I’M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS by Iain Reid

June 16, 2016
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Wow.

The narrator of the story is a nameless young woman who is in a fairly new relationship with Jake, but she has some doubts about where it is going and is thinking about ending things. Their relationship is based on a shared communication style, which moves to the physical, but it is their philosophical conversations that truly maneuver the relationship along.

Jake invites her to go home to meet his parents and see the farm where he grew up in a remote, small village. The family dinner is odd, but the ride back home after dinner even more so, with detours to a Dairy Queen staffed by giggling girls to a dark, deserted old high school.

This is a genuinely atmospheric book, and the cold, snowy night really ups the creepy factor, and the story grows more diabolical and dangerous with each turn of the page.

Written in the first person, but interspersed with an occasional page from a parallel story with a different point of view, eventually the two start looking like they will converge. These characters are carefully developed and the story takes some frightening turns, leading to a shocking ending.

The construct of this book is brilliant and unusual, and should appeal to fans of psychological thrillers or even horror. This dark debut is a most uncomfortable read, but simply unputdownable. Even after you turn the last page.

I read it twice.

Copyright ©2016 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

(For a peek at Reed’s writing style, check out You Sold Your Book! Please Sign This Contract in the New Yorker.)

6/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

I’M THINKING OF ENDING THINGS by Iain Reid. Gallery/Scout Press (June 14, 2016).  ISBN 978-1501126925. 224p.

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SUNSHINE BEACH by Wendy Wax Giveaway & Guest Blog!

June 15, 2016
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I am delighted to welcome Wendy Wax!

Hello all!

Thanks, Stacy for this chance to share news of my new Ten Beach Road novel, Sunshine Beach, with your readers.  It’s been a fun ride so far and now it’s less than a week to go before the June 21st on sale date.

I’ve had a chance to be in touch with readers and booksellers as plans progressed for my southeast book tour. There are multiple events set for Georgia, South Carolina and Florida and details are on my site at authorwendywax.com along with other updates and an excerpt from Sunshine Beach. Also there—and I’ve really loved sharing this—is the, I think, really terrific Sunshine Beach Book Club Kit.  It includes the “Wax Family Never Fail (cross my heart!) Egg Soufflé Recipe” that Maddie makes for the gang gathered at Bella Flora.  It also includes my memories of “The Beach I Grew Up On,” discussion questions and pics of the mid-century hotel that inspired Sunshine Beach.

Anyway, while writing the new Ten Beach Road story I craved my family’s egg soufflé every time Maddie served it. Assuming it makes you, too, a bit hungry while reading  Sunshine Beach, here’s the recipe.  I hope you’ll enjoy the soufflé and reconnecting with Maddie, Nicole, Avery, Kyra and the rest of the Do Over family when they return to Ten Beach Road next week.

Wax Family “Never Fail” Egg Soufflé

6 eggs

10 slices white bread, crust removed (cut in cubes to fit in blender)

1/2 pound Velveeta cheese (any flavor or type)

3 tablespoons sharp cheddar

1 cup milk

1/4 pound butter

½ teaspoon baking powder

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Melt butter and cheese in microwave (cut up in cubes for easier melting). Beat eggs and milk in blender. Add bread to mixture and blend. I usually add the melted cheese and butter to the blender then, plus the baking powder, and blend smooth.  Spray casserole dish with butter flavored non-stick spray. Pour mixture into casserole. Bake uncovered for 1 hour. (Unless it needs to be fancy, I use the disposable aluminum foil casseroles!)

Note: You can make ahead, wrap well and freeze.  Just make sure it’s at room temperature again (and give it a last stir) before you put it in the oven.

You can also mix ahead and refrigerate overnight for baking the next day.

