#Blog Tour #Mark of the Wicked by Georgia Bowers #YA Fantasy @Swoon Reads @Xpresso Book Tours

Book details:
Mark of the Wicked
by Georgia Bowers
Published by: Swoon Reads
Publication date: August 10th 2021
Genres: Fantasy, Young Adult


Synopsis:

A young witch tries to unravel the mystery of who is framing her for dark magic in Georgia Bowers’ creepy YA debut fantasy, Mark of the Wicked.

Magic always leaves its mark.

All her life, Matilda has been told one thing about her magic: You use only when necessary. But Matilda isn’t interested in being a good witch. She wants revenge and popularity, and to live her life free of consequences, free of the scars that dark magic leaves on her face as a reminder of her misdeeds.

When a spell goes awry and the new boy at school catches her in the act, Matilda thinks her secret might be out. But far from being afraid, Oliver already knows about her magic – and he wants to learn more. As Oliver and Matilda grow closer, bizarre things begin to happen: Animals show up with their throats slashed and odd markings carved into their bodies, a young girl dies mysteriously, and everyone blames Matilda. But she isn’t responsible — at least, not that she can remember. As her magic begins to spin out of control, Matilda must decide for herself what makes a good witch, and discover the truth…before anyone else turns up dead.

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / iBooks / Kobo / Google Play

My thoughts:

Dark and sinister, Mark of the Wicked is a story of a teenage witch who is in a desperate need of getting a second chance in life, although she herself isn’t aware of it.

If you like books in the paranormal genre, you know how the female characters tend to be either hapless beginners who have just discovered their powers, or tough, independent fighters (with a penchant for wearing dark colours) against all the injustice in the world. They are Inherently Good, otherwise what example would they set? Right? Well, Matilda from Mark of the Wicked doesn’t fall into either category. She is quite unlikeable with her petty revenges and self-cetredness. It’s just that she can get away with them. For now…

Matilda comes from a powerful bloodline of witches and has been taught by her grandmother and her mother that magic should be used for good and there is a balance in nature. When magic is used to hurt someone, the victim’s name is carved on the face of the witch. Everything changes when Matilda’s father teaches her a painful, but powerful spell for concealing the traces of her wrongdoing (originally created to protect the witchfolk from being persecuted). Why work hard on using magic to help people without getting any thanks, let alone a personal reward, if you can have fun watching them gets scared or confused?

You can guess that it is going to go either the Dorian Gray way or…something really bad is going to happen and shake Matilda into questioning her own decisions. In this case, Oliver, a new boy at Matilda’s school becomes interested in her magic, and, all the wicked, inexplicable things that start happening in their small town seem to point at Matilda.

I like stories where the main character develops and discovers that everyone makes mistakes in life. You have to face the consequences, but you’re not alone, there are people who will see you as more than just a sum of your errors and will be there for you when you need help.

Mark of the Wicked is a dark and atmosheric read -the events take place around Halloween, so a certain amount of creepiness is only to be expected. It was really interesting to read about the magic system and Matilda’s family history. There are some fascinating secondary characters, including Nana May.

The pace is a bit slower in the first part of the book, but it is understandable, as the setting and the moral ambiguity of the main character need to be established.

Overall, this is a promising debut from Georgia Bowers and I will be looking forward to reading more of her unusual, atmospheric stories. Thank you to Giselle from Xpresso Book Tours, NetGalley, Macmillan’s Children’s group/Swoon Reads and the author for the review copy. All opinions are my own and were not influenced in any way.

Author Bio:

Georgia Bowers lives in Bedford, a small market town in England. When it was time to decide what to do with her life, she was obsessed with two things: books and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It seemed sensible to follow in the brogued footsteps of Rupert Giles, so she became a librarian, though sadly not the demon fighting kind. But there’s still time.

Ever since her mum told her that witches used to meet in the woods near their village, she’s been obsessed with witchcraft and the paranormal. When she was a teenager, a weekly habit of Point Horrors satisfied her thirst for chilling tales before she moved on to reading Stephen King. These days she likes to give her nerves a break every now and then with a good YA romance.

After completing a course in writing YA fiction she was a winner in the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Undiscovered Voices. Since then she has dabbled with stories of chosen ones and ghostly best friends until she conjured up the magical ingredients for her debut novel, Mark Of The Wicked.

Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram

Giveaway:Tour-wide giveaway (INT)

  • Print copy of Mark of the Wicked

rafflecopter

If you would like to know what other bloggers thought of the book,you can find the full blog tour schedule here.

