Category: Giveaway

Guest Author JON FOYT showcase & giveaway ENDED

WELCOME JON FOYT


JON FOYT

Striving for new heights on the literary landscape, following careers in radio, commercial banking, and real estate, Jon Foyt began writing novels with his late wife, Lois. He holds a degree in journalism and an MBA from Stanford and a second masters in historic preservation from the University of Georgia. A marathon runner (60 completed) and prostate cancer survivor, Jon, 81, is active in an adult retirement community near San Francisco.
Connect with Mr. Foyt at these sites:

WEBSITE    TWITTER   

 

ABOUT THE BOOK

Marcel Proust in Taos, by Jon Foyt, tells the story of Christopher and Marlene, two recent immigrants to Taos, New Mexico, who fall in love with their adopted city and eventually each other. Christopher, a retired nuclear physicist, works on his first novel, while Marlene, newly arrived from Germany, spends her days painting the landscape and people around her. The two team up to open a microbrewery, and their relationship is tested by the hurdles they deal with along the way: Christopher hits a rough patch in his book, and a powerful enemy of Marlene’s threatens to destroy everything.

Christopher and Marlene find themselves confronting terrorism of a new sort with the matriarch of the Taos community, Agnes Havelock Powers, who strongly opposes having a brewery in town. Agnes is rich, powerful, and influential. She has the city authorities tucked in her purse next to her checkbook. Follow the exciting and charming love story of Marlene and Christopher in historical Taos, as they experience the challenges of confronting abusive power.

Read an excerpt

        While standing in the checkout line at the art supply store, Marlene reproached herself for her curt and inelegant response to Christopher’s invitation. For sure, she felt, he hadn’t been particularly suave in his outreach to her, either. In the two weeks of waiting for his call, she had gone over every nuance of their conversation in the Taos Inn, regretting that she hadn’t teased him into a more serious, or at least a fun relationship. She’d been too focused on her art, and she knew men were attracted to women who flirt, even if the man was married—Christopher wore no ring, but so what did that mean?

That afternoon in the tavern she should have invited him to her studio, changed into alluring attire and produced a romantic air for scintillating conversation by uncorking a bottle of Moselle wine, preparing a tasty tray of vorspeisen, turning on enchanting Bavarian music and lighting her scented candles—all against a backdrop of her prized art. As she paid the cashier, she brought herself back to the moment. Enough of this playful fantasizing! She was nervous about showing her art to this wealthy patron. Christopher would have to wait.

She reminded herself to concentrate on how she would present herself and her art to this woman with the name of “Mrs. Powers.” She vowed she would never abdicate her own ideals to a person who might be a domineering fuhrer in a skirt. Blumy and the other Taos artists had benefited from sponsorship those years ago and still did. Because of the railroad’s beneficence, their Taos School was indelibly imprinted upon the annals of world art, mentioned in every art history book and probably taught in every MFA program. Other individual artists, not so fortunate, had been readily co-opted. Marlene didn’t want such a destructive fate to befall her. She could think for herself, and she vowed to continue to paint, but solely for her own satisfaction.

Hurrying back to her studio, Marlene climbed the stairs only to see a note pinned to her door—Joe’s delinquent rent notice—and she panicked. She needed money and she desperately hoped this prospective patron would be generous, yet allow her to express her talent in the hallowed tradition of the Taos School, where her Blumy and his diverse group had pledged themselves to always remain faithful to their own individual artistic styles.

Marlene remembered that the gallery owner told her that the patron woman was heiress to a molybdenum fortune, and that her philanthropic nature was well known throughout the Southwest. “But, whatever you do, don’t say anything about the mountain top up by Questa that her mining company is scarring in the worst way—she’s very sensitive about the environmental issues about her company having stripped the mountain of its natural beauty.”

Having been both briefed and warned about her potential benefactor, Marlene waited for the knock on her door. Fresh flowers graced her rustic pine table. In her oven baked an apple strudel, its flavors wafting through her studio. Twice she repositioned her canvases, which she had purposely enriched with gilded frames, each time twisting her track lighting to best capture the aura and ambiance of each painting.

“What smells so yummy?” the amply proportioned Mrs. Powers inquired immediately upon entering Marlene’s aromatic stage.

