Friday, November 6, 2020

The Forgotten Sister by Nicola Cornick


 


The Forgotten Sister by Nicola Cornick is coming soon!  It's a time slip novel which I usually enjoy.  This one is about Amy in 1560 who is married to Robert Dudley but the marriage is anything but loving.  Robert has his eyes on the future Queen Elizabeth and treats Amy with no regards whatsoever.  Finally, after trying to be a good wife with no positive results, she knows she has to break free to attempt to salvage her life.  What happens next may not seem that it relates to modern times, but it does. 

In present day, Lizzie Kingdom and her best friend Dudley have always been the subject of scrutiny.  Both have been in showbusiness most of their lives so they're always in the public eye.  Lizzie has no further feelings for Dudley besides their best friend relationship, but others always speculated there was more than meets the eye.  They're wrong, but Lizzie can't seem to convince anyone regardless of the fact that she was at Dudley and his wife, Amelia's wedding and wouldn't cross that line.  So she seems content to live her life and put up with the rumors, but that proves to be almost impossible when tragedy strikes. 

How these two time lines merge will be up to you to read about.  I don't want to ruin anything for anyone! 

I was happy to get a copy of this book from Harper Collins and was excited about the premise. Unfortunately, I couldn't get invested in any of the characters or the story. It seemed more written for the YA genre in my opinion.  I also found it kind of irksome that the characters in both time frames to have the same names. I understand surnames being used, but not first names. I usually really love time slip stories, but now I know it has to be (at least for me) done just right. This one took me way too long to finish. 

With all that being said, I think it will be a hit with a big crowd and I wish the author huge success with the book when it releases on November 10, 2020. Thank you very much to the publisher for this opportunity.

Here's your opportunity to read an excerpt from the book: 


PROLOGUE

Amy Robsart, Cumnor Village

They came for me one night in the winter of 1752 when the ice was on the pond and the trees bowed under the weight of the hoar frost. There were nine priests out of Oxford, garbed all in white with tapers in hand. Some looked fearful, others burned with a righteous fervour because they thought they were doing the Lord’s work. All of them looked cold, huddled within their cassocks, the one out ahead gripping the golden crucifix as though it were all that stood between him and the devil himself.

The villagers came out to watch for a while, standing around in uneasy groups, their breath like smoke on the night air, then the lure of the warm alehouse called them back and they went eagerly, talking of uneasy ghosts and the folly of the holy men in thinking they could trap my spirit.

The hunt was long. I ran through the lost passageways of Cumnor Hall with the priests snapping at my heels and in the end, exhausted and vanquished, my ghost sank into the dark pool. They said their prayers over me and returned to their cloisters and believed the haunting to be at an end.

Yet an unquiet ghost is not so easily laid to rest. They had trapped my wandering spirit but I was not at peace. When the truth is concealed the pattern will repeat. The first victim was Amyas Latimer, the poor boy who fell to his death from the tower of the church where my body was buried. Then there was the little serving girl, Amethyst Green, who tumbled from the roof of Oakhangar Hall. Soon there will be another. If no one prevents it, I know there will be a fourth death and a fifth, and on into an endless future, the same pattern, yet different each time, a shifting magic lantern projecting the horror of that day centuries ago.

There is only one hope.

I sense her presence beside me through the dark. Each time it happens she is there too, in a different guise, like me. She is my nemesis, the arch-enemy. Yet she is the only one who can free me and break this curse. In the end it all depends on her and in freeing my spirit I sense she will also free her own.

Elizabeth.

I met her only a handful of times in my life. She was little but she was fierce, always, fierce enough to survive against the odds, a fighter, clever, ruthless, destined always to be alone. We could never have been friends yet we are locked together in this endless dance through time.

I possessed the one thing she wanted and could not have and in my dying I denied it to her forever. For a little while I thought that would be enough to satisfy me. Yet revenge sours and diminishes through the years. All I wish now is to be released from my pain and to ensure this can never happen again.

Elizabeth, my enemy, you are the only one who can help me now but to do that you must change, you must see that the truth needs to be told. Open your eyes. Find the light.

Excerpted from The Forgotten Sister by Nicola Cornick Copyright © Nicola Cornick. Published by Graydon House Books.


