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Showing posts with label Pump Up Your Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pump Up Your Book. Show all posts

Sunday, July 26, 2020

ANNA INCOGNITO by Laura Preble






ANNA INCOGNITO

Laura Preble

Literary Fiction/Women's Fiction



Lots of narrative pull...wonderfully complicated. - Jincy Willett, author of The Writing Class, and anthologized by David Sedaris in Children Playing Before a Statue of Hercules.



Anna
Colin Beck knows all too well what can happen when things go wrong
really wrong. So, she's spent the last several years living an extremely
regimented life at home, doing everything she can to avoid subjecting
herself to the torments of a germ-infested world. Everything must be
just so, and when things don't go to plan, she punishes her own
body...and that still hasn't helped alleviate her pain.



After a
chance meeting in a laundromat, she finds herself completely infatuated
with another person, something that hasn't happened to her in a long
time. Dr. Edward Denture is seemingly brilliant and magnetic...and in
the blink of an eye, she's attending intense somatic therapy sessions as
his newest client. The more he draws from her, the further their
relationship grows, until it's crossed countless lines and consumed Anna
with a fierce toxicity. And before she knows it, she finds herself
buckled into the driver's seat of a powder-blue El Dorado for a solo
cross-country road trip, determined to stop his wedding. It's a trip
that will test every limitation she's ever set for herself, and though
she's planned extensively for all contingencies, there are some twists
and turns you just can't prepare for.

With wry observations on the intersection of luck, fate, and life, Anna Incognito is a searing, darkly witty exploration of what it means to be alive.



PRAISE FOR ANNA INCOGNITO

IndieReader.com: 5/5
"Rich with witticism in the face of painful realities and evoking
lyrical truisms throughout, from of a rating scale of 1 – 5 this novel
is so off-the-charts good, it deserves a 10."
 LINK HERE



OnlineBookClub.com: 4/4
"The writing was captivating...This book would be great for readers who
are struggling with mental health or for those trying to understand it
better. Are you ready to go for a drive with Anna?. Buckle up, because
you are in for the ride of your life!"
 LINK HERE



Kirkus Reviews:  "The
protagonist’s acerbic wit and mordant tone work well in the difficult
material in Preble’s unconventional road novel. A razor-sharp, oddly
fun  romp through the American West."
 LINK HERE

ORDER YOUR COPY

Mascot Books → https://mascotbooks.com/mascot-marketplace/buy-books/fiction/romance/anna-incognito/

Amazon → https://amzn.to/3gWo7wf

 Barnes & Noble → https://bit.ly/2MtLLSV

 











Laura Preble is the award-winning author of the young adult series, Queen Geek Social Club (Penguin/Berkley Jam), which includes the novels Queen Geeks in Love and Prom Queen Geeks. Her novel, Out, dealt with the concept of LGBTQ rights within a young adult dystopia; Alex Sanchez, author of Rainbow Boys, says "Out explores
an intriguing, mind-bending, and challenging portrait of an upside-down
world that turns the tables on homophobia, acceptance, and love.” She
has won a Kurt Vonnegut Fiction Prize, and has been published in North American Review, Writer’s Digest, Hysteria, and NEA Today.

WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website:  www.preblebooks.com

Twitter: www.twitter.com/LauraPreble

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/laura.preble1  




http://www.pumpupyourbook.com



Wednesday, July 8, 2020

HOW THE DEER MOON HUNGERS by Susan Wingate




HOW THE DEER MOON HUNGERS

Susan Wingate

YA/Coming of Age/Mainstream Fiction



For those who enjoy reading books like Where the Crawdads Sing and My Sister’s Keeper

MACKENZIE FRASER witnesses a drunk driver mow down her seven-year-old
sister and her mother blames her. Then she ends up in juvie on a
trumped-up drug charge. Now she’s in the fight of her life…on the
inside! And she’s losing.



HOW THE DEER MOON HUNGERS is a coming of age story about loss, grief, and the power of love.

