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Book feature

Flirting with Monogamy

March 21, 2014 Leave a Comment

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“Flirting with Monogamy” by Debra Rosenberg

Blurb: Gwendolyn Sanders has lost her Orgasm.  Wrinkles are appearing on her forehead faster than an Etch-A-Sketch on steroids and her breasts haven’t passed the pencil test in ages.  As if that weren’t enough, her business is tanking, her teenage son can’t lay off the weed, and her marriage just isn’t what it used to be.  What’s a woman to do?

Gwendolyn’s journey from frustrated wife and mother to potential sex goddess hits a few bumps along the way.  As her adventures take her from a handsome stranger to a shocking revelation about her husband, Gwendolyn must rediscover who she really is, and what she really wants.

Chapter 1 tease

My day wasn’t meant to end like this, tied to my kitchen chair by a knife-wielding nut job.  The fact that I’m wearing nothing but my favorite lingerie makes it even more…inconvenient.

Granted, I’ve been going through a stressful period.  My life is unraveling.  But this latest turn of events seems like overkill, as if the fat lady has sung her last song, but refuses to take her final curtain call.

**Click HERE to buy “Flirting with Monogamy” on Amazon!
DebraRosenbergPic**About author, Debra Rosenberg:
Debra Rosenberg spent twenty years in the fashion industry before authoring the blog, “Women of a Certain Age:  Keeping it Flirty and Fabulous at Forty, Fifty and Beyond.  Debra currently lives in New York City with her husband, son, and very needy labradoodle.
**Contact: Email   Facebook

Filed Under: Flirting with Monogamy Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Chick-Lit, Debra Rosenberg, Flirting with Monogamy, Women's Fiction

Dispatches From Paradise

February 3, 2014 Leave a Comment

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“Dispatches From Paradise” by Shelly Gitlow

“In the spirit of Sex and the City, Shelly Gitlow has created three distinct and unforgettable female characters in her funny, racy novel.” Susan Seidelman, Director of the TV pilot Sex and the City

In the spirit of Sex and the City meets 50 Shades of Grey, DISPATCHES FROM PARADISE (Books and Books Press; February 1, 2014; Trade Paperback; $15.00) is an over-the-top, erotic comedy about three generations of women living together in Miami, where too much is never enough.

Author and screenwriter Shelly Gitlow makes her fiction debut in this colorful, lightning-paced, and often wildly unpredictable modern tale about sex, lies, and love.

From the very first page, DISPATCHES FROM PARADISE takes readers to the family battlefield of three generations of women living together in the sultry city of Miami — where DD cups abound, octogenarians recite erotic poetry and an S&M Fitness class is not for the fainthearted.

Written in the distinct voices of Liz (39) who pulls the plug on her marriage and quits her job so she can re-boot her life, her over-sexed mother, Claudette (55) who’s searching for her next partner/meal ticket, and Darcy (18) Liz’s beautiful, reckless daughter who’s realizing she might also have a brain and be a lesbian, DISPATCHES FROM PARADISE explores the complex dynamics of the women’s relationships as they tear through Miami’s wild clubs and outrageous art scene, changing, growing and reconnecting on new terms.

Drawing upon her unique insights as a family therapist, author Shelly Gitlow gives readers three characters they will never forget.  Her debut novel marks the arrival of a bold brash narrative voice.

SusieHorgan**About author, Shelly Gitlow:

Miami-based author Shelly Gitlow is the co-writer of the feature film Boynton Beach Club.           In her former life, she was a family therapist and wrote several books on quality management.  She divides her time between New York City and Miami.

**About Books & Books Press:

Books & Books Press is the publishing arm of Books & Books, a leading independent bookstore with locations in South Florida, the Caribbean and New York.   For more information visit:   http://www.booksandbooks.com/

*****

Publication Information:

Title:   Dispatches from Paradise

Author:  Shelly Gitlow

Publication Date:  February 1, 2014

Trade Paperback: 320 pages

Publisher: Books & Books Press

ISBN-10: 0983937877

ISBN-13: 978-0983937876

Price:  $15.00

For interviews, jpegs, and additional information, contact Laura Rossi Totten, laura@laurarossipublicrelations.com or 401-487-2453.

Filed Under: Dispatches From Paradise Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Dispatches From Paradise, Shelly Gitlow

The Consequences

January 28, 2014 Leave a Comment

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“The Consequences” by Colette Freedman

Blurb:

In the riveting follow-up to her acclaimed debut novel, Colette Freedman explores the aftermath of infidelity from three different perspectives–husband, wife, and mistress.

The end of an affair may be only the beginning. . .

Over the course of one tumultuous Christmas Eve, Kathy Walker confirmed her suspicions about her husband’s affair, confronted his mistress, Stephanie, and saved her marriage. She and Robert have eighteen years, two teenagers, and a film production business between them–plus a bond that Kathy has no intention of giving up on. Yet though Robert is contrite, Kathy can’t quite silence her doubts.

While Robert reels from his wife’s ultimatum and his mistress’s rejection, Stephanie makes a discovery: she’s pregnant. Her resolve to stay away from Robert wavers now that they could make a real family together. And in the days that follow, Stephanie, Robert, and Kathy must each reckon with the intricate realities of desire, the repercussions of betrayal, and the secrets that, once revealed, ripple through lives and relationships in thoroughly unexpected ways.

ColetteFreedmanPic**About author, Colette Freedman:

COLETTE FREEDMAN- An internationally produced playwright with over 25 produced plays, Colette was voted “One of 50 to Watch” by The Dramatist’s Guild.

Her play Sister Cities was the hit of the 2008 Edinburgh Fringe and earned five star reviews:  It has been produced around the country and internationally, fourteen times including Paris (Une Ville, Une Soeur) and Rome (Le Quattro Sorelle). The film version has been optioned and is in pre production.

She  has co-written, with International bestselling novelistJackie Collins, the play Jackie Collins Hollywood Lies, which is gearing up for a National Tour.

In collaboration with The New York Times best selling author Michael Scott,  she wrote the thriller The Thirteen Hallows  (Tor/Macmillan).

