Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Unbound by Kirsten Weiss



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Kirsten Weiss will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Three Witches and a Metaphysical Detective…

Riga just wants to mentor three young witches and go home. Doyle witch Jayce wouldn’t take help if it landed on her. But when a man is murdered in front of their eyes, these two must learn to work together. Because a dead man is the least of their worries… Jayce Bonheim loves magic and Doyle, California. But she and her small town have been paying a deadly price for the fairy gate she and her sisters can’t close. Now, a society of dark magicians has returned to town, a deadly winged monster has come through the gate, and an old friend has been murdered. And the new mentor who’s supposed to help Jayce and her sisters seems to have an agenda of her own…

It was supposed to be a simple training gig for Riga Hayworth, not a murder investigation. Still reeling from a tragic mistake in her past, she’s determined to stay retired. But the murder and the town’s magic seem tied together. Can Riga resist the lure of an investigation?

A thrilling and funny paranormal mystery, packed with magic, mystery, and murder. Perfect for fans of Mercy Thompson, Supernatural, and Charlaine Harris. Buy Unbound and start reading this page-turning witch mystery.

Read an Excerpt

“A black lodge in Doyle? Don’t you think you could have led with that?” I had mad respect for Mrs. Steinberg, but honestly. She’d dropped that intel for maximum dramatic effect.

The old lady set down her e-cigarette. “Not a black lodge. The Black Lodge. The one from San Francisco that’s been causing us so much trouble.”

“How do you know?” Riga asked quietly.

The old lady reached into her black handbag on the table and pulled out another square business card. She flung it onto the stained tablecloth. “Because the cheeky devils introduced themselves.”

My sisters and I shared a look.

“I know,” Mrs. Steinberg said. “They walked up to me, bold as brass, and they... and they...”

“They what?” I prompted and glanced at Riga. Why had Mrs. Steinberg hired her? Riga didn’t look that tough. She couldn’t be more than five-six in her low-heeled boots. Her eyes were odd—a sort of browny-purply. What sort of magic did she have?

“They brought flowers.” Mrs. Steinberg bristled. “Irises. My favorite.”

I rolled my eyes. “That does sound intimidating.” Looking at the tablecloth, I grounded myself and extended my senses toward Riga. I felt power, cold and empty. And yes, I know empty doesn’t exactly sound powerful. But hers was the empty of space, vast and deadly and terrifying.

I looked up. Riga was watching me.

About the Author:Kirsten Weiss has never met a dessert she didn’t like, and her guilty pleasures are watching Ghost Whisperer re-runs and drinking red wine. The latter gives her heartburn, but she drinks it anyway.

Now based in Colorado Springs, CO, she writes genre-blending cozy mystery, supernatural and steampunk suspense, mixing her experiences and imagination to create vivid worlds of fun and enchantment.

If you like funny cozy mysteries, check out her Pie Town - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/pie-town-mysteries, Tea and Tarot -https://www.kirstenweiss.com/tea-and-tarot-mysteries, Paranormal Museum- http://www.kirstenweiss.com/the-perfectly-proper-paranormal-mus-1 and Wits’ End - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/doyle-cozy-mystery-series books. If you’re looking for some magic with your mystery, give the Witches of Doyle - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/doyle-witch-cozy-mysteries, Riga Hayworth - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/riga-hayworth-paranormal-mysteries and Rocky Bridges - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/rocky-bridges-mysteries books a try. And if you like steampunk, the Sensibility Grey - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/sensibility-grey-steampunk-suspense series might be for you.

Kirsten sends out original short stories of mystery and magic to her mailing list. If you’d like to get them delivered straight to your inbox, make sure to sign up for her newsletter at her website. Website: http://www.kirstenweiss.com
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/kirstenweiss/
BookBub: http://www.bookbub.com/authors/kirsten-weiss
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kirstenweissauthor
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/kirsten.weiss
Email: kweiss2001@kirstenweiss.com (she’ll answer you personally…which may be a good or a bad thing, depending on your perspective.)