August 9th
Westveil Publishing >> Review
The Fantasy Princess >> Guest Post
Moonlight Rendezvous >> Review
The Fictional Journal >> Review

August 10th
Kait Plus Books >> Guest Post
Bookworm for Kids >> Review
SplendeurCaisse >> Review
Jessica Belmont >> Review

August 11th
Books Tea Healthy Me >> Interview
Stuck in the Stacks >> Review
Your Bookish Friend >> Excerpt

August 12th
A Book Addict’s Bookshelves  >> Interview
Reading Tonic >> Review
The Reading Chemist >> Review
Adventures in Writing >> Review
Tien’s Blurb >> Review
Archaeolibrarian – I Dig Good Books! >> Excerpt

August 13th
Reading Stewardess >> Review
The Avid Reader >> Review
Twirling Book Princess >> Excerpt
Jazzy Book Reviews >> Interview
Bookish Jottings >> Review
Rants N Scribbles >> Review

#Can’t Wait Wednesday #The Suite Spot by Trish Doller @St.Martin’s Griffin

Can’t-Wait Wednesday is a weekly meme hosted  by Tressa at Wishful Endings to spotlight and discuss the books we’re excited about which we have yet to read. Generally they’re books that have yet to be released. It’s based on Waiting on Wednesday, hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine.

The book I’m waiting for this Wednesday is…

The Suite Spot by Trish Doller

Trish Doller’s The Suite Spot is a charming romance novel about taking a chance on a new life and a new love.

Rachel Beck has hit a brick wall. She’s a single mom, still living at home and trying to keep a dying relationship alive. Aside from her daughter, the one bright light in Rachel’s life is her job as the night reservations manager at a luxury hotel in Miami Beach—until the night she is fired for something she didn’t do.

On impulse, Rachel inquires about a management position at a brewery hotel on an island in Lake Erie called Kelleys Island. When she’s offered the job, Rachel packs up her daughter and makes the cross country move.

What she finds on Kelleys Island is Mason, a handsome, moody man who knows everything about brewing beer and nothing about running a hotel. Especially one that’s barely more than foundation and studs. It’s not the job Rachel was looking for, but Mason offers her a chance to help build a hotel—and rebuild her own life—from the ground up.

Publisher: St. Martin’s Griffin

Expected Publication date: March 8, 2022

Genre: Fiction / Romance / Contemporary

TRISH DOLLER is the author of novels for teens and adults about love, life, and finding your place in the world. A former journalist and radio personality, Trish has written several YA novels, including the critically acclaimed Something Like Normal, as well as Float Plan, her adult women’s fiction debut. When she’s not writing, Trish loves sailing, traveling, and avoiding housework. She lives in southwest Florida with an opinionated herding dog and an ex-pirate.

#Blog Tour #Book Review of He’ll Be Waiting by Liz Alterman #Young Adult#Thriler @Xpresso Book Tours

Today I’m delighted to participate in the blog tour for He’ll be Waiting, a new, gripping thriller by Liz Alterman.

Book details:
He’ll Be Waiting
by Liz Alterman
Publication date: April 6th 2021
Genres: Thriller, Young Adult
Synopsis:

There are no safe spaces…

When Tess Porter agrees to pick up her boyfriend’s college pal at the airport on a snowy December night, she has no idea she’s about to embark on the most dangerous ride of her life. Two days later, the 17-year-old wakes up in a hospital with broken bones, and unable to remember how she got there. Her parents are acting strangely, and neither James, her boyfriend, nor her best friend Izzy has visited. As she struggles to physically recover, Tess wrestles with haunting questions: What happened? Will her memory ever return? and what if she’s better off not recalling any of it?

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Indiebound

Author Bio:

Liz Alterman lives in New Jersey with her husband and three sons. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Parents, McSweeney’s, and other publications. He’ll Be Waiting is her first young adult novel. When she isn’t writing, she spends most days microwaving the same cup of coffee and looking up synonyms.

Website / Goodreads / Twitter / Instagram

My thoughts:

​What a ride! Liz Alterman’s newest thriller He’ll Be Waiting proved to be such a gripping, compelling read, I just had to finish it in one sitting and here I am writing this review five hours after I picked the book!

17-year-old Tess Porter wakes up in a hospital with broken bones, bruises all over her aching body, stitches on her head after a surgery and, for better or worse, no memory of the ‘accident’ that caused all of this. Her parents are there taking shifts looking after her, doctors, nurses, a psychologist- the only person who is missing is her boyfriend James. Tess remembers that James was supposed to come back home from his college a day early to spend it with her, but probe further and her mind draws a painful blank. When she does see him, his visits are hurried, full of apologies and half-memories. What exactly is going on? Why would people who love her or are supposed to make her well-being their highest priority would force her through this torture of trying to remember the events of that snowy day on her own, without help? Why not just tell her what happened?