ORDER YOUR COPY

Amazon → https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08676VMT3





PART ONE

the beginning

“a flower knows, when its butterfly will return, and if the moon walks out, the sky will

understand; but now it hurts, to watch you

leave so soon, when I don't know, if you will ever come back.” ―Sanober Khan

1

The Day Before

I, one Miss MacKenzie Becca Fraser, was never one for saying fuck much. But as with life, things change.

The year before, Dad removed Tessa’s training wheels. The bike had grown up, was halfway between a tricycle and a teenager’s bike. Her eyes glowed when the trainers came off. Her smile? Buoyant. My bike was what Tessa called a big girl bike—a beach cruiser in Tiffany box blue. Mine didn’t have ribbons shooting out of the handles. Can you imagine me going to school with ribbons out of the handles? My peeps would never let me live it down.

The evening before what people called the worst thing that’s happened on the island since Becca Winthrop went and flopped over dead of heart failure at the liquor store, we set off on a night ride—Tessa and me. We left Mom at home stirring up dust with her favorite electric broom. Tuesday was a lazy fall night, one with the sun and moon in competition for the evening sky; with the sun being selfish for time, trying to hang on to day even though it knew it should just stop shining, give up, and go away. We’d stuck playing cards in the spokes of our tires to add to clicking crickets, tree frogs chirping, a not-so-distant fox hacking out a cough to alert its scattered pack of food found—a doomed rabbit or kitty kibbles left out on someone’s porch. Up the hill, deep in the woods, an owl’s Psalm echoed back from its mate as if they were holding invisible hands across the horizon, not wanting to let go. Their song played while we rode.

We’d split the deck of cards, each one clipping twenty-six onto our tire spokes to deter animals from darting out into the lane ahead. Because that was all we needed—to crash into a raccoon crossing the street. Not much good for the coon either. But the road was deserted, and I kept Tessa in front, keeping my eye out for her.

Tessa rode her bike fast like she was angling to lasso the moon, which sat high at the end of the road over Old Man Johnson’s cattle farm. The big, yellow ball lolled around atop a silhouette of gossamer evergreens framing a large swatch of grazing land.

Wind fluttered that silky sable ponytail of hers as we came off the downhill side of False Bay Drive where the road at the end of summer stripes a path of thirsty grass along the strait, where cows graze in a pasture trimmed by a stand of golden poplars, crooked and bending toward the north sky away from steady winds coming off the water. Most people think that on our island in the Pacific Northwest, we live in slickers and galoshes year-round. But that’s the secret we have. Seattle gives our island a bad reputation, makes us soggy when we’re not. We live in what meteorologists call a banana belt or a rain shadow, so our island lacks the lush, drippy rainforests often found in other parts of the Pacific Northwest.

Each downstroke of my pedals matched rhythm with the plastic ribbons whipping off Tessa’s handlebars, whizzing like a thousand bees around her hands. When she skidded to a halt in front of me, I yanked left, my wheels slipping as I swerved to miss her, no doubt balding a spot on the tire’s rubber.

“What’s wrong with you?” I demanded, anger flashing hot in my cheeks and pooling into my chest.

Tessa didn’t seem to hear me. She was gaping up at the sky with that moon gaping back at her.

“What?” I repeated, but this time we were both fixed on the dang moon.

“Do you see it, Mac? The deer?” Tess was in the habit of starting, finishing, and rereading Thurber’s The White Deer for, like, the millionth time—a read way above her grade. In fact, she often fell asleep with the stupid book open-faced on her chest. Then the next morning she’d stick a crow feather in the book to mark her place and set it on her nightstand, ready for her evening read.

“There’s no deer in the moon, dork, but there might be a man if you look hard enough. You need to read real stuff. You’re getting weird.”

“See its horns?”

“Antlers.” I told her. “A hungry moon like that likes to eat seven-year-olds for dinner.” “Nuh-uh,” Tessa answered.

I rolled my bike backward, parallel to hers, close enough to sneak my hand around the back of her head and yank her ponytail.

 “Don’t,” Tessa yelped.