Her novel The Affair (Kensington) came out January 29, 2013. The play of the novel earned both critical and commercial success as it toured Italy February through May 2013.

Her novel The Consequences (Kensington) comes out January 28, 2014, (TODAY!).

**Contact Colette: Website   Pinterest   Twitter

Filed Under: The Consequences Tagged With: Affairs, Blurb, Book feature, Book Release, Books, Chick-Lit, Colette Freedman, The Consequences, Women's Fiction

Cindy Arora

January 22, 2014 Leave a Comment

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About author, Cindy Arora: Cindy Arora was a staff writer at The San Gabriel Valley Tribune, The Orange County Register and Sacramento Magazine. She’s been published in Saveur, Tasting Table, Orange Coast Magazine and Fodor’s. She’s also a mother, a feminist, a whiskey enthusiast, and proud to call herself a Chick Lit author. Heartbreak Cake is her debut novel.

GUEST POST

My Life As A Mom and An Author

Being a mom is tough business, but rewarding. Being a writer is tough business, but also rewarding. Put them together and you get: One really, super, busy but fulfilling life. It’s true!
These days I struggle to find the balance between motherhood, daily life and being a writer. It’s a work-in-progress. That’s for sure. But I do have days where it’s perfect. I meet writing deadlines, my son eats his broccoli, I have a good day at my job, and I even manage to squeeze in a run. But then there are times when my son cries when we drop him off at day care, I skip lunch so I can write instead of going to pick up food, and then not only do I not go for a run, but I end the evening eating a box of crackers while watching The Voice. It happens. I do allow myself to have the tired working mom pity party, but I really just try to be grateful that I have a full life, including a love for writing. That’s often enough to motivate me to get off the couch and back to the business of writing.
It’s not always easy, and I do struggle with trying to find a way to be all that I want to be personally while also being the kind of mom that isn’t distracted, because honestly, there’s nothing better than being present in my son’s world where everything is new and exciting. Thanks to him, I stop and smell the roses, we run around the grass just because, jump into leaf piles and sit and watch the fire trucks come in and out of the firehouse while eating ice cream. I’ve slowed down, and it has actually helped me become a better writer. Now, it’s with the same slow and steady mentality that I head to my computer knowing that as long as I keep writing, I will get to where I want to go.
5 Tips for Writers with Kiddos
1. Squeeze in writing during naps or after the kids go to bed. Even if it’s an hour, it does help keep your head in writing mode.
2. Schedule a writing day for yourself. Let your husband, boyfriend, girlfriend, mother or whatever take your children away for a few hours so you can have a few hours of uninterrupted writing time. Head to your favorite coffee spot or restaurant and make it a date just for you.
3. Be nice to yourself if you don’t write for a few days or a week. It happens; sometimes it’s just too much. Allow yourself the break, but get back to writing as soon as you can.
4.If you need a writing break, maybe you can spend time researching, interviewing or working on character profiles. There’s always different ways to “work” on your writing.
5. Carry a notebook. Sometimes I’ll head to the park or be out running errands with my son and I’ll get an idea for my book. I like to carry a notebook with me so I can jot ideas down. I have even used my camera phone to take photos of buildings or towns that inspire me.
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“Heartbreak Cake” by Cindy Arora
Blurb: Business is sweet for pastry chef Indira Aguilar. Her indie bakery, Cake Pan, is fast becoming the talk of the wedding circuit for its unique take on cakes and homespun creations for the modern bride, garnering national recognition and drawing in celebrity clients. But while her professional life is blossoming, her personal life is crumbling. Indira may have a talent for blending buttercream into bliss, but when it comes to relationships, she’s got a lot to learn. Considering that the love of her life, Josh Oliver, is not only married, but also runs the award-winning pastry department of her fiercest competition, Crystal Cove Resort, Indira puts much more at stake than just her heart when she ends her affair with him. Rumors begin to fly as the small seaside community of Long Beach learns of her secret relationship, and Indira must defend not only her actions, but her wedding business and her reputation while trying to maneuver the choppy heartbreak waters of starting over, finding new love, and facing her past. With the support of friends and family, a fondness for butter, and a determined spirit, Indira may just bake her way back to happiness and possibly into the heart of Crystal Cove’s dishy new chef, Noah. But one thing is certain. Where there’s heartbreak, there must be cake.
**Contact Cindy: Website
**Buy “Heartbreak Cake” on Amazon!   **Add “Heartbreak Cake” to your Goodreads bookshelf!
**To learn more about Cindy’s book, visit her publisher website, Simon and Fig!
**Follow Cindy’s “Heartbreak Cake” tour on Fictionella!
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Filed Under: Cindy Arora Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Chick-Lit, Cindy Arora, Fictionella, Guest Post, Heartbreak Cake, Women's Fiction

Samantha Tonge

December 3, 2013 1 Comment

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About author, Samantha Tonge: Samantha Tonge lives in Cheshire, England with her lovely family and two cats who think they are dogs. She spends her days writing, willing cakes to rise and avoiding housework. She has sold over 80 short stories to mainstream women’s magazines. Doubting Abbey is her debut romantic comedy novel, out now from digital-first CarinaUK Harlequin.

INTERVIEW

Describe your writing style in five words: fun, accessible, fast-paced, readable, punchy

What do you love most about writing? The thrill of making a sentence sound just right and the buzz from getting reader-feedback.

Who or what inspires you? For short stories, everyday life and the tabloids inspires me – just tales of ordinary life that have an unexpected twist to them. For novels, it tends to be bigger issues like society’s obsession with celebrity and looks, or why a show like Downton Abbey has become so popular.

What is your writing/editing/publishing process like? I usually need six months, all-in, to write the first draft and then go over it several times looking at different aspects to improve on, and continuity. I enjoy both processes. My first drafts aren’t really rough, but always need a good polishing.

If you could meet another author, who would it be? Jane Austen – I would love to tell her how much her books still mean to women, all these decades on.

