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Monday, February 24, 2025

Interview of Jean Hackensmith Author of A Dream in the Wilderness (#Historical Romance, #Interview)

 


Hired as a nanny to Caleb Wachsmann’s three children, Sarah Bentley finds life in the Wisconsin Territory to be so much more.



 

Title: A Dream in the Wilderness

Author: Jean Hackensmith

Pages: 285

Genre: Historical Romance

Unable to find a teaching position in the flooded job market that is New York City, twenty-one-year-old Sarah Bentley accepts the position of nanny to Caleb Wachsmann’s three children after the farmer’s wife, parents, and infant son die in the Cholera epidemic of 1834. The twist? The job is in Superior, Wisconsin in the Michigan Territory, an unsettled wilderness located on the northwestern tip of Lake Superior.

Caleb is not looking for love; his heart will always belong to his beloved Annie. What he does need is a woman to watch after the children while he toils in the fields making a living for his family. Sarah turns out to be that woman. She raises his children with a gentle and loving hand and also helps Caleb to overcome an unbearable loss. As Wisconsin vies for statehood, the young couple will face challenge after challenge as they struggle to tame a wilderness that really doesn’t want to be tamed at all.

A Dream in the Wilderness is available at https://www.amazon.com/Dream-Wilderness-Saga-Book-ebook/dp/B0DJS19HMH.

 

INTERVIEW:

Can you tell us when you started writing?

I started writing over 40 years ago, when I was in my early twenties (and, yes, I'm disclosing my age!) I was an avid reader of Kathleen Woodiwiss romance novels, so naturally that was the type of book I chose to write...steamy historical romances. I found an agent, who actually came to my house for a week and helped me to edit my first manuscript. That manuscript never did sell, but what I learned from that agent has been invaluable over the years.

Can you tell me who or what the inspiration for the book was?

I've always wanted to do a series of books set in my hometown. This is it. Superior, Wisconsin sits at the northwestern tip of Lake Superior and is rich in history. It shares a harbor with Duluth, MN--the largest port on Lake Superior. The series starts with "A Dream In The Wilderness," which begins in the year 1834, long before Superior was ever founded in 1854. Basically, there was a trading post and Native Americans. My family was the first to settle in Superior before it ever became Superior.

Can you tell us how you came up with your title?

Northern Wisconsin was all wilderness back in 1834. In fact, it was said that a squirrel could cross the state without ever having to touch the ground. That's how thick the forests were. My main character, Sarah Bentley, dreams of becoming a teacher. That dream is realized in the Wisconsin wilderness, hence the title.

Can you tell us a little about your main characters?

Caleb Wachsmann is a widower with three small children. His wife, parents, and youngest child all died in the cholera epidemic of 1834. A dedicated father, Caleb does his best to care for the children properly after their mother's death, but is quick to realize he needs help. He then runs an ad in a New York newspaper for a nanny. Enter Sarah Bentley. Sarah has just graduated from a prestigious teaching college, but is frustrated when she realizes that every other educated woman in New York was also seeking a job as a teacher. She sees Caleb's ad in the newspaper and takes it as an omen. She travels to Wisconsin to become a nanny, but never abandons her dream of becoming a teacher. She also never dreams that she would fall in love with the children or their father.

What’s next on your writing to-do list?

After taking a little break, I intend to start on Book Four of the Brian Koski Stalker Series. It will revolve around four young men (one of them actually just a boy) who are convicted of murdering their parents and younger brother and sister while on a camping trip. Brian's firm is hired by the boys' aunt to prove their innocence.

Can you tell us when you started writing?

I started writing over 40 years ago, when I was in my early twenties (and, yes, I'm disclosing my age!) I was an avid reader of Kathleen Woodiwiss romance novels, so naturally that was the type of book I chose to write...steamy historical romances. I found an agent, who actually came to my house for a week and helped me to edit my first manuscript. That manuscript never did sell, but what I learned from that agent has been invaluable over the years.

Can you tell me who or what the inspiration for the book was?

