Sunday, February 27, 2022

LAST DUKE STANDING,

 Welcome to my blog tour show case for  LAST DUKE STANDING which is been hosted by HarperCollins ,Graydon House | Hanover Square Press | HQN | MIRA | Park Row Books





THE LAST DUKE STANDING

Author: Julia London

ISBN: 9781335639868

Publication Date: February 22, 2022

Publisher: HQN Books


Buy Links: 

BookShop.org

Harlequin 

Barnes & Noble

Amazon

Books-A-Million

Powell’s 



Book Summary: When Crown Princess Justine of Wesloria is sent to England to learn the ropes of royalty, she falls under the tutelage of none other than Queen Victoria herself. She’s also in the market for a proper husband—one fit to marry the future Queen of Wesloria. Because he knows simply everyone, William, Lord Douglas (the notoriously rakish heir to the Duke of Hamilton seat in Scotland, and decidedly not husband material), is on hand as an escort of sorts. William has been recruited to keep an eye on the royal matchmaker for the Weslorian Prime Minister, tasked to ensure the princess is matched with a man of quality...and one who will be sympathetic to the prime minister’s views. As William and Justine are forced to scrutinize an endless parade of England’s best bachelors, they become friends. But when the crowd of potential grooms is steadily culled, what if William is the last bachelor standing?


