Constance Phillips's Blog, page 14
May 29, 2015
Friday Featured Author: Jody A Kessler
Today, I’m so pleased to have Jody A Kessler here for Friday Featured Author. She has a brand new release out, but before we get to her story, the boxed set, and the interview, let me share a little bit about Jody.
About Jody A. Kessler
When Jody isn’t navigating the terrain of her imagination and writing it down, she can be found exploring the wilderness of Colorado with her family, or in the kitchen baking cookies & brownies – and then trying not to eat them all. She’s passionate about continuing to learn and reads anything and everything that catches her interest. Jody is a full time mom, a Reiki Master, and has taught Hatha yoga for over a decade.
Jody’s debut novel, Death Lies Between Us, is the winner of RomCon’s Readers’ Crown award for best Paranormal Romance in 2014. She is currently working on a historical time travel series set in Montana in the 1860’s. The first book in the series,
The Night Medicine, is available now on Amazon.
She invites you to visit her website at www.jodyakessler.com
Or connect with her on: Facebook Goodreads Twitter Pinterest YouTube
The Interview
Tell us about your latest release?
Heart of the Secret is a fun paranormal romance about a modern-day witch who will do anything to break the 500 year-old wedding curse on her family.
Here is the logline –
A 500 year-old curse, a witch who will do anything to marry her one true love, and the heart of a secret that will either divide them or bring them together…forever.
The storyline for Heart of the Secret came to me almost instantly. I enjoyed writing this novella immensely and I hope to continue writing more books in this series called, Witches of Lane County. The novella is coming out June 16th as part of the Magical Weddings box set.
Are you a plotter or pantser?
Plotter! I’ve found that being a pantser makes it easier to write myself into a corner. This can be devastating and takes away from valuable writing time if I get stuck fixing a major plot problem. So now I love plotting. I use index cards so I can shuffle my scenes around, and I also have timelines, a dry erase board, and outlines. I’m a plotting fanatic.
What was the most difficult part of the publishing process for you?
One of the harder parts of the publishing process is the waiting. Waiting for my kid to go to sleep so I can write another page, waiting for acceptance or rejection letters, waiting for the editor to send the next round of edits, waiting for release day, waiting to be paid, waiting to hit a best-seller list. I must be impatient, but I don’t like waiting.
How about the most fun?
Acceptance is the fun part. Acceptance letters of course, but also emails saying you won an award—that happened to me once—and it was the greatest day! Acknowledgment and acceptance from readers who love your book is really fun. It is the greatest feeling and makes the more challenging aspects of publishing worth it. I have to add that meeting authors and editors has also been a wonderful bonus to joining the publishing world.
What inspired you to write your first book?
I’m not sure I know where the inspiration came from, but I can tell you how it happened.
My infant son had colic forever—it really felt like forever. When the colic finally did pass he was extremely shy with anyone but my husband and me. My kid would scream if anyone even looked at him. He also had sleep problems. So, I decided to close my business and not return to work. I was very fortunate to be able to do this and I loved staying home with my son even if he was testing my sanity.
Anyhow, I’ve always had an extremely active mind and I like to stay busy. I used to write constantly when I was young, but as I became an adult, I sort of stopped. When I was home with my son I realized that I really wanted to start writing again. It was an undeniable urge to put pen to paper and create a story. I bought a spiral notebook and started writing during his naps. My first novel was picked up by a publisher about two years after I bought that first notebook.
Do you have any writing rituals? (Time of day to write, must have beverages? Etc?)
During the day, I crave coffee and tea. I find myself walking into the kitchen for a hot beverage right before every writing session. I like to tell myself that I’m not addicted to caffeine, but I probably am. I’m also a night owl and I am really productive after dark.
Who is your go-to author, the one you know you can always count on to deliver a great story?
I love Diana Gabaldon’s work and will read any of her books twice. But, to be perfectly honest, I am a huge fan of whatever tickles my fancy in the moment. I will read just about any genre and I have a deep love of words. Charles Frazier is another favorite author because his writing is stunning.
I just finished reading All That’s Unspoken by Constance Phillips and I loved it! The novel was exactly what I wanted to read at the time and I couldn’t put it down. I highly recommend it to anyone who likes sweet romance.
What projects are you working on at the present?
