.


By the way, did I mention that all those people who visited me during these ungodly hours had been dead for years?


My name is Amanda Rowling, née Meyer, a part-time secretary for my husband and mostly a stay-at-home housewife, and people, including but not limited to my husband Rick, usually call me Mandy


Anyway, I was trying my best to grab some sleep before dawn, not that I had to get up early and go to work in the morning, but Rick had been busy since joining USCAB—United States Cover All Bases, a security-based conglomerate owned and run by his dad—and I wanted to do my best to be his super-supportive partner. Cooking power breakfasts for him and myself had become my ritual since I moved in with him at this condo over a year ago, and I was determined to continue this ritual. Anyway, using knives and a hot oven in a sleep-deprived status wasn’t high on my to-do list. I tended to commit faux-pas in the kitchen, like scorching eggs and bacon to a crisp, whenever I was short of sleep.


Before marrying him, I used to work for the FBI’s New York City headquarters as a special assistant. At first, I was just an assistant with a mission to keep my then-boss Rick Rowling, the sexy, arrogant loose cannon who loved nothing more than trouble, from wreaking havoc and destroying NYC. However, a little after starting my FBI career, I developed a special skill of seeing dead people and communicating with them, and my tasks expanded to interviewing murder victims and dead witnesses.


When Rick, who was the head of Paranormal Cases Division and the only colleague I had, left the feds to join his family business, I followed his suit and resigned from the feds.


Even though Sheldon Hernandez, the head of the FBI’s New York City headquarters, offered me a lucrative consulting contract, I declined. At that time, leaving my life with the FBI, communicating with dead people and dodging frequent temper tantrums thrown at me by the deceased, and concentrating on being Mrs. Rowling seemed like a fabulous idea. But after the wedding and returning from our honeymoon, I wasn’t sure if I made the right decision. At that time, I presumed I’d stop encountering the spirits of dead; however, things didn’t go as I’d hoped. I was still having as many ghostly visitors as before.


And, recalling my past life as an FBI assistant, I was horrified to found myself sort of missing my days dealing with the murderers, crooks, and dead people. Okay, so having nothing to do with criminals should be the norm for most people, and when I left the feds, I couldn’t wait to spend my days without worrying about being assaulted by evil ghosts and bad humans, but…


GIVEAWAY!


Lotta Smith is giving away a collection of six books:


Wickedly Ever After: Halloween Hijinks by Lotta Smith

Trick or Treason by Kathi Daley

A Witchmas Carol by Amanda M Lee

Dark, Witch & Creamy by H Y Hanna

Curse of the Day by Annabel Chase

Dead Man Talking by Jana DeLeon


Thank-you for your participation prize: Everyone receives a free ebook copy of:

Whoever Finds the Wicked: Rick Rowling’s Secret File (Paranormal in Manhattan Mystery Prequel) Whoever Finds the Wicked: Rick Rowling’s Secret File

Terms & Conditions:

• By entering the giveaway, you are confirming you are at least 18 years old.

• One winner will be chosen via Rafflecopter to receive the book collection.

• This giveaway ends midnight October 13.

• Winner will be contacted via email on October 16.

• Winner has 48 hours to reply.

Good luck everyone!


ENTER TO WIN!


a Rafflecopter giveaway


Filed under: Guest Authors Tagged: #LottaSmithNovel, #pumpupyourbook, Lotta Smith, Pump Up Your Book, PUYB, Wickedly Ever After
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Published on September 26, 2017 16:48

September 20, 2017

VBT – Did I Ever Thank You Sister?

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About the Book

Title: Did I Ever Thank You Sister?

Author: Sal Di Leo

Genre: Nonfiction


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Sal Di Leo returns after 30 years to the Catholic orphanage outside Chicago that he and his siblings called home in 1963. This is the beginning of a journey of discovery and remembrance as Sal is forced to reconstruct his life as it really happened, including some of his most difficult years at Boys Town in Nebraska. As an adult, Sal tried to rise above his turbulent past in an aggressive quest for power and money. Successes soon led to failures. Eventually, a wise friend convinces Sal to go back to his roots and look for the good experiences and valuable lessons he learned as a nine-year-old orphan.


Author Bio


An entrepreneur who has successfully tackled many challenges in business and in life, Sal volunteers much of his time serving those in need. With his family, he founded St. Francis Lodge, a free retreat center where nuns, priests and others can reflect and rest to enhance their lives and work. The State Fish Art contest, which he started in Minnesota to help kids learn about conservation through art, is now offered in all 50 states and 12 countries. Sal has been actively involved with Rotary and the Lions Club, and he has spoken to service clubs around the United States about his life and the importance of gratitude. His self-published memoir, Did I Ever Thank You, Sister?, rooted in his childhood experiences in a Catholic orphanage, is available worldwide. The proud father of two adult daughters who have successfully left the nest, Sal has been married to his lovely wife Beth for more than 30 years. A longtime resident of Minneapolis, he is a 1977 graduate of the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.


Links

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/7062486-did-i-ever-thank-you-sister

Amazon: http://amzn.to/2xPYcPh

Website: http://www.saldileo.com/


Filed under: Guest Authors Tagged: Did I Ever Thank You Sister?, Enchanted book promotions, Nonfiction, Sal Di Leo
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Published on September 20, 2017 10:11

September 19, 2017

VBT – Just off the Path

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About the Book


Title: Just Off the Path


Author: Weston Sullivan


Genre: Folklore, Fairytales


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Hansel never asked to be a hero. He never wanted to fall in love with Rapunzel, Queen of the East. He didn’t ask to be raised by Gothel the Wretch, and he certainly never wanted to be credited for her arrest. But more than any of that, Hansel never wanted to lie: but he did. He lied about everything. He thought that he was done with it all when he and his sister Gretel retreated into the woods to reclaim their land, but he should have known better.


Years later, Rapunzel’s guards knock at his door, and they say the words he hoped that he would never hear: Gothel has escaped. As he and Gretel take refuge inside Rapunzel’s castle in the eastern capitol of Hildebrand, Hansel is thrust back into everything he never wanted in the first place: his lies, his legend, and his lust. In the wake of it all, he knows that Gothel has escaped to finish what she started. She is out to make sure that the Sleeping Beauty never wakes, and that Grimm suffocates under her blanket of thorn and vine. In order to find Gothel and save the kingdom, Hansel and Gretel must look for fact in a land of fairy-tale by following a trail of grisly murders, a girl in a red cape, and a powerful little man who can’t stand the sound of his own name.