This is about as much as I can tell you without spoiling the story. Pay attention- the clues are there all there. When it all slowly and gradually gets revealed, you’ll see how well-thought-through this compelling plot is. Personally, I don’t like it when crucial information comes out at the end and there’s no way you could have guessed who the culprit is and what their motivation was. This isn’t the case here. Everything is foreshadowed and developed later.
The same can be said about the characters. When we first meet Tess, she is hurting, she’s confused, she’s focused on herself at the expense of everyone and everything else, but through her eyes we get to see the people who are most important to her and who are all somehow involved in this mystery. Part of the message of this book is that everything is interconnected and even the smallest of our actions can have unpredictable consequences. Unpredictable because we can’t control other people, their feelings and their actions, but we can do our best to be there for people we love and pay real attention to them.

The book is very easy to read, it just grips you and compels you to keep turning pages until you solve Tessa’s mystery and go through the rich mix of her masterfully-portrayed emotions – grief, anxiety, anger, sadness, forgiveness. Although I didn’t know much about the author of this well-written YA thriller, I certainly hope to read more from her in future.

Thank you to Giselle from Xpresso Book Tours, the publisher and the author for the review copy provided in exchange for an honest opinion.

Giveaway:

Tour-wide giveaway (INT)

  • $25 Amazon gift card
  • Signed copy of He’ll Be Waiting

rafflecopter

Thankyou for reading the post! If you would like to find out what other bloggers thought of the book, you can find the full blog tour schedule here:

August 9th
Iron Canuck Reviews & More >> Excerpt
Archaeolibrarian – I Dig Good Books! >> Review

August 10th
Shelf Love >> Interview
Reading Stewardess  >> Review
Twirling Book Princess >> Excerpt
Rants N Scribbles >>  Playlist

August 11th
Reading Tonic >> Review
Adventures in Writing >> Excerpt
Books, Tea, Healthy Me >> Review
Jazzy Book Reviews >> Excerpt

August 12th
Momma Says: To Read or Not to Read >> Review
The Avid Reader >> Review
Lisa Loves Literature >> Review
Valerie Ullmer | Romance Author >> Guest post

August 13th
Owl Book World >> Review
Bookworm for Kids  >> Review
The Eclectic Review >> Review

#Happy Publication Day #Gone For Good (Annalisa Vega Book 1) by Joanna Schaffhausen #Police Procedural @Minotaur Books

Hapy Publication Day to Gone For Good, the first book in Joanna Schaffhausen’s new series of detective novels featuring Detective Annalisa Vega!

Description:

The first in a new mystery series from award-winning author Joanna Schaffhausen, featuring Detective Annalisa Vega, in which a cold case heats up.

The Lovelorn Killer murdered seven women, ritually binding them and leaving them for dead before penning them gruesome love letters in the local papers. Then he disappeared, and after twenty years with no trace of him, many believe that he’s gone for good.

Not Grace Harper. A grocery store manager by day, at night Grace uses her snooping skills as part of an amateur sleuth group. She believes the Lovelorn Killer is still living in the same neighborhoods that he hunted in, and if she can figure out how he selected his victims, she will have the key to his identity.

Detective Annalisa Vega lost someone she loved to the killer. Now she’s at a murder scene with the worst kind of déjà vu: Grace Harper lies bound and dead on the floor, surrounded by clues to the biggest murder case that Chicago homicide never solved. Annalisa has the chance to make it rights and to heal her family, but first, she has to figure out what Grace knew—how to see a killer who may be standing right in front of you. This means tracing his steps back to her childhood, peering into dark corners she hadn’t acknowledged before, and learning that despite everything the killer took, she has still so much more to lose.

Publisher: Minotaur Books

Publication date: August 10th,2021

Genre: Fiction / Mystery & Detective / Police Procedural

304 pages

Goodreads

ISBN 9781250264602

JOANNA SCHAFFHAUSEN wields a mean scalpel, skills developed in her years studying neuroscience. She has a doctorate in psychology, which reflects her long-standing interest in the brain—how it develops and the many ways it can go wrong. Previously, she worked for ABC News, writing for programs such as World News Tonight, Good Morning America, and 20/20. She lives in the Boston area with her husband and daughter. She is also the author of The Vanishing Season, No Mercy, All the Best Lies, and Every Waking Hour.

Facebook /Website /Twitter / Goodreads

#Happy Publication Day #She Wouldn’t Change a Thing by Sarah Adlakha @Forge Books

Happy Publication Day to She Wouldn’t Change a Thing, a compelling second chance story from Sarah Adlakha.

