Sunday, February 18, 2024

A Step Past Darkness

 Welcome to my blog tour for a Step Past Darkness which is been hosted by Park Row Books, Hanover Square Press, MIRA Books, Graydon House, Canary Street Press , HarperCollinsPublishers | Harlequin Trade Publishing











On Sale Date: February 20, 2024

9780778310761

Hardcover

$30.00 USD

Fiction / Thrillers / Psychological 

448 pages

Rating 5 

Would I recommend it? Yes , in fact I've told me friends that they need to check this one out as well as her other book.

Would I read anything else by this author ? Yes , she's becoming one of my favorite authors to read .

Now on to my thoughts

First off a big thank you to to the publisher as well as to the author Vera Kurian and to NetGalley for not only the invite to read and review A Step Passed Darkness but also for helping me to find a new favorite book for 2024 , in fact this was my all time favorite book for January , it had every thing in it that I loved , from a creepy town setting to a group of friends that see something they shouldn't have , as well as a very creepy cult that  was down right twisted , and it had me setting on the edge of my bed the inter time I was reading it , it remind me of one of my all time books by Stephen King it , and with each turn of the page I kept wondering who was going to make it out alive , like I said  it had everything I love in a good horror or thriller , twisted , creepy , dark, fast page from the start , with a mixture of the  supernatural elements that hooks me as well , and just like my other favorite book by her NEVER SAW ME COMING,  I stayed up reading  it  until I was at the very last page. So with these last words to you if you love : dark, twisted, as well as  Sinister books then this is the one for you 

1

August 17, 2015

The mountain had existed long before there had been anyone around to name it, pushed up by the inevitable forces that made the Appalachian Range millions of years ago. Hulking, it stood with a peculiar formation at its apex, two peaks like a pair of horns, giving the mountain its eventual name of Devil’s Peak. The coal mine inside was abandoned long ago.

On the southern side of Devil’s Peak was the town of Wesley Falls, where there were no remnants of the mine except for the overgrown paths crisscrossing up to two entrances, ineffectually boarded up, partially hidden but available to anyone looking hard enough. Down the western side were the steeper paths, far more overgrown with vegetation, leading down to the abandoned town of Evansville. That side of the mountain and beyond grew strange because of the coal fire that had been burning underground for almost a century. The Bureau of Mines had managed to contain the fire to the western side of the mountain so that only Evansville suffered. Only Evansville had bouts of noxious gases, open cracks of brimstone in the roads, residents complaining of hot basements and well water. Over time they left town, leaving behind a ghost.

Unlike its unfortunate neighbor, Wesley Falls had avoided the mine fire and transitioned from a coal-mining town to something not unlike Pennsylvania suburbia. It was the sort of town where one of the billboards outside the Golden Praise megachurch proclaimed, “Wesley Falls: the BEST place to raise a family!” and most adults agreed with that assessment. The sort of place where the city council had voted against a bid to allow a McDonalds to open, arguing that it would “lead to the deterioration of the character of Wesley Falls.” This had less to do with concerns about childhood obesity or dense traffic than it did a desire to keep the town trapped in amber. The sort of town where the sheriff was the son of the previous sheriff. 

Jia Kwon, stepping off a train at the station some miles away from Wesley Falls, looked around the crowded station for that son—the sheriff—now in his thirties, though she had trouble picturing this. Sheriff Zachary Springsteen had an air of formality that she couldn’t match up with the image of the boy she knew from high school, whom everyone called Blub. He was an inoffensive, nondescript kid who delivered papers via his clackety bike, who then grew to be the generic teen who stood in the back row of yearbook pictures. She had always been friendly with him, but never quite friends, starting from when she had transferred from St. Francis to the Wesley Falls public school system and Blub sat next to her in homeroom.

Was the fact that she had chosen to keep in contact with this not-quite-friend after she moved away from Wesley Falls an accident? No—she knew that now. Blub had been the perfect person to report back town news over the years because he never suspected her interest was anything more than curiosity. Their exchanges over the years had been just enough for him to feel comfortable, or compelled enough, to make the phone call that had brought her here.

Jia paused to put her phone in her purse, pretending she did not notice any stares. No one looked twice at her in Philly, but here she stood out as the only Asian, drawing even more attention to herself because she had dyed her hair a shade of silvery gray with hints of lavender in it. It would only be worse when she got into town, but even as a kid she had been so used to being stared at that she just exaggerated her strangeness, opting for bright clothes rather than trying to blend in.