As they search for answers, Hansel finds that he isn’t the only liar in Grimm, and that there may be a traitor among them of royal proportion.


 


Author Bio


After graduating with a BA in Creative Writing from the University of South Florida in 2017, Weston Sullivan moved to New York City to live and write in the heart of the industry. In late 2016, he began working as an intern in the submissions department of BookFish Books. His short story, “On the Hillside” won the Anspaugh Award for Fiction in February of 2017, and his novel, JUST OFF THE PATH, is due for release in early September.


He likes to believe that he is in charge of his own destiny, but at the end of the day, he knows that he was born to serve his two beloved cats.


 


Links


Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Just-Off-Path-Weston-Sullivan-ebook/dp/B074DKSBVH/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1503756112&sr=8-1&keywords=just+off+path


Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33804747-just-off-the-path?from_search=true


Filed under: Guest Authors Tagged: Enchanted book promotions, Fairytales, Folklore, Just Off the Path, Weston Sullivan
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Published on September 19, 2017 17:05

September 18, 2017

VBT – MURDER IN ROCK & ROLL HEAVEN

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Murder In Rock & Roll Heaven


by Robin Ray


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GENRE:   Mystery/Sci-Fi


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BLURB


No one ever “re-dies” in Heaven; unfortunately, that’s exactly what happened to singer Amy Winehouse. Her death, an unprecedented event in Heaven’s history, has thrown a once docile world into unfortunate chaos. Because of the new uneasy alliance between angels and citizens, a freshly-arrived detective in the rock & roll town has been tasked with investigating the prime suspects, the members of the 27 Club – Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison. To make matters worse, a powerful angel from one of the upper levels of Heaven will soon arrive to make her ten-year inspection, a task that fills the other angels with dread since she has the power to banish anyone of them to the underworld. So, with time running out, the PI and his newly acquired sidekick, both aided by rock legends such as Eddie Cochran, Mama Cass, Kurt Cobain, Karen Carpenter and others, must quickly uncover the mystery that threatens not only to close Heaven’s doors forever, but promises to send a ripple effect through the entire universe that can rip it apart.


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Book Excerpt


Plants of varying shapes and sizes sprouted everywhere, some just knee high, some as tall as mango trees. Rows of narrow pipes across the ceiling misted the foliage every minute. A few customers were sampling some of the edible flowers while others were reading manuals or informational tags about the unusual plants. Towards the back, the good PI spotted an employee who was busy pulling off the dead leaves from several botanical specimens. The clerk, he noticed, was very colorful with her psychedelic bamboo slippers, purplish pants, flowery blue and white tunic, rows of bangles on each wrist, several beaded chains around her neck, and a pink strip of cloth enmeshed in her long brown hair. As Gregory neared her, he could hear her humming along to the music playing over the virtual speakers high up in the corners of the center.


“Excuse me,” he introduced himself, “I was told Janis Joplin works back here.”


The employee turned and glanced at him. “You found her, babe.”


“Hi, Janis,” the PI introduced himself. “I’m Gregory Angelicus. And…”


“Oh, Lord,” she moaned, flinging the twigs in her hand down. “Another angel. What’d I do now?”


“Oh, no,” he stated quickly, “I’m not an angel. I just wanted to ask you a few questions.”


“About what?” she asked, eyeing the intruder with suspicion through her circular yellow sunglasses.


Gregory looked around momentarily. “Is there some place we can talk?”


“Sure,” she answered, crossing her arms. “You’re standing in it.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


AUTHOR Bio and Links


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Robin Ray emigrated to the U.S. from Trinidad & Tobago at the ripe old age of 12. Already steeped in the rich culture and mysteries of his native land, it would only be a matter of time before he, too, became a musician and storyteller. After a short stint at Iowa State University, he became a nurse for practical purposes but never abandoned his musical and literary aspirations. Eventually, he did play guitar in several bands, committing himself to localized tours and album releases. Leaving the music world behind, he delved headfirst back into his second love – writing. To date, he has authored six screenplays, two novels, seven novellas, around fifty short stories and many poems. Thus far, he’s published six books – five fiction and one non-fiction, all available in paperback and e-book formats. His latest novel, Murder In Rock & Roll Heaven, can be purchased from the following Amazon link.


https://www.amazon.com/Murder-Rock-Roll-Heaven-Robin/dp/1520167296/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1500853047&sr=8-1&keywords=murder+in+rock+%26+roll+heaven


https://seattlewordsmith.wordpress.com/


https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1720363.Robin_Ray


The book is on sale for only $0.99.


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RAFFLECOPTER  GIVEAWAY


Robin Ray will be awarding a $30 Amazon or Barnes and Noble GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.



Enter to win a $30 Amazon/BN GC – a Rafflecopter giveaway


Filed under: Guest Authors Tagged: Book Excerpt, Goddess Fish Promotions, MURDER IN ROCK & ROLL HEAVEN, Robin Ray
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Published on September 18, 2017 16:53

September 17, 2017

VBT – THE SPECTER OF THE INDIAN

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Title:

THE SPECTER OF THE INDIAN: RACE, GENDER, AND GHOSTS IN AMERICAN SEANCES, 1848 – 1898
Author: Kathryn A. Troy
Publisher: SUNY Press
Pages: 200
Genre: Historical Nonfiction



The Specter of the Indian unveils the centrality of Native American spirit guides during the emergent years of American Spiritualism. By pulling together cultural and political history; the studies of religion, race, and gender; and the ghostly, Kathryn Troy offers a

new layer of understanding to the prevalence of mystically styled Indians in

American visual and popular culture. The connections between Spiritualist print

and contemporary Indian policy provide fresh insight into the racial dimensions

of social reform among nineteenth-century Spiritualists. Troy draws fascinating parallels between the contested belief of Indians as fading from the world, claims of returned

apparitions, and the social impetus to provide American Indians with a means of

existence in white America. Rather than vanishing from national sight and memory, Indians and their ghosts are shown to be ever present. This book transports the readers into dimly lit parlor rooms and darkened cabinets and lavishes them with detailed séance accounts in the words of those who witnessed them. Scrutinizing the otherworldly whisperings heard therein highlights the voices of mediums and those they sought to channel, allowing the author to dig deep into Spiritualist belief and practice. The influential presence of Indian ghosts is made clear and undeniable. 