Book Series

Sensibility Grey Steampunk Suspense - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/sensibility-grey-steampunk-suspense
Tea and Tarot cozy mysteries - https://www.kirstenweiss.com/tea-and-tarot-mysteries
Pie Town cozy mysteries - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/pie-town-mysteries
Perfectly Proper Paranormal Museum cozy mysteries - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/the-perfectly-proper-paranormal-mus-1
Doyle Witch - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/doyle-witch-cozy-mysteries
Doyle Cozy - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/doyle-cozy-mystery-series mystery novels
Riga Hayworth - http://www.kirstenweiss.com/riga-hayworth-paranormal-mysteries

Buy Link: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08YMYK6QW/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1

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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Tour Book by Rachel Pfenning Hales



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Rachel Pfennig Hales will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

It’s show night. You’ve bought tickets and are waiting with your friends. The lights drop. The darkness swells in anticipation. A collective cheer grows. A breath of silence. Then, that first chord screams from the > speakers. Lights flash to flood the stage, radiating as the concert comes to life.

We are there, too, in the dark under the show, behind it, and above it. > Each prop or cool trick, every costume or scene change requires the hidden help of someone behind the scenes. In a few hours, you will have gone home, but we will still be here, tearing it all down. We will pack up the gear, load up more than a dozen tractor trailers, and head out to the next city. Tomorrow, we will build the production again in a new building. We’ll greet another audience. We’ll put on another show.

From load in to load out, watch a production build toward show time. Hear true stories from the rock and roll roadies who’ve helped create the world’s biggest concert tours with interviews from dozens of touring technicians.

Read an Excerpt

Everyone wants to hear the crazy stories. They want to hear about the celebrities, their flaws and their weird, fabulous quirks. They want to know about drugs and sex, and surprisingly little about rock and roll. They want to hear about the late nights, the VIP parties, the swag. Maybe they’ll listen to accounts of long hours and grueling conditions. Maybe they’ll ask about the technology. But really, they want to hear the tabloid version of backstage. That part does exist, of course. I once saw Tom Cruise sing karaoke at some afterparty in Malaysia, and then again in Vancouver. I’ve helped Santana move a couch and babysat Slash’s kid during a show. I’ve toasted with Dom Perignon, even though I couldn’t pronounce it. Once—and only once—I walked into a hotel room and saw a literal mound of cocaine. I’ve been to the Grammys twice, as well as the American Music Awards, and stood in the back parking lot at something for MTV. Admittedly, I’ve always used the stage door and never once walked a red carpet. I stood on the field at the World Cup in South Africa. I’ve rocked out with Ryan Seacrest for New Year’s. I’ve flown charter. I’ve missed a few commercial flights. I have visited five of the seven continents, and in 2010, I ran out of passport pages. I’ve worked shows at Madison Square Garden, the United Center, the Staples Center, the Grand Ole Opry, and the O2 arenas in London, Berlin, and Dublin. I’ve worked four shows in old Italian castles and one at a Target.

About the Author:
Rachel Pfennig Hales has always loved show business. From theater as a child, to a brief stint in television production, she found her niche in live event production. Rachel was able to start her career touring around the world with the Black Eyed Peas, and then with Lynyrd Skynyrd. Now, she is the Client and Community Development Manager at Rock Lititz, helping with various touring rehearsals and building up the live event culture on campus. Rachel also does a lot of writing, within the live event industry and beyond. She has BAs from DePauw University, an MA in English Studies from National University, and an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College.

Twitter: https://twitter.com/rapfenhales
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21459950.Rachel_Pfennig_Hales

BN: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/tour-book-rachel-hales/1139103274
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1735664847

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Thursday, June 24, 2021

I Can Still Hear You by Nicole Black



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. One randomly chosen winner via rafflecopter will win a $50 Amazon/BN.com gift card. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Welcome to It's Raining Books. What is the sweetest thing someone has done for you?

-          There have been a lot of nice things that people have done for me over the years. One of the sweetest that stands out was when my daughter made a really big deal out of my birthday. She knows that is my favorite “holiday” so she woke up early and made me breakfast and spent the afternoon reminiscing with me.

How would you spend ten thousand bucks?

-          The frugal part of me thinks that I would invest the money. The realist in me knows that I would most likely save half of it and take a really nice vacation with the other half. Experiences are things that we can remember forever, material objects come and go.

Where do you get your best ideas?

-          My best ideas come when I am least expecting them. Of course, my very best ideas come when I don’t have any paper or a pen to write them down. In all honesty, every morning when I wake up, I meditate for about twenty minutes. Usually right after my meditation ideas start to come to me.

