Bad Time To Be In It
July 17th, 2018
Bad Time To Be In It
by David Burnsworth
on Tour July 9 – August 10, 2018

Synopsis:
The past is never past. Sometimes it repeats itself. And sometimes it comes back to pay a visit. Blu Carraway, flush with cash and back in business, never had it so good. Or so he thought.The reality is his love life is in shambles, his business partner is spending too much time with women half his age and not enough time on the job, and someone close goes missing. Bluâs business partner goes off the rails, his friends show their true colors, and he realizes that getting closure sometimes means walking away from everything. With a case from the past gone wrong twice, a loved one in trouble, and an unanswered marriage proposal, itâs a bad time to be in it for Blu Carraway Investigations.
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Henery Press
Publication Date: July 10, 2018
Number of Pages: 254
ISBN: 9781635113587
Series: Blu Carraway Mysteries #2
Purchase Links: Goodreads, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iTunes, Kobo
ISLAND BREEZES
Boy, was it ever! A bad time to be in it, that is.
Blu’s life is a mess. An interesting mess, but still a mess. All of his life. His love life, his business and relationships with his friends.
Some of his problems include murder, kidnapping, an elusive girlfriend and two news reporters.
This was an enjoyable book that kept me guessing. I really like Blu Carraway. His house, too.
Thank you, Mr Burnsworth. When will I be able to see Blu again?
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Read an excerpt:
The pavement baked Pacoâs feet through his cowboy boots.
He lifted his straw hat, one with an orange band heâd bought from a local Mennonite child, and wiped his brow. The air tasted of salt, dust, and tamalito grease.
His two partners, a Belizean Creole called Lin and a Jamaican named Peter, were already in position. Lin nodded at him from the other side of the square. Paco checked on Peter and found him fifty meters due east scoping out the three young women theyâd come for.
Well, really it was just one of them they wanted. The other two women were going to be a bonus. The contract was to grab the woman with the family name of Kincaid, make a phone call when they had her at their hideout, and then do whatever they wanted with the other two. And eliminate any resistance.
The stupid chicas had only one guard with them. Some tall, middle-aged Bufon Paco guessed was half-Cuban, half-gringo, who wore sunglasses and dressed in light-colored fatigues and military style boots. He looked fit but was most likely nothing but an easy target. In the three days Peter, Lin, and Paco had tracked the women, the man with the sunglasses always kept watch from behind.
The past two nights Paco had dreamt of shooting the man through those sunglasses.
Using the sleeve of his shirt, Paco wiped his forehead one more time and then replaced his hat. He watched Peter wait until the women and the man passed and then fell in behind them.
God, the women were beautiful. Suntanned white girls in their early twenties. Perfect teeth. Curled, long hair. Linen blouses, short shorts, and sandals. After he shot their protector, his dreams ended with tying each of them to a bed, the fear in their eyes giving him immense pleasure.
And today was the day his dream would come true.
Paco watched the group pass through a crowd of old people in bright clothes unloading from a tour bus.
Except Peter didnât emerge behind them when the women came through the other side of the gray-haired mass.
Neither did the sunglass-wearing guard.
Paco smiled and thought, good, Peter took him out already.
He nodded at Lin who gave him a thumbs-up.
The women perused another row of vendors.
He and Lin followed, coming from opposite ends.
The women were just ahead. Paco caught sight of their toned caderas and thanked his god again for tight American shorts. He picked up his pace as he threaded through the crowd.
After about forty meters, something didnât seem right any more. He should have caught up to them by now. And Lin should have joined him.
Paco stopped, checked his phone. No messages.
Looking around, he thought he spotted the women turn down an alley.
Where were Peter and Lin?
It didnât matter.
He had to get the woman now. Especially with the guard out of the picture.
Paco knew he could handle her by himself, even if the other two females had to die to make things easier. He sprinted after them, cut down the alley, and found himself alone with nothing but a dead end. The only noise he heard was the market from which heâd come.
An abandoned car on blocks with its hood open mocked him. Dust kicked up from his boots as he skidded to a stop. Paco turned around. No one had followed him.
He turned back and looked straight down the barrel of a revolver.
His eyes would notâcould notâkeep from staring at the black hole in front of him that brought death. Where in the hell did this come from? There had been no sound.
A manâs voice said, âEsto es donde dar la vuelta y a pie.â (This is where you turn around and walk away.)
Thinking fast, Paco said, âQue buscaba para mi hija.â (I was looking for my daughter.)
The thumb of the hand holding the revolver cocked the hammer back.
Anyone else would have soiled his pants at this. But Paco knew the man had made a very big mistake. Other peoplesâ mistakes, and Pacoâs awareness of them, were how he had survived this long. The cocked pistol an armâs reach from his face had caught him off guard. If it had been five feet away, the perfect distance for control,he would have had a problem.
But this closeâ
Paco swung an arm at the hand with the pistol and ducked the other way, all in one motion just like heâd done before.
Except another gun fired.
Paco felt an inferno of heat and lead tear through his leg. He screamed and crashed to the ground.
A large, military boot kicked him in the face. It jolted his focus off the pain in his leg for a second and onto the sunglasses of the man from his dreams. Paco spotted a second pistol in the manâs other hand. He hadnât seen the second gun because he couldnât tear his eyes away from the first. The man had outsmarted him.
The man smiled down at him and said, in Spanish, âWho hired you?â
The pain flooded back. Paco seethed out a âPiss off.â
The man with the sunglasses put his large boot on Pacoâs injured leg and stepped down hard.
Paco had never felt pain so great in his thirty-three years on this earth. He tried to scream, but nothing came out. He swam in a horizon of white noise.
The pressure on his leg let up. The boot kicked him in the ribs, ripping his concentration away from his leg once more, long enough for him to breathe.
âYour two friends wonât be joining us. Tell me who hired you. Do it now. I wonât ask again.â
Pacoâs mind recovered enough from the pain to formulate a last desperate plan. He slipped a hand behind his back and pulled out a derringer.
Before he could aim it, the man standing over him blasted his hand from two feet away. And Paco felt a different twinge of pain that almost matched the firestorm in his leg. He lifted his hand to where he could look at it. Two of his fingers were missing.
Then he saw nothing.
