Thursday, April 28, 2022

The Lighthouse Girls

 Welcome to my blog tour stop for The Lighthouse Girls which is been hosted by Bookouture







Book: The Lighthouse Girls

Author: B.R. Spangler

Pub Day: April 22nd 2022  

 

Buy Links 

Amazon:  https://geni.us/B09SVBDNRHsocial

Apple: http://ow.ly/puLt50HZYH4

Kobo: http://ow.ly/Zqbb50HZYCZ

Googleplay: http://ow.ly/YkNX50HZYKS


Rating: 4

Would I recommend it? Yes

Would I read more of this series ? Yes

Would I read more by this author? Yes 

Like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher Bookouture , the author  B.R.Spangler ,       and to the wonderful ladies of the Bookouture Anonymous Facebook group without them and their hard work and efforts I wouldn't knew about these books , and to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it. I can never be disappointed with this series,  every time I pick up a book ,the author has out done herself yet again, like she rising the bar and what it's working, As soon as I was reading it I kept on reading, even when I knew I had to stop because I was getting a headache.  As for the story  it's written with a compelling story line and well developed characters, that make them more like able .And I loved how the author  used the settings with the lighthouses , plus  they helped give the setting that prefect tone for the background of the story. 


About the Book: 


The girl shivers in the boat, trying to hold back her sobs as the man silently rows them towards the lighthouse under a dark sky. She thinks desperately of her big sister, how they’d laughed just a few hours before as they rode the Ferris wheel at the funfair. Will she ever see her again?


When the body of a teenage girl is found abandoned on a beach by a lighthouse in North Carolina’s Outer Banks, Detective Casey White is first on the scene. Breaking the news to the heartbroken parents, Casey is distraught to learn of a second tragedy: the girl’s eight-year-old little sister Shawna is missing too.


Searching the lighthouse building, Casey soon finds traces that Shawna was kept there: her clothes, a teddy bear. Someone has been keeping her alive, but where have they taken her?


When she learns that the girls were together at a visiting funfair the night they were taken, Casey races to interview the workers, but is only met with silence and turned backs. Digging into old cases, Casey’s blood runs cold as she realises there’s been a murder in the same location as the travelling fair going back years.


Now the funfair has disappeared without trace. Thinking back to a shadowy figure she noticed by the hall of mirrors, Casey is certain when they find the fair, they will find the killer hiding in plain sight. But with the whole town terrified for their daughters, can Casey hunt them down before it’s too late for little Shawna?


An absolutely unputdownable thriller that will have you gasping at the twists and turns. Fans of Karin Slaughter, Lisa Gardner and Robert Dugoni will be completely addicted.


 


Author Bio

B.R. Spangler is a USA TODAY Bestselling Author of Mysteries and Crime Thrillers.A resident of Virginia with a wonderful family, including five cats, two birds and a lizard. During the day, the hours are filled with engineering work. Off hours, time is spent writing, editing, and thinking up the next great story.With too many stories to write, books are split across pen names, writing crime thrillers, science fiction, horrors, paranormal and contemporary fiction.To keep up to date, sign up for the B.R. Spangler newsletter sign up here: https://brspangler.com/sign-up. No spam will ever get sent, just some random musings or a heads up on when the next book is published

 

Social Media

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

Twitter: https://twitter.com/BR_Spangler

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brspangler/

 

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

The Wrong Victim

 Welcome to my blog tour stop for Wrong Victim which is been hosted by 

Park Row Books, Hanover Square Press, MIRA Books, Graydon House, Inkyard Press

HarperCollinsPublishers | Harlequin





Buy Links:

Bookshop.org: https://bookshop.org/books/the-wrong-victim/9780778312307 

Indie Bound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780778312307 

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-wrong-victim-allison-brennan/1139717188?ean=9780778312307 

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0778312305/httpwwwalli0f-20 

Books A Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/product/9780778312307 

Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B096FYD1S5/httpwwwalli0f-20 

Nook: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-wrong-victim-allison-brennan/1139717188?ean=9780369717795 

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-wrong-victim-1 

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Allison_Brennan_The_Wrong_Victim?id=60kxEAAAQBAJ 

