Monday, December 26, 2011

Lavender Dreams Cancer Anthology


Ten short stories in this anthology to entertain you. More importantly, the authors and cover artist have generously donated these stories and their royalties to help raise funds for cancer research each year.

Authors:

Barbara Ehrentreu, Gloria Oren, Lisa J. Lickel, Nan D Arnold, Nathaniel Tower, Rosemary Gemmell, Suzannah Safi, Tanja Cilia, Vicki Batman

Back Cover:

MuseItUp Authors dedicate this book to all who have been affected in one way or the other by cancer. All royalties from the sales of this book will be donated each year to a cancer research organization, or hospice in order to further combat and find a cure.

The book is divided into three sections: non-fiction, fiction based on true stories, and fictional stories—ten stories generously donated by the authors to help raise funds for cancer.

This book is dedicated to the memory of one of our dear editors who passed away in 2011 from cancer, Karen McGrath.

You will always be remembered.

Contents:

Tributes and Dedications

NONFICTION

A Blessing in Disguise by Gloria Oren

FICTION BASED ON TRUE STORIES

Cancer Didn’t Get Him by Barbara Ehrentreu
Taking Flight by Vicki Batman
Camp Chemo: The Last Laugh by Nan D Arnold
Waiting by Rosemary Gemmell

FICTION

Stories from the War by Nathaniel Tower
Testing…by Lisa J Lickel
The Cancer Tree by Nathaniel Tower
Behind A Closed Heart by Suzannah Safi
The Book by Tanja Cilia



I suppose I should review each story individually, but I am not going to do so.  I will, however, caution you to read the stories one at a time, as they can become overwhelming if you try to read too many at once.  Each piece holds to the high standards of MuseItUp Publishing, Inc.  Each piece will move you—make you laugh, cry…think.  I highly recommend this book, not just because the proceeds will hopefully help to wipe out this horrible disease, but because it’s a darned good read.

Price:  $1.99

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Tales of a Texas Boy by Marva Dasef



How do you handle a crazy jackass? Eddie knows. If you ask Eddie, he'll tell you pigs can fly and show you where to find real mammoth bones. Take his word for it when he tells you always to bet on the bear. These are things he learned while dreaming of becoming a cowboy in West Texas during the Depression. Through Eddie, the hero of "Tales of a Texas Boy," we find that growing up is less about maturity and more about roping your dreams. Hold on tight. It's a bumpy ride. A wonderful read for anyone who enjoys books like "Little House on the Prairie" or "Tom Sawyer." A great bit of nostalgia for seniors, too.



West Texas during the Great Depression comes alive in this collection of short stories told from the point of view of a boy growing up there.  Chores come first, but there’s time to play and be a boy, as well.  There are also special times like when the carnival comes to town with the fighting bear, or when he gets to visit relatives over by the New Mexico border and collect bones with a real archeologist.  There’s danger like when he and his sister try to ford a flooding river on the way to school because there’s no cutting when an education is a precious thing.  I was immersed in Eddie’s life, and if the book had been much longer, I suspect I’d have picked up his idoms.  Thnak you, Ms. Dasef, for introducing us to your father in such a wonderful way.

Prices:
E-Book:  $0.99
Print:  $6.49

Sunday, December 11, 2011

A Scuffle for a Wrinkle by Luke Evans



Vonnel offers a proposition to his skilled team of thieves: make off with the most technologically advanced gadget on the planet, and earn more money than they can imagine. The gadget known as "the wrinkler" lines up the rifts in space-time and thrusts you through it, but there's a catch. They're not the only ones after it.

They set up a sting in a skyscraper hotel on the edge of The City. Vonnel's right-hand man is dressed as a woman, his techie can't get the volume right on his communications, and his bumbling diversion is doing things better left unknown. Vonnel intercepts the target in his hotel room. Problem is, the wrinkler is not inside, and the man who stole it, his old nemesis, has already used it to disappear.

