Great new series

A series of action/adventure romances in novellas – so short, fast, entertaining!

She drives Victory’s success.
He knows someone is pushing them to fail.
And he thinks it’s her…

Max Landford handles every aspect of operations for Victory, a company dedicated to helping people who fall through the cracks. Troubleshooter Sebastian Braga, who can literally smell lies, has been hired to investigate a series of escalating snafus that threaten Victory’s near-perfect record…and she’s his prime suspect.

Bas didn’t expect to fall not only for the smart, challenging woman in charge, but for the family vibe at Victory itself. He may have finally found a place to belong. But their chemistry keeps getting in the way of his investigation, and Max, thrown off balance by his effect on her, worries the distraction is making her job suffer.

When a near-fatal disaster occurs on Max’s watch, it becomes clear that none of the problems are coincidental. She’s stunned to discover she was her bosses’ prime suspect and that Bas has been lying to her since they met. She’d resign, but the threat is growing, and she and Bas have to work together to save the company they both believe in.

Forced to make decisions that could destroy Victory as thoroughly as their enemy could, they have to face the possibility that their efforts—and their romance—are doomed. Can they keep Victory from going over the edge? Scroll up and click Buy Now to find out!

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Old Favorites

A search through The Wild Rose Press “Fantasy” section gave me these two old favorites. If you’re looking for fun with a touch of mystery and fantasy, pick these up! (And the others in the series as well!)

Desperately Seeking Salvage

by Misty Simon

Category: Fantasy Fiction

Mel Hargrove, eighties enthusiast, is the protector of much more than random cars and broken washing machines. Each piece in her precious junkyard has a ghost attached to it. No one in Frysville is aware of the secret that’s just down the road from them, and she wants to keep it that way. But when she finds naked statues of aging townspeople in the main square, she must figure out if someone, or something, is missing from her junkyard and out causing havoc. With a host of ghosts behind her and her new boyfriend beside her, Mel is ready to take on almost anything. Almost being the operative word…

ISBN: (digital) 9781509209439  

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Every Death You Take

by Misty Simon

Category: Fantasy Fiction

They’ve faced a crazy ghost and a madwoman, gained new friends, and sent foes to their final resting place, but Mel Hargrove and her boyfriend Becker are not sure what to do with this new situation. Every year Mel takes a reliable (and portable) ghost to do a routine bad-mojo cleaning for a lovely woman who lives in town, and all goes well until she comes out to the car and finds a new, unknown ghost sitting in her back seat. How can she be just roaming around unattached to any object, unlike any ghosts Mel knows? Is she a brand-new ghost? Where did she come from? And why is she singing a theme song from an ’80s television show? Mel and Becker will have to find the answers — and the dead girl’s body — before it’s too late to help this lost maiden-ghost in distress.

ISBN: (digital) 9781509215188  

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Spotlight: Victoria Smith

When Mia realizes she’s the only person left in the world, her first thought is that she’s free. After years of abuse by her mother and an accident that makes her financially responsible for her comatose mother’s care, Mia embraces her new life.

Though the solitude was intended to torture Mia, it is the best thing that ever happened to her. She spends the time healing while trying to figure out who she is and what she wants.

Before long, she realizes she’s not truly alone in her paradise. John claims to be her guardian but insists she needs to go back to her old life. How could that possibly be good?

Together they strive to figure out why Mia’s life was manipulated and who is responsible. Their journey uncovers deceit and evil—and their love for each other.

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Victoria Smith wrote her first romance at the age of nine and hid the story from her brothers to avoid being teased. Her mother recently found the folded notebook paper and, if you’re lucky, one day she’ll reveal the hero in that story. Now, she writes urban fantasy, paranormal romance, romantic suspense and women’s fiction – always with a happy, or at least satisfying, ending.

Writing Tips for the Week Ahead

August 5

Birthdays: Guy de Maupassant (1850), Ruth Sawyer (1880), Conrad Aiken (1889), Peter Viereck (1916), Wendell Berry (1934), David Baldacci(1960)

Ruth Sawyer won the 1937 Newbery Medal for “Roller Skates”

Conrad Aiken won the 1930 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

Peter Viereck won the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

Quote:

“We have lived our lives by the assumption that what was good for us would be good for the world. We have been wrong. We must change our lives so that it will be possible to live by the contrary assumption, that what is good for the world will be good for us. And that requires that we make the effort to know the world and learn what is good for it.” ― Wendell Berry, The Long-Legged House