“It’s my mother’s recipe for apple strudel from the old country. You will have a taste in just a minute or two—that is, when it cools.” Marlene rushed on, “There’s no sugar. I use pure honey from a little town outside Nuremberg—my father sends me a jar a month. He says the honey will counteract the pollen from our juniper trees, and I will never have an allergy.

“Oh, please sit down. May I pour you a cup of coffee?” Marlene knew she must put an end to her unrehearsed rapid speech, but she couldn’t stop. “Hasn’t our weather been glorious for this time of year? Makes me want to hike to the top of the unspoiled mountains around here instead of painting them. I’m a very disciplined artist and I know I could complete your assignment quickly and faithfully.”

“Could I have that strudel now?”

“Yes, of course. Do you take cream in your coffee?”

“I prefer tea with two sugars.”

“Would honey do?”

“Oh, forget it, dear. I’m here because Mr. Peters at the gallery recommended your work. My decorator is redoing my living room for this season’s Opera Guild socials. Mr. Peters insisted I select the art because he so values my opinion. Money’s no object, for me color is what’s important.” She looked at the painting on Marlene’s easel. “Not this one, but I do like the shading in that one over there. Don’t you have any landscapes without all these mountains?”

“I can paint a fresh subject for you,” Marlene assured her visitor.
        “Yes, I think we shall have to do that.”

“Do you have a particular setting in mind? Perhaps I could do an interpretive rendering of your house?”

“Maybe—no, I don’t want to appear overly pretentious, you know. Some people react….” Mrs. Powers produced small decorator color swatches. “Here, these will guide you. Your painting must not clash with my new draperies. I plan to give your painting the prominent space above my grand kiva fireplace, so make sure it blends in with everything in the room. Mine is, of course, quite a large room.”

Hesitatingly Marlene showed Ms. Powers another canvas. “This is my current work in progress. I’m painting my impressions of the Tu-o-ta Pueblo.”

Mrs. Powers pointed to the reddish-brown branches of the red willow trees lining the small stream. “Yes, this color here…a teeny bit softer, I should think. Put in a sweet little deer or two—you artists know what to do—but none of those rickety ladders. I want my friends to feel at home…you know, comfortable…so they’ll come back and donate more money to the Guild. That’s why I hold these socials, you know, to raise money for a good cause. One must support the community, as well as art and artists, don’t you think?”

Marlene nodded.

“How much do you require to get started?”

Marlene didn’t know how to respond.

“Five hundred, then, is that all right?” Mrs. Powers asked, then inquired, “How will you sign my painting? Can you make Marlene look a little like Remington? I don’t want you to actually forge his signature, of course, but I want my guests to be impressed—I mean, they all know that name. Now, could I have that strudel now?”

Marlene cut a slice of her pastry, covered it with gobs of whipped cream and deliberately shoved the culinary concoction into the face of Mrs. Powers.

“Ernest Leonard Blumenschein made me do this, and he hopes you get the message.”

BOOK DETAILS:

Paperback: 214 pages
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Publication Date: June 19, 2013
ISBN-10: 1481879162
ISBN-13: 978-1481879163

PURCHASE LINKS:

           

THANKS TO KELSEY AT BOOK PUBLICITY SERVICE,
I
HAVE ONE (1) DIGITAL COPY TO GIVE AWAY.
EBOOK~~OPEN TO ALL 
FILL OUT RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM BELOW
GIVEAWAY ENDS JANUARY 14th AT 6PM EST

WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN BY RAFFLECOPTER AND NOTIFIED
VIA EMAIL AND WILL HAVE 48 HOURS TO RESPOND
OR ANOTHER NAME WILL BE CHOSEN

a Rafflecopter giveaway

YOUR JAVA SCRIPT MAY NEED TO BE UPDATED
IF YOU AR EXPERIENCING DIFFICULTY
USING THE RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM

DISCLAIMER
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.
ADDENDUM
I do not have any affiliation with Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble. I am an IndieBound affiliate. I am providing link(s) solely for visitors that may be interested in purchasing this Book/EBook.