What comes first, the plot or characters?

-          For me, the plot almost always comes first. I find I can weave different people in and out of my stories easier than trying to build a story around a character.

What does your main character do that makes him/her special.

-          Scarlett is special because she grows so much as a person in the story. She has a hard time showing her emotions as her mother died when she was young. Now, her father is gone as well, and she realizes that she is alone in the world. It is a terrifying feeling, realizing that you are the adult and the one who has to make all of the hard decision.



I Can Still Hear You is a powerful and deeply moving story which grapples with the universal pain of grief and the loss of a loved one. When Scarlett O’Connor loses her father at the age of 30, she’s forced to face the shambles that her life has become. With no money and no savings, the only thing that waits for her is a cryptic map and a mysterious letter. With nothing left to lose, she embarks on a trip to Maui for her father’s final adventure, to begin a treasure hunt which will force her to look deep inside herself and come to terms with her pain and grief.

Accompanied by her less-than-supportive fiancĂ©, a close childhood friend, and an enigmatic man who was her father’s old acquaintance, Scarlett must decode the mystery and find the hidden treasure. But she knows she must face her fears alone, and calling upon the spirit of her father for guidance, she struggles to reconcile her emotions and uncover the treasure before her time in Maui comes to an end.

Perfect for fans of contemporary and women’s fiction, I Can Still Hear You is a gripping tale which will resonate with anybody who has struggled with the death of someone close. This book is a testament to the fact that even though we may have lost them, our loved ones stay with us no matter what challenges we face.

Read an Excerpt

I gazed up at the ceiling in quiet disbelief, as if I’d see my father looking down on me. Carefully, I removed the map from the box. It was yellowing and old, and the paper was as thin as tissue, so I took care in opening it. The map had some faint lines on it, some solid, some dotted, but no place names, no markings at all to tell what exactly it belonged to.

“Great, Dad,” I muttered aloud. “This is super helpful.”

But the second I said it, as had happened a dozen times in my life when I’d been presented with a puzzle, my father’s voice said, I’m not going to give you all the answers. Where’s the fun in that?

“This is one big party,” I muttered again. I had no idea where to even start. The only thing that made sense was to contact my dad’s friend living in Hawaii.

Hawaii.

He couldn’t possibly mean that he wanted me to go to . . .

No. That was impossible.

I read the letter, again and again. The more I did, the more it seemed as if, yes . . . that’s exactly what my father wanted.

Peering in the box again, I hoped that wad of cash would present itself. Or at least the stopwatch. But neither did. The box was empty.

About the Author:
Nicole Black is an author, motivational speaker and entrepreneur with a passion for sharing unique stories and helping people grow. For over 20 years, she’s worked in the business world as a corporate trainer in employee productivity and effective growth, where she’s helped some of the biggest brands in hospitality and entertainment grow sustainably through inspiring their employees. She’s been featured on platforms including TEDxWilmington, Jack Canfield Show, Santa Barbara News Press, The George DiGianni show and the Tom Barnard Show.

Through her writing, Nicole hopes to empower her readers and impart valuable lessons about grief, loss, and emotional growth. In her free time, Nicole enjoys traveling, yoga, and spending time with her wonderful daughter in their home of Santa Barbara, California.

FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/nicoleblack25
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/WriterNicoleB
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/nicolebwriter
The Book is On Sale for $0.99 during the tour.

Link to buy on Amazon for print book: https://www.amazon.com/I-Can-Still-Hear-You/dp/1732739706/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0
Link to buy Kindle version: https://www.amazon.com/I-Can-Still-Hear-You-ebook/dp/B08VR7SZQB/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0

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Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Critical Hit by W.M. Akers



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. W.M. Akers will be awarding a $50 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Check out the Kickstarter Campaign for this project.


How do you win a game that’s trying to kill you?

A twenty-nine year-old clerk at a games store in the Appalachian hamlet of Jett Creek, Tennessee, Callie Myles lives for the weekly RPG sessions run by her beloved brother and gamesmaster, LB. Under his watchful eye, she and her friends wage war, harness magic, and battle evil. When the dice are rolling, they are heroes, and all of Callie’s anxieties slip away. The fun stops the night LB burns to death in a bizarre fire.