Where did you get the idea for your book, “Doubting Abbey?” The public’s obsession with a period drama, the series Downton Abbey, really intrigued me – it has become massive on both sides of the pond. This made me wonder how a thoroughly modern girl, like my main character Gemma, would cope with suddenly being thrust into a stuffy, aristocratic atmosphere where she would have to reign in her care-free behaviour and emotions…

Hard/paperback or eBooks? E-books – I love my Kindle. The books are cheaper and it is brill being able to read with just one hand and snack with the other! Plus there are some great bargains to be had on e-readers, with free books and heavily reduced ones – at the moment, Doubting Abbey is only 79p/$1.28!

What was the most difficult part to write? The detail of the setting – I wanted to get it just right so did a lot of online research into stately homes and visited one.

What are you reading right now? Mad about the Boy by Helen Fielding – it is brilliant!

What time of day to do you seem to work best? Morning, definitely – if I can keep away from social media!

Every writer must have a…: an online group of fellow writers they can turn to when they need support, eg after getting rejections. I wouldn’t still be writing nowadays, if it wasn’t for my writer friends who’ve picked me up and brushed  me down!

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects? I have just started a sequel to Doubting Abbey! I can’t say much but in this one Gemma is more bonkers than ever!

DoubtingAbbeyCoverPic“Doubting Abbey” by Samantha Tonge

Blurb of “Doubting Abbey”:

Swapping downstairs for upstairs… How hard can it be!?

Look up the phrase ordinary girl and you’ll see a picture of me, Gemma Goodwin – I only look half-decent after applying the entire contents of my make-up bag, and my dating track-record includes a man who treated me to dinner…at a kebab shop. No joke!

The only extraordinary thing about me is that I look EXACTLY like my BFF, Abbey Croxley. Oh, and that for reasons I can’t explain, I’ve agreed to swap identities and pretend be her to star in the TV show about her aristocratic family’s country estate, Million Dollar Mansion.

So now it’s not just my tan I’m faking – it’s Kate Middleton style demure hemlines and lady-like manners too. And amongst the hundreds of fusty etiquette rules I’m trying to cram into my head, there are two I really must remember; 1) No-one can ever find out that I’m just Gemma, who’d be more at home in the servants quarters. And 2) There can be absolutely no flirting with Abbey’s dishy but buttoned-up cousin, Lord Edward.

Aaargh, this is going to be harder than I thought…

**Contact Samantha: Website   Doubting Abbey blog   Facebook   Twitter

**Buy “Doubting Abbey”: Amazon – US   Amazon – UK

Filed Under: Samantha Tonge Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Chick-Lit, Doubting Abbey, Guest Interview, Samantha Tonge, Women's Fiction

Expected

June 28, 2013 1 Comment

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“Expected” by Sarah England

Brief Synopsis:

Sam Sweet is a failed psychiatric nurse from a sink estate in Weston Super mare (UK). Her mother’s husband ran off with another woman 20 years ago – although you’d think it happened only yesterday – and the dragon mother’s one ambition is to be a grandmother.

But Sam is terrified of giving birth. She is easily traumatised and has no ambition to return to the sink estate and have dozens of children. She just wants a chance to do something with her life first, to fall in love, to see a bit of the world. Alas, in a drunken stupor she meets Simon – the psychopathic surgeon, who promises her a wonderful life and she believes him – because she is a dingbat and has a lot to learn.

In addition to this, her latest job is injecting facial fillers and clients are suing because it’s going lumpy. Making matters even worse, her best friend, also her boss, is sexually jealous to the point of blind rage because her boyfriend fancies Sam and does little to hide it. Sam is coping – by shopping and over eating chocolate. She piles on weight and sinks deeply  into debt, at which point Simon the surgeon starts playing serious mind games; and by the time it dawns on Sam just what a horrific mess she’s in – well might as well pass her the JCB because she keeps on digging.

Then as the company spirals downwards and all knives are out for survival – a new MD is brought in from the states – Joel – WOWEE – Madison! Sam and he instantly fall for each other but…her mother is now going bonkers – has booked the wedding….with the psychopathic surgeon….oh it’s getting worse…….fireworks? You bet….but that would be telling……

Chapter 1 (tease)

I have a needle stuck in Mrs. Devine’s face.

“Is it working, Sam?” she asks.

“Oh, um, definitely. Yes.”

Truthfully? Nothing is coming out of the syringe, and the harder I press the plunger the more my hand shakes and the needle bends. This is what is going to happen next—the needle snaps off before speeding along the venous highway like a tiny dart toward Mrs. Devine’s heart. Either that, or the whole thing suddenly gives way, and I rip a hole through her head. Sweat surfaces all over my body. I must have the flu or a nasty virus. Might even faint while still holding a syringe with a client attached to it.

Damn. Cellafiller is supposed to be the best thing since Collagen, but really, it’s nearly impossible to squeeze this stuff out, let alone artfully sculpt it beneath tissue-thin skin. I don’t remember it being so difficult during training, but now I’m on my own, well . . . let’s just say it isn’t a happy situation being in a back-street beauty salon with a bunch of women expecting great things.

Mrs. Devine, my model, and something big in local amateur dramatics, is lying on the clinic couch in full make-up, coral lips stretched into her performance smile as I try in vain to fill the ravine between her eyebrows. She doesn’t have a frown line through her glabella muscle so much as a grand canyon.

The small crowd of potential customers straining for a glimpse of this miraculous demonstration is visibly shrinking back. You can almost hear the hissing recoil. I don’t need to glance up to see the sharp downturn of glossed lips and the widening of black-rimmed eyes. Mrs. Devine’s grand canyon is oozing fresh blood. I’ve got the needle fully inserted now, retracting the syringe oh-so-slowly the way I’ve been taught, while my furiously vibrating thumb tries in vain to inject treacle-thick product. Should have taken minutes, and then ta-da! But the harder the plunger is depressed, the more blood oozes out, lying darkly now in a swelling puddle of glistening, ruby red.