I’m currently working on two novels at once. This is new for me. I normally write one book at a time, but I found that the novel on the backburner (I always have a novel stewing—usually a few of them) wouldn’t quit talking to me. I started writing a contemporary romance at the same time that I’m writing a coming of age story. I’m very excited about both novels and hope to release one of them by January/February of 2016.
What do your plans for future projects include?
Oooh….plans. I like plans. Book releases and a writing schedule help me stay productive. I currently have two novels waiting to be released. They are part of my new adult paranormal series, An Angel Falls. I hope to release book 3, Haunting Me, in September and book 4 sometime next year. I also have a release party on Facebook, June 16th for the Magical Weddings box set–you’re all invited by the way—and beyond that, I hope to be happy, content, and writing full time.
Thanks for having me on Feature Fridays! Hope you’re reading a fantastic book!

Aspen Morgan is an extraordinary, beautiful, and talented witch with the power to control animals and earth magic. She also deeply desires to marry Rook Avesbury. Unfortunately, Aspen knows that being a Morgan means she is destined to a life of solitude. The Morgans of Lane County don’t get married, they don’t explain why, and their secret always dies with them.
While studying the stars along the northwest coast, Rook, a handsome and charming wizard from the British Isles, falls in love with the captivating Aspen Morgan. After seven blissful months together, Rook is ready to spend forever with her.
Will the Morgan family curse be the end of Rook and Aspen, or will she find a way to reveal the deadly secrets of an enchanted journal and break the five hundred-year-old spell that is preventing their happily ever after?
Magical Weddings is available for pre-order for .99 cents on Amazon ~ 15 Enchanting Romances
Watch the book trailer on YouTube
May 26, 2015
Available Again: Fairyproof
As recently as last week I posted here that the relaunch date for Fairyproof was June 2.
My silly mistakes is your gain!
While uploading the Amazon Kindle files (The next to last ones I had to do) I forgot to set the publish date to June 2, which made the system auto-publish now. There was really no going back, and I couldn’t see any reason to, so, I systematically went through and hit “Publish” at all other venues.
The only place the book is not available again yet is All Romance Ebooks. It may be the end of the week before it shows up there.
After her parents’ death and an unwanted proposal, fairy Monique seeks refuge in the human world. Her brother has warned her of the dangers, but she believes hiding will be a breeze. She can control any human with a flirtatious smile and an attraction spell. Until she meets Daniel Elliot, the only human who’s immune to both.
Can Monique’s brother find her and bring her home before she falls victim to whoever is killing fairies on the human world?
Will the reason Daniel’s fairyproof be too much for them to overcome?
Buy Links: Amazon (paperback) | Amazon (Kindle) | Barnes and Noble | Kobo | Smashwords | iTunes
Book Trailer (Contains Old Cover)
As always, you can read the first chapter of this release at Constancephillips.com.
May 25, 2015
Honor and Remember: Memorial Day.
Today the blog goes red, white and blue to honor those who paid the ultimate price so that I can have the freedom to live in this wonderful country, where I’m afforded many rights. Including but not limited to the opportunity to write the words I choose.

American flag love heart
May 22, 2015
Friday Featured Author: Jamielynn Boothe
Jamielynn Boothe, today’s featured author, has given me a guest post about the reasons he chose to write Nightmares and Dreams. Please find his post below.

Nightmares and Dreams
by Jamielynn Boothe
Genre: Lesbian Romance
What made you decide to write Lesbian romance? What do you enjoy most about writing lesbian romance?
These are two very good questions. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to answer these for you. I chose to write this genre for my first novel for a particular reason.
Three years ago, when I began writing Nightmares and Dreams, it seemed the news was full of something to do with the LGBT community. There was violence against transgenders and homosexuals that tore my heart out. I am from a small town so I understand the pain and fear that hatred puts out.
I myself am in the LGBT family, being bisexual and always feeling that I would have had a happier life if I had been born female. I relate more to women than I do men so after deciding to write something deep and powerful, yet romantic I wanted to create a strong female character that within her role would face some of society’s issues. I feel that the role she played in Nightmares and Dreams told an incredible story that having been heterosexual would have been unable to do.