Ibooks: https://books.apple.com/us/book/the-wrong-victim/id1570424193 






The Wrong Victim : A Novel
Allison Brennan
On Sale Date: April 26, 2022
9780778312307
Hardcover
$26.99 USD
464 pages

ABOUT THE BOOK:

A bomb explodes on a sunset charter cruise out of Friday Harbor at the height of tourist season
and kills everyone on board. Now this fishing and boating community is in shock and asking
who would commit such a heinous crime—the largest act of mass murder in the history of the
San Juan Islands.
Was the explosion an act of domestic terrorism, or was one of the dead the primary target? That
is the first question Special Agent Matt Costa, Detective Kara Quinn, and the rest of the FBI
team need to answer, but they have few clues and no witnesses.
Accused of putting profits before people after leaking fuel endangered an environmentally
sensitive preserve, the West End Charter company may itself have been the target. As Matt and
his team get closer to answers, they find one of their own caught in the crosshairs of a
determined killer

Rating: 5
First off  like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher  Harlequin Trade Publishing, MIRA the author Allison Brennan,    for the invite to read and review The Wrong Victim . this is one of the few series that I've actually read in order since I found it on NetGalley and its maybe one of my all time favorite series by this author as well , its fast pace , with a bit of romance in it , and the author never stops surprising me when it comes to  her killers , and the characters just keeping to life more and more with each book, but I do have to say that there is one character in this one that I didn't like and she was one of the good guys , as for the story it was exciting  and make me want to know who and why was doing the bombings and who was the intend victim or was there ever one in the first place,


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

ALLISON BRENNAN is the New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of over thirty novels. She has been nominated for Best Paperback Original Thriller by International Thriller Writers and the Daphne du Maurier Award. A former consultant in the California State Legislature, Allison lives in Arizona with her husband, five kids and assorted pets.


Social Links:

Author website: https://www.allisonbrennan.com/

Facebook: @AllisonBrennan

Twitter: @Allison_Brennan

Instagram: @abwrites

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/52527.Allison_Brennan


Monday, April 25, 2022

THE WATCHMAKER'S DAUGHTER BY DIANNE HALEY

Welcome to my blog tour for THE WATCHMAKER'S DAUGHTER BY DIANNE HALEY which is been hosted by Bookoutre




Buy link:

 

https://geni.us/B09R4PX5DNsocial


Title : The Watchmaker's Daughter 

Author: Dianne Haley

Rating: 5


Would I recommend it ? Yes

Would I read more by this author? Yes

like always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher Bookouture  , the author Dianne Haley ,       and to the wonderful ladies of the Bookouture Anonymous Facebook group without them and their hard work and efforts I wouldn't knew about these books . and to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it.      A heart pounding emotional type read, this author has done her job when it comes to telling a WW 2 historical fiction story in every way , from making you feel stuff, to seeing the characters come to life.To making the danger very real and feeling like your going too jump when ever you heard a sound or thought you saw a shadow move ,  and she also made it hard  to trust most of the characters themselves, because I was always afraid our main Character would get caught.   





                                                          The Watchmaker's Daughter: An utterly gripping and heart-wrenching World War II historical novel


 


Hiding the worn piece of paper among her father’s watch deliveries, her eyes fill with tears at the memory of her brave friend walking towards the Nazi soldiers, and the sharp sound of gun fire. Her friend sacrificed herself so that she could deliver this message. But if she hands it over, the love of her life will die…


1942, Geneva: As her radio crackles with heart-breaking news from occupied France, Valérie Hallez gazes towards the snow-covered Alps after a long day helping her father, a local watchmaker. With a Nazi invasion looming, she is sick with worry for the future of her country, and for Philippe, her childhood sweetheart with soft brown eyes. Valérie might not be able to join the army like him, but she is determined to play her part in the fight against evil…


In defiance of her father, Valérie helps the French Resistance by smuggling messages among her father’s watch deliveries. And when darkness falls, she risks everything to hide Jewish refugee children in his old workshop. Philippe fears for her safety, as her work for the Resistance could come with a heavy price. But nothing will stop her delivering vital information and getting terrified children to safety before they are sent back to the Nazis.


