Author: CMash

An avid reader for many years. Married for 31 years with 2 fantastic adult sons who I am so very proud of with great gfs. Am disabled. Found this wonderful community of book blogging in approximately December 2009 and have loved every minute of it. Am now a reviewer for authors, publishers, publicists, etc. And am also a partner in a Virtual PR tour company, Partners In Crime Tours for authors of novels of mystery, suspense and crime (www.Partnersincrimetours.net)

SAVING GRACE by D.M. Barr | #Showcase #Interview #Giveaway

Saving Grace by D.M. Barr Banner

 

 

Saving Grace

A Psychological Thriller

by D.M. Barr

on Tour October 12 – November 13, 2020

Synopsis:

Saving Grace by D.M. Barr

Grace Pierrepoint Rendell, the only child of an ailing billionaire, has been treated for paranoia since childhood. When she secretly quits her meds, she begins to suspect that once her father passes, her husband will murder her for her inheritance. Realizing that no one will believe the ravings of a supposed psychotic, she devises a creative way to save herself – she will write herself out of danger, authoring a novel with the heroine in exactly the same circumstances, thus subtly exposing her husband’s scheme to the world. She hires acclaimed author Lynn Andrews to help edit her literary insurance policy, but when Lynn is murdered, Grace is discovered standing over the bloody remains. The clock is ticking: can she write and publish her manuscript before she is strapped into a straitjacket, accused of homicide, or lowered six feet under?

With a cast of secondary characters whose challenges mirror Grace’s own, Saving Grace is, at it’s core, an allegory for the struggle of the marginalized to be heard and live life on their own terms.

“A psychological thriller with more than enough twists, turns, and misdirection to keep even the most jaded reader turning pages all night long.”

–Lori Robbins, author of the Silver Falchion Award-winning novel, Lesson Plan for Murder

Book Details:

Genre: Psychological Thriller, Domestic Suspense
Published by: Black Rose Writing
Publication Date: October 15th 2020
Number of Pages: 255
ISBN: 978-1684335565
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BlackRose Writing | Goodreads

 

Author Bio:

D.M. Barr

By day, a mild-mannered salesperson, wife, mother, rescuer of senior shelter dogs, competitive trivia player and author groupie, happily living just north of New York City. By night, an author of sex, suspense and satire.

My background includes stints in travel marketing, travel journalism, meeting planning, public relations and real estate. I was, for a long and happy time, an award-winning magazine writer and editor. Then kids happened. And I needed to actually make money. Now they’re off doing whatever it is they do (of which I have no idea since they won’t friend me on Facebook) and I can spend my spare time weaving tales of debauchery and whatever else tickles my fancy.

The main thing to remember about my work is that I am NOT one of my characters. For example, as a real estate broker, I’ve never played Bondage Bingo in one of my empty listings or offed anyone at my local diet clinic. And I haven’t run away from home in fear that my husband was planning to off me.

But that’s not to say that I haven’t wanted to…

Q&A with D.M. Barr

What was the inspiration for this book?

My husband started asking about my inheritance. My father lives in Florida and is still alive. I wondered, what if…?

What has been the biggest challenge in your writing career?

The writing is simple compared to finding and audience and getting reviews, even from your friends.

What do you absolutely need while writing?

Silence. I can’t write if there’s noise. If someone starts speaking to me while I’m in “the zone,” I just tune them out. I’ve found I can write at any hour, in any room—as long as it’s quiet.

Do you adhere to a strict routine when writing or write when the ideas are flowing?

When I’m in writing mode, as opposed to revision mode or marketing mode, I force myself to write 1,000 words a day. I try to write them in the morning but if I don’t finish, the rule is to finish sometime that day. It doesn’t matter if they suck (the first draft always does); I just need to get them onto the page so I know what I’m dealing with and I can revise later. Sometimes, you don’t know until the story’s completely out exactly what story you have!

Who is your favorite character from your book and why?

My favorite character is an ex-Hasid named Zev. He’s sarcastic and irreverent, just like me, and adds some badly needed comic relief to the book.

Who is your least favorite character from your book and why?

Not too fond of Grace’s sons, since they take her for granted, following Eliot’s lead. In fact, I’m really not too fond of Eliot either.

Give us an interesting fun fact or a few about your book?

The original iteration of the book had Grace and Hack’s stories running concurrently. Hack felt responsible for his parents’ death and to make it up to their memory, he was helping Kenzie set up a LBGTQ shelter in his family’s home, where he was the only one still living.

Do you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers?

When you read the metaphors, if you think they are a little odd, remember that Grace’s entire experience of life has been from books.

Tell us a little about yourself and your background?

Wife, mother, member of several writing organizations in NY and the Hudson Valley. Rescuer of shelter dogs and competitive trivia player when there isn’t a pandemic around. I am a former magazine writer/editor who ran my own travel content/marketing company for years before ever daring to write fiction. As the daughter of owners of a major Manhattan travel agency, I was fortunate enough to travel the world, and have enjoyed stints as a travel writer as well as other travel-related careers. I’ve also worked in real estate and mortgage origination.

What’s next that we can look forward to?

My next book is a rom-com. I hope to be submitting it to publishers in October and hopefully, you’ll see it on the shelves in 2021.

Catch Up With Our Author On:
www.DMBarr.com, Goodreads, BookBub, Instagram, Twitter, & Facebook!

Read an excerpt:

One felony was all it took to convince Andrea Lin she was better suited to committing crime on paper than in person. As renowned mystery author Lynn Andrews, she understood conflict equaled good drama. Like her readers, she should have expected the hiccups, even relished them. What she hadn’t counted on was the accompanying agita, especially while sitting in her Bergen County kitchen, far from the action at the Bitcoin Teller Machine.

Her one job had been to place a single phone call when the money hit and tell the hacker to lift the encryption on Grace’s computer. Trouble was, her dozen calls remained unanswered until a few minutes ago, throwing their meticulous plan off schedule.

Andrea stroked the blue-gray Nebulung purring on her lap and tried to ignore the churning in her stomach. “Denver, the next time I consider helping a sibling with some crazy scheme, you have my permission to use my leg as a scratching post until I come to my senses. Agreed?”

Denver looked up, his green eyes filled with innocence, and answered with a single meow before leaping onto the table toward her plate of shortbread cookies.

“I’ll take that as a yes.” She sipped her tea, willing the sugar to sweeten the acrid taste in her mouth. The phone interrupted her meditation. No doubt a check-in from her brother, the extorter-in-chief.

“I figured you’d have called by now. Everything on track?” Joe’s strained voice conveyed his own jangled nerves. They’d agreed to be vague when communicating. In these days of Siri and Alexa, anyone could be listening.

“Finally. Took forever to get through to our friend, but she said she’d take care of ‘our project’ as soon as her meetings wrapped up. From here on out though, I’m sticking to fiction. Real-life intrigue is too stressful.”