Honestly, Nightmares and Dreams is the only novel I have written that the main character is a lesbian. In the sequel Christy and Heather are definitely a big part of it, but not the major characters. I enjoyed writing it mainly, as I mentioned, because I relate more to women than men as far as emotions go. I strongly admire women.
To me, women are the stronger of the two sexes in many ways. In everything I have written so far, a female has been the main character. I also enjoyed writing it because of Christy and Heathers passion for one another, their love, their deep bond. On a certain level, I connected.

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Nightmares of being raped as a teenager have haunted Christy for years. She’s tried to run and hide from them to no avail. Over the years pain has taken its toll, until she finally has enough and moves back to her hometown of Moneta, Virginia to be with the woman she loves. After being away for six years, facing her fears and being in Heather’s arms again gives her hope for a normal life.
Once she realizes that running away doesn’t really solve everything, Christy deals with the mental fears as well, seeking professional help. Everything begins to fall into place. Christy is with Heather and doing what she loves most, teaching.
Christy has reasons to smile again…until a horrendous hate crime is committed which specifically targets homosexuals. The roller coaster ride that Christy and Heather will unwillingly have to experience will be like nothing they have ever encountered before.
Men, who are nothing short of monsters continue their rage by kidnapping Christy and taking her off into the hills. Being held captive in an old hunting cabin, her earlier nightmares dwindle in comparison to what she has to endure. Christy is faced with a life or death situation. With her fears becoming reality, can Christy overcome the odds stacked against her, or will the monsters kill her before she can return to Heather’s loving embrace?

JamieLynn Boothe
is a southerner at heart. He was born and raised in a small town in Virginia
and a lot of his life has moved around to many states. He currently resides in
Connecticut. JamieLynn is forty-nine years young, single, a lover of love, good
food (preferably southern) sausage gravy and biscuits, writing, reading, art,
food, naps, cats, music, movies, cooking, time with loved ones and God. He is
currently working on a Christmas novella and will be starting an Inspirational
Historical romance series soon. JamieLynn is a laid-back loving guy and easy to
get to know.
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May 21, 2015
Throwback Thursday: An Ode to Purple Shoes
Isn’t it funny how some things come full circle in life?
When I was in High School I had a pair of purple Converse shoes. [They were the hightop version — not like those shown above.] I wore them everyday for damn near an entire school year for several reasons — none of which were comfort.
Purple shoes were one of the few ways I could wear my creative soul.
They seemed hip and grunge all at the same time. (Not that grunge was popular at that time — but as I look back now it’s the style I wanted to adopt. A bit ahead of it’s time)
We can’t forget or deny the Rick Springfield reference. (Maybe this should be number 1)
Always being a bit of rebel …those shoes seemed to annoy some people, and I got a charge out of doing that.
Today, when I go to buy my everyday shoes, I have to look at things that are more important that style and my creative soul. I have to worry about the aches and pains that develop if I don’t have a good, sturdy shoe. Hip pain, back pain, foot pain — some of which, I’m sure, I can tie back to those awful Converse shoes. They had absolutely no support!
Recently, I was cruising the New Balance isle of my local shoe store, thrilled that I had come in on a day where you could buy one pair, and get a second for half price. My first choice was what I thought would be a very good everyday shoe that would give me all the support I needed.
These seemed perfect!
Sturdy
Tons of support.
Neutral white, I could wear them daily, with any casual outfit.
And then these caught my eye!
Cute!
Retro!
Half-off
I could buy them, where them when the matcher or appropriate. They’d be a fun alternative to the plain-Jane, everyday, white shoes.
Only it didn’t exactly work out that way.
The shoes I was positive would be perfect for daily wear, hurt my feet in ways I thought weren’t even possible. Worse than I imagine those old purple Converse would today. As much as I tried to make them my everyday shoe, I would wither in pain as I pulled them off, often only after a few hours.
The purple beauties on the other hand, are without a doubt, the most comfortable shoes I have ever worn. They have been upgraded to daily wear, even when not completely appropriate to the color scheme. (But, I’m a writer, remember. A creative soul. Color schemes be damn!)
Sort of makes me feel like that High School girl again!
**In the interest of full disclosure, it should be stated that the author of this article owns two pair of retro Converse high-tops. One in bright pink and another in paisley pink. If a reader know where the author can find a pair of purple ones to replace that beloved high school pair, she would be forever grateful!