ORDER YOUR COPY:
Amazon| Barnes& Noble | Suny Press



The Vanished Return

In her 1885 book Life

and Labor in the Spirit World
, Mary Shelhamer, the sitting medium for the

primary Spiritualist journal the Banner

of Light,
recounted her visit to the ghostly realm. “Beyond [a] rolling

river,” she wrote, “there is a deeply-wooded country. Here you are up high

among the mountains; this is the red man’s home […] it is a refuge for the

poor, hunted and despised Indian, who, fleeing from mortal chains, finds

therein rest and peace.”
Her description of Indians as figures in flight, as members of a dying race,

was by the late nineteenth century a common one. For many white Americans,

Indians were, for the most part, already a thing of the past. They appeared

constantly in popular culture as figures of legend and literature, but real

Indians were primarily perceived as living relics—faint reminders of a vanished

people. But to nineteenth-century Spiritualists, Indians had never completely

gone; the ghosts of Indian dead walked among them. The proclaimed presence of

Indian spirits in American séances challenged the dominant discourse of Indians

as vanished, and had a profound impact not only on the Spiritualist movement,

but also on some of the most important debates of the day—those on race,

gender, civilization and the development of an American national character.
            This book

explores the spectral appearances of Indians in late nineteenth-century

American séances in relation to those national debates, and analyzes the

importance of such apparitions on several levels—racial, gendered, religious

and political. It demonstrates the overwhelming pervasiveness of this sorely

understudied phenomenon as a central social element of the Spiritualist

movement. The project establishes how the witnessing of Indian spirits affected

American minds and the reception of federal Indian policy by influencing

concepts of racial difference and socio-political hierarchy.
            The heart

of my analysis examines the racial elements unique to the spiritual

manifestations of Indians, as well as how American Spiritualists utilized the

Indian spirits they claimed to encounter as sources of political empowerment—as

agents of peace between whites and Indians, as models of sexual difference, and

as guides to spiritual progression for both races. Spiritualists understood

Indian ghosts to appear in séances with a mission to fulfill: to help ensure

the inner illumination of Spiritualists, to support white attempts at social

reform, and to serve as sources of strength to the female mediums they

possessed. They acted as mediators between the material and spiritual realms,

providing essential information about the condition and means of progression

through the several spiritual spheres, and communicating the temperament and

will of the supreme deity commonly referred to as the Great Spirit. Through

Indian spirit appearances, Spiritualists were apprised of the Great Spirit’s

attitude regarding social and political issues, such as the actions to be taken

regarding Indian nations, political equality for women, or the correct position

on congressional policies. The presence, strength, and support of Indian ghosts

were recognized as contributing to the efforts and accomplishments of

Spiritualists to create a “heaven on earth” that reflected the enlightened

position of spirits.
            These

spirits did not manifest predominantly as nostalgic symbols of a vanishing

race. They appeared frequently in the 1860s to 1880s, when the United

States was almost constantly at war with

Indian nations, when debates about what to do with Indians raged, and when the

future of the North American West was anything but certain. They did not simply

appear as Indians who were better off dead in the Happy Hunting Ground,

assuaging white guilt about conquests and an imagined vanishing, as has been

suggested by many historians—such as Alan Trachtenberg in his writing of

fictionalized Indians, Jared Farmer in his discussion of legends representing

Indians as ghostly and most pointedly Molly McGarry in her chapter on Indian

spirits.
Indian spirits were also not categorized on the whole as being from the distant

past and thus safely nonthreatening.
            Spiritualists

saw Indian ghosts as awakening public outrage and inciting political opposition

against the wars waged by the United States

on Indians, causing Spiritualists to question government objectives in the

West. Spiritualist publications vehemently denounced the Sand Creek Massacre of

1864, George Custer’s invasion of the Black Hills and

the duplicity and corruption of American Indian policy, as exemplified in the

Ponca Affair of the 1870s and multiple reports on dismal reservation

conditions. Spiritualists recognized the support of Indian ghosts for peace

policies and political equality, and the efforts of Spiritualists to restore

what they felt their country, allegedly superior in religion and civilization,

had lost—its sense of honor. They were not simply utilized as servants of the

mediums who conjured them; they were praised as guides and instructors, helping

to ensure the nation’s spiritual future. When Spiritualists closely followed

the development of the Indian Peace Commission in 1867, the rise and decline of

Ulysses S. Grant’s Peace Policy, the success of “civilized” tribes like the

Cherokee, the Carlisle and Hampton Institutes and the implementation of the

Dawes Severalty Act in 1887, they believed they were both heeding ghostly

warnings and working to rebuild the pride of their nation. These major events

in American/Indian relations are linked in this project to the intensity of

Indian spectral appearances and their centrality to the Spiritualist movement’s

contemporary development, serving as the basis for the powerful trop of the

“Indian spirit guide,” which persists today.
            A deeper

analysis than those by previous scholars of the manifestations themselves

reveals the complex and sometimes conflicting nature of such phenomena.

Scrutiny of the methods, acknowledgements, and purposes of Indian

manifestations opens wide a door to a much richer understanding of how the

intellectual and professional classes that comprised the foundation of

Spiritualist Movement constantly redefined and integrated the concept of “Indian”

into a society structured by racial and sexual difference. The notion of

Indianness that emerged from Spiritualist séances advocated a politically

non-racial society, whereby Indians could and should become American citizens,

and incorporated gender models that undermined contemporary definitions of

manliness as positively linked to violence.
            In using

such terms as “Indian spirits,” I refer to manifestations witnessed by

Spiritualists in which they claimed to see Indians, including cases of

specifically named Indians, as well as those “Indianness” derived solely from

Spiritualist identification. The ways in which Indian celebrities were

authenticated and nameless “Indians” were recognized both reflected how

“Indianness” as a scientific racial category was understood and constructed in

the Spiritualist arena and, I posit, were reflective of broader American

cultural attitudes. The actual presence of Indian spirits at nineteenth-century

séances is neither accepted nor denied in this book. It is only relevant that

Spiritualists accepted their experiences as truth. To assert at the onset that

all Spiritualists were knowing frauds is risky and counterproductive. Such

evaluations invite statements like those of Lisa Lenker, who in her research

connected her discussion of Spiritualism with Manifest Destiny rhetoric as

supporting the ethnic cleansing of the American continent. Lenker asserted that

all Indian ghosts were simply and happily dead (not undead, as the term “ghost”

suggests).
The ghosts of Indians will often be described throughout this book from the