“Jia?” said an uncertain voice.

She turned her head and instantly recognized Blub, who stood with the gawky awkwardness of someone uncomfortable with his own height. “Blub!” she exclaimed, coming closer. She embraced him, her head only coming up to his midchest. “You’ve grown two feet!”

He shoved his hands into his pockets, smiling. “Want to ask me if I play basketball?” Their smiles felt hollow, she realized, because of the strangeness of the situation and everything they weren’t saying. “I appreciate you taking the time to come out here. I know you’re probably busy but…” He led her to his patrol car. “Sorry, you’ll have to ride in the back.”

“It’s no problem,” she murmured, surprised to see that he had brought someone along for the ride.

“This is Deputy Sheriff Henry,” Blub said, turning the car on. A smaller man whom she did not recognize half turned and nodded at her curtly, though Jia could see him looking at her in the rearview mirror as they pulled away from the station. What on earth had Blub told him?

That once, in one of their email exchanges, when he complained about having to repair his roof, she made a joke about which team to bet on for the Super Bowl, and he did, and she had been right? That she had one too many stock tips that turned out to be good? That she inexplicably sent him a “You okay?” email at 8:16 a.m. on September eleventh, thirty minutes before American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center? There had been enough incidents as strange as these that when he called her last year asking for help, it felt like something clicking into place. Something that was supposed to happen. Over the years, she had started to feel comfortable with that clicking feeling, rather than being afraid of it. Last winter he had called her saying that Jane Merrick was missing from the old-folks home—she was prone to running— and she was outside in the freezing weather in only a nightgown, and they were worried about her. He did not say why he was asking her, a person who hadn’t lived in Wesley Falls for two decades, a person who neither knew nor liked Jane Merrick. She told him to look in the barn on the Dandriges’ property without providing an explanation of how she knew. She knew because she saw it. She knew because sometimes she could call up things when she wanted to, though not all the time, but this was still significantly better than when she was a kid and she couldn’t control when the visions hit her, or stop them, or even understand them.

And now, in the peak of summer heat, he had called again, saying that there was a missing person, could she help, friends were worried. She did not ask who because she felt something like the deepest note on a double bass vibrating, reverberating through her body. She saw herself walking, her white maxi dress—the one she was wearing right now—catching on brambles as she maneuvered her way down the overgrown path to the ghost town.

She had to go back to Wesley Falls. It was time.

“You all went to school together?” Deputy Sheriff Henry said when they pulled onto the highway.

“Yeah,” she said. “We didn’t overlap with you, did we?” Henry shook his head. “Blub and I go way back,” she said, meeting Blub’s eyes in the rearview mirror.

“I’ll never get over the fact that people call you Blub,” Henry remarked. “How’d you get that name anyway? Were you chubby or something?”

“I don’t think there’s an origin story,” Blub said, looking like he wanted the subject to change.

“I remember!” Jia exclaimed. “It’s when you threw up in fourth grade.” She leaned forward, pressing against the grate that divided the car, addressing Henry directly. “It was during homeroom. He threw up on his pile of books. I remember because it was clear and ran down the sides like pancake syrup.”

Henry laughed and Blub flushed. “Jia, you can’t remember that because you weren’t there. You were at St. Francis in grade school!”

She stopped laughing abruptly. “I could have sworn I remember that happening!”

“Sometimes when enough people tell you a story, you start to remember it like you were there,” Henry mused.

Sometimes, Jia thought. But there were other people who could see things that had happened or would happen, even if they weren’t there.

As they drove down the highway and drew closer to Wesley Falls, the mood shifted to an anxious silence. Jia checked her phone for anything work related. She ran a small solar panel company called Green Solutions with her two best friends, both hyper-competent, both probably picking up on Jia’s strange tone when she said she had to go back home for a short trip. They probably thought that it had to do with the settling of her mother’s estate, and Jia, even though she was uncomfortable with lying, allowed them to believe this. When her mother had died, Jia had come to Wesley Falls to liquidate everything in The Gem Shop and sell the store itself to the least annoying bidder: a fifty-something-year-old former teacher who wanted to open a bakery. A significant part of the decision had been not that her baked items were good—they were—but something about her aggressive combinations of spices had seemed witchy, and, most importantly, she did not attend Golden Praise. Jia’s mother, Su-Jin, would have approved.