About the book:

Ten Beach Road Novel, Book 4

Readers first met Maddie, Avery and Nicole in Wendy Wax’s Ten Beach Road, heralded as “one of six books that belong in your beach bag” by USA Today. Victims of a Ponzi scheme, the three were deeded Bella Flora, a crumbling historic home on Florida’s Pass-a-Grille Beach, in lieu of their vanished life savings. At the time, all the reluctant DIYers dared hope was that renovating and selling it would make them solvent. Little did they know they would end up starring in their own reality show, Do Over, strapping on their tool belts again in Wax’s Ocean Beach and The House on Mermaid Point and, now, fighting for their show and their integrity, in the long-awaited SUNSHINE BEACH, a Berkley Trade Paperback Original on sale June 21st.

There have been big life changes, including losses, for the characters Wax has created, but they’ve remained togetherfriends, family, extended family, barely tolerated colleagues and all. They’re still taking life one renovation at a time, but in SUNSHINE BEACH there’s a big difference. They’ve broken with the network, which insisted on endless compromise, and are risking everything to secure their next project and the future of Do Over.

This time, they find their next renovation pretty much right where they started, barely a mile from Bella Flora. It’s Maddie’s daughter Kyra who stumbles across the Sunshine Hotel, a once glorious mid-century beachfront property left to languish at the mercy of the elements. The opportunity to renovate it is too good to pass up and, they figure, what could go wrong? Well, it turns out, pretty much everything.

Maddie’s romance with rock legend “Will the Wild” Hightower gets complicated. Nikki’s reluctance to commit to the man who loves her may be the biggest mistake of her life. Kyra’s son Dustin’s famous actor father keeps popping up and, between him, Hightower and the Do Over cast, paparazzi abound, adding their own layer of chaos. Even the hotel seems to be against them when their remodeling uncovers a 60-year-old unsolved murder that brings construction to a halt, threatens the future of the show and reopens wounds that never fully healed.

As always, Wendy brings her distinctive blend of insight, humor and sense of place to the world and people she has created in this story of friendship, family, self-discovery and strength in the face of adversity.

SUNSHINE BEACH by Wendy Wax. Berkley (June 21, 2016).  ISBN 978-0425274484.  432p.

About the Author

wendy waxThe Atlanta Journal-Constitution says bestselling author Wendy Wax “writes with breezy wit and keen insight into family relations.” Her contemporary women’s fiction has been compared to that of Jennifer Weiner* and Karen Joy Fowler** and her books, including her Ten Beach Road novels, Ten Beach Road, Ocean Beach, and The House on Mermaid Point, A Week at the Lake, While We Were Watching Downton Abbey and others, have been featured in national media such as USA Today, Ladies’ Home Journal, CNN Online and Woman’s World.

When Ten Beach Road was published in 2011, Wendy had no intention of moving her protagonists beyond the beachfront mansion they renovated in St. Pete Beach, Florida, where the author was born and raised.  However, Wax found her own enthusiasm for her disparate characters matched by that of readers and reviewers, so when a new Ten Beach Road story began to take shape, she couldn’t resist putting aside her work-in-progress to spend more time with her intrepid DIYers.

The author of thirteen novels, Wendy currently splits her time between Atlanta, where she has lived for almost twenty years, and New York City. When not writing, she visits with readers at bookstores and book events, reads, enjoys her and her husband’s newly empty nest and catches up with her sons on the serendipitous occasions when everyone ends up in the same place at the same time.

*St. Petersburg Times **Deseret News

Connect with Wendy:  www.authorwendywax.com   @Wendy_Wax    facebook.com/AuthorWendyWax     

To win your own copy, please send an email to contest@gmail.com with “SUNSHINE BEACH” as the subject.

You must include your snail mail address in your email.

All entries must be received by June 30, 2016. One (1) name will be drawn from all qualified entries and notified via email. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age in the United States only. Your book will be sent by the publicist.

One entry per email address. Subscribers to the monthly newsletter earn an extra entry into every contest. Follow this blog to earn another entry into every contest. Winners may win only one time per year (365 days) for contests with prizes of more than one book. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone.


Honest to Dog by Neil S. Plakcy

June 14, 2016
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Rochester’s on the hunt again!