Hot nausea tides over me. I feel terrible, by the way, just in case you’re wondering; this poor woman had a long, squiggly frown line, and now she’s got what looks like a botched lobotomy. All eyes focus on my trembling hands as I withdraw the syringe, mop up the debris, and declare the job done. I’ve seen less blood-soaked gauze following open-heart surgery.

“There we are,” I trill, as lightly as if I just served up a plate of lasagna. “And in a couple of days, the line will be gone.”

Ignoring the horrified faces, particularly mine in the mirror opposite—so white against my red hair I look like Elizabeth the First after a nasty shock—I snap off my latex gloves, and return to its box the still full syringe with its severely weakened, bent needle. I cannot look at Mrs. Devine as she hops off the couch with blood pouring from her head. To be honest, I could cry. Mrs. Devine owns the clinic and had it gone well, there would have been a list of new clients for our new product. Instead, it’s a major screw-up. Another one. In time, she will have a scar, and that will no doubt take her mind off the ravine. But long before that, there will be that call—the one about having spoken to her lawyer.

***

My name is Sam Sweet, and I’m in total control; just because every decision I have never made was made by someone else does not mean I am not in control of my life now. Of course I am. Oh, God. Look, I’m doing my best. What else could I have done back there? Oh, God.

The phone rings when I’m halfway down the M5, bolting for home. Minnie. Oh, wonderful, wonderful Minnie. Thank the Lord and all his angels. Minnie will know what to do. You have to know about Minnie, because you’ll like her—really, you will. She’s funny and outrageous—you know, like that girl at school who’d poke you in the back to make you laugh when you were being told off, who pulls silly faces and says outrageous things that no one else dares say. Minnie will cheer me up and tell me she’s having the same problem but a thousand times worse and not to worry.

The thing is, though, Minnie’s been having a rough time lately too—a complaint has been made about her, but she doesn’t know who by or what it is. Our slime-ball boss, Arnie, is going to talk to her about it today. I’d forgotten about that. But the minute her name flashes on my phone screen, it puts all my own problems into perspective. Obviously, she’s going to need to let off steam, and I’m here for her.

“Minnie, hi – it’s me!” I screech into the hands-free set. And be assured, I’m shouting like a market trader because of the road noise. “How did you get on with the fat-arsed twat, then?”

“Sam!” Minnie screams. “Stop! He’s in the car with me.”

There’s a malignant pause, then, “Good afternoon, Samantha.”

Arnie’s voice is of the high-pitched and half-strangled variety, quite unpleasant in a man, I find. Very Mr. Bean, but coming out of a swarthy, fat man with a hairy back (saw it once in a swimming pool, thought it was a grizzly bear and screamed), it’s positively creepy. This is the man who interviewed me for three gruelling hours in a hotel foyer. I thought this was normal procedure until I found out everyone else had twenty minutes.

Now, there is a loaded silence while we all absorb the impact of what I’ve just said.

“Are you still there, Samantha?” says Arnie, every syllable loaded with menace and misogynistic contempt.

Still here but so not functioning.

“Er, hello, hello, hello? Sorry, can’t hear anything, you’re breaking up.”

Breaking up! Oh please . . . . He’ll never swallow that, but I’ve done it now. A fresh band of sweat breaks over me in a sickening wave, while useless, incoherent thoughts clamber around my brain like blind, mewing kittens under a furry blanket. Lorries are overtaking and I’m still in the fast lane, swerving about to a cacophony of blasting horns. I have to get off the planet. Now. A service station. Anywhere.

The phone rings again, but I let it go through to the messaging service. Minnie. Oh, Minnie—I can’t speak . . . not after that! I wonder what it was she wanted, though? I mean, why would she ring with the fat controller still in the car with her? Why? Maybe it was something I should know about . . . something important. I could worry for England. Give me nothing to worry about and I’ll worry about it.

But now I’m really worried.

SarahEnglandPic**A little bit about the author, Sarah England:

‘Expected’ is my debut comedy, but I also have a book of thrillers out, called ‘3am and Wide Awake’ with Alfie Dog Fiction, and have many short stories published in national magazines. Both books are available on amazon as ebooks and paperbacks.

**Contact Sarah:

Website   Facebook   Twitter

Email: s.england630@btinternet.com

**Buy “Expected”:

Amazon – US   Amazon-UK

Filed Under: Expected Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Chick-Lit, Expected, Sarah England

Psycho-Mommy: A Novel

June 21, 2013 Leave a Comment

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“Psycho-Mommy: A Novel” by Mira Harlon

Book Blurb:

Jessica Reed, a vibrant type-A-psychologist, is the ultimate planner:

  • Acceptance to the Ivy League school of her choice … (check!)
  • Graduating Summa Cum Laude and securing the ultimate post, as a sought after psychologist at one of the most prestigious hospitals in the world…. (check!)
  • Marrying Nolan, the man of her dreams (check!)

All is going according to the plan, UNTIL… is it possible? She’s pregnant right after her honeymoon! But, that’s not part of the plan. There are so many more things that are supposed to happen before babies. Are her dreams to start a private practice or Nolan’s dream to work for the Philadelphia Flyers crushed?
When Jess finally accepts the obvious, she starts to unravel. Hold on for a wild ride through Jess’ brilliant yet quirky mind as she obsesses about all things pregnancy – morning sickness, weight gain, proper nutrition, kegels, home baby-proofing, pure exhaustion and honing her sexiness (let’s just say it gets a bit awkward). Along the way Jess’s zany patients, friends, family members and colleagues, manage in ways, both big and small, to contribute to her pregnancy fixations. Does her obsession turn her into “psycho-mommy”?
With incredible wit and amazing perception into the human psyche, Mira Harlon keeps you coming back for more. This ironic, feel-good read will have you laughing and crying and wondering if we don’t all have a little psycho-mommy in us!