Asked by her friends to keep the weekly game alive, Callie does her best to set her grief aside. She puts on the monocle LB wore during sessions and finds herself sucked into a life-sized recreation of her brother’s game. Inhabiting the body of her beloved character, the legendary Arabeth, she thinks she has found the ultimate escape. Her paradise is spoiled when she discovers that something inside the game killed LB—and one of her fellow players was in on it.

To save herself, to avenge her brother, Callie Myles must pull on her armor and beat LB’s game from the inside out. If she gets killed along the way, well, at least she’s having a great time.

A fast-paced hybrid of mystery and adventure, CRITICAL HIT captures the breakneck joy of tabletop gaming, where life and death depend on the whims of a plastic die. It will be on Kickstarter from May 25 to June 25, and available on DriveThruFiction and Amazon after that.


Read an Excerpt

A Depression-era mechanic’s shop, LB’s studio was at the back of a sloping lot covered with garbage and twisted iron. It was just two rooms: an old forge on the first floor and a rat’s nest of papers and art supplies on the second. It was where he went, he said, when he needed to make art that was too personal to make at the college, or when he just wanted the world to leave him be.

All of it was on fire.

It was hard to see where the building had been. It was curling in on itself, like a paper bag in a campfire. The fire truck was halfway up the hill, spraying water on the house next door. The studio, they’d quit trying to save.

Doc’s car sat at the bottom of the hill, front doors open, engine running. I saw her, gray ponytail silhouetted by the flame, manning one of the jets. With what little strength I had left, I ran up the driveway. Matty leapt out of the truck’s cab, fireman’s coat still unbuttoned, and grabbed me by the shoulder.

“Is he inside?” I said.

“Get out of here.”

“God damn it, if he’s in there, we have to get him out!”

“It’s too hot. Nobody’s going near it.”

Matty rested his hand on my shoulder, and I tried to keep still. I wanted to push him, to charge inside, to look for LB, but that would have been against the rules.

We were watching together when my brother’s massive body exploded out of the window, wrapped in a cloak of flame.

LB screamed something. Maybe it was words, maybe it was just pain.

It stopped quick.

I didn’t flinch. I didn’t run to him. Even from behind the barricade, it was obvious he was dead.

About the Author:
W.M. Akers is a novelist, playwright, and game designer. He is the author of the mystery novels Westside and Westside Lights; the creator of the bestselling games Deadball: Baseball With Dice and Comrades: A Revolutionary RPG; and the curator of the history newsletter Strange Times. Born in Nashville, he spent a lucky thirteen years in New York before moving to Philadelphia in 2019. Learn more about his work at his website.

Website: http://www.wmakers.net
Newsletter: http://strangetimes.substack.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ouijum
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/wmakers
FB: http://facebook.com/ouijum

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Monday, June 21, 2021

Oh Good Now This by Susan Merson



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Susan Merson will be awarding a $25 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

FIVE THINGS YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW ABOUT ME


Okay, this may be a fun one! Hold on to your hat.

1: SLEPT WITH A WORLD FAMOUS MOVIE STAR

Hard to believe at this stage of the game but when I was young I was a starlet on the New York stage. The role I created was of a sexy, pissed off, Texas cheerleader turned rebellious art gallery owner and the show was a bit of a sensation off Broadway. It launched the career of a household name, but who’s telling?

Being a show about three girls becoming women in the midst of the feminist movement, and being written, directed and designed by a coterie of ultra fabulous gay men, the show attracted lots of famous people. One particularly famous lothario showed up, with two women on his arm. He came backstage and greeted us all, noting our names and smiling the impish imperialist smile of a stalker—pre Harvey Weinstein. In those days, it was supposed to be a compliment.

The story goes on and its juicy, but I’ll just tease it here. Truth is stranger than fiction!

2: GHOSTS HAVE BEEN REGULAR HELPERS

First time was when I was taking my final curtain call from the stage of the (then) Martin Beck Theatre. It was the closing night of my first Broadway show, directed by Franco Zefirelli. I was 24 and it had been my lifelong dream to appear on Broadway. My dad was always my greatest supporter. He had produced Grand Opera during World War 2, had worked for the Royal American Sideshows, knew all the clowns and roadies when the circus came to town. He died when I was 19 and it was my first big and devastating loss. Nevertheless, I followed my dream and somehow, I auditioned for the Zefireilli show and got the job. On that night from the stage. as I looked up and out at the audience, I saw my father, big as life—maybe bigger- grinning at me from the back of the theatre. He was bright and clear and proud as he could be.