The current bartender serving the beers, a friend named Brack Pelton, wasnât exactly his type. At six feet and with a perpetual suntanned complexion, Brack looked like he should be tending bar in the Bahamas, not owning two watering holes in the South Carolina lowcountry.
Pelton asked, âYou want another one, Mick?â
Even inside the place, the smell of the Atlantic Ocean directly behind him cleaned out his sinuses. The song streaming on the barâs sound system, âParadise Cityâ by Guns and Roses, was a real classic.
Crome nodded, hooked a boot heel on the bottom rung of his stool, and pulled a vape pen out of the breast pocket of his weathered leather vest.
He couldnât figure out what exactly heâd done wrong with Maureen but was sure it might have something to do with the two women he traded vodka shots with the night before. Mainly
because neither of them was Maureen. Maureen hadnât taken too kindly to him cancelling their date so he could follow a lead only to end up getting drunk and crashing at another womanâs pad. She didnât believe him when heâd tried to explain that nothing had happened. The lead was legit, but even he knew he should have just gotten the information over the phone.
What did people say in times like this? Câest la vie?
Whatever.
Pelton set a fresh pint of draft down in front of Crome. âHavenât seen you or Blu around in a while. Howâs it going?â
The kid, Pelton, meant well. If Crome hadnât taken a liking to him, and if he hadnât watched a video of the kid, empty handed, take on an armed giant of a man and win, he might have picked a fight with him just for fun. But the kid had saved his best friendâs daughter and was an unofficial partner in the private investigation firm Crome co-owned. Unofficial because just about everything Crome did was unofficial. The official side was handled by his main partner, Blu Carraway.
Crome said, âBluâs on a security job. In Belize, the lucky bastard. Should be back in a day or two.â
A voice from behind him said, âHi, Crome.â
It was female and familiar. Damn.
Anyone else would have been a welcome change to his wandering thoughts, a defense mechanism he used to avoid thinking about Maureen.
Hell, Maureen in her most pissed-off state would have been a welcome companion compared toâ
The female voice interrupted his thought. âArenât you going to invite me to sit down?â
Crome saw the smirk form on his own face reflected in the mirror behind the bar. He also saw the strawberry-blond curls, red lipstick, and tight dress of his newest problem. âItâs a free country.â
Harmony Childs pulled out the stool next to him and sat. âThat bad-ass biker routine wonât work on me, Sugar. Youâve seen me in my underwear.â
Twenty years his junior, nuttier than a pecan tree, driven, and drop-dead gorgeous, Harmony was the very clichĂ© of Kryptonite for him. She was also one of the two women heâd traded shots with last night.
It was true; he had seen her in her underwear. But not out of her underwear, thank God, or he and Maureen wouldnât have lasted this long.
Harmony said, âDonât tell me youâve still got a hangover. Iâd hate to think you couldnât hang with us, given your propensity for bars and liquor.â
She really was beautiful. And sheâd matched him shot for shot, unless the bartender was feeding her and her friend water instead of Citron. But that couldnât be because heâd watched all their shot glasses get refilled from the same bottle.
âNot on your life, Dolly,â he said.
Pelton came over, grinned at the young woman, and said, âWhatâll it be, Ms. Harmony?â
If Peltonâs wife caught him doing anything more than casual flirting, sheâd string him up by his testicles. Especially if it was with Harmony. Or her cohort, Tess Ray. Which reminded Crome, when there was one, the other wasnât far behind.
Tess pulled out the stool on the other side of Crome and sat. âSorry Iâm late. There was another double homicide in North Charleston.â
Shorter than Harmony, with shoulder length blonde hair that fell in layers, Tess wore dark-rimmed glasses, a business dress with no sleeves, and medium heels.
Sheâd been the second woman from the night before. Two women to one man, a bottle of vodka, and all he had to show for it was a nasty headache, a stiff back from the couch heâd crashed on alone, and a pissed off girlfriend. Must be his lucky day.
Crome opened his mouth to say âhowdyâ but got cut off before he could start.
âIt would be nice if your partner was around,â Harmony said.
âYou guys make good copy. Maybe you all could give us something besides gang violence to report on.â
Harmony and Tess were eager-beaver news correspondents whoâd recently gone independent.
Tess asked, âSo when is Blu due back in town? Soon, right?â
Every damn woman whoâd ever laid eyes on Blu Carraway fell in love with the bastard.
Again, Crome opened his mouth to speak, and again got interrupted. This time by the other local lady killer, Peltonâs dog, Shelby.
At the sight of the chow-collie mix, Harmony and Tess both slid off their stools and swarmed the mutt. The damned canine seemed to be eating it all up, dancing around between them, his wagging tail high in the air.
The song ended, and in the lull before the next one began, Crome checked his iPhone, the one that felt like an old-fashioned pair of handcuffs restraining him from freedom. The one that came with the business of running a private investigation firm. The one that his partner had made him take.
Heâd missed a call.
The number wasnât familiar, but whoever had called left a voicemail. He listened.
It sounded like Maureen. âMick? Iâm in trouble. Please helpââ
A manâs voice cut her off. âListen Crome, itâs payback time. You took from me so Iâm taking from you. Iâll be in touch.â
His phone showed a text message. He tapped to open it up and stared at a picture of a scared Maureen with a gun to her head.
Billy Idolâs âEyes Without a Faceâ started playing, blowing a hole through the world.
***
Excerpt from Bad Time To Be In It by David Burnsworth. Copyright © 2018 by David Burnsworth. Reproduced with permission from David Burnsworth. All rights reserved.

Author Bio:
David Burnsworth became fascinated with the Deep South at a young age. After a degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Tennessee and fifteen years in the corporate world, he made the decision to write a novel. Bad Time To Be In It (July 2018, Henery Press) will be his sixth. Having lived on Charlestonâs Sullivanâs Island for five years, the setting was a foregone conclusion. He and his wife call South Carolina home.
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GIVEAWAY:
This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for David Burnsworth. There will be 1 winner of one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card and 4 winners of one (1) print OR eBook copy of David Burnsworthâs Bad Time To Be In It. The giveaway begins on July 9, 2018 and runs through August 11, 2018. Open to U.S. addresses only. Void where prohibited.
