spot_imgspot_imgspot_imgspot_img
Home Blog Page 384

Spinster Kang by Zoe S. Roy Sneak Peek

0

A sneak peek of The Spinster Kang by Zoe S. Roy!

Blurb:

Thirty-two-year-old Kang is a new immigrant in Toronto. Having an older sister who was raped and suffers from the ensuing stigma in China, Kang is determined to remain a spinster, which has its own stigma in China, and she struggles with her fear and distrust of men. But Kang’s story is not a hard luck story. She is an intelligent woman and a successful immigrant. Kang deals with the perplexities of a different culture by maintaining a sense of curiosity, an enjoyment of learning about the new culture, and by finding humour rather than the humiliation that so often characterizes descriptions of immigrant experience. Kang rooms with Tania, a Russian immigrant, and learns that many years earlier, Tanya was in love with a Chinese medical student at Moscow University who was abruptly returned to China for having had a relationship with her. Kang’s own father once studied at that university but has never talked about it since he was forced to leave Moscow and then was labelled as a rightist during the Chinese Anti-Rightist Campaign. Since then her father has been dispatched to work and live in Kunming, a city far away from Beijing. Could the paths of her father and Tania have ever crossed? Curious about her father’s past, Kang decides to pay a visit to Moscow, accompanied by Brian, Tania’s nephew, a charming engineer who wants to explore his Russian Jewish roots. Spending time with Brian helps Kang to see how much her sister’s tragedy has shadowed her life. When Brian suddenly shows symptoms of schizophrenia, Kang must decide whether to throw her spinster’s hat away or end her relationship with Brian.

 

Sneak Peek:

 

Spinster Kang

(Two Vignettes)

 

This vignette is about Kang and her lesbian roommate Nancy:

On a Sunday in early April, Nancy invited Kang out for dinner at a restaurant. As soon as they walked in, a well-dressed waiter led them through a dimly-lit entrance and then downstairs into a pitch-black room.

Kang held Nancy’s hand in the dark. She thought about the restaurant’s peculiar name: O. Noir. It reminded her of the Chinese saying, “You can’t see your own fingers even if you place your hand under your very nose.” Nancy had explained that, without sight, the other senses were intensified, and that food would taste better.

Carefully, Kang groped for her chair and sat down. The combination of darkness with background music made her feel as though she were sitting in a cinema waiting for a movie to start. Someone came and then a woman’s voice explained what was in the dishes that were being placed in front of them. “Here are escargots in cherry tomatoes with garlic butter, marinated shrimps with herbs, and a basket of rolls.” Then the steps retreated. Her hand fumbling with the fork, Kang inhaled the steamy and delicious aroma from the dishes in front of her.

“What’s an escargot?” she asked.

“It’s a French word, meaning snail in English,” Nancy answered.

“Interesting,” Kang said, as her hands found an oval plate that felt warm to the touch and seemed to be heavy-gauge porcelain. Her fork made a little tinkling sound when she touched the plate. She poked at something rubbery, but had trouble picking it up.

“You can use your fingers,” Nancy whispered in a voice just next to Kang’s ear. She seemed to sense what Kang was doing.

“Right. Nobody can see me.” Kang pinched one creamy, slippery snail with her fingers and dropped it in her mouth.

“Yum!” Nancy exclaimed, biting into a tasty shrimp. “I remember the first time I went out with my ex. It was a blind date, and we went to a restaurant. I got so nervous and couldn’t stop babbling. The dim candlelight helped me relax…. Now, how are you feeling eating in the dark?”

“This reminds me of one evening when I was a school girl doing my homework when the electricity suddenly went off.” Kang told Nancy how her brother and his friend used a skeleton to scare her and her sister as well as the other kids in the neighborhood.

When Kang finished her plate and felt around for the buns. Nancy pushed the basket near her hand. “Here’s the bread.”

Surprised, Kang asked, “How did you know what I was looking for?”

“I could sense it,” Nancy said. “The escargots aren’t enough to fill your stomach.”

“Right,” Kang agreed, fingering the small indentations on the plate. “There were only eight snails.” She found the butter and spread it on her roll.

“Are you enjoying eating here with me?” Nancy asked as she bit into a bun.

