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Wednesday, May 8, 2019

On the Way Back by Ella Fox

Title: On the Way Back
Series: The Retake Duet #2
Author: Ella Fox
Genre: Contemporary/2nd Chance Romance
Release Date: May 6, 2019


She believed she was too broken to stay.

He knew he loved her too much to ever let go.

Shaelyn was determined to set Garrett free after their lives were torn apart.

Garrett was just as determined to keep their marriage intact. 

One tragedy shattered Shaelyn's heart.

Another will break through her walls and remind her that each day is a gift.

On the way down, they spiraled apart.

On the way back, they'll find that broken hearts still hold hope.















USA Today Bestselling Author Ella Fox has learned a bunch of stuff along the way but the most important of all those things is that anything is possible when you try. In 2012 she took a big leap of faith and published her first book, Broken Hart. Since then she’s written fifteen more full-length books and several novellas– and every one is a reminder that you can live your dream as long as you work for it.

Ella’s favorite things are music, movies, traveling, The Foo Fighters and, of course, reading. This isn’t a surprise considering the fact that her mom is USA Today Bestselling Author Suzanne Halliday.





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Tuesday, May 7, 2019

BOOK TOUR: Free Pizza by G.C. McRae



Book Details:



Book Title: Free Pizza by G.C. McRae

Category: Middle-Grade Fiction, 360 pages

Genre: Humorous Fiction

Publisher: MacDonald Warne Media

Release date: May 1, 2019

Tour dates: May 1 to 17, 2019

Content Rating: PG (No sex or drugs, just mild expletives such as "hell" and "damn".)



Book Description:



Brian McSpadden is always hungry. Does he have a disease? Worms? Does it have something to do with his being adopted? He spends his days at his crazy friend Danny’s house, hoping for snacks, but nothing seems to fill the void.



​Then Brian receives a mysterious birthday card that says, Free Pizza. He soon discovers the card has nothing to do with food and everything to do with the big questions in his life: where did I come from, why did my mother give me up and is there anyone out there who will like me the way I am?



To read reviews, please visit G.C. McRae's page on iRead Book Tours.



Buy the Book:
Meet the Author:

​G.C. McRae is the bestselling author of two young adult novels, three illustrated children's books and a collection of original fairy tales. His writing is fall-down funny, even when the theme is darker than a coal miner's cough. McRae reads to anybody at any time, in person or online, for free, which probably explains why he meets so many people and sells so many books.



In his latest work, Free Pizza, McRae spins the highly emotional themes from his decidedly unfunny childhood into a brilliantly comic yarn. After being given up for adoption by his teenage mom back when single girls were forced to hide unplanned pregnancies, his adoptive parents didn’t exactly keep him under the stairs but, well, let's just say, there were spiders.



A lot has changed since then. McRae’s own children have now grown and he runs a small farm with his wife, who is herself an award-winning writer.



Connect with the Author: Website ~ Facebook ~ Twitter ~ LibraryThing


Interview with G.C. McRae

Free Pizza is very much written for young adults, about two very distinctive 12-year olds. Is that what you were like as a 12-year old?
For sure. Pretty much like my main character, Brian. As it says in the first chapter, he spends his days trying not to be boring and trying not to get beat up. My sense of humor got me out of a lot of scrapes. I went to Catholic school and it was not all sweet, nice, gentle kids. In the ‘60s, it was pretty violent by today’s standards. There were constant fights or threats of fights. The vice-principal was put in the hospital by one kid, and he had it coming. The nuns and teachers dealt with every problem with the strap, which was a real shaving razor strop, two thick layers of leather and hurt like heck. Today, they’d probably be put in jail for the things they did to us.

Wow. Did you ever get the strap?
I think everybody did at some point. And mine was a comparatively minor offence. We were running up to this stop sign and swinging around it as many times as we could before touching the ground. A pretty harmless game. But we played it enough to pull the stop sign out of the ground. We were just being kids and we would have helped put the sign back in if we were told how. Instead, we were beaten. Experiences like that probably colour the way I view authority to this day.

Did you always want to be a writer?
From when I was a teenager, yeah.