I enjoyed hearing her whiny kid voice. Mom called it plaintive. But Mom liked to make things sound more sophisticated. Her beaten-up chest of drawers was a chiffonier. The mossy stone patio, a pergola. Mom wanted more out of life, and I suspected she harbored a few regrets. “Our island didn’t hold a candle to New York City,” she’d complained one night. “Not even to Seattle. At least Seattle has an international flair,” she’d said.

Mom could have been a model if she’d pursued it, but she’d fallen in love, had kids. The what-happenedto-my-life syndrome seemed to have snagged her in a net she couldn’t get out of. She often talked about things she would do after Tess and I were out of school, when the house and her life were her own again. A longing filling her words, just enough for me to sense an underpinning of resentment. Her gaze would shift to the window, outside, away and away, but not for long; and she would chuckle. Then, she’d sit upright and say, “Oh, we wish on stars and mushroom caps for moon dust and fairies.” I don’t know where she got that phrase, but Mom always trotted it out when she got wistful. Maybe it came from Gramma Kiki. Who knows? It really doesn’t matter, but the oddity of a phrase like that will stick with you.

And although our island boasted an international school—Spring Street School—our town was mostly country, with nothing international about it. We didn’t even have a stoplight. Just stop signs and, of late, one abused turnabout.

When I glanced sideways at Tessa, she was straddling her bike as she stared up at the moon. I noted a certain otherness in her expression, as if we weren’t alone, as if the ghost of that deer she’d spotted in the moon had plopped onto her shoulders and was weighing her down. Her eyes seemed dark with worry and as deep as a pair of bottomless wells, shimmering with unshed tears. I think about that worry sometimes. It haunts me still.

“Come on,” I said. “We’d better get home. Mom’s already in a snit.”

“I wonder what the deer eats, Mac. Do you think it’s hungry?”

“One thing it doesn’t eat, Tess, is cheese!” I said, laughing, but Tessa didn’t get it. She didn’t know then, or ever, about the man in the moon or about the cheese the moon was allegedly made of.

I used to like the word allegedly. I’d learned it as a vocabulary word at the start of my junior year, and I got it right on a pop quiz in homeroom spelling. The teacher even had me write my sentence on the board: Gemma allegedly hid the pencil from me, but there was no evidence to prove that for sure. The sentences I would write with this word now could not be more different: I was allegedly taking care of Tessa when we went to the park the day after looking at the deer moon. And I was allegedly not watching when the car hit her.  Allegedly became an important word for me after Tessa died. It’s weird to recall how much I liked the word in my junior year but hated it afterward when I heard the cop use it.

Allegedly,” he’d said, “the younger one was in the older sister’s care.” And then, as though no one understood, “The older one was supposed to be watching the younger one.” He said one as if we were buttons on a conveyor belt at some stupid button factory. The jerk.

After Tess died, I started counting the days of the moon as it sketched out a path in the sky from crescent to half to gibbous to crescent again. I called it moon spying, and every month when the moon was ripe, I used to rush outside to search that big ol’ cheese wheel. Maybe I’d spy Tessa riding on the back of the deer ghost, but mostly I just hoped she might see me searching the moon for a glimpse of her.













Susan Wingate is a #1 Amazon bestselling award-winning
author of over fifteen novels. Susan writes across fiction and
nonfiction genres and often sets her stories in the Pacific Northwest
where she is the president of a local authors association. She writes
full-time and lives in Washington State with her husband, Bob.

WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website: www.susanwingate.com

Blog:    www.susanwingate.com/blog

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanwingate

Facebook: www.facebook.com/authorsusanwingate





http://www.pumpupyourbook.com
 



Wednesday, July 1, 2020

THE CHRISTIAN CHRISTMAS CONDITION by Scott Rankin





THE CHRISTIAN CHRISTMAS CONDITION
Scott Rankin

Christian / Nonfiction



Our Lord desires that we become more Christ-like every day (1
Corinthians 11:1). To accomplish this goal, He tells us to renew our
minds (Romans 12:2).  But how do the Christmas holidays help accomplish
this goal when all the busyness and stress makes it hard to focus all
our attention on Christ and rest in His peace?  In an easy-to-read
format, The Christian Christmas Condition asks the question, “How does
our Lord feel about Christmas today?” encouraging Christians of all ages
to examine Christmas-time traditions from God’s perspective.  Filled
with bible references, this study will boost your faith, increase your
knowledge, and strengthen you to fully honor Jesus in the midst of
Christmas, traditions, and busy holiday activities.  This powerful book
further encourages all Christians to become more Christ-like in our
thinking and our actions each, and every day of the year… not just in
the winter holidays!