Andrea missed Joe’s response, instead perplexed by her cats’ sudden change of behavior. Denver had tilted his head and leapt from the table; Vail and Aspen sat frozen, ears perked, staring toward the foyer. Then she heard it too, the sound of papers shuffling in the living room. She leaned forward, muscles taut, hackles raised, ready to pounce. “Joe, hold on a sec. I think someone’s in the house. I’ll call you back later.”

***

“Wait, what? Andrea??” Silence. The connection was dead.

After twenty minutes of weaving in and out of rush-hour traffic to travel one mile, Joe “Hack” Hackford pulled up outside his sister’s Ridgewood home. Adrenaline pumping on overdrive, he jumped from his car and sprinted toward the house. Door wide open—not an encouraging sign. He steeled his nerves and hastened inside. The living room looked like a hurricane’s aftermath, with furniture overturned and papers littering the carpets and floor.

“Andrea? Are you here?” He rushed into the kitchen, which lacked any signs of their celebratory dinner—no spaghetti boiling on the stove, no cake rising in the oven. Only the door to the backyard ajar and a shriek emanating from the next room, piercing the eerie silence. Hair stiffening at the back of his neck, he raced into the dining room where a redheaded woman stood frozen, staring across the room.

“Who the hell are you?” he growled.

The stranger remained wide-eyed and unresponsive. He followed her gaze to the floor, where he witnessed the unthinkable. His beloved sister lay in the corner, surrounded by a pool of blood, a kitchen knife stuck in her chest. Her eyes remained fixed on the ceiling. A trio of feline guards circled her lifeless body.

Hack’s knees turned to jelly, and he grabbed onto a chair for support, forcing back the remains of the snack he’d consumed only minutes earlier. Once the initial shock waned, he reverted his attention back to the intruder. At second glance, she did look somewhat familiar, though the woman he’d met a few weeks back—the missing heiress whose computer they’d just hacked—was brunette. Had she uncovered their con? With a bolt of fury, he reached forward and pulled the wig from her head. A thousand questions zigzagged in his brain, but only one forced its way past his lips:

“Oh my God. Grace. Oh my God. What the hell have you done?”

***

Excerpt from Saving Grace by D.M. Barr. Copyright 2020 by D.M. Barr. Reproduced with permission from D.M. Barr. All rights reserved.

 

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This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for D.M. Barr. There will be 1 winner of one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card. The giveaway begins on October 12, 2020 and runs through November 15, 2020. Void where prohibited.

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WHAT IF? by Fran Lewis | #Showcase #Review

What if?

by Fran Lewis

on Tour October 1-31, 2020

What if? by Fran Lewis

Synopsis:

With the pandemic that never seems to be leaving us anytime soon I’ve created worlds that might make you pause for thought. Dark stories told by the characters as they experienced their journeys into worlds that you might not want to live in a hopefully be happy in the one you’re in.

MY THOUGHTS/REVIEW

4stars

Who would have thought that we would be living in a world as we are today in 2020? Having to exist with new normals that are so foreign to us.

In WHAT IF?, author Fran Lewis takes it even further. A collection of short stories and a poem that are menacing and grim with a sci-fi undertone. Stories that will have you wondering what if? Some that were so dark, that the question of what if we lived in this new world, was scary. Each speculative tale makes the reader wonder could it be possible, and if it could be, makes it even eerier.

What If? takes you on a ride where your imagination might not want to go!! Read this one with the lights on.

Book Details:

Genre: Time Travel/ Sci Fi
Published by: Fidelli
Publication Date: July 8, 2020
Number of Pages: 78
ISBN: B08CNKX3DT
Purchase Links: Amazon | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

One Race: One World: The Year 2050

It was now 2050 and the world had really changed. There were no more planes or trains. All you needed to do was think about being somewhere and you were there. The government, in order to save money on gas and fuel, had banned cars, buses, and any means of transportation, and implanted chips in everyone’s arms that helped transport them to wherever they wanted to go, including the past.

A huge explosion had occurred, and all that was left in the world were twenty countries, with only twelve hundred people in each country. Most people had not survived the explosion, which had caused most of the countries to just disappear into space forever. No one really knew if anyone was out there or if these people survived somewhere, and no one really cared enough to find out.

One man called The Ruler headed all the countries, and assigned one person as the Chief of Law and Enforcement in each country. Under this person, five people helped to enforce the rules and the laws.

Then, one miserable day, someone decided there were too many wars, too many hate crimes, too many people being killed on the streets, and too much traffic and congestion on the highways. The government hired several scientists to find a solution to the problem, and that was how everyone in the entire world wound up multicolored.

Because of all the wars and fighting and hate that took place in the past, the government created a way to eliminate the many different races in the world and opted for only one. Everyone looked the same. Our faces might have looked a little different, but our skin colors were the same—multicolored. They did this so that no one would insult, mock, or hurt anyone because of their skin color. They eliminated houses of worship so that everyone was nonsectarian, and no one would be discriminated against. However, what they could not eliminate were our thoughts and desires to make changes in our lives, even though they tried.

Everyone that lived here had a job that paid the same amount. No one, no matter what they did or what career they chose, was paid more than anyone else. We never had to worry about being laid off. Unless we decided to move somewhere else our job stayed the same, and there was no room for advancement—ever. Everyone did the same thing every day. Nothing changed. Life was supposed to be anger free, insult free, and most of all, calm and tranquil. HOW DULL AND BORING! (OH! I am not supposed to say that. Opinions are not allowed here.)

One morning I got up and got dressed to go to my boring job as an accountant with the only accounting firm in this city. I went over the books daily, entered my accounts in their daily ledgers, and did taxes for some of the companies in this city. It was grunt work, and nothing exciting ever happened at work or anywhere else.

Walking to work as usual, I began remembering how it was only twenty years ago when there were cars, trains, and people running and yelling for cabs and trains to wait for them at the station. I missed the newspaper people on the street and the vendors selling hot coffee and bagels from their pushcarts. Those were the days. I loved the way people had looked and the different races and nationalities that lived here. Learning from other people was what made life exciting.

Then the unexpected happened. A new family with two children moved in down the street from me. These two kids were not going to conform to our way of thinking, and decided it was time to shake things up—and they did. One morning when going to school they each wore something other than the school’s drab gray uniform. The girl wore a pink and green dress with flowers, and the boy wore something blue, and a shirt that said, “I hate being the same. Different Rules.”

This did not go over well, and they were taken into custody by the guards in their school and promptly suspended. This did not stop them. They started screaming and yelling all sorts of words we had not heard before. “One race is not what we are supposed to be. I hate this planet. I hate all of you.”

I could not believe my ears. This was grounds for banishment into the Devoid Zone. These two children had painted stars all over their faces. Their younger sister decided to paint her face one color. Who in today’s world had a face that was one color? Everyone here looked and dressed the same. It prevented jealousy, arguments, and fashion wars. How dare they go against the laws of this state?