What happened then?
When I was fourteen, I thought I wanted to be an artist. I spent a huge amount of time drawing superheroes and monsters, typical teenage fantasy things. Then I started doing dialogue and captions in the margins. Somehow words felt subversive. In drawing, a line was a line. With words, you could have double and triple meaning. It became a real playground for me. Anyway, after a while I stopped drawing and threw all my creative energy into writing. But I am drawing again now, and it’s really wonderful to do.

What did you write?
Oh, god... the most bizarre poetry in prose. The closest thing to it I’ve come across is a little book by Bob Dylan called Tarantula.

So his work inspired you?
No, not at all. I didn’t come across his book till decades later.

What is something people would be surprised to learn about you?
I am a pretty ordinary person from the outside. I love gardening. I don’t know anything about shrubs and flowers. But anything you can eat? I’m right there. Oh, and mushrooms. I grow those indoors as well as outside in beds. I guess that’s not very surprising. I suppose the thing that most people comment on is my schedule. I get up around 3:30, or sometimes earlier, to write. People think that’s difficult or disciplined, but I don’t find it difficult at all. It’s fun, and my brain works best first thing in the morning.

Most writers have a dream book they’d like to write - but for whatever reason, hasn’t been written yet. What’s yours?
Wow, there’s a question. I’ve already written two of my dream books, Seven Tales and Free Pizza. The only other one that’s begging to be written is a book about my teen years. Especially the music.

Bob Dylan?
No, I was into European art rock. Genesis, Van der Graaf Generator, Aphrodite’s Child. I still don’t have a handle on how I would incorporate the music into the novel, but some day, I’ll take a shot at it, I hope. Writing about music is not easy!


Enter the Giveaway!
Ends May 25, 2019



a Rafflecopter giveaway

The Cat Who Pawed the Cultist by Robert Hazelton


The
Cat Who Pawed the Cultist
Sanctum
Guardians Book 1
by
Robert Hazelton


Genre:
YA Urban Fantasy

Charlotte
Barreau has tried to maintain a low key lifestyle but it isn’t easy
for a young witch. As a student of the Holstrom Sanctum, she’s
studied the intricacies of magic but never had to apply them to
anything of importance. Her biggest concerns involve finding a movie
she hasn’t seen, spending time with her friend Avery, and passing
magical physics.All that changes when she meets a feisty orange cat
attempting to foil the plot of a cultist opening a portal to another
world. This magical beast comes to her with a calling, a duty to
defend our world against denizens of a dangerous realm called the
Umbra Oculus. Charlotte finds herself inextricably bound to her new
friend, a partner in his crusade.As they begin to investigate, they
find themselves dangerously outmatched. Their opponents are fully
trained, adult wizards with serious zeal for their work. Even after
enlisting the aid of two additional students, they discover they may
not be cut out for the task. But with no one else working on the
problem, these children and their cat must save the world, even as
they risk their very lives in the effort.






Robert
Hazelton has been writing short fiction, novels and music his entire
life. As the founding member of Deadly Nightshade Botanical Society
and a long time member of the band Abney Park, he has traveled
extensively and performed countless shows in exotic locales.


Robert
writes in a variety of genres but keeps drifting back to modern
fantasy/horror. He considers Elizabeth Moon, Frank Herbert, and
Steven Pressfield to be his biggest influences.









Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive content and a giveaway!