SOCIAL:

Author Website: https://www.nicolacornick.co.uk/

TWITTER: https://twitter.com/NicolaCornick

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nicola.cornick/ 

Insta: https://www.instagram.com/nicolacornick/ 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/63843.Nicola_Cornick 


To purchase The Forgotten Sister: 

BUY LINKS:

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Thursday, October 8, 2020

Confessions on the 7:45 by Lisa Unger

 



Alllllllll aboard!! Don't miss your train!  This is what may happen if you DO miss it. 

Selena misses her original train home from work so she boards the later train.  On the train she meets Martha who she feels an immediate connection to that she can't explain.  They begin talking and Selena starts unloading all of her problems while they sit there.  She's going through a very tough time (no spoilers) and feels relief when she confides in Martha.  Martha, in turn, confesses her own secret and they seem to form a quick, if not short bond. 

Well, without giving it all away, Selena's life starts falling apart, not only because of the problem she confessed to Martha, but then to top everything off,  Selena's nanny, Geneva goes missing and suspicion falls on Selena's home. 

Did Selena meet a friend or did she open her life up for more chaos? If only she had caught her regular train home! 

There's so much that goes on in this book after Selena meets Martha, my head was swimming, but in a good way! I enjoyed it but it went down some paths I wasn't totally buying.  But, sometimes that's the kind of story you need-a good escape. So, all in all, I really did enjoy it.  It is just a good, fun ride and if you can suspend SOME belief, you're going to have a good time! Lisa Unger really does deliver in her books. 

Click here for an excerpt from the book: Excerpt from Confessions on the 7:45


                                      Q and A with author Lisa Unger

 



Q: Please give the elevator pitch for Confessions on the 7:45

A: Selena Murphy is a young mother who is having a terrible day. When she gets on her commuter train home, it stalls, dying on the tracks. The beautiful stranger sitting next to her strikes up a conversation with a confession. Maybe it’s her awful day, or the drink she shouldn’t have had, or the dark of the train, but, whatever the reason, Selena shares a secret of her own. When the train comes back to life and Selena is finally headed home, she’s embarrassed. What would lead her to confess her darkest secret to a complete stranger? She hopes she’ll never see the mysterious woman from the train, ever again. But, of course, she will. 


Q: How do the ideas come to you for these bestsellers?

A: Every novel begins with a germ. A little zap of interest that starts me on an obsession for a particular topic. It could be a news story I read, or a sentence I hear or just an image that inspires me. One time it was even a piece of junk mail! Then, if that obsession connects to something larger that’s going on with me, I start to hear a voice or voices.I follow those voices, and they carry me through the narrative. 

Q: Can you explain the popularity of the psychological thriller genre?

A: People have a deep and abiding desire, a need even, to understand themselves and those around them. This includes having some insight into the darkest aspects of human nature. Crime fiction is the perfect place to explore some of the big questions people have about what makes people who they are. Also, in difficult times, crime fiction provides a story with a beginning, a middle, and an end where some type of justice is delivered. Not so with the real world. So I think there is some comfort to be found even in the darkest and most suspenseful novels.

Q: There are so many twists in the story.  Did you know the ending before you plotted all of the surprises?

A: When I sit down to write, I have no idea what’s going to happen, who’s going to show up or what they’re going to do day to day.  And I certainly have no idea how things will end.  It’s kind of a crazy way to write a book, but I’ve never done it any other way.  I write for the same reason that I read, because I want to know what’s going to happen.


Q:  What would you like to do if you were not an author?

A: I don’t know! I’ve never wanted to be anything other than an author. Psychology has always fascinated me, so maybe being a psychiatrist or counselor.


Q:  If Confessions on the 7:45 were made into a movie, which actors would you choose to play the lead roles?

A: I would cast Scarlett Johansson as Selena and Gal Gadot as Martha. The supporting cast would be important, too, and Anne Hathaway would be perfect as Geneva and I’d love to see Bradley Cooper as Graham.


Q:  Which of your books would you like to see televised or produced by Hollywood as a movie?

A: Any of them! Currently, THE RED HUNTER and UNDER MY SKIN are under options. So fingers crossed there! If I had to choose some others, I’d pick FRAGILE or INK AND BONE. I’d love to see my fictional town The Hollows come to life on the big or small screen.


Q: Which came first: the characters or the plot line? 

A: The characters, always. My stories always begin for me with a voice, someone with a story to tell.


Q: Why do you love Selena and why should readers root for her?