perspective of the Spiritualists themselves—as distinct historical actors. To

believers, these specters spoke, made claims and issued warnings. Writing about

their alleged activity in such a way allows this book to delve into the

responses and reactions of Spiritualists who believed these apparitions to be

intelligent, active agencies. This approach to describing spectral activity is

offset by the simultaneous focus on specific individuals deeply involved with

Indian apparitions, including the mediums Jennie Lord, Mary Shelhamer, Fannie

Conant, and Cora Tappan.
            Placing

Spiritualist manifestations at the center of this project, essentially shifting

the focus onto non-entities, is a somewhat unorthodox approach to the study of

history, and has not been the practice employed by other scholars of

Spiritualism. Yet doing so allows the incorporation of a body of literature on

ghostliness and hauntings that is central to this project. Such scholarship has

to this point been absent from Spiritualist studies, strangely so given that

the movement, at its core, was about communicating with the dead. Rather than

referring to these manifestations only as spirits from the celestial realm or

as the products of an American imagination, I abstain from judgment on their

existence. By using the labels that Spiritualists themselves did—ghosts of the

dead returned to life—I employ a lexicon of definitions that are critical to

understanding the full significance of Spiritualist encounters with such

phenomena. “Ghosts” are undead—uncanny, temporal disruptions that appear in

specific ways at specific times to deliver a message. Communication by such

entities conveys information about an obscured past occurrence. To the witness

of such phenomena, the presence of the ghost is made clear through a distinct

sensory experience, its disruption of logical time remedied only by listening

to what the ghost wants and providing it with satisfaction. It is with these

terms in mind, originating predominantly in fictive, psychological and

paranormal studies, that I look upon séance activities of nineteenth-century America.

In his work on literary hauntings of America

during the first half of the century (the period of federally sanctioned Indian

removal), Renee Bergland rightly suggested that representations of Indian

ghosts simultaneously established and questioned an intangible American

nationality, as well as racial and sexual classifications.
Indian spirits of séances contributed to changing definitions of race and

gender is the main thrust of this project.
            Organized

by theme rather than time, the chapters included in this book cover the nature

of Spiritualist hauntings marked as specifically Indian, and the questioning

and redefinition of masculinity, femininity, and morality as linked to national

progress that took place within séance circles beginning in the 1850s and

continuing throughout the 1880s. This timeframe will be repeated in each

chapter as different aspects of Indian hauntings are visited. A majority of

works on Spiritualism have chosen to narrow their scope to the earlier,

formative years of the movement. Studies about the Fox Sisters or Andrew

Jackson Davis, for example, emphasize the Spiritualism of the 1850s as

definitive of the entire movement. Bret Carroll highlighted the 1850s as an

emergent period, as did Howard Kerr.
not appropriate here. The frequency with which Indian manifestations were

recorded was fairly comparable from the 1850s through the 1880s, peaking during

the 1860s and 1870s. The decline that Burton Brown said occurred in the 1870s

is not borne out by the increased frequency of Indian apparitions.
The seemingly consistent presence of Indian ghosts at séances serves in part to

bolster my argument that Indian ghosts were a defining characteristic of

Spiritualist practice from its inception, and makes discussion of the movement

through the course of the century imperative to my efforts. Both Indian policy

and Spiritualism evolved in the twentieth century, and continue to do so, but

analysis of such changes is beyond the scope of this book. My intention is to

demonstrate how spiritual tropes of Indianness developed on the crest of

Spiritualism in tandem with dramatic change in Indian visibility in the public

eye.
            My focus on

recorded instances of Indian specters also determines to a large degree the

emphasis on certain sources at the expense of others. While myriad articles,

pamphlets, treatises and monographs by Spiritualists provide this project with

a contextual foundation for their beliefs, as well as Indian manifestations,

the recording of Indian ghosts emerged predominantly in certain forms of

Spiritualist print—namely, their periodicals. Newspapers played a critical role

in the development and dispersion of representations of Indians that saturated

nineteenth-century American culture and continue to do so.
The majority of writing on such phenomena appeared in the Religio-Philosophical Journal and Banner of Light; these sources are therefore dominant forces in

this project. My use of Banner of Light

in this book works somewhat as a centralizing force in a movement which had

none, and provides a modicum of order to the cacophony of Spiritualist voices. Banner of Light takes on an added

significance in my research because of its extensive coverage of Indian

affairs. The development of the Indian Peace Commission, the Modoc War, the

Ponca Affair, and the violation of the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie were all

covered and editorialized in the weekly journal, receiving consistent attention

in a periodical ostensibly dedicated to matters of the spirit. The amount of

space accorded to such news should not continue to be overlooked in the

analysis of Spiritualist print. The longevity of the Banner of Light, enjoying an approximately fifty-year run, speaks

once again to the pervasiveness within Spiritualism of this very specific

racial phenomena.
            Geographically

speaking, this project views Spiritualism as a national movement in a broad sense,

with loci of activity in New York

and Boston. As the sites of some of

the first violent contests with Indian nations, the northeastern states have a

well-developed “penchant for hauntedness,” as Judith Richardson claimed,

“alongside a more enduring popular interest in ghosts and the supernatural.”
Local variations of Spiritualism did not seem to have a significant impact on

Indian spectrality, and so has been omitted from this project. The one

exception to that is the Spiritual culture of New Orleans.

The connection between this city’s history and the spirit of Black Hawk will be

discussed in Chapter Two.  Likewise,

while there are many significant connections to be made with contemporary

Spiritualist movements across the globe, this project’s focus is on American

Indian ghosts within American Spiritualism, and the resulting effect on

American society. This intention, juxtaposed with the virtual absence of

similar phenomena in Europe, justifies the exclusion of

such a discussion in this work. The references to Britain’s

literary gothic tradition are brief, and useful only in demonstrating

Spiritualism’s place among the gothic tradition of the western world. European

Spiritualism is beyond the scope of this book. Additionally, this project is

not about Indian spirituality in its own right, as there were no significant

efforts on the part of Spiritualists to understand or incorporate Indian

religions into their own belief system. Their interest in native spirituality

extended to generalized ideas about animism and a natural Romanticism, which

will be addressed in Chapter Four.
            The

remainder of this introduction will serve several functions. It provides a

background on aspects of Spiritualist theology that are essential to

understanding the arguments made in this project, a discussion of Spiritualism

and Indian hauntings in context with changes in federal Indian policy, a brief

summary of the key goals and themes of each chapter, and a few words about the

bodies of scholarship most directly engaged and built upon in this book.




Theresa Shelhamer, Life and Labor in the

Spirit World: Being a Description of Localities, Employments, Surroundings, and

Conditions in the Spheres by Members of the Spirit-Band of Miss M.T. Shelhamer,

Medium of the Banner of Light Public Free Circle
(Boston: Colby & Rich,

1885), 85-86.