PROLOGUE 1844 When Justine was fourteen, her father took her to the mountainous north country of Wesloria. He said he was to meet with coal barons because they were restless and in need of appeasing. Why? Justine had wondered. “Because coal barons are always restless and in need of appeasing, darling,” he’d said, as if everyone knew that. She’d imagined large, heavily cloaked men, faces covered in soot, pacing their hearths and muttering their grievances. But the coal barons were, in fact, like all well-dressed Weslorian gentlemen with clean faces. They peered at her with expressions that ranged from disgust to indifference to curiosity. “Don’t mind them,” her father had said. “They are not modern men.” Justine and her father were housed at Astasia Castle. It was a fortress that jutted out forebodingly from a rocky outcropping so high on the mountain that the horses labored to pull the royal coach up the steep drive. It was purported to be the best of all the accommodations in the area, afforded to Justine and her father by virtue of the fact Justine’s father was the king of Wesloria, and she was the crown princess, the invested heir to the throne. Justine said the castle looked scary. Her father explained that castles were built in this manner so that armies and marauders could be seen advancing from miles away, and runaway brides could be seen fleeing for miles. “Runaway brides?” Justine had been enthralled by the idea of something so romantic gone so horribly awry. “Petr the Mad watched his bride run away with his best knight, and then watched his men chase them for miles before they got away. He was so angry he burned down half the village.” Her father did not elaborate further, as the gates had opened, and the castellan had come rushing forward, eager to show the king and his heir the old royal castle he proudly kept. Sir Corin wore a dusty blue waistcoat that hung to his thighs, the last four buttons undone to allow for his paunch. His hair, scraggly and gray, had been pulled into an old-fashioned queue at his nape. He kept a ring of keys attached to his waist that clanked with each step he took. He was a student of history, he’d said, and could answer any question they might have about Astasia Castle, and proceeded to exhibit his detailed knowledge of the dank, drafty place with narrow halls and low ceilings. A young Russian prince had died in this room. An ancient queen had lost her life giving birth to her tenth child in that room. Sir Corin showed them to the throne room. “More than one monarch’s held court here.” Justine was accustomed to the opulence of the palace in Wesloria’s capital of St. Edys. This looked more like a common room of a public house—it was small and dark, the king and queen’s thrones wooden, and the tapestries faded by time and smoke. Another room, Sir Corin pointed out, was where King Maksim had accepted the surrender of the feudal King Igor, thereby uniting all Weslorians under one rule after generations of strife. “My namesake,” her father said proudly, forgetting, perhaps, that King Maksim had slaughtered King Igor’s forces to unite them all. They came upon a small inner courtyard. Stone walls rose up on three sides of it, but the outer wall was a battlement. Sir Corin pointed to a door at one end of the battlement that led into a keep with narrow windows. “We use it for storage now, but they kept the prisoners there in the old days. Worse than any dungeon your young eyes have ever seen, Your Royal Highness.” Justine had never seen a dungeon. “Is this not where Lord Rabat was beheaded?” her father asked casually. To Justine, he said, “That would have been your great-great-uncle Rabat.” “Je, Your Majesty, the block is still here.” Sir Corin pointed to a large wooden block that stood alone, about two feet high and two feet wide. It looked to have been weathered by years of sitting in hard sun and wretched winters. “Oh, how terrible,” Justine said, crinkling her nose. “Quite,” her father agreed, and explained, with far too much enthusiasm, how a person was made to kneel before the block and lay their neck upon it. “A good executioner could make clean work of it with a single stroke. Whap, and the head would tumble into a basket.” “If I may, Your Majesty, a good executioner was hard to come by. More miners in these parts than men good with broadswords. Fact is, it took three strikes of the sword to sever Rabat’s head completely.” Sir Corin felt it necessary to demonstrate the three strikes with his arm. “Ah…” Justine swallowed down a swell of nausea. “Three whacks?” her father repeated, rapt. “Couldn’t get it done in one?” Sir Corin shook his head. “Just goes to prove how important it is to keep the broadsword sharp.” “And to keep someone close who knows how to wield it,” her father added. The two men laughed roundly. Justine looked around for someplace to sit so that she could put her head between her legs and gulp some air. Alas, the only place to sit was the block. “Steady there, my girl. I’ve not told you who ordered the beheading,” her father said. Sir Corin clasped his hands together in anticipation, clearly trying to contain his glee. “Your great-great-aunt Queen Elena!” Queen Elena had beheaded Lord Rabat? “Her husband?” “Worse. Her brother.” Justine gasped. “But why?” “Because Rabat meant to behead her first. Whoever survived the battle here would be crowned the sovereign.” “Ooh, a bloody battle it was, too,” Sir Corin said eagerly. “Four thousand souls lost, many of them falling right off the battlement.” Justine backed up a step. A quake was beginning somewhere deep inside her, making her a little short of breath. Her knees felt as if they might buckle, and her skin crawled with anxiety, imagining the loss of so many. “Could she not have banished him?” “And have him slither back like a snake?” Her father draped his arm around her shoulders before she could back up all the way to St. Edys. “She did the right thing. Why, minutes before, she was on the block herself.” “Dear God,” Justine whispered. “But at the last minute the people here saved her,” her father said. “She sentenced her brother to die immediately for his insurrection and stood right where we are now to watch his traitorous head roll.” “Well,” Sir Corin said. “I wouldn’t say it rolled, precisely.” The two men laughed again. “Don’t close your eyes, darling,” her father said, squeezing her into his side. “Look at that block. Elena was only seventeen years old, but she was very clever. She knew what she had to do to hold power and rule the kingdom. And she ruled a very long time.” “Forty-three years, all told,” Sir Corin said proudly. “Queen Elena learned what every sovereign must—be decisive and act quickly. Do you understand?” “I don’t…think so?” Justine was starting to feel a bit like she was spinning. “You will.” Her father dropped his arm. He wandered over to the block to inspect it. “We almost named you Elena after her. But they called her Elena the Bi—Witch,” he said. “And your mother feared they might call you the same.” “You said she was a good queen.” “She was an excellent queen. But sometimes it is difficult to do the things that must be done and keep the admiration of your people at the same time.” The spinning was getting worse. She gripped her father’s arm. “Why?” “Because people expect a woman to behave like a woman. But a good queen must sometimes behave more like a king for the good of the kingdom. People don’t care for it.” He shrugged. “No king or queen can make all their subjects happy all the time.” He suddenly smiled. “You look a bit like Queen Elena.” “The very image,” Sir Corin piped up. Later that day Justine saw a portrait of Queen Elena. She wasn’t smiling, but she didn’t appear completely unpleasant. She simply looked…determined. And her dress was elegantly pretty, with lots of pearls sewn into it. Later still, when her father and his men had retired to smoke cigars and talk about coal or some such, Justine returned to the courtyard alone. No one was there, no sentry looking out for marauders or runaway brides. She looked up at the tops of pines bending in a relentless wind, appearing to scrape a dull gray sky. She walked up the steps to the battlement and gazed out over the mountain valley below the castle. She spread her arms wide, closed her eyes and turned her face to the heavens. That was the first time she truly felt it—the pull from somewhere deep, the energy of all the kings and queens who had come before her, rising up to the crown of her head, anchoring her to this earth. She felt the centuries of warfare and struggle, of the people her family had ruled. She felt the enormous responsibilities they’d all carried, the work they’d done to carve a road to the future. Her father had often said that he could feel the weight of his crown on his shoulders. But Justine felt something entirely different. She didn’t feel as if it was weighing her down, but more like it was lifting her off her feet and holding her here. She didn’t believe this was a conceit on her part, but a tether to her past. She would be a queen. She knew that she would, and standing there, she felt like she should be. She felt born to it. A gust of wind very nearly sent her flying, so she came down from the battlement. She paused just before the block and tried to imagine herself on her knees, knowing her death was imminent. She imagined how she would look. She hoped she would appear strong and noble with no hint of her fear of the pain or the unknown. Being queen was her destiny. She knew it would come. But she hadn’t known then it would come so soon. Excerpted from The Last Duke Standing by Julia London. Copyright © 2022 by Dinah Dinwiddie. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.