Publisher’s Description:

Would you change fate- even if it means losing what you love?

Sliding Doors meets Life After Life in this story about a wife and mother who is given the chance to start over at the risk of losing everything she loves

A second chance is the last thing she wants.

When thirty-nine year old Maria Forssmann wakes up in her seventeen-year-old body, she doesn’t know how she got there. All she does know is she has to get back: to her home in Bienville, Mississippi, to her job as a successful psychiatrist and, most importantly, to her husband, daughters, and unborn son.

But she also knows that, in only a few weeks, a devastating tragedy will strike her husband, a tragedy that will lead to their meeting each other.

Can she change time and still keep what it’s given her?

Exploring the responsibilities love lays on us, the complicated burdens of motherhood, and the rippling impact of our choices, She Wouldn’t Change a Thing is a dazzling debut from a bright new voice.

Goodreads

Publisher: Forge Books

Publication Date: August 10th, 2021

Genres: Literary Fiction / Women’s Fiction

About the author:

Sarah Adlakha is a native of Chicago and a practicing psychiatrist who now lives along the Gulf Coast of Mississippi with her husband and their three daughters. This is her first novel.

Twitter: @sarahadlakha
Instagram: sarahadlakha
Facebook: Sarah Adlakha
Website: SarahAdlakha.com

#Blog Tour #Guest Post #Colouring Outside the Lines by Amanda Paull @rararesources

Today I’m delighted to participate in the blog tour for Amanda Paull’s new book Colouring Outside the Lines and present Amanda’s guest post!

GUEST POST BY AMANDA PAULL

Thank you so much for hosting me on Reading Tonic. Following the recent release of my new novel, Colouring Outside the Lines, I thought I’d share my thoughts about giving my main characters, like Katie in this story, an extra challenge to deal with while they’ve already got quite a lot on their plate.

I’ve realised that I somehow manage to do the same thing in real life, and I wonder if I inherited the tendency from my mother. Many years ago, my father had a heart condition that required a scan. I was a critical care nurse at the time and, knowing they would keep Dad in, I urged my parents to seek a referral to our local hospital.

Unfortunately, my parents are old-school.

‘The doctor said it was mild angina,’ said Dad.

‘He’s wrong, I have experience in this field –’

‘You’re not a doctor…’ said Mum.

Jump forward to the day of the scan….

My mother, hand clapped to mouth, aghast. ‘They won’t let him come home. They say he’s on the point of having a heart attack. And that he’ll die if he does because here are four blockages! Can you believe it…?’

🙄

So, in addition to having to driving an hour each way to see Dad in his hospital, miles away, and spending a good few more hours sitting at his bedside while he waited to get to the top of the long NHS waiting list, Mum decided to decorate their bedroom.

‘We can’t have the District Nurses coming in to see Dad in that room as it is now.’

Anyway, you get the picture, Mum ensured she was on the go from dawn until dusk.

So, my genes may explain the reason I lumbered Katie, who was already having a tough time with her fiancé, parents and work, with the added burden of walking the Northumberland Mighty Hike marathon in aid of MacMillan Cancer Care and also abseiling down Newcastle Tyne Bridge for charity.

It isn’t the first time I’ve done this type of thing. In Pictures in the Sky, the first novel in the Cherry Dene series, the main character, Michelle did the Great North Run – a half-marathon – while suffering from a broken heart.

I’m not a cruel person, and although my stories are all fictional ones, I think I could be inadvertently slipping in snippets of my own experiences. I did do the Great North Run one year with a broken heart. And another time, I was cajoled into abseiling down the Tyne Bridge for charity, while going through a marriage break up. Though it does indeed add to the emotional rollercoaster, there is also something cathartic about really putting yourself through the mill, when you’re already really going through the mill.

This year, as the real-life Mighty Hike date approached, I worsened my experience by starting the ketogenic diet. I’d gained some weight during lockdown, and that, coupled with the weight of the rucksack I would have to carry for the twenty-six-mile event, made it more difficult to train. I knew it would be much easier if I lost a little body fat, without losing any muscle, which the keto diet is famous for. However, though I expected to feel rubbish for the first couple of weeks with the dreaded keto flu, I didn’t expect it to go on for three months. Not being a quitter, I persevered. Yes, I lost weight, kept the little bit muscle I had, and my general aches and pains disappeared, but I felt terrible. Thankfully, I succumbed to carbs a couple of weeks before the hike and perked up. But this was a typical example of my tendency to take a challenge and make it much harder than it needs to be. At least through this particular challenge, I was lucky to have my lovely husband to support me.