When his college friend Doug moves to Stewart’s Crossing after an ugly divorce, reformed computer hacker Steve Levitan sees a way to pay forward the help he received under similar circumstances. But when Doug dies under mysterious circumstances, Steve and his crime-solving golden retriever Rochester have a new goal: Find the truth behind Doug’s death, even if Steve has to risk the freedom he has fought so hard for to do it. Contains Ponzi schemers, a Quaker funeral and cute jump drives shaped like llamas.

Honest to Dog is available for ebook preorder on Amazon right now, for $2.99. After the launch date, the price will go up to $3.99 — so now’s the time to buy!

And if you email Neil a screen shot of your order, at plax@bellsouth.net, then he will shoot you back a PDF of not one but two Rochester short stories (originally published in the Happy Homicides anthologies) as well as the dog treat recipes from my holiday ebook.

Rochester loves treats, and don’t we all? Here’s a special bit of “flash fiction” for all his fans– called “Doggy DNA.”

As we walked down the alley behind the Chocolate Ear together, my golden retriever Rochester noticed the brindle boxer in front of the pawn shop at the corner of Ferry Street before I did. He’s always eager to make new friends and thinks every dog on the street will be as gregarious as he is. Sadly, that’s not always the case.

It was a gorgeous spring day, a cloudless blue sky above and the scent of lilac blossoms on the air, and I’d planned to turn down the alley onto Ferry Street and take Rochester to the canal towpath for a long walk, but when I saw that the boxer was alone, without a leash, I tugged on Rochester’s leash to turn around.

Rochester strained forward as the boxer lifted his leg on a stone planter of yellow daffodils in front of the pawn shop. Then the door swung open and a young woman rushed out. She had big round-framed sunglasses and a frizzy mop of bright red hair that immediately attracted my attention, and she wore a shapeless brown tent dress that swirled as she moved.

She took off toward Ferry Street, the boxer right behind her. As she ran, her head appeared to tilt to the right, and I realized as she grabbed at her hair that she was wearing a wig. I watched in fascination as she pulled the wig off. Then she and the dog turned the corner and were gone.
A moment later a portly man in baggy jeans and a fisherman’s shirt came out of the pawn shop door.

He looked up and down the alley. “You see a girl come running out of here?” he asked me, as Rochester and I approached.

“Yeah, with a bright red wig?” I asked. “She and her dog ran down to Ferry Street and turned right.”

“She looked so innocent with that goofy red hair,” he said. “I should never have turned my back on her.”

“She stole something?”

“A diamond ring. Worth about five grand.” He shook his head. “I’ll have to call the cops and then the insurance company.”

He went back inside grumbling. Rochester and I continued down the alley to Ferry Street. I tried to turn him toward the canal, but instead he pulled as if he wanted to cross the street.

“What is it, boy?”

I looked across the street in the direction he wanted to go. A young woman, of about the same shape and size of the pawn shop thief, was hurrying down the block, accompanied by a brindle boxer.
The same woman? This one had mousy brown hair cut short, and wore a bright yellow blouse and dark green shorts. She looked like a walking daffodil.

At first I thought it had to be a different woman and a different dog, but Rochester thought otherwise. The lack of a leash was the kicker for me.

We stayed on our side of the street and followed her up to Main Street. The boxer waited obediently by her side until the light changed. While we waited ourselves, I pulled out my cell phone and called my friend Rick Stemper, one of the police detectives in Stewart’s Crossing, our home town.
I told him about the girl and the dog, and he said, “I’m almost at the pawn shop. Keep an eye on her.”

Rochester and I kept our distance as we followed the girl across Main Street and up a block, where she turned left. She climbed the porch of an old Victorian with fading paint on the green and white gingerbread.

She and the dog went inside, and Rochester and I waited in the shade of a big maple just coming into leaf until Rick arrived a few minutes later, parking his unmarked car on the side street.
“You sure it’s the same girl?” he asked, as he reached down to chuck Rochester under his chin.
“Can’t say. Same body type, and it’s definitely the same dog. Rochester recognized him.”
“Huh. The crime dog strikes again.”

Despite his skepticism, I knew that Rochester and I had converted Rick into a believer in my dog’s detective abilities.

