Sin at Sea (Sinful Novellas) by Emma Nichols #debut #spotlight @EmmasErotica


To celebrate my review coming tomorrow and a great debut I am giving a few copies away.

As always if I like it I want to MAKE you like it too.

ENTER

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Sin at Sea (A Sinful Novella, #1)
by Emma Nichols 

When Alysin decided to surprise her boyfriend at work with dinner, the surprise was on her. Since he was going at it with his secretary on the conference table, she packed a bag and called her BFF. Jolie and Alysin had been traveling the country, working as digital nomads for ten years ever since graduation. Taking this as a sign it was time for a new move, they decided to take a cruise, regroup, and make a plan.

Then she meets Mr. Bedroom Eyes. Following her lead, they pretend to be married so that she can rid herself of the guy who started hitting on her before the boat left the dock. Though it was supposed to be a momentary arrangement, he asks her to take it one step farther. Then another and another. The cruise promises to be memorable in every way that matters.

Along the way, Alysin learns that she won’t have to fake an orgasm if she’s with someone who knows what to do, that not all men suck, but the best ones suck really well, and that sometimes what starts out as something pretend, can fast become something completely real. Will the woman who lives life with no regrets, regret that she made that stupid rule about not exchanging names and contact info?

To celebrate my review coming tomorrow and a great debut I am giving a few copies away.

As always if I like it I want to MAKE you like it too.

ENTER

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Cover Reveal: Savor Me by Kailen Gow #ASMSG #MasterChef @Literati_Lit


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Title: Savor Me

Author:  Kailin Gow

Genre: Erotica/Adult Contemporary

Published: 6/25/2013

Event organized by:Literati Author Services

Purchase Link: Savor Me on Amazon 

 

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Book Description:

 

Taryn Cummings could not believe she was accepted into the prestigious International Institute of Culinary Arts culinary institute she dreamed of studying at in beautiful Paris, France. It was a far cry from her unglamorous life back home in New York where she helped her mother run their small family-owned restaurant called Sam’s. The International Institute of Culinary Arts churned out the top chefs in the world, including the wildly sexy and eccentric Master Chef Errol King, whose celebrity personality was larger than life.

She wanted excitement in a city of romance and thrills, but arrived to find her apartment barely livable and herself in need of a suitable place to stay. A chance meeting at the Institute brings her face-to-face…

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The Domino Effect by Jill Elaine Hughes @JillEHughes #review @Literati_Books


The Domino Effect (The Domino Series)

Synopsis:
21-year-old college student and aspiring journalist Nancy Delaney’s nose for news smells a hot story idea when it comes to international playboy and artist Peter Rostovich. But as she works to get her story, she soon becomes intimately entangled with the mysterious Rostovich, who finds her irresistible. He becomes Nancy’s ticket to sexual awakening, and she soon discovers she has an appetite for bondage, too.

And there’s far more to Rostovich than just his art — he’s involved in a strange, violent criminal underworld that kidnaps Nancy and spirits her halfway around the world, where she’s held prisoner and made to serve as private Dominant-for-hire somewhere in the former Soviet Union. Will the sexual powers Rostovich helped awaken in her be Nancy’s only hope for escape?

Review: 

I gave this book 4 stars. Why? it had so much promise! I really wish I got this to Beta read.

I loved the normal name, Nancy Delaney. How refreshing, I am tired of the familiar and trendy names. Overall the overuse of Alexa and Lexie/Lexi is getting to me. The meeting and work for a review of a semi erotic art exhibit was a little different. I liked the relationship to her room mate and best friend, Hannah. Of course they are like night and day extreme and total opposites. Nancy was so naive to me it was a little hard to deal with. She immediately fell for Peter Rostovich. I mean he was intriguing and famous in the art world, so she jusmped on that train in a New York minute, or do I say Ohio minute? The setting in Ohio was a little different and although Cleveland is pretty big it doesn’t compare lifestyle wise with the likes of New York, Miami and Chicago, not to mention LA.

What was juicy was the relationship and how it started with Peter and Nancy. Innocent, well told and juicy. There was a lot of expression from Nancy that was out of character. She knew what she wanted and even when she sort of revealed to Hannah what happened, she was a lady about it.

lots of steam

The thrilling part was the difference in the Ukrainian mob and how they operate. The organization and how they use technology and surveillance, in my opinion was great! For some reason I thought they were not as savvy as others groups using intelligence. When things were discovered it was already a few days too late. Like for instance, having a monitor or gps on someone and them finding out it was true and has been going on a few days already.

