Amy Sheppard is a busy mum of two boys, living in Cornwall. Her obsession with making budget friendly family dinners, led her to writing two cookbooks. Amy creates recipes for her followers and for brands @amysheppardfood
Welcome to Spooky's Maze Of Books, where your find reviews, book chats as well as hauls and monthly TBRs.
Saturday, August 27, 2022
The Beach Party
The Ex
Welcome to my blog tour stop for The EX which is been hosted by Bookouture
Book: The Ex
Publication Day: August 26th 2022
Buy link(s)
The love of your life… or a deadly mistake?
It’s hard, meeting your ex after so much time apart. You remember the tears and accusations, the desperate look on his face as he punched the wall, but you try not to show it. You smile politely, even while your heart beats faster.
You watch as he looks down into the stroller, at the beautiful blond-haired blue-eyed baby kicking his little legs in the sunshine, whose innocent smile lights up your world.
You see his face change. You know what he’s thinking.
The next day he calls. His voice is shaking. He wants the truth. Is it his child?
You hesitate, your throat dry, good and bad memories swirling in your mind. You’ve missed him so much… but can you ever trust him again?
You decide that the most important thing is doing what’s right for baby Tom. But months later, when the sirens wail in the night, you have to admit: you never thought either of you would go this far…
A brilliantly twisty psychological thriller from no.1 bestselling author S.E. Lynes about a relationship full of secrets and lies. Fans of Ruth Ware, Lisa Jewell and Gillian Flynn will be gripped by The Ex.
Author Bio:
A former BBC Producer, S.E. Lynes has lived in France, Spain, Scotland and Italy and is now settled in Greater London. After completing her MA, she taught creative writing at Richmond Adult Community College for ten years. She now combines writing, mentoring and lecturing in Richmond Borough.
Author Social Media Links
Website: susielynes.wixsite.com/website
Friday, August 26, 2022
SMALL TOWN, BIG MAGIC by Hazel Beck
Welcome to my show case for Small Town ,Big Magic which is been hosted by Graydon House | Hanover Square Press | HQN | MIRA | Park Row Books
Buy Links:
BookShop: https://bookshop.org/books/small-town-big-magic/9781525804717
Harlequin: https://www.harlequin.com/shop/books/9781525804717_small-town-big-magic.html
Barnes & Noble:https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/small-town-big-magic-hazel-beck/1140810563?ean=9781525804717
Books-A-Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Small-Town-Big-Magic/Hazel-Beck/9781525804717?id=8292090795540
Powell’s: https://www.powells.com/book/small-town-big-magic-9781525804717
Book Summary: For fans of THE EX HEX and PAYBACK'S A WITCH, a fun, witchy rom-com in which a bookstore owner who is fighting to revitalize a small midwestern town clashes with her rival, the mayor, and uncovers not only a clandestine group that wields a dark magic to control the idyllic river hamlet, but hidden powers she never knew she possessed. There’s no such thing as witches...right? Emerson Wilde has built the life of her dreams. Youngest Chamber of Commerce president in St. Cyprian history, successful indie bookstore owner, and lucky enough to have her best friends as found family? Done. But when Emerson is attacked by creatures that shouldn’t be real, and kills them with what can only be called magic, Emerson finds that the past decade of her life has been...a lie. St. Cyprian isn't your average Midwestern river town—it’s a haven for witches. When Emerson failed a power test years ago, she was stripped of her magical memories. Turns out, Emerson’s friends are all witches. And so is she. That's not all, though: evil is lurking in the charming streets of St. Cyprian. Emerson will need to learn to control what’s inside of her, remember her magic, and deal with old, complicated feelings for her childhood friend--cranky-yet-gorgeous local farmer Jacob North—to defeat an enemy that hides in the rivers and shadows of everything she loves. Even before she had magic, Emerson would have done anything for St. Cyprian, but now she’ll have to risk not just her livelihood...but her life.
If you google my name—something I only do every other Tuesday because ego surfing is an indulgence
and I keep my indulgences on a strict schedule—the first twenty hits are about the hanging of Sarah
Emerson Wilde in 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts.
Guess why.
Only after all those witch hits—three pages in—will you get to me, Emerson Wilde. Not a tragically
executed woman accused of witchcraft by overwrought zealots, but a bookstore owner and chamber of
commerce president. The youngest chamber of commerce president in the history of St. Cyprian,
Missouri, not that I like to brag.
Men are applauded for embellishing the truth while women are seen as very confident for telling the
truth—and very confident is never a compliment.
If you slog past all the Crucible references and sad YouTube videos from disaffected teens with too much
eye makeup, you might read about how my committed rejuvenation efforts have brought ten new
businesses to St. Cyprian in the past five years. You might read about our Christmas around the World
Festival which, thanks to my hard work and total commitment, brings people from—you guessed it—all
around the world. You could read any number of articles about what I’ve done to help St. Cyprian,
because it’s not a good day unless I’ve done something to support the town I love best.