Now Vonnel must use all his wits to determine where his nemesis has gone, and how to procure the wrinkler for his client. It's a race up skyscrapers and through space-time for the ultimate gadget, and only one person can stop him: a man he has never before bested.


When I read “A Scuffle for a Wrinkle,” I forgot it was a short story.  For some reason I thought it was novel length.  Maybe that was because I’m not used to world-building complete with an alternate language (at least for cuss words) in a short story.  Maybe this story takes place on Earth; maybe not.  But it wasn’t an Earth I recognized.  Buildings were hundreds of stories tall and the land outside the city was a desert.  People mostly flew—in carts, luxury vehicles or harnesses.  I wasn’t sure I liked Vonnel, but if this were a movie, I could see George Clooney playing him and winning women’s hearts while making men want to be him.  Yeah…he kinda grows on you.  And major kudos to Luke Evans for a top-notch job of world-building in thirty-four pages.

Price:  $2.50

Buy Link:

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Lurkers by Lindsay Below






Blurb:
To say Kayla is bad at science would be a colossal understatement. So why does she carry the responsibility to figure out what went wrong? In the blink of an eye, everything she knows has changed. Her parents -- along with the rest of the adults in Toronto -- have disappeared, leaving her saddled with her whiny little brother. Luckily, she meets Jackson Sullivan, a fifteen-year-old scientific genius bent on finding out what happened. But he wants her help. How is she supposed to help sort out all this science stuff when she can barely pass her tenth grade science class?

As Jackson’s sidekick? Not in a million years.

Excerpt:

“What are we going to do?” she whispered.

She figured he knew what she was talking about—their parents. “I need more information,” he muttered. “We should go out into the city and find more people like us.”

“More people?” she gaped. “You think there are still people out there, besides us?”

He laughed. It was quick, and he covered his mouth with his hand, but she heard it. “You thought we were the only people left in the city,” he mumbled through his fingers.

She scowled. He made it sound like she was an idiot. “I didn’t see anybody else,” she snapped. It wasn’t so far-fetched to think that she, Josh, and Jackson were the only people left.

“I’ve had three separate calls today,” he informed her. “All from kids. None could find their parents. Not everybody is gone, only the adults. How many other kids do you think there are in the city?”

“You think this is happening to everybody?”

He raised his eyebrows. “Of course.” He lifted his hand, listing the points on his fingers. “No buses. No cars. No television. No radio.” He leaned back. “I’m almost surprised we have electricity. Although, depending on how many people use it, we should have enough stored up for a while.”

Kayla frowned to herself, thinking. “But why would all the adults leave? Why wouldn’t they take us with them? They’re our parents.”

“I don’t know yet,” Jackson admitted. “That’s what we need to find out.”


All of the adults have gone, but where?  Jackson thinks he can find out with Kayla’s help.  But it’s all she can do to keep herself together and ride herd on her eight-year-old brother—who happens to have diabetes, and need insulin.  Not an easy job.  Especially after she burns down the house the first night.  I never have liked electric stoves.  You can’t tell whether the burners are on or off.

This is another Young Adult book from MuseItUp Publishing, Inc., and it was written by a very young author.  I guess it takes what it takes to get us where we are, but I’m a smidge jealous that Ms. Below (pronounced Bay-low) has gotten there already at the tender age of twenty-one.  How wonderful to be getting paid to do what you love at such a young age, and to do it so well!  You can fill the bottom of your children’s Christmas tree with or stockings with copies of Lurkers.  But since it’s rather gauche to give away books that have already been read, I suggest you wait until after Christmas to borrow your child’s copy, or better yet, buy one for yourself!  I’m sure you’ll enjoy it just as much as I did.