***

Excerpt from What if? by Fran Lewis. Copyright 2020 by Fran Lewis. Reproduced with permission from Fran Lewis. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Fran Lewis

Fran Lewis is a reviewer, talk show host, mj network, reading and writing staff developer. She was the administrative assistant to the Principal and created original programs for students after school. She was the music director and created musical festivals along with other staff members. She’s a member of Marquis Who’s Who, Continental Who’s who and who’s who of America’s professionals and educators.

Catch Up With Fran Lewis On:
Website, Goodreads, BookBub, Instagram, Twitter, & Facebook!

 

 

Tour Participants:

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  • ON THE RUN by Traci Hunter Abramson | #BookBlast #Giveaway

    On the Run

    by Traci Hunter Abramson

    October 27, 2020 Book Blast

    Synopsis:

    On the Run by Traci Hunter Abramson

    As one of the top investigative journalists in the nation, Elle Jameson has a knack for uncovering the truth. So when a promising lead points to corruption on a German military base, Elle anticipates a straightforward assignment. But then she stumbles upon a deadly conspiracy beyond anything she’s faced before, and her scrutiny does not go unnoticed. She knows too much, and she can’t be allowed to live. With no idea where to turn for help, she does the only thing she can: she runs.

    The guardians, an elite team of undercover agents, have one job: safeguard those under their protection. As a new guardian, Nolan has just received his first solo assignment to help a young woman who just survived an assassination attempt. Within minutes of making contact with the beautiful journalist, however, their location is discovered. Thus begins a game of cat and mouse spanning the globe as the two work to stay ahead of a determined assassin. Nolan fights to buy Elle time to complete her investigation, and what she discovers is a plot that threatens the very fabric of America. In a desperate race against evil, Nolan and Elle are the only ones who can prevent global catastrophe.

    Book Details:

    Genre: Romantic Suspense
    Published by: Covenant Communications
    Publication Date: October 2020
    Number of Pages: 296
    ISBN: 9781524412487
    Series:Guardian #4
    Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads

    Read an excerpt:

    Elle weaved her way through the Saturday crowd at the street market, listening to the various conversations flowing around her. Since arriving in Germany three weeks ago, she had looked forward to exploring the local scenery and visiting the cities near her new assignment. If only today she had time to enjoy the environment . . . and the shops.

    A brisk wind whipped through Elle’s long, blonde hair. A few autumn leaves drifted onto the sidewalk. She tugged her overcoat tighter around her, then stuffed her hands in her pockets to protect them against the chill, not bothering to put her gloves on.

    She passed various customers, picking up on snippets of their conversations.

    Two women discussed what kind of fish to buy for dinner, and an older couple looked over a variety of apples at the fruit stand. At the neighboring booth, a handful of tourists chatted in English as they debated whether some glassware would make it safely home to Canada.

    Elle wished she could worry about such trivialities, but she doubted that would happen anytime soon.

    Something was wrong with the latest reports on the new drone project. She was sure of it.

    When her uncle had sent her undercover as an army lieutenant, she had expected to find some evidence of misappropriation of funds or missing supplies, but uncovering a possible unauthorized access to highly sensitive material lifted her investigative senses to a new level. This wasn’t a story to be written. If her suspicions were right, this was espionage.

    For three weeks now, she had set aside her true identity of investigative journalist and had acted under her alias of Lieutenant Elaina Martin to send her suspicions up the chain of command. Unfortunately, no one wanted to listen to a lowly lieutenant in a sea of colonels, especially when that lieutenant was a bean counter. She really needed to talk to her uncle about promoting her the next time he sent her undercover as an officer. Of course, no one would believe she was a colonel at twenty-seven, so she supposed her age was going to handicap her for a while longer.

    Her assignment to Germany was supposed to be her opportunity to take a break from high-profile cases for a while, a chance to rest and recover from nearly six months of undercover work in the Middle East.

    Unfortunately, her first day on the job, she had stumbled across an anomaly that, despite weeks of research, she still couldn’t explain.

    When she tried to discuss the problem with her commanding officer, she had been told the program supervisor had everything under control. Colonel Doyle’s assurances didn’t change the facts. Someone without clearance had accessed the developmental software for the new unmanned aircraft prototype, a prototype that could fly undetected by radar. She didn’t need to be an aeronautical engineer to know that the software in the wrong hands could be deadly.

    With no one in her unit taking her concerns seriously, she had reached out to the only person she’d known outside her unit whom she could trust with classified information: her sister Abby.

    If Abby couldn’t figure out what was going on, Elle didn’t know who could.

    The woman had a knack for seeing what other people missed. Elle should know.

    Had it not been for Abby, the theft of weapons at Edwards Air Force Base would have put Elle before a court martial instead of the corporal who had tried to frame her.

    The incident had opened Elle’s eyes to what she really wanted to do with her life. Abby had spent her years since college protecting their country by keeping secrets, and Elle wanted to protect their freedoms by revealing the secrets that, when kept, could create their own kind of danger, so she’d been working as an investigative journalist ever since.

    Elle reached the designated café and stepped inside. Most of the round tables were occupied, the seats positioned so the customers could look out the wide window and watch the world go by. Deeper inside the restaurant, Abby waited for her at a table in the far corner.

    Elle weaved her way past several waiters until she reached her sister. When Abby stood, Elle gave her a hug. “Abby, thanks for meeting me.”

    “You said it was important. From what you sent me, I think it is.”

    Elle sat beside Abby, then reached into her oversized purse to retrieve a file folder. “I brought you documentation.”

    Abby took the folder and opened it in front of her. “What am I looking at?”

    “The download logs for the new drone software.”

    “And?”

    Elle scooted her chair closer and pointed at the area of concern. “According to command, this software is still in the final testing stage. The only people who should be accessing the files are the programmers.”

    She tapped on a list of the approved personnel. “Kamile Frost, Dennis Cleveland, and Lance Finney are all listed over here.”

    “Then who is this?” Abby asked, pointing to the three access codes used during the night shift.

    “That’s what I want to know. Whoever it is only downloads the updates after everyone else is gone for the day.”

    “Talk about suspicious.”

    “I thought so too.”

    A waiter approached with a carafe of water, slices of lemon floating inside.

    He filled both of their glasses. “Have you had time to look over the menu?”

    Elle opened hers, quickly narrowing the options to what she could eat without triggering her allergies to citrus, tomatoes, and pork. After they both gave their orders and the waiter left, Elle pulled a water bottle from her purse and took a sip.

    “I see you still come prepared.”

    “Yeah. It’s such a pain that so many restaurants serve their water with lemon.”

    Elle didn’t know how Abby had escaped all the food allergies in the family, while Elle appeared to have received a double dose.

    Abby sipped her water and tapped her finger on the file folder. “I assume you brought your concerns to the attention of your CO.”

    “Colonel Doyle didn’t seem the least bit interested in my concerns.”