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You Are Part of the Peace Process
July 14th, 2018Dangerous Secrets
July 10th, 2018Dangerous Secrets
by Susan Hunter
on Tour July 2 – 13, 2018
Synopsis:

A week that starts out with a womanâs dead body in the living room is not going to end well. Writer Leah Nash learns this truth when her friend Miguel arrives home on a Sunday night, only to discover that his weekend renter has failed to checkoutâat least in the usual sense of the word. By Wednesday, Miguelâs uncle is arrested for murder.
The victim is the owner of SweetMeets, a website for sugar daddies in search of college-age sugar babies. Police investigators uncover an eye-witness who saw Miguelâs uncle at the scene. They find his fingerprints on the murder weapon, and they dig up a connection to the victim that he was anxious to keep buried.
But Miguelâs uncle isnât the only resident of small-town Himmel, Wisconsin with something to hide. As Leah and Miguel hunt for the real killer, theyâre faced with half-truths and outright lies from local citizens desperate to keep their own secrets under wraps. In her most complex investigation to date, Leah must use all the smartsâand smart-asseryâshe has to find the killerâs true identity. When she does, everything comes together in a tense climax that tests her courage and reveals that sheâs been keeping a few things secret from herself.
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Himmel River Press
Publication Date: November 2017
Number of Pages: 362
ISBN: 1979009821 (ISBN13: 9781979009829)
Series: Leah Nash Mysteries #4 (Each is a Stand Alone Mystery)
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Google Play | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
They should have named this place Secret City. Is there anyone here who doesn’t have secrets?
Too many of those secrets turn out to be deadly. The police don’t want Leah to mess with pursue the case (cases?), but as a crime writer she can’t leave it alone.
No matter how many times I thought I’d figured out the murderer, I was always wrong. This book will take you down many paths before you finally see the light.
This was my first Leah Nash book. Now I want to read many more. Keep them coming, Ms Hunter. Please.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Read an excerpt:
Chapter 1
The late-afternoon sun shone with a fierce light that set the autumn reds and yellows of the leaves on fire. I had passed the construction and congestion around Madison, and I was almost home on that almost perfect October day. I rolled down the car windows, turned up the music, and sang my heart out to Adele, Aretha, and yes, itâs true, the Backstreet Boys. Donât judge.
I was eager to get back to my small-town homeâHimmel, Wisconsin, after a pretty grueling two weeks in Michigan. I had been thrust into the role of primary caregiver for my Aunt Nancy, after she took a tumble from the stage during an energetic dance number in her local theater groupâs production of Grease. Normally, her husband, or my mother, or her daughter would have stepped in. But Uncle Jeff was on a fishing trip at some remote camp in Canada, and Aunt Nancy refused to ruin it for him. My mother was on a cruise, and my cousin Rowena was giving birth in Texas.
Enter me, Leah Nash, devoted niece, former reporter, current true crime writer, and unlikely home health care aide. I love my Aunt Nancy, but, sadly, I donât have a big reserve of tender-loving care to draw from. And Aunt Nancy, it turns out, doesnât have a big reserve of patience for forced immobility, cabin fever, and a steady diet of grilled cheese, Honey Nut Cheerios, and spaghetti. When I tried to vary the menu one night by making Cornish game hens, a favorite of Aunt Nancyâs, it just underscored my domestic deficiencies. They were in the oven a little longâwell, maybe, a lot long. After I served them, Aunt Nancy started calling me âBaby Jane,â and asking me where her parakeet was.
When Uncle Jeff finally got home, both she and I were relieved. I flew out the door on a flurry of hugs, kisses, thanks, and donât-mention-its almost before he set his suitcase down. My tour of duty in the wilds of Michiganâs Upper Peninsula was over. Himmel may not be a metropolis, but at least we donât have wolves in our backyard. And bears. I donât even want to talk about the bears.
The thought of sleeping in my own bed, in my own apartment, made me giddy as I neared home. If I had known it was the last time Iâd feel unfettered joy for quite some time, I wouldâve reveled in it more.
* * *
âLeah! When you get back?â
âHi, Mrs. Schimelman, just now. Iâm starving, so youâre my first stop. Whatâs good today?â
Clara Schimelman owns the Elite CafĂ© and Bakery just a short distance from my apartment. Sheâs a friendly, gray-haired woman in her late sixties. Her large, comfortable frame is testament to the delicate pastries and delicious sandwiches she serves. The Elite, with its rickety old tables, squeaky wooden floor, and uncomfortable small chairs, is a Himmel favorite.
âIs all good,â she said with justifiable complacency. âI make you döner kebap. Is a new menu item I bring back from Berlin. Pita bread, roasted turkey, lettuce, tomatoes, onions, cabbage, chili flakes, garlic-yogurt sauce. Itâs the bomb.â Mrs. Schimelman, a fixture in town for more than 30 years, still retains a strong German accent, but she loves her American slangâthough she generally runs a few years behind.
âSounds perfect,â I said. âSo, whatâs been going on?â I asked, as she turned to assemble the sandwich.
Over her shoulder she answered, âYou havenât talked to no one?â
âNo. Most of the time I couldnât get a signal on my phone, and my auntâs internet connection was so slow, I couldnât stand it. I texted a couple of times with Coop and Miguel, but thatâs about it. Why, did something happen?â
At that moment, the bell over the door tinkled and a frazzled looking mother with three rambunctious little boys came through the door.vâCoffee, just a really dark, really big cup of coffee, please, Mrs. Schimelman. Boys, one cookie choice. And donât forget please and thank you.â
âHey, Lanette, how are you?â
Lanette Howard is my motherâs across-the-street neighbor.
âLeah, hi. Sorry, did we just barge in on your order? Dylan, donât lick the display case. Marcus, stop pinching Arlo.â As she spoke, she deftly separated two of her children and swiped at the remains of Dylanâs tongue print on the front of the case. âIâm so sorry, Mrs. Schimelman. If you have a cloth and some spray, Iâll wipe that off. And please, go ahead, get Leahâs order.â
âNo, thatâs OK, you go ahead. Iâll just take a look at the paper and catch up.â A copy of the Himmel Times Weekly sat on the counter, and I grabbed it and moved to a nearby table.