You think about how two dueling enemies are and that is Rostovich and Bluschencko.  I really wanted more of them. I hope in the next book they are brought to the center.  Along with the ramifications of Bluschencko’s men and the nasty way they roughed people up.

I thought the similarities to another book were there. I wont say anything else on the matter. If you have not read the other book, then this will be a great read for you.

 I’ll be waiting for the next book and to check out what else she writes.

4 stars

Follow the tour here

jill hughes Author Pic

JILL ELAINE HUGHES is a professional journalist, playwright, memoirist, and fiction author. She has written for the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Reader, Washington Post, Cat Fancy magazine, New Art Examiner, and numerous other media outlets. Her plays have been widely published and produced by theaters in New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston, Atlanta, San Francisco, the United Kingdom, and Australia. She is also the author of several New Adult fiction books. Ms. Hughes also writes erotic fiction under two pen names: Jamaica Layne and Jay E. Hughes.

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This is an author requested review and an ARC  Blog tour hosted by Literati Literature Lovers Blog

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The Domino Effect by Jill Elaine Hughes @JillEHughes #toptenreads #spotlight @Literati_Books


Nancy Delaney’s Top Ten Favorite Books:

**Starred titles are explicitly mentioned and/or referred to in THE DOMINO EFFECT (Heroine Nancy Delaney is a devotee of 19th-century and early 20th-century English literature)

 

10. Bleak House**, Charles Dickens 

 Bleak House is a satirical look at the Byzantine legal system in London as it consumes the minds and talents of the greedy and nearly destroys the lives of innocents–a contemporary tale indeed. Dickens’s tale takes us from the foggy dank streets of London and the maze of the Inns of Court to the peaceful countryside of England. Likewise, the characters run from murderous villains to virtuous girls, from a devoted lover to a “fallen woman,” all of whom are affected by a legal suit in which there will, of course, be no winner

 

9. Daisy Miller**, Henry James

Henry James’ 1878 publication that brought him international fame, “Daisy Miller” is subtitled “A Study in Two Parts.” The plot centers around a Europeanized American man named Winterbourne, who meets a nouveau riche American woman going by the name Daisy Miller. A short novel, James wields the sword of fiction to craft a “study” of the roles of men and women, social relationships, cultural intersection, the allure of money, foolishness and wisdom, the responsibilities of parents, and the impact of one’s life upon others

 

8. Pride and Prejudice**, Jane Austen

 “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”

 So begins Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen’s witty comedy of manners–one of the most popular novels of all time–that features splendidly civilized sparring between the proud Mr. Darcy and the prejudiced Elizabeth Bennet as they play out their spirited courtship in a series of eighteenth-century drawing-room intrigues. Renowned literary critic and historian George Saintsbury in 1894 declared it the “most perfect, the most characteristic, the most eminently quintessential of its author’s works,” and Eudora Welty in the twntieth century described it as “irresistible and as nearly flawless as any fiction could be

 

7. Tropic of Cancer**, Henry Miller

Now hailed as an American classic, Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller’s masterpiece, was banned as obscene in this country for twenty-seven years after its first publication in Paris in 1934. Only a historic court ruling that changed American censorship standards, ushering in a new era of freedom and frankness in modern literature, permitted the publication of this first volume of Miller’s famed mixture of memoir and fiction, which chronicles with unapologetic gusto the bawdy adventures of a young expatriate writer, his friends, and the characters they meet in Paris in the 1930s. Tropic of Cancer is now considered, as Norman Mailer said, one of the ten or twenty great novels of our century.”

 6. The Story of O**, Pauline Réage

O is a young, beautiful fashion photographer in Paris. One day her lover, Rene, takes her to a chateau, where she is enslaved, with Rene’s approval, and systematically sexually assaulted by various other men. Later, Rene turns O over to Sir Stephen, an English friend who intensifies the brutality. But the final humiliation is yet to come.

 5. Lady Chatterley’s Lover**, D.H. Lawrence

One of the most extraordinary literary works of the twentieth century,Lady Chatterley’s Lover was banned in England and the United States after its initial publication in 1928. The unexpurgated edition did not appear in America until 1959, after one of the most spectacular legal battles in publishing history.