“All the pawn shop guy remembers is the bright red hair,” he said. “He couldn’t identify her.”

“What about the dog?”

“He didn’t say anything about a dog.”

“Rochester and I saw the dog, a brindle boxer, pee on the planter in front of the pawn shop. I’ll bet you could get the dog’s DNA and match it. They do that kind of thing now, you know.”
“Not in Stewart’s Crossing,” he said. “The chief would laugh me right out of his office if I suggested that.”

“But the girl doesn’t have to know that,” I said. “You’re always complaining that people assume too much from DNA evidence, right? That they have no idea how complicated it is?”

“Yeah.”

“So when you talk to her, tell her that you got the dog’s DNA from the planter, and if she wasn’t with him, then someone else was, and you need to take the dog in for evidence.”

He shook his head, and I wasn’t sure he was going to take my idea. He was the cop, after all. My dog and I were just amateurs.

Rochester and I went for a long walk along the canal towpath, enjoying the spring weather, and it wasn’t until dinner time when Rick called. “Never underestimate the dumbness of the common criminal,” he said. “She bought the story about the doggie DNA. She said she’d hand over the diamond ring if I didn’t take her dog away. “

“Lesson learned,” I said. “Next time you’re going to commit a crime, leave the dog at home.”
Rochester woofed in agreement.


THE SPACE BETWEEN SISTERS by Mary McNear Giveaway!

June 13, 2016
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New York Times and USA Today Bestselling author Mary McNear returns to her beloved Butternut Lake in a story where the complicated bonds of sisterhood are tested, long kept secrets are revealed, and love is discovered… all during one unforgettable summer at the lake.

Win and Poppy are two sisters who couldn’t be more different. Win is organized, responsible, and plans her life with care. Poppy is impulsive and undependable, leaving others to pick up the pieces of her life. But despite their differences, they share memories of the idyllic childhood summers they spent together on the shores of Butternut Lake. Now, thirteen years later, Win, recovering from a personal tragedy, has taken refuge on Butternut Lake, settling into a predictable and quiet life.

Then one night, Poppy unexpectedly shows up on her sister’s doorstep with her suitcases, an aging cat named Sasquatch, and a mysterious man in tow. Although Win loves her beautiful sister, she wasn’t expecting her to move in for the summer. At first, they relive the joys of Butternut Lake. But their blissful nostalgia soon gives way to conflict, and painful memories and buried secrets threaten to tear the sisters apart. As the waning days of summer get shorter, past secrets are revealed, new love is found, and the ties between the sisters are tested like never before… all on the serene shores of Butternut Lake.

Scroll down to read an excerpt..mary mcnear

AUTHOR BIO:

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Mary McNear is a writer living in San Francisco with her husband, two teenage children, and a high-strung, miniscule white dog named Macaroon. She writes her novels in a local donut shop where she sips Diet Pepsi, observes the hubbub of neighborhood life and tries to resist the constant temptation of freshly-made donuts. She bases her novels on a lifetime of summers spent in a small town on a lake in the Northern Midwest.

To win your own copy of THE SPACE BETWEEN SISTERS by Mary McNear, please send an email to contest@gmail.com with “THE SPACE BETWEEN SISTERS” as the subject. You must include your U.S. street address in your email.

All entries must be received by June 21, 2016. One (1) name will be drawn from all qualified entries and notified via email. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age in the United States only. Your prize will be sent by HarperCollins Publishers.

One entry per email address. Subscribers to the monthly newsletter earn an extra entry into every contest. Follow this blog to earn another entry into every contest. Winners may win only one time per year (365 days) for contests with prizes of more than one book. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone.

THE SPACE BETWEEN SISTERS by Mary McNear. William Morrow Paperbacks (June 14, 2016). 978-0062399359. 336p.

EXCERPT

From THE SPACE BETWEEN SISTERS by Mary McNear. Copyright © 2016 by Mary McNear. Published on June 14, 2016 by William Morrow Paperbacks, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Excerpted by permission.

“Look, there’s a driveway,” Poppy said. “And there’s a cabin at the end of it, too. You can see its lights through the trees.”