Price:  $5.50


Monday, November 28, 2011

If I Could Be Like Jennifer Taylor by Barbara Ehrentreu

 
Carolyn Samuels is obsessed with the idea of being popular. She is convinced that the only thing keeping her from happiness is her too heavy for fashion body and not being a cheerleader. Hyperventilating when she gets nervous doesn’t help. When she is paired for a math project with the girl who tormented her in middle school, Jennifer Taylor, she is sure it is going to be another year of pain. With Carolyn’s crush on Jennifer’s hunky junior quarterback, Brad, her freshman year in high school looks like a rerun of middle school. When Jennifer is the only student who knows why she fell in gym class, Carolyn is blackmailed into doing her math homework in return for Jennifer’s silence. Jennifer takes on Carolyn as a pity project since she can’t be seen with someone who dresses in jeans and sweatshirts. When Jennifer invites Carolyn to spend the night to make her over and teach her to tumble, Carolyn learns Jennifer’s secret and lies to her own friends to cover it up. Will Carolyn become a cheerleader and popular? Does she continue to keep Jennifer’s secret? Or will she be a target of this mean girl again?


I was Carolyn Samuels in high school, although my grades weren’t high enough to tutor anyone or for anyone else to ask me to do their homework.  Fortunately, I grew up in Chicago and the high school I attended was large enough that the kids who bullied me in grammar school went their own way and I made new friends.  Cheerleading?  Tumbling?  My favorite sports were reading and writing fiction.  I was terrified of falling and of balls flying at me.  But I digress.  I identified with Carolyn, even forty-some-odd years later.

Whether you’re seventeen or seventy, you’ll identify with someone in this book.  It was written for young adults, but it’s a great read for everyone.  However—it is a MUST READ for teenage girls.  Jennifer’s secret is one shared by girls everywhere and Carolyn’s dilemma whether or not to keep that secret is probably shared by just as many other kids.  If you have a daughter, granddaughter, niece or any teenage girl in your life, by all means, give her a copy of “If I Could Be Like Jennifer Taylor” for Christmas.  Reading this book could save a girl’s life, or help a young girl save her friend’s life.


Price:  $5.95


Wednesday, November 23, 2011

“Remain in Light” Harkens Back to the Work of Hemingway and Fitzgerald

  
In 1968, Irène Laureux's husband was murdered during the Paris student and worker riots. Thirty years later, she is still on the hunt for the man who knows how and why Jean-Louis died – his secret lover, Frederick Dubois.

Aiding in her search is American expat Martin Paige, a writer still reeling from a love affair gone wrong with a student, David McLaren. Martin meets a young poet, Christian, and the two fall in love, but their happiness is shaken when Martin's friend, Diane Jacobs, arrives in Paris with news that David has gone missing.

Diane discovers that David's disappearance is more than just a missing person case with connections to drugs, stolen identities, long-hidden government secrets and a shocking connection to Irène's past. This literary mystery takes readers from America to London and into the dark underworld of the fabled City of Light.



Remain in Light is a complex book with very real characters. It harkens back to the work of Hemingway and Fitzgerald, leaving the Champs Elysee and prowling the back streets of Paris. It starts with Martin Paige stuck in traffic because of an accident in the Pont de l'Alma tunnel in the wee hours of August 31, 1997 and getting home late. Being stuck in traffic because of Princess Diana's accident, however, is not the point--it's his restlessness, his disenchantment since the loss of his lover, David. Diane Jacobs arrives that day, as well.

The plot is full of twists and turns, dark corners and alleyways of both Paris and the human psyche. If you're looking for a light, fluffy read, look elsewhere. If you're looking for a book you can sink your teeth into, re-read and find things you missed the first time, then I highly recommend Remain in Light.


Price:  $4.99


Sunday, November 13, 2011

Shadows Steal the Light by Christine London



Blurb:

It’s love at first sight for rock star Colin Dunlow when he runs into sultry jazz singer, Jenna Lindstrom, with a few complications. The woman of his dreams hates rockers and there’s someone who wants him dead.

