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Book Review: Stranger or Friend by Sylvia Villalobos

Stranger or Friend is Sylvia Villalobos’ first book, a mystery. Anyone familiar with Sylvia Writes, Ms. Villalobos’ blog, knows she is a wonderfully lyrical writer, an accomplished painter with words. I was very much looking forward to her book, and I was not disappointed. Zoe Sinclair returns just before Christmas to her home in Pine Vale, Wyoming, to take care of her mother, who is weak and clearly terminal with a heart condition. She comes back to the cold of an impending winter and the shocking murder of her best friend, Lori. Pine Vale is a small, somewhat isolated town whose citizens know each other. Outsiders are noticeable, and in the minds of some, not welcome. Which is why the Herods – Zoe’s and her mother’s across the road new neighbors – are viewed with such suspicion. No friend could possibly have murdered her, or could they? Ms. Villalobos sets the scene and the tension at the outset, when Zoe hears a faint crying and someone running in the woods in the dark outside her home just as she is pulling her bags from the car. The situation inside is no better: her mother Rosemary is incredibly weak, can’t be left by herself, and refuses an operation to repair her failing heart. A close family friend, Dr. Knox is overseeing her care and comes every day to check on her. Zoe’s life is bleak and made bleaker when an old friend from high school, Nolan Fox, now the Sheriff, comes to tell them that Lori is dead, strangled, her clothes ripped off. He needs information from Zoe because of her close relationship with Lori, and from Rosemary, because Zoe had been caring for her. Homicide is something new in Pine Vale, but the Sheriff leaves with more questions than answers. The town gradually becomes populated with recognizable characters: Marshall Park, an old friend who had stuck up for Zoe in high school and who is now the town’s handyman, despite his desire for a career as an artist; Louise Webber, the town gossip, who puts her nose in everyone’s business; Detective McCoy from the county administration, who is first reluctant to take on the case, then tries to run it by stepping on Sheriff Nolan; Cory, Lori’s boyfriend, knows nothing about what Lori was doing right before she was killed. Daphne Herod has become a close friend of Mother, as she is called, and it is Mother who introduces Zoe to the family: Daphne, a dream interpreter like Mother; Nick, the younger son who is severely mentally disturbed and who escapes from the house on a regular basis; and the older son Sebastian, a computer geek, whose good looks draw Zoe’s immediate attention. Is it Nick whom she hears in the woods? Did he murder Lori and the family is hiding it? A lot of townspeople think so. There is plenty of tension along the way to the discovery of the true killer: hang ups on Mother’s phone, a beating given to Zoe when she follows a suspicious red car into the country side, a Christmas card from Lori to Zoe whose message makes no sense, a rock thrown at Mother’s window, another murder. Ultimately, the killer seeks out Zoe herself as the next victim. I was definitely in suspense until, as they say, all was revealed in the final chapters. If I had a complaint about the book, it would be a rather slow beginning. But by the sixth chapter, I was fully engaged. Ms. Villalobos has drawn a dark and gritty mystery about a small town full of prejudices, and it’s a good read. Her writing is so descriptive and haunting that this reader found herself sitting right in the middle of Pine vale and its plots. I recommend it to my blog followers and mystery readers in general! You can find her book, which is being published by Summer Solstice and which will be released March 24, at: Disclosure: A free copy of the book was provided to this reviewer. Silvia Villalobos is a native of Romania who lives in Los Angeles and loves to write murder mysteries and short fiction. Her stories have appeared in The Riding Light Review, Pure Slush, and Red Fez, among other publications. She is attracted to write about premises filled with questions which arouse feelings and mental discourse. Her upbringing in Romania may have contributed to her wonderful imagination and to the writing of stories filled with peril. She likes to take long walks through the local paseos or hike in the Santa Clarita Woodland Park, and in addition to writing, she blogs regularly and has taken up preparing and giving speeches for Toastmasters International. Follow her on Twitter: @Sylvia_Writes and on her blog, Sylvia Writes 0 0

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Coming tomorrow….

Tomorrow I get to introduce the first book by Sylvia Villalobos, the author of the blog Sylvia Writes.  The book will be released March 24, and I was lucky enough to get an ARC. Sylvia has been a blogging sister for quite a while now, and her posts are always thoughtful, insightful, and challenging. I hope you will check her out, and stay tuned for my review of Stranger or Friend tomorrow. Someone else had a book release this month…er, me…and I hope you have taken a look at Death in a Dacron Sail. I promise you are in for a good reading ride. You can click on the icon to the left to connect with the book.  Apologies for the shameless self promotion!  0 0

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Death in a Dacron Sail has been released. Now what?