“All right,” Everett said. “But if my car breaks down, I’m not knocking on that door. I’ve seen that movie, too. We spend the night there, and when we wake up in the morning, we discover that our kidneys have been harvested.”

“Ugh,” Poppy said, wincing. “I had no idea you were so dark, Everett.”

“No?” he said, with a trace of a smile. “It’s amazing how much you can learn about someone on a two-hundred-and-forty-mile drive.”

“That’s true,” Poppy mused. “So, what have you learned about me?” she asked. She wasn’t being flirtatious. She was just curious.

“I’ve learned . . .” He looked over at her, speculatively. “I’ve learned that you think corn nuts are revolting.”

“That’s because they are revolting.”

“Corn nuts,” Everett said, concentrating on another turn, “are the ultimate road trip food.”

“Not even close,” Poppy said. “Because that would obviously be Red Vines.”

“Yeah, I don’t think so,” Everett said. “I mean, they have, like, zero nutritional value, unless you count whatever’s in the red dye, and—”

“Oh, my God, look,” Poppy said, excitedly, of the driveway they were passing. Beside it a large sign with a wintery pinecone painted on it spelled out white pines.

“What’s that?” Everett asked.

“It’s a resort, and it means that we are now exactly three miles away from my grandparents’ cabin. I mean, my sister’s cabin,” she amended, feeling that familiar jab of resentment she felt whenever she was reminded of the fact that this beloved piece of family real estate had been passed down to Win, and only Win, three years ago. This resentment was part of the reason that Poppy had avoided coming to Butternut Lake since Win had moved here year-round a couple of years ago. But if there was any comfort to be found in Win being the one to own the cabin, it was in knowing that she would never sell it; it meant as much to her as it did to Poppy.

Poppy and Win had spent all of their childhood summers here until Poppy was sixteen and Win was fifteen (they were thirteen months apart), and Poppy, who was just shy of thirty, could still remember every detail of the cabin. It stood on a small bluff, just above Butternut Lake, and its dark brown clapboard exterior was brightened by cheerful window boxes that overflowed with geraniums. And the homey touches continued inside: colorful rag rugs, knotted pine furniture, red-checked slipcovers on sofas and chairs. The living room, everyone’s favorite room, was as comfortable as an old shoe, with its fieldstone fireplace, and its old record player and collection of albums (some of which dated back to the 1950s). In one corner, there was a slightly wobbly card table for playing gin rummy, and on the shelf next to the table, a collection of hand-painted duck decoys. Mounted on the wall above the mantelpiece was the prized three-foot walleyed pike that had not gotten away from their grandfather. The living room windows looked out on a flagstone patio, their grandmother’s begonia garden, and a slope of mossy lawn leading down to the lake. And the kitchen . . . Poppy remembered it as though it existed in a perpetual summer morning: the lemon yellow cup- boards, the row of shiny copper pans hanging on the wall, and the turquoise gas stove, a monument to 1950s chic.

“Do you think you should give your sister a call now?” Everett asked, interrupting her reverie.

“Why?”

“To tell her that we’re almost there.”

“Oh,” Poppy said, momentarily at a loss. And then she tossed her long blond hair. “No. I’m not going to tell her,” she said. “I thought we’d surprise her.”

Everett stole a quick look at her. “But… she knows we’re coming, right?”

“Not exactly,” Poppy said, feeling a first twinge of nervousness.

Everett was quiet. Then he asked, “Does your sister like surprises?”

“Not really,” Poppy said, and there it was again, that nervous- ness. She tamped it down, firmly, and said, “But what are sisters for if they can’t just . . . drop in on each other?”

“‘Drop in’?” Everett said, after another pause. “It looks like you’ve got a lot of your stuff with you, though, Poppy. Isn’t it more like, ‘move in’?”