âThank you. Itâs probably better for everyone if we get out as quick as possible. Howâs your aunt doing? And whenâs your mother due back?â The boys, having made their selections, were vibrating with anticipation as Mrs. Schimelman reached into the display case with practiced hand and scooped up their choices in thin, white bakery tissue paper. There was a moment of buyerâs remorse while one changed his order, and the other wailed because his brother was âcopying.â Lanette sighed and said, âI know, sugar is a bad idea, but I had to have a coffee and I couldnât bring them into this divine bakery and not let them have a cookie.â
âHey, youâll get no argument from me. Aunt Nancy is doing pretty well. Mom will be back Tuesday or Wednesday. I canât remember which. Anything going on in the old neighborhood?â
She looked surprised for a second and said, âIn the neighborhood? No, butâMarcus, thatâs it. Hand over the cookie. You may be able to get it after dinner, if you can ride home without picking at your little brother. Iâm sorry, Leah, I have to get these monsters out of here.â She managed to pay Mrs. Schimelman, grab her coffee, and wrangle her crew out the door without spilling, dropping, or losing anythingâor anyone. I stand in awe of Lanetteâs multitasking skills.
I half-expected Mrs. Schimelman to share her views on parenting with me after they left. Sheâs as generous with her opinions as she is with her portions, but she was busying herself slicing turkey and getting out condiments. I opened the paper and scanned the headlines. Trick or treat hours had been set by the city council; a car had fallen into a sinkhole on Maple Street; a potbellied pig was used to assault a man in a domestic dispute; and Mrs. Hansonâs first grade class had participated in a trip to the zoo in Madison. A busy week, indeed.
I turned to the inside pages and checked the obituaries. Itâs an old habit I canât seem to break. My first assignment at my first newspaper, which happened to be the Himmel Times Weekly, was to write the obituaries. Iâd envisioned covering police news, or at least a lively city council meetingânot dull, dead people stuff. When I had balked, my boss brought me up short.
âEvery obituary is the story of a personâs life. Itâs their final story. Itâs something their families keep, and reread, and pass on. Itâs a marker for their memories. Itâs not a throwaway job. You need to do it right, and you need to can the attitude. Understand?â
I did. Ever since then, Iâve never been able to put aside a newspaper without at least scanning the obituaries as a small way of paying respect to all those life stories. As I looked through them, one notice surprised me. I put the paper aside and saw that my sandwich was ready.
âMrs. Schimelman, what happened to Duane Stanton? It says he died suddenly. Heart attack?â
âOh, ja. Terrible that was. No heart attack. He fell from that bird-watching place. Watching birds. Itâs crazy.â She shook her head.
âThatâs awful. He was a quirky guy, but I got a kick out of him. What do I owe you?â
â$4.50. And I give you pumpkin walnut cookie for free. Welcome home.â
* * *
I pulled into the parking lot behind my apartment and was just hauling my suitcase out, when a familiar voice called to me.
âLeah, what are you doing here?â
âI live here, Courtnee, remember?â
âI thought you were fishing in Canada with your grandma.â
It was typical of Courtnee Fensterman, a self-absorbed blonde who never really pays attention to anything that doesnât center on her, to mash half-heard information into her own particular version of fake news.
âI was in Michigan taking care of my aunt.â I yanked the suitcase out and shut the door. Then I pulled the handle up, ready to head inside the back door to my loft.
âArenât you even going to ask me what Iâm doing here on a Saturday?â Her pretty but vapid face had taken on a frown, and her blue eyes held reproach. I noticed then that she had a cardboard box in her arms.
âOK, Iâll bite. What are you doing here?â
âWell.â She paused and shifted the box, then handed it to me. âCould you hold this for a minute? Itâs really heavy.â
Reflexively, I grabbed it, looked down and saw that it appeared to contain the vast make-up collection Courtnee kept in her desk drawer, along with some framed photos, at least half of the pens owned by the Himmel Times Weekly, and several boxes of Junior Mints.
âWhat are you doing, moving out?â
âDuh. Yes. Keep up, Leah.â
âWait, what?â Courtnee leaving had long been my dream when I still worked at the Times. It seemed unfair that it should happen after I left.
âRebecca is just so mean. Iâm not, like, her personal slave. âCourtnee, youâre late! Courtnee, this message makes no sense. Courtnee, you canât close the office to get your hair highlighted. Courtnee, the conference room isnât your personal party place!â Like anything is ever a party around here. My mom said I shouldnât have to take that kind of thing. So, I finally quit.â
I wasnât shocked that Mrs. Fensterman seemed to share Courtneeâs view that slavery on the job consisted of performing duties in a timely, accurate and professional manner. She had to develop her skewed vision somewhere. But it did surprise me that her mother had encouraged her to leave a paying position. Itâs not like Courtneeâs job skills would open the door to many careers.
âWait, wait, wait. You quit your job? What are you going to do?â
She tilted her head and rolled her eyes the way she does when she thinks Iâve said something especially lame.
âIâm already doing it. Iâm a secretary or something in the Public Safety department at Himmel Tech. My Uncle Lou got me the job. Rebecca didnât even give me a goodbye party or a gift or anything. And then she calls me today and says to come and get the rest of my stuff because the new girl needs the drawer space or something. Like, Iâve been busy, right? Youâd think getting married might make her feel happy and be a little nice. But no. Sheâs still a biatch.â
I felt a fleeting frisson of sympathy for Himmel Technical College, but I was more interested in the last bit of information Courtnee had dropped in. I handed the box back to her, then leaned my face in close so sheâd have to focus on me. I had to see if this was real news, or fake. âCourtnee, are you saying Rebecca is married? Who to?â
Rebecca Hartfield and I had clashed at our first meeting, and things had gone downhill from there. She was dispatched by A-H Media, the hedge fund that had bought the Himmel Times a year or so ago, to bring their latest purchase into line. Which, as far as I could see, meant squeezing every drop of profit out of the paper until A-H Media shut it down or sold its dried, dead husk. Thereâs a reason I refer to it as Ass-Hat Media.
âWell, Coop, of course. They got married last week.â
***
Excerpt from Dangerous Secrets by Susan Hunter. Copyright © 2018 by Susan Hunter. Reproduced with permission from Susan Hunter. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:

Susan Hunter is a charter member of Introverts International (which meets the 12th of Never at an undisclosed location). She has worked as a reporter and managing editor, during which time she received a first-place UPI award for investigative reporting and a Michigan Press Association first place award for enterprise/feature reporting.
