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SNEAK PEEK: DESTINATION NORTH POLE: 5,000 km by Bicycle

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Author Gary W. Wietgrefe tells his story:  A journey fueled by the love of nature

Destination North Pole is endearing, humorous, dangerous and sometimes quirky travelogue.

An old guy on an old bicycle supported by a sag-wagon (his loving wife) ventures north. She traveled ahead to find nightly food and lodging as he peddled an average of 121 kilometers (75 miles) per-day for forty days searching for iconic North Pole.

Nature awakened history and imagination of the senior pensioners. A love emerged from the flat Dakota Plains, Canada’s Prairie Provinces, British Columbia into the vast Yukon and Alaska through eight mountain ranges with pristine streams and hot springs over massive glaciated rivers and permafrost.

Wildlife? Dangers? Risks? Constantly!

Hundreds of black bears and grizzlies blocked deer, elk, moose, wood bison, wolves, bicyclists, and other critters from lush road-sides. Elements (rain, wind, flurries and chilly mornings) heighten the desire for sun, wildflowers, rippling streams, glaciated mountains, hot baths and soft beds. A couple’s love and a path through nature opened opportunities for others on this 5,000 kilometers (3,000 mile) adventure—Destination North Pole!

Age is not the limiting factor, It is personal willingness to take on, and accomplish something that you have been delaying for too long. Now it is your turn,” Gary Wietgrefe, Author of Destination North Pole: 5,000 km by bicycle.

View YouTube https://youtu.be/VX72RwOzfXk for a quick summary of Destination North Pole. Recent books in Wietgrefe’s Relating to Ancients series are Learning as it influences the 21st century and Culture and the mysterious agent changing. For more background see  https://www.relatingtoancients.com/.

About The Authors:
Gary Wietgrefe (pronounced wit’grif) is an inventor with six patents, internationally published researcher, military intelligence veteran, economist, agriculturalist, systems developer, societal explorer, cyclist, hiker, outdoorsman, and author. He and his wife Patricia live and travel from South Dakota. More information can be found about Gary at: https://www.relatingtoancients.com/news

To request additional review copies or an interview with Gary Wietgrefe, please contact Mickey Mikkelson at Creative Edge Publicity: mickey.creativeedge@gmail.com / 403.464.6925.    

 

Sneak Peek: MANUFACTURING CIVILITY by CHRISTIAN MASOTTI AND DR. LEWENA BAYER

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MANUFACTURING CIVILITY
An expert analysis of Civility as a Continuous Improvement Strategy by continuous improvement expert Christian Masotti and international best-selling author Dr. Lewena Bayer.

Incivility at work is real. And it is real in manufacturing. According to a Gallup State of the American Workplace report, 75 percent of manufacturing workers are disengaged at work. In fact, the manufacturing industry, according to the Gallup report, is the least engaged industry across sectors. A closer look at the research reveals that a primary cause for this disengagement is poor leadership. Specifically, supervisors and managers with low social acuity are co-creating uncivil workplace cultures. Manufacturing Civility provides a 6Cs formula for solving people problems. These strategies result in continuous improvements that shift workplace culture away from traditional toxic and uncivil organizations towards healthier, more positive workplace experiences for employees in manufacturing environments.

The “people-treatment” aspects of the proprietary Manufacturing Civility methodologies have been co-created by 20-year, internationally recognized experts in the field of civility training-Lewena Bayer, CEO of Civility Experts Inc., and a veteran of the manufacturing industry, Christian Masotti. The tried-and-true methodologies shared in the book have been proven to impact individual morale, wellness, and outlook in organizations across sectors, including manufacturing.Civility-when specifically applied to how people are treated at work, is a continuous improvement strategy that has been proven to have measurable impacts on:• Retention and engagement• Performance• Workplace wellness and safety• Innovation, creativity, and problem-solving• Bottom-line business metrics, including profitability.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Dr. Lewena Bayer
Lew believes that “Civility is its own reward”. She suggests that “In choosing civility, people find their best self, and in doing so, they experience the grace, courage, generosity, humanity, and humility that civility engenders.”

For more than 20 years Dr. Lewena Bayer has been internationally recognized as the leading expert on civility at work.  With a focus on social intelligence and culturally-competent communication, the team at Civility Experts – which includes 500+ affiliates in 48 countries has supported 100’s of organizations in building better workplaces. In addition to her role as CEO of international civility training group Civility Experts Inc. www.CivilityExperts.com which includes The Civility Speakers Bureau, and Propriety Publishing. Lew is Chair of the International Civility Trainers’ Consortium, President of The Center for Organizational Cultural Competence www.culturalcompetence.ca, and Founder of the In Good Company Etiquette Academy Franchise Group www.ingoodcompanyetiquette.com.

Including 2-time, international bestseller, The 30% Solution, and the pending December release of Golden Rule Peace and Civility Lew is a 16-time published author. Lew is also a proud mentor for The Etiquette House, a member of the Advisory Board for A Civil Tongue, was a national magazine columnist for 10 years, and has contributed expert commentary to many online, print, and television publications.

CHRISTIAN MASOTTI

With over 25 years in the workforce, Christian understands that being civil and exhibiting “human-kindness” is a critical leadership competency that not only builds trust and credibility, but also impacts bottom line metrics including safety, quality, delivery, engagement, and efficiency.

A graduate of McGill University with years of field experience in OEM manufacturing environments including GM, Ford and Chrysler, Christian has seen how when leaders have the courage to make decisions, give feedback, measure success based on quantitative observations, and to continually try to do all this in a civil way, they can create and/or change workplace culture.

Christian is a continuous learner who believes that the ability to combine his technical skills including Lean, Six Sigma and Kaizen with social intelligence and cultural competence have been the key to his success. In addition to consulting, keynote presentations, and delivery and design of training with Civility Experts Inc and its 501 affiliates in 48 countries, Christian’s current projects include work with Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, and Arcelor Mittal.

  

 

Are There Boundaries Between Horror, Dark Fantasy and Science Fiction? An Interview with Loren Rhoads

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We caught up with horror author Loren Rhoads to talk about her book Unsafe Words and how many monsters we can find in the dark!

RE: Tell us the synopsis of your book.

Here’s the text from the back cover:

In Unsafe Words, the first full-length collection of her edgy, award-winning short stories, Loren Rhoads punctures the boundaries between horror, dark fantasy, and science fiction in a maelstrom of sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll. Ghosts, succubi, naiads, vampires, the Wild Hunt, and the worst predator in the woods stalk these pages, alongside human monsters who follow their cravings past sanity or sense.