Trachtenberg, Shades of Hiawatha: Staging

Indians, Making Americans 1880-1930
(New York: Hill & Wang, 2004), 19; Jared

Farmer, On Zion’s

Mount: Mormons, Indians and the American Landscape
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2008), 312;

Molly McGarry, Ghosts of Futures Past:

Spiritualism and the Cultural Politics of Nineteenth-Century America
(Berkeley: California University Press, 2008), 73.



72; Robert Berkhofer, The White Man’s

Indian: Images of the American Indian from Columbus to the Present
(New

York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1978), 90.




Lenker, “Haunted Culture and Surrogate Space: A New Historicist Account of

Nineteenth-Century American Spiritualism” (PhD diss., Stanford University,

1998), 30.



L. Bergland, The National Uncanny: Indian

Ghosts and American Subjects
(Hanover: Dartmouth, 2000), 7.



Carroll, “Unfree Spirits: Spiritualism and Religious Authority in Antebellum America” (PhD diss., Cornell University, 1991),

25. Howard Kerr, Mediums, Spirit Rappers

and Roaring Radicals: Spiritualism in American Literature, 1850-1900
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1973).



Nineteenth-Century America” (PhD diss., Boston University Graduate

School, 1973).



(Chicago: Illinois University Press, 1999), 11.



widespread of Spiritualist periodicals. According to Sally Morita, by 1860 the

periodical had a circulation of approximately 25,000. Ann Taves, Fits, Trances and Visions: Experiencing

Religion and Explaining Experience from Wesley to James
(Princeton:

Princeton University Press, 1999), 184; Sally Jean Morita, “Modern Spiritualism

and Reform in America” (PhD diss., University of Oregon,

1995), 78.



Valley

(Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press 2005), 39.



 





Kathryn Troy is giving away 2 sets

of spiritual postcards and 2 Ouija design tote bags!
Terms & Conditions:

By entering the giveaway, you are confirming you are at least 18 years old.
Four winners will be chosen via Rafflecopter
This giveaway ends midnight September 29.
Winner will be contacted via email on September 30.
Winners have 48 hours to reply.

Good luck everyone!
ENTER TO WIN!


a Rafflecopter giveaway



 


 



Kathryn Troy has two Master’s Degrees in History from Stony Brook University.

She contributed to the anthology The Spiritualist Movement published by Prager in August 2013, and teaches at Farmingdale State College and Suffolk County Community College.

In her spare time she pours all she knows about the ghostly and supernatural

into her fiction writing.

WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:
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http://www.pumpupyourbook.com
 
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Published on September 17, 2017 17:41

Pre-order Blitz – ONE SUMMER NIGHT

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About the Author


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Caridad Pineiro is a transplanted Long Island girl who has fallen in love with pork roll and the Jersey Shore, but still can’t get the hang of tomato pies. When Caridad isn’t taking long strolls along the boardwalk to maintain her sanity and burn off that pork roll, she’s also a NY Times and USA Today bestselling author with over a million books sold worldwide. Caridad is passionate about writing and helping others explore and develop their skills as writers. She is a founding member of the Liberty States Fiction Writers and has presented workshops at the RT Book Club Convention, Romance Writers of America National Conference as well as various writing organizations throughout the country.


Want to receive Caridad’s newsletter with exclusive content just for subscribers and special giveaways?


Just visit http://bit.ly/2cbxlYw to sign up.


Caridad values your privacy and will not share your e-mail or personal information.


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:
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About the Book


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Title: ONE SUMMER NIGHT

Author: Caridad Pineiro

Publisher: Sourcebooks

Pages: 352

Genre: Contemporary Romance


BOOK BLURB


An offer that’s impossible to accept . . .


Maggie Sinclair has tried everything to save her family’s business, including mortgaging their beloved beach house on the Jersey Shore. But now, she’s out of options.


The Sinclair and Pierce families have been neighbors and enemies for almost thirty years. That hasn’t stopped Owen Pierce from crushing on Maggie, and he’s determined to invest in her success. Now he has to convince her that he’s more than just trouble with a capital T…


PRE-ORDER BELOW!
Amazon Kindle | Amazon Paperback | B&N | iBooks

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Book Excerpt


Tracy Parker was in love with being in love.


That worried her best friend and maid of honor Maggie Sinclair more than she cared to admit.


In the middle of the temporary dance floor, Tracy waltzed with her new husband in a satin-and-lace designer gown, gleaming with seed pearls and twinkling sequins. But the sparkle dimmed in comparison to the dreamy glow in Tracy’s eyes.


The sounds of wedding music competed with the gentle rustle of seagrasses in the dunes and the crash of the waves down on the beach. The fragrance from centerpiece flowers and bouquets battled with the kiss of fresh sea air.


Connie and Emma, Tracy’s two other best friends and members of the bridal party, were standing beside Maggie on the edge of the dance floor that had been set up on the great lawn of Maggie’s family’s beachfront mansion on the Jersey Shore. Huddled together, Maggie and her friends watched the happy couple do a final whirl.


“She’s got it so bad,” Maggie said, eyeing Connie and Emma with concern past the rim of her rapidly disappearing glass of champagne.


“Do you think that this time he really is The One?” Connie asked.


“Doubt it,” Emma replied without hesitation.


As the DJ requested that other couples join the happy newlyweds, Maggie and her friends returned to the bridal party dais set out on the patio. Grabbing another glass of champagne, Maggie craned her neck around the gigantic centerpiece piled with an almost obscene mound of white roses, ice-blue hydrangea, lisianthus, sheer tulle, and twinkling fairy lights and examined the assorted guests mingling around the great lawn and down by the boardwalk leading to the beach.


She recognized Tracy’s family from their various meetings over the years, as well as some of Tracy’s sorority sisters, like Toni Van Houten, who in the six years since graduation had managed to pop out a trio of boys who now circled her like sharks around a swimmer. Although the wedding invite had indicated No Children, Toni had done as she pleased. Since Tracy had not wanted a scene at her dream beachfront wedding, Emma, who was doing double duty as the wedding planner for the event, had scrambled to find space for the children at the dinner tables.


“Is that Toni ‘I’ll never ruin my body with babies’ Toni?” Connie asked, a perplexed look on her features.  At Maggie’s nod, Connie’s eyes widened in surprise, and she said, “She looks…happy.”


A cynical laugh erupted from Emma. “She looks crazed.”


Maggie couldn’t argue with either of their assessments. But as put-upon as their old acquaintance seemed, the indulgent smile she gave her youngest child was positively radiant.