And I pride myself on making every day a good day.
Even if most people read about Sarah and the witch trials and stop there, I know the truth about her. I
learned all about my notorious ancestor while researching a presentation for my fourth-grade class.
My peers might have preferred Skip Simon’s bold and unlikely claims that he was a direct descendent of
the outlaw Jesse James, but learning about Sarah changed my life. The reality of Sarah Emerson Wilde is
that she was a fierce feminist who wanted to play by her own rules. A nonconformist who wasn’t
interested in playing the perfect Puritan, and therefore a direct threat to the Powers That Be. Following
her own rules, ignoring theirs, and trumpeting her independence got her killed.
Sarah wasn’t only a tragic figure. She was also a fierce martyr who would have hated being called either.
In retrospect, it was maybe too much for Miss Timpkin’s fourth-grade class.
But ever since then I’ve considered Sarah my guiding light. I’m proud to have such an exceptional,
indomitable woman in my family tree. My great-grandmother times nine, to be precise. I’ve always felt
that I owe it to myself, the Wilde name, and Sarah to be a strong, independent woman who doesn’t let
the patriarchy or anything else get her down for long.
“And I don’t,” I announce brightly to the quiet of the early-morning kitchen of my family’s historic
house.
It’s a Tuesday in March and I have plans. I always have plans. It’s what I do, but these are particularly
epic, even for me. I might have been born too late to speak feminist truth to Puritan patriarchal power,
but I have my own calling.
I am here to make St. Cyprian a better place.
Don’t laugh.
You can’t fix the world until you sort out your own backyard. I intend to do both.
Since my first St. Cyprian community project with my second-grade class, I have put everything I am into
this shining jewel of a river town, the people lucky enough to live here, and the shops that carve out
their spots on the cobbled streets—like my own intensely independent bookstore.
For all the women who came before me who weren’t allowed. Or those who carved out their way and
were shunned for it.
Fist pumps optional.
I pump a few on my own in the kitchen, because there are few things in this life that psyche a girl up
more than a fist pump. One of those things is coffee. Another is sugar. Combine all three and I’m ready
to face the day.
But first I need to face my roommate.
My roomie and best friend, Georgie Pendell, grew up in the rickety old house next door, but moved in
with me when she could no longer bear another moment of agony in her parents’ house—her dramatic
words, not mine. She’s been here five years, sprawled out over the third floor and using the extra
bedroom I’d assumed she’d make into an office as a library instead.
Mind you, what Georgie calls a library gives me hives. It’s an overflowing catastrophe of books piled into
tottery towers that she refuses to let me organize for her. The last time I tried to go inside, the door only
opened about two inches before hitting one of her stacks.
She insists it’s exactly the way she wants it.
And that’s fine, because Wilde House is big enough for the both of us. In fact, bigger than we need. With
my parents gone living the high life in Europe and my sister’s defection to who knows where after our
high school graduation, the house had seemed too big. I had been thrown for a loop when both my
sister and parents left St. Cyprian within a year of each other—though I’d rallied the way I always do. My
sister, Rebekah, had always been a free spirit. My parents had always been socially ambitious—so why
not take that as far as it could go on the Continent? I had the town. I had my friends. I got to live in this
piece of history with my grandmother. Yet when my grandmother died a few years later and left me
here alone, the old house felt like an ominous, rattling thing that might swallow me whole. Winter had
seemed to seep in, cruel and unforgiving. The halls had seemed too long, the lights too dim.
Possibly I was grieving. The loss of Grandma. The loss of my family, who I knew had their reasons for
staying away, in Rebekah’s case because she always had reasons no matter how little she communicated
those reasons. Or returning only for the funeral, in my parents’ case, and then rushing back to their
European adventure.
It felt a little stormy there for a while.
My silly, happy, eccentric best friend moving in has been like letting in the sunshine.
Organizational challenges aside, having her here makes these early mornings with the whole of Wilde
House creaking around me, like it’s singing its own song while I wake, feel less…lonely.
Not that I allow loneliness in my life. I swat it down like an obnoxious fly anytime it pops up. Because
loneliness is a betrayal of all the women who came before me and I am not going to be the Wilde who
lets them down. I’m the current caretaker of this landmark of a house that’s been in my family some
three hundred years, since the first Wilde wisely made the long trek away from the Massachusetts
Colony and settled down in this part of Missouri where two great rivers meet, the Mississippi and the
Missouri. I like the idea of roots that deep and rivers that tangle together. I like this house that towers
above me with its uneven floors and oddly shaped rooms. I like where it sits in town, on one end of
Main Street like a punctuation mark.
And I really like that my best friend is always right here, within reach.