And now, with Blub turning off the highway, her heart felt torn in different directions. Wesley Falls wasn’t home, but it was, because it was where most of her memories of Su-Jin lived. As the car moved it felt as if they traveled through an invisible veil, something that felt uncomfortable in a way she could not put into words anyone else would understand, but was familiar and, she knew, strange. Strange like how she was strange.

But then it came: the feeling that arose every time she had gone home to visit her mother—the feeling that she shouldn’t be here. Except this time, it was worse. They had just arrived in Wesley Falls, passing Wiley’s Bar, which was on the outskirts of town. It was frequented by truckers stopping for a cheap burger and beer.

“That place is still here?” she murmured.

“They got karaoke now,” Blub offered.

“Please kill me,” Jia responded, trying to sound light. Blub laughed, then turned onto Throckmartin Lane. The street hadn’t changed in twenty years: it still housed Greenbriar Park, which everyone called “The Good Park,” and the larger homes where the wealthier families lived. Built before McMansions had hit this part of Pennsylvania, the houses differed in their architecture—some colonial, some farmhouse—but were all similar with their immaculate lawns, American flags, and WESLEY FALLS FOOTBALL signs.

Blub slowed to a stop, making eye contact with her in the rearview mirror. He was waiting for directions.

She gestured for him to turn onto Main Street, that old, curved road with the bottom half of the C drawn out like a jaw that had dropped wide open—it was impossible to drive anywhere in Wesley Falls without driving on Main Street at some point. They passed the police station, then the row of shops. Some of the mom-and-pop stores that lined Main Street had changed, but Wesley Falls still didn’t have a Target, a chain grocery store, or a reasonable place to buy clothes. Indeed, the best place to raise a family was apparently a place where you had to drive ten miles to the mall to get many of the things people wanted. She gazed at the bakery that used to be The Gem Shop. Spade’s Hardware was still there—her mother had had a grudging friendship with the owners. The candy shop had changed ownership but it was still a candy shop. They drove along the north side of town, by the lake and the Neskaseet River—called Chicken River by locals because of its proximity to and usage by the chicken processing plant at the north edge of town.

Wesley Falls and Evansville had both popped up in the 1800s, their economies at first built entirely around the Wesley coal mine, which resided inside Devil’s Peak. No matter how many times well-meaning adults attempted to close off the entrance of the mine, which had been abandoned in the 1930s when the coal ran out, high school kids always found their way in. Drawn to the allure of ghost stories, rumors that if you found the right path you could find the mine fire in Evansville, and the inevitable urban legends about the Heart.

Jia pointed and Blub turned onto the unpaved road that crossed the Neskaseet and wound up the side of Devil’s Peak to Evansville. From this elevation, she could see the entire tiny, abandoned town. The simple, squared-off eight shape of the town’s few roads, the dilapidated strip of larger buildings at the center, then the rectangles of homes, all identical because they had been provided by the mining company.

The road came to an end, trees and shrubbery blocking their passage. Blub put the car in Park, turning to face Jia. “Can’t drive farther.”

“Then we walk,” she said. She led the way, ignoring the looks from both men as she freed herself from prickly branches that caught onto her dress. Blub used his nightstick to whack away a tangle of vegetation, then Jia found a path that led down to the town.

It smelled like sulfur with a hint of cigar. Jia picked her way gingerly down the main road, which was buckled and cracked in places, then turned a corner behind the old church and stopped. There was someone in the road wearing a bright fuchsia shirt. She could only see the top half of the figure’s body. The lower part, from the stomach down, was trapped inside the road in what looked like a fresh sinkhole.

Jia knew without looking. Some part of her had known from the moment Blub called her. He needed help finding a missing person, but he hadn’t said who. This was the thing that had pulled her back, made her feel an insistent anxiety for the past few months.

Blub and Henry were running to the body, the latter yelling. When Jia finally approached, Blub was trying to get a pulse. She watched the two men huddle over the body, Henry almost making an attempt to pull her from the chasm before Blub stopped him. This could be a crime scene.

Blub sat back on his haunches. The fuchsia T-shirt was soaked with last night’s rain. Her blond hair was pulled into a ponytail, tendrils stuck to the sides of her face. That face. Familiar but different. She’s still so pretty, Jia thought. Her mouth was open and a scratch stood out livid on her pale cheek. Her eyes were closed.