    “Did he have an explanation?”

    “No. He just said the program manager would have said something if there were a problem. Apparently, everyone up the chain of command agrees with Colonel Doyle because no one seems concerned that a top-secret program might have been jeopardized,” Elle said.

    “And no one told you who else is accessing it?”

    “No. I thought with your resources, you could figure it out.”

    “That’s easy enough. When I get back to the office, I’ll look up the access code and see who it belongs to.” Abby lifted her glass and took another long swallow. “I can’t guarantee I can tell you the name.”

    “I realize you can’t share classified information, but you would at least be able to tell if this person is cleared on the project.”

    “I can do that,” Abby said. “I’m not sure I’ll find anything beyond what the project supervisor would have noticed.”

    “Maybe not, but after what happened at Edwards, I’d rather be safe than sorry.”

    “The theft of those weapons wasn’t your fault. Adams created such a good paper trail, no one could have been expected to know it wasn’t real.”

    “The auditor did.”

    “An auditor who has thirty years of experience and was specifically looking for potential thefts,” Abby countered. “Besides, if it was something you should have caught in your ordinary course of business, he wouldn’t have made a point of clearing you.”

    “But I sensed something wasn’t right. I just couldn’t put my finger on it.”

    “Which is why we’re sitting here now.”

    Elle shrugged. “I’m sorry if I seem paranoid.”

    “Not paranoid. Cautious,” Abby corrected. “There’s a difference.”

    “Whatever you call it, I appreciate your help.” Elle took another sip from her water bottle.

    Abby cleared her throat. “How have you liked being stationed here in Germany?”

    “It’s been good. I wasn’t sure if I would be able to practice speaking German much since so many people here speak English, but the language has come back faster than I’d expected.”

    “I figured it would. You were speaking like a native when we lived here as kids.” Abby cleared her throat again and tugged at her scarf.

    “So were you. I never realized how much we learned while Dad was stationed in Stuttgart.”

    Abby opened her mouth to respond but, instead, coughed several times.

    She reached for her water glass and took a swallow.

    Elle leaned forward in her seat. “Are you okay?”

    “Yeah. Sorry, I have this tickle in my throat,” Abby said, promptly coughing again. “Must be the change in the weather. I got a cold last fall too.”

    “I’ve been wondering how anyone survives the winters here.”

    “You’re about to find out . . .” Abby’s words trailed off into another fit of coughs, then her face turned red, a panicked expression dominating her features.

    “Abby!” Elle pushed out of her chair and circled to pat her sister on the back.

    Even though Abby hadn’t eaten anything, her hands went to her throat as though she were choking.

    The waiter was at their side in an instant and pulled Abby out of her chair to start the Heimlich maneuver.

    “She hasn’t eaten anything. I think she’s having an allergic reaction.” Elle fumbled through her purse for her EpiPen. She flipped off the safety cap, pressed the tip to Abby’s thigh, and pushed the button to trigger the injection.

    Almost immediately, Abby took a gasping breath.

    “Here.” The waiter thrust a glass of water toward Abby. “Take a sip.”

    “No.” Elle pushed the glass away and knelt beside Abby’s chair. “Are you okay?”

    Abby opened her mouth to speak only to begin another coughing fit.

    Elle turned to the waiter. “Something’s wrong. Call an ambulance.”

    A waitress approached, her phone in hand. “I already called. The ambulance will be here any minute.”

    The waiter picked up the carafe from the table and refilled Abby’s glass. As soon as there was a break in the coughing, he offered the glass of water again.

    “Are you sure you don’t want to give her something to drink?”

    “Not until we figure out what caused this.”

    Again, Abby tried to take a deep breath, but this time, her body trembled before being taken over by a seizure.

    “Help me move her onto the floor.” Elle gripped Abby under her arms while the waiter helped ease her onto the carpet. Elle moved the closest chairs out of the way and knelt beside Abby.

    “I’ll check on the ambulance,” the waiter said.

    Elle sensed rather than saw the waiter head for the door. Helpless to do anything but wait, Elle fought for calm. “Hang on, Abby. Help is on the way.”

    The words were barely out of her mouth before two ambulance attendants rushed through the door. Elle stood to give them room to work.

    “What happened?” the paramedic asked in German.

    “I don’t know,” Elle said, automatically responding in his language. “She started coughing and acting like she couldn’t breathe. I injected her with my EpiPen, and she got better for a few seconds. Then it started again. She started her seizure about a minute ago.”

    Both paramedics knelt beside Abby, evaluating her.

    “Does she have any known allergies?”

    “No, and she was fine when I got here,” Elle said. “When she couldn’t breathe, the EpiPen was the only thing I could think of.”

    Abby’s face paled, and her body stilled.

    “I’ve lost her pulse,” one paramedic said.

    Elle stepped back and watched the paramedics begin CPR and start Abby on oxygen. Adrenaline still pumping through her, Elle lowered herself into her chair. Minutes stretched out, the paramedics continuing the CPR, trading places every few minutes. They spoke with someone on the phone, the voices blurring with the background noise of the crowd who had been cleared out of the restaurant.

    Tears flowed freely down Elle’s cheeks. She stood with her arms tightly folded, unable to do anything but watch and pray. She didn’t know how much time had passed when one paramedic tapped the other on the shoulder and shook his head. The paramedic not working on Abby sat beside Elle to confirm that the unbelievable had become the inevitable.

    The one performing CPR gave one more chest compression and leaned back on his heels. His eyes lifted to meet Elle’s. “I’m sorry.”

    “No.” The word escaped in a whisper. It couldn’t be. Elle stared at her sister’s lifeless body, waiting for any sign that she had misunderstood. Her heartbeat echoed in her head as though beating inside a deep tunnel.

    “I’m so sorry.” The second paramedic put his hand on Elle’s arm.

    Grief crashed over her, new tears forming. Her sister was gone. She was really gone.

    “Can I get you something to drink? Maybe a glass of water?”

    Elle shook her head, and her gaze swept over the table. Her water glass wasn’t there. Why that detail mattered at such a time, Elle didn’t know. A quick scan of the table revealed her glass wasn’t the only thing missing. Abby’s glass, the water carafe, and the file outlining Elle’s suspicions were also missing.

    Elle swiped at her tears. “What happened to the waiter who met you at the door?”

    “No one met us when we arrived,” the paramedic said.

    Suspicions cut through her grief and bloomed with a sense of panic. Her file was coded in a way that it wouldn’t jeopardize national security, but if the people behind the suspicious activity got ahold of it, they would know exactly where the evidence was that could identify them.

    Elle swallowed hard and forced herself to push aside her emotions and look at Abby’s lifeless body. The only thing her sister had ingested since her arrival was the water their waiter had served them, water Elle herself would have drunk had it not contained lemon slices. She stood and took a step toward the door.

    “I have to go.”

    “But we need more information from you.”

    “Her name is Abigail Bender, and I think she was poisoned.”