 4. Howard’s End, E.M. Forster

The disregard of a dying woman’s bequest, a girl’s attempt to help an impoverished clerk, and the marriage of an idealist and a materialist — all intersect at an estate called Howards End. The fate of this country home symbolizes the future of England in an exploration of social, economic, and philosophical trends during the post-Victorian era.

 

3. On The Wings of the Dove, Henry James

Set amid the splendor of London drawing rooms and gilded Venetian palazzos, ‘The Wings of the Dove’ is the story of Milly Theale, a naïve, doomed American heiress, and a pair of lovers, Kate Croy and Merton Densher, who conspire to obtain her fortune.

In this witty tragedy of treachery, self-deception, and betrayal, Henry James weaves together three ill-fated and wholly human destinies unexpectedly linked by desire, greed, and salvation.

2. Doctor Zhivago, Boris Pasternak

This epic tale about the effects of the Russian Revolution and its aftermath on a bourgeois family was not published in the Soviet Union until 1987. One of the results of its publication in the West was Pasternak’s complete rejection by Soviet authorities; when he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958 he was compelled to decline it. The book quickly became an international best-seller.

Dr. Yury Zhivago, Pasternak’s alter ego, is a poet, philosopher, and physician whose life is disrupted by the war and by his love for Lara, the wife of a revolutionary. His artistic nature makes him vulnerable to the brutality and harshness of the Bolsheviks. The poems he writes constitute some of the most beautiful writing in the novel

 1. Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy

  Leo Tolstoy’s classic story of doomed love is one of the most admired novels in world literature. Generations of readers have been enthralled by his magnificent heroine, the unhappily married Anna Karenina, and her tragic affair with dashing Count Vronsky.

In their world frivolous liaisons are commonplace, but Anna and Vronsky’s consuming passion makes them a target for scorn and leads to Anna’s increasing isolation. The heartbreaking trajectory of their relationship contrasts sharply with the colorful swirl of friends and family members who surround them, especially the newlyweds Kitty and Levin, who forge a touching bond as they struggle to make a life together. Anna Karenina is a masterpiece not only because of the unforgettable woman at its core and the stark drama of her fate, but also because it explores and illuminates the deepest questions about how to live a fulfilled life.

 

Follow the tour here

jill hughes Author Pic

JILL ELAINE HUGHES is a professional journalist, playwright, memoirist, and fiction author. She has written for the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Reader, Washington Post, Cat Fancy magazine, New Art Examiner, and numerous other media outlets. Her plays have been widely published and produced by theaters in New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston, Atlanta, San Francisco, the United Kingdom, and Australia. She is also the author of several New Adult fiction books. Ms. Hughes also writes erotic fiction under two pen names: Jamaica Layne and Jay E. Hughes.

 

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Full Throttle (Daddy’s Girls) by Chelsea Camaron @ChelseaCamaron #giveaway


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The first 3 books in Chelsea Camaron’s bestselling series Daddy’s Girls

Such an exciting giveaway

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Restore My Heart (Daddy’s Girls #1)
by Chelsea Camaron 

Bad Boy, Ryder Davenport comes into Dina Fowler’s life in the middle of her own personal hell. Still coming to terms with the death of her parents, she pushes everyone away. When she trusts the wrong man, putting her in a bad relationship she felt she couldn’t escape, Ryder comes along. Enjoying his playboy ways, fast cars, motorcycles and a new woman in his bed nightly, Ryder had no thoughts of settling down. That is, until he sees the damage a man can do when he meets a very broken Dina. He changes in hopes of one day being enough for her. But, can she ever feel safe with a man again? Ryder has restored hundreds of classic cars, can he restore Dina’s heart?

 

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Salvaged (Daddy’s Girls #2)
by Chelsea Camaron 
Brayden and Maggie have been dating for four years. Maggie is ready and expecting an engagement ring. Brayden has a past full of weaknesses and mistakes he can’t seem to shake. As he slowly loses everything, he also loses Maggie. As his world unravels, can he find the strength to shake his inner demons? Does he have it in him to face the ghosts of his past? Can Maggie overcome his deceptions? Will they find a way to love and trust again?

*This book intended for adult audiences due to the language and sexual content

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Full Throttle (Daddy’s Girls #2.5)
by Chelsea Camaron 

High school sweethearts manage to make it through college into the working world still together and going strong.From the start of their relationship Jake has made very clear his apprehension to marriage. Kenna understood going into this nine years ago that with Jake there would never be a ring or white dress.