But when Valérie is entrusted with an urgent letter for the Allies, she finds herself in an impossible position. The information it contains could alter the course of the war. But if she hands over the message now, it will cost Philippe his life. With Nazi spies closing in on her, Valérie must act now… But can she really trust the man she loves, and will she find a way to save both him and her country before it’s too late?


An utterly gripping and heart-breaking novel about love and bravery in a time of terrible danger. Fans of The Alice Network, The Nightingale and We Were the Lucky Ones will be swept away by The Watchmaker’s Daughte


About the author

 

Originally from the north of Scotland, Dianne now lives with her husband in Edinburgh and has two grown-up children. After a thirty-year business career in London and Edinburgh when Dianne wrote between projects, she is now writing full-time.

Dianne and her family have been visiting the area round Lake Geneva since 1992 and love the Alps in all seasons. The inspiration for her series set in WW2 Switzerland came from a drive through Geneva’s old town on a rainy October evening, the cobbled lanes a perfect setting for secrets and hiding places.

Author social media

 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/dhaley30

 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Dianne-Haley-Author-105318942048374

 

Website: www.diannehaley.com

 

                             

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Souvenirs From Kyiv

 Welcome to my showcase for Souvenirs From Kyiv which is been hosted by Bookouture





Title :Souvenirs From Kyiv

Author: Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger

Pub date: April 22, 2022

Description

‘Russia has been trying to wipe Ukraine off the world map for thousands of years. They haven’t succeeded yet. Now, I’m picking up my stone and throwing it at Goliath. I want people to understand. I want to save this country.’ Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger, March 2022




Larissa is a renowned embroiderer, surviving in occupied Ukraine during World War II as a seamstress in her ruin of a workshop. Surrounded by enemies, she expresses her defiance by threading history into her garments. But at what cost?




Mykhailo is a soldier on leave, returning to Ukraine from the front on Christmas Eve. As he travels through his country, he is confronted by the hardship the war has brought to his fellow countrymen. Will what he sees this Christmas change the course of his life forever?




Marusia and her family are woken early one morning by the arrival of the Nazis, who have come to search for her partisan brother. As the soldiers move through their house, her family has just moments to make choices that will determine their survival.




Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger’s stories bring to life the true history of her Ukrainian family who fought to survive World War II. Laced with hope, Souvenirs from Kyiv celebrates the endurance and resilience of the human spirit.



Souvenirs from Kyiv


Foreword


Glory to Ukraine!”


In 1991, 2004 and 2014, the Maidan in Kyiv was the stage for three major events that etched Ukraine into the European consciousness. These were the fall of the Soviet Union, the Orange Revolution and the Euromaidan respectively, the last of which ended in bloodshed but united generations of Ukrainians. Whereas the Orange Revolution succeeded in overturning a fraudulent election, the Euromaidan did nothing to change Ukraine’s entry into the European Union (EU). For nearly four months, Ukrainians protested President Yanukovych’s sudden decision to renege on his promise to make Ukraine part of the European Union, and instead bound Ukraine to Russia in the Eurasian Economic Union. Then, on February 24, 2022, the entire world not only understood Ukraine’s existence but began speaking Ukrainian. Within a week, the words “Slava Ukraïni!” had been uttered by everyone from truck drivers to the world’s leaders. Some copy and pasted the Cyrillic version—“Слава Україні!”—onto their social media posts. Whereas in World War II, nationalists and freedom fighters churned out handmade leaflets to boost morale, today we only need to turn to Twitter to get our hero-fix..


As a Ukrainian-American, I should be reveling in a bittersweet victory. From North America to Australia, from Asia to Africa, the world now recognizes that Ukraine is not Russia. In the span of just a few days, Vladimir Putin has accomplished what most Ukrainians the world over have been trying to do for nearly a century. As a first-gen American, I grew up defending myself and my heritage; a heritage passed firmly down by a family of displaced World War II refugees. “No, I am not Russian. Yes, Ukraine is a separate country. I speak Ukrainian. Why should I speak Russian? Does every Italian speak Spanish? Does every Portuguese person speak fluent French?”