A: As most of my characters are, Selena is imperfect. The pressures she experiences from the world around her are matched by those she places on herself. She is struggling, but she also knows she has reserves of strength from which to draw to overcome the obstacles she faces, some of which are catastrophic. I think we’re all stronger and braver than we believe ourselves to be, so when we’re rooting for Selena, we’re really rooting for the warrior within us all.


Q: How do you come up with your stories? Is anything based on or influenced by real life? 

A: Everything in fiction is autobiographical -- and nothing is! If we’re writing from a deep and authentic place, then all of our experiences, our observations, the people we meet, the situations we observe, the conversations we have and overhear, inform our fiction. Sometimes inspiration comes from the news, from travel, from questions I have about people and the world. My fiction is always influenced by my real life but in really layered and mysterious ways. 


Q: What was your last 5-star read? 

A: I’ve read so many fantastic books recently! GOOD GIRLS LIE by JT Ellison, IF IT BLEEDS by Stephen King, and LITTLE SECRETS by Jennifer Hillier are some of my favorite recent reads.

Q: What is one thing about publishing you wish someone would have told you?

A: I worked for a publisher before I became an author, so I was lucky to have a lot of insight into the business of publishing. So I suppose I’d like to share what I knew going in that a lot of writers don’t.  I knew that the book contract was not the end of the journey, but the beginning of the writing life. And that no matter where you are in your career -- an aspiring writer, or a published writer just starting out, or a mega bestseller, it never stops being about the writing. What you do on the page is always the most important element of your career, so never stop trying to get better.


Thank you so much to the publisher for the advance copy. All opinions are my own.   

Monday, September 14, 2020

The Librarian of Boone Hollow by Kim Vogel Sawyer


I was so excited to get an advance copy of this book!  It releases September 15, 2020. 

Quick synopsis:  Addie is attending college and happy about her future when she gets bad news.  Her parents have hit financial trouble and have lost their home.  It also means that Addie's school bill cannot be paid.  She would do anything to help her parents and is thrilled when a job opportunity comes up to work in a library in Boone's Hollow, Kentucky.   Addie loves books and she is eager to start her job so that she can begin to send money back to her parents. 

Emmett is from Boone's Hollow, but knows Addie from college.  They met briefly at a bonfire at school, but don't really know each other.  Emmett graduated from the college and returned home.   He has all about given up on his dream to have a career due to not being able to find a job in the area of his degree and so he decides to join his father in the coal mines. 

Bettina has lived in Boone's Hollow her whole life but has never furthered her education. She is content to live in the small town and lead a simple life. She has her eyes set for Emmett and is ecstatic when he returns from college  She also works for the library system delivering books by horseback to the less fortunate folks on the mountain. She is convinced she and Emmett can have a future together to include marriage. 

Emmett is shocked to find Addie in Boone's Hollow and Bettina is not happy at all seeing that Emmett knows her.  Trouble follows in the story, not only with personal relationships, but with someone who may just be trying to get rid of the library program.  So much more happens and other characters are introduced but I don't want to give too much away. There are good lessons in here on not making snap judgments about how people live and to not make decisions about people without finding out about them on your own.  It is dangerous to  just listen to talk that may not be true. 

This story is a nod to the Works Progress Administration which included REAL librarians on horseback.  I find this fascinating as I am a huge book and library fan.  You can read more about the real librarians here:  Horse Riding Librarians.

I really enjoyed this story and felt it went along very quickly. I was not only interested in what was happening to the characters, but I love any book that makes me look into a subject even more.  Kim Vogel Sawyer did not disappoint.  If you like books, libraries and learning more about historical subjects, this book is for you. 

I really appreciate WaterBrook Multnomah for the advance copy and for this opportunity to read this fascinating story. 

 

Sunday, September 13, 2020

The Last Story of Mina Lee by Nancy Jooyoun Kim

 




This book was a roller coaster of emotion and actually had a good little "mystery" build up.  

Margot has always been somewhat embarrassed of her immigrant mother, Mina Lee.  Margot, who was born in America, feels more savvy Mina Lee.  In Margot's eyes, Mina has never tried to achieve more or tried to make her life better in any way.   Mina has bought shame to Margot by not speaking English, gotten a better job or tried to get out of her dingy apartment, the same apartment she's still in, much to Margot's chagrin.  And to top everything else off, Margot does not know who her father is.   Mina refuses to tell her.  So, Margot was thrilled to finally become of age when she can leave home and put distance between her and her mother. 