I've always wanted to do a series of books set in my hometown. This is it. Superior, Wisconsin sits at the northwestern tip of Lake Superior and is rich in history. It shares a harbor with Duluth, MN--the largest port on Lake Superior. The series starts with "A Dream In The Wilderness," which begins in the year 1834, long before Superior was ever founded in 1854. Basically, there was a trading post and Native Americans. My family was the first to settle in Superior before it ever became Superior.

Can you tell us how you came up with your title?

Northern Wisconsin was all wilderness back in 1834. In fact, it was said that a squirrel could cross the state without ever having to touch the ground. That's how thick the forests were. My main character, Sarah Bentley, dreams of becoming a teacher. That dream is realized in the Wisconsin wilderness, hence the title.

Can you tell us a little about your main characters?

Caleb Wachsmann is a widower with three small children. His wife, parents, and youngest child all died in the cholera epidemic of 1834. A dedicated father, Caleb does his best to care for the children properly after their mother's death, but is quick to realize he needs help. He then runs an ad in a New York newspaper for a nanny. Enter Sarah Bentley. Sarah has just graduated from a prestigious teaching college, but is frustrated when she realizes that every other educated woman in New York was also seeking a job as a teacher. She sees Caleb's ad in the newspaper and takes it as an omen. She travels to Wisconsin to become a nanny, but never abandons her dream of becoming a teacher. She also never dreams that she would fall in love with the children or their father.

What’s next on your writing to-do list?

After taking a little break, I intend to start on Book Four of the Brian Koski Stalker Series. It will revolve around four young men (one of them actually just a boy) who are convicted of murdering their parents and younger brother and sister while on a camping trip. Brian's firm is hired by the boys' aunt to prove their innocence.

Can you tell me about your experiences finding a publisher for the book?

My last seven books I have self-published through Amazon.com and this one is no exception. I've had two traditional publishers over the years, and find self-publishing totally liberating. I get to choose when the book is released, not the publisher. I get to decide on what I want for a cover, not the publisher. I work at my own pace, with no deadlines, which is also very important to me. Strangely, I've also had better success since I started self-publishing, also. My historical romance, "The Promise", which is set during the 1930's Dust Bowl era, is my best seller to date, having sold over 20,000 copies. I am proud to say that, for the first time in my writing career, I could support myself off my writing if it became necessary.

If you were going to hang out with one of your characters, who would that be?

Sarah Bentley. She is my kind of girl. She's tough when she needs to be, yet gentle and understanding with the children. She has a dream and pursues it doggedly. And she knows how to love. What more could you want as a woman?

What do you like to do for fun when you’re not writing?  

I absolutely LOVE live theater, especially musicals. In fact, I founded our community theater in Superior back in 1992 and since that time, have directed upwards of 60 shows. I also appeared ON stage a couple of times, playing Anna in "The King and I" and Miss Hannigan in "Annie." Other than that, I love to camp, travel, do paint by numbers, and knit.

How long did it take you to write the book, and how long did it take to get published?

I wrote "Dream" in about 2 months. And, as I already stated, I self-published the book through Amazon.

Do you have any tips for a young writer just starting out?

Don't give up. Keep writing, writing, writing. I was an editor for a publishing company for eight years, and watched so many authors grow just through the writing process itself. The more you write, the better you get. It's inevitable. And don't be afraid of self-publishing if you think it's for you. There used to be a stigma attached to it, but there isn't anymore.

Can you tell me where we can purchase your book?

All of my books are available exclusively on Amazon.com

My last seven books I have self-published through Amazon.com and this one is no exception. I've had two traditional publishers over the years, and find self-publishing totally liberating. I get to choose when the book is released, not the publisher. I get to decide on what I want for a cover, not the publisher. I work at my own pace, with no deadlines, which is also very important to me. Strangely, I've also had better success since I started self-publishing, also. My historical romance, "The Promise", which is set during the 1930's Dust Bowl era, is my best seller to date, having sold over 20,000 copies. I am proud to say that, for the first time in my writing career, I could support myself off my writing if it became necessary.

If you were going to hang out with one of your characters, who would that be?

Sarah Bentley. She is my kind of girl. She's tough when she needs to be, yet gentle and understanding with the children. She has a dream and pursues it doggedly. And she knows how to love. What more could you want as a woman?

What do you like to do for fun when you’re not writing?  