Maggie skipped her gaze across the gathering to take note of all the other married folk. It was easy enough to pick them out from her vantage point on the dais where she and her friends sat on display like days’ old cakes in the bakery. They were the last three unmarried women in an extended circle of business and college acquaintances.


“How many times do you suppose we’ve been bridesmaids now?” Maggie wondered aloud. She finished off her glass and motioned for the waiter to bring another.


“Jointly or severally?” asked Connie, ever the lawyer.


“Way too many,” replied Emma, who, for a wedding planner, was the most ardent disbeliever in the possibility of happily ever afters.


Maggie hadn’t given marriage a first thought, much less a second, in a very long time. She’d had too many things going on in her life. Not that there hadn’t been a few memorable moments, most of which revolved around the absolutely worst man for her: Owen Pierce.


But for years now, she’d been dealing with her family’s business and its money problems, which had spilled over into her personal finances. As she gazed at the beauty of the manicured grounds and then back toward her family’s summer home, it occurred to her that this might be the last time she hosted a celebration like this here. She had mortgaged the property that she had inherited to funnel money into the family’s struggling retail store division.


Unfortunately, thanks to her father’s stubborn refusal to make changes to help the business, she spent way too much time at work, which left little time for romance. Not to mention that none of her casual dates had piqued her interest in that direction. Looking down from her perch, however, and seeing the happiness on so many faces suddenly had her reconsidering the merits of married life.


“Always a bridesmaid and never a bride,” she muttered, surprising herself with the hint of wistfulness in her tone.


“That’s because the three of us are all too busy working to search for Prince Charming,” Connie said, her defense as swift and impassioned as if she were arguing a case in court.


“Who even believes in that fairy-tale crap?” Emma’s gaze grew distracted, and she rose from her chair. “Excuse me for a moment. Carlo needs to see me about something.”


Emma rushed off to the side of the dance floor, where her caterer extraordinaire, Carlo Teixeira, raked a hand through his thick brown hair in clear frustration. He wore a pristine white chef’s jacket and pants that enhanced his dark good looks.


Emma laid a hand on Carlo’s forearm and leaned close to speak to him, apparently trying to resolve a problem.


“She doesn’t believe in fairy tales, but her Prince Charming is standing right in front of her,” Connie said with a sad shake of her head.


Maggie took another sip of her champagne and viewed the interaction between Carlo and Emma. Definitely major sparkage going on, she thought.


“You’re totally right,” she said with an assertive nod.


Connie smiled like the proverbial cat, her exotic green-gold eyes gleaming with mischief. “That’s why you hired me to represent your company as soon as I finished law school. Nothing gets past me.”


“Really? So what else do you think you’ve seen tonight?”


Raising her glass, her friend gestured toward the right of the mansion’s great lawn where some of the fraternity brothers from their alma mater had gathered. One of the men slowly turned to sneak a peek at them.


“Owen has been watching you all night long,” Connie said with a shrewd smile.


“Totally impossible, and you of all people should know it. Owen Pierce has absolutely no interest in me.”


She set her glass on the table to hide the nervous tremble of her hand as her gaze connected with his for the briefest of moments. Even that fleeting link was enough to raise her core temperature a few degrees. But what woman wouldn’t respond like that?


In his designer tuxedo, Owen was the epitome of male perfection—raven-black hair, a sexy gleam in his charcoal-gray eyes, broad shoulders, and not an ounce of fat on him, which made her recall seeing him in much, much less on a hot summer night on Sea Kiss Beach. She had been staying in the quaint seaside town on the Jersey Shore with her grandmother that summer, much as she had all her life. As they also had for so many years, the Pierce boys had been residing next door for the entire season.


The two beachfront mansions had been built side by side decades earlier, before the start of the Pierce and Sinclair rift. The cost of waterfront real estate had escalated so drastically since their construction that neither family was willing to sell their beloved home to put some distance between the warring clans.


Well, make that the warring fathers, because as far as Maggie was concerned, she had no beef with Owen. They had played together down on the beach as kids. She couldn’t count the many sand castles they’d built or the time they’d spent out in the surf.


But after her mother had died, things had changed, and the carefree spirit of those halcyon days had disappeared. The Pierce boys had stopped coming down to the Shore for the next few years, and combined with the loss of her mom, it had created an emptiness inside her that hadn’t really gone away.


By the time the Pierce brothers returned  years later, the feud had gotten worse, and Owen and Jonathan had been instructed to stay away. But an ill-timed and half-drunk kiss with Owen on a moonlit summer night had proved that staying away was impossible. It had also helped the emptiness recede for a bit. Since then, fate had seemed to toss them together time and time again in both their business and personal lives, keeping alive her fascination with him. She felt not quite so alone when he was around, not that she should get used to that.


Owen Pierce had left her once before when she’d needed his friendship the most: right after her mother’s death. His on-again, off-again presence in her life proved that she couldn’t count on him.


Owen stood next to his younger brother, Jonathan, who couldn’t be more different. While Owen was clean-cut and corporate, Jonathan had the scruffy hipster look going on. It was appealing in its own way, but not to her.


“Trust me, Maggie. Your families might be at war, but Owen would clearly love to sleep with the enemy,” Connie said.


She blew out a frustrated sigh. “More reason to avoid him. You know I’m not the kind to sleep around.”


Emma returned, color riding high on her cheeks, but not in a good way.


“Something wrong?” Maggie asked.


Emma kneeled between the two of them and whispered, “It seems the groom had a bit too much to drink and Tracy caught him being hands-on with an old flame.”


“Not Amy? Tracy always lost it if she spotted him with Amy,” Maggie whispered.


“Definitely Amy. Now Tracy is refusing to come out and cut the cake. I have to say, this takes the cake, literally. Married a few hours, and already there’s trouble.”


“Ever the hopeful romantic, Em,” she kidded.


“If you think you can do better, why don’t the two of you come help me talk Tracy off the ledge?”



Caridad Pineiro is giving away a $25 Amazon Gift Card!

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One winner will be chosen via Rafflecopter to receive $25 Amazon Gift Card
This giveaway ends midnight September 29.
Winner will be contacted via email on September 30.
Winner has 48 hours to reply.