Featuring an introduction by six-time Bram Stoker Award-winner Lisa Morton and cover art by Lynne Hansen, these fifteen never-before-collected stories come from the magazines Cemetery Dance and Space & Time, from the books Sins of the Sirens, Demon Lovers, The Haunted Mansion Project: Year Two, Tales for the Camp Fire, and more. One story, “With You By My Side It Should Be Fine,” is original to this collection.

RE: What do you feel is the most unique aspect of your book?

Loren Rhoads:  The first story in Unsafe Words, “Here There Be Monsters,” was inspired by a haunted historical mansion in Northern California. I went up there on retreat with a group of horror writers. Some ghost hunters came along with all their equipment. By night, people prowled all over the house with EMF meters and EVP recorders. We wrote by day. Someone asked the caretaker if he was afraid of the ghosts. “The really frightening things live in the woods,” he said. I was so struck by his remark that I wrote this story.

RE: Tell us about your main character(s).

LR: There are all kinds of people in these stories, but two of the stories have characters drawn from my other works. Alondra DeCourval is a witch who travels the world, protecting people from magical monsters and vice versa. I’ve written a whole series of stories about her, but the story in this collection, “Valentine,” is a departure for her. In it, she has tracked a seemingly immortal man to Oslo. I researched that story by spending a couple of days in a university gross anatomy lab.

One of the other stories, “Never Bargained for You,” was inspired by a throw-away line in my novel Angelus Rose. My succubus Lorelei was reminiscing about the days when she worked in the music industry in Los Angeles in the 1970s.  An editor came to me for a story about a succubus and I thought, “Wouldn’t it be fun to explore Lorelei’s past?” I was reading about Led Zeppelin at the time. The short story came together very quickly.

RE: What genre(s) is this and who do you think will enjoy reading it? 

LR: These stories range all over the map, from horror to science fiction to dark fantasy to literary, always with a dark sensibility. I imagine the readers are a lot like me: they read everything they can get their hands on. At heart, what they want most is to meet imaginary people who come alive as they read. This kind of reader likes to get a chill while they’re reading, especially at this time of year.

RE: Have you received any feedback on it yet, and if so, what was it?

LR: People have said some truly nice things about this book.

“With Unsafe Words, Loren Rhoads has created a lyrical kaleidoscope of a collection, whose shifting genres reveal ever-evolving visions of shining beauty and immense darkness. I loved it.” — Brian Hodge, author of The Immaculate Void and Skidding into Oblivion

“Loren Rhoads is an uncommon writer in any genre. She sharpens tropes to an unrecognizable edge and uses them to wound you. She raises you from the dead with her unflinching hope and her vital prose. She’s the writer you want to hold your hand on the long, strange walk into hell.” — Meg Elison, author of the Road to Nowhere series

“Unsafe Words is filled with dark, lyrical tales that lift you up before they drag you under into quiet moments of fear and horror. Rhoads has a gift. She takes you deep and, when you come out on the other side, you’re just glad you’re still alive.” — J. Scott Coatsworth, Captain Awesome of Queer Sci Fi

RE: Tell us something about yourself that most of your readers may not know.

LR: I fell in love with vampires when I was very small. My parents lived in their first house until I was four and a half, which is how I can date this memory:  One day, I was at the next-door neighbor’s house to play with her daughter. We ran through the living room, where the mother was watching TV. I remember this piece of spooky music. The TV showed a room filled with flickering candlelight and a long polished box. The box’s lid raised slowly and a man’s hand reached out from inside.  I had no idea what I was watching at the time. Later, I discovered it was Dark Shadows.  Barnabas Collins was my first vampire!

RE: What’s next for you?

I’m working on a novel called The Death of Memory, which features my character Alondra DeCourval. It’s kind of her origin story. She meets a vampire in San Francisco and starts her love affair with the city. I’m really excited about finally telling a book-length story about her.

RE: Where can people interact with you and find out more about you and your books?

My home on the web is at lorenrhoads.com. All my books can be found on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3jAugyX is my author page. If you’d like to get to know me better, I have a monthly newsletter that always includes a morbid travel adventure, often to cemeteries. Here’s the link to sign up for that: https://mailchi.mp/aa9545b2ccf4/lorenrhoads.

 

Loren Rhoads is the author of 199 Cemeteries to See Before You Die and Wish You Were Here: Adventures in Cemetery Travel. Her newest book is Unsafe Words, a collection of short stories.

Social media:

Website:  https://lorenrhoads.com/

Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/aa9545b2ccf4/lorenrhoads

Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/LorenRhoadsAuthor/

Amazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/Loren-Rhoads/e/B002P905PE/

Unsafe Words on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2FjmmuA

199 Cemeteries on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3jGHtq2

Wish You Were Here on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3d68fWk

Strange Beasts Prowl the Streets in this Sneak Peek from The Cryptids by Elana Gomel

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Here’s a little two-chapter sneak peek from Elana Gomel’s The Cryptids.

The Cryptids: synopsis

 

An invasion like no other is threatening the Silicon Valley. A cutting-edge quantum communication technology has unleashed a flood of cryptid sightings. From headless Mothmen to dog-faced cats, strange beasts are prowling the streets and emerging from the woods, spreading a deadly epidemic of mind-blindness. Children mutate into protean monsters; people are carried away by thunderbirds; and those who survive fail to recognize themselves in the mirror.
Cryptozoologist Sharon Manley, a stranger in a strange land, thinks she knows what is going on. But who is going to believe her if her information comes to her in dreams? Torn between two countries and two men, she finally embarks on a one-way odyssey into the heart of the cryptid Earth to uncover its shocking secrets. Her quest takes her to the forest of flayed bears, to the beach colonized by Mothmen, and finally to the golden city of Hell. There she has to confront the enigmatic cryptid masters and to make the choice that will determine the fate of more worlds than one.

 

The Cryptids: Chapters 1-2

The Cryptids

Elana Gomel

 

Pescadero Beach

 

In the dawn light the beach looked like an alien terrain: whorls and spirals of corrugated sand pierced by bones of driftwood. The gunmetal surface of tidal pools was wrinkled by the brisk wind.

Maureen scrambled down the eroded slope. He followed slowly, hanging back, seeing her diminishing figure as if through an inverted telescope.

“Look!” she exclaimed, pointing.

An off-shore rock came alive. A flock of gulls, cormorants, sandpipers, and pelicans rose into the pale air, obscuring the pewter-colored sun. Shadows of their wings dappled the wet sand.

He pulled out his phone and it dropped from his shaking fingers into the slimy weeds at his feet. He had a moment of pure terror. After all these months of trial-and-error to be thwarted by a slippery phone-case! He groped in the weeds and breathed out his accumulated tension when his fingers closed around the plastic rectangle.

A wave of sharp acrid stench rolled over them, overpowering the briny smell of the ocean.