**The first two chapters are available with the Amazon look and fine feature.  Click HERE to access the link!

**Contact Information:

Mira Harlon   Psycho-Mommy   Mira Harlon – Google+   Twitter

Filed Under: Mira Harlon, Psycho-Mommy: A Novel Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Chick-Lit, Mira Harlon, Psycho-Mommy: A Novel

The Hole in the Middle

May 17, 2013 2 Comments

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**The Hole in the Middle is free download from May 17-19 only!**

Book Blurb:  I Don’t Know How She Does It for the This Is 40 generation, The Hole in the Middle introduces Sophie Whelan, a woman who has it all – including a hideous boss, a distracted husband, daycare woes, problem employees and a 40th birthday on the horizon. Precariously close to slipping off of the treadmill that is her daily grind, Sophie is startled by the reappearance of Will Shannon, the great unresolved love of her life. As she remembers the vivid drama of their college romance, Sophie confronts the choices she has made in life and in love and looks for the one answer that has always eluded her: what does she really want?

Chapter 1

CHAPTER 1: MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2011

It’s a grey morning in the windswept parking structure across from the hospital, affectionately known as “The Baxter”.  I’m huddled in my minivan with the heat going full blast, gazing out at the unlovely view of the flat, cloudy sky and the forlorn stand of leafless maple trees lining the concrete wall opposite.  I’m not here for the view, though.  This parking spot may be short on ambience, but it has cell phone reception, and I’m surveying the voicemail landscape before venturing into the office.  I punch in my code and wait.

The disembodied voice speaks: You have nine new messages.

Nine.  That’s not so bad.

First message.  Click.  Barry, definitely.  He never leaves messages.

Next message.  Click.  Ditto.  But two hang-ups before nine-fifteen is unusual.  I feel my shoulders start to creep up with anticipatory tension.

Next message.   Message marked urgent.  Uh oh.  “Hi, Sophie.  It’s Barry. I see that you’re not in yet.  I need to speak to you about the Gala as soon as you do get in. There’s a problem and you need to get on top of it.”

Next message.  “Hi Sophie, it’s Anna from the toddler room at daycare.  Scotty is pulling on his ear and seems a little fussy.  He’s OK to stay for now, but if he gets any worse we’ll have to ask you to pick him up.  OK?  Sorry about that.  We’ll call you later with an update.”

What?  No.  I dropped him off half an hour ago and he was fine.  A little phlegm-riddled, maybe, but nothing more.  If I believed in God, I would pray.  Maybe I should anyway, just to hedge my bets.

Next message.   “Hi Sophie.  It’s Janelle Moss.”  The lead volunteer on the Gala, an event controlled by a group of very wealthy women who have intense and competing agendas that I don’t even begin to understand.  Every conversation with these people is a minefield.  Happily, managing Gala volunteers is one of the few things in the office that I’m not responsible for, and whatever the problem, I’m going to punt it right back to Justine.  “I don’t know if you’ve had a chance to talk to Justine yet, but we’re looking at a little change in direction on the creative for the marketing materials.  Happy to chat once Justine has filled you in.  Bye now.”

Next message.  “Sophie, it’s Justine.  Major screw-up at the Gala meeting last night.  We need to talk urgently.  Call me.” Justine is my colleague and sometime friend, when it suits her.  She runs the Event Planning department, which means that the Gala is her problem.

Next message.  “Sophie, my dear.  It’s Lillian.  I was hoping to catch you in person.  How I hate these dreadful machines!  Do give me a call today if you can.  The issue is rather time sensitive, as you young people are fond of saying.”

Lillian Parker has been one of my favorite people on earth since my last year of university, when I lived in her rambling house, paying criminally low rent in exchange for house-sitting services during her frequent sojourns abroad.  Her annual holiday party is this weekend, and I can see the invitation in my mind’s eye now, poking out of the pile in the corner of my desk that I lovingly call my Guilt Stack.  It’s not like Lil to get worked up about RSVPs, which is why the card is still buried in the Guilt Stack, but I’ll move it up to the top of the pile and deal with it once I get into the office – or by Thursday at the latest.

Next message.    “Hi Sophie.  It’s your mother.  Look honey, I know you’re busy but we have to talk about Christmas.  It’s urgent.”

Instinctively, I check the date on my BlackBerry.  Have I lost a week somewhere?  But no, it’s only December 5th.

“First of all – dinner.  I’m going to do a turducken again this year, but did Jesse like it last year?  I know he said he did, but he didn’t have seconds, so I’m not convinced.  Your brother and Dana liked it – come to think of it, did you like it?  Anyway, if you and Jesse are OK, we’ll go with the turducken again, but I want you to be honest with me if you aren’t OK with it.  Anyway, assuming that you are, we’ll go with usual sides – mashed potatoes, turnips, that rice dish that you like and probably some creamed spinach or something.  I was going to do mini shrimp cocktails for the appetizer, but did you tell me that Jesse isn’t eating seafood these days?  If not, I could always just do a soup, maybe roasted red pepper ­– that would be nice with the turducken.  I’ve been talking to your brother about dessert – he says that he doesn’t care, but I know he prefers the pumpkin pie and you always say that you prefer the lemon meringue.  So I guess I could make both, if it’s really important to you to have lem –“

Next message.  “It’s your mother again.  The machine cut me off.  Anyway, call me about dinner.  And then I need you to think about what the kids want for Christmas.  Are you doing stockings at your house or mine?  If you are doing them at mine, I’ll need to get the old stockings out and do a few repairs – they were looking kind of threadbare last year.  And also I’ll need to know if you are bringing everything for the stockings or if I need to buy some things as well.  Are you going to stay overnight here on Christmas Eve?  Because if you are, we’ll need to make a plan for dinner on the twenty-fourth.  Beef might be nice.  Does Jamie still like those transformer robots?  Because I saw a robot kit that looked amazing.  It said it was for thirteen years and up, but Jamie is such a smart little boy, I think he’d really like it.  Maybe it’s something that he and Jesse could do together; Jesse’s been working so hard.  And for Scotty I was thinking that it’s probably time to get him playing hockey; wouldn’t Jesse love that?  Maybe some little skates and a helmet and a stick?  How cute would that be?  I’m around this morning, then out for lunch with Jennie Birkin – you must remember Jennie; you went to school with Andy Birkin.  Then I’ll be back for a couple –“

End of messages.