“Especially among Christians in positions of wealth and power, the idea of reading the Gospels and keeping Jesus’ commandments as stated therein has been replaced by a curious process of logic. According to this process, people first declare themselves to be followers of Christ, and then they assume that whatever they say or do merits the adjective “Christian”.” ― Wendell Berry, Blessed are the Peacemakers: Christ’s Teachings of Love, Compassion, and Forgiveness

 “It is precisely the sort of thing I am always trying to do in my writing – to present my unhappy reader with a wide-ranged chaos – of actions and reactions, thoughts, memories and feelings – in the vain hope that at the end he will see that the whole thing represents only one moment, one feeling, one person. A raging, trumpeting jungle of associations, and then I announce at the end of it, with a gesture of despair, ‘This is I!” ― Conrad Aiken, Blue Voyage

Tip: Never be so hard on yourself that you give up. Keep at it. It’s not easy, but it can be done.

Jumpstart: Write about your first day of something: school, college, work, etc. Be specific about your feelings, experience, setting, etc.

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August 6

Birthdays: Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809), Charles Fort (1874), Norma Farber (1909), Constance Heaven (1911), Richard Hofstadter (1916), Barbara Cooney (1917), John Graves (1920), Elizabeth Beresford (1926), Piers Anthony (1934), Diane di Prima (1934), Conor McPherson (1971), Paolo Bacigalupi (1972)

Richard Hofstadter was a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Nonfiction.

Barbara Cooney was a two-time winner of the Caldecott Medal

Paolo Bacigalupi won the Hugo and Nebula awards for his book “The Wind-up Girl”

Quote: The more I write stories for young people, and the more young readers I meet, the more I’m struck by how much kids long to see themselves in stories. To see their identities and perspectives—their avatars—on the page. Not as issues to be addressed or as icons for social commentary, but simply as people who get to do cool things in amazing worlds. -Paolo Bacigalupi

“I believe that children in this country need a more robust literary diet than they are getting. …It does not hurt them to read about good and evil, love and hate, life and death. Nor do I think they should read only about things that they understand. ‘…a man’s reach should exceed his grasp.’ So should a child’s. For myself, I will never talk down to, or draw down to, children. (from the author’s acceptance speech for the Caldecott award)” ― Barbara Cooney, Chanticleer and the Fox

“A good notion for a novel is far too precious to waste; it must be caught the moment it flashes into mental view, or it will escape to the brain of some other writer who really doesn’t deserve it.”― Piers Anthony, On A Pale Horse

Tip: Don’t forget to give back to the universe. Help other authors where you can. Actually, help anybody. Little kindnesses can come back to you in many ways.

Jumpstart: Your character is in a non-motorized boat in the middle of a large lake when a sudden storm blows up… what now?

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August 7

Birthdays: Louis Leakey (1903), James Randi (1928), Betsy Byars (1928), Jerry Poumelle (1933), Garrison Keillor (1942), Anne Fadiman (1953), Vladimir Sorokin (1955)

Betsy Byars won the 1971 Newbery Medal for “Summer of the Swans”. She also won a National Book Award for Children’s Fiction and an Edgar Award.

Jerry Poumelle is best known for “The Mote in God’s Eye” and “Lucifer’s Hammer” (in collaboration with Larry Niven).

Quote: “Those who believe without reason cannot be convinced by reason.”― James Randi

“Anyone who thinks sitting in church can make you a Christian must also think that sitting in a garage can make you a car.” ― Garrison Keillor

“When I type a title page, I hold it and I look at it and I think, I just need four thousand sentences to go with this and I’ll have a book.” – Betsy Byars

Tip: Professional jealousy exists. Try not to let it control you. If a friend gets better contracts, etc. than you, be happy for them. Celebrate their success.

Jumpstart: An asteroid is going to hit Earth and there are only enough ships and room on the moon for a small portion of the population. You’re the person who has to choose. How do you do it and who do you save?

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August 8

Birthdays: Sara Teasdale (1884), Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (1896), Maia Wojciechowska (1927), Valerie Sayers (1952), Jostein Gaarder (1952), Ian Pears (1955), Anastasia M. Ashman (1964)

Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings won the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her book “The Yearling”

Sara Teasdale won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for her book “Love Songs”

Maia Wojciechowska won the 1956 Newbery Medal for “Shadow of a Bull”

Quotes: What a strange world. If you believed in Christianity or Islam, it was called ‘faith’. But if you believed in astrology or Friday the thirteenth it was superstition! Who had the right to call other people’s belief superstition?” – Jostein Gaarder

 “We cannot live without the Earth or apart from it, and something is shrivelled in a man’s heart when he turns away from it and concerns himself only with the affairs of men”

― Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Cross Creek

Tip: Reward yourself even for small victories. Finish your first novel? Celebrate. Submit? Yay! Contract? That calls for a real celebration. Be sure to enjoy the small steps along the way as well as the big ones. Even if it’s something as small as “I wrote today”.