One day, when accompanying her friend on a move to the city where Mina still lives, Margot decides to visit.  Usually the visits are on holidays only.  They don't see each other often and barely talk on the phone.  Margot is in shock when she finds her mother dead in her apartment.  It appears to be a fall, but things aren't always what they seem.  

I am not going to give too much away, but I think we ALL forget our parents had different lives, dreams and desires before we came on the scene.  This is just one lesson that Margot learns about Mina when starting to dig into her life.  Because they were never close, Margot finds there's actually a lot to learn about her mother, and unfortunately hard lessons about regret.  The story then starts going back and forth between Mina's story and present day. 

I really enjoyed this book and was thankful to the publisher for the opportunity.  The only thing that lost points for me was the several thinly veiled semi political, semi social comments as if the author was trying to force certain stances in, probably her own opinions.  

Otherwise, I am glad I got to read this story.  I love reading about other cultures and I think the author was informative in this area.  Thank you to the publisher. I think this book will do well.   Released September 1, 2020. 

If you would like to read an excerpt of this book click here: 

Book Excerpt


Information: 

Buy Links: 

Harlequin 

Barnes & Noble

Amazon

Books-A-Million

Powell’s

Social Links:

Author Website

Twitter: @njooyounkim

Instagram: @njooyounkim

Goodreads


Author Bio: 

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Nancy Jooyoun Kim is a graduate of UCLA and the MFA Creative Writing Program at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her work has appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, The Rumpus, Electric Literature, Asian American Writers’ Workshop’s The Margins, The Offing, the blogs of Prairie Schooner and Kenyon Review, and elsewhere. Her essay, “Love (or Live Cargo),” was performed for NPR/PRI’s Selected Shorts in 2017 with stories by Viet Thanh Nguyen, Phil Klay, and Etgar Keret. THE LAST STORY OF MINA LEE is her first novel.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Little Disasters by Sarah Vaughan




Hi, all! 


How far would you go to help a friend?   This is the dilemma Liz is facing with her friend Jess.  In Liz's eyes,  Jess is the perfect mother while Liz feels like she's trying to hold it all together what with being a mom and an emergency room doctor.  There's always the guilt when Liz is away and she feels subpar sometimes with Jess. In fact their friendship has weakened since Jess had her third baby. However, one night, Jess brings her baby, Betsey into the ER when Liz is working.  Betsey has been sick during the evening but Liz notices an injury to the back of Betsey's head.  Jess claims that Betsey fell when Jess wasn't looking but Liz has a bad feeling.  Could her friend have done something to her baby?  Could Jess' husband have? 

This is a book about really not knowing what someone is going through and the lengths people will go to get what they want and to protect what they love.  it's also a book about paying attention and reaching out to those in need when they are in trouble. 

I really enjoyed this book.  It caught me off guard in a few places and that's hard to do in this day and age.  I was invested in what happened and in the characters.  This was my first Sarah Vaughan book but it won't be my last.  Thank you to NetGalley and to the publisher.  


Thursday, June 4, 2020

Stranger in the Lake by Kimberly Belle




Charlotte has pulled herself away from the wrong side of the tracks.  She and her brother Chet have worked hard to shed their hard upbringing.  Charlotte, working her job, met Paul, the local millionaire.  Charlotte knows people look at her with disdain.  The local townfolk think she must have just married Paul for his money, but it isn't true.  Charlotte truly loves Paul and shares happy news with him.  She's pregnant.  

However, another obstacle that Paul has had to overcome is that he was once married before and his wife was found dead in the lake surrounding the town. Her death was suspicious because she was an expert swimmer.  Paul was cleared of her death, but the town has never forgotten. 

Then something happens: another woman is found dead in the lake, under Charlotte and Paul's deck.  Charlotte knows this will automatically thrust Paul back into high suspicion. Two dead women in the lake?  It's a mystery for sure.  And matters are made worse when the police come to question Paul and he lies about knowing this second woman.  Charlotte doesn't know her, but she saw Paul talking briefly with the stranger in the lake the day before in town. 

This book alternates between present day and several decades prior when Paul was in high school and secrets that were kept between him, and his two friends, Jax and Micah.  Secrets that Charlotte doesn't even know.