Colouring Outside the Lines is written with a light touch and is a story that I hope will uplift as well as entertain my readers. Although Katie does have a bit of a tough time, I haven’t given her more than she can handle. She’s well capable of getting through the Mighty Hike and abseiling down the Tyne Bridge, while nursing a broken heart. And she’ll do it just like most other forty-something women – with fortitude and a good sense of humour. 😊

ABOUT THE BOOK:

Colouring Outside The Lines

Meet Katie: she’s about to marry the most wonderful man in the world. The planning is done, the checklist is checked. The future is set.

Having spent her twenties and thirties enjoying life with good friends, and building a career she loves, it’s taken Katie until her forties to contemplate settling down. And she couldn’t be more delighted she waited.

So, why is her perfect groom standing gawping at her, wearing mismatched socks and sweating buckets? This can’t bode well.

With her special day in tatters, Katie has a decision to make. Does she snatch back the reigns of her old life, and tighten her grip even more? Or should she take a chance on change? Will she find the key to happiness at a Pilates class in a smelly old hall? Or is the curve ball heading her way too huge to handle?

If you like British humour and a flawed protagonist on an emotional journey, you’ll enjoy reading Amanda Paull’s latest novel, Colouring Outside the Lines – a heart-warming tale of shattered dreams, self-discovery and finding true love where you least expect it.

Amazon / Goodreads

Author Bio –

Amanda Paull grew up in the North East of England and couldn’t wait to move away. However, after studying and then living both in England and abroad, she returned to the North East and wouldn’t dream of living anywhere else now.

​​

After a short career in teaching, she retrained as a nurse. She recently retired from her post as a Sleep Nurse Specialist and now spends her time writing Women’s Fiction novels and Romantic Comedy short stories.

Social Media Links

website / twitter / facebook

Thank you to Amanda for her guest post!

Let’s all wish Colouring Outside the Lines lots of success.

Have a wonderful Tuesday!

It’s Monday! What are you reading? August 9th, 2021

It’s Monday! What are you Reading is a weekly meme hosted by Kathryn from Book Date, a place to share and discuss what we’ve read in the past week and what we’re in the middle of or are planning to read this week.

What I read / listened to last week

Ruin and Rising by Leigh Bardugo

The capital has fallen.

The Darkling rules Ravka from his shadow throne.

Now the nation’s fate rests with a broken Sun Summoner, a disgraced tracker, and the shattered remnants of a once-great magical army.

Deep in an ancient network of tunnels and caverns, a weakened Alina must submit to the dubious protection of the Apparat and the zealots who worship her as a Saint. Yet her plans lie elsewhere, with the hunt for the elusive firebird and the hope that an outlaw prince still survives.

Alina will have to forge new alliances and put aside old rivalries as she and Mal race to find the last of Morozova’s amplifiers. But as she begins to unravel the Darkling’s secrets, she reveals a past that will forever alter her understanding of the bond they share and the power she wields. The firebird is the one thing that stands between Ravka and destruction—and claiming it could cost Alina the very future she’s fighting for.

A Bad Day For Sunshine and A Good Day For Chardonnay by Darynda Jones

… a real marathon of Darynda Jones! Both books were fun to read, but now I need a break from all these jokes 🙂

Running a small-town police force in the mountains of New Mexico should be a smooth, carefree kind of job. Sadly, full-time Sheriff–and even fuller-time coffee guzzler–Sunshine Vicram, didn’t get that memo.

All Sunshine really wants is one easy-going day. You know, the kind that starts with coffee and a donut (or three) and ends with take-out pizza and a glass of chardonnay (or seven). Turns out, that’s about as easy as switching to decaf. (What kind of people do that? And who hurt them?)

Before she can say iced mocha latte, Sunny’s got a bar fight gone bad, a teenage daughter hunting a serial killer and, oh yes, the still unresolved mystery of her own abduction years prior. All evidence points to a local distiller, a dangerous bad boy named Levi Ravinder, but Sun knows he’s not the villain of her story. Still, perhaps beneath it all, he possesses the keys to her disappearance. At the very least, beneath it all, he possesses a serious set of abs. She’s seen it. Once. Accidentally.

What I am reading/listening to now:

All Night Long with a Cowboy by Caitlin Crews

If you play with fire…
One of the most notorious cowboys in Cold River, Jensen Kittredge always has willing women with sweet smiles vying for a place in his bed. So when the prissy high school librarian sidles up to him in the most disreputable bar in town with a scowl on her face, he has no idea what to make of it. Much less the attraction he feels toward the bespectacled creature who wants something from him… but not that.
Yet.
Someone gets burned…
Harriett Barnett doesn’t care for dens of iniquity– or the insolent cowboy she certainly shouldn’t find attractive. But one of her students needs her help, and if she needs to corral the infamous Jensen to save him, she will. Trouble is, the town’s favorite Kittredge brother is a lot more than she bargained for. Harriett’s happy little life is orderly and neat, just how she likes it–until Jensen blows it all apart with his particular brand of addictive passion. Can a modern-day schoolmarm really tame the wildest cowboy in town? Or is Harriet headed for a terrible fall?