Susan has also taught composition at the college level, written advertising copy, newsletters, press releases, speeches, web copy, academic papers and memos. Lots and lots of memos. She lives in rural Michigan with her husband Gary, who is a man of action, not words.
During certain times of the day, she can be found wandering the mean streets of small-town Himmel, Wisconsin, dropping off a story lead at the Himmel Times Weekly, or meeting friends for a drink at McClain’s Bar and Grill.
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ENTER TO WIN:
This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for Susan Hunter. There will be 1 winner of one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card. The giveaway begins on July 2, 2018 and runs through July 14th, 2018. Open to U.S. addresses only. Void where prohibited
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Praise Him
July 7th, 2018Dangerous to Know
July 3rd, 2018Dangerous to Know
âDonât look at him, dear. Heâs dangerous.â
Isabella Bankmill seeks a husband whose character matches her list of requirements. The man must share her faith, but he must also possess a certain je ne sais quoi. The enigmatical Lord Gregory Gordon BrombyâLondonâs newest literary sensationâcertainly possesses the latter. Despite a deformed foot and alarming views on politics and religion, he attracts the ladies in droves.
Haunted by his past and overwhelmed by his newfound celebrity status, Lord Brombyâs obsession with his own doom leads to reckless behavior. When he is stalked by an obsessive aristocrat seeking an elopement, Brombyâs friends urge him to marry a suitable lady as soon as possible. Intrigued by Isabellaâs convictions and hoping to avoid further scandal, Bromby proposes to Isabella.
Isabella also receives an offer of marriage from kind-hearted philanthropist, David Beringerâa man equally devoted to his faithâbut she only has eyes for Lord Bromby. Blinded by his talent and good looks, Isabella convinces herself that heâs not as dangerous as everyone claims. But when Brombyâs world violently collides with hers, Isabella must decide once and for all who is lord of her life. God or Bromby?
ISLAND BREEZES
She should have listened.
I kept telling Isabella who to marry, but she wouldn’t listen to my advice.
Toss a manipulative aunt, a nut job cousin, an unusual sister, excitement and notoriety into the mix and Isabella is lost.
She got herself into a real mess that she cannot escape. Back in 1812 a woman couldn’t own munch – not even herself. Everything belonged to her husband. Not a lot of freedom there.
Thank you, Megan Whitson Lee for this book. The story took me on an unexpected journey. I love historical novels, because there’s always something new for me to learn. I’m looking forward to more of your novels.
***Book provided without charge by Audra Jennings PR.***
Megan Whitson Lee is an anglophile and a recovering runaway. Over the years, she escaped to England and Australia before finally settling down in the US. These days, she lives a relatively quiet life as a wife, a mom of two greyhounds, an editor for Pelican Book Group, and a high school English teacher. She now escapes by writing novels instead of jumping on planes to foreign countries. Her novel, Captives, won the 2016 Director’s Choice Award and was a finalist for a Selah Award in the women’s contemporary fiction category at Blue Ridge Mountain Christian Writers Conference.
Megan writes women’s contemporary thrillers and historical fiction featuring characters standing at the crossroads of major life decisions.
Three Shoeboxes
July 3rd, 2018Three Shoeboxes
by Steven Manchester
July 1-August 31, 2018 Tour

Synopsis:
Mac Anderson holds life in the palm of his hand. He has a beautiful wife, three loving children, a comfortable home, and a successful career. Everything is perfectâor so it seems. Tragically, Mac is destined to learn that any sense of security can quickly prove false. Because an invisible enemy called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder has invaded Macâs fragile mind and it is about to drop him to his knees. He does all he can to conceal his inner chaos, but to no avail. Left to contend with ignorance, an insensitive justice system, and the struggles of an invisible disease, he loses everythingâmost importantly his family.
One shoebox might store an old pair of sneakers. Two shoeboxes might contain a lifetime of photographs. But in Three Shoeboxes, a fatherâs undying love may be just enough to make things right again.
Details
Genre: Women’s Fiction
Published by: The Story Plant
Publication Date: June 12th 2018
Number of Pages: 285
ISBN: 1611882605 (ISBN13: 9781611882605)
Purchase Links: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, & Goodreads
Pre-publication endorsements:
âCompelling and emotional, Three Shoeboxes takes readers on a heart-wrenching journey through some of lifeâs toughest challenges, always with the ever-present sense of the transforming power of love and hope. Three Shoeboxes is Steven Manchester at his finest.â – Carla Neggers, NYT & USA Today Bestselling Author, Harbor Island and Echo Lake â
Raw, moving and brutally honestâSteven Manchester takes you on an emotional rollercoaster. Grab your tissues for this heart-wrenching storyâbetter yet, grab a box full!â – Tanya Anne Crosby, NYT & USA Today Bestselling Author, The Girl Who Stayed ”
Three Shoeboxes is a compassionate, accessible portrait of a vitally important topic, PTSD, how it affects the sufferer and the familyâand how to find hope and healing.” – Jenna Blum, NYT & International Bestselling Author, Those Who Save Us and Storm Chasers â
Three Shoeboxes is terrific writing. Manchesterâs protagonistâs life becomes nightmarish, his rage palpable, and his ultimate redemption breathtaking. It was enough to bring this reader to tears.â – John Lansing, #1 Bestselling Author, The Devilâs Necktie
ISLAND BREEZES
This book is a story about how lack of communication can destroy a very happy family. Itâs a heart rending book at how post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can lay dormant for years until an event suddenly triggers it.
I thought that I had figured out the source of Macâs PTSD, but I hadnât. His life became a complete shamble. He lost his job, his family and himself. Finally, help arrived shortly after he was fired.
It was a long process, but Mac was determined to get his life back, especially his relationship with his children.
Oh, you want to know about those three shoeboxes? Iâm not going to tell you. Youâll have to read the book to find out whatâs in them. Just know youâre going to need a box of tissues for this book.
Once again Steven Manchester has given us another great book. His skills as an author are outstanding. Thank you, Mr. Manchester, for becoming an author.
***Book provided without charge by the author.***
Read an excerpt:
Mac jumped up, panting like an obese dog suffering in a heat wave. His heart drummed out of his chest. Startled from a sound sleep, he didnât know what was wrong. He leapt out of bed and stumbled toward the bathroom. He couldnât breathe. He couldnât think. Thereâs something wrong, he finally thought, IâŠI need help. He searched frantically for an enemy. There was none. As he stared at the frightened man in the mirror, he considered calling out to his sleeping wife. She has enough to worry about with the kids, he thought, but was already hurrying toward her. âJen,â he said in a strained whisper.