Because before I head off to my beloved Confluence Books today, I need to get Georgie on board for an
Official Friend Meeting tonight. Being a young, ambitious, independent woman in charge of the
chamber of commerce in the most charming river town in Missouri—and therefore America—comes
with its challenges. A strong leader knows when to lean in to her community, and I do. My friends are
always the first people I turn to when I need some help.
I tell myself that I would do that even if my family was still here. That my friends are my family. My
parents and sister are the black sheep—not me. Their leaving, their lack of contact entirely or bright,
shallow, early-morning messages from abroad is their choice.
And their loss.
My friends stayed. They love St. Cyprian and loved my grandmother too. They are mine, and I am theirs.
Just like this town I love so much.
Still, sometimes I like to make a gathering official because that makes it more likely we’ll get to the
constructive advice more quickly.
I head for the curving narrow stairs that will take me up into the house’s turret. It’s never been my
favorite part of the house—it makes me think of princesses and fairy tales and other embarrassingly
romantic things that have no place in a practical, independent life—but it suits Georgie to the bone. Like
it was made for her.
I eye the newel post as I start up the stairs because it’s shaped like a grinning dragon and I’ve never
understood it. The Wildes are the least fanciful people alive. Pragmatism and quiet determination would
be our coat of arms if we had such a thing, but we’re Midwesterners, thank you. Coats of arms are far
too showy.
The dragon grins at me like it knows things I don’t.
“That is unlikely,” I tell it, then close my eyes, despairing of myself.
There is no room in my life for the kind of whimsy that results in discussions with inanimate objects.
Especially a dragon. A sometimes creepy dragon who hunches at the foot of the banister like he’s
guarding the house.
“Stop it,” I mutter at myself—and possibly at him—as I head upstairs.
Once on the third floor, I eye Georgie’s library door as I pass it, itching to get in there and establish some
order, but sometimes friendship comes before logic. Or intelligible shelving systems. At the end of the
hall, her bedroom door is ajar, and I can see Georgie herself sitting on the wood-planked floor facing the
two huge turret windows that take up most of the outside wall. They are flung wide open to the cool
spring air and she has her face lifted to the sunrise.
Her curly red hair swirls around her, and she’s wearing enough bracelets on her wrist to perform a
symphony of tinkling metal sounds. Like the half hippie, half free spirit she claims to be.
Georgie’s family also has roots in Puritan Massachusetts witch trials but unlike me, she loves getting lost
in all that witchcraft nonsense. She pretends she has various supernatural powers to annoy me, but
mostly she likes the trappings. What she solemnly calls crystal lore and sage burning. She likes to talk to
her cat as if he can understand her and claims his meows are detailed replies that she, naturally, can
comprehend perfectly. And she steadfastly claims to believe that Ellowyn, one of our other closest
friends, can brew teas that cure colds, repair broken hearts, and curse weak-willed men.
There’s something comforting about how Georgie wholeheartedly embraces the silliness, like this daily
ritual of hers. The morning light streams in, making the colorful crystals she’s arranged around her in a
circle glow.
As I stand in the doorway, she gets to her feet and begins to collect her debris. Her crystals are the only
item she owns that I have ever seen her keep in some kind of order. I used to try to help her pick up the
various rocks, but she would tell me things like I put the malachite with the quartz and everyone knows
that’s wrong, or that reds and blues shouldn’t touch on Wednesdays, obviously. I finally gave up.
I’ll admit that sometimes I have to shove my hands in my pockets to keep from helping again anyway.
“What brings you to my lair this early in the morning?” she asks without looking at me. I know this is to
give the impression that she divined my presence when it’s more likely she heard the creaky board out
in the hallway.
She does something dramatic with her fingers in the air, and at the same time a breeze shifts through
the wind chimes she has hanging in her windows. A funny little coincidence.
I ignore it. “You’re free tonight, right?”
“Sadly no. In a shocking twist that will surprise everyone who’s ever met me or seen me attempt to
dance, I’m running away to Spain, where I will dedicate myself to the study of flamenco. And possibly
also tapas and wine.”
In other words, yes, she’s free.
“I need to call a meeting.”
Georgie sighs and looks over her shoulder at me. “Not every get-together needs to be a meeting with a
cause.”
I smile winsomely at her. “But some do.”
“Is this about those flyers I helped you put up yesterday?”
I smile even more broadly. If there was an award for best flyer, that one would win it. But then, I’m
excellent at flyers. “That flyer was about the new and improved Redbud Festival, Georgie.”
“Yes, I know. I also know that anytime you try to new and improve something in this town, the plague
that is Skip Simon descends on you like the locust he is.”
“He hasn’t. Yet.”
“But he will.”
He will. He always does.
I sigh. “Yes, he will. He can’t resist. But I don’t want to fight him.” This time is implied. “I want to find a
way to get through to him. Preferably without embarrassing him in front of the whole town.”