Social Links:

Author Website

Facebook: Julia London

Twitter: @JuliaFLondon

Instagram: NA

Goodreads


Author Bio: 


Julia London is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of over fifty novels of historical and contemporary romance. She is the author of the popular Highland Grooms series as well as A Royal Wedding, her most recent series. Julia is the recipient of the RT Bookclub Award for Best Historical Romance and a six-time finalist for the prestigious RITA award for excellence in romantic fiction. She lives in Austin, Texas. Visit her at www.julialondon.com.


Wednesday, February 23, 2022

The Hidden Child

 Welcome to my blog tour stop for The Hidden Child which is been hosted by Bookouture






Title: The Hidden Child 

Note: Inspired by a real-life true crime story, this is an unforgettable and totally gripping mystery thriller perfect for fans of Gregg Olsen, Elly Griffiths and Found.

Author: Rebecca Griffiths: 

Rating: 4

Would I recommend it ? Yes

Would I read more by this author? Yes

First off  like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher  Bookouture, the author Rebecca Griffiths , the ladies of Bookouture Anonymous for all of their hard work   , and to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it. For someone who loves true crime ,I never once heard anything about this case ,and I tend to read , listen and watch a lot of true crime books, true crime shows and podcast. I do have to say that at first I was a bit confused about what was going on but that's on me since at this very moment I'm sick with a head cold but once I re started the book and started to read it as well as listing to it been read by text to speech on my Kindle ,I started to understand what was going on, And while the story is upsetting and emotional as well, all I could think was man these people was sick, and could there be more victims out there that was never found. As for the story it's the author did an amazing job bring both the story and the characters to live which in some cases is hard to do especially when it's based on a true crime ,I tend to find these types of stories hard to believe but this this one showed how far the author went in her research to bring not only the characters to live , and her story but also the victims themselves and the darkness's that was inside the killers. By the end of the book I was glad they got stopped but I was also sad because of what they did to their victims and mad that it took the police that long to catch them.


Book: The Hidden Child 
Author: Rebecca Griffiths
Pub Day: Feb 24th 2022 
Buy Links:

Listen here: http://ow.ly/koBg50HVoTj

Connie splashed through puddles, the rain slapping her face. Everywhere was tarmac and concrete, fog and drizzle, but no sign of her child. ‘Have you seen my daughter? Please, you must’ve seen her?’ Connie’s face crumpled, preparing to cry. But there wasn’t time for tears, she told herself, she had to find her child.


Manchester, England, 1965: In an instant Connie’s life has changed. She only left her daughter Kathy alone for a moment but that was enough for her to vanish without a trace. As Connie desperately searches for her, she has to put the news reports of other missing children to the back of her mind. She is determined to find her safe. She will bring her daughter home.


As local farmer Ronald listens to the news, he is shocked by what he hears. He has spent his life away from the spotlight, quietly tending to his farm. But when a young couple begin acting suspiciously on his land, he knows that trouble is about to reach his door.


And then he sees her. A girl in a bright red coat who looks completely lost. Ronald knows he needs to help keep her safe and find her family. But on the wild and desolate farmland, Ronald has buried his own dark secret. Can he risk it coming to light to save her life?


Rebecca Griffiths grew up in mid-Wales and went on to gain a first class honours degree in English Literature. After a successful business career in London, Dublin and Scotland she returned to rural mid-Wales where she lives with her husband, a prolific artist, their four black rescue cats, two pet sheep the size of sofas and writes full time. 