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Filed under: Guest Authors Tagged: #bookexcerpt, #CaridadPineiro, #pumpupyourbook, Book Excerpt, Caridad Pineiro, Contemporary Romance, Giveaway, One Summer Night, Pump Up Your Book, Romance Writers of America, RT Book Club
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Published on September 17, 2017 16:29

September 16, 2017

Day Moon Blog Tour





 



 



Title:

DAY MOON (Tomorrow’s Edge Book 1)
Author: Brett Armstrong
Publisher: Clean Reads
Pages: 389
Genre: Christian/Scifi/Dystopian




In A.D. 2039, a prodigious seventeen year old, Elliott, is assigned to work

on a global software initiative his deceased grandfather helped found. Project Alexandria

is intended to provide the entire world secure and equal access to all

accumulated human knowledge. All forms of print are destroyed in good faith, to

ensure everyone has equal footing, and Elliott knows he must soon part with his

final treasure: a book of Shakespeare’s complete works gifted him by his

grandfather. Before it is destroyed, Elliott notices something is amiss with

the book, or rather Project Alexandria. The two do not match, including an

extra sonnet titled “Day Moon”. When Elliott investigates, he

uncovers far more than he bargained for. There are sinister forces backing

Project Alexandria who have no intention of using it for its public purpose.

Elliott soon finds himself on the run from federal authorities and facing

betrayals and deceit from those closest to him. Following clues left by his

grandfather, with agents close at hand, Elliott desperately hopes to find a way

to stop Project Alexandria. All of history past and yet to be depend on it.


ORDER YOUR COPY:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble


 


Prologue: InheritanceThe drizzle tapped on the coffin with an increasing intensity. A steady rain

soon began, its great droplets gently touching the mourners with icy

insistence. None of it seemed real to Elliott. He looked at the mounded soil,

the great wound in the earth where the coffin was positioned, ready to be

lowered at any time. Rain was sliding off its slick grey surface, as though

nature wished to wash all of this away.

Arranged in a semi-circle around the casket were all those who cared enough

about Elliott’s grandfather to make the trip out to this relatively obscure

plot of land. No one gave it much attention throughout the year. Buried deep in

the woods atop a steep, Appalachian hill, the cemetery had no road. Even the

paths were overgrown. Every one of the attendees had been forced to make the

trek in their uncomfortable finery. Like shadows dancing from a flame, they had

made the journey, full of complaints.


Elliott glanced at those gathered: aunts and uncles, cousins, and a variety

of other relatives whom he couldn’t identify. His parents were somewhere,

speaking with the attendees, trying to hold the family together in light of the

sudden affair. No one had expected the accident. There wasn’t even an

opportunity to look at the body; so charred and mangled had his grandfather’s

body become as his vehicle careened off the road.


Everything about the accident felt so impossible. Nothing more so than this

moment. With the rain’s persistence, they were already beginning to lower his

grandfather into the gaping, muddy maw.


Soon the arguments over who got what would begin. His grandfather had a

will, but no one cared what it said, so long as they got their fair share.

Elliott had already overheard grumbles that he was getting a rare item, one of

the few enduring volumes of Shakespeare’s works. It had been a favorite of his

grandfather. Even for its rarity, it wasn’t worth anything. The global

initiative his grandfather had been working on, Project Alexandria, required

all print materials to be recycled as soon as their contents were added to the

system. A single repository of human knowledge, from the beginning of recorded history

to the present. Whoever had the book would simply have to part with it sooner

or later. It didn’t matter.


A tear tried to fight its way through Elliott’s rigid guard. Clenching his

hands into fists, he took a shallow breath, and blinked it back. There was only

one other person who could have felt close to what he did. Shortly, all of the

others wandered away, seeking cover. In their absence, Elliott could clearly

see his cousin stood by the hole, planted like the many stone fixtures around

them. John was twenty-seven, almost ten years older than Elliott, and had

already lost his father, Elliott’s uncle, some years earlier. John’s attention

was fully on the descending form of their grandfather’s casket. The thought of

this forced Elliott’s head round, briefly, to look in the direction of his

uncle’s tombstone. It was in danger of being overtaken by honeysuckle vines.

Even in the strengthening shower, the scent of the buttery hued blooms filled

the air.


Elliott was tempted to walk over to the small granite block and push away

the encroaching plant. Try as he might, he couldn’t bring his legs to move in

that direction. If no one acted soon, the messages on the stone would be

obscured:


“ALVERSON MCINTYRE.”


“Pursued Greatness.”


“Born: September 30, 1982.”


“Died: June 18, 2035.”


Uncle Al had died four years ago, to the day, of some exotic respiratory

disease that had spread from central or southeast Asia; a mini-pandemic. If he

hadn’t been overseas on business, he might never have contracted it. Now, all

that would be remembered of him was that in his fifty-two years of life, he

pursued greatness, to say nothing of ever laying hold of it.


Rubbing his arms, to bring warmth to them, Elliott turned back around and

finished his journey to John’s side. The brawny man was still looking down into

the hole to where the casket had finished its descent. John’s blue eyes never

wavered from their hold on the burial pit. Slowly, John reached out his large,

work-worn hand, gripped a handful of the dirt in the mound beside him, and

stared at it a few seconds, before gently lofting it into the grave.



 


BOOK TRAILER:

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/n8RdGQ6jQiE?rel=0


 



 


Brett Armstrong, author of the award-winning novel, Destitutio Quod

Remissio
, started writing stories at age nine, penning a tale of revenge

and ambition set in the last days of the Aztec Empire.  Twenty years

later, he is still telling stories though admittedly his philosophy has

deepened with his Christian faith and a master’s degree in creative

writing.  His goal with every work is to be like a brush in the Master

artist’s hand and his hope is the finished composition always reflects the

design God had in mind.  He feels writing should be engaging, immersive,

entertaining, and always purposeful.  Continually busy at work with one or

more new novels to come, he also enjoys drawing, gardening, and playing with

his beautiful wife and son.


His latest book is Day Moon (Tomorrow’s Edge Book 1).


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:
WEBSITE | TWITTER | FACEBOOK



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Published on September 16, 2017 14:42

September 14, 2017

VBT – Accidental Lawyer

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About the Book


Title: Accidental Lawyer

Author: Kim Hamilton

Genre: Crime Fiction


Set in the brilliant and diverse city of Baltimore, Accidental Lawyer, is a humorous, often irreverent portrayal of the dubious practice of personal injury law. Jessica Snow has a crisp new law degree, a grinding ambition, and a pesky moral compass that is often at odds with her new job as an ambulance chaser. Her face and name appear on billboards and buses throughout the city, and if that isn t enough to embarrass her mother, there s a television commercial in the works. Her elevated status has her wrangling with a local mob boss, duping a drug dealer, and confronting phony clients. With the help of her bold and brassy sidekick, Kari, Jess develops a remarkable proclivity for this ignoble profession by wrapping up difficult cases and finding new business in unexpected places. When trumped-up murder charges are brought against her boss, she faces her biggest challenge yet tracking down a killer. Along the way, Jess builds a new kind of family for herself, her own tribe, made up of friends, colleagues and clients, many of whom are sure to raise eyebrows at her mother s dinner table.


