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Monday, February 15, 2016

Memory Yoga Action Game by Think Fun




This game has it all. It is a memory game and also adds in exercise. There are 36 thick cardboard cards with pictures of yoga poses. The person with the most matching poses wins. Actually everyone wins because you are stretching your mind and body with this game. This game isn't just for kids even though ti says for kids 3 and up. Us adults need our minds and bodies stretched as well. My Daughter and I have just taken up yoga and we are still learning all the positions. This game is helping us with that as well.

 I received this product free in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.


Yoga Spinner Game by Think Fun






This yoga spinner game may have a kid theme to it but it is also great for us adults. My Daughter and I are just really getting into yoga and this game has made it so much more fun as well as helping us to explore new routines as well as the exercises themselves. The spinner itself is also the box that holds the cards. It is made of plastic. The cards are thick cardboard with pictures showing the position. There are 54 yoga pose cards. The different stops on the spinner is what makes this a game. Each spot is something different. The smiley face means you get a card, the sad face means you loose a card and so on. The game is centered to children but we are enjoying it just at well.

 I received this product free in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.

Iridesi Premium Etched Glass Nail Files w/ Case





I am thrilled with this Nail file set. I love that it comes in a beautiful red case instead of bouncing around in the bottom of my purse scratching things up. I love how well it actually works on my nails. This file is made of etched glass and feels almost smooth but works better then any sandpaper covered nail file I have ever used. Even works better then the metal ones.

There are 2 nail files in the set one is 5 1/2 inches long and the other is 3 1/2 inches. I keep the 3 1/2 inch one in my purse and the 5 1/2 inch one in my make up bag. These are a fine grit but works great for smoothing edges of broken nails and for taking off hang nails. These are red at the handle end and white on the part that is used to file the nail. These are died not painted. The cases they come in are small plastic 2 piece tubes and are just beautiful. I love these. They are pretty and useful.

 I received this product free in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.


Atalanta® Stainless Steel Kitchen Tool Sets








I have been wanting a kitchen tool set like this for a while. One that comes with a melon baller, a zester, and a fruit corer. This set is everything I had hoped it would be when I ordered it. It is great for making melon balls as well as zesting a lemon and also coring a apple.

The handles are made of plastic and the metal part is stainless steel. The blade on the corer is very sharp and worked very nicely slicing through the apple. These are easy to clean up with hot soapy water or toss them in the dishwasher.. The handles are about about 5 1/2 inches long and are ergonomic. They fit nicely in my small hand and also fit well in my husbands larger hands.

This really is a nice set. This set would also make a great gift for anyone like me who is a from scratch cook, These would also be cute added to a fruit basket or other fruit themed or kitchen gadget gift basket.

  I received this product free in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.

Sahara Sailor Survival Hunting Knife




My husband loves knives. He has a very extensive collection of both decorative knives as well as knives he uses. He is never without at least 3 knives on him, He has 2 attached to his belt and a small one in his pocket at all times. So when I was given the chance to have this one I jumped at it.

This knife is 7 1/2 inches total length with a 3 1/2 inch double edged blade, The knife is made of stainless steel. It has a sawtooth edge on once side of the blade and comes to a sharp point at the end of the blade. The handle is covered in several feet of cording which also helps with making it non slip. It also comes with a nylon sheath that snaps tightly around the handle of the knife. There is also a belt included.

This is a very nice knife. My husband is very happy with it. It would also make a great gift.

I received this product free in exchange for an honest and unbiased review.

tour for the Realm Walker Series by Kathleen Collins




Realm Walker
Realm Walker Series
Book One
Kathleen Collins

 
Genre: Urban Fantasy

 
Publisher: Carina Press

 
Date of Publication:  October 28, 2013

 
ISBN: 9781426896545
ASIN: B00E1V5S3S

 
Word Count: 76,000

 
Book Description:

 
An estranged mate, a mangled body and a powerful demon who calls her by name…

 
As a Realm Walker for the Agency, Juliana Norris tracks deadly paranormal quarry using her unique ability to see magical signatures. She excels at her job, but her friends worry about her mysterious habit of dying in the line of duty without staying dead. That's only the first of her secrets.
Most people don't know Juliana became the mate of master vampire Thomas Kendrick before he abandoned her seven years ago. Most people don't know the horrors she endured at the hands of the vampire he left in command. Most people don't know her true parentage, or why a demon on a world-threatening rampage has taken a personal interest in her…
Even as Juliana pursues the demon, it goes after all she holds dear—including Thomas, who is back to claim her for his own. But if she can't reconcile her past and learn to trust herself again, she will lose him forever.
Available at  Amazon   BN  Harlequin Print