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Saturday, February 19, 2022

Beach Wedding

 Welcome to my blog tour for Beach Wedding which is been hosted by Harlequin Trade Publishing, 




Title: Beach Wedding 

Author: Michael Ledwidge

Rating: 4

First off  like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher Harlequin Trade Publishing, , the author Michael Ledwidge  , and to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it. Hamptons, cold case, Murder, lies, payoffs , a who done it . What more could you ask for in a book ,and  makes you ask yourself who's telling the truth and who can you trust or turn to, family that is there for each other , betrayal that comes from the shadows. If you want to knew more you have to read the book. 


Beach Wedding

Michael Ledwidge

On Sale Date: February 15, 2022

9781335425751, 1335425756

Hardcover 

$27.99 USD, $34.99 CAD

Fiction / Thrillers / Crime

352 pages

Buy Links:

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Beach-Wedding-Novel-Michael-Ledwidge/dp/1335425756 

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-beach-wedding-michael-ledwidge/1139389743 

Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/books/beach-wedding-9781335425751/9781335425751  

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/beach-wedding-3?utm_source=google_action 

AppleBooks: https://books.apple.com/be/book/beach-wedding/id1565660058 

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Michael_Ledwidge_Beach_Wedding?id=7lMsEAAAQBAJ 

Libro.FM: https://libro.fm/audiobooks/9781488213182-beach-wedding 

Indigo: https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/beach-wedding/9781335425751-item.html 

Target: https://www.target.com/p/beach-wedding-by-michael-ledwidge-hardcover/-/A-83983021

About the Book:

A high-society wedding party stirs up new evidence in an unsolved murder in this thrilling stand-alone from the New York Times bestselling coauthor of James Patterson’s Now You See Her and The Quickie.


Hamptons sand… Hamptons money… Hamptons murder…


When Terry Rourke is invited to the spare-no-expense beach wedding of his hedge fund manager brother, he thinks that his biggest worry will be flubbing the champagne toast. But this isn’t the first time Terry has been to the Hamptons.


As the designer tuxedos are laid out and the flowers arranged along the glittering surf, Terry can’t help but take another look at a decades-old murder trial that rocked the very foundations of the town—and his family. He soon learns that digging up billion-dollar sand can be a very dangerous activity. The kind of danger that can very quickly turn even the most beautiful beach wedding into a wake.



Chapter 1

A gull circling in the sea breeze banked into a clumsy slide, then settled gently on the tallest of the beach mansion’s brick chimneys like it wanted to be the weather vane.

At the far end of the back lawn where the sod became beach grass, I stood with my brother Tom, looking up at the massive castle-like structure, taking it all in.

At least trying to.

Tom, playing tour guide, had just explained that the Southampton summer dream house he’d just rented was a proper traditional two-wing manor, built in the French Renaissance Revival style after a famous house of landed gentry outside of London. Past the sun terrace we’d just walked across, you could see the pool peeking out around the side of the thirty-thousand-square-foot house like a giant block of sapphire wrapped in travertine.

To say that Tom was a tour guide wasn’t even an exaggeration, as the place was literally about the size of a museum.

“So?” Tom said. “What do you think?”

I turned away from the white elephant of a house and took a sip of my drink, studying the private staircase of weathered teak that dropped down the windy bluff at our back. I looked south to where the wood slat fence wound along the dunes, and beyond it, the Atlantic’s infinite slate blue waves rose and curled and broke and crashed with a soft hiss as it washed up onto the private beach thirty steps below us.

Being from the poor man’s Hamptons, Hampton Bays across the Shinnecock Inlet, Tom and I had been more of the to-the-split-level-born class. The only exclusive club we’d ever been members of was that of the hustling townie contingent. Up until now, the only times I’d ever gotten within spitting distance of these Southampton eight-figure beach castles was by working events as a busboy or a bartender or a valet. I’d never even dreamed of actually staying in one.

“What do I think of this beer?” I finally said, holding up my bottle. “Exceptional, Tom, really. What is it? Craft stuff? Head and shoulders above the cans of Miller Genuine Draft in my beer drawer back in Philly.”

“Ha-ha, dummy,” Tom said, elbowing me. “C’mon, really. What do you think?”

I turned, studying my brother. Tom usually looked pretty pale and stressed from his 24/7 Wall Street pressure-cooker managerial duties at Emerald Crown Capital Partners, the hedge fund that he had started. But he’d already been out here for a couple of days, and it had done him a ton of good, I saw. My dark-haired brother looked actually sort of relaxed for once, tan and handsome and happy in his preppy red shorts and half-unbuttoned cream-colored linen shirt.