“It’s her,” Blub stated.

“Maddy Wesley,” Henry said, disturbed and awed.

“You knew that Maddy was the missing person? You didn’t tell me,” Jia said, trying to keep her voice stable.

Blub remained crouched, his elbows on his knees with his hands dangling down. “Didn’t think I needed to,” he stated, his voice devoid of the warmth it had had while in the car. He didn’t look at her as he examined the scene, and it occurred to Jia that he was actually the sheriff. Not Blub, the kid who threw up on his pile of books, but an actual agent of the law.

Jia edged backward, fearful that the road could break under her.

“You know her?” Henry asked.

His gaze made her self-conscious. Jia had never been a good liar. Much of the lying she had done that summer so many years ago had been by omission. She was working on a project. She was hanging out with Padma. These things had been true, but misleading.

“She was in our year,” Jia managed. “We all went to high school together.”

Blub’s eyes went from the body to Jia. “You weren’t friends, though, were you?” Maddy ran with the popular crowd, the Golden Praise crowd. Jia had been the opposite of that.

“No,” she said finally. “We weren’t friends.”


Excerpted from A Step Past Darkness by Vera Kurian, Copyright © 2024 by Albi Literary Inc. Published by Park Row Books.  



ABOUT THE BOOK:

I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER meets Stephen King in this character-driven thriller

about a study group of six teenagers who witness something tragic in an abandoned mine,

which comes back to haunt them 20 years later.

SIX CLASSMATES.

ONE TERRIFYING NIGHT.

A MURDER TWENTY YEARS IN THE MAKING...

There’s more to Wesley Falls than meets the eye, but for six high school students, it’s home.

Kelly, the new girl and rule-follower.

Maddy, the beauty and the church favorite.

Padma, the brains and all-A student.

Casey, the jock and football star.

James, the burnout and just trying to make it to graduation.

And Jia, the psychic, who can see the future.

When these six are assigned to work on a summer group project, their lives are forever

changed. At an end of the year party in the abandoned mine, they witness a preventable

tragedy, but no one will take them seriously. As things escalate, they realize the church, the

police, and the town’s founders are all conspiring to cover up what happened. When James is

targeted as the scapegoat, to avoid suspicion, they vow their silence and to never contact each

other again. Their plan works – almost.

Twenty years later, Maddy is found murdered is Wesley Falls, and the remaining five are forced

to confront their past and work together to finally put right what happened all those years ago. If

they can survive...






ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Vera Kurian is a writer and scientist based in Washington DC. Her debut novel, NEVER SAW

ME COMING (Park Row Books, 2021 was an Edgar Award nominee and was named one of the

New York Times’ Best Thrillers of 2021. Her short fiction has been published in magazines such

as Glimmer Train, Day One, and The Pinch. She has a PhD in Social Psychology, where she

studied intergroup relations, ideology, and quantitative methods. She blogs irregularly about

writing, horror movies and pop culture/terrible TV.

SOCIAL LINKS:

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

IG: https://www.instagram.com/verakurianauthor/?hl=en 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/vera_kurian

Friday, February 16, 2024

The Patient by Teri Terry

 Welcome to my blog tour stop for   The Patient by Teri Terry which is  been hosted by Bookouture 







Title : The Patient 
Author " Teri Terry
Rating : 4
Would I recommend it?Yes 
Would I read more by this author ? Yes
First off like always I want to say a big thank you to Bookouture as well as to the author and NetGalley for letting me read and review The Patient , which by the way I loved and enjoyed so much , and while a times it fit a bit slow it actually worked in the a way that it made the story line so much real and made me think that what was happen in the story could actually happen in real life , and that made it even more creepy , to actually think that someone would give someone a second chance at life only to decide that person now didn't have the right to live . 