This book kept me entertained and wanting to know what was going on, especially how the past was going to catch up and tie into the present.  I thought it was a good solid story, but I still had had one pretty big question at the end. I won't ask them here but it was something that really nagged at me.  It was probably something very obvious, and I missed it. Anyway, I enjoyed this story and I think a lot of others will, too.  I think it will be a good summer read that possibly won't wrap up the way you think.  I'm not saying a twist, but still maybe a little unexpected.   Releases June 9th!!  Read on for an excerpt! 

The town of Lake Crosby isn’t much, just three square blocks and some change, but it’s the only town in the southern Appalachians perched at the edge of the water, which makes it a popular tourist spot. Paul’s office is at the far end of the first block, tucked between a fudge shop and Stuart’s Craft Cocktails, which, as far as I can tell, is just another way to say “pretentious bar.” Most of the businesses here are pretentious, farm-to-table restaurants and pecialty boutiques selling all things overpriced and unnecessary.
For people like Paul, town is a place to socialize and make money—in his case, by selling custom house designs for the million-dollar lots that sit high on the hills or line the lakeshores. My old friends serve his drinks and wait his tables—but only the lucky ones. There are ten times more locals than there are jobs.
The covered terrace for the cocktail lounge is quiet, a result of the off-season and the incoming weather, the sign on the door still flipped to Closed. I’m passing the empty hostess stand when I notice movement at the very back, a tattered shadow peeling away from the wall. Jax—the town loon, the crazy old man who lives in the woods. Most people turn away from him, either out of pity or fear, but not me. For some reason I can’t put into words, I’ve never been afraid to look him straight on.
He takes a couple of halting steps, like he doesn’t want to be seen—and he probably doesn’t. Jax is like a deer you come up on in a meadow, one blink and he’s gone. But this time he doesn’t run. His gaze flicks around, searching the street behind me. “Where’s Paul.” A statement, not a question.
Slowly, so not to spook him, I point to the sleek double doors on the next building, golden light spilling out the windows of Keller Architecture. “Did you check inside?” Jax shakes his head. “I need to talk to him. It’s important.”
Like every time he emerges from out of the woods, curiosity bubbles in my chest. Once upon a time, Jax had everything going for him. High school prom king and star quarterback, the golden boy with a golden future, and one of Paul’s two best friends. Their picture still sits atop his desk in the study, Paul and Jax and Micah, all tanned chests and straightened smiles, three teenage boys with the world at their feet.
Now he’s Batty Jax, the raggedy, bearded boogeyman parents use as a warning. Do your homework, stay out of trouble, and don’t end up like Jax. He clings to the murky back of the terrace, sticking to the shaded spots where it’s too dark for me to make out much more than a halo of matted hair, the jutting edges of an oversized jacket, long, lean thighs. His face is dark, too, the combination of a life outdoors and dirt.
“Do you want me to give Paul a message? Or if you stay right there, I can send him out. I know he’ll want to see you.” Actually, I don’t know; I only assume. Jax is the source of a slew of rumors and petty gossip, but for Paul, he’s a painful subject, one he doesn’t like to talk about. As far as I know, the two haven’t spoken since high school graduation—not an easy thing to do in a town where everybody knows everybody.
Jax glances up the street, in the direction of far-off voices floating on the icy wind. I don’t follow his gaze, but I can tell from the way his body turns skittish that someone is coming this way, moving closer.
“Do you need anything? Some money, maybe?”
Good thing those people aren’t within earshot, because they would laugh at the absurdity of the trailer-park girl turned married-up wifey offering the son of an insurance tycoon some cash. Not that Jax’s father didn’t disown him ages ago or that I have more than a couple of bucks in my pocket, but still. Jax shakes his head again. “Tell Paul I need to talk to him. Tell him to hurry.”
Before I can ask what for, he’s off, planting a palm on the railing and springing over in one easy leap, his body light as a pole vaulter. He hits the cement and takes off up the alley. I dash forward until I’m flush with the railing, peering down the long passage between Paul’s building and the cocktail lounge, but it’s empty. Jax is already gone.
I push through the doors of Keller Architecture, an open space with cleared desks and darkened computer screens. The whiteboard on the back wall has already been wiped clean, too, one of the many tasks Paul requires his staff to do daily. It’s nearing five, and other than his lead designer, Gwen, hunched over a drawing at her drafting table, the office is empty. She nods at my desk. “Perfect timing. I just finished the Curtis Cottage drawings.”
Calling a seven-thousand-square-foot house a “cottage” is ridiculous, as are whatever reasons Tom Curtis and his wife, a couple well into their seventies, gave Paul for wanting six bedrooms and two kitchens in what is essentially a weekend home. But the Curtises are typical Keller Architecture clients—privileged, demanding and more than a little entitled. They like Paul because he’s one of them. Having a desk is probably ridiculous, too, since I only work twenty hours a week, and for most of them I’m anywhere but here. My role is client relations, which consists mainly of hauling my ass to wherever the clients are so I can put out fires and talk them off the latest ledge. The job and the desk are one of the many perks of being married to a Keller.
“Thanks." I tuck the Curtis designs under an arm and move toward the hallway to my left, a sleek tunnel of wood and steel that ends in Paul’s glass-walled office. “I’m here to pick up Paul. There’s something wrong with his car.” When he called earlier to tell me his car was dead in the lot, I thought he was joking. Engine trouble is what happens to my ancient Civic, not Paul’s fancy Range Rover, a brand-new supercharged machine with a dashboard that belongs in a cockpit. More money than sense, my mother would say about Paul if she were here, and now, I guess, about me.