 



Death’s Daughter         
Realm Walker Series
Book 2
Kathleen Collins


Genre: urban fantasy, paranormal romance


Publisher: Carina press


ISBN: 9781426898112
ASIN: B00GKBIR80


Word Count:  68,000


Book Description:


Juliana Norris, Realm Walker with the Agency, is an Altered. A fact that she runs up against every time she’s forced to work with human police officers, and their species-ist commissioner, on cases they can’t solve themselves. Which happens more than they would like to admit.


Her gift—the quality that makes her the best Realm Walker in the business, without boast—is the ability to read magical signatures. Whether the gift came from her father, the dark fae god of death, or the mage mother she can’t remember, is anyone’s guess. And when Altered children start going missing with only wild magical signatures as clues, her heritage is the last thing on her mind.


She can’t afford such distractions, and she definitely can’t afford to worry about the fact that her mate, master vampire Thomas Kendrick, hasn’t spoken to her since she saved him from a demon—maybe it’s because she had to stab him to do so. Because whoever is kidnapping these children must be very powerful to wield wild magic. Very powerful, and very dangerous indeed.


 
Available at Amazon  BN  Harlequin Print

 

 

The Making of Michael Bishop
A Realm Walker Short Story
Kathleen Collins

 
Genre: urban fantasy, dark fantasy

 
Date of Publication: August 30, 2014

 
ASIN: B00N5YWPCE

 
Number of pages: 20

 
Book Description: Keep your distance. Don't look him in the eye. Feed him and leave.

 
Michael D'Augustino is a priest in the time of the Inquisition. Marked as weak for his refusal to torture those charged with sorcery, heresy, devil worship or worse, he's given another task. Feed the prisoner in the cell in the darkest corner of the dungeon. With the edict comes a set of instructions.

 
Ever obedient, Michael does exactly as he is told. Until the night his charge doesn't eat and Michael has to enter the cell to find out why. Instead of the beast he believes to be imprisoned there, he finds a man. A broken, tormented man who asks for help.

 
But all is not as it seems and, before the night is through, Michael will be changed forever.

 
Available at Amazon and BN

 

 

Blood Slave

Realm Walker Series
Book 3
Kathleen Collins

 
Can she find a killer in a town where the basest desires are allowed to run free?

 
There are zombies in the Dead Zone and Juliana Norris is sent to take care of the problem. And for there to be zombies, there had to be bodies. When vampires are found to be the culprits, Juliana is sent undercover in the red light district of Kansas City. Lying to her mate, Thomas Kendrick, isn’t something she wants to do, but she’s in another vampire’s territory and Thomas would not be pleased. Besides, she’s more than capable of doing the job and she needs to prove it to everyone. Most of all herself.

 
Charles Morgan is in control of the Kansas City area, making a rich living off his various enterprises. Juliana goes undercover at the strip club Lust and gets sucked into his dark, decadent world. More victims turn up and the Agency is positive they’ve got their man, but Juliana is not so sure. When the Agency refuses to listen, she reluctantly turns to Thomas for help. He intervenes but finds Juliana unaware of the danger she is in and discovers she may just be too deep for him to save.

 
Available at
Amazon    BN    iTunes

 

 

 


About the Author:

 
Kathleen Collins lives and works in Missouri. By day, she labors in the local prosecutor's office. At night she writes while surrounded by her husband, two boys and two loveable mutts. She is constantly thinking of her next project and loves to connect with her readers. You can find her most often on Facebook or on her website.

 

 
@kathy_collins

 

 

Tour and Review for Near The Wild Maureen Willett




Near The Wild
Maureen Willett

Genre: paranormal romance or historical fantasy

Publisher: independent

Date of Publication: June 27, 2015

ISBN: 9781524209926
ASIN: B010JLKZZY

Number of pages: 229
Word Count: 82,500

Book Description:

Cowboys and leprechauns both occupy Maeve MacKeighry's world in 1870, and she must decide which will win her heart. Leprechauns are feared, even in Ireland, but that doesn't prevent Maeve from striking up a friendship with one who lives near her village. But once Maeve becomes a young woman, the local villagers start to gossip, especially since the MacKeighrys are known to practice magic in their home. It's just for entertainment, but the town folk don't see it that way. Rather than be outcasts, the MacKeighrys set off to America to homestead in Kansas, vowing to leave their magical ways and friends behind. Little do they know that Maeve's friend follows and protects them on their journey.