Buy Link:

Book Description:

I feel the steady thump of my new heart beating inside me. The surgeon said everything went well. But I can’t stop thinking about my donor: the girl who was killed. Her death saved my life. But now whoever took hers is coming for mine…I can’t believe it when I learn my donor’s identity. The attack on Flora was all over the news. From my hospital bed I read every article, obsess over every word and soon I feel like I know her: the beautiful girl with flame-coloured hair, adored by everyone around her. Why would anyone hurt someone so perfect?When Flora’s family reach out to me, I’m unsure. My hands are shaking as I arrive at their grand mansion with its golden stone and sprawling gardens, but they’re warm and welcoming, tears shining in her mother’s eyes as she smiles at me.She even tells me to take anything I want from Flora’s things, as she can’t bear to go through them herself. I run my fingers over the racks of beautiful designer items, carefully choosing outfits in Flora’s signature yellow, the bright colour complementing the new flush in my cheeks. I think of the years I’ve wasted being ill, and the crushing loneliness I thought would never end. I deserve this.But then there’s a violent attack on another patient who received one of Flora’s organs. My heart – Flora’s heart – races dangerously fast. Is it a coincidence?Maybe I’ve made a mistake by stepping into Flora’s life. Has this second chance really saved me? Or has it cost me everything?A totally gripping psychological thriller that will keep you turning the pages late into the night. If you loved The Silent PatientThe Housemaid and The Doctor’s Wife, you won’t want to miss this.
Author Bio:





Teri Terry is an award-winning, internationally bestselling author of thrillers for young adults and adults. She has lived in France, Canada, Australia and England at more addresses than she can count, acquiring four degrees, a selection of passports and an unforgettable name along the way. Before writing full time, Teri has been a scientist, a lawyer, an optometrist, and worked in schools, libraries and for a charity. She now calls a village in Buckinghamshire home, where she lives with her husband and Scooby, a very cute and naughty cockapoo.
https://twitter.com/TeriTerryWrites/Sign up to be the first to hear about new releases from Teri Terry here: https://bookouture.com/subscribe/Teri-Terry

Sunday, February 11, 2024

THE FRAMED WOMEN OF ARDEMORE HOUSE

 Welcome to my showcase for THE FRAMED WOMEN OF ARDEMORE HOUSE which is been hosted by Harlequin Trade Publishing, Hanover Square Press, 












The Framed Women of Ardemore House


CHAPTER ONE


The house was enormous. Jo didn’t know enough about local architecture to date it,

but the walls stretched up in the damp air, big and dark and lichen flecked. Windows had

been boarded up; they wept black mildew creases over sandstone sills. Staring through the car

window, Jo dropped her eyes down to the stairs, flanked by columns where Jo imagined

regal statues might have stood. Or ought to have stood. 

“It’s…a castle,” she whispered. 

“It is most certainly not a castle,” said Rupert Selkirk, solicitor of Selkirk and Associates,

in the driver’s seat beside her. “Not even the largest house in Abington.” 

Solicitor. Jo rolled the word around in her mouth. She’d pocket it for later rumination; it was

nice to have a word for chewing on. It suggested antique leather chairs and brass lampstands,

elt safer than divorce lawyer, and didn’t trigger the same sort of gut gripe. Rupert looked exactly

as

a solicitor fought to, with a high forehead, disappearing hairline, and two very bushy eyebrows.

He also drove a puddle-green sedan with the steering wheel on the wrong side of Jo’s expectations. S

he wondered if the sense of dislocation would fade with the jet lag. It hadn’t exactly improved

her first impressions. She forgot to introduce herself, forgot the handshake, stared in absolute

stunned silence at the landscape as they drove.

Online pictures had suggested something endlessly green, but the reality was wet and ragged,

browned out from the end of winter and laced at the edges with naked tree branches.

Jo squinted into the distance, taking in the brackish heath, then trees, then fog. A cluster of

trees appeared, lanky pin oaks and a few copper beeches. A crumbling dry-stone wall s

naked away from decayed posts; no fence, but the remnants of one. She let her eyes wander its

length to a dark smudge of woodland and black bark dotted with lichen. The rest of the hill

loomed treeless, stark, and scarred by eruptions of additional stone. Moors, she thought.

Endless and rolling with dry heather and wet peat.

Jo had pressed herself to the glass, ignoring the steam prints she made. She hadn’t brought

much with her—certainly not her books. But Wuthering Heights might have been a

good choice. Relaxation breathing had never been much use to her; whenever she consciously

thought about autonomic responses, they went all wrong. So she mentally recited the opening lines

of the novel as the car grumbled to a halt in the shadow of Ardemore House. As for Rupert,

he was repeating himself.