ORDER YOUR COPY




Merry Christmas! Put your holiday thinking caps on, because we’re warming up with two fun challenges. First, I’m going to give you three sets of lyrics. Your job is to see how much of each song you can remember. If you feel like singing out loud, be my guest. Ready?



  • Oh, you better watch out, you better not…
  • Rudolph the…
  • I’m dreaming of a…
            Now, let’s get into the Christmas spirit with our final exercise: when I say “go,” quickly list the top ten things you associate with the Christmas season. You may include past memories or present-day traditions; anything related to Christmas, and there are no wrong answers. This exercise is about the first things that pop into your mind, so complete your list as quickly as you can. You can use the space provided below or get your own sheet of paper, but please don’t skip this brief exercise, as you’ll want to reference your list later!

            When you’re done, we’ll continue on the next page. Ready… Set… Go!





Here are a few popular answers: Jingle Bells, cutting out paper snowflakes, snowball fights, writing letters to Santa Claus, vacation from school, mistletoe, sitting by a warm fireplace on a cold night, trimming the Christmas tree, hanging stockings, setting out cookies and milk for Santa Claus, candlelight mass, Christmas lights on houses, and family reunions… Some of our fondest memories circulate around this time of year!

I once asked a woman named Lisa to do this exercise out loud, and she did an amazing job of listing a large number of family-related activities. However, not one thing she listed had any correlation with Jesus, His birth, worship, angels announcing Jesus’ birth, or a manger scene. Now, Lisa loves the Lord, but I asked her why she had so many other thoughts come to mind before Jesus—and her answer unveiled the perfect premise for this book (thank you, Lisa). She said, “I guess we’re all just conditioned to think that way.” So now I ask, if we’ve really been conditioned… what condition are Christians in during Christmas?



 What did your top ten list look like? Did Jesus make the cut? Now, let’s add another layer to this “top 10” list exercise. When you see your kids or any immediate family member today, ask them to take the same challenge. Their answers may astonish you (partly because they do not have the chance to read the introduction of this book beforehand). Their responses should be wonderfully raw.

As you compare other people’s responses, where did Jesus get put in the order? Was He first? Was He in the middle? Was He in the back? Or was He left out altogether? If you found anywhere through the results of your own experiment that Jesus did not dominate or top your list, or those of your friends and family members, then let’s examine why together.



You will find that there are a variety of different views among people about Christmas and its traditions. We’ve all heard phrases like:

  • “Jesus… the reason for the season”
  • “Let’s put Christ back into Christmas”
  • “We need to save Christmas”
  • “Happy Holidays” (instead of “Merry Christmas”)
            Some in the body of Christ regard Christmas as a pagan holiday, believing we should not observe it at all. Many contend that Christmas was created to honor baby Jesus and it’s very important to keep this tradition so we can worship Him. Others still will point out that Christmas has now become so commercialized that we just need to get back to what is really important.

So, what is the real reason for the Christmas season? How did Christmas celebrations begin? How does God want us to use Christmas to worship and honor His Son? These are some great questions, and that is what we are going to cover in this book.

            When Lisa suggested so appropriately that we have been “conditioned,” it simply implies that your surroundings, history, and family traditions have trained you to think a certain way. Truth be told, you were probably born into family traditions and influenced greatly as a child by your surroundings to put presents, the Christmas tree, or Santa first, all the while letting God and Jesus share the spotlight every now and then. In doing so, you may find that Jesus, over time, inadvertently moved out of the first priority position because of conditioned habits during this season.