The MacKeighrys encounter many adventures along the way to Kansas, only to find a simple sod house on their new farm at the end of the journey. The untamed land offers a fresh start for the family, as well as two very interesting men who both compete for Maeve’s attention. Pretty young women in a wild western town are a rarity. But can she forget her magical friend, and turn her attention to two of the most interesting men she has ever met? Perhaps cowboys and outlaws have a certain charm that a leprechaun doesn't, after all.

Most of the novel takes place in Kansas in 1870 and is based on the author’s family history. The idea of the MacKeighry’s sod house came from the home of Willett’s great grandfather. She was lucky enough to visit it as a teenager before the house was destroyed. One of the characters, Nikki Fuerst, is based on an ancestor, a prince from Austria who was disinherited for marrying a commoner and sent off to America. Stories Willett has been told her entire life about her family’s history and traditions, such as levitating tables, are included in Near The Wild.


Excerpt:

Leprechauns were feared, even in Ireland.  Of course, Ma and Da denied that we were related to the magical people in the forest, the sidhe, but there was no denying that the other good families in our village of Clonmel didn’t know how to do the things we did.
Ma would shake her head and tease us, calling us leprechauns whenever we asked if we could play our favorite game.  But then she would close the shutters so the fun could begin.  Surely none of our neighbors should see us huddled around a table that was two feet off the ground.  It was just a fortune-telling game to us.  We’d make the table rise into the air merely by thinking it should do so, and then we’d ask it simple questions.  The hovering wooden table would tap one of its legs on the floor to answer, once for “yes” and twice for “no.”  As our confidence grew, our questions became more outlandish, making my younger brothers giggle until tears poured down their faces.
I’m not sure where that game came from, but I do remember Ma playing it with her sisters, too, whenever we all got together for holidays, and such.  My brothers and I would watch in fascination because my mother and aunts were so much better at it than we were.  The table would rise much higher and then pound out the answer to the “yes” or “no” question posed to it.  None of us children understood the implications of what we were witnessing.  But the elders of the village and church did.
Then, there was the business about Finn and me.  I didn’t think anyone outside our family could see him, so as we got older I got lazy about keeping our friendship secret.  We began to venture out of the thick forest, where we had played since we were babes, and sit together in the meadow on the outskirts of Clonmel.  We’d lie back and let the tall, green grass engulf us.  Finn would make fun of some of the townsfolk to make me smile.
I soon learned my mistake.  One day, the baker’s wife marched into the middle of the town square to point her finger in Ma’s face, making a holy show of herself and poor Ma.  The sour-faced woman said I was inviting trouble, that I’d be stolen away to the sidhe’s world, or worse.  The baker always gave Ma a free meat pie when she went into the shop, while his wife watched with a scowl.  I think she had it in for us.
Ma told the woman to “hump off,” much to my delight and horror, and then she demanded an apology from the fat, old crone.  I received less support when Ma got me home, though.  She yanked so hard on my ear, it felt like it’d come off, and the heat of her anger made her face go scarlet.
“Maeve MacKeighry,” she shouted through clenched teeth, still pulling my earlobe, which I feared had now been deformed forever.  “I’ve had enough of your sprite!  You will not see him again, or so help me Lord Jesus!”  When Ma took the Lord’s name in vain, it was serious business.
But we both knew Finn could not be so easily discarded.  He was a wild spirit, full of good intentions but no regard for rules, or restrictions, as his kind often were.  Even if I tried to avoid him, he wouldn’t let go of me.
Ma feared I’d never have a respectable suitor, even though boys in Clonmel gave me admiring glances, especially when I wore my long, thick curls loose.  Ma used to say I had classic features offset by fiery hair.  Although I did inherit the high cheekbones of the MacKeighry clan, I don’t quite know what she meant by “fiery” since my hair was more brown than red.   In either case, boys did look my way whenever I passed by, but none approached me.  Maybe because my stride wasn’t as dainty as most girls looking for husbands, or maybe because of the challenge they saw in my green eyes.  Most likely, though, it was because they’d heard the whispered tales about Finn and me.
Then the whispers became more frequent.  Villagers stopped knocking on our door.  Rumors of witchcraft started to spread.  Never mind that the baker’s wife was the culprit, it still made townsfolk turn away when we walked down the street to church.  When Father Donoghue shunned our family after Sunday mass more than once, Da left to start a homestead in Kansas.
Ma said they were giving away land in America.  It might as well be on the moon for all I cared.  And the land must not be worth much if they were giving it away for free, I figured.  Nevertheless, some months later, we followed.
“The Lord is giving us a chance at a better life in a new country,” Ma told us all one rainy afternoon.  The weather made us housebound, so we begged to play with the table.  “None of our games will be allowed in our new home.  We’ll have a fresh beginning, and one without the ways of leprechauns,” she had said with a pointed look in my direction.
###
I can still see myself as I was in 1870 at the dawn of becoming a woman, standing on the deck of the Belle Asisse in high hopes for our adventure, feeling the ocean wind whip through my hair more forcefully than it did the patched sails overhead.
As I looked out at the green waters of the Atlantic, I hoped we would sight land soon.  I wanted to feel solid ground beneath my feet and get off that moldy, old ship.  Finn said I looked tired, and he was right, too.  How could I sleep sharing a bunk with four of my brothers?  Even though they were all younger than me, they were tall and took up too much room.  I’d sleep on the floor, but the rats or roaches might get me.  The bay leaves and garlic Ma put around our two bunks didn’t keep the vermin away, and things grew larger in the dank air.