“Very much. This is my first experience eating snails,” Kang spoke slowly. “And without light, but with a nice—” But before she finish her sentence, she felt two hands gently holding her

face, and then lips pressed softly against hers. The delicate fragrance told her it was Nancy. Kang was so shocked that she slipped off her seat and onto the floor.

God! She sat on the carpet under the table, completely disoriented by the kiss.

The following vignette is about how schizophrenia is suspected in Brian:

One day, Tania invited Kang and Brian to have a lunch with her. Over the lunch of a pasta salad and grilled cheese sandwich, Kang asked Brian, “You didn’t get enough sleep, did you?”

“What gave it away?” Brian asked, his eyes flitting from Kang to his aunt.

“Your bloodshot eyes,” Kang said.

“Don’t worry. I’m okay.” He hesitated. “I have a question for my aunt.”

“Go ahead,” Tania said, and locked her eyes on his.

“Did you ever think about going to China to locate Viktor?”

“What a question!” She sucked in air. “Yes, sometimes I did, but the circumstances were never right.”

“How about now? China is open, and you have the time,” said Brian before biting into a sandwich.

“Well, I’m too old. Why do you ask such questions?” Tania smiled wearily.

“I guess the trip to Moscow sparked my imagination.” He chuckled. “If I could find a time machine…What did I say?” Brian asked, staring into space. “Sometimes my mind feels very hazy.”

“Your mind?” Tania paused. “Can you pick me some flowers from the garden after the meal?”

“Of course! Which ones would you like?” he asked, taking a sip of Pepsi.

“Pick some black-eyed Susans and the purple coneflowers.”

Brian finished his Pepsi, got a pair of scissors, and dutifully went out the side door. Tania watched him from the kitchen window. Kang stood beside her.

They watched Brian make his way along the path between the flower beds. Several startled sparrows rose from the shrubs as he passed, one of them almost hitting his head. He jumped and his arm swept in the air as though he were trying to catch it. He stepped past the black-eyed Susans and then coneflowers. Finally, when he reached the end of path, they saw him jump again, one hand clenching into a fist, the other holding the scissors.

“My gosh! What’s wrong with him?” Kang cried out.

“He needs to see a doctor,” she said. “Something is wrong.”

After they finished cleaning the kitchen, Brian had slipped into the room quietly. “Aren’t they beautiful?” he said, holding a vase filled with flowers of different colours. “What do you call this white one?” he asked.

Eye wide open, Tania looked the flowers. “That’s a dahlia! In fact, they’re all dahlias!” She tried to speak without panicking. “My dear, didn’t you find the black-eyed Susans or the purple coneflowers?”

“You said yellow and purple. Plus I got some white ones.” Brian sounded innocent. “Don’t you like them?”

“They’re very nice. Thank you.” Tania asked, “Where are my scissors?”

“I washed them and put them back in the drawer.”

“Have you had a checkup lately?” Tania asked.

“No. Do you think I should see the doctor because I’m flower illiterate?” Brian laughed.

(The vignettes are in a video, readers can listen to them on  YouTube.)

Spinster Kang

Synopsis

Thirty–two-year-old Kang, nicknamed “Spinster” in China, is a new immigrant in Toronto. The misery of her sister, Jian, as a victim of rape, abandoned by her first boyfriend and then mistreated by her husband, has a strong impact on Kang’s life. She distrusts men.

Before coming to Canada, Kang has earned a B. Ed and worked as a teacher. However, she has to acquire an Ontario teaching certificate to locate a teaching job in Toronto. In order to put money aside for tuition fees, she works two jobs including a full-time counter helper in a Tim Hortons. Kang has moved a few times before she finally rooms with Tania, a retired professor. Besides doing domestic work, Kang proofreads Tania’s autobiography while she studies to earn her teaching certificate.

During the blackout in the summer of 2003, Kang has a chance encounter with Brian, Tania’s nephew, a charming engineer. Assuming he is gay, Kang meets with him without aversion and becomes curious about him. Kang is eager to improve her oral English, and Brian wants to know about Chinese culture.

From Tania’s autobiography, Kang learns about Tania who, born to a Russian Jewish family, immigrated to Canada with her family more than four decades ago. Her love experience with a Chinese medical student in Lomonosov Moscow State University.

during her youth especially intrigues Kang, who starts to inquire about her own father. He once studied at that university but has never talked about it since he was forced to leave Moscow and then was labelled as a rightist during the Chinese Anti-Rightist Campaign. Since then her father has been dispatched to work and live in Kunming, a city faraway from Beijing. Could the paths of her father and Tania have ever crossed?