 

Part One. The Golden State

 

Chapter 1

She was staying in a wooden chalet incongruously perched above the lion-colored stubbly hills. There were other travelers in the chalet, all strangers, except for a girl who looked like Julie. There was also a child who hid in dark corners. 

A man in a bespoke suit came in, carrying a folder. His face was a blank expanse of sallow skin without a single feature. Swimming under its surface like a darting shadow was another face: thin and feathery, with a predatory beak and side-facing round eyes.

The man gave each traveler a voucher with a date on it.

“This is a free voucher for your flight back home,” the man said. “The date is the date of your death”.

 

Sharon Manley woke up, her heart hammering. She pulled the Petersens’ thick quilt over her head, curling up into the warmth. Mark’s absence lay like an icy hollow under her breastbone.

She had recognized the eyes and the beak. Argentavis magnificens, the giant teratorn, an extinct Miocene predatory bird with the wingspan of 26 feet.

She flashed back to the last night’s conversation at the dinner table. Carl and Rhoda were finishing their wine. Carl had his iPad out and was swiping it in search of postprandial news while Rhoda was watching Sharon with a fretful expression on her lined face.

“How did it go today?” Rhoda asked.

“Just look at this nonsense!” Carl exclaimed.

Sharon pretended she did not hear Rhoda’s question. She still cringed, remembering the glassy look in the chairman’s eyes as he had pushed her resume across the table. They did not need adjunct professors for the next academic year, the biology department was downsizing, budget cuts, and Ms. Manley was of course aware…

Dr. Manley, actually, but at this point his voice had faded into a drone and all she wanted was to be out of that stuffy little office in that third-rate community college. She got up rudely and walked out. Outside the familiar smell of academic life hit her like cigarette smoke tickling the nostrils of a recent quitter: a heady aroma composed of disinfectant, students’ sweaty bodies, and stink of caged lab animals. She caught the hem of her new skirt in the door and tugged. The skirt slid out with a ripping sound and she spat out “Kurwa!” She had no idea what it meant. It was Mark’s word.

A male student turned around and stared at her tight black top. She could see his mind shifting through his stock of clichés, trying to place her: too old for a student, too tarted-up for a professor, too exotic for a faculty wife…She glowered at him and the student hurried away.

She turned to Carl with a forced smile.

“What is it, Carl?”

He swiveled his iPad around, showing her the front page of the online edition of the San Jose Mercury News. All she could see was an editorial on the latest proposition to increase property taxes.

“I agree they are already high but…”

“Not that!” Carl barked and stabbed at a smaller headline.

Sighting of a giant eagle on Pescadero beach.

She rolled her eyes. A Californian eagle was a big bird but giant?

“Four times as big as a Californian eagle,” Carl read out as if responding to her thought. “Who comes up with this stuff?”

Sharon’s lethargy dissipated:

“A thunderbird sighting?”

“A thunderbird?” Carl Petersen repeated, frowning. “No, they say it was an eagle. What’s a thunderbird?”

Rhoda leaned over his shoulder.

“Oh no!” she exclaimed. “It’s that man whose wife disappeared. Now he claims to have seen a giant bird too?”

Carl peered at the screen.

“He says his wife was taken by a giant bird,” he chuckled. “The Merc is in the toilet if they need this kind of clickbait. It used to be a real newspaper, now it’s an online rag.”

She had checked the story afterwards when the Petersens retired and she was free to escape into the guest quarters. She had a hot bath but even the smell of lavender and the green-and-gold Californian twilight failed to salve the sting of yet another failure. Sharon knew herself all too well: left alone, her mind would go over her accumulated defeats, worrying at them like a dog with a bone. So as a diversion she logged onto the San Jose Mercury website and read the description of the incident. She was not much wiser afterwards. Yes, the man in question had probably been drunk or delusional. Yes, he had probably seen a Californian golden eagle. Yes, his wife…well, whatever had happened to her, she had not been not carried away by an eagle who would be hard pressed to lift even a small dog, let alone a person.

On the other hand…

The witness’ name was Lester Choy, a resident of Mountain View. He claimed to have encountered a giant bird of an unknown species early on the morning of July 21 at Pescadero Beach, about forty miles south of San Francisco. Pescadero State Beach is a popular hiking and recreational destination but the day in question being Tuesday and the hour ungodly 5.30 AM, there had been no other witnesses. It was not clear what Mr. Choy and his wife had been doing on the beach so early in the morning. The article said that Mrs. Maureen Choy had been declared missing and a search for her was underway.

“The bird had the wingspan of about 25 feet or seven and a half meters,” Mr. Choy had said. “In the general shape it resembled a condor but its beak was long, powerful and hooked, like an eagle’s beak, not stubby like a condor’s. Its head was not bald either and there was no flap of skin above its eyes. It had very powerful long legs with giant grasping talons, covered in a sort of down. It was dark-colored, maybe black or even navy. Its eyes were flashing red. It was a real predator.”

Teratorns were relatives of condors but their beaks resembled those of eagles, indicating an actively predatory rather than scavenging lifestyle. And yes, a teratorn could have carried away a human being. There were precedents: in Switzerland where an eight-year-old girl was reportedly snatched away by something that looked like an eagle on steroids and in 1977 in Lawndale, Illinois, where a hefty ten-year-old was dragged by a huge bird across his backyard.

Teratorns had been extinct for over 5 million years.

Sharon had a perfect answer to this but in a strange house in this alien country she was beginning to doubt it made sense. Or that it was important. She was thirty-four. Her career was going nowhere. The most important relationship of her life was over.

She still had dreams, though, and they were becoming increasingly vivid as her life was bleeding away. Lying in bed, she clung to the dissipating remnant of the thunderbird dream. Even nightmares were preferable to emptiness.

 

 

Chapter 2

The woman slowed down on the uphill slope, lifting her face toward the redwood boughs tracing intricate hieroglyphs in the cloudless sky. She was a good runner, had done the Seattle marathon several times, but age was beginning to tell. She whistled and her dog, a frisky black Lab, came out of the manzanita bushes, his tail wagging energetically. She patted his head and drew air into her lungs, ready for another spurt, when the dog suddenly froze, his lips pulling back from his teeth, a growl beginning deep in his throat.

“Come on, Buddy, it’s just a deer!” she called out impatiently.

The growl rose a fever pitch and the Lab dove into a dense patch of undergrowth. The crunch of breaking wood was as loud as a shot. The woman yelled but the dog did not reappear. She started after him but stopped when she saw the scarlet gleam of poison oak. Just perfect! Now Buddy would need a bath; her afternoon exercise was ruined; Steve had messaged that he would be home late; and…

The scarlet gleam was wet. She stared, unwilling to let her brain acknowledge what her eyes were seeing. There was no sound from the undergrowth. The silence was as absolute as it always was in the redwoods, wrapping her up in layers of what used to be peace but was now paralysis.