 

Guest Author SARA J. HENRY showcase & giveaway ENDED

 

WELCOME SARA J. HENRY


 

SARA J. HENRY

SARA J. HENRY’s first novel, Learning to Swim, won the Anthony, Agatha, and Mary Higgins Clark Awards, was a Target Emerging Author pick, and was named one of Best Books of 2011 by the Boston Globe. Her second novel, A Cold and Lonely Place, was a Reader’s Digest Select Books choice and will be out in paperback from Broadway Books in November 2013. She’s written for Prevention, Adirondack Life, Bicycling, Triathlete, and other magazines, was an editor at Rodale Books and Women’s Sports & Fitness magazine, and was a newspaper and magazine editor. A native of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, Sara now lives on a dirt road in southern Vermont with at least one too many dog.
Connect with Sara at these sites:

WEBSITE        TWITTER   

Q&A with Sara J. Henry

Do you draw from personal experiences and/or current events?
Not really either. An opening scene comes to me – which most often happens while I’m in a car on a long drive – and I spin the story out in my head. I can dream up most of a novel on a full-day drive, as long as traffic is light.

Do you start with the conclusion and plot in reverse or start from the beginning and see where the story line brings you?
I have the story roughed out in my head before I start writing – and I always know how the book is going to end. In fact, I tend to write the ending scene long before I get to it. Things may change slightly by the time I get there – in A Cold and Lonely Place the back-story and motivations of some of the characters changed as the story progressed, so I did alter the ending a bit. But the essence remained the same.

Which brings me to the next point: I like to let the characters develop and plot line change slightly as I go. A good example is in Cold and Lonely when someone knocks on the door of a cabin in the woods – and the person knocking at the door was not the person I’d planned it to be.

Your routine when writing?  Any idiosyncrasies?
I have no set routine. If I’m writing new material, i.e, not revising or rewriting, I like to write early in the day or late at night, when the minutia of day-to-day life isn’t filling my head. When something’s going well, I don’t stop. If I’m having trouble with a section or passage, I’ll pull it out of the manuscript and put in a separate file to work on. I’ll print it out in a different font or use the Reading Layout view in Word to see the material differently.

Is writing your full-time job?
Like many other authors, I spend what seems like an enormous amount of time working to promote my books! (I particularly love library visits.) But writing, other than an occasional editing job, is my sole source of income.

Who are some of your favorite authors?
Carol O’Connell, Kate Atkinson, Frances Fyfield, Daniel Woodrell, Tana French, A.S. King, Matthew Dicks

What are you reading now?
An enormous number of books for a contest I’m helping judge. The only non-contest book I’ve read recently is Reality Boy by A.S. King.

Are you working on your next novel?  Can you tell us a little about it?
Yes, it’s the third in the series, and many of the familiar characters are back, including Troy’s brother, Simon, and her friend Alyssa from Burlington.

Your novel will be a movie. Who would you cast?
For much the same reason that I don’t give explicit descriptions of most of my characters – I like readers to be able to envision them as they would like – I don’t mentally cast my novels. With that said, when I was struggling with the first novel in this series, Learning to Swim, the character Philippe came alive to me only when I envisioned him as Christian Bale, as the father he played in the 2002 sci-fi movie Equilibrium. Mark Ruffalo (or many other actors) could play Jameson, although it would be lovely to have a Canadian or UK actor. And any versatile actor such as Kristen Stewart or Jennifer Lawrence could portray Troy perfectly.

Manuscript/Notes: hand written or keyboard?
I compose on a computer and do copious revisions by hand, and repeat the process over and over until I’m relatively happy with the manuscript.

Favorite meal?
Anything someone else prepares!

ABOUT THE BOOK

Freelance writer Troy Chance is snapping photos of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival ice palace when the ice-cutting machine falls silent. Encased in the ice is the shadowy outline of a body–a man she knows.

One of her roommates falls under suspicion, and the media descends. Troy’s assigned to write an in-depth feature on the dead man, who, it turns out, was the privileged son of a wealthy Connecticut family who had been playing at a blue collar life in this Adirondack village. And the deeper Troy digs into his life and mysterious death, the murkier things become. After the victim’s sister comes to town and a string of disturbing incidents unfold, it’s clear someone doesn’t want the investigation to continue, and Troy doesn’t know who to trust.

A Cold and Lonely Place, the sequel to Learning to Swim, follows Troy on a powerful emotional journey as she discovers the damage left by long-hidden secrets and catches a glimpse of what might have been.