3: I READ AND TEACH TAROT

Have always been an intuitive and have done cards since the days when the Theosophical Society in the East 50’s featured teaching groups with tweedy enthusiasts who came together to share their secrets. Recently, I have started to teach tarot for writers, showing folks how intuitive cues can jumpstart their writing and even help to create storylines and character arcs. Check that out at my website, www.susanmerson.com. I have studied at the Arthur Finlay College in London, run by Spiritualists, to explore the world of channeling and the passing of knowledge from one era to another.

4: PILATES, YOGA AND REALITY

I was never very athletic and hated anything that asked me to be coordinated and graceful when I was a kid. Until I found yoga in my 40’s. It changed my life. For my fiftieth birthday, I became a certified yoga instructor. Since then, I have studied Feldenkrais, and am certified to teach Mat classes in Pilates.

Unfortunately, before I found these disciplines I sought perfection with Jane Fonda at her Robertson Ave studio in Los Angeles. There were too many people in too small a room. On hands and knees we were all instructed to kick right. But, the person next to me kicked left and directly into me. Unstable, I tumbled into a herniated disc, which has defined my ongoing challenges with mobility ever since.

5: I LIVE NEXT TO A HAUNTED MANSION

It’s true that they say that the woman who once owned the historic house in the park next to my cobblestoned street, appears often on her balcony, overlooking the Harlem River. I have never seen her but I have it on good authority. It’s also the spot where Washington commanded the Battle of Harlem Heights and where Lin Manuel Miranda wrote bits of HAMILTON. Aaron Burr lived in that famous house, too. But, I haven’t seen him floating around. He divorced the owner of the house, who threw him out, never to be seen again.

Starting over is hard enough but when ghosts decide to hitch a ride into the future—things can get complicated.

Widowed Vivi leaves California for a new start back east landing in a college town near her old friend Vikram, now the local ‘spiritual’ leader and disappointing lover. But the two have old business which leads them to uncovering the ghosts they conjured long before and the ones that are haunting them now. Vivi reclaims her life, -- with the help of a couple different dimensions-- saying hi to the ghosts who choose to hang around, and growing a new garden and a new life

 

 

 

 


Read an Excerpt

They climb into Vikram’s old Saab. The dope has worn off but the sugar high has not. Vikram reaches into his pocket. He brings out a little statue of an Indian god and goddess. He hands it to Vivi.

 

“A wedding present.”

 

“Gosh, this guy has four arms.”

 

“Yes,” Vikram says. “Doesn’t she look happy?”

 

Vivi blushes. “Never mind,” she says.

 

Vikram slides his arm along the top of the seat and pulls her close. Vivi isn’t sure.

 

“Don’t worry. It’s freezing.  We can keep each other warm.”

 

Viv slides closer and feels the warmth of his body. She snuggles in. He is so tall and it feels good to be smaller than, to be surrounded by.

 

“Jake is shorter than you,” she says. “I’m not used to being surrounded.”

 

“The more to keep you safer, my dear.” Vikram says with a soft smile.

 

“So, tell me about this. Who are these guys?” She is referring to the small statue.

 

 “It’s the perfect wedding gift. Vishnu and Lakshmi are devoted to each other. She is the goddess of prosperity, purity and generosity. The embodiment of beauty, grace and feminine charm.”

 

“Just like me,” says Vivi.

 

“Just like you,” he echoes.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

Susan Merson began her career as an actress on and off Broadway, in television and film. Co-founding the LA Writers Bloc in 1985 with award winning writer Jane Anderson, she has mentored writers through the Bloc and through her private and university classes in Playwriting, Life Stories, Writing as a Spiritual Practice, Tarot for Writers and the popular VOICING Series. Her short fiction has been featured in The Jew in America, Nice Jewish Girls (Penguin), The Worcester Review, the Chicken Soup series and several other online platforms.  As a playwright, her award-winning plays have been performed internationally, including her 8 solo plays featured and used as example in YOUT NAME HERE: An Actor Writers Guide to Solo Performance. (Amazon). Long form fiction available on Amazon is her award-winning blog, WHEN THEY GO AND YOU DO NOT and her first novel DREAMING IN DAYLIGHT.  OH GOOD NOW THIS, her newest novel launches 12/1/21. She is a tarot reader and counselor, a maker of quilts, clothing and whimsy.  Susan is a humble mother and a proud resident of New York City. 