My second book, Death in a Dacron Sail was released ten days ago. I had a fabulous launch party in the Vat Room of a local brewery, and there have been two lovely online reviews so far: Barb Vitelli http://iwishilivedinalibrary.blogspot.com/2015/03/death-in-dacron-sail-review.html?showComment=1425491072329#c3996690571933 Rosie Amber https://rosieamber.wordpress.com/2015/03/11/death-in-a-dacron-sail-by-noelle-granger/ Sally, of Smorgasbord – Variety is the Spice of Life – did a five star treatment of my first book, Death in a Red Canvas Sail: https://smorgasbordinvitation.wordpress.com/2015/03/11/five-star-treatment-death-on-a-red-canvas-chair-by-n-a-granger-noelle/ Nick Rossi, bless his soul, has tweeted about my book for the last week. A million thanks to all of them!  As Rhe would say, they are wicked kind. I’ve also had interviews published Chapel Hill Magazine, The Raleigh News and Observer, and the Boothbay Register. So now what? I feel like I’ve given birth, and someone else is caring for the baby! Am I suffering from post-partum depression? Here is what I have planned at this point: Other blogging friends out there who will review the book. Postcards printed I can send to everyone on my Christmas card list. Bookmarks printed to leave along with copies of my book to drop off at local independent bookstores (Barnes and Noble will not carry the book because it was published by CreateSpace) – this will take a day of driving around and begging. The A-Z Blog Challenge: this year it will be something related to my books (reveal on March 23) Some readings – working on that! So, all of my dear readers, give me more ideas! And please read the book and put some reviews on Amazon for me. I need all the input I can get. And I’m happy to return the favor. Hugs from Rhe, Will, Sam, Jack, Paulette and Marsh and…me! 0 0

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Book Review: Stranded in the Seychelles by Bev Spicer

Stranded in the Seychelles is a fun, frothy memoir of two young women looking for adventure before they have to make a life decision about settling down. It is written by Bev Spicer, who has written several humorous memoirs of her life, including Bunny on a Bike, telling of the time she was a Playboy croupier in London. Bev and Carol, her bosom buddy, have come to a fork in the road. Carol has just returned from teaching English to monks in Tibet, while Bev has held a series of uninspiring jobs, including typing out legal contracts and folding and labeling bin bags to send off with a quote to possible customers (that one really impressed me!). She finally gets a postgraduate teaching certificate from Cambridge and, at the time of this story, has been teaching English to uninterested secondary school students for a year. When Bev comes across an ad for qualified English teachers for the National Youth Service of the Seychelles, they both bite. I had to look up the Seychelles: the Seychelles Islands are an archipelago in the Indian Ocean off the eat coast of Africa, in the same general region as Zanzibar, Madagascar and Mauritius. The two friends fly out to their new island home, picturing a luxury villa on a beach, tropical fruit and air-conditioned class rooms. They should have been alarmed by the lack of information or even a syllabus for the classes they were to teach. By this time the reader is thinking too good to be true, don’t do it! They step off their plane into the climate of a convection oven, peopled by native and mixed raced individuals who speak mainly Creole, with strange customs and even stranger food. Eventually they are given their own house, with a steady breeze from the ocean and electricity. Also lizards and a wondrous variety of spiders, which spin webs like nets overnight. Their school is on another island, which they reach by landing craft each morning, together with other recruited teachers. The voyage is spent gagging on the acrid black smoke from the engine. Their classrooms are outside under tin roofs, which heat the air beneath to baking levels by the end of each day, and have poisonous centipedes dropping in from time to time. Teachers at the school come from various European countries as well as Sri Lanka and Mauritius, making a colorful, multilingual lot. The students, by contrast, are perpetually sleepy and unengaged in learning, despite Bev and Carol’s best efforts. This memoir is filled with eclectic characters, surprising and humorous adventures, lots of local beer, and experiences on and with an ancient Kawasaki 250 cc motorbike they purchase for getting around. Along the way, the reader is nicely schooled in the sometimes harsh realities of life in a poor, politically unstable country. A concatenation of events lead to Sue and Carol’s long and eventually successful attempt to terminate their contract after the first school term: most significantly to them was the ban on traveling anywhere during their breaks except within the Seychelles and Mauritius. Not to mention the lack of eligible men. This was a fun read, written with a sharp wit and keen sense of humor, with an eye to the ridiculous and candor with the politics. It’s a great memoir. It made me want to be young again, carefree and open to any adventure. Bev Spicer was born in a small market town in the Midlands of England and educated at Queens’ College, Cambridge. She was a lecturer at Anglia Ruskin University before moving to live in France with her husband and two of her children; there she writes full-time. Along the way, she has been a teacher, blackjack dealer for Playboy, examiner, secretary (various sorts – most boringly ‘legal’) and Sunday checkout girl at Tescos. As well as France, she has lived in Bridgnoth, Cambridge, Rethymnon (Crete), and Mahe (Seychelles). The next place she has said she wants to explore is probably Spain. She reports that her husband is very tolerant. She loves people, reading, writing, speaking French, astronomy (quantum theory addict), gardening, traveling, and hates housework, cooking, drizzle and honey. Sounds like my kind of author! You can find Stranded in the Seychelles, along with her ten (!) other books on Amazon: and Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6450490.Bev_Spicer as well as Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BevSpiceAuthor   0 0