“What do I think?” I finally said. “What do you think I think? It’s impossible, Tom. That’s not a house. It looks like a Park Avenue apartment building. I mean, where is Zeus staying now that you rented his house? Summering in the South of France? No, wait. Visiting Poseidon?”

Tom slowly put an arm around my shoulders.

“Zeus is right here, Terry,” he said, winking at me with a wide grin. “I am Zeus, come down to stand here with you stupid mortals. Right here before your very eyes.”

“Yeah, right,” I said, shouldering him away. “I remember all those times Zeus clipped his divine toenails into my Captain Crunch at the kitchen table like it was yesterday. And all the birthday punches. With one for good luck, too. Every time. The gods are so benevolent.”

As my brother cracked up, I smiled and took another sip of my beer.

Because I felt happy too then. Or maybe suddenly at ease was a better way to describe it. Truth be told, I’d been a little reluctant to make the trip up from Philly and all the way back home after all these years.

Actually, more than a little.

Even with the fact that my oldest brother was finally tying the knot.

There are reasons why some people leave the place they were born and raised and never come back. Usually, they’re very good reasons.

But maybe, I thought as I took in Tom and the billion-dollar scenery some more.

Maybe this wasn’t such a big deal after all. Time had passed. Quite a bit of it. And didn’t they say that time heals all wounds?

At least it wasn’t a big deal as far as Tom was concerned, I realized.

Despite his new ginormous pockets, Tom was still just Tom. Tom, who used to let me ride back home on the handlebars of his ten-speed from Little League practice when I was a kid. Tom, who let me read his comic books as long as I kept them neatly in the plastic covers. Tom, who hit a kid who was bullying me in the head with a basketball from half-court in the schoolyard that time.

Just Tom, I thought, looking at him as the summer wind scattered some more expensive sand across the back of my pale neck and knees.

Only with a couple of specks of white in his black Irish hair now and more than a couple extra zeros in his bank account.

“Okay, I’ll bite,” I said then. “Only because I know you’re dying for me to ask. How much is it running you?”

“What? You mean with the staff and everything?” Tom said, comically wrinkling his brow.

Tom had already mentioned the chefs and the maids and the gardeners, and even the chauffeur and limo that the rental came with to heighten the full modern money-be-damned Great Gatsby experience.

“Yes, the whole kit and caboodle. Out with it, moneybags. How much?”

“Five,” Tom said, staring at me calmly.

“Five? What do you mean? Five what?”

He looked at me again silently for a beat before I got it. If I hadn’t already just swallowed my beer, I probably would have spit it all over him.

“That’s impossible! Five hundred grand? Half a million dollars for the season?” I said in shock.

“Oh, no,” my brother said, chuckling softly as he shook his head.

He gave me another wink as he brought his own beer to his lips.

“That’s just for July, Terry,” he said. “Just July.”


Excerpted from Beach Wedding @ 2022 by Michael Ledwidge, used with permission by Hanover Square Press.


About the Author:

MICHAEL LEDWIDGE is the writer of seventeen novels, the last dozen being New York Times bestsellers cowritten with one of the world’s bestselling authors, James Patterson. With twenty million copies in print, their Michael Bennett series is the highest-selling New York City detective series of all time. One of their novels, Zoo, became a three-season CBS television series. He lives in Connecticut.


Social Links:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OfficialMichaelLedwidge/ 

Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/_mikeledwidge 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mike.ledwidge/ 


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

The Defense Lawyer

 

Welcome to my reading corner , where we talk about the books I've read and think you should know about , and that you might be interested in. From the bad to good, to even audiobooks  and before you ask you did read that right,buts its a new a year and I'm slowly getting in to them but I'm still going to be reading more books then audio books , each month the plan is to try and listing to 2 or 3 audio books and then talk about them  , so pull up a set and if you want to get a drink. 