Excerpt:

He heard the pop of a gun. Diving behind the mailbox bolted to the edge of the curb, heart racing in his throat, he rolled back into a crouch. The silver coupe had turned and was now coming at him along the sidewalk. He bolted across the street and ran, full tilt into a side street bordered by old twenties houses interspersed with more modern apartment complexes. Craning his neck for a brief backward glance, he spilled over the tire of a bicycle and into a row of similarly parked bikes outside the entrance to an apartment building. Tumbling onto the grass easement between sidewalk and street, he scrambled to his feet, looking for the coupe. It was turning the corner from 32nd Street parallel to the Shrine, onto his side street. Searching frantically for some way, something to slow the vehicle down, he picked up one of the bicycles, now flattened in a domino effect against the others and flung it into the street.

He looked back toward the approaching coupe: a maelstrom of jacaranda blossoms swirled in its wake as it accelerated toward him. He took off down the sidewalk again, this time not looking back. The centrifugal force behind the speed of his flight projected him out into 30th Street as he flew around the corner toward Figueroa. At an all out sprint, he dashed across the major artery, dodging the still clogged traffic exiting the Shrine toward the freeway. Running past Carl’s Junior, he headed for the overpass just the other side of Flower Street.

Shite. Who the hell? His mind raced on ahead of him as he pumped his arms in Olympic exertion. Having the green chain link mesh of the overpass fencing in clear view, he risked a glance back. The coupe was weaving around the cross traffic of Figueroa in perfunctory fashion, nearly clipping the bumper of a black SUV. Only one way out; he bolted toward the fence, leaping in upward propulsion, reaching for the top crossbar, propelling himself over with raw strength, determination and adrenaline.

His body slammed against the freeway overpass sign, dangling like the condemned from the gallows. Hands clamped tightly to the crossbar, teeth gritted, he lowered his chin to look below him. A catwalk of sorts, supporting lights for the sign, was but a few meter drop. He stole one more glance toward the street, just catching a blur of silver going north around the corner on Flower, toward downtown, the freeway flyover and against traffic. The metallic clunk and reverberation up his legs as his feet landed on the catwalk jarred him into a contracted crouch. Looking behind and down, he saw the rooftops of lethargic traffic scooting forward in preemptory battle to get ahead.

The unmistakable sound of large masses of metal being compacted came from the direction of Flower Street. An ivy cover fence screened any view of what had occurred. It wasn’t thirty seconds later, as Colin assessed the distance to the pavement, that he saw the form of a man catapulting over the ivy clad fence, leaping onto the overpass.
Head and face covered with a black ski mask, the identity of his pursuer was impossible to detect. Judging from the agility and muscularity of the man, Colin was in for some serious trouble. Damn! He timed his descent to coincide with the eighteen-wheeler passing under him. Pulling in a resolute lungful of air, he leapt.

The roof of the truck gave slightly with the impact of his weight. Its forward movement was slow enough, that it jolted him from his feet onto his knees, but did not propel him head over heels. Palms flat, he braced himself in anticipation of greater force. Shooting a glance at the receding over pass, he saw the darkly clothed athletic figure of the man in the ski mask land on a truck with a short red trailer, not two lengths behind him. Colin searched three hundred sixty degrees, twisting his crouched body to obtain the widest possible panorama of the rapidly degrading situation. His options were narrowing.

As the red truck moved forward, its driver signaled a lane change toward the left. Traffic was beginning to pick up speed as the effects of the merging onramp were diminishing. Wind now played a factor in not only his stability, but his ability to see as his long hair whipped about his cheeks and eyes. He moved along the roof toward the cab, remaining crouched to preserve what advantage a lower center of gravity might afford.
He felt, rather than saw, his assailant landing on the cold reflective grey of the truck’s roof; vibrating shockwaves caused by the weight of his body striking the rear of the trailer telegraphed through the metal like a seismic shock. Colin turned to see the man leaping across the long surface of the roof. Who is this…f***ing Spiderman? Colin’s racing thoughts jumbled in an upset of twisted incomprehension as he tried to force his mind to cooperate through the surge of adrenaline-laced resolve coursing through him.