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I’m Doing My Happy Dance

On her blog, I Wish I Lived in a Library, Katherine posted her review of Death in a Dacron Sail. I am so pleased she liked it. I’ve always appreciated her reviews and had kept my fingers crossed she would enjoy it.  Check it out at: iwishedilivedinalibrary.blogspot.com or http://iwishilivedinalibrary.blogspot.com/2015/03/death-in-dacron-sail-review.html?showComment=1425491072329#c3996690571933 0 0

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Book Launch Party!

Last night we had a party for the launch of my second book, Death in a Dacron Sail. It was huge fun – just socializing with friends and imbibing some good wine and beer. We held it at the Top of the Hill Restaurant, which brews its own beer. The party was in the Tank Room, two flights down from the roof- top restaurant (so sort of the Bottom of the Hill); this space contains the huge vats of the beer they brew, displayed behind glass windows. There was a full bar, and we chose a menu of beer and wine varieties for everyone. A few tables and a display of the books – the rest was schmoozing with good friends. No book transactions, just fun. Well, I did sign one – for a very special guest, Dr. Larry Gilbert, my research mentor and adviser, who at 86 is still my role model. I counted three other published authors among the guests, along with all the members of my Early Birds critique group. Three of us have been together for four years, the rest for at least two. I’ve never been to a launch party before, but I did hire a marketing group – Yardarm Media – to help me, and they suggested the launch party. With their help, I’ve had and will have several interviews and the readings are lining up. Since many publishers expect you to do your own marketing, self-publishing (via Create Space) plus having a marketing group seemed like a logical and less daunting (not to mention less frustrating) way to get my books out there. Has anyone else hired a marketing firm? Had a launch party? What did you do for it? I’d love to know! 0 0

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Book Review: The Watchmen, Volume 2 of the Britannia Series by Denham and Trow

The Watchmen is the second book in the Britannia series by Richard Denham and M.J. Trow. I read and reviewed the first book in the series, The Wall. I liked that book; this one was more entertaining. The Wall began in AD 367 in Roman Britannia, modern day England. The Watchmen is set years later and the four so-called ‘Heroes of the Wall’ are living very different lives from their earlier roles in the Roman Army. Leocadius, once a bragging and womanizing pedes or foot soldier, is now a leader in civilian life, the council of Londinium (London), with a cold wife and a warm mistress, Honoria. The beautiful Honoria runs an upper class brothel and has a child, Scipio, with Leocadius. Vitalis, also once a foot soldier, has become a Christian and now lives in a rough house by the Thames, where he weaves baskets for sale from the river grasses. Justinus, once a 30 year old non-commissioned officer of the cavalry, is now Commander of Hadrian’s Wall, tasked with protecting Britannia from invaders from the wild lands north of the Wall. Paternus, a semisallis (a rank above pedes) had lost his family in the earlier book and had made a political marriage with Brenna, female leader of the Voltadini, to tie her people to Rome. They’d fallen in love and had a child together, but Paternus had died five years before the story begins. Justinus is in love with Brenna and committed to overseeing the development and education of her two boys, one from an earlier marriage and the one fathered by Paternus. Around these characters the book swirls, moving swiftly from one to the other, leaving the reader with multiple cliffhangers. The figure tying the separate story lines together is Magnus Maximus, commander of the Roman Army in Britannia. He declares himself Caesar, a challenger to the throne of Gratian, Emperor of the western Roman Empire. Gratian shares the throne with his brother Valentinian II, Emperor of the eastern half of the Roman Empire. At the beginning of the book, Maximus is demanding and winning allegiance from the various native tribes in Britannia, as their Caesar. Leocadius is mired in the politics of Londinium and saddled with a grasping wife. He plays dice for his life. Vitalis wants a peaceful life but has to rejoin the military to help his sister Conchessa find her husband, who defrauded Valentinian and is missing. Justinus is facing a massive incursion of invaders determined to kill everything and everyone in their way and has to work with Maximus and the tribes allied with him to stop them. Each of their stories winds through the book like ribbons on a maypole, detailed with Celtic legend, Egyptian mysticism and tribal battle-fury. How many of the remaining three Heroes of the Wall will survive? I only have two negative comments: first, the story of Maximus’ campaign against Gratian is given short shrift – in itself, it could have been another volume; second, there were places where the characters use very contemporary expressions, which was a little jarring. I appreciated the glossary at the end of the book for Roman terms with which I wasn’t familiar, and the map showing sites from the narrative. Richard Denham is a self-taught Roman historian with an exhaustive knowledge of this period; M.J.Trow is a military historian. They have combined their talents to bring the Britannia of the fourth century and its citizens to life. I fully admit I am not an historian and perhaps some who are might quibble. But as a general reader, I recommend this book for anyone who enjoys historical fiction and Roman history. Where I felt the first book in the series would appeal mainly to men, this book has a broader appeal. I’m hoping to see a third book soon. 0 0