“—Not a castle. The house is wider than it is deep, mostly to take advantage of the

south-facing aspect.” Seeing the blank look on Jo’s face, he tried again. “In England, south-facing

gardens get the most sun. That’s where you’ll find the Ardemore Gardens. They were the highlight

of the property, once. Overgrown now, I’m afraid.” Rupert swept his hand across the horizon

as if bisecting it. “Everything east of here is rented for grazing livestock. There is also,

as you know, the cottage. It helps defray the tax burden.”

Tax burden. She might want to hold on to those words, too.

“Emery Lane, my assistant, will be drawing up papers while we walk the property,”

he said. Jo was starting to run out of processing space, internally. She felt a hiccup of

emotion and press-ganged it into a smile.



“Papers?”

“For you to sign. To take over the property as your inheritance.”

The smile failed. Better say something like yes, good. Quite. 

Exactly the thing. But Rupert got there first, offering her a hand out of the passenger seat.

“Your mother always spoke very warmly of you, by the way.

 I was very sorry to hear of her passing.”

At these words, Jo quietly abandoned her pursuit of professionalism.

“Y-yeah. I got the card. Thanks.”

Rupert was still looking at her. She could tell, but wasn’t about to look back.

 She took in the house, instead, this not-castle that rose straight out of bracken 

and into a cloud bank.

“I want to go inside,” she said. Rupert joined her across the weedy lawn.

“I thought we would see the cottage first. It’s at least habitable.”

He didn’t seem to understand; Jo was standing in front of Wuthering Heights, 

and no, she did not want to go poke around a cottage. Not yet.

“Inside,” she said. “Please.” Rupert sighed.

“All right. But have proper expectations. This property has been vacant for a century, 

at least since at least 1908.”

Now in front of the door, Jo furrowed her brow as Rupert hunted for the right key. 

That was a surprise, actually. And it didn’t make sense.

“But you said my uncle Aiden had the property? In your email—”

“Ah, but he did not live on-site. Had a flat in York, and—” Rupert stopped abruptly a

nd stumbled back. Jo followed his gaze to see a pair of bright eyes peering back at 

them through the glass.

“Jesus!”

“Tut, now.” Rupert waved his hand airily. “That’s only Sid Randles, caretaker.”

A moment later, and the man himself opened the door. Lean, lanky, all arms, 

legs, and a shock of red hair. Attractive in the way of highwaymen and pirates, 

he was either a very well-kept forty-something, or thirty gone to seed. He was also blocking the way.

“Here’s a surprise,” he said. “This the American, then?”

“Yes. Sid Randles, meet Josephine Black,” Rupert offered.

“Jones,” Jo corrected. “It’s Jo Jones now. I mean, again.” Jo faltered slightly,

 then dutifully stuck her hand out. Sid tucked an industrial-grade flashlight under 

his arm and gave her a shake, then squeezed her palm.

“Sounds like an alias,” he said.

“Jo Jones was an American Jazz drummer of the Count Basie Orchestra rhythm 

section from 1934 to 1948,” Jo said, then puckered her lips as if that would bring the 

words back. Sid eyed her a minute, then let out a yelp of laughter, and not very kindly.

“Ms. Jones would like a tour. Sid, will you do the honors, please?” Rupert checked his 

wristwatch. “I need to take this call and there’s no signal inside.” He turned away, and Sid grinned

 at Jo, one crooked canine slipping over his lip like a storybook fox.

“There’s no electricity,” he said.

“I figured that’s why you have the flashlight,” Jo said, pointing. Imagining him as

 Reynard from the French fables had done wonders for her confidence. She could almost i

magine the swish of his irritated tail.

“Fine, fine. Come on in.” He backed into the hall. “Hope you don’t mind the smell.”