Now seeing their friends so eager to make such a serious commitment in their own relationships a crack begins to form in Jake and Kenna’s once solid foundation.

Will Kenna ever open up and share her dreams with Jake?Can Jake overcome his childhood issues?Is Kenna willing to accept things just as they are forever?Will her desire for a more serious commitment make her change her feelings for her one love?Is Jake enough alone or does Kenna demand more than he can give?Can they move forward full throttle into their future together?

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About the Author:
Chelsea Camaron has a love for old muscle cars and Harley Davidson motorcycles. She currently resides in Southern Louisiana with her husband and two children. She was born and raised in Coastal North Carolina and her heart is always Carolina day dreaming. Her love for reading has sparked a new love for writing with a few projects currently in the works.
 
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Dogs Aren’t Men- A contemporary Romance by Billi Tiner @tinerbooks #newrelease


NOW AVAILABLE!!! Dogs Aren’t Men- A contemporary Romance

 

BOOK DESCRIPTION:

Rebecca Miller is a gifted veterinarian with an extraordinary understanding of animal behavior. She is leading a fulfilling life as the owner and operator of the Animal Friends Veterinary Clinic. Ever since her 30th birthday, her mother has made it her mission to help Rebecca find a man, get married, and give her grandchildren. But Rebecca doesn’t see the need for a man in her life. She has her dog, Captain, and that’s all the companionship she needs. However, her world changes the day she literally runs into Derrick Peterson, a gorgeously handsome ER doctor.
Derrick’s experiences with women have taught him that they are vain, silly, and untrustworthy. He keeps his relationships with them brief and superficial. However, he finds himself being irresistibly drawn to Rebecca. She’s smart, witty, compassionate, and very different from the women he usually encounters. Will Rebecca be the one to break down the wall he’s spent a lifetime building around his heart?


The author:

billitiner

I have been a veterinarian for over 10 years. I live in a small town in Missouri with my family. I love animals and have 3 dogs and 3 cats of my own.

Billi Tiner is the author of several books, please check her links below!

What other bloggers are saying:

Monday, June 17, 2013

5 ★★★★★ Review of Billi Tiner’s Dogs Aren’t Men

Dr. Rebecca Miller is a gifted veterinarian, leading a happy and fulfilling life at her veterinary clinic. Her Golden Retriever, Captain, is her constant and only companion, and she doesn’t see the need for any men in her life. She believes that having crossed the Rubicon of thirty, her odds aren’t that great anyway. However, her mother has other plans. She wants grandchildren.
Rebecca runs (literally) into Derrick on a basketball court, and she feels a strange attraction to the tanned and handsome ER doctor.
Coincidentally, Rebecca’s mom sets up a blind date for Rebecca originally intended to be with Derrick. It goes haywire and she winds up with Derrick’s best friend, Mitch, on a double date. Unfortunately, Derrick has shown up with a stunning blonde and this does nothing to make Rebecca think she has a chance with Derrick.
Rebecca is an independent, tough, and intelligent heroine. And the rest of the other characters are written with a depth and realism that makes you really care about their lives. The interaction and chemistry was great, and the dialogue terrific.
Being an animal lover, I enjoyed the realistic depiction of veterinary life, especially after I discovered that the author is herself a veterinarian.
I also liked the quick pace of this story. Ms. Tiner keeps it moving and doesn’t get caught up in lengthy filler paragraphs that you’ll find in other books.

A fun read. Highly recommend.

Bad Girls by Deborah Doucette #spotlight #preview #newrelease


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SNEAK PREVIEW:

“Twisted.” That is the word Rebecca’s mother, Eva, uses to describe the shoes. It’s a word, an image that drops into Rebecca’s memory; a haphazard seed, taking root. “Twisted,” Eva says while wringing her hands as if she were squeezing the life out of a wet washcloth. Rebecca pictures black lace-up oxfords with thick soles and a hard raised heel – prison shoes. In her mind, they are contorted, cartoonishly, into corkscrews.

Rebecca imagines the girl in the shoes when they were new, shiny. Or, maybe they had been worn by others before her and were beat. Perhaps they were too tight and pinched the girl’s toes, or too loose and caused her to shuffle her indignity across the floor. Rebecca sees her in a loose, rough cotton shirtwaist with button tabs where the waistband should be. A dress the color of schoolroom walls, holding areas, of bus station lavatories – numbing and anonymous. Her dark hair spreads out stark and alarming against the Vaseline green of the fabric; shocking in its refusal to lie flat and quiet, it coils and curls wildly, too obvious, dangerous. She is stocky and square; she is sturdy in her shoes. And angry. Her face is…her face is…? Familiar.