Because the only thing I’ve ever been able to do when it came to Skip Simon, from another old and well-
to-do local family here in St. Cyprian like mine, was embarrass him.
Publicly.
His unearned victory against me in fourth grade notwithstanding.
There was the kickball game. You’d think a grown man wouldn’t still be mad that a girl had accidentally
smashed his face with a kickball in gym class, both breaking his nose and making him the laughingstock
of the fifth grade, but Skip had brought it up at least twice in the past six months alone.
There was the olive branch incident. Except it wasn’t an olive branch. It was an extra helping of the fish
sticks from the cafeteria that everyone knew he loved. I’d thought he’d find those fish sticks within the
hour and maybe we could bury the hatchet. Instead, he’d come back from a week’s vacation—that he
claimed was the flu, but he had a tan from lying on the beach in Mexico—to find everyone calling him
Stinky Simon. And hadn’t believed I’d been out that same week because I really did come down with the
flu before I could take the fish sticks offering back out of his locker.
There was the unfortunate field trip to Mark Twain’s Boyhood Home in Hannibal. The riverboat incident
a year later. The ninth-grade intercom thing that even my own friends didn’t entirely believe was an
accident, but how was I supposed to know that it could be so easily turned on? Or that Skip and his
freshman year girlfriend would choose to use that room to make out in?
Classmates made unfortunate slurping sounds at him for years.
Then there’d been prom. Our parents had urged us to go together despite the many years of discord.
They thought our two old St. Cyprian families should be friendlier, and obviously my rebellious sister
wasn’t the one to approach for cordiality of any kind. And when they’d had a few drinks, our parents
tended to wax rhapsodic about how they’d always had hopes for Skip and me.
Neither Skip nor I shared these hopes.
But we’d agreed all the same, because St. Cyprian is a small town. And because it made sense to make
an effort. Okay, that was me, but he was briefly less jerky about things. We even called our awkward
plans peace talks.
Then I stood him up.
It was an accident, but no one believed that.
My position, then and now, is that when your always-problematic sister “loses” your favorite science
teacher’s chinchilla, you can hardly be concerned about a dance. You initiate search and rescue, in a
prom dress, because it’s the poor, lost chinchilla that matters. And given that I was the one who found
Mr. Churchilla, you’d think Skip would have forgiven me.
But he didn’t. Especially when the rumor went around that I’d always plotted to stand him up. As if I
would descend to playing teen rom-com movie games with Skip. Plus, there was another rumor that
Skip himself had actually been planning to embarrass me with something far more cringeworthy than his
choice of white tuxedo.
I wish I could say we’d left such silly adolescent issues behind, but on the day of Skip’s coronation—I
mean, election, if you could call it that when his grand and formidable mother basically forced everyone
she knows into voting for her precious spoiled baby—as mayor of St. Cyprian, I led a town cleanup
service project. I had no idea the cleaning substance we’d used in the community center would make
the floor abnormally slippery. I was wearing shoes with decent treads.
But Skip was not. He tripped, fell flat on his face and, yes, broke his nose again.
Yes, he blamed me.
The harder I tried to be nice to Skip, the worse I seemed to embarrass him. Over time, he moved on
from any actual incidents to simply blaming me by rote. If there is any bad word breathed about him on
the cobbled streets of St. Cyprian, he assumes it’s my fault.
But he’s the mayor. What mayor is universally adored? Welcome to politics.
An argument he does not find compelling, sadly. I’ve tried.
Skip might not believe this, but while he can certainly schmooze with the best of them, he isn’t liked by
all and sundry. He is mayor here because his family is powerful and because he vowed to keep the town
as it is. The sad truth is, no matter how many progressive folks live here, a great many people in the
greater St. Cyprian area are afraid of change.
That doesn’t mean they like Skip personally. Yet somehow the blame for any negativity aimed at him or
his office or his campaign gets put on my shoulders. When he decides I’m wrong, which is pretty much
anytime I get out there and try to change things for the better, he really goes after me.
This is why I need my friends to help me brainstorm ways to deal with Skip’s eventual, inevitable
response to my new ideas for the Redbud Festival. Because I’m certainly not going to stop trying to
improve St. Cyprian and its tourist-attracting, revenue-producing festivals to appease Mayor Stinky
Simon.
Excerpted from Small Town, Big Magic by Hazel Beck. Copyright © 2022 by Megan Crane and
Nicole Helm. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
HAZEL BECK is the magical partnership of a river witch and an earth witch. Together, they have collected two husbands, three familiars, two children, five degrees, and written around 200 books. As one, their books will delight with breathtaking magic, emotional romance, and stories of witches you won't soon forget. You can find them at www.Hazel-Beck.com. |
Crown of Darkness
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