But don’t lose heart—conditioned does not mean permanent. God tells us that through Him, we can renew our minds! And with a renewed mind comes an overflow of blessings.



            So, sit back and enjoy while we study “The Christian Christmas Condition.”























Scott Rankin graduated with a degree in music education and spent his
20’s and 30’s as a successful music director, visual designer for
marching groups, and a professional clinician for high school and
college music programs.




In 2009 he was injured in a bicycle accident where he was instantly
paralyzed. Today as a healing quadriplegic, Scott’s passion for teaching
has been re-focused from music to writing Christian books and public
speaking.




Scott Rankin is a gifted educator and effective public speaker. His
ability to take complex subject matter, break it into bite-size pieces,
and re-assemble those through simple, logical, and enjoyable teaching
techniques makes his material easy to understand and hard to forget!


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website:  https://www.ScottRankin.com


Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ChristianCondition








http://www.pumpupyourbook.com



Monday, June 15, 2020

Grave Consequences by Lena Gregory




GRAVE CONSEQUENCES

By Lena Gregory

Cozy Mystery



Cass Donovan is reminded that you can’t believe everything you hear, especially when it comes from the dead . . .



When stories begin circulating of a centuries-old ghost haunting the
Bay Island lighthouse, Cass is caught up in mystical happenings of her
own, with countless voices from the beyond all clamoring for her
attention with dire warnings. But before she has a chance to learn
whether there’s a connection between the rumored ghost and her restless
visitors, the lighthouse keeper mysteriously falls to his death, and
Cass’s reputation for communing with the dead lands her right in the
middle of the police investigation.



Cass knows the victim was no saint, as he made little effort to hide
his philandering ways from his wife or anyone else, and often acted out
with no thought for the feelings of others. But had he finally gone too
far, or were there more menacing motives behind his murder? As Cass
begins building a list of suspects, including the man’s supposedly
grieving wife and a mysterious new woman in town, she also turns her ear
to those otherworldly voices, hoping for a clue. And as she begins to
close in on the culprit, she realizes too late that if she’s not
careful, she’ll soon be communicating with the dead in person . . .

BUY LINKS

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0881XMPB2/ref=sr_1_6?dchild=1&keywords=lena+gregory&qid=1588623125&sr=8-6

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/grave-consequences-lena-gregory/1136968677?ean=2940162632931

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/grave-consequences-10

Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1019948


Other Books by Lena Gregory





A worn book sat on a stand beneath a glass case. A card beside it read “Kitty Garrison’s Journal—the life of a lighthouse keeper’s daughter.”

“It doesn’t look like much.” Bee crossed the rope barrier set up to keep patrons from getting too close, then leaned close to the glass and squinted.

“It looks like a diary.” Cass tilted her head to try to read what was inside the book but to no avail.

Bee opened the case.

“What are you doing, Bee? You can’t open that.” Stephanie shot out a hand and pushed the small door closed.

“Well, then, how am I supposed to know what’s in it?”

“Easy,” Stephanie said. “You wait for Amelia to come back and ask her if she’ll let you read it.”

“Yeah, but your way, she might say no. At least my way I can just apologize after the fact. And then we would have seen the inside of the book, maybe gained valuable information on how to find the treasure.” He grinned. “Much better to apologize later than to ask permission now.”

“Is that what this is about, Bee?” Cass wouldn’t mind having a peek in the book, either, but she wasn’t about to upset Stephanie. “You want to find the treasure?”

“You bet I do.”

And somehow Cass had a feeling Levi had counted on that when he’d shared the story. “Question is, if Fred is trying to find the treasure, what does Levi have to gain by making sure everyone under the sun—or at least those living on and probably visiting Bay Island—know about it?”

Bee shrugged off her concern. “Maybe he doesn’t want to see Fred find the treasure? Not that I can blame him. Fred DiCarlo is not a nice man.”

“I suppose, but still.” Cass looked in the direction Levi had gone.

Voices carried into the museum, and Bee deftly hopped the security rope, then propped a hand on his hip and leaned against the railing, possibly going for a nonchalant pose that ended up looking more like I just got caught doing something I shouldn’t have been doing.