There were rumors of mountain lions…

She backed off, slipped on dry bark and fell, raising a cloud of leaves and needles. The manzanita bushes whipped around as something pushed through.

 

Sharon’s diary was pristinely blank for the week ahead: no more job interviews. There were two community colleges that had not yet responded to her resume, and she milked the delay of rejection for every drop of hope. But she had a job of sorts, gotten through Rhoda’s extensive network of friends and relatives. A techie who lived in a multi-million house in the Santa Cruz Mountains amused himself by keeping a collection of rare amphibians and reptiles at home. He needed somebody to baby-sit his pets. He had instantly taken to Sharon when she had correctly identified his current favorite as a Hochstetter frog from New Zealand. Like all of Frank’s animals, Hochstetter frogs were a protected species and forbidden to import.

Sharon needed the money but just the drive up the mountain to Frank’s house was enough of a reward for helping him break the law. Once she cleared Alice’s Restaurant where aged bikers shyly ogled her through their bulging helmets, she was alone on the mountain road dappled with gold and green and shaded by the feathery branches of redwoods and Douglas firs. Occasionally the bright strawberry-colored trunk of a madrone would flash by like a ruby set in jade. And even on a summer day there were thick undulating bands of fog lying across the tarmac, ghosts of twilight unafraid of the mild sun of Northern California.

She passed her favorite curve where the woods fell away on both sides and revealed the bark-littered slopes of ocher and pink dotted with cushions of emerald moss. And then she pulled into the driveway of Frank’s rustic cabin on steroids.

The frogs were ailing. The big male (about 5 centimeters long, huge by the standards of his species, and christened John Henry) seemed sluggish as he emitted a thin squeak perched on Sharon’s finger. New Zealand frogs don’t croak but it seemed to her he was deliberately complaining.

“I know how you feel,” she said.

By the time Frank got home, she had fed John Henry and his mates, cleaned their enclosure and removed the rose-colored Madagascar chameleon named Pinky from the mantelshelf where he liked to imitate an ornament. Frank muttered a greeting, which was the pinnacle of his social skills. He could, however, talk for hours, animatedly and fluently, about frogs, rare plants, and deep learning software. Sharon considered him the closest thing to a friend she had in California. The fact that he had an autism spectrum condition and could never tell what she was thinking or feeling was a huge relief. Nowadays she did not want anybody peering into the curdled jumble of her emotions.

“Hey, Frank,” she asked, “did you see that thing in the San Jose rag about a replay of the Birds in Pescadero?”

He stared at her blankly and she had to explain. It turned out that he had heard of the case but did not know Hitchcock’s movie.

“What do you think happened?” she asked. “Was the guy drunk?”

“I don’t know,” he shrugged. “It certainly sounds like he was. The largest bird here is the Californian condor and it’s very rare, even though a couple has been observed in Big Sur, and in any case, its wingspan is only…”

“9 feet, I know,” Sharon said impatiently. “So it’s hard to imagine somebody claiming a wingspan three times that unless he was under the influence”.

“Especially Les Choy,” said Frank.

“You know him?”

“Met him a couple of times.”

“What does he do?”

“He has a start-up.”

“Could you give me his number?”

“Sure.”

It was stupid, she told herself. She was done with cryptozoology. It had come between her and Mark even before Julie. It had destroyed her career.

No, she was not going to call him.

 

Mark Kaminski was driving on M1 toward Heathrow. Clammy fog fastened upon his windshield like a clinging lover. Swept aside by the wipers, it always came back, embracing the car with its tenuous arms.

His cellphone played the opening bars of “Carmina Burana”. He pressed the Reject button and turned on the radio. BBC1 news bulletin was on but he caught only the tail end: something about long queues at Heathrow. A burst of static, and a voice said, loud and clear: “…the alleged sighting of a giant bird in Half-Moon Bay, California, continues to draw attention of Nessie and Bigfoot fans on both sides of the Atlantic. And now for our 24-hour weather forecast…”

The static cut in again. The forecast was unnecessary. Mark could provide one himself: visibility very poor; cold rain; probably an accident ahead; and time wasted at the airport as the sullen security personnel palpated his shoes and sniffed his aftershave. This was his next 24 hours.

Afterwards…who knows? The future lay ahead as blank as the fog. He had never been to the States before and the only mental image he could summon of Columbus, Ohio, was, incongruously, the white colonnaded front of the Columbus Hotel in Sussex Gardens. He knew the reason it popped up only too well. The first time with Julie, the first lie to Sharon.

He glanced at his silenced cellphone and imagined Julie staring at her own device, a pouting smile and a tear-swollen rebuke superimposed upon each, flickering like a Schrödinger cat in its sealed box.

He forced the image out of his mind and concentrated on driving. A lorry loomed ahead and he braked sharply. This way he’d never make it to the airport. It’d be a pity to die at the age of thirty-five, leaving behind only a couple of broken hearts and a half-written book on evolutionary contingency.

The traffic eased and Mark touched the familiar number in Krakow and let the phone ring. Mama would not answer, he knew, but what if… And the “what if” of Julie. He imagined the cellular network of possibilities wrapping up the Earth, signals bouncing through its intangible fibers, branching and propagating like seaweed. But at some point it had to stop. There was one number he would never call; one “what if” that was never going to become “maybe” again. He had his chance and he blew it.

Back to the conference paper. “The evolution of alternative phenotypes: the case of planarian flatworms”. A solid, well-researched paper to be presented as part of the seminar series at Ohio State University’s Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology. A line to add to his CV, a step toward promotion to Senior Lecturer, a solid anchor in the post-Brexit UK. Perhaps even a financial opportunity. Flatworms, after all, had amazing regenerative capacities and some pharmaceutical company might be interested. Now that Sharon’s misplaced idealism was no longer in the way…

He sternly forbade himself to pursue this train of thoughts, marveling at the infinite hall of mirrors that the mind was: thinking about himself thinking about his own thinking. The miracle of self-awareness. Occasionally it became too much. Like now.

Love had died before he met Julie. They just had both pretended it was still alive, while carrying around its corpse like pallbearers at some invisible funeral. He could blame himself for many things but not for refusing to be dragged into a dead-end pseudoscience, as ridiculous as the Victorian table-turning. They would both end up poor and outcast, so-called “independent scholars”, the academic equivalents of bums and tube buskers. He was a scientist. Cryptozoology was woo.

But Sharon did not agree. According to her, their project was going to do for biology what quantum theory had done for physics.

Their project.

Mark put his foot down on the accelerator.

 

The day had started badly and steadily gotten worse. First was the dream.