    ***

    Excerpt from On the Run by Traci Hunter Abramson. Copyright 2020 by Traci Hunter Abramson. Reproduced with permission from Traci Hunter Abramson. All rights reserved.

     

     

    Author Bio:

    Traci Hunter Abramson

    Traci Hunter Abramson was born in Arizona, where she lived until moving to Venezuela for a study-abroad program. After graduating from Brigham Young University, she worked for the Central Intelligence Agency for several years, eventually resigning in order to raise her family. She credits the CIA with giving her a wealth of ideas as well as the skills needed to survive her children’s teenage years. She has gone on to write more than twenty bestselling novels that have consistently been nominated as Whitney Award finalists and seven-time Whitney Award winner. When she’s not writing, Traci enjoys spending time with her husband and five children, preferably on a nice quiet beach somewhere. She also enjoys sports, travel, writing, and coaching high school swimming.

    Catch Up With Traci Hunter Abramson:
    www.TraciAbramson.com, Goodreads, BookBub, Instagram, Twitter, & Facebook!

     

     

    Tour Participants:

    Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!



     

     

    Giveaway!:

    This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for Traci Hunter Abramson. There will be TWO winners. ONE winner will receive (1) Amazon.com Gift Card and ONE winner will receive one (1) physical copy of On the Run by Traci Hunter Abramson (U.S. addresses only). The giveaway begins on October 27, 2020 and runs through November 5, 2020. Void where prohibited.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

     

     

    Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Virtual Book Tours

     

    Mailbox Monday

    Mailbox Monday

    According to Marcia, “Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came into their house last week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists.

    Click on title for synopsis via GoodReads.

    Click on title for synopsis via GoodReads.

    Sunday:

    The Girl Who Wasn’t There by Vincent Zandri~ Kindle personal download
    Tuesday:
    Murder, Forgotten by Deb Richardson-Moore ~ Signed TPB from Author
    Wednesday:
    The Scandal by Nicola Marsh~ TPB from Hachette Book Group via giveaway
    Derailed by Mary Keliikoa ~ TPB from Author/Blogger Darcia Helle
    All We Buried by Elena Taylor ~ HC from Author/Blogger Darcia Helle
    Little Falls by Elizabeth Lewes~ HC from Author/Blogger Darcia Helle
    When You See Me by Lisa Gardner ~ HC from Author/Blogger Darcia Helle
    The Forgotten Daughter by Joanna Goodman ~ TPB from Harper Collins
    Friday:
    The Perfect Daughter by D.J. Palmer~ eBook from St. Martin’s Press via NetGalley

    The Drowning Kind by Jennifer McMahon~ Print ARC from Simon & Schuster
    Saturday:
    Eye For Eye by J.K. Franko ~ TPB from Blogger Margaret Yelton
    Tooth For Tooth by J.K. Franko~ TPB from Blogger Margaret Yelton
    Life For Life by J.K. Franko ~ TPB from Blogger Margaret Yelton

    Friday | Friendly Fill-Ins

    black


    Hosted by Four-Legged Furballs and 15 and Meowing

    This week’s Fill-Ins:

    1. I might______________________.
    2. I want to ________________________ before fall is over.
    3. If my house were haunted, _________.
    4. _________ is the scariest thing that’s ever happened to me.

    My answers:

    1. I might be able to sit on the deck today and read because of the weather.

    2. I want to cook my large batches of chicken soup, red meat gravy, and other dishes to freeze for us and to send care packages to my son before fall is over.

    3. If my house were haunted, I hope it’s with family members that have passed.

    4. When I was 8 and my family was part of a sting for months at the request of the state police is the scariest thing that’s ever happened to me.

    EMERGENCY POWERS by James McCrone | #Showcase #Interview #Giveaway

    Emergency Powers by James McCrone Banner

     

     

    Emergency Powers

    by James McCrone

    on Tour October 1-31, 2020

    Synopsis:

    Emergency Powers by James McCrone

    The accidental president is no accident. The investigation that was FBI Agent Imogen Trager’s undoing may be the key to stopping a brutal, false flag terrorist attack meant to tighten a puppet president’s grip on power.

    Emergency Powers will delight mystery and thriller fans (“Great for fans of Brad Meltzer, David Baldacci.” –Publishers Weekly) And politics junkies will enjoy the ripped-from-the-headlines urgency. But it’s about more than the headlines. And darker. A story of corruption and redemption, achieved at enormous personal cost, featuring FBI Agent Imogen Trager: “a memorable protagonist—as tough as she is smart.” (Kirkus Review)  Indeed, “Three tough female characters steal the show: FBI agents Vega, Sartain, and Trager. Overall, the power dynamics of these women…are something special.” (T. LIEBERMAN, Independent Book Review)

    As the story begins, Imogen is haunted—and sidelined—by a case she couldn’t solve. When the president dies in office, she knows that the conspiracy she chased down a blind alley still has life in it—and she needs to get back in the hunt. As bodies pile up and leads go cold, the main target from that old case reaches out to her. He’s still at large, and now he needs protection. Imogen doesn’t trust him, and it’s not only because he’s offering intel that sounds too good to be true. He’s already tried to kill her once.

    Set in D.C., Seattle and small town America, Emergency Powers is a story of corruption and redemption, achieved at enormous personal cost.

    “A high-stakes political thriller that feels so chillingly true, you pray it’s not”—TOM STRAW, seven-time NYT bestselling author, as Richard Castle

    “RECOMMENDED” – Kate Robinson, US Review of Books

    “Compelling, heart-pounding and thoroughly intriguing…”— STEPHEN MACK JONES, August Snow, Lives Laid Away

    “Keen portraits of true patriotism—and the courage that drives it.” —  ART TAYLOR, The Boy Detective & The Summer of ’74

    Book Details:

    Genre: Suspense-Thriller
    Published by: James McCrone
    Publication Date: October 1, 2020
    Number of Pages: 300
    ISBN: 9780999137727 (9780999137734)
    Series: An Imogen Trager Thriller
    Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop.org | Goodreads

     

    Author Bio:

    James McCrone

    James McCrone has a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Washington, in Seattle. He’s a member of Crime Writers of America (NY Chapter), Sisters in Crime (DE-Valley Chapter), Int’l Assoc. of Crime Writers, Philadelphia Dramatists Center and Int’l Thriller Writers.

    He’s the author of Faithless Elector and Dark Network, the first two Imogen Trager “Noirpolitik” suspense-thrillers about a stolen presidency. The third Imogen Trager thriller, EMERGENCY POWERS, is due out in late September, 2020. His short story, “Numbers Don’t Lie” will appear in the anthology Low Down Dirty Vote, Vol.2 (M. Berry, ed.), out on July 4, 2020.

    A Pacific Northwest native, he now lives in Philadelphia with his wife and three adult children.

    James’s work explores characters pitted against forces larger than themselves. Both on an off the page, he’s fascinated with politics and issues of social responsibility and justice.