May 19, 2015
Tuesday Teaser: Coming Again June 2, Fairyproof
As many of you know, I am relaunching Fairyproof June 2 with a new cover/look.
Here’s an excerpt:
Gray eyes met hers from behind black-rimmed glasses. Her heart lurched in her chest. Charming him would be a pleasure.
Holding his gaze, she set her shoulders back enough that his eyes would drop lower, and closed the distance between them.
She offered her hand across the desk and tipped her head, letting her hair fall across her right shoulder. When his large hand enveloped hers, she smiled and cast an enchantment spell. “Mr. Elliot, I’m Naomi Sanders.”
She waited for the familiar haze to cloud his eyes, a sure sign he was under her control.
He accepted her hand, cradled it in his for a brief moment before turning his attention to his assistant who handed him her paperwork.
No haze. He didn’t move toward her with an infatuated grin, just went about his business.
A sharp pain seized her heart, radiating through her chest. What could have gone wrong? Casting an enchantment spell was second nature. She’d been using them to get what she wanted since seeking refuge among the humans.
As she lowered herself into one of the chairs, her mind grappled with what had gone wrong, and her body slipped into the familiar: teasing the man in front of her. She crossed her long legs, and let her skirt slide up her thigh.
Unaffected, Daniel read her file as he walked around his desk and leaned back against it. After a moment, he looked up and asked, “Why did you leave your last job?”
She shifted her weight in the chair, uncrossing her long legs and crossing them again in the opposite direction. He didn’t appear moved at all by her physical appearance, but even with her worries Monique couldn’t ignore him or the way his dark, tailored suit accented his long, lean body.
A smile crossed his thin lips, but not for the reason she wanted. He hadn’t even noticed her legs. Contact hadn’t been broken by his crisp, clear eyes. The grin turned to a light chuckle. “If that question is too hard, Miss Sanders, maybe we’re both wasting our time.”
Her cheeks flushed and she knew they were reddening with embarrassment. Worried they clashed with her hair, she tried to swallow the blush. If winning this job the old fashioned way wasn’t going to work, then she wasn’t going to get it.
Still, she had to say something.
Fear knotted her stomach as she stammered, “It’s not too hard, Mr. Elliot. I needed a new start, so I moved.”
“From the locations of your last three jobs — Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, and Boston — it seems like you’ve needed a few new starts. Now, it’s Elgin, Illinois. Some would say moving across country when you don’t have a job lined up is a very stupid thing to do.”
A glint in his eyes that told her he didn’t agree with that statement. She followed that instinct and moved forward, hoping to salvage things. “I’m not worried. If I don’t get this job, I’ll find another.”
If he was immune to her spells, was she also transparent to him? Did he know she was lying? Could he see just how desperate she was? Her fears raced through her head ,breaking her concentration.
“I would say you’re brave and a go-getter.”
Wait. Those were positive attributes. Right?
Stay tuned to these pages and Constancephillips.com for buy links when they become available.
May 15, 2015
Friday Featured Author: Judy Alter
Today’s featured author is Judy Alter!
An award-winning novelist, Judy Alter is the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries series: Skeleton in a Dead Space, No Neighborhood for Old Women, Trouble in a Big Box, Danger Comes Home, Deception in Strange Places, and Desperate for Death. She also writes the Blue Plate Café Mysteries—Murder at the Blue Plate Café and Murder at the Tremont House and The Oak Grove Mysteries which debuted in 2014 with The Perfect Coed. A third Blue Plate, Murder at the Mansion, is due out in the fall.
Her work has been recognized with awards from the Western Writers of America, the Texas Institute of Letters, and the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame. She has been honored with the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement by WWA and inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and the WWA Hall of Fame.
Judy is retired as director of TCU Press, the mother of four grown children and the grandmother of seven. She and her Bordoodle, Sophie, live in Fort Worth, Texas.
Links: Web page | Blogs | Facebook | Twitter |
The Interview
Thanks for having me as a guest, Connie. Fun to be here and get to talk about projects that are near and dear to my heart.
Tell us about your latest release?