Rebecca’s mother stands in front of the white porcelain sink in her new kitchen. The last project Rebecca’s father completed before his addiction to nicotine claimed him. The last time her mother would flirtatiously wish for something, the last time Joe would take up the challenge. That was the essence of what they were to each other. Even at the end, Eva was his princess, his damsel in distress, his girl; Joe was her rescuer always, her hero. The white countertops, cabinets, white tile floor – every surface shiny as a silver dollar – were her mother’s idea; he grumbled that the color was impractical.

“It’ll look like a goddamn hospital.” He glowered, menacingly and threw his tools around, kicked an old cabinet door, splintering the dry wood, causing his children to scatter like mice to the four corners of the house. Eva stood by passively, patiently. She cajoled him, babied him, pampered him, and got her way as usual. It was a lot of work for Rebecca’s mother, this vision of husbands and wives, this version of marriage. She labored much more strenuously plotting, playacting, and preening than he did at sawing, nailing, and painting. Eva would sigh in the end, smiling like Mona Lisa.

Oh God…Beauty and the Beast, Rebecca would think as her eyes reflexively rolled in their sockets. The beast magically changes into a prince through Belle’s saintly patience, simpering affection, and blind love. Rebecca was certain that’s the way Eva saw her role, and what prompted these tidbits of advice imparted ever since Rebecca could remember: “Never contradict a boy. Play hard to get. Play dumb. Always let them win.” Rebecca ignored the advice.

She loved racing the boys at recess when she was a little girl and often won. How the boys felt about it was of no significance to her whatsoever.

Rebecca hated the games her mother played; “I won’t do it,” she told her mother, once she was old enough to figure out what was going on. After a while, she lost patience with Eva, “That is so insulting! Archaic! Times have changed, you know.” Eva would shake her head, lifting one shoulder in a half-hearted shrug, “Men never change,” she had said. Now, with the way things have gone in her marriage, Rebecca thinks maybe Eva was right.

Eva tipped her head back as steam rose, billowing up from the pot of pasta she emptied into a colander. Her short black hair, professionally coifed once a week and carefully maintained in between, was in some danger of wilting. With the back of her hand, she pushed at few curls that tried to relax over her forehead; they won’t dare reappear there. She wore her house uniform: shapeless worn shift, clean, but irreparably stained, and canvas sneakers with holes frayed through at the toes, the bleached-white laces tied into a tight bow and double knotted. This is what she cooks, cleans, and gardens in. She does laundry in it, mows the grass in it and wears it while carrying on lengthy, involved telephone conversations with her sisters.

Over the years, her children have given her designer loungewear, sweat suits, brand new Keds, and soft leather moccasins. No one knows what becomes of them. Throughout Rebecca’s childhood, they all thought this getup was the reason she scurried into the bedroom to hide when anyone knocked at the door.

In truth, Eva had no use for neighbors, distrusted strangers. She had her family and that was enough, that was everything. Her Anne Klein’s and Ralph Laurens, her silks and linens, her expensive leather pumps and matching handbags wait in dark, perfumed closets for bi-weekly shopping excursions with her sisters, and for lunch at restaurants with invariably disappointing fare: “I make better at home.”

She tossed the pasta with the tomato sauce begun early this Sunday morning, simmering for hours with olive oil, garlic, basil, bay leaf, oregano, meatballs, a few sausages. A ritual that keeps the world, for her family, turning on its axis. The kitchen workspace is small, two short steps from the stove on one side to the sink on the other. Stir, taste, lift, pour, tip back, shake the colander, empty contents into the deep bowl, two steps back to the stove, ladle in a little sauce, toss. A ballet as old as generations.

Rebecca Griffin and her mother were talking about Rebecca’s latest real estate deal. Rebecca got the listing on a fixer-upper with nine acres on Farpath Road in Havenwood; a coup. She was one of four brokers interviewed by the attorney handling the sale for the owner. Attorney Hanes had been won over with her thorough listing presentation, her record of sales in the area, and partly because of the way she leaned into their conversation, lightly touching his sleeve, speaking directly into his eyes, calling him Noah, as if they were friends. When they shook hands, he held onto hers and placed his other hand on top firmly, lingering a moment; the double-handed shake – a good sign, she’d thought.