I feel a little warm and light-headed now, and I pull down my visor mirror for an assessment.  Every day of my thirty-nine years looks back.  Grey coat, grey suit and grey roots: I really need to get my highlights done.  More alarmingly, I can feel an aching weariness in my chest.  I’ve noticed it with some regularity lately, and it makes me nervous.  Some days it’s just a knot of anxiety, but today it feels like the hole in the middle of a donut: empty but for the wind whistling through it.  I know I shouldn’t feel this hollowed out and used up at thirty-nine, but I don’t have time for that kind of reflection today.

I rummage through my purse, and locate my triage kit to deal with the problems I can solve.  I pull out the bottle of cough suppressant and take a long swig that burns going down, and then squeeze a couple of drops of Visine into each eye.  Then I attack the area under my eyes with concealer and everything else with bronzer.  And with that, I’m ready to brave the germ screening desk.

I’ve invested considerable time and energy in my relationship with Max, the guy who has been guarding the germ desk for the past six months; I know the names of his grandchildren and their ages, and how Max developed a herniated disk last year, and that Max’s wife wants him to get a storage locker for his model trains.  And because our conversations have covered extensive areas of Max’s life and times, there has been little opportunity to explore the subject of my health, which is exactly the way I want it.

But today, Max is missing.  Nigel, according to his security tag, is sitting in Max’s chair.  And judging from the length of the line, Nigel takes his job very seriously.  When I get to the front, I consider batting my eyelashes, but I suspect that insouciance of this kind has a shelf life, and mine is getting awfully close to the expiration date.  I give him what I hope is a winning smile instead.

Nigel is clearly unmoved.  He picks up his clipboard and clears this throat.  He’s going to make me do the survey.  I can’t believe it.  Max never made me do the survey.  I wonder if that’s why Max isn’t working here anymore.

“Have you experienced any coughing in the past twenty-four hours?”

“No.”  This is absolutely true.

“Sneezing?”

“No.”  Not more than everyone sneezes when they wake up in the morning, that is.  Take Jesse, for example.  He sneezes practically every morning, sometimes eight times in a row.  It doesn’t mean that he’s sick.  I myself am not a chronic sneezer like Jesse, but there is no reason to draw any dire conclusions just because I was sneezing this morning.

“Vomiting?”

“No.”

“Fever?”

“No.”  I can’t say for sure.  I don’t have a thermometer in my portable pharmacy.  And again, there are lots of other possible explanations for the flush in my cheeks today.

“Flu-like symptoms of any kind?”

“No.”

Nigel peers at me over the top of the clipboard.  If Nigel wants to, he can insist on taking my temperature, and then I’ll be in deep trouble.  But as much as he wants to, he can’t find justification today.  I almost pump my fist in the air as he moves onto the next person in line. But with Max gone, I know this is only a temporary win. Nigel is cut from a different cloth entirely. Society requires people like Nigel; without them there would be no parking officials or mall cops or hall monitors, and we would live in a state of anarchy.  And it’s important to remember this, because I dislike Nigel so intensely at this moment that I’m beginning to imagine terrible events that might befall him, and prevent him from coming to work ever again.  Not death, of course, I’d never wish for that.  A debilitating injury would be quite enough.

For the record, I approve of the hospital’s infection protection measures, at least in a theoretical sense.  And I would definitely comply with them if I were providing front line health care and believed that I posed any risk whatsoever to the hundreds of sick children upstairs.  But I’m the Director of Communications for the hospital, so I spend my days reviewing press releases and dealing with media requests, ducking my boss and trying to persuade my assistant to do some work.  I’m not saving lives.  There are lots of people in this building who do, but I’m not one of them.  And if I followed the letter of the law, and kept my flu symptoms at home, I would have worked exactly thirteen out of the last forty-five days.

In the meantime, though, it’s already nine-ten and I’m late for work.

My assistant Joy is at her desk: a mixed blessing.  She raises her tweezed eyebrows at me and murmurs, “Slow start this morning?” before turning back to her computer, where she is communing with her Facebook friends, or possibly buying designer knock-offs on eBay. But I’m not ready to declare this day a complete write-off, at least not yet, so for now I’ll act as though she works for me, and that we’re both happy about it.

“Good morning, Joy,” I say.  “I need to speak to Justine right away.  Can you find her and see if she can pop by?”

She eyes me with a combination of contempt and petulance, and my request hangs, unacknowledged, between us.  “Your phone’s been lighting up all morning,” she says.  “And Barry’s been by twice looking for you.  It’s about the Gala.”

The Gala is the hospital’s major fundraiser of the year.  It is a lavish dinner-dance for two thousand of the city’s established and upwardly mobile, and it raises over a million dollars for our medical research each year.  It is organized by a committee of well-heeled volunteers, who have lots of extra time and opinions about everything from the shade of the napkins to the font on the tablecards. It is also – mercifully – not in my portfolio, except in a tangential sense, since I oversee the marketing for the event.  I’ve attended a few committee meetings, mostly as moral support for my colleague Justine, but I begged off last night to nurse my cold.

“I’ll go and see him once I’ve had an update from Justine.  So if you could get her for me that would be great.  Thanks,” I say, retreating into my office, and closing the door behind me.

I see my computer sitting innocently enough on my desk, but I’m not fooled.  Recently, I have fallen into the habit of ascribing human characteristics to my computer, and unfortunately, our relationship has taken a turn for the pathological.  This week, I’m having trouble shaking the irrational conviction that my computer is poised for an attack; each morning, I quake inwardly as I push the power button and hear, in the hum of waking machinery, a marauding army of data collecting itself and preparing to barrel over the horizon at me.

I log in, and the screen fills with email; definitely more than twenty… could it be as many as fifty?  I look away in horror. The computer seems to vibrate with a malevolent energy; like a rabid dog, I’m convinced that it senses my fear.   I back away and step out into the hallway. “And, Joy?  Could you please call everyone and postpone the staff meeting?  I’ve got to sort out this thing with Justine.”