When the group headed past the museum entrance and up the stairs, presumably toward the third floor, Cass tugged Bee’s arm. “Come on, we’ll climb the lighthouse before it gets too late. We can always come back here afterward, if there’s time, and talk to Amelia. Maybe she’ll let you read some of the book once everyone’s gone.”

Bee stared longingly at the journal, then sighed. “Sure thing. Whatever you say, Mum.”

They headed out of the museum and followed the concrete walkway toward the lighthouse. The salty sea breeze rustled the bushes lining the path. The mild wind carried the softest hint of a whisper, tantalizingly close, yet just out of reach.

Cass paused. An illusion created by the wind funneling along the walkway? It had to be. It’s not like she was giving a reading, and that’s the only time the voices called to her, assailed her as they competed for her attention. At least, that’s the only time they’d reached out to her so far.

Stephanie looked over her shoulder. “Are you coming, Cass?”

Bee stopped and turned, then frowned. “Is something wrong?”

Shaking off whatever apprehension had stopped her, Cass moved on. “Sorry, daydreaming, I guess.”

“It’s a beautiful day. I bet you’ll be able to see for miles.” Stephanie dug through her bag and pulled out her phone.

“Oh, definitely.” Bee pointed past the bushes and over the choppy waters of the bay. “Look, you can see the south fork of Long Island from here.”

The height of the bluff the lighthouse stood on offered an amazing view across the bay. A foghorn sounded from somewhere in the distance, seagulls circled and dove, occasionally coming up with a prize, and the ferry chugged toward Long Island, only about half full from the looks of it.

They entered the tower and started up the circular staircase, the clang of their shoes against the iron steps echoing off the sandstone walls.

“Not what it seems . . .”

“What do you mean?” Cass studied Bee’s back as he climbed a few steps ahead of her, though how he did it in his signature platform shoes was beyond her.

He paused and looked back at her over his shoulder. “Huh?”

“You said something, but I didn’t quite catch—”

“Stop.” The man’s voice seemed to come from all around her at once.

This time she’d been staring straight at Bee, and he’d been in the middle of saying something else when the male voice had interrupted him.

A woman’s voice joined the man’s. “Why don’t you . . .”

A chorus of voices answered in unison.

Cass shook her head, willing the voices to retreat. “Nothing, Bee. Sorry, I thought you said something.”

Though the scowl remained firmly imprinted on his features, Bee turned and resumed his trek up the stairs, seemingly content to ignore whatever was happening with her. Probably for the best, anyway. If he thought for one minute ghosts haunted the lighthouse, he’d probably plow both Cass and Stephanie over in his haste to leave.

“Watch . . . go . . . stop . . . please . . .” The voices continued unsolicited, demanding, insistent.

“What do you want?” Cass yelled and covered her ears.

Bee stopped again and looked back. “Are you sure you’re all right?”

“Yes, please . . .” She lowered her hands, taking a firm grip on the railing to steady her shaking hands. “Just go.”

Bee shook his head and picked up the pace.

Fear skittered along Cass’s spine as she tried to open herself up, make sense of what the voices wanted from her. She focused intently on one voice, that of a man, more demanding that the rest, just a bit louder. “. . . lighthouse . . . rocks . . . look . . . back . . .”

Look back? Look back where? Did he mean literally? She glanced over her shoulder at Stephanie bringing up the rear. She seemed okay. Maybe figuratively? Look back. But at what? The past? The story of the lighthouse keeper, maybe. Is that what the voice was trying to tell her?

They stepped onto the observation deck, the wall of windows opening up an even more incredible view than offered from the bluff. She closed her eyes and concentrated.

“You know,” Bee said, “you could try to block the voices out, ignore them. That’s what I do when I don’t feel like hearing what people are saying.”

“Bee!” Stephanie’s mouth dropped open.

He held up a hand, his eyes wide, as if just realizing what he’d said. “Other people, I mean. You know, when I don’t want to hear what other people are saying. Never you two.”

Stephanie pointed a finger past Cass at him. “That had better be what you meant, buddy.”