Better Believe It by Fern Ronay

Jada Marlone’s life appears to be perfect on social media. She has a loving husband, a beautiful child, and a successful career. What she doesn’t post about is the disconnect she feels in her marriage, the difficulties of motherhood, and her strained relationship with her mother.

Resigned to never being truly happy, Jada runs into an ex-boyfriend. While trying to decide whether the coincidence is her second chance at happiness, Jada begins having dreams that feature her dead cousin Gina.

With Gina’s help, Jada starts to uncover the real reasons behind her life decisions. As Jada tries to figure out her future, uncontrollable events threaten her resolve. Will she be able to draw from all she learned from Gina, or will she risk making the same mistakes twice?

What I’m reading /listening to next:

Defy The Night by Brigid Kemmerer

From New York Times bestselling author Brigid Kemmerer comes a blockbuster fantasy series about a kingdom divided by corruption, the prince desperately holding it together, and the girl who will risk everything to bring it crashing down.

The kingdom of Kandala is on the brink of disaster. Rifts between sectors have only worsened since a sickness began ravaging the land, and within the Royal Palace, the king holds a tenuous peace with a ruthless hand.

King Harristan was thrust into power after his parents’ shocking assassination, leaving the younger Prince Corrick to take on the brutal role of the King’s Justice. The brothers have learned to react mercilessly to any sign of rebellion–it’s the only way to maintain order when the sickness can strike anywhere, and the only known cure, an elixir made from delicate Moonflower petals, is severely limited.

Out in the Wilds, apothecary apprentice Tessa Cade is tired of seeing her neighbors die, their suffering ignored by the unyielding royals. Every night, she and her best friend Wes risk their lives to steal Moonflower petals and distribute the elixir to those who need it most–but it’s still not enough.

As rumors spread that the cure no longer works and sparks of rebellion begin to flare, a particularly cruel act from the King’s Justice makes Tessa desperate enough to try the impossible: sneaking into the palace. But what she finds upon her arrival makes her wonder if it’s even possible to fix Kandala without destroying it first.

The Darkness by Ragnar Jónasson

Spanning the icy streets of Reykjavik, the Icelandic highlands and cold, isolated fjords, The Darkness is an atmospheric thriller from Ragnar Jonasson, one of the most exciting names in Nordic Noir.

The body of a young Russian woman washes up on an Icelandic shore. After a cursory investigation, the death is declared a suicide and the case is quietly closed.

Over a year later Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir of the Reykjavík police is forced into early retirement at 64. She dreads the loneliness, and the memories of her dark past that threaten to come back to haunt her. But before she leaves she is given two weeks to solve a single cold case of her choice. She knows which one: the Russian woman whose hope for asylum ended on the dark, cold shore of an unfamiliar country. Soon Hulda discovers that another young woman vanished at the same time, and that no one is telling her the whole story. Even her colleagues in the police seem determined to put the brakes on her investigation. Meanwhile the clock is ticking.

Hulda will find the killer, even if it means putting her own life in danger.

How did your last week go and what are you reading this week?

#Book Blitz #Mister Know-It-All by Amélie S.Duncan @Xpresso Book Tours

Book & Author Details:
Mister Know It All
by Amélie S. Duncan
Publication date: August 8th 2021
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Romance


Synopsis:

A romantic comedy set in the world of Vi Keeland and Penelope Ward’s Stuck Up Suit

What’s a girl to do when she discovers that her boss/boyfriend (I don’t need a lecture, thank you very much!) is a cheating windbag?

Dump him and quit her job, of course.

After that, it was supposed to be the Summer of Me—a totally self-indulgent few months.

Except that I met a drop-dead gorgeous Viking with a bossy attitude.

We clashed on his arrogance and crassness, but geek bonded over Star Wars and Star Trek.

He offered himself as a no-strings-attached candidate for my get-my-groove-back sex plan, and I left because he already had a girlfriend, even if they were on a break.

But I couldn’t stop thinking about him.

I really, really needed to find someone less complicated, but he infiltrated my thoughts.

He was hot, after all (And his towel might have slipped on purpose.) Seriously hot.

No matter how many times I decided not to pursue anything with him, he kept showing a softer side of himself.