Gwen leans back in her chair, wagging a mechanical pencil between two slim fingers. “Yeah, the dealer is sending a tow truck and a replacement car, but they just called to say they’re delayed. He said he had a couple of errands to run.”
I frown. “Who, the tow truck driver?”
“No, Paul.” She swivels in her chair, reaching across the desk behind her for a straightedge. “He should be back any sec.”
I thank her and head for the door. On the sidewalk, I fire off a quick text to Paul. I’m here,
where are you? I wait for a reply that doesn’t come. The screen goes dark, then black. I slip the phone into my jacket pocket and start walking.
In a town like Lake Crosby, there are only so many places Paul could be. The market, the pharmacy, the shop where he buys his ties and socks. I pop into all of them, but no one’s seen him since this morning. Back on the sidewalk, I pull out my phone and give him a call. It rings once, then shoots me to voice mail. I hit End and look up and down the mostly deserted street.
“Hey,Charlie,” somebody calls from across the road, two single lanes separated by a parking strip, and I whirl around, spotting Wade’s familiar face over the cars and SUVs. One of my brother’s former classmates, a known troublemaker who dropped out sophomore year because he was too busy cooking meth and raising hell. He leans against the ivory siding of the bed-and-breakfast, holding what I sincerely hope is a hand-rolled cigarette.
“It’s Charlotte,” I say, but I don’t know why I bother.
On my sixteenth birthday, I plunked down more than a hundred hard-earned dollars at the courthouse to change my name. But no matter how many times I correct the people who knew me back when—people who populate the trailer parks and shacks along the mountain range, people like Wade and me—no matter how many times I tell them I’m not that person anymore, to them I’ll always be Charlie.
He flicks the cigarette butt into the gutter and tilts his head up the street. “I just saw your old man coming out of the coffee shop.” Emphasis on the old man. “If you hurry, you can probably catch him.” I mumble a thanks, then head in that direction.
Just past the market, I spot Paul at the far end of a side street, a paper cup clutched in his hand. He’s wearing the clothes I watched him pull on this morning—a North Face fleece, a navy cashmere sweater, dark jeans, leather lace-up boots, but no coat. No hat or scarf or gloves. Paul always dresses like this, without a second thought as to the elements. That fleece might be fine for the quick jogs from the house to his car to the office door, but with the wind skimming up the lake, he must be freezing.
The woman he’s talking to is more properly dressed. Boots and a black wool coat, the big buttons fastened all the way to a neck cloaked in a double-wrapped scarf. A knitted hat is pulled low over her ears and hair, leaving only a slice of her face—from this angle, her profile—exposed.
“There you are,” I say, and they both turn.
A short but awkward silence. If I didn’t know better, I’d think he looks surprised to see me. Charlotte, hi. I was just…” He glances at the woman, then back to me. “What are you doing here?”
“You asked me to pick you up. Didn’t you get my text?”
With his free hand, he wriggles his cell from his pocket and checks the screen. “Oh. Sorry, I must have had it on Silent. I was on my way back to the office, but then I got to talking and…well, you know how that goes.” He gives me a sheepish smile. It’s a known fact that Paul is a talker, and like in most small towns, there’s always someone to talk to.
But I don’t know this woman.
I take in her milky skin and sky blue eyes, the light smattering of freckles across her nose and high cheekbones, and I’m positive I’ve never seen her before. She’s the kind of pretty a person would remember, almost beautiful even, though she’s nothing like his
type. Paul likes his women curvy and exotic, with dark hair and ambiguous coloring. This woman is bony, her skin so pale it’s almost translucent.
I step closer, holding up my hand in a wave. “Hi, I’m Charlotte Keller. Paul’s wife.”
The woman gives me a polite smile, but her gaze flits to Paul. She murmurs something, and I’m pretty sure it’s “Keller.”
The hairs soldier on the back of my neck, even though I’ve never been the jealous type. It’s always seemed like such a waste of energy to me, being possessive and suspicious of a man who claims to love you. Either you believe him or you don’t—or so I’ve always thought. Paul tells me he loves me all the time, and I believe him. But this woman wouldn’t be the first around these parts to try to snag herself a Keller.
“Are you ready?” I say, looking at Paul. “Because I came in the boat, and we need to get home before this weather blows in.”
The talk of rain does the trick, and Paul snaps out of whatever I walked into here. He gives me that smile he saves only for me, and a rush of something warm hits me hard, right behind the knees.
People who say Paul and I are wrong together don’t get that we’ve been waiting for each other all our lives. His first wife’s death, my convict father and meth-head mother, they broke us for a reason, so all these years later our jagged edges would fit together perfectly, like two pieces of the same fractured puzzle. The first time Paul took my hand, the world just…started making sense.
And now there’s a baby, a perfect little piece of Paul and me, an accidental miracle that somehow busted through the birth control. Maybe it’s not a fluke but a sign, the universe’s way of telling me something good is coming. A new life. A new chance to get things right.
All of a sudden and out of nowhere I feel it, this burning in my chest, an overwhelming, desperate fire for this baby that’s taken root in my belly. I want it to grow and kick and thrive. I want it with everything inside me.
“Let’s go home.” Without so much as a backward glance at the woman, Paul takes my hand and leads me to the boat.
Excerpted from Stranger in the Lake by Kimberly Belle, Copyright © 2020 by Kimberle S. Belle Books, LLC. Published by Park Row Books.
Hope you all enjoyed the excerpt! Get your copy June 9th!