 

 

FACEBOOK:  https://www.facebook.com/susanmersonauthor

 

WEBSITE: http://www.susanmerson.com

 

BUY LINKS:

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/.../oh-good-now.../1138532579

https://books.apple.com/us/book/id1546617489

https://www.amazon.com/Good-Now-This-Susan.../dp/B08RCXVNTX/

 

The author has also done a series of five videos regarding the use of Tarot for writers (for more information, visit her website):

 

 

1: Author/ teacher Susan Merson (OH GOOD NOW THIS/ Amazon) explores Tarot to jump start your writing. TAROT FOR WRITERS #1:  INTRODUCTION

 

An introduction to using your own intuitive powers to tap into the resonance of Tarot images, packed with archetypes and symbols, to jumpstart inspiration for your artistic projects.

 

**CORRECTION: The Raziel Tarot Deck is designed by artist Robert Place with commentary by Rachel Pollack. https://youtu.be/LGONsfOayJg

 

 

2: Author/teacher Susan Merson (OH GOOD NOW THIS/Amazon), explores TAROT cards to jumpstart your writing, TAROT FOR WRITERS #2: LANDSCAPE

 

 Explore the landscape of story. Entering the world of the card offers visceral clues to the landscape of your writing. https://youtu.be/Mwq9x-I9oQE

 

 

3: Author/ teacher Susan Merson (OH GOOD NOW THIS/ Amazon) explores  TAROT cards to jump start your writing. TAROT FOR WRITERS #3: CHARACTER.

 

A brief exploration of character and how to find their first basic journey. Look deeply at the character clues in the cards and throw three cards to begin their adventure. https://youtu.be/CuovTNQ5ztk

 

 

4: Author/teacher Susan Merson (OH GOOD NOW THIS/AMAZON) explores TAROT cards to jump start your writing. TAROT FOR WRITERS #4:  WHAT STORY SHOULD I WRITE TODAY

 

On pulling cards to intuitively discover the story, the genre, the themes and the major turning points of a new story. https://youtu.be/eHm0mVSNaPo

 

 

5: Author/teacher Susan Merson (OH GOOD NOW THIS/AMAZON) explores TAROT to jumpstart your writing. TAROT FOR WRITERS/ #5 TIMELINES AND DEEPER DIVE INTO RELATIONSHIPS

 

 Timelines and going deeper into relationships with pro and antagonists. The more cards you draw the more information you can gather. https://youtu.be/EClPq0e-H70

 


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Friday, June 18, 2021

Constellations by Patricia Leavy



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Patricia Leavy will be awarding a signed set of 3 novels: Shooting Stars, Twinkle, and Constellations to two (US only) randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during the tour. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Why do you write in your genre? What draws you to it?

I write women’s fiction that centers on female protagonists because I’m interested in women’s lives and relationships. I’m always grateful for the chance to offer different representations of women, some of whom, like Tess Lee, may be inspirational or aspirational. Recently I’ve become obsessed with writing love stories. There’s been a lot of darkness and divisiveness in the world between the political climate and the pandemic. Love stories have been my escape and respite. There’s been something profoundly comforting about writing about love. It’s like being wrapped in a big hug every day. I’ve now written seven love stories back-to-back, and I’m working on another one. I’m just addicted to the feeling of warmth that comes from this genre.

What research is required?

It depends on the book. With Constellations, I needed to look up some things about stars to make sure the metaphors worked. For example, is Orion visible in Pennsylvania in December? This is the kind of stuff I checked.

Name one thing you learned from your hero/heroine.

I’ve learned more from Tess Lee after writing five books about her, than any other character. She’s an inspiration to me in countless ways because of her compassion, her ability to truly see people, and the way she loves with her whole heart. The biggest thing I’ve learned from her is how to quiet the negative voices in our head and just breathe. As Tess says at one point in the series, “Breathe. Just breathe.”

Do you have any odd or interesting writing quirks, habits, or superstitions?