Jumpstart: Your character wakes without the ability to communicate with those around her. What does she do?

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August 9

Birthdays: Izaak Walton (1593), John Dryden (1631), Jean Piaget (1896), Pamela Travers (1899), Tove Jansson (1914), Philip Larkin (1922), Daniel Keyes (1927), Robert Shaw (1927), Seymour Simon (1931), Graeme Gibson (1934), Shirlee Busbee (1941), Pat McKissack (1944), Barbara Delinsky (1945), John Varley (1947), Jonathan Kellerman (1949), Gene Yang (1973)

Pamela (P.L.) Travers is best known for her book “Mary Poppins”

Daniel Keyes is best known for his Hugo and Nebula-winning work “Flowers for Algernon”

Quote: “The principle goal of education in the schools should be creating men and women who are capable of doing new things, not simply repeating what other generations have done; men and women who are creative, inventive and discoverers, who can be critical and verify, and not accept, everything they are offered.” ― Jean Piaget

“All good fiction involves an element of mystery – ideally, the reader should be compelled to turn the page in order to find out what happens next. Crime novels use extreme events – matters of life and death – to catalyze the story. That kind of intensity appeals to me.” – Jonathan Kellerman

Tip: Put the book you’ve just finished writing away for at least a week. Watch movies, read other books, take long walks, relax. Or, better yet, start your next book. Do anything other than look at your manuscript. That way, you can come back to it with a fresh eye.

Jumpstart: P.L. Travers was born on August 9, 1899. Never heard of her? I’d be willing to bet you’ve heard of Mary Poppins. Travers wrote several books about everybody’s favorite nanny. Imagine you’re a friend of Mary Poppins. Who would you be and what would your quirk be? No fair picking something from the book or movie. How do you know Mary?

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August 10

Birthdays: Curt Siodmak (1902), Ward Moore (1903), Jorge Amado (1912), Nancy Buckingham (1924), Barry Unsworth (1930), Mark Doty (1953), Susan Lewis (1956), Suzanne Collins (1962)

Mark Doty won the 2008 National Book Award for Poetry for “Fire to Fire”

Suzanne Collins is best known for her trilogy “Hunger Games”

Quote: “But I mind fanatics, the ones who try to impose their beliefs on you.” ― Susan Lewis, A Class Apart

“Get to know your characters. Don’t be afraid to listen to them. In fact, if they aren’t talking to you, you’ve got a problem.” Susan Lewis

“Have fun with an opening line. You don’t have to use it in the final draft, but it’s a good way to start.” – Susan Lewis

Tip: Plot can take two basic forms, or even a combination of the two. It will usually be either a three-act structure (beginning, middle, end), or, from Joseph Campbell’s writings, be a mythic journey. It can also be a combination of the mythic journey within the three-act structure.

Jumpstart: You’re going to visit a favorite relative you haven’t seen in years. You’ve kept in touch by phone and letter, but not visually. When you see him/her, you’re shocked by their appearance. Why?

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August 11

Birthdays: Alex Haley (1921), Andre Dubus (1936), Joanna Cole (1944), Don Freeman (1908)

Tip: We do research to get our facts straight, but don’t get lost in the research. You can while away an entire afternoon looking things up. Find your one item, note it and move on. Or mark the passage for a later time.

Quote: “The trick is not in becoming a writer, it is in staying a writer. Day after week after month after year.” – Harlan Ellison

Jumpstart: What are your top five…anything (desserts, music, movies, etc.). Why are they your top five? What is it about them that you like so much?

New Book up for Preorder

Fighting a friend is never easy. Killing one is even harder.

Facing down an ancient evil, special agent Elizabeth St. John is outnumbered, outgunned, and outmatched. Local cop Kaeden Pike is the perfect choice to help her but letting him—or anyone—into her life and heart is the most difficult challenge she’s ever faced. Kaeden has never found the one person who fit him, until now. But how can he convince Liz that they make the perfect pair, especially when the end of the world is coming? Someone has to gather the forces of good to win this fight, but when Liz accepts the role, she finds that being alone isn’t a choice she has to make. Almost losing Kaeden to the evil who already took the only other person she’s ever trusted convinces her to open her heart and let him in…where he belongs.

ebook only – paperback to come later

Amazon $3.99

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Award Finalist: Gini Rifkin

Finalist Colorado Author’s League for Historical and Romance

Break Heart Canyon

by Gini Rifkin

Category: Romance / Western

Unearthing artifacts in Colorado sounded like easy money to Ryker Landry. Then he met the woman who owned the land. Una MacLaren vows no fortune hunter will desecrate the ancient relics of Break Heart Canyon—even if the man is a handsome scoundrel. Fighting to keep her goat farm afloat as local cattlemen hatch deadly schemes to make sure she fails, Una has enough to worry about. Captivated by the courageous redhead, Ryker joins forces with Una and her deerhound, MacTavish. But what does he desire most—the woman or the artifacts? When the mythical white cougar again prowls the rocky cliffs, the legend of Break Heart Canyon draws them into a web of danger. Only daring and blind trust can save them.