But we couldn’t keep going like that, neither here nor there.

Some decisions had to be made.

One that could change everything.

If someone had told me how my Summer of Me would end? I’d never have believed them.

But I regret nothing.

Goodreads / Amazon

Author Bio:

Amelie S. Duncan writes steamy, sexy stories. Her inspiration comes from many sources including her life experiences and travels. She lives on the West Coast of the United States with her husband.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram / Amazon

GIVEAWAY

Blitz-wide giveaway (INT)- ends August 19th

Signed copy of Mister Know It All + swag

$25 Amazon gift card

rafflecopter

#A Bad Day for Sunshine (Sunshine Vicram#1) by Darynda Jones

Sheriff Sunshine Vicram finds her cup o’ joe more than half full when the small village of Del Sol, New Mexico, becomes the center of national attention for a kidnapper on the loose.

Del Sol, New Mexico is known for three things: its fry-an-egg-on-the-cement summers, strong cups of coffee – and, now, a nationwide manhunt? Del Sol native Sunshine Vicram has returned to town as the elected sheriff – thanks to her adorably meddlesome parents who nominated her–and she expects her biggest crime wave to involve an elderly flasher named Doug. But a teenage girl is missing, a kidnapper is on the loose, and all of this is reminding Sunshine why she left Del Sol in the first place. Add to that the trouble at her daughter’s new school, plus and a kidnapped prized rooster named Puff Daddy, and, well, the forecast looks anything but sunny.

But even clouds have their silver linings. This one’s got Levi, Sunshine’s sexy, almost-old-flame, and a fiery-hot US Marshall. With temperatures rising everywhere she turns, Del Sol’s normally cool-minded sheriff is finding herself knee-deep in drama and danger. Can Sunshine face the call of duty – and find the kidnapper who’s terrorizing her beloved hometown – without falling head over high heels in love . . . or worse?
​(From the book blurb)

My thoughts:

A Bad Day for Sunshine is the first book in Darynda Jones’s Sunshine Vicram series, set in a small town of Del Sol, New Mexico. Fast-paced, entertaining, full of laugh-out-loud witty comebacks and Darynda’s trademark quirky characters, thebook is fun, fun, fun to read from the beginning to the end. It kept growing on me as I read on and got to know better Sunshine, her family, friends and enemies.

Sunshine Vicaram unexpectedly (for her) becomes the sheriff of her home town of Del Sol without any recollection of having entered the election. Clearly, her parents had something to do with it, but Sun is a bit reluctant to look into this particular mystery. She is more than qualifed to do a great job in this position, having a degree in Criminal Justice and a stellar career in Santa Fe Police Department. Most of the book covers Sunshine’s first day at work, parallel to her 14-year-old daughter Auri’s first day at Del Sol High, which also turns into a bit of a nightmare. Fifteen years ago Sunshine fled Del Sol following a traumatic abduction which landedher in hospital in a coma. She doesn’t remember much of her ordeal or the month prior to the events, but Sun has never stopped investigating her own case.

It seems that the worst crime she will have to deal with is the disappearance of a locally famous rooster Puff Daddy, when the news of a teenage girl missing turns everything upside down and the clock countdown to save her life begins.

Sunshine is such a likeable character! Darynda Jones has a very peculiar, quite snarky sense of humour, but you can’t deny that Sunshine’s witty retorts and chapter sub-headings/ fictional notices on Del Sol’s various businesses are absolutely hilarious. There’s much more to Sun than that- she is strong, independent, a caring mother and a loyal friend. Loved her bestie-Chief Deputy Quincy Cooper and, of course, Aurora Dawn Vicram a.k.a. Auri a.k.a. bean sprout. If you were (or still are!) a fan of Gilmore Girls, you know the formula- a single mother doing her best to raise a super smart, cool teenager. Auri’s efforts in investigating Sybil’s case will prove indispensable in solving the case.

Did I mention the romantic tension between Levi Ravinder, Sunshine’s old (and current) crush? Levi’s a classic boy from the wrong side of the tracks who’s been trying to make his semi-criminal family walk on straight and narrow. There’s also a very handsome US Marshal in the town, trying to capture a fugitive (another entertaining plotline with a great twist in the end).

This was one of the most enjoyable reads for quite a long time. There is a thin line between being sassy and trying too hard, and I have to say Darynda Jones manages to stay on the right side. There is a great balance of funny and touching and funny again. Sunshine’ is vulnerable, strong and capable at the same time, doted with great empathy and an infallible gut instinct, and yet she works hard to do her homework and follow through on every single lead. All of this being a (very) single mother of a teenager which is an art in itself.