Using the theories from the course of Psychological Development, Kang begins her own self-analysis. Chatting with Brian also gives her a chance to view how much her sister’s tragedy has shadowed her life. Talking about her sister’s marriage makes her see through the mental twists in her own past. Besides, Brian’s imagination and loss-of-reality amaze her.

Kang falls in love with Brian, whose stories reveal that he is straight. Inspired by Tania’s memoir and suspecting her father’s past, Kang decides to pay a visit to Moscow in May after she finishes all her courses. Meanwhile Brian is curious about that city where his mother spent her teen years before moving to Canada. In addition, he desires to search for his Jewish Russian roots.

Kang and Brian travel to Moscow together, which has brought the two closer. Afterwards they plan to have an engagement party and Kang’s parents are scheduled to visit Toronto for Kang’s graduation ceremony and betrothal. However, Brian has shown symptoms of schizophrenia. Should Kang throw her spinster’s hat away or cancel the engagement to Brian? Should she reveal to Tania that her father was her first love so long ago? She seeks solutions and is happily surprised.

Author Bio:

Born in China, Zoë S. Roy, an avid reader even during the Cultural Revolution, writes literary fiction with a focus on women’s cross-cultural experiences. Her publications include Butterfly Tears (2009), a collection of short fiction, and three novels, The Long March Home (2011) and Calls Across the Pacific (2015), and Spinster Kang (2019), published by Inanna Publications. She holds an M.A. in Atlantic Canada Studies from Saint Mary’s University and a M.Ed. in Adult Education from the University of New Brunswick. She is a former teacher and a member of The Writers’ Union of Canada.

 

Website and URLs for any social media

Reviews of Spinster Kang:

Kirkus Reviews

Midwest Book Review

Reader Views
Interview with Zoë S. Roy, author of Spinster Kang

‘Spinster Kang’: Interview with Author Zoe Roy

 

A link to where to buy the book

Inanna Publications

Amazon.com

BARNES &NOBLE

Apple Books

 

Podcasting Made Simple by Daniel Larson

Podcasting Made Simple: The Step by Step Guide on How to Start a Successful Podcast from the Ground up by Daniel Larson is an excellent and comprehensive guide for anyone who is considering podcasting. Even as an experienced podcaster, I found so much value in this book!

5 – Stars

My review:

This starts from the beginning, including a look at why, what and how. It causes you to really delve into your podcasting idea or developing an idea. Know why you want to do it first. These sound like simple things, but if you just launch into it without any direction it’s a gamble and not a strategy.  It talks about conversational podcasts and educational podcasts. From talking about equipment and editing to guests and audiences, this book has everything a new podcaster, or even a seasoned one, needs to have a successful podcast.

 

About the book-

If you’re looking for a step by step walkthrough on how to start a podcast right from the ground with no previous experience, then keep reading…

‘The medium of podcasting and the personal nature of it, the relationship you build with your listeners and the relationship they have with you – they could be just sitting there, chuckling and listening… there’s nothing like that’ – Marc Maron

Podcasting is the expressional medium with therapeutic value we’ve been missing in our lives for decades. Luckily, popularity has been growing exponentially over the last few years – did you know the number of Americans who are weekly podcast listeners over the last 7 years has tripled? Let alone a 24% increase in the UK from 2018-2019.

Although there’s never been a better time to get into podcasting, with all the contradicting and often false information scattered all over the internet, it’s no wonder why so many people often struggle to find a starting point when there’s so many conflicting views on what the best quality equipment is, what launch strategy should be used, and even editing. In fact, it can even create the illusion that starting a podcast is a daunting and time-consuming process.

You might be reluctant to commit to something you lack both knowledge and experience in or you’re worried that when you do make that leap there’ll be no one on the other side listening? Maybe you’re skeptical of whether you’ll be able to get guests on as a newbie with no name to yourself.