    Q&A with James McCrone

    Welcome and thank you for stopping by CMash Reads

    What was the inspiration for this book?

    Great question! The character of Imogen Trager, the heroine of Emergency Powers, inspired me and fired me up. She grabbed me and demanded that I “listen” to her and pay attention. She’s smart, engaged and driven – and you’d do well to do as she says (ha ha :).
    I’m grateful that those qualities are something a lot of the early reviews have picked up on. Imogen’s been marginalized at the FBI, and I was looking for a way to examine the current political climate and how it came about, not as a screed, or a polemic, but as an examination of what’s going on now. I saw and “heard” her as the perfect foil to the conspirators.
    No homework required!

    Do you draw from personal experiences and/or current events?

    I do draw from current events. But it’s less about what’s happening right now, and more about what it might mean—now and in the future. There’s certainly a ripped-from-the-headlines urgency to what happens in these pages, but it’s much more than headlines about things people think they know. And it’s darker. The book isn’t about the current administration—or any administration, but what could happen if we took our eye off the ball, so to speak. As long ago as the year 2000, I was unsettled by some of the anti-democracy rhetoric I was hearing, and I knew that Imogen would want to expose and put a stop to it all. Because if she doesn’t, none of us will recognize the nation.

    Are any of your characters based on people that you know?

    No. In fact the disclaimer at the beginning of the book says that “anyone who thinks they recognize a real person in the characters presented here is paying the author an extravagant compliment.” 
    • Certainly, there’s an element of myself in Imogen—I’ve forced myself to think about the times I’ve been marginalized or not heard. And I’ve put those feelings and impressions through the prism of her character.
    • That being said, I see people—on the street, in the cafes—or I hear them talk, and I use bits and pieces—the way someone holds a pen, a bizarre haircut, a supercilious manner. And I use it. The constraints of writing characters who seem real in the situations in which they find themselves means that you have to make decisions about who they are, and once you start doing that, even if you began by “drawing” someone from real life, you change them. The needs of the story change them.

    Your routine when writing? Any idiosyncrasies?

    I write pretty much full time, 9-5. I sit in my room, type my little conspiracies and occasionally venture out for supplies. It’s not that different from lockdown, frankly. I can’t listen to music while working because I find it’s too distracting, and it’s terrible if someone out on the sidewalk in front of the house is having a conversation, because it’ll intrude on my writing, too.
    Ideally, each day, I’ve done whatever business there is to do, got caught up on email, social media, and so on, before 9 or 10am. And then I write until noon-ish. I take an hour break and get back to it. Then I take a break at about 3, and run on until 5.

    The strange thing is that much of what I write in the morning is terrible—and terribly frustrating! I’ve tried not writing until after lunch, thinking, I’d jump right in. But it doesn’t work. It’s the price I pay for the afternoon to be productive.
    I also do the shopping and the cooking for our household, so if I have to go out, I do it as early in the morning as I can, so I can keep to schedule.

    Tell us why we should read your book?

    Emergency Powers is that delightful discovery—a tense, timely thriller with canny political insight and strong, complex characters. It’s well written, well researched and seamlessly crafted. It has that ripped-from-the-headlines urgency, the insider’s look a lot of readers crave.
    But it’s the three tough female characters who steal the show and will stay with you. Imogen is complex and driven. She’s brave, not because she’s foolhardy, but because she must be. Her friendships are complex, too. Her only real allies in the Bureau are Special Agent in Charge Amanda Vega and Special Agent Annette (“Nettie”) Sartain, both of whom disliked her at first. Both come to like her. And to respect her.

    Are you working on your next novel? If so, can you tell us a little bit about it?

    I can’t say too much, but it’s another thriller, this time set outside the US, in Scotland. It deals with the Scottish Independence referendum and Brexit. I’m afraid that’s all I can say now. I’m almost done with the first draft, and I’m pretty excited about it.

    What are you reading now?

    I just finished Meg Gardiner’s Dark Corners of the Night, and Blacktop Wasteland, by SA Cosby, and before that I was on a Philip Kerr jag. My wife got me four of his Bernie Gunther novels for Father’s Day. I have a massive TBR pile next to the bed.

    Fun Questions:
    Your novel will be a movie. Who would you cast?

    I think Jessica Chastain would be perfect as Imogen. She has just the right level of simmering restraint—and the red hair!  She, like Imogen, radiates a calm, self-assuredness.
    • Vega could be played by Paulina Gaitan (she was in “Narcos” and “Sin Nombre”) or Natalia Cordova-Buckley (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) – someone tough, but not hard-hearted. Clare-Hope Ashitey (Seven Seconds) might be a good Nettie. For Calder, I think Kevin McKidd or Dominic West.
    • Having made my choices, I have to say: I know nothing about casting. I decided this was true after watching Amadeus, the film about Mozart. I really admire this film, but think about it:
    The kid from Animal House plays Mozart? The principal from Ferris Beuhler’s Day Off is Emperor Joseph? If you’d asked me, I’dve said, never in a million years. And yet they’re perfect in the roles.

    Favorite leisure activity/hobby>?

    Cooking, reading, dancing (though there hasn’t been much of that since March). My wife and I will occasionally dance in the living room or out on our back patio. Fortunately, the children are grown and moved out, so there’s far less criticism or cringing than in years past. 

    Favorite meal?
    • I worked in restaurants for more than 15 years, and I love cooking and food far too much to limit myself. I have the waistline to prove it!
    There is basically nothing I don’t like. Sure, there are things I prefer over others, but unless you’re offering me sea cucumber sushi, or dried jellyfish, or that Sicilian cheese with live bugs in it, I’m probably going to eat it and enjoy it.
    • My favorite thing is to cook seasonally. With what’s available now. Mid-summer to late fall is the best time. So much to choose from!
    The meal I’m going to make in a couple nights is pretty close to my heart for that reason. I’m making dinner for some friends (we’ll be eating outside), and I’ll probably serve gazpacho soup to start, and sautéed scallops with pasta al pesto (the basil from my back garden) and some broad Roma beans. Ripe fruit for dessert (maybe a blueberry pie).

    Catch Up With James McCrone:
    JamesMcCrone.com, Chosen Words Blog, Goodreads, BookBub, Instagram, Twitter, & Facebook!

     

    Read an excerpt:

    Friday, March 10

    Seattle, Washington

    1

    Just before 5am, FBI Agent Imogen Trager gave a low growl and reached for the phone, buzzing officiously on the nightstand. She sat on the edge of the bed she shared with Duncan Calder, glowering at it as her eyes focused in the dark. Fixing a strand of red hair behind her ear, she scrolled through texts and posts from colleagues and friends. Her anger turned from dismay to sickening fear.

    “Duncan!” She shook him awake and handed him the phone. He sat up and took it, scanning the news, instantly awake.