She stirred but didnât open her eyes.
The constricted chest, sweaty face and shaking hands made Mac wonder whether he was standing at deathâs door, cardiac arrest being his ticket in. I have to do something now, he thought, or Iâm a goner. âJen,â he said louder, shaking her shoulder.
One eye opened. She looked up at him.
âItâs happening again,â he said in a voice that could have belonged to a frightened little boy.
Jen shot up in bed. âWhat is it?â
âIâŠI canât breathe. My heart keeps fluttering and I feelâŠâ
âIâm calling an ambulance,â she said, fumbling for her cell phone.
âNo,â he said instinctively, âitâll scare the kids.â
She looked up at him like he was crazy.
âIâll go to the emergency room right now!â Grabbing for a pair of pants, he started to slide into them.
Jen sprang out of the bed. âIâll call my mom and have her come over to watch the kids. In the meantime, Jillian canâŠâ
Mac shook his foggy head, halting her. âNo, Iâm okay to drive,â he said, trying to breathe normally.
âBut babe,â she began to protest, fear glassing over her eyes.
âIâll text you as soon as I get there,â he promised, âand then call you just as soon as they tell me what the hellâs going on.â
Jenâs eyes filled. âOh MacâŠâ
He shot her a smile, at least he tried to, before rushing out of the house and hyperventilating all the way to the hospital.
?
Iâm here, Mac texted Jen before shutting off the ringer on his phone.
The scowling intake nurse brought him right in at the mention of âchest pains.â Within minutes, the E.R. staff went to work like a well-choreographed NASCAR pit crew, simultaneously drawing blood while wiring his torso to a portable EKG machine.
As quickly as the team had responded, they filed out of the curtained room. A young nurse, yanking the sticky discs from Macâs chest, feigned a smile. âTry to relax, Mr. Anderson. It may take a little bit before the doctor receives all of your test results.â
For what seemed like forever, Mac sat motionless on the hospital gurney, a white curtain drawn around him. I hope it isnât my heart, he thought, the kids are still so young and they needâŠ
âWho do we have in number four?â a female voice asked just outside of Macâs alcove.
Mac froze to listen in.
âSome guy who came in complaining of chest pains,â another voice answered at a strained whisper. âTest results show nothing. Just another anxiety attack.â
No way, Mac thought, not knowing whether he should feel insulted or relieved.
âLike we have time to deal with that crap,â the first voice said. âCan you imagine if men had to give birth?â
Both ladies laughed.
No frigginâ way, Mac thought before picturing his wifeâs frightened face. She must be worried sick. But I canât call her without talking to the doctor. SheâdâŠ
The curtain snapped open, revealing a young man in a white lab coat with a stethoscope hanging around his neck.
This kid canât be a doctor, Mac thought, the world suddenly feeling like it had been turned upside down.
âYour heart is fine, Mr. Anderson,â the doctor quickly reported, his eyes on his clipboard. âIâm fairly certain you suffered a panic attack.â He looked up and grinned, but even his smile was rushed. âSometimes the symptoms can mirror serious physical ailments.â
Mac was confused, almost disappointed. So, what I experienced wasnât serious? he asked in his head.
The young man scribbled something onto a small square pad, tore off the top sheet and handed it to Mac. âThisâll make you feel better,â he said, prescribing a sedative that promised to render Mac more useless than the alleged attack.
âUmmmâŠokay,â Mac said, his face burning red.
The doctor nodded. âStress is the number one cause of these symptoms,â he concluded. âDo you have someone you can talk to?â
Mac returned the nod, thinking, I need to get the hell out of here. Although he appreciated the concern, he was mired in a state of disbelief. Iâm a master of the corporate rat race, he thought, unable to accept the medicine manâs spiel. If anyone knows how to survive stress, itâs me.
âThatâs great,â the doctor said, vanishing as quickly as heâd appeared.
My problem is physical, Mac confirmed in his head, it has to be. He finished tying his shoes.
Pulling back the curtain, he was met by the stare of several female nurses. He quickly applied his false mask of strength and smiled. A panic attack, he repeated to himself. When put into words, the possibility was chilling.
The nurses smiled back, each one of them wearing the same judgmental smirk.
With his jacket tucked under his arm, Mac started down the hallway. Sure, he thought, I have plenty of people I can talk to. He pulled open the door that led back into the crowded waiting room. That is, if I actually thought it was anxiety.
?
Mac sat in the parking lot for a few long minutes, attempting to process the strange events of the last several days. Although he felt physically tired, there werenât any symptoms or residual effects of the awful episodes heâd experiencedânot a trace of the paralyzing terror I felt. And they just came out of the blue. He shook his head. How can it not be physical? He thought about the current state of his life. Work is work, itâs always going to come with a level of stress, but thatâs nothing out of the ordinary. He shook his head again. I just donât get it. He grabbed his cell phone and called Jen. âHi, itâs me.â
âAre you okay?â she asked, the worry in her voice making him feel worse.
âIâm fine, babe.â
âFine?â she said, confused. âWhat did the doctor say?â
âHe said itâs not my heart.â
âOh, thank God.â
Her reactionâalthough completely understandableâstruck him funny, making him feel like the boy who cried wolf.
âSo what is it then?â she asked.
He hesitated, feeling oddly embarrassed to share the unbelievable diagnosis.
âMac?â
âThe doctor thinks it was aâŠa panic attack.â
This time, she paused. âA panic attack?â she repeated, clearly searching for more words. Then, as a born problem solver, she initiated her usual barrage of questions. âDid they give you something for it? Is there any follow up?â
âYes, and maybe.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âHe gave me pills that Iâd rather not take if I donât need to. And he suggested I go talk to someone.â
âTalk to someone? You mean like a therapist?â
âIâm pretty sure thatâs what he meant.â
âOh,â she said, obviously taken aback. âThen thatâs exactly what you should do.â
âI donât knowâŠâ
âIs there something bothering you I donât know about, Mac,â she asked, âbecause you can talk to me, too, you know.â
âI know, babe. But thereâs nothing bothering me, honest.â He took a deep breath. âFor what itâs worth, I donât buy the anxiety attack diagnosis.â
âWell, whatever you were feeling this morning was real enough, right? I could see it in your face. It wouldnât hurt anything for you to go talk to someone.â She still sounded scared and he hated it.