In Podcasting Made Simple you will discover:

  • The X factor that leaves listeners craving their next fix of your content
  • The secret to creating an immersive parasocial relationship with your audience
  • Why trying to monetize incorrectly can actually ruin your chances of turning your hobby to an income
  • Why many podcasters’ advertisement and promotion actually repels potential listeners
  • How to create a loveable personal brand through emotional familiarity
  • The simple, straight forward guide to recording and editing (equipment recommendations included).
  • 5 simple tricks to make postproduction a breeze
  • How to choose and execute the launch strategy that’s right for you
  • Why over half of podcasts are given up on by 6 months down the line
  • How to format the perfect email that will get sponsors running your way, even if you have a low listenership
  • Unique ways to start attracting guests, and become an authoritative figure
  • The pre-guest ritual that guarantees a free-flowing interview
  • The single most important voice technique that you can use to differentiate your show from competitors

This digestible guide is made for people who have no experience, so yes, this will work for you even if you’ve never spoken into a microphone. Even if you’re not a technology guru, and have no presence on social media. Even if you have an extremely busy schedule and a low budget. Even if you think your content ideas are absolutely absurd and no one will listen. Even if there are thousands of podcasts similar to yours already published, and you have no marketing experience.

 

PODCAST: Talking Fiction Obsessions with Author Mark Leslie on Book Lights

0

Talking Fiction Obsessions with Author Mark Leslie on Book Lights

LISTEN HERE!!!

Mark Leslie would be the first person to admit he’s still afraid of the monster under his bed.

Proudly adopting the term “Book Nerd” for himself, Mark is a writer, editor and bookseller and is most comfortable with a pen in hand, fingers on keyboard or with his nose stuck in a book.

Mark’s dark fiction is often compared to “Twilight Zone” or “Black Mirror” in terms of style, exploring “what if” themes with contemporary settings that include speculative elements, gently skipping around the genres of sci-fi, horror and urban fantasy.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day – Remember and Celebrate

0

A man of substance and integrity. We celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. today, but we feel the vibrations of his influence through history into today.

Celebrate by learning more about this amazing leader and how he helped change our lives!

The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. by Clayborne Carson.

 

 

 

 

 

or Martin Luther King Jr.: Dare to Dream by Anna Revell.

 

17 Cents and a Dream Dan Milstein USSR Memoir – Memoir Monday

0

Daniel Milstein‘s 17 Cents & a Dream is a harrowing story about how his mother, father and brother escaped the oppressive government of the U.S.S.R and immigrated to Ann Arbor, Michigan has been described as the quintessential Jewish immigrant story of the era. Born in Kiev, Ukraine, Dan and his family experienced undue hardship, religious persecution and life-and-death situations all in the shadows of the greatest nuclear accident that ever occurred; the Chernobyl nuclear meltdown which killed more than 100,000 people including his grandfather. Non-fiction / BiographyRead Dan Milstein’s new book detailing his story: 17 Cents and a Dream: My Incredible Journey from the U.S.S.R. to Living the American Dream. Mark Victor Hansen, Bestselling Author of ‘Chicken Soup for the Soul’ who wrote the foreword says this: “Through pure determination, fortitude and attitude, Daniel pulled out of impossibly difficult situations. His story is true, his story is a personal inspiration to me and I hope it will inspire you too to maximize your potential and go for the greatest of dreams.”Available on Amazon

 

Barnes & Noble Selects Julia Claiborne Johnson’s “Better Luck Next Time” as January 2021 National Book Club Selection

0

Readers Invited to a Free Virtual Book Club Event Featuring Julia Claiborne Johnson in Conversation with Author Julie Schumacher on Tuesday, February 2

Barnes & Noble, Inc., announced Better Luck Next Time by Julia Claiborne Johnson as the January 2021 selection for the Barnes & Noble Book Club, a monthly book club designed for readers across the country to discuss the most compelling books. Barnes & Noble is selling a special, exclusive Book Club edition of Better Luck Next Time as well as hosting a free LIVE virtual event on B&N’s Facebook Page with Julia Claiborne Johnson in conversation with Julie Schumacherauthor of Dear Committee Members and The Shakespeare Requirement, about the book on Tuesday, February 2, at 7pm East Coast Time. Customers can purchase the exclusive edition, featuring a discussion guide for book clubs, in-stores or online at BN.com.