Poppy ignored this question. Harder to ignore were her suitcases, wedged in the trunk of Everett’s car, or her boxes, stacked on the backseat beside Sasquatch’s pet carrier. And it wasn’t just a lot of her stuff, as Everett had pointed out. It was all of her stuff. Though, truth be told, that wasn’t saying much. It had taken her less than an hour to pack everything up. Traveling light was a recurring theme with Poppy, and a necessary one, too, since her peripatetic lifestyle was the norm.

“Sisters don’t have to call ahead. They’re there for each other,” Poppy said now, though she was annoyed by the defensiveness she heard in her own voice.

“But do you think your sister—Win—will be home right now? It’s ten o’clock on a Saturday night.”

“Oh, she’ll be home. If I know her, she’s probably . . . alphabetizing her spice rack,” Poppy said, “or color coding her sock drawer.” As soon as she said this, though, she felt disloyal. “Actually, she’s a sweetheart,” she said, turning to Everett. “And I don’t blame her, at all, for being a little . . . neurotic or controlling, or whatever she is. I told you about what happened to her, didn’t I?” And Poppy pictured Win as she’d been the last time she’d seen her, her dark blond hair pulled back in a ponytail and her girl next door approachableness only slightly tempered by the wistful expression on her face.

“Yeah, you told me what happened to her,” Everett said. It was quiet in the car again as he negotiated another sharp turn, and as Poppy watched the car’s lights skim over an entrance to an old logging road. She smiled. She and Win had driven down that road as teenagers, looking for bears at dusk.
“All right,” she said, after a few more minutes, “we’re getting close. After this next curve, it’s the first driveway on the left.” And, suddenly hungry, she added, “Here’s hoping Win’s got some leftovers from dinner.”

“Yeah, and here’s hoping she’s in a good mood,” Everett added wryly.


SLEEPLESS IN MANHATTAN by Sarah Morgan

June 12, 2016
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From Manhattan With Love (Book 1)

Paige was a sickly child with a heart condition, and her brother Matt has been overprotective ever since. She’s had a crush on Matt’s best friend Jake since high school, when he gently rejected her and promised Matt he’d keep away.

Fast forward and Paige is a successful events planner, working in NYC with her two best friends. Eva is a chef and Frankie is a floral designer, but they all lose their jobs in a huge layoff.

The girls are all despondent, until Jake suggests they start their own business. But a start up is a lot of work and in this case, pretty much no reward. Until Jake steps up and has them create a party for him that is a huge hit and gets their business going.

The old feelings Paige had return in full force, and the heat between her and Jake leaps off the page. Jake has his own problems; he’s a wealthy bad boy and a serial dater with childhood issues still plaguing him. The relationship between the friends rang a lot truer for me than the romance, but all in all it was a very enjoyable read.

This is the first book of a series and from what I understand, Eva and Frankie will get their own stories. I am looking forward to both!

6/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

SLEEPLESS IN MANHATTAN by Sarah Morgan. HQN Books (May 31, 2016). ISBN: 978-0373789153. 464p.

Kindle

 


THE LOVE & LEMONS COOKBOOK by Jeanine Donofrio

June 10, 2016
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An Apple-to-Zucchini Celebration of Impromptu Cooking

Photos by Jack Mathews

I am a farm to table kinda girl. I belong to a CSA (community supported agriculture) for most of the year, but it stops at the end of May as the heat makes growing anything here in summer very difficult. I have learned to can tomatoes, pickle beets, and make kale chips by the gazillion.

When I go out to eat, I will often choose a restaurant that offers healthier options and like many people, have fallen for the farm to table restaurant model. I say “fallen” for two reasons; I sort of fell in love with the idea, then found out I’d mostly likely been taken. If you haven’t read Laura Reiley’s article, “At Tampa Bay farm-to-table restaurants, you’re being fed fiction” please do. Or listen to her interview on the America’s Test Kitchen podcast. I don’t live in Tampa, but I can extrapolate that if 90% of the farm to table restaurants in Tampa are lying, I’m pretty sure that statistic will follow over to where I live. And it pisses me off.

So in retaliation, I am taking Michael Pollan’s advice to cook more at home, and this cookbook is a great way to get me inspired. And FYI, this is yet another cookbook born of a blog. I’m going to continue as if I haven’t given you several links that will take you away from here.