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Death in a Dacron Sail: A Review

A review of Death in a Dacron Sail is in. Check out Book Club Mom. Book Club Mom.doc  or https://bvitelli2002.wordpress.com/2015/02/25/rhe-brewster-is-at-it-again/.  Many thanks to Barbara Vitelli for the review. My book release party is Monday evening (I’ll post pictures), and the book is already on Amazon. If you read it, please review it!  The Kindle version will be available by Thursday of next week. Let the games begin! 0 0

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Versatile Blogger Award

I gratefully accept The Versatile Blogger Award, and because of the lengthy award acceptances last night at the Oscars, will keep this short. (Applause, bows) I apologize to CaptainSparklez who nominated me for the award last month. I’m happy I finally have time to recognize this honor and thank him. His website is called, interestingly enough, Troll Base, and you can find it at: https://mlgpronoscopezzz.wordpress.com/ There you will find poetry and opinion and a page for jokes, which needs more entries!! For this award, I am to nominate 15 other bloggers. If any of the nominees already have this award or would like to decline, I am sending you a bouquet of flowers instead, which you can post on your blog if you wish. Sally, of Smorgasbord – Variety is the Spice of Life – gave me this idea.   This is my list: Betty Stephens at Betty A. Stephens, Maine Author http://4writersandreaders.com/ Barbara Vitelli at Book Club Mom https://bvitelli2002.wordpress.com/ Cindy Knoke http://cindyknoke.com/ Charli Mills at Carrot Ranch Communications http://carrotranch.com/ Coleen Chesbro at Silver Threadings   http://silverthreading.com/. Michael Jeck at WriterlyWiterings http://writerlywitterings.com/ Olga at Just Olga https://olganm.wordpress.com/about/ Stepheny Forgue Houghtlin http://stephenyhoughtlin.com/ Viv Drewa at the Owl Lady Blog https://theowlladyblog.wordpress.com/ Paul G. Day at Brave Bear Books http://bravebearbooks.com/ Pete Deakon at Captain’s Log http://petedeakon.com/ Ali at A Woman’s Wisdom https://awomanswisdom.wordpress.com/ Anthony Vicino at One Lazy Robot http://onelazyrobotblog.com/ Fia Esson at Fia Esson, Write https://essenfia.wordpress.com/ Esther at Hortus Closus   https://hortusclosus.wordpress.com/   And now for seven things about myself: I used to be 5’ 10”’ tall. Used to be is the operative verb. My hair color was once a deep red. I shudder. I have huge feet. Which is why I wear sandals a lot. Thank heavens I live in the South. I am allergic to surgical tape from too many surgeries. None of them cosmetic…well… My eyes really are that blue – I don’t wear contacts. My daughter is Korean. We’ve been blessed every day since we got her. My favorite food is pizza, hot or cold. I do have preferences with regard to the source, though. (A deep bow to my readers.)       0 0

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The Excitement Begins with Book Club Mom

As most of my blog readers know, I have the second book in the Rhe Brewster Mystery series coming out soon. March 2, in fact. This time I’m having a book release party to celebrate! Book Club Mom (aka Barbara Vitelli) kindly accepted an advanced reader copy and posted yesterday to advertise my book (heartfelt thanks to her). Go to:Book Club Mom.doc  or What’s up next? A new Rhe Brewster Mystery! More to come, with pictures from the party…   0 0

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