“I am so excited to kick off a new year of the Barnes & Noble Book Club with the riveting and thoughtful Better Luck Next Time,” said Jackie De Leo, Vice President, Bookstore, Barnes & Noble. “This funny and charming story of friendship and love, set in late 1930s Reno on a Divorce Ranch, is a look at the ways friendship can save us, love can destroy us, and the family we create can be stronger than the family we come from. Julia Claiborne Johnson’s sophomore outing is a triumph and we are sure our Book Clubs readers will enjoy it as much as we did.”

Barnes & Noble invites customers to join the B&N Book Club Facebook Group to share their views of the book as well as attend the virtual Book Club event one month after publication to hear from Julia Claiborne Johnson.

“When I moved to New York City in the 1980s with dreams of becoming a writer someday, I haunted the old Barnes & Noble flagship store down on Fifth Avenue and 18th Street,” said Julia Claiborne Johnson. “There are not enough words in my vocabulary—yet—to thank you for choosing my novel Better Luck Next Time as the B&N Book Club pick for January.”

The virtual event on February 2 will be hosted on Barnes & Noble’s Facebook Page and will include a conversation between Julia Claiborne Johnson and author Julie Schumacher. Before the virtual event, customers can also join in discussion at their convenience on the new B&N Book Club Facebook group and on social media via the hashtag #BNBookClub.

Schizo: Hidden in Plain Sight by Dr. Ilene B Benator

0

In the same vein as Robin Cook and Michael Palmer, Dr. Ilene B. Benator crafts a terrifying medical thriller that is sure to excite with her novel Schizo: Hidden in Plain Sight.

An ambitious future surgeon on his psychiatry rotation is assigned a patient who reveals to him information about an organized plot to control the population. His pursuit of the truth leads him to become a psychiatric patient in the same facility.

Dan Greenberg was a promising medical student who was derailed by Catherine–a bizarre schizophrenic patient whose delusions about patients in danger at hospitals all around Chicago were startlingly specific.

Drawn by both curiosity and compassion, Dan investigates, discovering that they were exactly where Catherine said they would be. Who are these people? Why are they in danger? Are they connected with each other?

While incarcerated, he joins forces with an unlikely ally Jake–who murdered his family during a drug-induced psychotic break, but is also a charming hacker with street smarts who creates a plan to get Dan’s life back. In his attempts to do so, he threatens to uncover a conspiracy to track and manipulate the population by a cabal of influential people who will do anything to keep their plot secret. He will learn just how far powerful people will go to stay in control, and the high price of the truth.

Schizo takes readers on a wildly unexpected journey into the what-ifs of medical science. Written by an Emergency Physician, Ilene B. Benator crafts situations that are terrifying, yet all too believable.

 

Actor/Comedian Kevin Hart to Publish Middle-Grade Series with RHCB

0

Comedian, actor, producer, and entrepreneur Kevin Hart will release his debut children’s book, MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE, to be published by Crown Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, it was announced by Phoebe Yeh, VP & Publisher. The humorous novel for middle-grade readers, co-written with New York Times bestselling author Geoff Rodkey and featuring art from David Cooper, pulls from Kevin’s experiences as a go-getter and father of four to celebrate do-it-yourself creativity and rising against the odds to bring your dreams to life. The first in a series, MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE will release with a first print run of 150,000 on June 1, 2021.

Kevin Hart’s debut follows a boy named Marcus who dreams of making a blockbuster superhero film. When he’s assigned to create a movie for an after-school class, he teams up with his creative-nemesis-turned-partner Sierra to bring the superhero comic he’s written to life. Will they be able to pull off special effects with zero dollars? With the perfect amount of drive, vision, and luck, these kids from the block might just prove there’s a way to make their dreams come true. With nonstop laughs from Hart and Rodkey and more than 50 black-and-white illustrations from Cooper, MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE will have readers eager for the sequel before they’ve even reached the last page.

As a child growing up in North Philadelphia, Hart did not have access to many books that he could see himself in. Now a father, he is eager for his children to have a different experience. With MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE, Hart seeks to do his part to bring more diversity to children’s books while also sharing a message important to him: that every child has the ability to dream big and achieve their goals if they are willing to persist and put in the work, just as he did.