Donofrio offers some great advice; “cook backward” is my favorite. In other words, don’t go to the market with a list, go to the market with an open mind and find the freshest, most beautiful, seasonal produce you can, then go home and find ways to prepare it. Start with this book, which is organized by vegetable.

First up is the most basic suggestion for “what to make when you have many vegetables.” When I’m starting to feel a little overwhelmed by the CSA. When I have no more room in the fridge! Then it’s time to add all those veggies to eggs, pasta, tortillas, soup or a salad. Fruits are included, by the way, lest you wondered about the lemons in the title.

Does Apple, Brie & Thyme Crostini work for you? How about Avocado Breakfast Tacos with spinach, eggs and salsa? I loved the Sweet Chili Charred Broccolini, although to be honest I subbed regular broccoli, which worked well. There’s a whole chapter on cucumbers, which I need to use up in the next few days so I’ll be diving into Cold Sesame Cucumber Noodles for sure. Loaded Sweet Potato Nachos is another winner.

The back of the book is very cleverly laid out with pages for smoothies, pesto, hummus, guacamole and more, with several variations on each.

There are tons of beautiful pictures that are enticing enough to get me to try a lot of these recipes.

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The recipes are clearly laid out with ingredients that are easy to find in season, and most importantly, that are really delicious. This is a lovely cookbook, especially for summer.

6/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

THE LOVE & LEMONS COOKBOOK by Jeanine Donofrio. Avery (March 29, 2016). ISBN 978-1583335864. 320p.


HELL’S GATE by Bill Schutt & J.R. Finch

June 9, 2016
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This is an extraordinary adventure taking place in the Brazilian jungle during the Second World War. The almost improbable discovery of a Japanese submarine marooned and abandoned is discovered in the jungle. A team of U.S. Army Rangers are sent to investigate and goes missing.

The military then sends a scientist, R.J. MacReady, a wise-cracking, quick thinking and brilliant individual, to follow up on the situation. MacReady parachutes into the jungle of central Brazil and quite by chance meets up with an old colleague of his, who was thought to be dead years earlier. Bob Thorne lives peacefully in this remote area with his indigenous wife, Yanni, who possesses strange and mysterious powers. The duo prove invaluable to Mac during his mission.

MacReady makes the arduous trip to a fog shrouded valley, where he learns of an Axis plot to develop a system to destroy the United States and its allies. The weapon seems like nothing short of science fiction until an afterward by the authors describe it as within the realm of possibility. There is a subplot involving  a dark force attacking both men and beasts at night.

A story of deadly forces played out against the improbable background of impenetrable jungle is guaranteed to keep the reader glued to the book.  With the authors’ afterward, the book becomes a well executed novel about a possible departure from reality, and is a mesmerizing story.

6/16 Paul Lane

HELL’S GATE by Bill Schutt & J.R. Finch. William Morrow (June 7, 2016).  ISBN 978-0062412522.  384p.


RECIPE FOR DISASTER by Stacey Ballis

June 8, 2016
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When I find an author I like, I go back and read all their books. Such is the case here. After reading Wedding Girl, I had to go find earlier books by this author and this is the first one I found.

Ballis writes foodie chick-lit, which is the best short description I can come up with. Recipe for Disaster also deals with renovating an old house, and since I divide my TV time between the Food Network and HGTV, this book was right in my wheelhouse. Plus I could read it while watching those shows, one of the reasons I like reality TV.

Anneke Stroudt is a contractor for a high end building company. Her co-workers have quite the men’s club going on that includes Barbie doll type receptionists, and Anneke is definitely an outsider, but her work is so good they keep her busy.

But then the shit hits the fan. Anneke catches her fiance cheating, and she tells off a client, with the end result of losing her fiance, her home (which was his) and her job. Or as she puts it, a “country song waiting to happen.”

Luckily she has the old historic wreck she’s been working on in her spare time. Her fiance is part owner but is feeling so guilty he tells her she can pay him back when she sells it. It’s a mess but now it’s home.