The world will never forget what the Ukrainian flag looks like thanks to the landmarks and architecture illuminated worldwide in blue and yellow. An obscure

president has risen to superhero status. TikTok videos propagate the high morale amongst Ukrainian defenders; videos feature young soldiers dancing with bazookas and Kalashnikovs. Street fighters teach viewers how to make Molotov cocktails and where to target for the best damage, or—better yet—if you don’t have a tractor to tow one away, a young woman has created an instructional video on how to drive home a captured Russian tank. It’s surreal when, from every corner of the world, we can watch David throwing stones at Goliath. And feel the suffering. Or at least imagine we do. In the process, we are glorifying Ukraine. We are glorifying the heroes born on social media. We are witnessing communities, a country, even a world stitched together by a common cause: to cheer on these blue-and-yellow underdogs. Thanks to Hollywood, we are conditioned for that happy end to arrive within ninety minutes. In war, it does not. And the impact is felt over generations.

I’ve spent my entire adult life trying to make sense of the horrors my relatives survived in World War II. During one of my interviews with her, my grandmother stopped and rubbed her face. When she looked back at me, she said very soberly, “There was nothing glorious about our fight. I hope your generation never has to experience what we went through. Ever.” And here we are. I spend my nights sobbing.

I write historical fiction for complex and deeply personal reasons. If I have to simplify it, then my mission is to recover and repair the stories we have lost so that we can reflect on how we have gotten to where we find ourselves. I write to build empathy. And I write to resolve the truth behind the big picture; to make it clear that conflict is not about two teams meeting on the battlefield—one called “good” and one called “bad.” There are no winners in this story.

“Glory to Ukraine!” demands the response “Glory to the heroes!” But even that salute is not complete. There is a third part. It is “Death to enemies.” I don’t see many people posting that on their social media. Neither in English nor in Cyrillic. To understand the power of this salute, you must understand its history. Versions of it were used during Ukraine’s War of Independence (1917–1921), and then it was adopted by a renegade partisan group in the 1940s, whose mission was to “purify” Ukraine of Jews, of Poles, of Nazis, of Soviets. It is a chant that was banned by Soviet authorities and resurrected in 1991 when Ukraine wrested itself from the USSR, and

when her borders reappeared on world maps. Finally, “Glory to Ukraine!” echoed over the Maidan by a generation born into freedom, and has now become eternalized as Ukraine battles for its very existence during the Russian invasion. The salute is mired in blood and in sacrifice even as its meaning has shifted to unify an entire world. And maybe that is okay if the words are not lost in a vacuum; if the words—which mean so much—can be understood.

“Glory to the heroes!”

I was raised by freedom fighters. In the 1970s and ’80s, “Nordeast” Minneapolis was a unique blend of Eastern European, German, Jewish, Lebanese, and Indian families. A Lebanese deli and a Ukrainian butchery became iconic in the Twin Cities. Two Ukrainian churches were located right across the street from one another: the Byzantine Catholic one and the Orthodox Christian one. My father belonged to the former, my mother to the latter. My relatives could not return to Ukraine because it was now the USSR and their family names were listed alongside a one-way ticket to a gulag. I grew up in a family whose story was anything but secret. Every time we were served bread, we were reminded of where we’d come from, and how very lucky we were to have that bread. These stories quickly gave me an unquenchable thirst for justice and for defending the “underdogs.” From an early age, I rooted for the Davids in this world, cheering them as they stood up to the Goliaths of the universe.

For the first two decades of my life, I had no idea that I was stewing in nationalism either, or what that even meant. This Ukrainian-American generation grew up in the lap of Ukrainian consciousness and we felt special because we spoke a language hardly any other American knew, and wielded knowledge about a country that few understood had the right to exist. Russia and Russian were curse words in our Diaspora. We learned “our” stories, “our” history and “our” heritage in Ukrainian schools that were held on Saturdays. We attended church every Sunday, because first came God, then family, and only then friends. We expressed our unique identity through Ukrainian folk dance, Ukrainian scouts, and went to Ukrainian summer camps where kids from Chicago and Minneapolis met in the woods of Wisconsin for three weeks and marched around singing rousing battle songs about freeing Ukraine from foreign enslavement. If you’d

seen us, you’d think we were paramilitary. I wouldn’t have understood what that meant. All I knew was that I was fiercely proud. Proud of my heritage. Proud of my people. Proud about knowing where I’d come from. We were all lying in wait for our moment when we would rise up, grab hold of our independence, and make sure the world knew Ukraine. We were waiting to be those glorified heroes.