“When I was younger, all I heard was no,” says Hart. “No, you can’t. No, you’re not good enough. No, you don’t have the right education or know the right people. I’m stubborn, so I turned those no’s into fuel. Every time I heard one, it just made me work harder to prove that whoever said it was wrong. My hope is that MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE will show kids that the only one who can really say no to their goals is themselves. If they can dream it, then they can do it.”

“We’re very excited to be working with Kevin Hart on this fun new series,” says Yeh. “MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE is not only hilarious, but it’s also very relatable and empowering in the way it shows kids using what they have to make their creative dreams a reality.”

MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE will also be available as an audiobook narrated by Hart from Listening Library, an imprint of Penguin Random House Audio, releasing simultaneously on June 1, 2021.

Yeh acquired world rights to MARCUS MAKES A MOVIE and an untitled sequel from Marc Gerald of Europa Content.

Emmy-nominated producer Kevin Hart was born and raised in Philadelphia, where he launched his career as a comedian during an amateur night at a local comedy club. Over the years Hart has become a Hollywood powerhouse, opening ten films at number one at the box office. Hart has popularized characters in the beloved Jumanji franchise and The Secret Life of Pets 2, his newest stand-up special became Netflix’s biggest stand-up special of 2020, and his memoir, I Can’t Make This Up, debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list, remaining on the Top 10 Print Hardcover Bestsellers List for ten weeks straight. In addition to selling out theaters and arenas for his comedy tours, Hart is the founder of the Laugh Out Loud Network, which serves as a platform for emerging comedians and is home to two premium series both featuring Hart. Hart also launched Laugh Out Loud Radio channel 96 on SiriusXM, with Hart hosting alongside longtime friends and fellow comedians the Plastic Cup Boyz. In April 2019, their featured talk show Straight from the Hart became available on Pandora and now ranks as the number one podcast across all genres.

Anchor Launches a Line of Hardcover Books

0

Anchor Books will begin publishing hardcovers, announced Suzanne Herz, Publisher of Vintage Books and Anchor Books and EVP of Doubleday. The new venture will complement the existing award-winning Vintage/Anchor paperback program and will launch with six to eight titles in spring 2022. The hardcover list will focus primarily on psychological suspense, mystery, and commercial fiction, as well as popular nonfiction. Edward Kastenmeier, previously VP and Executive Editor, Vintage/Anchor, will lead the program in his new role as Editorial Director.

“In addition to this exciting new initiative, our primary role at Vintage/Anchor remains unchanged, serving as the paperback publisher for the Knopf Doubleday Group,” says Herz. “Our stand-alone paperback program delivers editorial, publicity, marketing, and operational excellence. And equally important in the current marketplace, we have heightened our focus on backlist and delivering new audiences, which affords our books the enduring shelf life they deserve.”

Founded in 1953, Anchor Books is the oldest trade paperback publisher in America. Its list boasts award-winning fiction, history, science, women’s studies, and sociology, and its authors published in paperback include Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Karen Armstrong, Margaret Atwood, Dan Brown, David Grann, Jon Krakauer, Alexander McCall Smith, Ian McEwan, Chuck Palahniuk, Anne Rice, and Colson Whitehead.

In 1999 Anchor Books merged with Vintage Books, which was founded in 1954 by Alfred A. Knopf.

Kastenmeier, a thirty-year veteran of Vintage/Anchor, has edited and published books by Alexander McCall Smith, James Ellroy, Jo Nesbø, Robert Harris, and Lars Kepler, among others, and he has long overseen the Vintage Crime / Black Lizard publishing program. “This new hardcover line will bring popular fiction and nonfiction to a wide audience, applying the visionary publishing we’re already known for to a hardcover market,” says Kastenmeier. “I’m excited to expand into this new space.” Editors Anna Kaufman and Caitlin Landuyt will work closely with Kastenmeier on curating the Anchor hardcover list.

The first list of titles includes three debut novels: Brendan Slocumb’s The Violin Conspiracy, a high-stakes tale that follows a classical musician on an increasingly desperate search for a missing Stradivarius; Amy McCulloch’s Breathless, a wildly suspenseful thriller set against the back drop of commercial mountain climbing; and Taylor Hahn’s The Lifestyle, a sexy romantic comedy about a Manhattanite who will resort to anything to save her marriage.

Weekend Word Search: Horror Classics

0

Books, movies, themes and characters…find them all online or print!

HORROR WORD SEARCH