 

She trudged wearily through the streets of a maze-like city. At least she assumed it was a city, even though there were no pedestrians, no cars, and no houses – just blank walls rising up above her head, and narrow passages that doubled in upon themselves. The pavement and the walls were of the same color: bright yellow. The sky above her head was dull white and a lick of fire was creeping up to the zenith, setting the air aflame.

 

Like all of her recent nightmares, there was nothing particularly frightening about the images but the entire thing was so steeped in thick menace that Sharon woke up choking. And then there was a call from Frank Roberts. There had been a break-in on his property. When Sharon, still muzzy, drove up into the mountains, she found Frank and his girlfriend, a young woman named Noni, wading through the bushes at the back of the house. It still amazed Sharon that Frank, despite his social impairment, was quite successful in the dating game. She attributed it to his sweet nature or less charitably, to his money.

Sharon rather liked Noni whose random piercings seemed to draw a mysterious map on her body. Seeing her, Noni gave a delighted squeak, kissed her on both cheeks, and promptly disappeared, leaving the two of them comb through the backyard. “Backyard” was a loose definition: Frank’s land stretched down the mountain slope into a tangle of tanoaks and blackberry, and even Frank himself was not sure where it ended. Its cultivated portion was choked with reptile cages, amphibian enclosures, and a vegetable garden where Frank grew fifteen experimental varieties of eggplant that hitherto failed to tempt even the local raccoons. Nevertheless, somebody – or something – had rampaged through the garden, uprooted and tore plants, broke several cages, and absconded with a couple of frogs.

“John Henry!” wailed Frank.

“Perhaps we should call the police,” suggested Sharon.

“They won’t come,” Frank objected. “We’re an unincorporated area. The county sheriff thinks we belong in the valley and in the valley they don’t know where we belong. A woman died here ten years ago and they only came after a week”.

Sharon sighed. She was endlessly grateful to Rhoda Petersen whose kindness to the British niece whom she hardly knew had enabled this Californian escape. Apart from Christmas cards and an occasional Facebook post, Sharon had had almost no contact with her mother’s estranged sister in the Silicon Valley until sheer desperation made her buy a one-way ticket. And now she had fallen in love with the Golden State. But as with any passion, there was a downside. Local law-enforcement was part of it.

“Anyway,” continued Frank, “I don’t think it’s a good idea to advertise my specimens. Pinky’s still here. No, the thing to do is to rig up some defenses. I can put motion-sensitive sensors and cameras around here. There’ll be a ruckus if the perimeter is breached.”

“And what’ll you do?” Sharon asked skeptically. “Call the police? They’ll come in a week.”

“Shoot the bastard,” Frank responded enthusiastically.

Sharon rolled her eyes. She hated firearms.

“And what if you’re not home?”

“You can be here. I’ll pay for your time.”

“I’m not going to shoot anybody!”

“Well, maybe you can just scare them away.”

“Fat chance!” Sharon muttered.

The sun was coming down. The sky grew pearly-white, while the woods acquired the bright patina of the recently polished old bronze. In the gaps between the trees she could see the sea of clouds lapping at the mountains below her. The clouds were dense and solid, the color of whipped cream.

“I really liked John Henry,” said Frank despondently.

Sharon was picking burrs off her jeans preparatory to getting into her beat-up Subaru when she felt her cellphone intimately vibrate against her thigh. This was surprising because normally there was no signal on the mountain. But the screen showed nothing.

“How come there is such spotty cell coverage here?” she asked, irritated. “I’d think in the Silicon Valley, of all places, you’d have instant communication.”

“Bandwidth,” he replied cryptically.

“Whatever. But why didn’t one of your start-ups try something new?”

“Les did. Lester Choy.”

“Really?”

“Yeah. His start-up, UniCom, filed a patent for quantum communication. But the last I heard it wasn’t doing too well.”

As she was driving down, the phone, thrown on the passenger seat, vibrated again. She never bothered to get a hands-free set because so few people called her now. Who could that be? The Petersens? One of her Californian acquaintances? Or perhaps, just perhaps, it was a call from England…

The screen went blank; whoever called – if anybody called at all – was swallowed up by the vagaries of the local network.

When she flicked her eyes back to the road, there was an animal standing on the verge, looking at her.

The brakes screeched as she fought to stop the car from skidding. All the while, unfazed by the noise, the animal kept staring. And when the car was finally under control it turned majestically and disappeared into the roadside bushes cemented into a dense mass by the encroaching darkness.

Sharon pulled over, killed the engine and rested her head on the steering wheel. She could see the creature vividly with her eyes closed as if it had imprinted itself on her retina.

It had been large, the size of a buck. Its general outline and the fluid grace with which it slithered into the bushes were feline. Sharon knew there were bobcats in the Santa Cruz Mountains and an occasional mountain lion. But the animal had been neither.

As her headlight had raked the road, the animal, uncharacteristically for a wild creature, had stood still and turned its head as if deliberately allowing her a full view of its face.

It was not a cat’s face. Mostly it resembled the face of a large pug-nosed dog, such as a boxer or a bulldog: flat, with heavy hanging jowls, slit eyes and loose lips. But it was of dead-white color, hairless, and its narrowed eyes sparkled ruby-red as it lowered its heavy head and padded back into the forest.

 

Elana Gomel – bio

Elana Gomel is an academic and a writer. She has published six non-fiction books and numerous articles on posthumanism, science fiction, Victorian literature, and serial killers. Her fantasy, horror and science fiction stories appeared in Apex Magazine, New Horizons, Mythic, and many other magazines and were also featured in several award-winning anthologies, including Zion’s Fiction, Apex Book of World Science Fiction, and People of the Book. She is the author of three novels: A Tale of Three Cities (2013), The Hungry Ones (2018) and The Cryptids (2019). Her stories won several awards, including the of Gravity Award for the best science fiction story in 2020. She is a member of HWA.