The sudden laugh in my left ear startled me out of my thoughts.  It seemed closer than it should be, because no one stood next to me at all.  I looked around, wondering if it had been the howling of the wind, but then the sound came again.  Something was playing tricks on me, but it wasn’t the wind.
“Finn!”  I tried not to call his name.  I didn’t want anyone to know he was onboard.  It was supposed to be our secret, but he took many chances by going on deck in daylight.
I whirled around when the laugh came again, only this time it was behind me.  A flash of raven black hair was all I spotted before he disappeared, but it was enough to make me go down the stairs to the sleeping quarters below.  The smell of musty wood and unwashed bodies assaulted me.  I wouldn’t be able to catch him, so I hoped I could trick him instead.  I ran down the stairs and through the maze of wooden bunks.  Some were occupied but most were empty.  The deck was crowded in the afternoons with passengers getting a few hours of fresh air, so I jumped over empty bed after bed and ran to the darkest corner.  I knew it well, and so did Finn.  We’d met there almost every night after Ma and the boys fell asleep.
I gasped for air as I collided with a barrel and almost fell to my knees, but he put his hand out to keep me from doing myself real injury.
“You need to be more careful, darlin’ girl.  Don’t run so hard.  You’ll burst your laces,” Finn said with his bewitching smile that made his crystal-clear aqua eyes sparkle.  “Young ladies shouldn’t play so rough.”
I pulled away and socked him in the shoulder with my fist, making him wince for just a second.  Then he smiled again.
“Although, you are good at playing rough,” Finn said as he rubbed his shoulder.
“What girl with six brothers isn’t?”  I flashed a smile at him, trying to be beguiling like the girl in the novel I’d just finished, but knowing it wasn’t working.  Offending his shoulder hadn’t helped me much either.
He took a strand of my hair and twirled it around his finger, smoothing out the curl as he went.  He had impossibly long, tapered fingers.  The kind any girl would envy.  Then, more fingers were in my hair in a soft yet demanding way.  I watched, fascinated by the way they worked their way into my curls, entwining my heart with their rhythm.  I imagined those same long fingers running down my neck, unbuttoning my bodice, making a pattern on my skin.  A small, choking sound escaped from my throat, much to my shame.  Finn dropped my hair and backed away.
Things were changing between us, and I wasn’t prepared for it, especially the way he made me feel.  I had always been the one in control, even when we were small children, but now Finn was able to set my emotions spinning with just a glance of his eyes, or toss of his glorious black hair.  I tried to get my breath under control, but his perfect face with its luminous skin and ruby lips got in the way.
So, I concentrated on the dark green jewel he wore on a leather strip around his neck instead.  Finn was never without it.  He’d told me before that the emerald contained what was left of his ancient soul. The jewel looked tarnished and murky, as if it had seen better days.  I had suggested we polish it once, but Finn had said that was impossible and refused to talk about it further.  I stopped asking about it when we were children.
He stood there watching me with his light eyes.  My heart wasn’t calming down at all, so I felt the need to shift my weight from one foot to another.  Then, I remembered last night and was quite pleased to feel something other than desire.
“I’m so angry with you!  I don’t think we should be friends anymore!”  I tried to sound steadfast in my conviction, but as he stepped closer, his sweet spicy scent made my senses spin again.  I leaned against the side of the ship, wanting to feel the hardness of the wood and smell the mold that was everywhere, instead of Finnegan.
“You don’t mean that,” Finn said in a husky voice as he put a hand on each side of my head and bent in toward me.  “My Maeve, you’re the center of my world.  You have been since the day I first saw you in the forest.  Why would you say such a thing?”
My chest heaved and fell with each breath, making my skin chafe against the course cloth of my plain gown.  I longed to be free of it, but just the thought of what would happen if I suddenly stripped off my restrictive clothes made me feel faint.  I swallowed hard.
“I couldn’t find you.  I looked all over the ship, and waited for hours last night, but you weren’t here.  Where have you been?” I asked, not wanting to sound like a petulant child, or jealous, for that matter, but I wasn’t successful.  I held my breath and waited.  I had never clung to Finn before.  It had always been the other way around.
A flash of concern crossed his face.  “I was here, while you were eating supper.  But then Michael walked by, so I left.  Your brothers are sentries.  It’s as if they know I’m on the ship.”  Finn stooped, put his lips to my forehead, and then stepped back.
The air became a bit less intoxicating as he moved away, and I could almost breathe again.  “Were you with someone else last night?”  I didn’t want to ask, but it needed to be in the open.  I had seen Finn looking at some of the other young ladies on board, and I wasn’t sure if it was curiosity or longing in his eyes.
All expression left his face.  “Don’t ever ask me that again.  I’ve been devoted to you your entire life, and that has never faltered.”  His voice was low, so only I could hear it, but it was filled with emotion.   “It never will.”
I nodded, recognizing the truth in his statement, and felt the blush fill my face, thankful the darkness covered it.  I wanted to put my hand on his arm and kiss his cheek the way I used to, but I hadn’t felt comfortable doing that in quite some time.  It would lead to things neither of us was strong enough to control.
“Maeve! Maeve!”  Michael’s voice was close.  It was too dark to tell where my eldest brother was.  There’d be the devil to pay if he saw us together.
“I’ll be here tonight, waiting for you,” Finn said in earnest, and then he was gone.  A flash of light remained in the air around me.  It had an odd golden glow.