    Imogen rose and picked her way to the living room in the dark where she turned on the television. The piercing glare of the screen stung the murky Northwest morning. Some 3,700 miles away, Vice President Robert Moore approached a phalanx of microphones, manfully fighting back tears:

    “My fellow Americans,” he said, “it is my sad duty to confirm that Diane Redmond, the President of the United States, is dead.”

    Bob Moore, a towering figure in person, looked small on screen, standing in the rain under a canopy of black umbrellas at the entrance to Walter Reed Medical Center. Duncan joined Imogen in the darkness, and she reached for his hand.

    They stared, dumbfounded, as Moore continued: “Her doctors have informed me”—here he paused to clear his throat—“that the cause of death is believed to be a heart attack; that it was sudden and fatal. A full autopsy is underway, and it will give us a clearer picture. Our prayers go out to her family and loved ones.

    “The Chief Justice has administered the Oath of Office to me here in the presence of cabinet members and hospital staff. The preservation of our great nation’s interests, its security and the continuity of government are assured.”

    Duncan turned to Imogen: “Is it starting again?”

    “I don’t think it ever stopped,” she brooded, her green eyes smoldering. “We failed. We didn’t cut the head off the snake.” Fury rose within her, sharp and raw like nausea.

    Duncan handed her back the phone. It continued buzzing as reporters swarmed, asking for a quote from her as the public and photogenic face of the Faithless Elector investigation. She’d learned her lesson there and declined each call.

    Their texted questions—the ones she bothered to read—were, as usual, off the mark: Would the Faithless Elector task force be revived to look into the President’s death? Would unanswered questions from the investigation strengthen or weaken support for the new President? Regarding the first: the task force was alive, if not well, she thought, and at any rate, she’d be one of the last to know about any official changes or developments. As to the second: Take a fucking a poll.

    None of them asked the real questions—the ones she needed answered: Was this the final move of the conspiracy she had chased madly into a blind alley? If so, how had the dark network assassinated a President inside the White House? Who was moving the pieces, and what were the next moves? Most pressing: How would she get herself back in the hunt? From her phone, she deleted the draft email bearing the resignation she had planned to send on Monday morning.

    Dawn was still some two hours away as Calder sat down on the couch next to her. “So you won’t be resigning, I take it,” he observed.

    “No,” she said, not looking up from her notebook.

    “How will you begin?”

    She looked up. “We were digging in the wrong place. I’m going to go back over the associates and links we’ve established, see where or how any of them point at Bob Moore.”

    “So Moore digging, eh?” he quipped.

    Imogen sighed. She loved him, but how was he able to have distance at a moment like this? she wondered. She eyed him wearily. “Duncan, I’m going to get stonewalling from Nettie at the office about this new direction. I’m—”

    He held up a hand. “What will you do?” He looked at her notebook. “And who’s Carla?”

    “I’m going back to the data.”

    “You’ve gotten nowhere with that,” said Calder acidly.

    “Because we were looking at it in relation to other actors. Not Moore. And Carla’s not a who, but a what—short for ‘CARLA F BAD’: Character, Associates, Reputation, Loyalty, Ability, Finances, Bias, Alcohol, Drugs. It’s what you look at in a security clearance, among other things. It helps define spheres of influence and interaction. The disclosure dossiers on the men who’ve been working directly under Moore will have looked precisely at these CARLA factors. And I want to look at them, too. And his associates. So I’ll go backward, this time with Moore in mind. I want to look at his campaign finances. Who funded him early on in the race? Who else was involved or associated? Maybe something jumps out at me. Maybe that’ll point me in a direction.”

    “It’s a lot of maybes, ’Gen.” He scratched at his iron gray hair.

    “It’s where I’ll start. There’s always a gap in the armor somewhere. The really hard part is that I can’t just request materials the regular way through regular channels without telegraphing what I’m trying to do.”

    “Or looking like you’re still part of the Faithless Elector case.”

    She nodded and looked at him uncertainly. “And…I think I should cut this weekend short, if I can get a flight back to D.C.”

    “I’m wondering what you’re still doing here,” he said.

    Imogen leaned in and kissed him.

    On the East Coast it was early morning, but across much of the country the sun was still not up. In the darkness, the announcement of Redmond’s death in office set off a series of moves seemingly unconnected and largely unremarked, as pawns were sacrificed and battle pieces were moved into place for the final gambit.

    Rocky Mountains

    Snow lit by headlights split the darkness, blinding the Highway patrolman who waited for the tow truck to pull out a car buried in the snow. Working in the dark about 14 miles west-by-southwest of Aspen, Colorado, the tow truck was having a difficult time dragging the car out. In what must have been whiteout conditions, the car had plunged through a guardrail and into the ravine.

    As the patrolman stood at the side of the road waiting for the winch operator to do his work, he took off his right glove to read an alert on his phone. Speechless, he watched the news clip of now-President Moore at the hospital. Bewildered, numb—and not just from the cold—he stared over the still-dark, bleak expanse of mountains.

    “Damn,” said the winch operator, breaking the patrolman’s reverie. The contorted steel shell of a car came into view and slowly ascended backwards up the steep hill. “You guys close Route 82 for more than half the year. Maybe you should think about closing this one, too.”

    “We serve and protect,” the patrolman countered. “We can’t protect them from their own stupidity.”

    Maricopa, California

    Ninety-five miles northwest of Los Angeles, near Bakersfield, west of where the lush groves of San Emidio return to desert, police had responded to a call reporting shots fired.

    The bodies of four men lay strewn around the living room and kitchen of a battered, double-wide trailer home, victims of an apparent drug deal gone bad. Even before forensics got to work, it was obvious the house had been used as a meth lab. An acrid stench burned the eyes and throats of the responding officers, who quickly backed out and awaited the Kern County forensics team.

    As two officers sat in a squad car in the dark guarding the site, news reached them of the death of the president. They watched Moore at Walter Reed on the lieutenant’s phone. The death of these four drug dealers now seemed even less important. Desultorily, they searched the onboard police computer for information about the four corpses. Two of them had arrest records, known agitators and members of a border vigilante group.

    “Right,” the lieutenant said to the patrolman. “Illegally funded law and order.”

    “For some,” the officer added.

    In Seattle, Imogen packed her bags, while fewer than six miles away but as blind to one another as opposite sides of the same coin, a sleek Eclipse 500 jet touched down at Boeing Field. The light jet taxied rapidly in the damp winter darkness, coming to an abrupt stop on a dimly lit portion of the tarmac at the north end of the field.

    The hiss of its engines became a plaintive whistle as the doors popped open and two young men, Dan Cardoso and Eric Janssen, ran down the steps. They immediately turned round and helped close the stairs. But for this gesture of help, anyone witnessing their arrival—and no one did—might have mistaken them for two young executives returning from a casual outing.

    Its doors sealed once more, the small jet in the tan-on-beige livery of Flintlock Industries, pushed on, the whistle of its engines discordantly climbing the scale as it taxied away. Cardoso and Janssen walked toward their cars parked just outside a chain link fence, fist-bumping as they separated at the gate.