Joy has been at the hospital for twenty-seven years.  Her seniority guarantees her a position with someone on the Executive Team, but she gets passed around like a hot potato because she has the worst attitude in the secretarial pool.  She is also not particularly competent, and it’s hard to tell if she’s bad at her job because she hates it, or if she hates it because she’s bad at it.  You could spend a lot of time on this age-old philosophical debate about chickens and eggs, but the real take-away is this: getting good secretarial help is not unlike winning at musical chairs: the people who think it has anything to do with luck are usually the ones left standing when the music stops.  Your chances are always going to improve if you’re willing to keep your elbows out, but I, against a mountain of evidence disproving it, have always clung to the belief that civility is rewarded in the end.  And even if I were prepared to sink into the fray, my bargaining power is constrained by the fact that my department, Communications, is a cost center not a profit center, which is to say that we spend money instead of bringing it in.  This is a designation that presages all kinds of large and small disappointments.  It’s the profit centers who hold the real power in any organization, and which are routinely showered with staff and budgets.  Not for the first time, I consider the merits of my career choices.

Joy actually rolls her eyes.  “They’re not going to like it, you know.  It’s the second time this week.  Erica is totally pestering me about getting some time with you.”

“I get it,” I tell her.  “I’ll meet with them today.  I just can’t do it right now.  Can you please let them know?”

Joy sighs heavily and departs.

“Thank you, Joy,” I call after her.  “I really appreciate it!”

Deep down, I suspect that the real reason that Joy works for me is that I am the only person in the office who is willing to put up with her.   As I do each morning, I remind myself that Joy is paid to show up every day and make my life easier.  The fact that she refuses to fulfill this basic requirement calls for a serious conversation with the HR department, but I would rather suffer than invest my emotional energy in a doomed attempt at performance management.  I’m just going to wait until someone with less power than I have is hired, so that I can pass Joy off and continue the cycle of dysfunction.

I should have checked my email first. I feel a little light-headed, and am taking deep calming breaths as Justine appears in my doorway.  Justine is the Director of Special Events and the only person with less actual power than I have on the senior management team.  I feel for her.  Event planning is a career for masochists.  Events can fail for almost infinite and wholly unpredictable reasons.   Providing name tags?  You’d better hope that the temp who is preparing them remembers to include the appropriate honorific after the name of the megalomaniac on the Board.  Using audio-visuals?  Pray that the AV department sends the smart guy who actually knows how to use the equipment and not the stoner who is mailing in his last few years until he can trigger his pension and still hasn’t really figured out how to work those new-fangled computers.  Serving food?  Look out for the myriad of allergies – news to you – that are likely to endanger the life of a major donor.  While you’re at it, hope that the bartender has recovered from the fight with her boyfriend and decides to show up after all.  And here’s the kicker: even if you throw the best event in the world, the volunteers will take all the credit and you’ll be left managing feedback like “Didn’t you think the vinaigrette was a little too citrusy? Can you make sure that doesn’t happen again next year?”

Justine is made from tough stuff, though.  She’s been managing events for close to fifteen years and has nerves of steel.  But today, she looks panic-stricken.

“What happened last night?” I ask.  “Barry is freaking out.  He’s practically stalking me.  What’s going on?”

Justine groans.  “It was horrible, Sophie.  You can’t imagine.”

“I don’t understand.  I thought we were just rubber-stamping approval for the art for the posters and website last night.  It was supposed to be a short meeting.”

“I know,” says Justine.  “Claudio did a great job on the art.  Very sexy – gorgeous models, loincloths, Cleopatra – everyone loved it.”

“So what’s the problem?”

Justine wrinkles her nose as though she has just tasted something bitter.  “They don’t like the theme anymore,” she says.

I’m stunned.  We have spent months trying to get the volunteers to agree on a theme for the evening.  Every single detail flows from the theme – music, entertainment, décor and most importantly from the perspective of the volunteers, wardrobe.  It was a big day when they finally settled on Walk Like An Egyptian, which the volunteers felt provided an aesthetic bridge between the retro cool of eighties girl band music and the sophisticated elegance of the wildly fashionable Halston-style goddess dresses. More importantly from my perspective, the decision allowed us to move forward with hiring an outside designer and getting the promotional materials done.  In truth, the website should have been up a month ago.  We are supposed to start selling tickets next week.

Justine shakes her head.  “Apparently, the fundamental appeal of the Egyptian theme had to do with being able to get the Bangles to perform.”

“The Bangles,” I repeat.  This is news to me.  How did this never come up?  “Didn’t they break up, like, twenty years ago?”

“Well, it turns out that they’re back together.  They’re doing a reunion tour, and Janelle saw them in L.A. last month.  But they’re committed to a long-term gig in Vegas through the spring and can’t do the Gala.”

“Can’t we just get another girl band?”

“I tried that.” Justine grits her teeth.  “Just be glad you weren’t there, Sophie.  It was a freight train.  It couldn’t be stopped.  Janelle converted every single person on the committee in the space of ten minutes.  By the end, everyone agreed that the theme was too stiff without the Bangles tying it together.”

“Stiff?  What about the male models in loincloths, the belly dancers, the palm trees and the dance party in the Pharaoh’s tomb?”  I can’t believe this is happening.

Justine’s smile turns nasty.  “Do you know what the real problem is?” she asks.  “They suddenly realized that they’d all be wearing the same dress. Not that anyone was crass enough to come out and say it.”

“Oh my god,” I say.  “There’s no way they’ll change their minds, then?”

“Nope.”

“I need to think,” I say.  “Don’t cancel anything.”  I suddenly remember Barry.  “What are we going to tell Barry?”

“I think he knows,” says Justine.  “Janelle said that she was going to tell him.”

As if on cue, Joy pops her head in the door.  “Barry wants to see you now,” she says.

“Are you coming with me?”  I ask Justine.

“Not a chance, friend,” she replies.  “My ears are still ringing from the slap down I got from him this morning.  I’m planning on staying out of his way for as long as possible.  Anyway, you can handle him.  He likes you.  More than he likes me, at least.”