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Behind the Red Door by Megan Collins



This morning, I finished Behind the Red Door by Megan Collins. Now, I absolutely love Ms. Collins' first book, The Winter Sister, so I was thrilled to get an advance copy of this one from NetGalley. 

From Goodreads:

When Fern Douglas sees the news about Astrid Sullivan, a thirty-four-year-old missing woman from Maine, she is positive that she knows her. Fern’s husband is sure it’s because of Astrid’s famous kidnapping—and equally famous return—twenty years ago, but Fern has no memory of that, even though it happened an hour outside her New Hampshire hometown. And when Astrid appears in Fern’s recurring nightmare, one in which a girl reaches out to her, pleading, Fern fears that it’s not a dream at all, but a memory.

Back home in New Hampshire, Fern purchases a copy of Astrid’s recently published memoir—which may have provoked her original kidnapper to abduct her again—and as she reads through its chapters and visits the people and places within it, she discovers more evidence that she has an unsettling connection to the missing woman. As Fern’s search becomes increasingly desperate, she hopes to remember her past so she can save Astrid in the present…before it’s too late.


So, I thought this had a really good premise and I couldn't wait to dive in.  Unfortunately, I thought this veered off of the description too much.  It IS about what it says, no doubt, but the end result (s) seemed incredibly far fetched to me.  Also, and this is just my opinion only, I couldn't seem to rally behind any of the characters. Of course what happens to two of them is heartbreaking, but the characters themselves weren't likable enough to make me FEEL what I should for them.  While the situation they faced was horrible, I didn't like THEM.  Without giving too much away, I felt in the beginning that Astrid sounded entitled and I was right. Maybe the author made her that way on purpose.  I'm not sure. 

With all that being said, I still think this book will do well when it releases.  I think a lot of people will enjoy it and quite frankly, I want it to do well.  Ms. Collins is very interactive and polite with her followers on Instagram and I wish her the very best with it.  Releases August 2020. 

Thank you so much to Netgalley and to the publisher.  No review was required.