Title: The Defense Lawyer

Author:James Patterson and Benjamin Walliace

Narrated : Stuart Soltnick

Duration: 9 h 33 m 52 s

Genres: nonfiction 

Rating: DNF ( Could not make it past chapter 10 at all ) 

Would I recommend it? No

Would I read more by this author? Yes

Would I listing to this narrator again ? Yes

Like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher  Hachette Audio,  for letting me listing to this book but sadly it just wasn't for me,it wasn't the authors or the narrator's fault that I DNF it 10 chapters in it was who the book was about , the only good thing about the book was the authors, the narrator and that the chapters was short, while the lawyer himself was  a narcissist ,who one minute said something and then did something else because it would bring them more fame and put their name in the paper . 



For more than a decade, Barry Slotnick never lost a case—no matter how notorious or dangerous his clients. Everyone deserves the best defense.

 

Known for his sharp mind, sharp suits, and bold courtroom strategies, Bronx-native Barry Slotnick is known as the best criminal lawyer in the US.

 

He calls himself “Liberty’s Last Champion.”

 

Slotnick mediates Bette Midler’s bathhouse contract and represents John Gotti, “The Dapper Don.” He defends “Subway Shooter” Bernie Goetz and negotiates future First Lady Melania Trump’s pre-nup.

 

His unparalleled legal brilliance defines a profession, a city—and an era.  

Sunday, February 13, 2022

Don't look Back

 Welcome to my blog tour  stop for Don't Look Back which is been hosted Bookouture 



Title: Don't Look Back 
Series : The Detectives Kane and Alton 
Author: D.K.Hood
Rating: 5
Would I recommend this series? Yes
Would I read more of this series ? Yes, I'm hooked 
Would I read more by this author? Yes 
First off  like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher Bookouture   , the author  D.K. Hood , and to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it.The back story of one of my all time favorite characters in this series , and how she became who she is , plus is shows how strong her character is , plus I loved how she wasn't afraid to make a stand when the going got tough, another thing I love was how this story helped me understand Jenna so much more , and made her seem more real, because the life she lived before can and have happened to others when they've  been abused by their partner and some times don't make it out alive like Jenna did, while others do .  The story brings to life how and what abused victims go there and how they live their live in fear every day. 



Book: Don't Look Back
Author: D.K. Hood 
Pub Day: Feb 8th 2022
Buy Links: 

Amazon: https://geni.us/B09JCCY7XQsocial 

Apple: http://ow.ly/kpju50GqPNF 

Kobo: http://ow.ly/L1tu50GqPL1 

Google: http://ow.ly/tAta50HIeOC 

Audible:

US: zpr.io/bVBXBQZaettK

UK: zpr.io/FDD6yFunLpBd

https://soundcloud.com/bookouture/dont-look-back-by-dk-hood-narrated-by-patricia-rodriguez

About the Book: 


Jenna Alton was once an FBI agent who would stop at nothing to put those who hurt the innocent behind bars. An addictive short-read about how she became Black Rock Falls’ most loved sheriff.


He grabs at her hair, pulling hard. She doesn’t scream like he wants her to. Instead, she grits her teeth and waits for her chance to escape. Then she runs harder than she has ever run in her life. As she hears his angry footsteps gaining on her, she prays that she makes it out of there alive…


Undercover FBI agent Jenna Alton has been playing wife to dangerous criminal husband Michael Carlos for four years. Tonight she plans to make her escape. But as she gathers her belongings together, she hears something that stops her in her tracks – he’s taken a young girl called Mandy, and she’s being held somewhere close. Jenna knows what she must do – find the child and get her to safety – even if it means risking her own life.


As Michael hosts a party at their secluded home, Jenna pretends to play his doting wife, whilst desperately searching for Mandy. She takes a deep breath as she walks past her husband’s office door. If he catches her, he’ll kill her.


Jenna’s already sacrificed so much, but innocent lives will be lost if she doesn’t leave the house tonight. With the clock ticking, can Jenna save the innocent little girl and get them both out alive?


An absolutely unputdownable 150-page read from USA Today bestselling author D.K. Hood. If you’re a fan of Lisa Regan, Melinda Leigh and Kendra Elliot, you will love this gripping read.




Author Bio and Social Media 
D.K Hood is THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, USA TODAY, and Amazon Bestselling Author of The Kane and Alton Series. She is a member of International Thriller Writers, Australian Crime Writers Association, and Sisters in Crime Australia.D.K. lives very quietly with her husband and enjoys her beautiful garden filled with birds and water dragons. The dogs and cats in her stories are reminiscent of her wonderful companions.
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Pharmythology

Welcome to my reading corner , where we talk about the books I've read and think you should know about , and that you might be intereste...