She can be found at https://www.citiesoflightanddarkness.com/ and on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram

https://www.facebook.com/elana.gomel

https://twitter.com/ElanaGomel

https://www.instagram.com/elanagomel/

 

Sneak Peek: THANKFULLY IN LOVE A Thanksgiving Anthology

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THANKFULLY IN LOVEA Thanksgiving Anthology

Four USA Today bestselling romance authors come together for Thanksgiving, telling the stories of four woman who have not had the best experiences with the men they have dated in their pasts. With the help of family and loved ones this holiday season, can they learn to open their hearts one more time? If they can dare to make the leap, they could find themselves finally, thankfully in love…

There’s no place like home, especially during Thanksgiving. After spending ten years as an officer and analyst with a special division in a federal cyber-investigation, Tripp Atsilla is on the brink of burnout. Then he meets Parker Rutledge. Two years ago she changed her name and moved to a small town, hoping to leave the damage her ex-husband caused behind. Someone’s found her; someone who wants to make her pay for her ex-husband’s crimes. But can she trust Tripp? Can she trust anyone? …

Miranda Cox isn’t looking forward to heading home for Thanksgiving. She’d raved to everyone that Matthew was the one; now she has yet another failed relationship under her belt. Despite working as a translator in Ottawa, and loving travelling abroad, she’s thirty-four and still single. When Miranda arrives at Union Station in Toronto, she’s surprised to see Taz, her childhood friend. Years earlier, they’d drifted apart. Miranda was so hurt over the loss of their friendship. She’s also shocked to learn that he’s divorced. Miranda finds herself inviting him and his sick mother for Thanksgiving dinner at her parents’ place. It is finally their time? …

Chef Drew Barnett has been hired to create the perfect Thanksgiving for a potential restaurant investor, but a power outage has him scrambling to find a working kitchen. Jilted bride and food critic Claire Rothchild is pet-sitting a friend’s St. Bernard named Snowflake. She wants to hibernate for the holidays, but it turns out the guest house she’s staying in has power when the main house does not. Feeling uncomfortable for invading the privacy of his potential investor’s guest, Drew doesn’t know what to make of a food critic in his kitchen, just as Claire doesn’t know how to stop interfering with his dishes and passing tidbits to a mooching pooch. Is this a recipe for a Dog-Gone Holiday? Or for love? …

Born with a degenerative eye disease, photographer Kelsey Thomas knows two things: she will be legally blind within five years and her family wants to see her married and settled first. Then Kelsey’s boyfriend breaks up with her one week before she planned to introduce him to her family at her grandmother’s island commitment ceremony. At the resort bar, she meets Dr. Noah Lawson. He spends his life inside his lab developing cutting-edge techniques to slow the progression of vision loss. When he’s offered funding with strings―save the eyesight of the granddaughter of a wealthy investor―he’s reluctant to agree. Noah is smitten by Kelsey―so much so that he agrees to be her fake wedding date for the Thanksgiving holidays. Too late, he realizes her connection to his potential investor. Is this a set-up? Or fate? …

About The Authors:
USA Today and national bestselling author Anna J Stewart has always had a book in her hand or a story in her heart. A child of the 70’s, early obsessions with Star Wars, Star Trek, and Wonder Woman set her on the path to creating fun, pulse-pounding romance in multiple sub-genres. Since her first novella with Harlequin in 2014, Anna has written and published more than forty romances and swears she’s just getting started. When she’s not writing, she’s dealing with a serious Supernatural and Jason Momoa addiction, experimenting with new cooking and baking recipes, surrounding herself with family and friends or hanging out at her local theater and attending fan conventions. You can read more about Anna, her books, and her workshops for writing groups at www.AuthorAnnaStewart.com. 

Born in Jamaica but raised in Canada, Kayla Perrin is a USA Today and Essence bestselling author with over forty books, for major publishing houses including St. Martin’s Press, HarperCollins Publishers, Kensington Books and Harlequin. She is published in romance, mystery/suspense and mainstream fiction. She’s been featured on television shows such as Entertainment Tonight Canada, Who’s Afraid of Happy Endings (Bravo documentary), A.M. Buffalo, and the CTV News. She has also been featured in Ebony magazine, Romantic Times magazine, The South Florida Business Journal, The Toronto Star, The Hamilton Spectator and many other Canadian and U.S. publications. In October 2007, she was featured in the Italian version of Vanity Fair. Her works have been translated into Italian, French, German, Spanish and Portuguese. Please visit her website at www.authorkaylaperrin.com.

Prior to writing romance, award-winning USA Today bestseller Melinda Curtis was a junior manager for a Fortune 500 company, which meant when she flew on the private jet she was relegated to the jump seat―otherwise known as the potty. In addition to her Sunshine Valley series from Grand Central Forever, she’s published independently and with Harlequin Heartwarming, including her book Dandelion Wishes, which is an upcoming TV movie starring Amber Marshall. She lives in Central Oregon with her husband―her basketball-playing college sweetheart. While raising three kids, the couple did the soccer thing, the karate thing, the dance thing, the Little League thing and, of course, the basketball thing. Between books, Melinda spends time with her husband remodeling their home by swinging a hammer, grouting tile, and wielding a paintbrush.

USA Today bestselling author Cari Lynn Webb lives in South Carolina with her husband, daughters and assorted four-legged family members. She’s been blessed to see the power of true love in her grandparent’s 70 year marriage and her parent’s marriage of over 50 years. She knows love isn’t always sweet and perfect, it can be challenging, complicated and risky. But she believes happily-ever-afters are worth fighting for. She loves to connect with readers.

Lezli Robyn is an Australian genre author and Assistant Publisher of Arc Manor, who has moved to the United States, where she lives with her blue-eyed mini-Dachshund/Chihuahua named Bindi (which means “little girl” in several indigenous Australian dialects).

She currently edits Caezik Romance’s holiday related anthologies. She previously edited Heart’s Kiss magazine.

 

Brad Meltzer and Chris Eliopoulos Introduce the Latest Additions to the “Ordinary People Change the World” Book Series via Zoom (10/14)

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Join Brad Meltzer and Chris Eliopoulos, the author/illustrator team behind the New York Times bestselling picture book biography series, Ordinary People Change the World, as they introduce the latest additions to the collection: I AM ANNE FRANK and I AM BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, both published by Dial Books for Young Readers. Eliopoulos will demonstrate his art style throughout the discussion at this virtual event hosted by Politics & Prose via Zoom on Wednesday, October 14 at 7:00 pm (ET).

I AM ANNE FRANK, the first book in the series to focus on a child, is of special significance to Meltzer, who wrote, “The rise of Anti-Semitism…the way religious, ethnic and racial minorities are regularly targeted…it’s impossible to ignore – and I want my kids to see and find strength from Anne Frank’s lessons. I am proud of my Jewish heritage, and Anne Frank’s incredible story is one I’m honored to share with readers everywhere.”

I AM BENJAMIN FRANKLIN is perfect for election season and talking to children about science and inventions. Franklin was one of the Founding Fathers of the U.S. who helped draft the Declaration of Independence while making important scientific contributions.

Brad Meltzer is the author of the New York Times bestselling Ordinary People Change the World series for children, as well as six New York Times bestselling thrillers for adults. He is also the #1 bestselling author of the critically acclaimed comic books Identity Crisis and Justice League of America, and is the cocreator of the TV series Jack & Bobby. A graduate of the University of Michigan and Columbia Law School, he lives in Florida.

Christopher Eliopoulos began his illustration career at Marvel Comics, and has worked on thousands of comics, including Cosmic Commandos, Monster Mayhem, Franklin Richards: Son of a Genius, Pet Avengers, Cow Boy, and his first picture book The Yawns Are Coming! He lives in New Jersey. #TeamPRH !!