Some will laugh. What were a bunch of Americans thinking they were going to do? Return to the home country? That is exactly the mentality our Diaspora instilled in us. When Ukraine regained its independence, first-gen Ukrainian-Americans left in a swarm to work as doctors, lawyers, teachers, and business people. People I’d grown up with were heading over to help reboot the country and make their parents and grandparents proud.

I was also feeling this wave of national pride but tackled it a bit differently. In the 1990s, I was studying journalism. When I realized that my grandmother and her siblings were aging, I started recording their stories with the intention of immortalizing them. Instead, I learned something that took my pride down several notches. Everything I thought I knew about my family couldn’t even scratch the surface. My relatives were surprisingly forthcoming, but it would take me many decades before I felt I could do the stories justice. It was many years, many trips, and what felt like many lifetimes later that I began to understand what their struggles were about; what this fierce need for sovereignty and independence cost them. And now I share a cautionary tale: glorifying any country, especially one at war, is a delicate business. It can quickly create a one-sided fiction based on misinformation and misunderstanding; it can do more harm than good because the disappointment that comes afterwards is earth-shattering. The true story of the Ukrainian is not in the least bit a black-and-white tale; it is not even allegorical. It is human with all the fragility and strength and contradictions and complexities every human being carries within themselves. However, it is also a common story that connects us at the most elementary level: the need to be free.

“Death to Enemies!”

In 1945, journalist Edgar Snow pronounced that “World War II was a Ukrainian war.” It is understandable why he would be compelled to do so. The Eastern Front had seen some of the most horrific, no-holds barred violence. Stalin and Hitler had both applied “scorched earth” policies, burning everything down so that the other side could not profit from any valuable resources.

During World War II, no Ukrainian could ever name just one enemy. No Ukrainian knew from day to day who the enemy really was. Stalin’s and Hitler’s armies were inarguably responsible for the slaughter of millions upon Ukrainian soil, but add to that the fluid infighting between Ukrainian political factions, and the result was rampant fratricide and blind hate. Partisan units fought and mass murdered locals whose ideologies were not the same and fell upon Poles, under whom western Ukrainians had been oppressed; and Ukrainians had a hand in the extermination and deportation of the local Jewish populations. Details were slow to come to the surface after the war, no thanks to the Soviet Union’s lock-and-key policies, but when that information did trickle out, many exiled Ukrainians around the world were confronted by the ugly truths about their countrymen. Many were also given the opportunity to reconcile with their pasts. I, for one, was only beginning to understand things that sobered me. My community’s stories were complex, shocking, real-life struggles for survival, and they came at heavy prices.

In 2002, I took the vast material I had and aimed to unravel the tangled roots born of Ukraine’s role in the World War II. In 2020, I published six of those stories under the title Souvenirs from Kiev. It was my attempt to connect the world to Ukraine and Ukrainians, and to share my understanding of a lesser-known history. Now, Bookouture has offered to help get these stories into the hands of more readers than I could possibly reach alone. I took liberties with the characters and events in order to weave together a complete portrait of the Ukrainians that I have met, loved, and respected—of a culture and country that I have grown to better understand as I have matured, and to love ever more deeply. My romance with Ukraine has turned into a true and steadfast love; the more I learn about her fragility and faults, the more I embrace and accept her.

Russia has been trying to effectively wipe Ukraine off the world map for thousands of years. They haven’t succeeded yet. And they certainly won’t be able to now that the

entire world knows the country’s salute. I plea for peace in these pages, but that hybrid freedom fighter in me cannot deny this one very simple fact: by republishing these stories, I am picking up my stone and throwing it at Goliath. I am suddenly empowered to help make an impact. My mission has not changed: I want people to understand. To learn. To have their horizons broadened and to realize that there is no glory in war; there is no glory in the fight for survival. Instead, I turn to the brighter light found in the Ukrainian anthem:

[ANTHEM TEXT]Ukraine has not yet perished; not her glory, not her freedom

Fate shall smile upon us!