âMaybe not,â he replied, appeasing her. In the back of his head, though, he was already contemplating how much he should continue to share with herâor protect her from. âI need to get to work,â he said.
âWhy donât you just take the day off and relax?â she suggested.
Here we go, he thought. âI wish I could, babe,â he said, âbut we have way too much going on at the office right now.â
âAnd maybe thatâs part of your problem,â she said.
âIâll be fine, Jen,â he promised. âWeâll talk when I get home, okay?â
âOkay.â
âLove you,â he said.
âAnd I love you,â she said in a tone intended for him to remember it.
***
Excerpt from Three Shoeboxes by Steven Manchester. Copyright © 2018 by Steven Manchester. Reproduced with permission from The Story Plant. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:

Steven Manchester is the author of the #1 bestsellers Twelve Months, The Rockinâ Chair, Pressed Pennies, and Gooseberry Island, the national bestseller Ashes, and the novels Goodnight, Brian and The Changing Season. His work has appeared on NBCâs Today Show, CBSâs The Early Show, CNNâs American Morning, and BETâs Nightly News. Recently, three of Manchesterâs short stories were selected â101 Bestâ for the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.
Connect with Steven at: stevenmanchester.com | Twitter – @AuthorSteveM | Facebook – @AuthorStevenManchester
Tour Host Participants:
Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!
ENTER TO WIN:
This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for Steven Manchester. There will be 1 winner of one (1) Amazon.com Gift Card and 3 winners of one (1) print copy of Steven Manchesterâs ASHES. The giveaway begins on July 1, 2018 and runs through September 1, 2018. Open to U.S. addresses only. Void where prohibited
Find Your Next Great Read at Providence Book Promotions!
Grand Prize Winner
June 28th, 2018A note from a friend. We’re celebrating a major achievement.
Three Shoeboxes Takes the Grand Prize at the 2018 New York Book Festival!
We did it, Folks. We took the Top Prize at the 2018 New York Book Festival! Three Shoeboxes–and its timely message–mean a great deal to me and I’m absolutely thrilled that it’s being so well received.
NEW YORK RELEASE: The story of a family man who faces the struggles of post-traumatic stress is the grand prize winner of the 2018 New York Book Festival, which honors books worthy of further attention from the worldâs publishing capital.
Author Steven Manchesterâs Three Shoeboxes (Fiction Studio Books) tells the story of Mac Anderson, who has a seemingly perfect life on the outside, but battles an invisible enemy called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
One shoebox might store an old pair of sneakers. Two shoe boxes might contain a lifetime of photographs. But in Three Shoeboxes, a fatherâs undying love may be just enough to make things right again.
This compelling and emotional story by a master of family-oriented fiction will be honored at a private reception at the Algonquin Hotel in Manhattan in July.
You can read more about Three Shoeboxes right here this coming Tuesday. You can purchase this book now from Amazon.
Not Fair
June 2nd, 2018Not Fair
By Steven Manchester
ISLAND BREEZES
Witness the breakdown of a man and his family.
A day at the fair starts off well, but that ends too soon. Life just seems to keep going downhill for Mac after that little heartbreaking adventure.
Not Fair is a teaser for Three Shoeboxes. Three Shoeboxes takes you all the way through Mac and Jen’s story. You’re going to get pulled into this story. I can’t wait until Three Shoeboxes is released.
***E-book provided without charge by the author.***
Go here to download Not Fair.
Synopsis of Three Shoeboxes: Mac Anderson holds life in the palm of his hand. He has a beautiful wife, three loving children, a comfortable home and successful career. Everything is perfectâor so it seems. Tragically, Mac is destined to learn that any sense of security can quickly prove false. After a horrific auto accident, an invisible enemy called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (P.T.S.D.) invades Macâs fragile mind and drops him to his knees. He does all he can to conceal his inner-chaos, but to no avail. Left to contend with ignorance, an insensitive justice system and the struggles of an invisible disease, his family is taken from him.
One shoebox might store an old pair of sneakers. Two shoeboxes could contain a lifetime of photographs. But in Three Shoeboxes, a fatherâs undying love may be just enough to make things right again
To get ramped up to the new release, Iâve written the short story, Not Fair. Based in the world of Three Shoeboxes, this 40-page story will introduce you to the bookâs setting and characters.
I hope you enjoy Not Fair, as we get ready for the big release!
~ Steven Manchester
Keep the Midnight Out
May 29th, 2018Keep the Midnight
Out
by Alex Gray
on Tour May 7 – June 8, 2018
Synopsis:

When the body of a red-haired young man is washed up on the shore of the beautiful Isle of Mull, Detective Superintendent Lorimerâs tranquil holiday away from the gritty streets of Glasgow is rudely interrupted. The body has been bound with twine in a ghoulishly unnatural position and strongly reminds Lorimer of another murder: a twenty year old Glasgow case that he failed to solve as a newly fledged detective constable and which has haunted him ever since.
As local cop DI Stevie Crozier takes charge of the island murder investigation, Lorimer tries to avoid stepping on her toes. But as the similarities between the young manâs death and his cold case grow more obvious, Lorimer realises that there could be a serial killer on the loose after all these years.
As the action switches dramatically between the Mull murder and the Glasgow cold case twenty years earlier, Lorimer tries desperately to catch a cold-hearted killer. Has someone got away with murder for decades?
Book Details:
Genre: Mystery
Published by: Witness Impulse
Publication Date: May 8th 2018
Number of Pages: 368
ISBN: 9780062659286
Series: A DCI Lorimer Novel, #12 (Stand Alone)
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble; | HarperCollins | Goodreads
ISLAND BREEZES
Midnight doesn’t always happen in the middle of the night. It can also look different to each individual.
It can ruin a favorite holiday location, mess with a town or tear a family apart.
Midnight on the Isle of Mull is all this and more. Can anyone ever keep the midnight out? Detective Superintendent Lorimer and DI Crozier try, but also have to play an ego game while in the process.
Thank you, Ms Gray for another DCI Lorimer novel. I look forward to many more.