Amazon Has Book Deals

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Readers, did you know know Amazon promotes lots of book deals on their website?

Books from Indie Authors, larger publishing houses, and Amazon’s own imprints are included. Deals from less than $3.99 to free can be found. Just follow these links:

Daily Deals – up to 50% off

$3.99 or Less Deals

Gold Box Deals – these change every 24 hours

Amazon Newsletters – these feature many titles and comes right to your email and you can specify what your reading interests are so you get only those genres you read.

 

 

Check out the dark secrets at HARKWORTH HALL in this SNEAK PEEK!

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Ask him about his wives.

Caroline Daniels must marry, and marry well. But in her remote corner of England eligible suitors are few and far between, and none hold a candle to her closest friend, Diana Fitzroy.

When Sir Edward Masterson arrives, he seems the answer to Caroline’s financial worries, though she instinctively dislikes the reticent, older merchant. Soon Sir Edward has set his sights on acquiring both Caroline and the decaying Harkworth Hall.

Caroline’s future seems secure, save that Sir Edward’s enigmatic secretary hints at a dark secret, and Sir Edward shows an unusual interest in the nearby bay. To discover Sir Edward’s true purpose, Caroline will have to face the horror beneath Harkworth Hall—and the woman who will change her life.

A historical full of suspense and mystery! Get a sneak peek at HARKWORTH HALL by L.S. Johnson!

Here’s the entire first chapter!

 

Chapter I

The Birds

 

I first heard of Edward Masterson the day of the birds, though I forgot about them through much of what happened after. Indeed, in the moment, their strange flight was only a disturbing inconvenience, as it turned my father back from his walk to the village on laundry day.

My father was a gentleman of small, regular habits. He walked to the village twice each week, to gain news of the wider world and have two pints of ale before walking back. In winter, he had Mr. Simmons, who served as our steward as well as sometime butler and valet, drive him. But in the fine weather of late spring he would set off walking, in his plain suit but with his sword polished and ready should he meet any ruffians.

The rest of our little household—myself and Mr. and Mrs. Simmons; my poor mother had passed when I was young—would plan much around this simple outing, for the house was too much work for the Simmonses alone. My father made no objection to my helping with light chores such as dusting, but he had recently been infected with the disease of matchmaking, and he feared for my prospects should I develop a working woman’s hands and complexion. His solution for our overworked staff was to simply hire more help as needed, but I often snuck into his study to review our account books and there was no surplus for such luxuries. Thus, I learned to separate want from necessity, and while other women my age were dancing at assemblies or practicing their needlework, I was scrubbing floors and learning to make pastry. I learned, and I learned as well to not reflect upon my circumstances, lest I fall into melancholy—and many days there was simply no time for such indulgence. As soon as my father left, I put aside my role as Caroline Daniels, landowner’s daughter, and became Caroline Daniels, maid, stableboy, or whatever we needed me to be. Laundry especially was a daylong affair, and more than once we had sent Mr. Simmons out to delay my father so we could get the last damp pieces inside before he returned.

My father left, drawing the door closed behind him. I waited in the hall, seeing in my mind’s eye his stout figure striding down the drive. Now he would pat his pockets, ensuring he had a shilling but little more, for he had once been robbed on his return and had a fine watch and several shillings taken off him. Now he would think about that watch, and touch his sword in reassurance. All was well and nothing was forgotten; he could enjoy his journey in peace, and we could set about our work. I counted to fifty, then with a deep breath seized the first laundry basket and began dragging it back to the yard—

—when I heard the terrible sound of the door swinging open again, and my father bellowing for Mr. Simmons. At once I dropped the basket, smiling brightly. My smile faded, however, when I saw the spatters on his hat and coat, including a red smear on his face.

“Are you all right? Did you fall?” I rushed towards him, thinking to stop any bleeding with my apron.

“Quite all right,” he said. “Only the birds are going mad.”

For a moment I stared at him, believing I misheard him, but then I saw movement in the sky past his shoulder. Birds of all sizes and shapes, flying at odd angles to each other but all heading inland. As I watched two collided, then set at each other with horrific shrieks and bared claws. Feathers drifted down as they fought.

“I’ve never seen anything like it. It’s quite late in the year to be mating, and there are gulls up there. They usually stay close to the shore—” My father suddenly broke off, frowning at the laundry basket. “What are you doing with that laundry?”

“I was looking for a petticoat,” I said quickly. “I cannot find it anywhere.”

He gave me a suspicious look, but I was saved from further inquiry by Mr. Simmons appearing. As he fetched my father a fresh coat, I slipped past him and went out onto the drive. Dozens of birds filled the sky, and save for when their paths provoked a conflict, they were doing so in near silence, as if they needed all their strength to fly. But what were they flying towards—or were they fleeing something? I scanned the horizon: there was not so much as a cloud, not a hint of an incoming storm.

Above me two more birds crossed paths, and the larger one viciously raked the smaller. It tumbled to the ground, then carefully righted itself and began limping forward, still heading unerringly inland.

“Caroline, dear, don’t distress yourself with such sights.” My father took my arm and led me back to the house.

“But what could be causing it?” I asked, still craning my head. “Something has frightened them, something worse than a storm.”

“They were probably startled by an animal—perhaps we have a wolf again. I’ll ask in the village,” he said. “Oh, and I forgot to tell you! I will be stopping at the Fitzroys’ on my way home. I was thinking if Diana spends the season in town again, perhaps you could join her? A stay of some weeks will help you become more comfortable in society, and develop your acquaintanceships further.”

And there were so many replies I wished to make, all at once. The Fitzroys were our closest neighbors, and Diana my oldest friend. Having both lost our mothers early, and without siblings, we had been for a time closer than sisters. The memories of our girlhood, pretending to be the pirates Anne Bonny and Mary Read, or the tragic princess Caroline, still filled me with longing. But the Fitzroys’ finances had flourished where ours had declined, and I took no pleasure in the prospect of marriage. A season with Diana promised only embarrassing shortfalls and uncomfortable encounters.

I wanted to say all these things, and that I had seen far worse than a wounded bird in my life, for had I not seen my own mother die in childbirth? But such was not the speech of a dutiful daughter, and I quailed at the thought of disrupting our affectionate relationship. I was still struggling for words when he kissed me on my forehead and shooed me back inside, as if I was still a little girl.

 

***

 

I anticipated some return to the subject of laundry when my father came home, and I took care to soothe my reddened hands well before his return. But his disapproval never arrived. The Theophilus Daniels who returned was gaily whistling and positively beamed at the sight of me, despite the fact that I was helping Mrs. Simmons set the table for dinner.