One Percent of You by Michelle Gross


One Percent of You
Michelle Gross
Publication date: May 5th 2019
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance
Make no mistakes about it. I know what I look like to others. Young, government-aided, pregnant mom. They see Lucy on my hip, and they see a mistake. I mean, why else would someone have a child so young, right? They couldn’t be more wrong. I’m too busy most days between parenting, work, and finishing up my last year of nursing school to let their judging gaze tear me down until he moves in the vacant house next to the apartments I live in.
His cold, blunt observation of us doesn’t differ from any other stranger. He doesn’t know me, but he’s already painting a picture of who he thinks I am in his mind. He judges my very round belly, Lucy’s inability to leave him alone, the bags under my eyes, and the fact that I can care less what I look like anymore.
He’s a rude guy. Stays that way for months too. Then something happens, I’m not even sure what. Judgmental Guy decides Lucy and me—as well as baby Eli, are worth his friendship.
Turns out, Judgmental Guy isn’t too mean—okay, he kind of still is. But he graduates to Elijah. I build an unlikely friendship with him which deems it necessary for him to start smiling around me and my kids.
I’m wrong again. Elijah isn’t rude. He’s terrifying. His strange acts of kindness are unraveling me. Elijah is only my friend.
Right?
Oh, fudge. I think I’m wrong. Again.
–full-length single mom slow burn romance
EXCERPT:
There was a moment of panic. For a second, I couldn’t see any Funyuns. I realized why. There was only one bag left, and it was partially hidden by all the Lay’s chips next to it. I nodded and smiled as if to say, “It’s all good” when two little hands shot up and snatched the bag before I could.
“Whoa,” I said, staring down at the blonde pigtails.
She slowly turned, peered up, and arched her brow at me curiously. “Are you talking to me?” The kid couldn’t be more than three and there she was completely alone and stealing my damn Funyuns!
“How about you give me those Funyuns?” I asked nicely.
She stared down at the chips in her tiny grip—those were mine—then looked back up. “No. Get your own.” She turned to walk off.
“Where’re your parents? Little shits shouldn’t be all alone even if they’re becoming lil’ thieves at such a young age.”
She scowled, her tiny nose wrinkling up. “She’s right where I left her.” She pointed to a blonde head leaned over one of the freezer sections. The little girl was inspecting me when I glanced back down at her. I saw the way her eyes rolled over my arms before she frowned. “My papaw always tells my mom that tattoos are ugly on women.”
“Oh?” I tilted my head. “Your papaw sounds ugly.”
Her mouth fell open. “You have demons on your arms ’cause you’re one.”
I jumped and hissed. She startled, dropped the Funyuns, and ran screaming to her mom. I bent down, picked up my chips, and chuckled as I walked over to the next aisle and grabbed a pizza—something I could at least heat up easily—then went to the checkout where ugly grandpa’s evil thief helped her mom unload their shopping cart items.
Lil’ Thief gazed up, eyes widening then hardening as tough as one could look at her age. She saw the bag of chips in my hand and tapped her Mom’s side “Mom, mom,” she started.
“What is it, Lucy?” Her mother asked as she grabbed her purse and wheeled the cart forward as the cashier rung up her items. I took in the greasy blonde hair tucked into a messy bun. It probably had been a day or two since she shampooed it. From her chipped nails to her pale, tired face without makeup it was obvious she didn’t give two shits about her appearance. The longer I watched her, the more she irked me. I exhaled loudly as I imagined her living off the government. In a matter of minutes, she’d slide an EBT card through the slot to pay for her items.
Guilt washed over me. My ma had been in this shape while raising me, and most of the food on our table before she met Hank came from food stamps, yet I saw more people abuse the system, so my disdain was real every time I saw people like this one in a store.
No one was like Ma. She was her own breed, and she’d hang me for my petty thoughts, but I couldn’t stop myself.
“That demon worshipper stole my chips.”
Fucking hell. I went from the dude with demons on my arm to demon worshipper real quick. I’d hate to see what this child would have to say about my shops—creepy, demon portraits everywhere. The horror!
The mother’s head snapped up from her purse at her child’s voice. She peered around to where her daughter pointed—at me—before turning a pitiful shade of red. Her eyes were the brightest shade of blue I’d ever seen, or maybe it was because she was so pale and sickly looking. She blushed so hard it made her extremely noticeable.
“Lucy, that’s not nice! Why would you say that?” She wiped her face and tried hard not to stare at me as she spoke to her daughter.
“He stole my Funyuns!” Her daughter’s face was red too. Quite the match, the two of them.
The mom raised up, face squinted in pain as she placed her palm on her back, and that was when I noticed—holy, why hadn’t I noticed before? The woman was very pregnant. Just what society needed—another little terror running wild. She gestured toward the small chip bags beside me. “Grab a bag so I can pay. And apologize for saying that.”
The little girl scooted around the shopping cart and snatched a small bag of Funyuns before turning around to me. “Sorry.” She stuck out her tongue as she glared up at me from a perfect angle where her mom couldn’t see it. Sneaky.
“You should really get a hold on that,” I couldn’t point at the kid with my hands so full, but I jerked my head toward it so that she would