Desperate for Death is the sixth Kelly O’Connell novel, set in a historic neighborhood in inner-city Fort Worth, Texas. I keep thinking I’ve run out of ideas for Kelly and she ought to retire—sort of the Cabot Cove syndrome. How many murders can take place in one small neighborhood? But readers really seem to like Kelly, her husband and daughters, her eccentric assistant Keisha, and her ever-growing extended family. So somehow, when a new idea comes across my mind, I usually adapt it to Kelly.
Plotter or pantser?
Definitely a pantser. I start with a general idea and go from there. When a publisher wants a synopsis, it’s a real problem because I know the book will veer off in a different direction than I originally thought. In one Kelly novel I was three-fourths of the way through, and even I still didn’t know who did it. When it hit me who the villain was, I had to go back and write him into enough earlier scenes to make it all seem plausible.
The most difficult part of the publishing process?
My kids say I’m poor at plotting, and sometimes I really do get stuck in the muddy middle. But I truly think marketing is the hardest. I’m finally learning to ignore most of the advice I see online and do what works for me—frequent Facebook and Twitter postings, a daily blog, an author’s page on Facebook, and a frequently updated Web page. Also sporadic attention to Goodreads, with occasional giveaways. Beyond that, I just can’t go. Pinterest is fun but I can’t grasp using it for my books—and it’s a worse time-suck than Facebook. So I do what I can.
The most fun?
The most fun is when suddenly a scene springs into mind, and I know exactly where I’m going, who’s going to do what, and so on. Happens more often than you think. I’m a believer in the old advice that if you listen to your characters, they’ll tell you what’s going to happen. So when they “talk” to me it’s really exciting. If they don’t “talk,” I find my writing dull, usually have to redo it.
What inspired me to write my first book?
I’ve always wanted to write, since I was about ten. And I did—short stories (Seventeen rejected me), news releases, etc., in a job, health articles for the layman. But when I finished graduate school, a friend gave me her mother’s memoir of growing up in early twentieth-century East Texas. I was fascinated and it suddenly hit me that I could turn that material into a novel. It was published in New York as After Pa Was Shot—not my choice of title. I had called it A Year with no Summer, and when I told my mother the New York title, she scoffed and said, “More violence!” But after that I was a novelist, writing some really bad novels that never went anywhere but enough good ones to give me a credible record. I was also pigeon-holed for years as a young-adult novelist.
Writing rituals?
I wish I had a regular schedule, but life gets in the way. I’d love to write in mornings, but errands, grocery store, household stuff, doctors’ appointments often get in the way. And then I really like to have lunch with friends. In the early afternoon I nap so I can be ready for my eight-year-old grandson who goes to school across the street from my house. So serious writing—and reading—are done in the evening.
My go-to author?
I really can’t say. I have several favorites who don’t write the kind of mysteries I do—cozies—so I go to them for diversion. But to study the cozy and find a good story I think I count on July Hyzy’s White House Chef series, Cleo Coyle’s coffee house mysteries, Carolyn Hart’s Death on Demand series, Susan Wittig Albert’s China Bayles series, and Leslie Budewitz’s food-related books. I’m trying all the time to move my reading beyond the cozy series—next on my list is At the Water’s Edge by Sarah Gruen (Water for Elephants and other titles).
Present projects?
Right now, I’m proofing next-to-final galleys of a non-fiction, light-hearted, casual book to be titled Texas is Chili Country—due out next fall from Texas Tech Press. Then I want to go back and begin edits on the third in my Blue Plate Café Mystery Series—to be titled Murder at the Mansion and, I hope, released next fall. Have to work in some marketing and a newsletter, plus I regularly do my neighborhood newsletter, which takes a bit of time.
Future projects?
I have a partially written sequel to The Perfect Coed, and I want to get back to that. Plus I’ve written a novel about Chicago in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The few Chicago publishers I targeted are not open to queries right now, so I have to decide what to do with it. According to one, when they do open up, and if my manuscript should possibly make it through their process, I’d be eighty-five before it was published. I may self-publish to avoid the inevitable long delay. It’s a story I really care about.
Desperate For Murder
Just when Kelly’s life has calmed, she faces yet another of life’s puzzles. Except the pieces in this one don’t fit. First the apartment behind her house is torched, then a string of bizarre “accidents” occur to set her off-balance. Who is stalking her? Where does the disappearance of a young girl and her disreputable boyfriend fit in? And why are two men using the same name? Is the surprise inheritance another part of the puzzle? At a time when she is most vulnerable, Kelly can’t make the pieces fit, but she knows she must protect her daughters. Before Kelly can get the whole picture, she helps the family of a hostage, rescues a kidnap victim and attends a wild and wonderful wedding.