My Review:

  This was a great book. It caught and held my attention all the way through. It is more of a historical romance and a pioneer story then a mystical magical story. I did enjoy it though even if I chose it for the magic aspect. 
  In the book The MacKeighry's leave Ireland to come to Kansas to start a new life in the 1870's. There are lots of adventures along the way and a lot more once they finally reach Kansas. The main Character of the book is Maeve. She is a young woman coming of age. She has a friend no one else can see. His name is Finn and he is a Leprechaun. Mauve is in love with him but it is a love that can never be as Leprechaun's and humans cannot be together. Once the family is in Kansas Mauve falls for human's, 2 of them actually. Her story goes from there. I do not want to give the book away though.
   The book gets a little slow at times but those times did not last long thankfully. I do wish Finn had of had a larger part in the book. After all the book was supposed to be about Cowboys and leprechauns. There really wasn't a lot of cowboy either. 
  I do like Maureen Willett's writing style, the characters are well done very well. I did like the historical part of the book as I am a history buff. I would like to read more of this families story in the future. 
About the Author:

Maureen Willett is a writer of fiction that pushes the boundaries of established genres.  Her stories mostly come from her own family legends that have been passed down through generations, but then she tops them off with a twist of faery dust and angel wings. 

But at the core of each story are great characters in very human conflicts that anyone will find compelling.  Each novel is crafted as an experience that will take readers beyond their day-to-day lives, incorporating themes of time travel, reincarnation, and magic.   

She lives in Hawaii and finds its ethereal beauty a source of inspiration for her writing.  She is a former journalist, public relations professional, and media marketing specialist.  Writing fiction has been her passion since grade school.






Tour giveaway

4 $10 Amazon GCs