understand I was talking about her kid.
“That?” The mom’s eyebrows went up a notch. She forgot the part where she was trying not to make eye contact with me as she frowned.
“Your kid,” I muttered.
“Right, kid,” she told me. “Not that.” She glanced down at her daughter. “Come on, Lucy. Step away from the bad man.”
I scoffed. “I guess that’s better than demon worshipper.”
She straightened up and glared at me. “Would you prefer it if we called you the devil?”
“Suits me.” Kids had no hope of not being little shits when their parents raised them to be just as uptight. I bet she’d love to hear the name of my shops as well.
She scowled and turned around to pay. It surprised me when I saw a debit card slide through the machine. So she had a man she lived off? Popping out babies just to keep him? You’d think she’d at least take better care of herself. “What?” she muttered when I was still staring at her.
I shrugged, unbothered. She closed up her purse, hollered for her kid again before waddling out the damn door.
Good riddance!
I dropped my stuff, slowly covering my eyes with my hands. What just happened finally sunk into my thick skull. I stole a kid’s chips. There was no end to my assholery.
It was a five-minute drive from the grocery store to my new house. The one thing I hated about the place I bought was that it was right next to the projects. I would likely hear all kinds of shit I didn’t want to, but I got a great deal and the house was amazing. Or at least Ma thought so, she was the one that decided for me. I would live in it and pay for it but it didn’t matter what I thought. Apparently, anyway.
I really needed to stop letting her boss me around.
I could almost hear her saying that she’d stop after I found someone else to do it as I pulled into the driveway. Grabbing my grocery bags, I exited the truck. Before I could lock up, I heard a noise from the apartment lot next door.
“Lucy, I’m gonna need your help with these.”
Who knew why I walked around my truck to see when I’d recognized the familiar voice. The woman from the store was helping Lil’ Thief out of a car seat. The moment the kid’s feet hit the concrete, it was like her demon detector turned on. Her eyes darted around before landing on me.
One scrawny arm raised and pointed. “Demon worshipper!”
Ah, fuck.


Author Bio:
Michelle is from a small town in Eastern Kentucky where opossums try to blend in with the cats on the porch and bears are likely to chase your pets—this is very true, it happened with her sister’s dog. Despite the extra needed protection for your pets, she loves the mountains she calls home. She has a man and twin girls who are the light of her life and the reason she’s slightly crazy.

As a kid, she was that cousin, that friend, that sister and daughter, the talker who could spin a tale and make-believe into any little thing so it was no surprise when she found love in reading, and figured all these characters inside her head needed an outlet. They wanted to be heard, so she wrote.

The voices keep growing faster than she gets the time to write.

The stories are never going to end. That’s perfectly okay, though. We never want to stop an adventure.

She writes and loves many different genres so sign up to her mailing list to keep updated on her releases!

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Hard Drive by Alexandra Banks


Hard Drive
Alexandra Banks
(Fairy Tale Billionaire Romance, #4)
Publication date: April 23rd 2019
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance
Hacker
Master Penetrator
She stole my hard drive and said she owned my a$$
But now, she’s made a dangerous discovery, and they’ll kill to silence her.
The only way to protect her is to take her to my safe house. A cabin in the woods. Where no one can find us and I’ll have her all to myself. She needs me to save her, but I need her more. As her enemies close in, I swear, I’ll die to protect what’s mine.
This former Army Ranger has a mission: #protectwhatsmine.
Spoiler: This book is short, sweet, and full of heat. There’s firmware, RAM, and massive bandwidth. We’ve got a former Army Ranger who has it bad for our lady hacker. He’s taken her to his cabin, and they are about to find out the real meaning of hard drive.
This book is a short, sexy read. One hour of super-duper, steamy hot, sweet reading pleasure. That’s right, it’s quick. Because let’s be honest, sometimes, quickies are best!
EXCERPT:
Kaylee: Nick, this is Kaylee. I’m on a burner phone. I’m in trouble.

Nick: Where are you?