Excerpt:
I started down the driveway and saw out of the corner of my eye movement in the bushes to the side. Just as I screamed, a dark figure ran toward me and before I could move head-butted me in the stomach—so hard that I lost my breath and fell on my back on the driveway. Within seconds Mike and the girls were outside, Gus having heard my scream if they didn’t, and the figure was gone. Mike paused only a second to make sure I was breathing and talking and then took off to find the assailant, calling over his shoulder for Maggie to stay with me and Em to go call 911.
Buy link for Desperate for Death
May 12, 2015
Tuesday Teaser: Judy Alter’s Desperate for Death
Please welcome Judy Alter to the blog today!
An award-winning novelist, Judy Alter is the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries series: Skeleton in a Dead Space, No Neighborhood for Old Women, Trouble in a Big Box, Danger Comes Home, Deception in Strange Places, and Desperate for Death. She also writes the Blue Plate Café Mysteries—Murder at the Blue Plate Café and Murder at the Tremont House and The Oak Grove Mysteries which debuted in 2014 with The Perfect Coed. A third Blue Plate, Murder at the Mansion, is due out in the fall.
Her work has been recognized with awards from the Western Writers of America, the Texas Institute of Letters, and the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame. She has been honored with the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement by WWA and inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and the WWA Hall of Fame.
Judy is retired as director of TCU Press, the mother of four grown children and the grandmother of seven. She and her Bordoodle, Sophie, live in Fort Worth, Texas.
Web page | Blogs | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads
Desperate for Death
Just when Kelly’s life has calmed, she faces yet another of life’s puzzles. Except the pieces in this one don’t fit. First the apartment behind her house is torched, then a string of bizarre “accidents” occur to set her off-balance. Who is stalking her? Where does the disappearance of a young girl and her disreputable boyfriend fit in? And why are two men using the same name? Is the surprise inheritance another part of the puzzle? At a time when she is most vulnerable, Kelly can’t make the pieces fit, but she knows she must protect her daughters. Before Kelly can get the whole picture, she helps the family of a hostage, rescues a kidnap victim and attends a wild and wonderful wedding.
Excerpt:
I started down the driveway and saw out of the corner of my eye movement in the bushes to the side. Just as I screamed, a dark figure ran toward me and before I could move head-butted me in the stomach—so hard that I lost my breath and fell on my back on the driveway. Within seconds Mike and the girls were outside, Gus having heard my scream if they didn’t, and the figure was gone. Mike paused only a second to make sure I was breathing and talking and then took off to find the assailant, calling over his shoulder for Maggie to stay with me and Em to go call 911.
Buy link for Desperate for Death: http://www.amazon.com/Desperate-Death...
May 11, 2015
Kara Leigh Miller Convinces Me to Spill Some Editing Cave Secrets
Today, Kara Leigh Miller has invited me over to Kick Start Your Heart Romance to divulge some secrets from the editing cave.
“I might be the odd duck here, but I always look forward to my edits. I see it as the nitty-gritty time to take my story to a higher, polished level. That doesn’t mean I haven’t received edits that bruised my ego, or made me initially defensive, but when that happens I remember to take a deep breath, close the file, and walk away.”
Read more about editing experiences over at Kick Start Your Heart Romance!
May 4, 2015
Celebrating Houdini – Resurrecting Harry Giveaway and Relaunch Party!
We’re celebrating the relaunch of Resurrecting Harry!!
To start out, I’m giving away one copy to a lucky winner at Goodreads. All you have to do to be entered is click the link below.
Goodreads Book Giveaway

Resurrecting Harry
by Constance Phillips
Giveaway ends May 30, 2015.
See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.
And don’t forget the Facebook party later this week. You can join at the event page, and come back later in the week for fun and game around Resurrecting Harry and also learn about the books from my friends/guest authors: Jenna Rutland, Arlene Hittle, Sissy Wilder, and Ute Carbone.
https://www.facebook.com/events/18434...