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Author Bio


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KIM HAMILTON was born in the D.C. suburbs and currently resides outside of Baltimore, Maryland with her husband, where they raised their two daughters. After beginning a legal career in real estate, an unusual set of circumstances thrust her into the family’s personal injury law firm. She spent ten inglorious years there as an ambulance chaser—an experience from which she has almost fully recovered. Accidental Lawyer is her first novel.


 


Links


Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Accidental-Lawyer-Kim-Hamilton/dp/1946920150/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1503751718&sr=8-1&keywords=accidental+lawyer


Literary Agency: https://www.metamorphosisliteraryagency.com/


 


Filed under: Book Blasts Tagged: #iheartreads, Accidental Lawyer, Crime Fiction, Enchanted book promotions, Kim Hamilton
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Published on September 14, 2017 12:09

Book Blast – DARK GENIUS

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Dark Genius

by H. Peter Alesso


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


GENRE: Fiction


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Buy link for Dark Genius:


https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075HVG2Z9

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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BLURB:


To the insatiably curious—science is the greatest adventure. So, when scientists at CERN announced the discovery of the ‘God’ particle in 2012, all the world wondered, “How did they find it?”


A decade later, despite his past academic failures and egregious family circumstance, Andrew Lawrence embarked on a journey of discovery, competing against rival scientists to be the first to solve the greatest unsolved mystery of the universe—dark matter—and win the ultimate prize; the Nobel.


Emma Franklin, a PhD candidate at Harvard, developed software for detecting particle reactions using a quantum computer. To the amazement and excitement of the scientific community, her work revealed two possible bumps in the energy curve that were not predicted by any established theory.


At MIT, Lawrence created a model that predicted the scattering processes of a dark matter supersymmetry particle. Though his early work was disparaged, he improved his theory and found that it predicted the data Emma had discovered. Their professional collaboration deepened into a personal relationship, but when critical data was stolen, Emma found evidence that incriminated Lawrence. Though she withheld the impeaching material from the authorities, she felt she could no longer trust him.


Despite their troubled partnership, and notwithstanding the complexities of nature, Lawrence and Emma persevered against the egos, jealousy, and envy of rivals, on their exhilarating quest to find the ‘Holy Grail’ of physics


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Book Excerpt


I thought all was lost—now I have a second chance.


With a profound sense of relief, Andrew Lawrence slide his tablet into his shoulder holster and walked briskly along the Boston sidewalk. His past academic failures and egregious family circumstances were behind him. He was ready for a fresh start.


Tall, slender, and dark-haired, he listened to the clicking and clacking of shuffling shoes on the pavement as students jostled alongside him. The hint of autumn from the cool morning air brought a frenzy of activity to the sprawling campuses of both MIT and Harvard which nurtured a flourishing rivalry among their ambitious students. He could feel the undercurrent of tension for the start of the fall term.


By the time he crossed Longfellow Bridge, his adrenaline was pumping. He noticed several eight-man sculls already rowing down the Charles River, their school colors plainly visible. Squinting his eyes against the glare, he could make out the MIT and Harvard boats vying for the lead, stroke by stroke.


Striding across the rambling campus, his lips concealed a secret smile as he contemplated a revolutionary solution to a problem he had been daydreaming about. When he swung around a corner, he ran smack-dab into a young woman. Her armload of books, papers, and assorted technology flew into the air and scattered across the walkway.


“Sor . . . sorry.”


“You should be,” the woman said, her face screwed into a tight scowl. “Your head was in the clouds.”


Lawrence opened his mouth, but before he could speak, she pointed down and said, “See what you’ve done?”


She stooped and frantically tried to corral her absconding belongings.


“Let me help,” said Lawrence, grasping some loose papers about to blow away.


Spying her tablet on the grass, she exclaimed, “Oh no! All my work.”


Carefully, she picked up the device and turned it on, tapping her fingers impatiently until the screen lit up. She heaved a sigh and looked Lawrence directly in the eyes. “You’re lucky. Sooo . . . lucky.”


Lawrence mumbled another apology and helped her pick up the last few books.


As she struggled to reorganize her treasures, Lawrence brushed a strand of hair away from his eyes and for the first time cast an appraising glance at the young woman.


She was attractive.


It wasn’t that she was a striking beauty—though her smooth white skin, olive green eyes, and classic profile complemented the hazelnut hair that cascaded over her shoulders. Nor was her carriage especially eye-catching, though she displayed an appealing youthful vitality. No, what seemed most appealing was her confident determined poise, as if she possessed a special hidden talent.


“You really should use a backpack.”


“The lining ripped,” she retorted.


Seeing the logos on her tablet’s screen, Lawrence asked, “Harvard? Math?”


“I can tell by your tone that you’re MIT,” she said, her eyes flashing.


Lawrence grinned, “Physics.” As an afterthought, he asked, “What are you doing on this campus?”


“Well, Mr. Physics, that’s none of your concern.”


Something in the way she said it, caused him to laugh.


They faced each other in a stand-off for a long moment—saying nothing.


Then the young woman heaved a sigh, gathered her possessions to her chest, and brushed past him.


Lawrence watched her figure disappear into the crowd.


Damn. I didn’t get her name.


As he turned to leave, something shiny on the ground caught his eye. It was a flash drive.


Picking it up, he spun around and called, “Wait!”


But she was gone.


He looked at the memory stick, thinking . . .


I’ll have to crack her password, if I’m going to see her again.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


AUTHOR Bio and Links


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As a scientist and author specializing in technology innovation, H. Peter Alesso has over twenty years research experience at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). As Engineering Group Leader at LLNL he led a team of scientists and engineers in innovative applications across a wide range of supercomputers, workstations, and networks. He graduated from the United States Naval Academy with a B.S. and served in the U.S. Navy on nuclear submarines before completing an M.S. and an advanced Engineering Degree at M.I.T. He has published several software titles and numerous scientific journal and conference articles, and he is the author/co-author of ten books.

http://www.hpeteralesso.com/images/pete2.jpg


Email: h.alessocomcast.net


Website: http://www.hpeteralesso.com/Default.aspx

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/413852.H_Peter_Alesso

https://twitter.com/hpeteralesso

https://www.amazon.com/H.-Peter-Alesso/e/B001HCY45M/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_3?qid=1482982330&sr=1-3


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RAFFLECOPTER GIVEAWAY


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Published on September 14, 2017 10:56