ISBN: (digital) 9781509244591  ISBN: (print) 9781509244584

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Indie Bound

Spotlight: Susie Black

Mermaid Swimwear CEO Butch Oldham was an equal opportunity scoundrel who screwed anyone and everyone in his wake. So, the question wasn’t who wanted the bastard dead. The question was, who didn’t? After Mermaid sales exec Holly Schlivnik finds colleague Queenie Levine standing over Oldham’s battered corpse nailed to a fabric cutting table with a big honkin’ pair of cutting shears plunged deep into his chest, the cops soon recover Queenie’s hidden blood-soaked sweater, discover her stormy relationship with the victim, and her public threats to make Butch pay for destroying Mermaid by stealing it blind. When Queenie is arrested for Butch’s murder, Holly jumps into action to flesh out the real killer. But the trail has more twists and turns than a slinky, and nothing turns out the way the wise-cracking, irreverent amateur sleuth thinks it will as she tangles with a clever killer hellbent for revenge.

Amazon:      https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0C62HRJXM

Barnes & Noble:  Death by Cutting Table by Susie Black | eBook | Barnes & Noble® (barnesandnoble.com)

ID INFORMATION

ISBN NUMBERS:

PAPERBACK ISBN #: 978-1-5092-4845-2

DIGITAL ISBN #: 978-1-5092-4846-9

Named Best US Author of the Year by N. N. Lights Book Heaven, award-winning cozy mystery author Susie Black was born in the Big Apple but now calls sunny Southern California home. Like the protagonist in her Holly Swimsuit Mystery Series, Susie is a successful apparel sales executive. Susie began telling stories as soon as she learned to talk. Now she’s telling all the stories from her garment industry experiences in humorous mysteries.

She reads, writes, and speaks Spanish, albeit with an accent that sounds like Mildred from Michigan went on a Mexican vacation and is trying to fit in with the locals. Since life without pizza and ice cream as her core food groups wouldn’t be worth living, she’s a dedicated walker to keep her girlish figure. A voracious reader, she’s also an avid stamp collector. Susie lives with a highly intelligent man and has one incredibly brainy but smart-aleck adult son who inexplicably blames his sarcasm on an inherited genetic defect.

Looking for more? Contact Susie at:

Website: www.authorsusieblack.com

E-mail: mysteries_@authorsusieblack.com

REVIEW:

4****

Thoughts: Holly Schlivnik is at it again. When her friend Queenie is accused of murdering Mermaid Swimwear CEO Butch Oldham, there’s nothing Holly can do but help her out. Which she does. There are so many suspects that they have to go through. Unfortunately, they do discover who the killer is…much to their detriment.

What I liked: The author’s usual humor is evident in this fourth book in the series. You don’t need to have rad the previous ones to know what’s going on in this one, but it might help to set the background. I love the coroner’s nickname (Snip) and how she got it from Holly. I also enjoyed the ending and Holly’s new investment. Plus Holly and her bevy of men coming (or not coming) to her rescue is cute.

What I didn’t like: Very little. It’s a good story with a satisfying ending.

Recommendation: Recommended.

Disclaimer: Disclosure of Material: I received a final and/or advanced reader copy of this book with the hope that I will leave my unbiased opinion. I was not required to leave a review, positive or otherwise, and my opinions are just that… My Opinions. I am posting this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising”

New Book:

Haven’t read this one yet, but I love the Wylder series of books. And Roni Denholtz is a really good author. Check it out at The Wild Rose Press.

One of These Wylder Nights

by Roni Denholtz

Category: Romance / Historical / 20th C

Betsey Chalmers comes west to Wylder, Wyoming from New York City. Her mission: to help her cousin Joe and his business partner Vaughn discover the location of the legendary Spaniard’s mine, rumored to contain a huge amount of gold. She intends to use seances to help in their quest.As she and Vaughn work together, she falls for him. But Vaughn is convinced Betsey is out of his league.Can they locate the mine while finding the greatest treasure of all: true love?

ISBN: (digital) 9781509248346  ISBN: (print) 9781509248353

Available through these fine retailers…

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BooksAMillion

Indie Bound