“Low bar,” I say.

KateHiltonPic**Contact the author, Kate Hilton!

Email: kate@katehilton.com

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**Don’t forget, the book is FREE May 17th – 19th only!

Filed Under: The Hole in the Middle Tagged With: Book feature, Books, FREE book, Kate Hilton, The Hole in the Middle, Writers

Grannies, Guns and Ghosts

May 17, 2013 2 Comments

Grannies web JPG 3

Blurb of “Grannies, Guns and Ghosts”:  Senior snoop, Agnes Barton, has taken up residence in a Winnebago at a campground in East Tawas, Michigan. It’s not the ideal place for a woman of seventy-two to live, but she’s making do. She had planned to start a detective agency with partner in crime, Eleanor Mason, but a snag with the license has them free wheeling it, not that it matters because they are the ones folks call when dead bodies turn up.

A frantic phone call has Agnes and Eleanor racing to the scene of yet another crime scene. Herman Butler has fallen to his death from a third story window, and the widow, Betty Lou, is beside herself with either grief or competing for the Oscars, and it’s up to Agnes and Eleanor to unravel the mystery, which gets more interesting when a ghost is listed as a possible suspect.

This time around, Agnes and Sheriff Peterson can agree, the widow is nuts, but wait, a few days later the ghost ship, Erie Board of Trades, was spotted off the shores of Lake Huron. Ghost hunters, G.A.S.P., hightail it into town, and East Tawas is overrun with ghost sightings.

Agnes and Eleanor must sort fact from fantasy before another body is found or a curse is realized.

CHAPTER 1

I, Agnes Barton, of sound mind and body, promise not to throttle my partner in crime, Eleanor Mason, no matter how much she tries to get a rise out of me. I must have lost my mind when I decided to partner with Eleanor in our new detective agency, Pink Ladies. It seemed like a good idea at the time. Truth be known, she had saved my life. I wonder if I’ll ever hear the last of that? Oh, who was I fooling, she’s the only one I’d want to snoop with. While we are quite the odd couple, we’re also a great team. So what if the official paperwork and licenses are out of date, that won’t stop us from investigating whatever we had a mind to.

Charter Arms couldn’t have made a better pistol than The Pink Lady. What woman wouldn’t love a pink, ultra-lightweight .38 Special. It’s perfect for women to tote around in their handbags. Not that you would call a carpet bag a handbag by any means. Some of them are large enough to conceal an arsenal of weapons, if a body had a mind to do such a thing.

Unlike the fictional bounty hunter Stephanie Plum, I like to keep my sidearm handy. Nobody really gave a squat what a person of a certain age had concealed in their bags. I suppose most younger folks think we all knit and do all sorts of creative things. Oh, I have a creative mind all right, but not creative enough to dodge Eleanor. Poor dear wouldn’t know what to do without our adventures.

I had taken up residence in a camper of all things, parked in a camp-ground in East Tawas, Michigan, on the tranquil shores of Lake Huron. Lucky for me I got a larger spot at the camp-ground and I had adjusted to living in a Winnebago. My house had been fire-bombed during our last case. It’s not so bad. I get to enjoy the misty lake as the sunrises and some of the most spectacular sunsets in Michigan.

I eyed my cat, Duchess, and said, “I hope it doesn’t take ‘til winter for our house to be rebuilt.”

Duchess responded with, “Meow.”

“I know girl, no mourning doves here,” I said to her. I strode by the mirror as I made my way into the bathroom and deep lines formed as I grimaced. I’m still wearing my pink bathrobe with pink ruffles, white sandals covering my feet. My unruly salt and pepper hair was tangled and I tried to work my fingers through the knots. Every dang morning it’s the same thing, my hair looks like a rooster did it in my sleep. Puffy dark circles were apparent, obviously from the restless slumber as my hip ached something fierce last night.

I made my way into the kitchen and poured coffee grounds into my new fancy-dancy coffee maker that is supposed to make a good latte. If I ever figure out how to use the damn thing! It’s only seven in the morning and I’m already cussing, if only in my head at the moment.

I jumped and bumped against the counter and clutched my chest when my door vibrated nearly off the hinges. Whoever could that be and this early?

I pulled back the pink lace curtains to reveal a familiar pair of friendly blue eyes. Eleanor, had her face pressed to the window with both her hands against my door like a lost puppy begging to be let in.

I yanked open the door and watched in amusement as she tried to steady herself, resembling a Weeble Wobble. What is the saying? Weeble Wobble but we don’t fall down.

“Have you been camped outside my door all night waiting for me to let you in?” I body blocked the doorway. I wasn’t ready to let her in just yet.

She puffed up her chest, trying unsuccessfully to act offended. “Of course not, Agnes. I just didn’t want to bother you if your hot-shot lawyer man is here.” She giggled, her large belly jiggling. “Unless you want an audience,” her eyes danced.

She wishes.

“Who?”

“You know perfectly well whom I’m talking about. The last time I came here the camper was rockin’ so hard that I thought there was an earthquake occurring inside.”

“It was earth-shattering.” I frowned. “Andrew Hart has gone back to wherever he came from, just as I knew he would.”

“Did he say when he’s coming back?”

She actually sounded sincere.  “I don’t know nor do I care. I’m seventy-two and I don’t have the time for the entanglement a man would create in my life.” I cared all right, but I’d never let her know it. If I gave it too much thought I’d be no good to anybody. Andrew left, and I wish under better terms, but me being the stubborn woman I am, we left on a sour note. An argument over coffee creamer of all things, and I crossed the line when I insisted he stay in town, but no sense in regrets now. It’s too late.

**Comments from the author:  If you have ever wondered what Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum would be like as a senior citizen then check out this series. Think Grandma Mazur meets Murder She Wrote.

IMG_2379**Contact Madison Johns:

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Filed Under: Grannies, Guns and Ghosts Tagged With: Book feature, Books, Cozy mystery, Grannies, Guns and Ghosts, Madison Johns

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