BOOK DETAILS:

Paperback: 304 pages
Publisher: Broadway Books
Publication Date: November 5, 2013
ISBN-10: 0307718425
ISBN-13: 978-0307718426

PURCHASE LINKS:

           

THANKS TO JESSICA AT RANDOM HOUSE,
I
HAVE ONE (1) COPY TO GIVE AWAY.
OPEN TO U.S. RESIDENTS
FILL OUT RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM BELOW
GIVEAWAY ENDS JANUARY 13th AT 6PM EST

WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN BY RAFFLECOPTER AND NOTIFIED
VIA EMAIL AND WILL HAVE 48 HOURS TO RESPOND
OR ANOTHER NAME WILL BE CHOSEN

a Rafflecopter giveaway

YOUR JAVA SCRIPT MAY NEED TO BE UPDATED
IF YOU AR EXPERIENCING DIFFICULTY
USING THE RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM

DISCLAIMER
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.
ADDENDUM
I do not have any affiliation with Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble. I am an IndieBound affiliate. I am providing link(s) solely for visitors that may be interested in purchasing this Book/EBook.

 

And the winner is……

….of Thursday Morning Breakfast (and Murder) Club by Liz Stauffer

CONGRATULATIONS!!


1 Maureen Carol Follow @CherylMash on Twitter

An email has been sent and the winner has 48 hours to respond of another winner will be chosen. Thank you to all that entered.

Guest Author JACK HYLAND showcase & giveaway ENDED

WELCOME JACK HYLAND

JACK HYLAND
John W. Hyland, Jr. (Jack) born in Detroit in 1938 and raised in Philadelphia. Graduated high school in 1955 (The Haverford School, outside Philadelphia), Williams College (1959, majoring in theoretical physics) and received a M.B.A. from Harvard University in 1961.  Moved to New York City (1961) where he has been ever since, with the exception of four years living in Paris and London.
His career has been in investment banking with Morgan Stanley & Co for 18 years (partner after eight years) followed by Warburg Paribas Becker (vice chairman), and PaineWebber (vice chairman) for eight years and the balance spent in a boutique investment banking firm (McFarland Dewey & Co.) until the last four years with Media Advisory Partners (founding partner) (www.mediaadvisorypartners.com <http://www.mediaadvisorypartners.com> )Besides The Moses Virus, he wrote a biography Evangelism’s First Modern Media Star, The Life of Reverend Bill Stidger (www.stidger.com <http://www.stidger.com> ) as well as articles syndicated by Hearst and The New York Times on his travels in India, Libya and Bhutan.  He also has written articles in “Fine Gardening” magazine on his garden at his weekend house in Millerton, NY.Not-for-profit activities have included being Chairman, and Chairman Emeritus of the American Academy in Rome; Co-Chairman of Teachers College, Columbia University; Director of the College Art Association; and Trustee of the Clark Art institute.He has three children, Liza, married, with three children living in Rye, New York; Jonathan, PhD in Psychology, living and teaching in Salt Lake City; and Susannah, married, running a counseling clinic in Brooklyn. Jack’s partner is Larry Wente, who has an architectural firm in New York City.
Connect with Jack at these sites:

WEBSITE    

Q&A with Jack Hyland
Do you draw from personal experiences and/or current events?
I’ve personally known all the characters in The Moses Virus, with their good points and their weaknesses and ambiguities.  For a while I wrote myself in as the hero, and even called him by my name.  Quickly, however, he rebelled, and I gave him a new name, Tom Stewart, since he didn’t really want to be me.  He was considerably happier and eventually so was I.
The ghastly virus in the book comes right off the front pages of the major newspapers (The New York Times: Debate Persists on Deadly Flu Made Airborne, cover page, December 27, 2011) with the running controversy about the motives of the scientists in resurrecting the world’s most devastating killer—somewhere between 50 and 100 million people killed by the Spanish flu of 1918-19. Is there any government that wouldn’t want to have its own supply?  Also, we—the world of seven billion people—are headed for potential disaster in that the food supply is drastically falling behind the growth in population. Why? Many reasons: corruption, inefficiency, among others. The solution? Some would propose bio-engineered seeds boosting the output of crops, and others would curb population growth. Still others would cure corruption. Which would you pick and at what risk? Certain major companies see the profit opportunities.