Bee grinned and held up both hands in a gesture of surrender. “Of course that’s what I meant.”

“Uh-huh.” Eyeing him out of the corner of her eye, Stephanie returned to admiring the view. She snapped a few pictures with her phone.

Cass tried to ignore the bickering. She massaged her temples. If she didn’t relax, she wasn’t going to get anything.

Bee continued offering advice. “And if ignoring the voices doesn’t work, you can try doing what I do when I walk into the diner, or the deli, or Tony’s Bakery when there is an undeniable undercurrent of excitement rippling through the air, and I know before I take another step there’s really good gossip to be had.”

“What’s that?” At that point, she’d try anything to shut them up.

He turned his back to the view, leaning against the railing that would keep anyone from falling through the circular wall of windows. “Narrow them down one at a time, eliminating those that don’t seem to know anything, those who are just hanging out trying to make sense of what’s going on the same as you are, and continue to whittle away at them, ignoring those you dismiss in favor of those who seem to have knowledge, then focus in on them until you get the message.”

Cass moved to the railing lining the circular platform and leaned her hands on it. Choppy waves battered the coastline, washing up onto the large boulders lining the bluff and beach, sea foam bubbling over between crevices.

“Lighthouse . . . away . . . back . . . push . . .”

She couldn’t grab it. Something, though, so close. Like something just at the edge of her awareness, something she should be able to . . . She closed her eyes, allowing the voices to wash through her.

“Stay . . . back . . . stay away . . .”

Her eyes shot open. “I’ve got it. I know what the voices are trying to tell me.”

Bee folded his arms over his chest, no doubt over any talk of the paranormal. “Oh, and what’s that?”

Cass tried to swallow, her mouth gone to paste, and glanced from him to Stephanie and back again. “Stay away from the lighthouse.”

Bee groaned and returned his attention to the view of the bay.

Stephanie studied her. “Do you think—”

Movement in her peripheral vision caught Cass’s attention. Her gaze shifted to the third floor of the keeper’s house just as someone tumbled out the window toward the rocks below.

A silhouette backed away from the window, barely noticeable, a shadow among shadows as it slid away into darkness. Was the vision real? Or was she witnessing some past tragedy that had played out time and time again over the past couple of centuries? Hadn’t Levi said Samuel Garrison had been found dead on the rocks below the lighthouse, the very same jetty someone had just fallen from the keeper’s house onto?

Muffled screams in the distance assured her the man lying on the rocks was real enough, but what of the silhouette she’d seen as the man fell?

























Lena Gregory is the author of the Bay Island Psychic Mysteries, which take place on a small island between the north and south forks of Long Island, New York, and the All-Day Breakfast Café Mysteries, which are set on the outskirts of Florida’s Ocala National Forest.


Lena grew up in a small town on the south shore of eastern Long
Island. She recently relocated to Clermont, Florida with her husband,
three kids, son-in-law, and four dogs. Her hobbies include spending time
with family, reading, jigsaw puzzles, and walking. Her love for writing
developed when her youngest son was born and didn’t sleep through the
night. She works full time as a writer and a freelance editor and is a
member of Sisters in Crime.




To learn more about Lena and her latest writing endeavors, visit her website at http://www.lenagregory.com/ and be sure to sign up for her newsletter http://lenagregory.us12.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=9765d0711ed4fab4fa31b16ac&id=49d42335d1.


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website: http://www.lenagregory.com/


Twitter: https://twitter.com/LenaGregory03


Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Lena.Gregory.Author/?fref=ts



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Wednesday, May 27, 2020

The Marvelous Mechanical Man by Rie Sheridan Rose





THE MARVELOUS MECHANICAL MAN

By Rie Sheridan Rose

Steampunk/Adventure/Romance



The Marvelous Mechanical Man is the first book in a Steampunk series
featuring the adventures of Josephine Mann, an independent woman in need
of a way to pay her rent. She meets Professor Alistair Conn, in need of
a lab assistant, and a partnership is created that proves exciting
adventure for both of them.