It would be hard to miss it. A puff of musty air assaulted Jo’s nostrils on entering—a wet, rotten odor. The windows were boarded, and in the slanted peek-a-boo light she could just make out the ghost of a table, a phantom of chairs in the foyer. Sid swept the light across the hall from a dust-webbed staircase to a grand room that opened off their left.
“You’ll want to pay respects to the Lord and Lady,” he said, then marched her through the pocket doors. The smell was stronger in here, sharper and more tangible. Then, her heart leapt; she’d caught a glimpse of distant book spines.
“It’s a library?” she asked.
“Yeah. A rotten one.” Sid played the flashlight beam along the mantel of a marble fireplace. “But up there, see ’em? That would be Lord William Ardemore. And his wife, Gwen, of course.”
The portraits were too large, and the beam of the light too small, but she could make out a frowning man with deep set eyes and a woman with a rosebud mouth, who might have suitably graced a Victorian cookie tin. Family members she had never known.
“Damned odd, those two.” Sid flicked the light between them. “Just up and vanished from the place.”
Jo sucked a breath. Did everyone know more about them than she did?
“What do you mean? Vanished how?”
“I mean just that.” He played the light against his own face, campfire style. “Just up sticks and gone. Fired everybody, too, didn’t they? Oh, they’d been toast of the town, like.” He did an awful falsetto: “Jobs for the big garden and big bloody house. Then poof. Like they were running from something.”
Jo was watching carefully for signs of a joke. There didn’t appear to be any, so then she waited for him to carry on. Except he didn’t. She studied him for a few silent seconds, until he gave another bark of laughter.
“Nothin’ to say about that, eh? Well, the old Lord and Lady are the least of your worries, anyhow. There’s a hole in the roof upstairs, an honest to God hole. Between you and me? Be cheaper to pull the house down than to fix it up.”
Jo pursed her lips so hard she felt teeth.
“I just got it! I can’t tear it down!”
Sid only shrugged at her outburst.
“Fair, I guess. But what do you plan to do with it, then? Look around.”
Jo did not, in fact, have an answer to that. Sid apparently meant it rhetorically, anyway, since he was now herding her toward the door.
“To the cottage,” he said. “Come on.”

Excerpted from The Framed Women of Ardemore House by Brandy Schillace. Copyright © 2024 by Brandy Schillace. Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A., a division of HarperCollins






Book Summary: 


An abandoned English manor. A peculiar missing portrait. A cozy, deviously

clever murder mystery, perfect for fans of Richard Osman and Anthony Horowitz.

Jo Jones has always had a little trouble fitting in. As a neurodivergent, hyperlexic 

book editor and divorced New Yorker transplanted into the English countryside, Jo

doesn’t know what stands out more: her Americanisms or her autism.

After losing her job, her mother, and her marriage all in one year, she couldn’t be

happier to take possession of a possibly haunted (and clearly unwanted) family

estate in North Yorkshire

But when the body of the moody town groundskeeper turns up on her rug with three

bullets in his back,

Jo finds herself in potential danger—and she’s also a potential suspect. At the same time, a

peculiar

family portrait vanishes from a secret room in the manor, bearing a strange connection to

both the

dead body and Jo’s mysterious family history.

With the aid of a Welsh antiques dealer, the morose local detective, and the Irish innkeeper’s wife,

Jo embarks on a mission to clear herself of blame and find the missing painting, unearthing a

slew of secrets about the town—and herself—along the way. And she’ll have to do it all before

the killer strikes again…


The Framed Women of Ardemore House

Author: Brandy Schillace

Publication Date: February 13, 2024

ISBN: 9781335014030, Hardcover

Publisher: Hanover Square Press

Price $30.00


Buy Links:

BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-framed-women-of

-ardemore-house-a-netherleigh-mystery-original-brandy-schillace/20016470?ean=

9781335014030 


Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-framed-women-of

-ardemore-house-brandy-schillace/1143600531 


Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1335014039/keywords=mystery%

20books?tag=harpercollinsus-20 


Books A Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/9781335014030?cjdata=

MXxOfDB8WXww& 




Social Links:

Author Website: https://brandyschillace.com/ 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/bschillace 

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

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

Book’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/netherleigh/

 

Peculiar Book Club Podcast, Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.

com/groups/peculiarbooksclub 



Author Bio: 


Brandy Schillace, PhD,  is a historian of medicine and the critically acclaimed

author of Death's Summer Coat: What Death and Dying Teach Us About Life and Living and

Clockwork Futures: The Science of Steampunk. The editor-in-chief of the journal Medical Humanities,

she previously worked as a professor of literature and in research and public engagement

at the Dittrick Medical History Center and Museum. Brandy also hosts the Peculiar Book

Club Podcast, a twice-monthly show.

The Framed Women of Ardemore House, featuring an autistic protagonist caught at the

center of a murder mystery, is her fiction debut. Brandy is also autistic, though has not

(to her knowledge) been a suspect in a murder investigation. Find her at https://brandyschillace.com/ 



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