Often, I’ll end up eating and drinking some of the foods/beverages my characters consume, even if they’re things I don’t normally have. When the book is over, I return to my normal eating habits.

Are you a plotter or pantser?

I’ve definitely become a pantser. My novel Shooting Stars, the first book that follows the love story of Tess Lee and Jack Miller, came to me in a burst as a complete story. I could see and hears all the characters clear as day. In the past I had used outlines and written in chronological order. With Shooting Stars, I viewed it as a compilation of scenes, and that’s how I wrote it – completely out of order. In fact, the last chapter in the book was the first one I wrote, then I skipped around in the middle, and I finished by writing the first chapter. There was no plan or formula. I just sat at my computer and wrote. I loved both the process and result so much, that I’ve been doing the same thing ever since with all my novels, including Constellations—just sitting down and writing scenes, getting lost in the story worlds and characters, and then stitching it all together.

Look to your right – what’s sitting there?

A sign that says, “In art we trust.”

Anything new coming up from you? What?

The fourth Tess Lee and Jack Miller novel should be coming out in early August. It’s titled Supernova and it’s the darkest, grittiest book in the series. The novel explores love and trust. What happens when there is a betrayal? Tess and Jack’s love will be tested in a way it never has been before. Tess also has some badass moments. It’s been written for a while, so I’m just waiting to release it. If readers are new to this series, they may want to begin with Shooting Stars to see how Tess and Jack meet, and then move to Twinkle, and then to Constellations. But the books can each be read as a stand-alone too, if that’s preferred.

Do you have a question for our readers?

Do you ever feel envious of characters because you perceive them as having something you don’t have (money, fame, beauty, a romantic partner), or do you look at them as aspirational?

Constellations follows Tess Lee and Jack Miller after three years of marriage as they navigate the meaning of love and family over a series of holidays. Tess is a wildly successful and world-famous novelist. Her inspirational books explore our innermost struggles and the human need to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel. Jack is a former federal agent. After spending decades immersed in a violent world, a residue remains. Both healing from past trauma, together they have finally built the life they wish to live. What will happen to their blissful union when Jack’s childhood family resurfaces? When Tess and Jack visit the Millers for Christmas, how will insecurity, a sense of missed opportunities, and the need for redemption test their relationship? When a terrible accident threatens everything in an instant, will they learn the true meaning of unconditional love? Their loved ones are along for the ride: Omar, Tess’s sarcastic best friend who calls her Butterfly; the female president of the United States, with whom Tess talks politics and bakes cookies; Joe, Jack’s friend from the Bureau who understands the sacrifices he’s made; Bobby and Gina, their younger friends who never fail to lighten the mood; and the Miller family. Constellations is a novel about family – those into which we’re born and those we create – the human desire to belong and feel connected, the true nature of intimacy, and the power of love to heal and redeem. Written as unfolding action, Constellations is a poignant novel that moves fluidly between melancholy, humor, and joy.


Read an Excerpt

That afternoon, the kitchen in the Miller house was bustling with noise. Tess, Julie, and Mikey were making Christmas ornaments with the boys at the table. Mary was washing dishes and John was drying them. Jack came into the room holding his cell phone. “Tess, Omar is on the phone for you. He couldn’t reach you on yours.”

She looked up, glitter on her face. “I turned the ringer off when we got here. Is everything okay?”

“He said it’s a work thing,” Jack replied.

“Well, I’m a little busy. Can I call him back?” she asked.

“He said it’s urgent but he’ll make it quick.”

“My hands are a mess. Please set the phone on the table and put it on speaker.” She looked at the boys and said, “I’m sorry, this will only take a minute.”

Mary turned off the faucet so Tess would have quiet for her call, and Julie put a finger to her lips to hush the boys.

“Hi, Omar. You’re on speakerphone. I have glue all over my hands,” she said.

“Of course you do,” Omar said with a laugh.

“I’m making Christmas ornaments with my nephews.”

“Butterfly, Crystal and I have been trying to get in touch with you since yesterday. I need your final approval on the streaming deal for the limited series.”

“I turned my phone off. I told you, no work until after the holidays.”

“I know and I’m sorry, but they want the write-off on the books for this calendar year. Everyone will be out of the office from tomorrow until after the new year, so we have to get it done today. I know this donation is important to you. I can sign the paperwork; I just need the green light.”

She sighed. “Fine.”