Do you start with the conclusion and plot in reverse or start from the beginning and see where the story line brings you?
Some years ago, I was invited to meet at six in the morning on a hot summer day in Rome to watch while an archaeological team from the American Academy in Rome re-opened an excavation in the Roman Forum on the Palatine Hill. The first chapter came to me in this way, watching the team at work moving rocks, sifting the findings, while at the same moment imagining a catastrophic release of a deadly virus killing two of the archaeologists. In this “imagining” I polished off the head of the American Academy team whom I had known for years.  I told him about his fate later, which he laughed about good-naturedly.  With this, the story was off and running.  I had no idea exactly where the story was going but I knew the characters would help me find the way.  And they did.

Your routine when writing?  Any idiosyncrasies?
About three in the morning, I wake up with a fabulous idea connected to my book.  I toss and turn, and the idea keeps returning, changing sometimes, but persistently wanting some attention. I get up. I jot down the main points and go back to sleep.  Later, when I get up, I take the notes from my dreaming state and work them into the story. Some of the ideas are too wild to use; others, however, join the story and enrich it. I never know in advance.

Is writing your full time job?  If not, may I ask what you do by day?
Investment banking is my main job, mergers and acquisitions in media and education. Both areas are in major transition and face major needs to change if they are to remain viable. Challenging.  I’ve also been Chairman of the American Academy in Rome, which gives the Rome Prize to Americans in many arts and scholarly fields, and it is where some of the action in The Moses Virus takes place; I’m Co-Chair of Teachers College, Columbia University, the oldest and largest of the nation’s schools of education (perhaps the setting of the next book—which depends on Tom Stewart and some other events); and a couple of other not for profit organizations.  Travelling is a passion: Egypt, for example, fascinates me. Luxor and the supreme achievements of ancient Egypt, or Rome, or Paris, of Istanbul, and so on. I’ve been to 57 countries—as many as Heinz has varieties.

Who are some of your favorite authors?
I worked on an oil tanker for Sunoco one summer in college and after the modest work assignment was done each day, legitimately hid from more work duties. On the deck near the bow, another college student and I read all the rest of the day. I loved many of the classics: Dickens, Fielding, Jane Austen, and the Brontes. I moved to more current authors, Michael Crichten, discovered science fiction via Isaac Azimov, Philip Dick, Heinlein and on to the surrealist writing of Heller (Yossarrian—“He had decided to live forever, or die in the attempt”) and Vonnegut.

What are you reading now?
I enjoy the story telling and page turning skills of Stephen King, Tom Clancy and John Grisham. And I need to add that I’m a movie fiend, ranging from James Bond (both Sean Connery and Daniel Craig), action and adventure (Jason Bourne), certain comedies, science fiction (“Gravity”—wow, what an experience), twisted mysteries (Alfred Hitchcock). And certain television—Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, as well as a few series, such as The Newsroom, the amazingly cynical House of Cards with Kevin Spacey.

Are you working on your next novel?  Can you tell us a little about it?
May I quote from the last page of The Moses Virus? Alex is talking to Tom.
“Mr. Forensic Archaeologist, tell me exactly what was in Crystal’s small leather case when she drove away from Kronberg Castle.”
Tom said, “I have no bloody idea.  And, perhaps it’s better that neither of us know. Furthermore, it will be some time before I join in an excavation in the Roman Forum again.”
“Fine by me,” Alex said.
And that is the way things stood for quite a while. But in exactly one year and three months, Tom would have the exact answer to Alex’s question.”
That’s all I can say, except that we are not done with Crystal, Alex and Tom.
h. Fun questions:-Your novel will be a movie.  Who would you cast?
Clive Owen as Tom Stewart. Owen (Children of Man, The International) if he can handle an America accent is the closest I can get to Cary Grant both of whom have the good lucks, intelligence and sense of humor to be the main character; and Eva Green, (Bond’s love in Casino Royale), who is strikingly good looking, and totally self possessed would be a perfect Alex Cellini.

Manuscript/Notes: hand written or keyboard?
Scraps of paper from waking up and transcribing three AM ideas, but otherwise everything is written on the computer. There are drawbacks—I find it harder to locate certain passages whereas it would be easier if all were on pages of paper, or occasionally I mistakenly type for too long before saving, and you all know what happens then.

Favorite leisure activity/hobby?
I have an apartment in New York City, and a house in the Berkshires overlooking a lake and a hump-backed mountain. Why travel? I wonder, since where I live is better than any place else I’ve ever found. But I love to travel—sadly much of the Middle East which is the heart of our western civilization is in turmoil, so trips there are difficult at the present time. But the Far East, Europe, South America—there is so much to see and people to meet.  I’m not enthusiastic about the Arctic or Antarctic, but maybe I’m not being fair.