Christine London does a fabulous job of taking us from Los Angeles to London and back, and keeping us on the edge of our seats the whole time in this wonderful page burner.  Jenna doesn’t seem like the kind of snob who would dislike a man just because he performs music in a genre that’s different from hers.  So why is she so averse to dating rockers?  Who is trying to kill Colin and why?  How is it that Jenna seems to get caught in the crossfire so much?  Or are they after her too?  If so, what did she do to anger someone that much?  She’s just starting her career.  There are plenty of red herrings along the way to keep the reader guessing until Ms. London is good and ready to answer the questions.  Speaking of careers just getting started, Christine London is an author to watch.

Price:  $5.95


My blog tour ends Monday at Long and Short Reviews.  The link is in the list at the left side of the site.  And stay tuned for the announcement of the winner of the giveaway!  Thanks for following me and for making Rock Crazy a best-seller at the MuseItUp Publishing, Inc. bookstore!

Sunday, November 6, 2011

A View to a Kilt by Chris Redding


Waking up next to a dead guy can ruin your whole day.

When a wise-cracking interior decorator wants to put her past behind her, the dead body of the mayor’s son makes it pretty clear that won’t happen too easily.

A conservative former computer geek for the FBI is holding on too tightly to his past. His wife died under suspicious circumstances and he believes the decorator has the information to solve the case. Unfortunately for him, she isn’t talking… until a series of events convinces her she needs protection especially when her biggest secret threatens to destroy both their lives.


Miriam Stokes is feisty, funny, and independent.  Okay, she’s downright stubborn and she nearly gets herself killed because of it.  Angus “Gus” Macpherson is now a PI and he’s only supposed to protect her; not fall in love with her.  But with a closet still full of his late wife’s clothing a year after her death, it’s difficult to convince Mim he’s ready to move on.  And they don’t have much time to talk while they’re dodging bullets.

There’s a dark secret in Mim’s past that overshadows everything.  She was married to a crooked cop with ties to the mafia.  Some anonymous man is paying for Gus’ services, but who is he?  What kind of connections does her family have?  Is Mim really a mafia princess?  Is that why Gus could never get near her for a statement when he was working the case that got him kicked out of the FBI? The investigation of her ex-husband?  And why did she wake up next to the Mayor’s dead son?  Was not killing her a mistake?  Those questions haunted me until the very surprising end.

It’s a great read.


Price:  $2.99



Don’t forget that my blog tour is still going on.  Leave a comment here, and then hop on over to Rochelle Weber, Author.  Meet Chris Redding and learn about her next book, Blonde Demolition, coming later this month!

Sunday, October 30, 2011

The Halloween Dino Trip by Lea Hovris Shizas



10-31-11  The Halloween Dino Trip by Lea Hovris Shizas



Jillian is planning her first big Halloween party and hopes the weather holds out
Well, the weather does...but after Jillian, in her witch's outfit playfully chants the following from a prop witch's spell book:
“Changes are due…
Not many but a few
To meet your history
And see it’s not misery
Ghosts will abound
Trekking all around
For you will now travel
In a land full of marvel”
Everyone is in for the surprise of their life. Her backyard is gone. In its place greenery filled with tall trees, a variety of bushes, and...DINOSAURS?

 

Jillian’s birthday party takes quite a turn in the land of the Dinosaurs in this delightful middle-grade story.  I ordered this book for my granddaughter when she was visiting, but she did not get all the way through it.  She did enjoy what she read of it, stopping to say, “Grandma, guess what’s happening!”  Ms. Shizas did a wonderful job of re-creating the classroom at the beginning.  My granddaughter said the teacher reminded her of one of her teachers.  I picked up the Kindle when the kids left and read the story myself and found it charmingly scary.  I didn’t figure whether the kids would get home until the very end, either!  The book was very informative, as well—but don’t tell your children that.  If you have middle grade children or grandchildren, they will definitely enjoy The Halloween Dino Trip.


Price:  $2.50



Don’t forget that my blog tour is still going on.  Leave a comment here, and then hop on over to Rochelle Weber, Author.  I’ve won a Bloggy Love Award!

Here’s the link.  http://rochelleweber.blogspot.com