***Book provided without charge by PICT.***
Read an excerpt:
CHAPTER ONE
They called it âthe splashâ; though the boat that crept silently, oars dipping lightly in and out of the water creating myriad bubbles of phosphorescence, made little sound at all. It was vital to keep quiet; the time for frightening the fish would not come until the net was properly laid across the mouth of the burn. After that the oars would be raised high and brought down with force, driving the sea trout from their shadowy lairs straight into the trap. It was illegal, of course, had been for decades, but that did not stop more intrepid poachers sneaking in at dead of night and lying in wait for the fish.
Unfair, unsporting, the fishery bodies claimed, though most folk here, on the island of Mull, recognised the thrill of rowing under the stars and risking some wrath from the law enforcers.
Ewan Angus Munro glanced back over his shoulder to see his son playing out the last of the splash net; the ancient cork floats now in a perfect arc across this narrow neck of water.
Young Ewan looked towards his father and nodded; the first part of the deed was done and now all that remained was to ensure that the fish would be scared out from their hiding places by the sudden noise of oars thrashing on the surface so that they would rush towards the net.
The old man turned the boat with an expertise that came from many years of practice, then headed back towards the shallow channel. He raised the oars, resting them in the rowlocks, water dripping like molten rain from their blades. The small craft was allowed to drift a little before Ewan Angus turned to his son again, the eye contact and nod a definite signal to begin the second stage of their nightâs work.
Young Ewan Angus stood, legs apart, perfectly balanced in the centre of the boat, one oar raised high above his shoulder as the older man watched him, eyes full of approval. The boy had been given more than just his fatherâs names: his flair for the splash, too, had been passed down from father to son.
Across the marshy strand full of bog cotton and sweet-smelling myrtle sat a small white cottage. A swift glance showed him that there was no light on anywhere; the holiday folk were doubtless sound asleep, oblivious to the small drama being played out yards from their front door.
The sound of the splash seemed magnified as it disrupted the stillness, echoing over the bay. The young man heaved the oar again and again, each whack making his body stiffen with fear and a sort of bravado. If they were caught theyâd lose both the net and the boat, a heavy price to pay for a night of fun and a good catch of sea trout, fish that fetched a decent price at the back doors of the best hotel kitchens.
Several times the boat was rowed up and down, followed by a series of splashes until the old man raised his callused hand to call a halt. Now it was time to wait and see if the fish had indeed been scared witless enough to swim towards their doom.
Once more the old man rowed along the line of corks, his son lifting the net to see if anything lingered below.
âA beauty,â the boy whispered, raising the net to reveal a good-sized sea trout struggling in the brown mesh.
âTen pounder at least!â he went on, freeing the huge fish where its gills had caught and hurling it into a wooden box below his feet.
âBe-wheesht and get the net up,â his father hissed, though the grin on his face showed how pleased he was with their first catch of the night. The old man bent towards the struggling fish, his fist around the priest, a wooden club that had been in the family for generations. One swift blow and the fish lay lifeless in the box, its silvery scales gleaming in the night.
One by one, others joined the fated sea trout as the two men made their laborious way along the edge of the net.
âMy, a grand haul, the night, Faither,â Young Ewan Angus exclaimed, his voice still hushed for fear of any sound carrying over the water.
âAye, noâ bad,â his father agreed, a contented smile on his face. One of the middling fish would be wrapped in layers of bracken and left in the porch of Calum Mhor, the police sergeant. A wee thank you for turning his continual blind eye to the nocturnal activities taking place down the road from Craignure. Mrs Calum had guests staying and sheâd be fair pleased to serve them a fresh sea trout for their dinner. It was universally acknowledged here on the island that the pink fish was far superior in flavour to the coarser salmon, particularly those that had been farmed.
âMy, hereâs a big one!â
The young man staggered as he tried to haul in the final part of the splash net. âI can hardly lift it!â he exclaimed.
âMust be caught on a rock,â the old man grumbled, his mouth twisting in a moue of disgust. If they had to tear the net to release it then it would take hours of work to mend, but the operation depended on being in and out of these waters as quickly as they could manage. Hanging about was not an option in case the Men from the Revenue had decided on a little night-time excursion of their own.
Suddenly the young man bent down in the boat, hands gripping the gunwales as he peered into the depths below.
His brow furrowed at the rounded mass swaying beneath the surface, rags of bladderwrack shifting back and forwards with the motion of the waves. Then, as his eyes focused on the ascending shape, Ewan Angus Munro saw pale tendrils that had once been fingers of flesh and one thin arm floating upwards.
He screamed, and covered his mouth as the sickness rose in his throat, then stumbled backwards. The boy flung out his arms, desperate to grasp hold of something solid to break his fall but all he felt under his hands were the wet bodies of slithering fish.
âWhat the . ?. ?. ??â Ewan Angus turned, an oath dying on his lips as the boat rocked violently, small waves dashing over the bow.
Wordlessly, his son pointed to the waters below. Then, as the old man peered over the side of the boat, he saw the body rising to the surface, its passage out to sea impeded by their net.
***
Excerpt from Keep the Midnight Out by Alex Gray. Copyright © 2018 by Alex Gray. Reprinted by permission of Witness Impulse, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved.
Author Bio:

Alex Gray was born and educated in Glasgow. After studying English and Philosophy at the University of Strathclyde, she worked as a visiting officer for the Department of Health, a time she looks upon as postgraduate education since it proved a rich source of character studies. She then trained as a secondary school teacher of English.
Alex began writing professionally in 1993 and had immediate success with short stories, articles, and commissions for BBC radio programs. She has been awarded the Scottish Association of Writers’ Constable and Pitlochry trophies for her crime writing.
A regular on the Scottish bestseller lists, she is the author of thirteen DCI Lorimer novels. She is the co-founder of the international Scottish crime writing festival, Bloody Scotland, which had its inaugural year in 2012.
Catch Up With Alex Gray On:
Website ?, Goodreads ?, & Twitter ?!
Tour Participants:
Visit these other great hosts on this tour for more great reviews, interviews, guest posts, and giveaways!
Giveaway:
This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours for Alex Gray and Witness Impulse. There will be 3 winners of one (1) print copy of Alex Grayâs THE SILENT GAMES. The giveaway begins on May 7, 2018 and runs through June 10, 2018.
Open to U.S. addresses only. Void where prohibited.