Favorite meal?
Begin with a sublime salad of tomato and mozzarella, like I had this summer in Verona at a restaurant called the Twelve Apostles, followed by a main pasta course at a restaurant called Rosa Rossa in Venice, which is cited by Johnny Depp as his favorite restaurant in the world, a cool, crisp Italian pinot grigio, and then some gelato and coffee. Can’t beat this.

Thank you for stopping by CMash Reads and spending time with us.

ABOUT THE BOOK
The Moses Virus is a thriller primarily set in modern day Rome.  Two American archaeologists die suddenly in an underground passageway in the Roman Forum leading to the buried rooms of Emperor Nero’s Golden Palace.  The Italian authorities conclude that the deaths were caused by a devastating and highly contagious virus.  Tom Stewart, an NYU forensic archaeologist who was present when the deaths occurred, becomes entangled in the race to find the supply of the virus—a race involving many powerful players desperately seeking the deadly contagion.  Stewart must find and destroy the virus before others harness its sinister power.
The Vatican, foreign groups, the world’s largest genetically-modified seed manufacturer—all have their reasons, and none will stop until they succeed, no matter what the cost or risk to millions of people if the virus escapes and causes a pandemic.
BOOK DETAILS:

Genre: Archaeologists—Fiction
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Taylor Trade
Publication Date: January 7, 2014
ISBN-10: 1589799089
ISBN-13: 978-1589799080

PURCHASE LINKS:

           

THANKS TO MARIA AT MARIAN BROWN PR,
I
HAVE THREE (3) SIGNED COPIES TO GIVE AWAY.
OPEN TO U.S. RESIDENTS
FILL OUT RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM BELOW
GIVEAWAY ENDS JANUARY 10th AT 6PM EST
WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN BY RAFFLECOPTER AND NOTIFIED
VIA EMAIL AND WILL HAVE 48 HOURS TO RESPOND
OR ANOTHER NAME WILL BE CHOSEN

a Rafflecopter giveaway

YOUR JAVA SCRIPT MAY NEED TO BE UPDATED
IF YOU AR EXPERIENCING DIFFICULTY
USING THE RAFFLECOPTER ENTRY FORM

DISCLAIMER
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.
ADDENDUM
I do not have any affiliation with Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble. I am an IndieBound affiliate. I am providing link(s) solely for visitors that may be interested in purchasing this Book/EBook.

 

And the winner is……..

….of Sneaky Art by Marthe Jocelyn

CONGRATULATIONS!!


16 Pam Boland Like Providence Book Promotions on Facebook

An email has been sent and the winner has 48 hours to respond or another winner will be chosen.  Thank you to all that entered.

And the winner is….

…….of Forever’s 3rd Day of Christmas

Once Upon a Highlander Christmas by Sue Ellen Welfonder,

His For Christmas by Jennifer Haymore and

I’ll Be Home For Christmas by Jessica Scott

CONGRATULATIONS!!


14 Molly Jaber Tweet about the Giveaway

An email has been sent and the winner has 48 hours to respond or another winner will be chosen. Thank you to all that entered.

And the winner is….

…….of Forever’s 2nd Day of Christmas

The Trouble With Christmas by Debbie Mason and
 

Twas The Night Before Mischief by Nina Rowan

CONGRATULATIONS!!


25 lristi bonus Like Providence Book Promotions on Facebook
An email has been sent and the winner has 48 hours to respond or another winner will be chosen. Thank you to all that entered.

ADDENDUM: 12/31/13  Due to a non response, another winner has been chosen.  The winner has 48 hours to respond or another winner will be chosen.

45 Maureen Carol Tweet about the Giveaway

And the winner is……..

…….of Forever’s 1st Day of Christmas

Christmas In Lucky Harbor by Jill Shalvis and
A Christmas To Remember by Jill Shalvis, Kristen Ashley,
Hope Ramsay, Marilyn Pappano &Molly Cannon

CONGRATULATIONS!!


55 Maureen Carol Follow @CherylMash on Twitter

An email has been sent and the winner has 48 hours to respond or another winner will be chosen.  Thank you to all that entered.