I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon.

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Hi, campers! Life has yet to quiet down after the release of Before Ever After. I'm running on four hours of sleep and coffee.
* I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon.*
Oh, dear. Did I just say that out loud? Oops. That's been my mantra since the book came out. If you've seen my tweets and Facebook page, you'll know just how miserably I've been failing at sticking to it.
Fortunately, the universe took pity on me and dropped a lovely book review on my lap to smile at and cuddle with. You can find it in this month's print issue of the Historical Novels Review Magazine.
BOOK REVIEW: BEFORE EVER AFTER
Get ready for the unexpected when you pick up this offbeat, incredibly enjoyable novel, which will transport you on a memorable journey through Europe old and new. American expat Shelley Gallus had put her life on hold after her husband, Max, was killed in a Madrid train bombing three years earlier. When a man who is his spitting
image rings her doorbell in London, claiming to be Max's grandson, Paolo, Shelley refuses to believe this time-bending impossibility. That is, until the similarities between Max and Paolo's beloved and seemingly ageless "Nonno" become too profound to ignore.
She and Paolo board a plane for the Philippines, where he believes Max has resurfaced. Shelley's reminiscences about how she and Max first met form the heart of the novel, and although its structure jumps around a lot, the story is easy to follow. Max had been her guide on a laid-back package tour through the back roads of Europe that Shelley joined on impulse.
As the group's VW van rumbles along from the steps of Montmartre to Switzerland's Emmental Valley, and from the red-roofed skyline of Slovenia's capital to the shadow of Mt. Vesuvius, Max recounts folkloric vignettes from history, each one set further back in time. Each is a perfect little slice of the past featuring ordinary people, their difficult times, and how they fought to save their loved ones. Back on the plane with Paolo, Shelley realizes that perhaps Max's stories were more than that. Perhaps they were his way of telling the truth about himself.
Sotto's deceptively slim debut is as rich and satisfying as one of Max's famous baked egg and cheese breakfasts, minus the calories and cholesterol. Its tone moves from zany to thoughtful to painfully sad and back again, all the while evoking the lengths people travel for love.
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Hope you can pay Sarah a visit on her READING THE PAST blog and say hi
* I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon. I will not stalk Amazon.*

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