Rebecca picked a cucumber slice from the big salad bowl and said while crunching, “I feel so sorry for poor Mr. Deitzhoff, the owner. His wife died a while back and he’s like a hermit, drifting around in that old place, a lost soul. I don’t know what’ll become of him. His attorney’s in charge now.” she visibly shuddered at the thought. “A long time ago, Harold Deitzhoff was the chief psychologist at the women’s prison in Warington,” she informed her mother.

Eva stopped short at the mention of the prison and the man who worked there long ago, wooden spoon raised aloft in mid dip, raining red droplets that splat alarmingly onto the antiseptic white floor. She turned to Rebecca and began to tell her about those shoes planting the image that will remain, buried at the back of Rebecca’s mind, germinating as if a living thing. Insistent tendrils will work their way through, surfacing when the time is right.

Now, as Eva ladles out the sauce, she serves up the rest of the story along with the ziti. “She was a tough girl, and wild. Remember, this was in the forties in East Boston. Italian parents ruled over their children. Not like now,” she huffs, scoffing at these foolish times. “In those days, you did what your father told you. These were very proud people, a little crude, you know, rough, cafone. The whole Gabrielli family was rough, but Rose, she had that wild streak.”

“She wore a big black leather jacket just like a man. And she smoked, hung around the corner with the boys! Something good girls just didn’t do in that neighborhood.” The tightly packed, tightly knit Italian immigrant neighborhood of East Boston. It’s houses, double and triple-decker boxes packed shoulder-to-shoulder with an occasional sliver of alleyway in between, shrugging their way up and down narrow, cobbled streets that run, eventually, to the sea. And on every accidental spit of land, every meager scrap of dirt on which the sun might shine, a lush garden.

Rebecca remembers the neighborhood, the houses, from sporadic childhood visits to family unable or unwilling to extricate themselves from the pack. And the conversations shared through thin walls, problems floating through windows and landing at the breakfast table next door for enthusiastic consumption; the closeness of the neighbors, the intimate proximity, suffocating as twice breathed air or binding as blood – lack of privacy or cozy confederacy, depending on your point of view.

She recalls stepping out of the car and almost directly onto brick stairs, looking up onto the homely charcoal face of the three-family rising straight up into the fog and the faint urine smell of the foyer with its obligatory, cumbersome navy blue pram parked next to the stairwell. The stairs coiled endlessly upward to the third floor where the Scauzillo’s lived, Zia Grace and Zio Louie.

Rebecca is still able to feel the way her shoulders hunched up, her face twisting in distaste as she edged by the closet outside the third floor landing that contained a suspicious looking toilet with a long chain pull dangling overhead. The brightness of the interior of the apartment when she stepped into the kitchen from the dank hallway made her gasp, inhaling the house-smell of food and Bon Ami. The contrast so sharp, she breathed a sigh of relief to have her black patent leather Mary Jane’s planted on pale gray linoleum, clean as water and speckled with chips of rainbow colors. She remembers the sunny, smiling kitchen filled with hearty greetings and the happy noise of family, the treacherously listing back porch used only for hanging wash, but an exciting forbidden perch for viewing plane bellies on their slow, impossible, ear-splitting ascent from the nearby airport. Rebecca waited for one of them to fall, with a plop, into the sea.

Children were hugged, kissed, pinched affectionately, boasted about, told they were beautiful – “Bella! Bellissima bambini!”– and over fed, but not accommodated in any way. There were no toys, no TV. The children were expected to amuse themselves and be good, so they snuck onto the porch, silently poked each other, played “categories,” sometimes smuggling coloring books into the solitude of the seldom used parlor. Kitchen noise floated in, nearly visible, like smoke, like the scent of something familiar and comforting wafting through until they grew heavy with it, tired and restless and slumped to the table leaning against grownups’ legs. The children lay their heads in welcoming laps where their backs were rubbed, and patted. Meanwhile, grownups continued hollering, arguing and laughing. Rebecca listened, dozing; occasionally the gist of something extraordinary and strange filtering into her consciousness, making a permanent home there. Some words spoken in Italian only “mala femmina” or “putana” spat out under stormy eyes. Rebecca never learned to speak much Italian but remains, to this day, fluent in broken English.

“She ran around with men,” Rebecca’s mother continues. “Older men, married men. Running wild! Shamed her family. So the father, to teach her a lesson, put her in that place. In those days you could do that to bad girls. Straighten them out,”Eva says as she straightens her own back sharply to illustrate. “But, she wasn’t there long when she was found hanged in her cell!