    “See you April 20,” Janssen said.

    Cardoso gave a thumbs-up as he turned away. Though the tarmac was deserted, the bravado exchange was a crucial performance. They had each been schooled in the need for watchfulness—especially of one another. Any sign of dissent, hint of doubt or fading spirit should be reported.

    Alone for the first time in more than 24 hours, each man allowed himself to think about what had just happened. On orders, they’d dispatched the members of a cell near Bakersfield, California, much like their own, though a failing one according to their handler. Although they had kept their misgivings to themselves, each had arrived at the same conclusion: when given a list of people marked for death, the quickest way to get your name added to the list was to refuse or even question the job. Each ruminated on the final step to come, and whether they would receive their just, or their eternal, reward.

    Before their cars were started, and as Imogen zipped her suitcase closed, the light jet was in the air, headed east to another rendezvous.

    2

    Reactions to the death of the President were swift across the nation and the political spectrum. Imogen, now waiting at the airport gate, had inadvertently seated herself between two television monitors, each tuned to a different 24-hour news channel. They faced each other, across her and the political divide. At times, they seemed to be arguing with each other, and she found herself glancing back and forth like someone watching a tennis match. Travelers congregated silently at screens large and small throughout the terminal.

    The remarkable unanimity of official emotion on television and across social media made it seem that everyone in Washington had been issued the same talking points memo: Redmond was praised for her “integrity,” her “dignity” and “strength,” each promising to uphold the unity she had embodied and to deliver on her legacy while offering support to Moore. There were, Imogen noted, still a few unfilled cabinet positions left. Snapchat, she mused tartly, seemed like a better venue for all the disposable preening and jockeying.

    The news was rife with speculation about what had befallen President Redmond, and what a new Moore administration might look like. Between the two televisions and along the political spectrum, while politicians hewed to their “unity in adversity” tropes, the talking heads seemed to be going through their own peculiar stages of grief: conservative hosts, when not in denial about the larger implications, presented with over-modulated anger; whereas mainstream pundits registered shock and dismay, their interviews with Democratic leaders manifesting pain, and above all bargaining. Only religious leaders seemed to have progressed to acceptance and hope, anointing Moore as one demonstrably chosen by Providence. In all cases, speculation was rampant, and there were no facts in evidence, save the obvious—Redmond was dead and Moore was president.

    Bob Moore was taciturn by nature, the pundits opined. He had a reputation for bloodless pronouncements, heavy on procedure and mindful of every political angle, earning him the ironic nickname “ad lib Bob.” But on the campaign trail, and during the contested fight for the Presidency, they noted, he had been a different man. All dispassion spent, he became a man of conviction. It remained to be seen, the pundits agreed, as to which version of Moore would prevail now that he was President.

    ***

    Excerpt from Emergency Powers by James McCrone. Copyright 2020 by James McCrone. Reproduced with permission from James McCrone. All rights reserved.

     

     

    Tour Participants:

    Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!



     

     

    Giveaway!!:

    This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for James McCrone. There will be 4 winners. Two winners will each receive one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card and Two winners will each win EMERGENCY POWERS by James McCrone (Print ~ US and Canada addresses only). The giveaway begins on October 1, 2020 and runs through November 2, 2020. Void where prohibited.

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

     

     

    Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Virtual Book Tours

     

     

    Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Virtual Book Tours

     

    #Review | THE GIRL IN THE MIRROR by Rose Carlyle

    The Girl In The Mirror by Rose Carlyle
    Genre: Psychological Fiction
    Published by William Morrow
    Publication Date: October 15, 2020
    ASIN : B083JLX7NS
    Pages: 300
    Review Copy From: Publisher via NetGalley
    Edition: Kindle
    My Rating: 3.5/4

    Synopsis (via GR)

    Written with the chilling, twisty suspense of The Wife Between Us and Something in the Water, a seductive debut thriller about greed, lust, secrets, and deadly lies involving identical twin sisters.

    Twin sisters Iris and Summer are startlingly alike, but beyond what the eye can see lies a darkness that sets them apart. Cynical and insecure, Iris has long been envious of Summer’s seemingly never-ending good fortune, including her perfect husband Adam.

    Called to Thailand to help her sister sail the family yacht to the Seychelles, Iris nurtures her own secret hopes for what might happen on the journey. But when she unexpectedly finds herself alone in the middle of the Indian Ocean, everything changes. When she makes it to land, Iris allows herself to be swept up by Adam, who assumes that she is Summer.

    Iris recklessly goes along with his mistake. Not only does she finally have the golden life she’s always envied, with her sister gone, she’s one step closer to the hundred-million-dollar inheritance left by her manipulative father. All Iris has to do is be the first of his seven children to produce an heir.

    Iris’s “new” life lurches between glamorous dream and paranoid nightmare. On the edge of being exposed, how far will she go to ensure no one discovers the truth?

    And just what did happen to Summer on the yacht?

    Only Iris knows . . .

    My Thoughts

    One hundred million dollars is on the line to produce the first heir.

    Summer and Iris Carmichael, mirror twins, are the oldest of the 7 children. Iris always felt that Summer had it all, beauty inside and out, kindness, married to a man who is wealthy by his own right, whereas Iris has one failed marriage and only had her eye on the prize. How far will she go?

    I found that the plot was suspenseful throughout which kept me turning the pages. And for that, I gave it 4 stars. However, I found that there was a lot of nauticalese. And the ending was shocking, but for me, very confusing, to the point, that I didn’t truly know who received the money and for that, I gave it a 3.5 rating.

    I do recommend it as I feel others that like a good psychological thriller, would enjoy it.

    Purchase Links: Amazon 🔗 | Barnes & Noble 🔗 | Goodreads 🔗

    REVIEW DISCLAIMER

  • This blog was founded on the premise to write honest reviews, to the best of my ability, no matter who from, where from and/or how the book was obtained, and will continue to do so, even if it is through PICT or PBP.
  • I received a copy of this book, at no charge to me, in exchange for my honest review. No items that I receive are ever sold…they are kept by me, or given to family and/or friends.
  • I do not have any affiliation with Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble. I am providing link(s) solely for visitors that may be interested in purchasing this Book/EBook.
  • Mailbox Monday


    Mailbox Monday

    According to Marcia, “Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came into their house last week. Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists.

    Click on title for synopsis via GoodReads.

    <

    Sunday:

    The Perfect Secret by Steena Holmes~ eBook from free Amazon download
    Tuesday:
    Ruby Falls by Carol Goodrich Royce ~ eBook from Post Hill Press via NetGalley
    Wednesday:
    The Betrayal by Terry Lynn Thomas ~ eBook from HQN/Harper Collins via NetGalley
    Thursday:
    Pretty Little Wife by Darby Kane ~ eBook from Harper Collins via NetGalley