Can’t wait to read the next book in the series!

#Book review #The Center of the Universe by Ria Voros #YA

Grace Carter’s mother -the celebrity news anchor GG Carter – is everything Grace is not. GG is a star, with a flawless wardrobe and a following of thousands, while Grace, an aspiring astrophysicist, is into stars of another kind. She and her mother have always been in different orbits. Then one day GG is just … gone. Cameras descend on their house, news shows speculate about what might have happened and Grace’s family struggles to find a new rhythm as they wait for answers.
While the authorities unravel the mystery behind GG’s disappearance, Grace grows closer to her high school’s golden boy, Mylo, who has faced a black hole of his own.
She also uncovers some secrets from her mother’s long-lost past. The more Grace learns, the more she wonders. Did she ever really know her mother? Was GG abducted … or did she leave? And if she left, why?

(From the book blurb)

My thoughts:
I’m going to start with a quote to explain the title of the book:

Tell me your favorite fact about space …Just pick one thing. What’s something that blows your mind away?’

‘The Universe is expanding, right? from the Bing Bang. But what’s actually expanding is space itself, which was also made at the time of the Big Bang…So what that means is there is no center of the universe. Everywhere is the center– which means nowhere is… We naturally want there to be a starting point, but anywhere I stand in the universe is the middle. Like, right now, here is the center’

If these lines made you think the book is nerdy or overly-lyrical, nothing can be further from reality. It is written in fairly simple colloquial language, short chapters and is very easy to follow.

It is also very easy to relate to and fall in love with its characters. The main one (the book is written from her point of view), Grace Carter, is the third Grace in a family line of strong intelligent women. Her grandmother was a famous actress. Her Mom- GG Carter is a news anchor, a very public figure, a face of her TV channel. Grace herself is not interested in fame. She loves astronomy, in particular, discovering exoplanets by methodically watching the skies and doing complex calculations. She also loves playing with her younger brother Charlie and verbally sparring with her best friend Iris (Grace can always tell what mood Iris is in by the number of bangles on her wrist). Grace is curious, perceptive, loyal and very non-assuming. Then there is also a boy, Mylo McLean, whose hobby is taking photos of butterflies to capture this one special moment of beauty when everythings stands still. Mylo is gorgeous and popular and perhaps their orbits would have never crossed but for Iris who would like to involve his rich family in her charity.

Milo asks Grace to put a good word in for him, as he would like to interview Grace’s mom for his English assignment. The only time they can do it is during a soccer game. Everything is going fine and Grace is about to introduce Mylo to her mother, when they realise she had disappeared after having taken a telphone call.
What follows is endless police interviews, news crews surrounding their house, stress, worry, re-adjustment and perpetual waiting, so familiar to people whose loved ones have been abducted or just disappeared without a trace. Grace and Mylo’s relationship becomes closer because he, out of all people in the universe, is the person who can understand the best what she is going through.

I went into this book expecting a mystery- there is one, don’t get me wrong- but it isn’t central to the novel. In fact, it gets solved fairly early in the book and to be honest, it isn’t something I could have guessed or worked out. The book is much more about growing up and how the relationships we forge with other people change and develop over the time. The center of the universe is everywhere where you are. You are influenced and influence other people, their feelings, their happiness or lack of, their choices.

A big part of the book is about a mother-daughter relationship, which is realistic and poignant at the same time. During the long days of waiting for any news from the police on how the investigation of the kidnapping is going, Grace thinks a lot about the changes in her Mom’s appearance, character and family interactions, as the constant work stress gradually took away the mom she knew as a child. Grace knows that ‘we’re different versions of ourselves with different people’ (and also different versions with the same people at different times) and what Grace needs desperately is rediscover her mother and their connection.

The book is on the long side, but if you believe that everything worth having in this life happens over time, especially love and friendships, you are not going to complain, because what you see is the evolution of the characters which requires work. It is also optimistic, reflective and genuine.

…Galaxies collide all the time, like cosmic car crashes. Even in the impossible vastness of space, the gravity of a bigger galaxy will pull a smaller one, suck in its dust and gas and its solar systems, absorbing them..I’m looking at images of these crashes on my computer when it occurs to me that we slam into peole around  us, invisibly all the time. Through the things we say and don’t say. What we do and don’t do. That we are slowly changed by the constant bombardment. That we consume and are consumed, until we become products of our interactions, made of old and new parts, simultaneously broken and healing.

The Title: The Center of The Universe

Author: RiaVaros

Publication date: Apil 2nd, 2019

Publisher: Kids Can Press

Genre: Thrillers and Suspense

Age Category: 14 to 18, Grades 9 to 12

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