Kaylee: Slowly. Look up.
Nick’s in the coffee shop where we first met two years ago. There are two drinks at his table, a black coffee for him, and an iced latte. We were supposed to meet here ten minutes ago. Looks like he ordered for me. I smile at that. I’ve wanted him since the day I first saw him. But he’s never indicated that he sees me as anything but a skilled asset for his team.
He casually stretches his arms over his head and leans back in his wooden caféchair. He’s in his usual get-up, a black T-shirt stretched over his biceps and a leather jacket loaded with weapons. The shop is crowded, there’s a line at the counter, and all the tables are taken. Even so, there’s a space around Nick, like people can sense that he’s more.
Three men in sunglasses and black suits block the doorway, scanning the shop. Nick takes them in and his shoulders tighten. As a security expert and a former Ranger, he knows a threat when he sees one.
They’re here for me.
Nick feigns a yawn and finally brings his eyes to the ceiling. The only acknowledgement that he sees me is a slow blink. I’m in the HVAC, peering out from the ceiling vent.
Not for nothing, but this isn’t the first time I’ve crawled through an air vent.


Author Bio:
Get Your Free Starter Library at www.alexandrabanks.com/coming-soon

Alexandra Banks is the pen name of two feisty friends who love to hang out and dream up steamy love stories. After graduate degrees, global managerial positions and the nine to five grind, they decided it was more fun to bring joy to the world through happily ever afters. They deliver smart, strong heroines, and heroes who love them. You'll get that romance read afterglow...every single time. Better yet, their books are short and sweet - because let's be honest, sometimes quickies are best. They love their families, their golden retrievers, and bingeing on ice cream. If you want happiness, sweet fun, and steamy romance then Alexandra Banks is for you!

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Unexpected Shelter by Abby Taylor

Title: The Unexpected Shelter 
Author: Abby Tyler
Genre: Sweet Romance
Release Date: May 7, 2019


She saved the town’s abandoned animals. He saved her.

Abby Tyler welcomes you to the witty, well-meaning busybodies of Applebottom, Missouri, where the community its pies -- and its matchmaking -- very seriously.

Savannah Perkins has always loved the animal shelter her father started in memory of her mother. It’s been her life’s work and a peaceful place for her to care for him as he declines into dementia.

But it’s a hard living, and volunteers have gotten difficult to come by.

Until Luke.

No one is more surprised by Luke Southard’s arrival in Applebottom than his father. Mayor T-bone had no idea he had a son.

While Luke waits on the local veterinary school to accept his transfer, the town suggests he help out at the shelter.

But some of the local boys take issue with his closeness to Savannah, blaming him for vandalism around town. When the new vet school refuses him, Luke figures he’s overstayed his welcome.

It will take some quick thinking by the town to help Luke and Savannah save both the shelter and their tender new love.







Savannah shoved her hair off her face as she ducked inside the kennel room of the animal shelter, knowing she was streaking mud across her forehead. Couldn’t be helped after getting ten dogs in out of the rain, one of which had refused to leave his puddle.

She stopped short. Wait. Who was that by the dog cages?

The man turned around, and Savannah took two steps back.

“Oh my gosh. Who are you?”

The man was disarmingly good-looking. He wore a T-shirt with a plaid button-down over it, the sleeves rolled up to the elbows.

“I’m Luke Southard,” he said. “I don’t believe we’ve met.” He extended a hand.

Savannah lifted her arm, then realized it was covered with streaks of mud and withdrew it.

Strangers in Applebottom were rare. The town was off the beaten path. And certainly, people who were just passing through didn’t stop by the animal shelter.

“I’m sorry. I’ve been wrestling Luigi in the yard. Why are you here?” She shoved her hair back and realized she probably just put another streak of mud on her face.

“The lady who owns the dog bakery sent me. Said you could use some help.”

Delilah, God bless her. But who was this man?

“I know everybody in Applebottom,” she said. “But not you.”

He moved suddenly to the side, blocking Luigi, who was trying to escape out the back again. Savannah lunged for the door and shut it.

“Thanks.”

“No problem.” His grin made her belly flip over. “I’m new in town.” He bent down to scratch Luigi behind the ears. The overweight lump flipped on his back immediately to get belly rubs instead. 

“I’ll be working on cars in the mornings, but I was in veterinary school up north before moving down. Delilah thought helping you out would look good as I tried to switch to a college down here.”

Savannah felt absolutely faint. A new man in town. Ridiculously handsome.

And studying to be a veterinarian.

That was it.

She was dead.



Abby Tyler loves puppy dogs, pie, and small towns (she grew up in one!) Her Applebottom Matchmaker Society books combine the sweet and wholesome style of romance she loves with the funny, sometimes a-little-too-truthful characters she remembers from growing up in a place where everyone knew everybody’s business.