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Free Enovella from Holly Bodger!

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Follow this link to download the novella!
Set in the same world as 5 TO 1The Other One gives Surina’s perspective on the first day of her sister’s Tests, showing that Koyanagar’s perfect Poster Girl may not be so perfect after all.


This product or book may have been distributed for review, this in no way affects my opinions or reviews. COPYRIGHT © 2014 LIVE TO READ

Death in a Major by Sarah Fox: Spotlight and Giveaway!



DEATH IN A MAJOR
A Music Lover’s Mystery
By Sarah Fox
Witness Impulse
January 5, 2016
E-ISBN 9780062413017 * $2.99



About the Book

The new season for the Point Grey Philharmonic starts off on a sour note when one of the symphony’s wealthy benefactors drops dead in the second Music Lover’s Mystery from author Sarah Fox.

When Archibald Major, local big wig and nasty tyrant, drops dead at a post-concert reception, violinist Midori Bishop soon suspects foul play. Although Midori has no intention of getting involved in another murder investigation, that all changes when Jordan - her violin student and the victim’s grandson - seeks her help convincing the police that the real killer is his uncle, a low-level criminal.

As Midori digs into the victim’s life, she discovers that he was a man who created discord at every turn, even within his own family, and there is no shortage of potential suspects. When someone close to Midori unexpectedly confesses to the crime, Midori must race to discover the identity of the true killer before an innocent person goes to jail for a crime they didn’t commit… and before Midori herself becomes a victim in the killer’s deadly encore.


Purchase Here:
DEATH IN A MAJOR


About the Author
Sarah Fox was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia where she developed a love for mysteries at a young age. When not writing novels or working as a legal writer she is often reading her way through a stack of books or spending time outdoors with her English Springer Spaniel.



Connect with Sarah Fox


Praise for Sarah Fox

“Readers are kept in suspense as each spinetingling event moves them towards an unforgettable ending. Sarah Fox delivers murder mystery with believable characters and earns a thumbs up.”
   — Authors on the Air Global Radio Network on DEAD RINGER

“While Midori may be clueless in love, she is good at asking questions. It is easy to understand how difficult it is for her to leave the investigating to the police, particularly once she has begun. Her actions are believable, if at times rash. Dead Ringer is an entertaining cozy with just the right amount of suspense. It is a great choice for reading on a lazy summer afternoon.”
   — Mutt Cafe on DEAD RINGER

“Readers are in for a treat with Sarah Fox’s new cozy...out of love, Midori sticks her nose in every place she can, which makes her a perfect heroine for lovers of mysteries. Readers will be pleased with the sheer entertainment of Fox’s plot.”
   — Suspense Magazine on DEAD RINGER

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This product or book may have been distributed for review, this in no way affects my opinions or reviews. COPYRIGHT © 2014 LIVE TO READ

The Radiant Road by Katherine Catmull: Review and Playlist!


A gorgeously written tale of magic, friendship, and self-discovery set in a dream-like landscape filled with fairies.

After years of living in America, Clare Macleod and her father are returning to Ireland, where they’ll inhabit the house Clare was born in—a house built into a green hillside with a tree for a wall. For Clare, the house is not only full of memories of her mother, but also of a mysterious boy with raven-dark hair and dreamlike nights filled with stars and magic. Clare soon discovers that the boy is as real as the fairy-making magic, and that they’re both in great danger from an ancient foe. 

Fast-paced adventure and spellbinding prose combine to weave a tale of love and loyalty in this young adult fantasy.


"A stunningly atmospheric, gorgeously complicated dream of a book." —Publishers Weeklystarred review

"An unforgettable tale . . . that contains all the darkness and light of A Midsummer Night's Dream." —School Library Journal, starred review

Goodreads Summary

My favorite part of this novel was the descriptions of the Irish countryside and the author's devotion to Clare's character.  The reader will meet Clare as she is preparing to move back to Ireland with her father.  She's a completely different person at the end of the novel.  She's intelligent, inquisitive, and a little wily.  Her character grew a lot throughout the novel as did the secondary characters.  I really enjoyed her discovery of the fae world and all that it implied-both dangerous and fascinating.  The more Clare becomes acquainted with the fae the deeper in danger she slides.  

The author has a way of writing that will make  it very difficult for the reader (as it did me!) to put down the book.  I felt like the author's way with words and subtle complexities fit a novel about fairies and mystery perfectly.   Finn, the dark haired boy, was both a surprise and forwarded the plot via his relationship to Clare.  I liked how the author focused on the secondary characters as well as Clare's character.  Overall, this book is recommended to young adult/teen readers.

4 Stars



Character playlist

In The Radiant Road, a girl named Clare, whose mother died when she was young, returns to Ireland and the house where she was born: a stone house hidden under a green hill, with a tree growing inside it. Inside the tree she finds a connection to a world she’d known as a child and forgotten all about; she finds a boy named Finn; and she finds great danger, to both his world and our own.

Some of these songs might seem a little ancient for a 15 year-old, but when she lived in America she spent a lot of time—too much time, frankly—trolling YouTube for interesting tunes.


1. “Painting by Chagall,” The Weepies. “We float like two lovers in a painting by Chagall” —no spoilers, but that’s very Clare and Finn in more ways than one. Also, though: “Everybody says you can’t you can’t you can’t, don’t try! but everybody says that if they had the chance, they’d fly, like we do.” Trying even when she might fail, when she’s most afraid to fail, is Clare’s story.

2. “Maybe in Another Year,” Jennie Pearl. An eerily pretty song from a 15 year-old girl in 1970. Teenagers who make or invent and put it out there are Clare’s soulmates—even ones like Jennie, who never make another song.