First thing she needs is some contract labor but no one will help her. Turns out her old boss has blacklisted her. Eventually she finds an Indian man wearing a turban who is looking for work. No one will hire him because of his looks, but Anneke is happy for the help.

In a slightly other worldly twist, she finds an old journal in the home from the original owner’s cook. Every time she has a decision to make, she opens the book at random and the answer to her question is there. Well, most of the time.

Meanwhile, a co-worker who she despised has offered up some cash and his expertise to help with the house. Desperate, she acquiesces and things really get moving.

Anneke learns to cook, to trust her friends and her instincts, and has her happy ending. This was a fun read and I will be reviewing more Ballis books for sure.

6/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

RECIPE FOR DISASTER by Stacey Ballis. Berkley (March 3, 2015). ISBN: 978-0425265505. 480p.

Kindle

 


INK AND BONE by Lisa Unger

June 7, 2016
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Unger returns to the Hollows, New York, a small town that positively vibrates with supernatural activity. Finley Montgomery is its newest inhabitant, moving in with her grandmother Eloise, a well-known psychic who works with Jones Cooper, the local private investigator.

Several children have gone missing in town, with Abbey the most recent of them. Her parents are distraught and their marriage is on the brink when, in a final attempt at any sort of closure, Abbey’s mother hires Cooper to find her missing daughter.

In this case, Eloise can’t help, but Finley can. Finley has been having visions since she was a small child, driving a massive wedge between her and her mother. But Eloise can help Finley nurture her gift, and that process may lead to finding the missing children.

This engrossing story weaves between these unusual characters and the man who abducted Abbey, building suspense on every page. The tension is palpable, and Unger straddles the fine line between thriller and horror, making this a very exciting and riveting read, sure to appeal to a wide range of readers, including Kay Hooper or Stephen King fans.

HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Unger’s consistent appearances on best-seller lists speaks to her ability to draw in devoted readers across genres, and her latest will do the same.

Copyright ©2016 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

3/16 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch™

INK AND BONE by Lisa Unger. Touchstone (June 7, 2016).  ISBN 978-1501101649. 352p.

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THE CORNERS OF THE GLOBE by Robert Goddard

June 6, 2016
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James Maxted Thriller

Robert Goddard is certainly no novice to the literary world. His style, as evidenced in the many books that he has written, is more formal and detailed than most other authors. He can introduce a multitude of details and then tie them neatly together at the end of the book. The Corners of the Globe is no exception.

The principal character is James Maxted, known popularly as Max, who was introduced by The Ways of the World, the first book of the trilogy. Max saw plenty of action as an aviator during World War I and is now in Paris during the peace conference in 1919. The allies, as victors in the Great War, are attempting to come up with peace conditions for Germany and a division of the lands that were conquered.

Max has succeeded in avenging the death of his father, Sir Henry Maxted, who was in Paris as a diplomat. Max feels that there were more factors involved in his father’s death than came out, and returns to Paris to investigate German spymaster, Fritz Lemmer.  Maxted feels that Lemmer is the key to finding out the details of what Sir Henry was investigating, and enlists with Fritz under the false pretensions of working for him. Max’s loyalty is actually to Britain, as he is a member of their Secret Service.

Lemmer sends Max to the Orkney Islands to find and bring back a document that is on one of the German battleships. It is impounded at Scapa Flow awaiting the Paris peace conference’s decision about disposition of the fleet.  Max obtains the document but what it contains causes him to break his cover and rush back to London. Information shown indicates a plot centered upon Japan and the need to recover someone being held there as prisoner.

The need to travel to Japan and events that will probably transpire there are left for the next book of the trilogy. Goddard keeps the reader involved in the details of this book and anxiously awaiting the conclusion in the  third and final book. The only drawback to this is Goddard’s style of presenting a great many details which must await book three for resolution. But it should keep the reader interested and ready for the conclusion.

6/16 Paul Lane

THE CORNERS OF THE GLOBE by Robert Goddard. Mysterious Press (June 7, 2016).  ISBN 978-0802125224.  400p.