“The family was devastated, but they never believed she killed herself. Never! They knew how she was, proud like the rest of them, strong as a bull, stubborn, tough. When they picked up her belongings, her shoes were mangled, like she’d been dragged and dragged. Struggling.

“The family says she knew something, something terrible. I don’t know what, they would never really talk about it. You know, ‘non dichia niente,’” a phrase as familiar to Rebecca as the fragrance of garlic simmering in olive oil. It frequently punctuates family conversations, topping them off with a sprinkle of finality, “say nothing” it means.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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I grew up in a large, close-knit Italian family held together by hard working Italian immigrant grandparents and big, boisterous Sunday macaroni dinners. I married young – it was my only aspiration – and had four children spread out, in a wholly unplanned fashion, over twenty years. I painted – oils and later watercolor – volunteered for arts groups, studied with a locally famous painter, traveled to the ocean as often possible and became a real estate broker.

At exactly forty years of age, with a (surprise) two-year-old, and two teenagers, I decided it was time for reinvention. I recall sitting on the edge of my bed with my head in my hands asking myself, what do you really want to do? The answer was, write! I enrolled – two-year-old in tow – in a creative and business writing program at a local college and quickly decided business writing wasn’t for me. My creative writing professor pulled me out of class one day and as we sat on the stairs outside of the classroom, he looked me in the eye and told me I was an honest-to-god writer. It was the second time a teacher shared that opinion with me, but the first time it impelled me to action. I began to solicit and get assignments from local newspapers and was tooting along under a head of steam with the goal of writing for a nationally recognized paper until life happened; my youngest, Sabra, was born. Her arrival into our family brought me unexpected blessings, including the opportunity to become involved in the issues of grandparents raising grandchildren which led to my first book, Raising Our Children’s Children. Since then, I have updated the first edition and a revision will be published as Raising Our Children’s Children: Room In The Heart in Spring 2014. In addition, I am a blogger for the Huffington Post on their Huff Post 50 site (for the over fifty crowd)www.huffingtonpost.com/deborah-doucette/.

Since writing my first book, life has spun me around sending me in new directions a few more times; I’m now a breast cancer survivor, and a divorced single mom. I live in a small country suburb outside of Boston in an 1840s village farmhouse with my big, red poodle, Fiamma (flame in Italian – Fia for short) surrounded by my art and joyfully entertained by the comings and goings of my twin grandbabies. I am currently working on a new novel.

   

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#Labels, Labels… Who’s got the labels? #MondayMorning Fika w/ @AnastasiaVitsky #ASMSG #Respect


Check out Penelope Jones and her web

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Good morning my lovelies.

Today, I’ve been invited to do Monday Morning Fika with Anastasia Vitsky.  

 

If you don’t know who she is,  you must be living under a rock.  The woman has brought F/F spanking into the limelight, and she seems to be producing another book ever few weeks.  I only met her back in September, and I think she’s released like 5 maybe 6 books since then!  She’s a wonderful writer, but more than that, Ana’s an amazing person, and I can’t tell you how excited I am to be invited to share my views on her blog.  

 

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Monday Morning Fika is not about advertising your books, well, it is but not in a traditional sense of the marketing field.  Ana likes to have real lifestyle topics for it. She wants to know why we’ve chosen this lifestyle, or just what’s…

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Full Throttle (Daddy’s Girls) by Chelsea Camaron @ChelseaCamaron #giveaway


Enter to win

The first 3 books in Chelsea Camaron’s bestselling series Daddy’s Girls

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Restore My Heart (Daddy’s Girls #1)
by Chelsea Camaron 

Bad Boy, Ryder Davenport comes into Dina Fowler’s life in the middle of her own personal hell. Still coming to terms with the death of her parents, she pushes everyone away. When she trusts the wrong man, putting her in a bad relationship she felt she couldn’t escape, Ryder comes along. Enjoying his playboy ways, fast cars, motorcycles and a new woman in his bed nightly, Ryder had no thoughts of settling down. That is, until he sees the damage a man can do when he meets a very broken Dina. He changes in hopes of one day being enough for her. But, can she ever feel safe with a man again? Ryder has restored hundreds of classic cars, can he restore Dina’s heart?