3. “Dark of the Matinee,” Franz Ferdinand. This might seem too fierce for dreamy Clare, but I don’t think so. This is just the sort of boy she’d like, and in some ways is just the sort of boy she finds.

4. “Heather Says,” by the Cowsills: Clare has had plenty of experience with nasty Heathers in her various schools. Also this is a great, weird song, and Clare values the weird.

5. “White Teeth Teens,” Lorde. See “Heather Says,” but five or six years later, and more bitterly serious. Invisible Clare would deeply appreciate this critique of those who enjoy high school a little more than they should.

6. “The Stolen Child,” The Waterboys. Clare has passionate distaste for the word “fairies,” but she does love the bits of Yeats she’s read in her late mother’s commonplace book. So she might like this lovely setting of one those poems: “Come away, human child, to the water and the wild.”

7. “Ending Song” by Keren Ann. “Sunny day—no one’s here. In the morning rain, there’s no clouds, and I hear, ‘Follow me . . . follow me . . .’” This is basically the story of someone experiencing a Strange—what Clare’s mother called a fairy-making—so it would be right up Clare’s alley.

8. “Starálfur,” by Sigur Rós — like most Sigur Rós songs, this has a Strange energy that Clare can relate to. You know Iceland must be littered with the makings of the Strange.

9. “Laughter Lines,” Bastille. “I'll see you in the future when we're older/And we are full of stories to be told . . .” I mean Clare just has this one on repeat, sometimes, and you know who she’s thinking of. So good.

10. “Sprout & the Bean,” Joanna Newsom: “Dreaming seamless dreams of lead”—honestly this whole song is a bit of a Strange—could Newsom be from Timeless? And she was only just out of her teens when she recorded this album.

11. “The Body of an American,” The Pogues. Surely Clare, poking around in closets, found one of her mother’s old Pogues CDs and fell for it hard, like any sane person? This song’s a good one for Clare, because it’s about an Irish American who returns home ( . . . to die, but let’s leave that aside).

12. “I’m On My Way,” The Proclaimers. Clare knows this not from Shrek—please—but from her Scottish father’s teenage copy of the The Proclaimers’ second album, which has a place of honor in his CD rack. Clare and her Dad sing this while they do the dishes, and if it makes him sad, remembering his dead wife, Clare sings in her thickest, most awful Scottish accent to cheer him up.

13. “Carrickfergus,” Van Morrison. Beautiful rendition of an Irish folk song of loss and grief. Clare listens to it when she needs to cry.

14. “You Were Cool,” The Mountain Goats. Clare would like everyone to know she already liked The Mountain Goats before John Green started talking about them. This song reminds her of someone she knew in school in Texas. That is all.

15. “The Parting Glass,” The Clancy Brothers. An old song but lovely, which her mother used to sing. Clare thought of this song when she left Finn and his people to go off to meet her beast.




This product or book may have been distributed for review, this in no way affects my opinions or reviews. COPYRIGHT © 2014 LIVE TO READ

Zero Day by Jan Gangsei: Blog Tour and Giveaway!


Eight years ago, Addie Webster was the victim of the most notorious kidnapping case of the decade. Addie vanished—and her high-profile parents were forced to move on.

Mark Webster is now president of the United States, fighting to keep the oval office after a tumultuous first term. Then, the unthinkable happens: the president’s daughter resurfaces. Addie is brought back into her family’s fold, but who is this sixteen-year-old girl with a quiet, burning intelligence now living in the White House? There are those in the president’s political circle who find her timely return suspicious.

When the NSA approaches Darrow Fergusson, Addie’s childhood best friend and the son of the president’s chief of staff, he doesn't know what to think. How could this slip of a girl be a threat to national security? But at the risk of having his own secrets exposed by the powerful government agency, Darrow agrees to spy on Addie.

It soon becomes apparent that Addie is much more than the traumatized victim of a sick political fringe group. Addie has come with a mission. Will she choose to complete it? And what will happen if she does?


ABOUT JAN GANGSEI:
Jan Gangsei grew up in small-town Vermont, reading Nancy Drew mysteries, putting on backyard shows with her best friend and dreaming about exploring the world. After college, she landed a job as a newspaper reporter covering politics and the police beat, and was astonished to discover she could actually get paid to write and tell stories. Since then, she's lived in Key West, New York City, DC and Barbados. She's now settled with her family in northern Virginia, where she writes full time with a cup of hazelnut coffee in one hand and a Jack Russell terrier named Watson curled under her legs. Her debut young adult novel, ZERO DAY, publishes with Disney-Hyperion in January, 2016.

Some random facts about Jan:

* Soon after she learned to walk she was stuck on a pair of skis (Vermont law), which she promptly removed and watched as they slid down the mountain solo -- likely explaining her future love of physics (and staying safely in the lodge).

* She's a graduate of the DIA's attache program for spouses, where she learned how to properly set a table, wear an evening gown, and disable an attacker with a few well-placed kicks. She suggests you don't ever sneak up on her in a dark alley, especially if she's wearing heels.

* She has tons of favorite authors, but some of her biggest influences growing up include: Judy Blume, Margaret Atwood, Edith Wharton and Kurt Vonnegut. (Also, whoever wrote the copy for the back of her Cheerios box, which she's pretty sure she'd memorized by third grade.)

* She loves meeting new people, and interacting with other readers and writers. Drop her a note and say hello here or on Twitter!



Tour Schedule:
Week 1:


Week 2
1/22: Beauty and the Bookshelf - Q&A

Giveaway:
3 Finished Copies of ZERO DAY (US Only)
a Rafflecopter giveaway


This product or book may have been distributed for review, this in no way affects my opinions or reviews. COPYRIGHT © 2014 LIVE TO READ