“You were right,” Omar said. “We were able to get them up to three point four million, and they’ll make the donations directly. Is it a deal?”

“Yes, that’s fine,” Tess replied.

“I also need to confirm that you want to donate one hundred percent. Barry’s still hoping you’ll have a change of heart and keep some of it, but you know how accountants are.”

“Well, he can keep hoping. Have them donate the whole thing.”

“You still want half to go to veterans and half to that children’s wish organization?” Omar asked.

“Yes,” Tess replied. “Is that it?”

“I’m afraid there’s one last question, and I’m bracing myself for your response. Don’t kill the messenger, Butterfly, but your publisher wanted me to ask if you’d reconsider your insistence on keeping the donation anonymous. They’d love to get some publicity out of it. Eliza Elkington could do a profile in her magazine, or you could do a TV spot with Diane.”

“Absolutely not. That offends me to the core. You can tell Claire that if I see anything in the media about this, even so much as a whisper, I’ll assume they leaked the story and I’ll be publishing my next book with someone else.”

“I’m sorry, I had to ask.”

“Please wish everyone happy holidays and tell Claire I hope her son has recovered well from his injury. Are we done?”

“Yes, Butterfly. I’m sorry to disturb you. I hope you and Jack are having a good trip.”

“I love you to pieces, but if you call me about work again, you’re fired.”

“From your business or your life?”

“Both.”

Omar laughed. “If it’s any consolation, Butterfly, you’re doing a good thing that will help a lot of people.”

“Nice attempt at redemption. I’ll talk to you when we’re back in DC. Give my love to Clay.”

She gestured at Jack to hang up. There was complete silence in the room. Mikey and Julie looked up at Jack, their mouths agape. John and Mary looked at each other with shocked expressions and then back at Jack and Tess.

Noticing everyone staring, Tess softly said, “I’m sorry for the interruption.”

John cleared his throat. “Tess, I’m a vet.”

Tess smiled kindly. “I know. Jack told me. Your service was what inspired him to enlist. Since leaving his full-time job with the Bureau, he’s done a lot of wonderful volunteer work to support vets.”

John looked at Jack and then at Mary.

“What John’s trying to say is that was a very generous thing you did,” Mary said.

Tess smiled and turned to the boys. “So, I think the snowflake needs more silver glitter. What do you think? Maybe we can convince your Uncle Jack to sit down and help.” She picked up an ornament and began sprinkling sparkling flakes on it. Jack sat down next to her and squeezed her thigh. Mikey looked at him and smiled. Jack craned his neck to look at his parents, and they smiled too. Mary turned the faucet on and went back to washing the dishes. Jack leaned over and kissed Tess on the cheek. “Here,” she said, handing him a star ornament. “Why don’t you start with this one?”

About the Author:
Patricia Leavy, Ph.D., is a bestselling author. She was formerly Associate Professor of Sociology, Chair of Sociology and Criminology, and Founding Director of Gender Studies at Stonehill College in Massachusetts. She has published over thirty books, earning commercial and critical success in both fiction and nonfiction, and her work has been translated into many languages. She is also series creator and editor for ten book series with Oxford University Press, Guilford Press, and Brill/Sense, including the ground-breaking Social Fictions series. Patricia has received dozens of accolades for her books. Recently, her novel Film won the 2020 American Fiction Award for Inspirational Fiction, her 3-novel set Candy Floss Collection won the 2020 American Fiction Award for Anthologies, and her novel Spark won the 2019 American Fiction Award for Inspirational Fiction and the 2019 Living Now Book Award for Adventure Fiction. She has also received career awards from the New England Sociological Association, the American Creativity Association, the American Educational Research Association, the International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry, and the National Art Education Association. In 2016 Mogul, a global women’s empowerment network, named her an “Influencer.” In 2018, she was honored by the National Women’s Hall of Fame and SUNY-New Paltz established the “Patricia Leavy Award for Art and Social Justice.” She has residences in Maine and Massachusetts where she lives with her husband, daughter (when she’s not away at college), and her dog. Patricia loves writing, reading, watching films, and traveling.

Website: http://www.patricialeavy.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WomenWhoWrite/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/patricialeavy

Amazon buy link: https://www.amazon.com/Constellations-Patricia-Leavy-ebook/dp/B0932N2DWZ/

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