 

 

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Salvaged (Daddy’s Girls #2)
by Chelsea Camaron 
Brayden and Maggie have been dating for four years. Maggie is ready and expecting an engagement ring. Brayden has a past full of weaknesses and mistakes he can’t seem to shake. As he slowly loses everything, he also loses Maggie. As his world unravels, can he find the strength to shake his inner demons? Does he have it in him to face the ghosts of his past? Can Maggie overcome his deceptions? Will they find a way to love and trust again?

*This book intended for adult audiences due to the language and sexual content

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Full Throttle (Daddy’s Girls #2.5)
by Chelsea Camaron 

High school sweethearts manage to make it through college into the working world still together and going strong.From the start of their relationship Jake has made very clear his apprehension to marriage. Kenna understood going into this nine years ago that with Jake there would never be a ring or white dress.

Now seeing their friends so eager to make such a serious commitment in their own relationships a crack begins to form in Jake and Kenna’s once solid foundation.

Will Kenna ever open up and share her dreams with Jake?Can Jake overcome his childhood issues?Is Kenna willing to accept things just as they are forever?Will her desire for a more serious commitment make her change her feelings for her one love?Is Jake enough alone or does Kenna demand more than he can give?Can they move forward full throttle into their future together?

Enter to win

About the Author:
Chelsea Camaron has a love for old muscle cars and Harley Davidson motorcycles. She currently resides in Southern Louisiana with her husband and two children. She was born and raised in Coastal North Carolina and her heart is always Carolina day dreaming. Her love for reading has sparked a new love for writing with a few projects currently in the works.
 
Find Chelsea
Where To Buy

 

The Georgia Corbins by Kara Leigh Miller @KaraLeighMille1#spotlight


The Georgia Corbins 

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Title: The Georgia Corbins

Author: Kara Leigh Miller

Publisher and Imprint: Entranced Publishing

Genre: YA contemporary romance

Release Date: June 10 2013

Length: 265 pages

Blurb:

 

Ali Philips never thought anything could be more devastating than the day Levi and Tucker Corbin, her two best friends—her only friends—moved away. Three years passed without a single phone call, text message, or email from them and she’s resolved to the fact that she will probably never see them again. Until one morning when she comes face-to-face with Levi Corbin in physics class.

Little does she know, the Corbins have returned to Haldeen with only one thing on their minds: winning Ali’s heart. Ali soon finds herself in the middle of a love triangle she doesn’t want any part of. As she tries to reclaim the friendships she’s lost and to adjust to the unfamiliar feelings she’s having, she struggles with making the one decision that will forever change their lives: Levi or Tucker Corbin?

She’s always had a special bond with Tucker and feels most comfortable when she’s with him. But Levi brings her to life in a way she didn’t think was possible and makes her feel things she didn’t think she would ever feel. Torn between the two, Ali is certain of only one thing–by the time it’s over, she’ll lose one of her best friends.

 

Buy Links: http://www.entrancedpublishing.com/imprints/blush/the-georgia-corbins/

 

Add to Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17669136-the-georgia-corbins

 

Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/HQeur_ftAno

 

Giveaway:

 To celebrate the release of The Georgia Corbins, Kara Leigh Miller is giving away exciting prizes. The Grand Prize, which is open to US residents only, includes a signed copy of The Georgia Corbins, The Georgia Corbins hardcover journal and postcards, The Georgia Corbins tote bag, Kara Leigh Miller pens and notebooks, and Legasea bookmarks.

Second and third prizes are an ebook copy of The Georgia Corbins, and one lucky person will win a first chapter critique. International entries are welcome. Good luck! Winners will be announced July 1st.

 

About the Author:

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Born and raised in the small town of Mexico, New York, Kara was an only child who was forced to find ways to entertain herself. Playing make believe with her Barbie dolls and stuffed animals was her first real taste of storytelling before she became old enough to develop a love affair with the written word. In early 2010, Kara picked up her very first erotic romance novel, and she was instantly hooked. She loves to write contemporary romance, erotica, and young adult romance. Currently she has several full-length novels in the works, a series of novellas, and a handful of short stories. Kara is an active member of the CNY Creative Writers Café and the CNY Romance Writers. Today, Kara resides in New Haven, New York with her husband, five kids, and three cats. When she’s not reading or writing, she’s thinking about reading and writing. And when she’s not doing that, she’s spending time with her family and friends.

 

Author Social Media Links:

Blog: http://www.karaleighmiller.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/KaraLeighMille1

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KaraLeighMiller?fref=ts