Our enemies shall vanish like dew in the sun;

And we too shall rule our beloved country.[END ANTHEM TEXT]

I like to imagine Russians standing up to Putin and making him draw back. Because if they do not—if we do not stand up to him—we have learned nothing from our previous mistakes. This spring, before our very eyes, a new world war is and it will not—I promise you—take on the shape and color of sunflowers.

Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger


Austria, March 2022



Author bio: 


Chrystyna Lucyk-Berger was born in Minnesota in 1969. A first-generation American of Ukrainian immigrants, she grew up in the culture-rich neighborhood of "Nordeast" Minneapolis. Inspired by her second-grade teacher, her writing career began with short stories, then morphed into travel narratives, and eventually novels. She has worked as a journalist and as a managing editor for a magazine publisher before jumping the editor's desk and pursuing her dreams of writing and traveling. In 2000, she moved to western Austria and established her own communications training company. She has won several awards for her short stories and novels and now primarily writes historical fiction.


Silent Little Angles

 Welcome to my blog tour stop for Silent Little Angels which is been hosted by Bookouture

Buy Link:
Title: Silent Little Angels 

Series :Detective Katie Scott Book 7

Author:Jennifer Chase

Pages : 402

NetGalley ARC

Rating: 5

Would I recommend it? Yes

Would I read more of this series ? Yes 

Would I read more by this author? Yes

 Like  always I  want to say a  huge  thank you to the publisher  Bookouture , the author Jennifer Chas  ,    and to the wonderful ladies of the Bookouture Anonymous Facebook group without them and their hard work and efforts I wouldn't knew about these books . And  to NetGalley for the invite to join this blog tour as well as letting me read and review it. Another all time favorite series of mine to read and just get lost in. I loved how the author used the setting  of the camp and how it felt like I was in one of the episodes of Criminal Minds,  as well as the feeling that if you turn the other way your see Jason watching you. The case itself was complex , as well as full of danger,  to the point that I was shouting in my head ,don't go back there. And the characters, wow I missed visiting with them and seen them work together,  and I loved how closer Sean McGaven and Kaite are in this one, their not just partners,their family .

                                                                                        


     Book Description:


The water ripples as the girl’s body escapes the reeds and floats silently upwards. Her beautiful face—blue eyes frozen open, skin as white as snow—breaks the surface. But it’s too late, this innocent soul has taken her final breath…


When camp counselor Carolyn Sable’s body is found floating in a lake beside Eagle Ridge Summer Camp, Detective Katie Scott must dig deep to stay focused. As a child, Katie spent many happy weeks at that camp toasting marshmallows on the fire with her best friend Jenny… until the day Jenny disappeared. The loss will always haunt Katie, but Carolyn’s inconsolable family need answers.


Searching the area, the devastating discovery of two more bodies sends the case into a tailspin. Suddenly on the hunt for a serial killer, Katie’s blood turns to ice when she finds newspaper clippings about her own past cases planted near one of the bodies. Was this twisted killer banking on Katie taking the lead? And why?


Carolyn was adored by children and staff at the camp, so Katie thinks her sudden resignation is key to cracking the case. Uncovering a tragic accident involving a group of children the weeks before Carolyn left, Katie knows she’s getting close.


But when the carefully laid trap Katie sets to catch Carolyn’s killer backfires, Katie finds herself in unthinkable danger and unable to even trust her own team. Can she stay alive long enough to crack the toughest case of her career, and how many more innocent lives will be lost before she does?

Author Bio:

Jennifer Chase is a multi award-winning and best-selling crime fiction author, as well as a consulting criminologist. Jennifer holds a bachelor degree in police forensics and a master’s degree in criminology & criminal justice. These academic pursuits developed out of her curiosity about the criminal mind as well as from her own experience with a violent psychopath, providing Jennifer with deep personal investment in every story she tells.

In addition, she holds certifications in serial crime and criminal profiling. She is an affiliate member of the International Association of Forensic Criminologists, and member of the International Thriller Writers.

https://www.instagram.com/jenchaseauthor/

https://twitter.com/JChaseNovelist

Good Half Gone

 Welcome to my show case for Good Half Gone which is been hosted by Harlequin “911, WHAT IS your emergency?” “Hello? Help me, please! They t...