Alistair’s prize invention is an automaton standing nine feet tall.
There’s a bit of a problem though…he can’t quite figure out how to make
it move. Jo just might be of help there. Then again, they might not get a
chance to find out, as the marvelous mechanical man goes missing.



Jo and Alistair find themselves in the middle of a whirlwind of
kidnapping, catnapping, and cross-country chases that involve airships,
trains, and a prototype steam car. With a little help from their
friends, Herbert Lattimer and Winifred Bond, plots are foiled,
inventions are perfected, and a good time is had by all.

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I was debating just what I should do next when I heard the sound of a key in the front lock. Hurrying back to the laboratory, I was just in time to see Alistair Conn step inside.

            “Professor Conn! Am I glad to see you.”

            He set the bundles he was carrying down on the counter.

            “What is it, Miss Mann?”

            “Your mechanical man...can it walk on its own?”

            He frowned, glancing quickly at the rear door and back.

            “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

            I rolled my eyes.

            “We don’t have time for shilly-shallying. Yes, I know I didn’t have your leave to look in the back rooms, but I did. I saw the automaton, or statue, or whatever he was, but when I opened the door to the hallway this morning, the door to the storage room was ajar and the man was gone.”

            “Gone?” All the color fled his face, and he pushed me aside, practically running down the lab to the rear door. He threw it open and darted to the storage room. “No...no! This is impossible! How could he be gone?”

            “That’s what I was asking you.”

            “He can’t move on his own, Miss Mann. He has no power source. He’s just a big metal doll without his heart—and that doesn’t work yet.” He wiped his hand across his lips then turned and ran back to the lab, searching furiously amid the items I had so carefully arranged—apparently to no avail—on the counter. “It’s gone!” he cried. “They got that, too? Oh, this is disastrous, indeed.”

            “Got what?” I asked, following him back to the lab, where he seemed determined to destroy all my neatening efforts of the day before.

            “The heart, Miss Mann, the heart! I showed it to you yesterday morning—it’s an oblong machine, about so big….” He held up his hands about six inches apart. “You asked me what it did.”

            I stepped over to the counter and opened the drawer beneath it. Rummaging in the back, I withdrew the silk-wrapped package I had placed within it the night before.

            “Is this what you’re looking for?”

            He practically snatched it from my hand.

            “Thank God! Oh, that was most clever, Miss Mann. Most clever.”

            I decided there was no need to tell the man it was only chance that had protected his precious...whatever it was. Let him think it had been foresight.

            “You say that’s the statue’s heart?”

            “Well, it will be, if it ever starts working. This little object will provide the power necessary to move the automaton’s limbs, to let him think. He will be a true mechanical man.”

            “But it doesn’t work.”

            He sighed.

            “Not yet.” He set the oblong down on the counter. “I’ve done everything I can think of, but I just can’t make it do anything.”

            I looked down at the funny little machine. I couldn’t tell him I had played with it and added things. He would never forgive me.

            Something looked odd about the assembly. I couldn’t quite put my finger on what, so I put my finger on the machine instead. There was a tiny lever half-hidden by the new gear assembly. It shifted under my fingertip, and suddenly, the heart began to beat.

















Rie Sheridan Rose multitasks. A lot. Her short stories appear in
numerous anthologies, including Nightmare Stalkers and Dream Walkers
Vols. 1 and 2, and Killing It Softly Vols. 1 and 2. She has authored
twelve novels, six poetry chapbooks, and lyrics for dozens of songs.
These were mostly written in conjunction with Marc Gunn, and can be
found on “Don’t Go Drinking with Hobbits” and “Pirates vs. Dragons” for
the most part–with a few scattered exceptions.



Her favorite work to date is The Conn-Mann Chronicles Steampunk
series with five books released so far: The Marvelous Mechanical Man,
The Nearly Notorious Nun, The Incredibly Irritating Irishman, The
Fiercely Formidable Fugitive, and The Elderly Earl’s Estate.



Rie lives in Texas with her wonderful husband and several spoiled cat-children.

WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website: https://riewriter.com/  and https://theconnmannchronicles.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RieSheridanRose

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

 



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