“You will never guess where I have been,” he declared, sitting on a stair riser and wrestling off his muddy boots.

“You were at Uncle Stuart’s, sampling his port,” I said, laughing, as I bent to help him. So close had we been with the Fitzroys’ in my childhood, that I had taken to calling Mr. Fitzroy “Uncle,” and Diana referred to my father as the same.

“Indeed I was,” my father said, smiling like a little boy. “But I was not the only one! He had another visitor.” He held out his fingers, as if ticking off a list. “A business acquaintance, staying in the village. Older than you, but quite worldly and prosperous. Looking for an estate to let, where he can bring friends for the weekend.” His smile broadened. “Such conversation! Such carriage, such refinement! I tell you, Caroline, I have not met such a true gentleman since we were in town last season. Did I mention his business? He runs a most successful trading company. The stories he had, some of the places he’s been! I could have listened to him all evening.”

“And what, pray tell, is this magical man’s name?” I asked, helping him up from the stairs.

“Pardon?” He blinked at me, as if brought up short by the question, and then burst out laughing. “Oh my, I didn’t even say, did I? His name, my dear, is Sir Edward Masterson.”

 

Author bio:

L.S. Johnson lives in Northern California, where she feeds her cats by working in a library. She is the author of the Chase & Daniels series of gothic novellas. Her first collection, Vacui Magia, won the North Street Book Prize and was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award. Her second collection, Rare Birds, is now available. Find her online and sign up for her newsletter at www.traversingz.com.

 

Website and URLs for any social media:

https://traversingz.com/

A link to where to buy the book (optional):

https://books2read.com/u/bxqONo

Academy Award Winning Actress Natalie Portman Pens Children’s Book

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Academy Award-winning actress, director, producer, and activist Natalie Portman retells three classic fables and imbues them with wit and wisdom.

From realizing that there is no “right” way to live to respecting our planet and learning what really makes someone a winner, the messages at the heart of Natalie Portman’s Fables are modern takes on timeless life lessons.

Told with a playful, kid-friendly voice and perfectly paired with Janna Mattia’s charming artwork, Portman’s insightful retellings of The Tortoise and the Hare, The Three Little Pigs, and Country Mouse and City Mouse are ideal for reading aloud and are sure to become beloved additions to family libraries.

Natalie Portman is an Academy Award-winning actress, director, producer, and activist whose credits include Leon: The Professional, Cold Mountain, Closer, V for Vendetta, the Star Wars franchise prequels, A Tale of Love and Darkness, Jackie, Thor: Love and Thunder, and Black Swan. Born in Jerusalem, Israel, she is a graduate of Harvard University, and now lives with her family in Los Angeles. Natalie Portman’s Fables is her debut picture book.

Janna Mattia
 was born and raised in San Diego. She received a degree in Illustration for Entertainment from Laguna College of Art and Design, and now works on concept and character art for film, illustration for licensing, and private commissions. Natalie Portman Fables is her picture book debut.

SNEAK PEEK: Deadwood Undertaker Series CAN’T RIDE AROUND IT!

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The Saga Continues by the All-Star Duo of USA TODAY Bestselling Author ANN CHARLES and Sam Lucky!

Can’t Ride Around It (Deadwood Undertaker Series Book 3)

Some things you just can’t ride around …

Jack “Rabbit” Fields knew a good thing when he saw it, whether it was a sound horse, a sure bet, or a pretty sage hen. When it came to locking horns with any curly wolves he ran into along the trail, he tended to shoot first—a notion that had saved his hide more times than he could count. But that was before he came to Deadwood.

Now, someone is stealing freshly dead bodies right out of their graves, and Rabbit and his amigos are on the hunt to figure out who. And more important, why?

Unfortunately, finding the answers to those questions will take plenty of Rabbit’s bullets, and maybe his blood, too. When the shooting stops and the smoke clears, he reckons there will be a whole lot more cold corpses in the Black Hills.

Hold onto your hats and saddle up for another action-filled adventure with the Santa Fe Sidewinders, Clementine, Hank, and the rest of the goldurn Deadwood devils!

Other Books in The Series:

Life At The Coffin Joint

Deadwood (late 1876) … A rowdy and reckless undertaker’s delight. What better place for a killer to blend in?

Enter undertaker Clementine Johanssen, tall and deadly with a hot temper and short fuse, hired to clean up Deadwood’s dead … and the “other” problem. She’s hell-bent on poking, sticking, or stabbing anyone that steps out of line.

But when a couple Santa Fe sidewinders ride into town searching for their missing uncle, they land neck deep in lethal gunplay, nasty cutthroats, and endless stinkin’ snow. Their search leads them to throw in with

Clementine to hunt for a common enemy.

What they find chills them all to the bone and sends them on an adventure they’ll never forget.

From the bestselling, multiple award-winning, humorous Deadwood Mystery series comes a new herd of tales set in the same Deadwood stomping grounds, only back in the days when the Old West town was young.

A Long Way From Ordinary:

There’s gold in them there hills!” … and something deadly, too.

Danger the likes Boone McCreery has never seen is brewing in the Black Hills. Fresh in from Santa Fe, he’s returned to Deadwood to seek justice for his uncle—and maybe to see about a girl. Little did he know his search for justice would have him stumbling into a hornets’ nest beyond his worst nightmare. One thing is for certain, the trouble he and his compadres chance upon deep in the trees is a LONG way from ordinary.

Kick up your spurs and enjoy another rip-roaring, wild ride with Boone, Rabbit, Clementine, and Hank through the pages of the second book in the Deadwood Undertaker series.

 

About Ann and Sam:

Ann Charles is a USA Today Best-Selling author who writes spicy, award-winning mysteries full of

Junction Mystery Series, Dig Site Mystery Series, Deadwood Undertaker Series (with her husband, Sam Lucky), and AC Silly Circus Mystery Series. Her Deadwood Mystery Series has won multiple national awards, including the Daphne du Maurier for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense. Ann has a B.A. in English with an emphasis on creative writing from the University of Washington and is a member of Sisters in Crime and Western Writers of America. She is currently toiling away on her next book, wishing she was on a Mexican beach with an ice-cold Corona in one hand and a book in the other. When she is not dabbling in fiction, she is arm wrestling with her two kids, attempting to seduce her husband, and arguing with her sassy cats.

Sam Lucky likes to build things—from Jeep engines to Old West buildings to fun stories. When he is not writing, feeding his kids, attempting to seduce his wife, or attending the goldurn cats, he is planning food-based book signing/road trips with his wife and working on one of his many home-improvement projects.

Sam Lucky’s Website: http://www.samlucky.com

To request additional review copies or an interview, please contact Mickey Mikkelson at Creative Edge Publicity: mickey.creativeedge@gmail.com / 403.464.6925.