I absolutely LOVE live theater, especially musicals. In fact, I founded our community theater in Superior back in 1992 and since that time, have directed upwards of 60 shows. I also appeared ON stage a couple of times, playing Anna in "The King and I" and Miss Hannigan in "Annie." Other than that, I love to camp, travel, do paint by numbers, and knit.

How long did it take you to write the book, and how long did it take to get published?

I wrote "Dream" in about 2 months. And, as I already stated, I self-published the book through Amazon.

Do you have any tips for a young writer just starting out?

Don't give up. Keep writing, writing, writing. I was an editor for a publishing company for eight years, and watched so many authors grow just through the writing process itself. The more you write, the better you get. It's inevitable. And don't be afraid of self-publishing if you think it's for you. There used to be a stigma attached to it, but there isn't anymore.

Can you tell me where we can purchase your book?

All of my books are available exclusively on Amazon.com



Book Excerpt

Superior, Wisconsin

August 21, 1834

Caleb Wachsmann stood before the four open graves, his two eldest children on either side of him and the youngest in his arms. His entire body was numb. It still didn’t seem possible that all four of them could be gone. But they were. Cholera had taken them systematically, one by one. His father. His mother. His beloved wife, Annie, the mother of his children. His gaze settled on the last coffin, no more than three feet long. Inside was his six-month-old son, Danny. 

Caleb and the older children got sick first. Caleb’s mother had been through other cholera epidemics and knew exactly what to do. They started boiling the drinking water from the nearby St. Louis River and, between her and Annie, and even his father, had forced tons of the bacteria-free water down their throats to prevent dehydration. At one time, Caleb joked that he thought he was going to float away.

He and the older children recovered. Then the rest of the family got sick. The rapid deterioration in their conditions made it impossible for Caleb to keep up with the hydration on all four of his patients. Danny was the first to succumb to the disease. He lasted only 24-hours after the first symptoms appeared. The others lasted two to three days.

Caleb couldn’t help but blame himself. He was responsible for their care, and he had failed.

“Pa?”

Caleb didn’t hear his son’s voice. He was too lost in his thoughts and his grief.

A yank on his shirt sleeve brought him back to reality.

“Pa!”

“What, Seth?” he asked with exasperation heavy in his tone as he looked down at the carrot-topped, freckle-faced boy before him. In fact, all of the children were the spitting image of their mother, and it made looking at them all the more painful.

“Why did we put Grandpa and Grandma and Ma and Danny in the ground? Grandma and Ma aren’t going to like it at all, cuz they don’t like to get dirty.”

Caleb stooped before his eight-year-old son, placing two-year-old Bethany on his knee, then indicated for the five-year-old Jenny to come closer, also. “Remember how I told you that your ma and Danny and your grandma and grandpa are in Heaven with God now?”

The two older children nodded.

“You see, what we put in the ground wasn’t your Mama and Danny anymore, or your grandma and grandpa. The part of her that made your mama your mama and Danny, Danny already went to Heaven.”

“Like their ghosts, you mean?” Seth asked.

“Their spirits,” Caleb corrected. “What’s in the ground is just what was left over and, in time, that part of them will go back to the ground.”

“But it still kinda looked like Ma when you and Father Hauley put the cover on the box,” Seth argued.

Caleb sighed his resignation. “Yes, it did. I don’t know how to explain it better, Seth. When you get older, you’ll understand.”

“So, who’s gonna take care of us now, Pa?” Jenny asked. “Mama and Grandma always took care of us when you and Grandpa were out in the fields plantin’ stuff.”

“I haven’t figured that out yet, honey, but I will.”

The little girl’s green eyes teared and her face scrunched up with her sadness. “I miss Mama, Pa. I want her to come back.”

The sight of his sister’s anguish brought renewed tears to Seth’s eyes also, and Caleb pulled both of them close. Bethany put pudgy arms around her older brother and sister and joined in the hug.

The traveling priest who had performed the ceremony, the only other person present at the burial, looked on in sympathy when he considered what lay ahead for the young father. It was unheard of for a man to raise three children on his own, especially a farmer who spent ten to twelve hours a day cultivating his fields. Yes, Caleb Wachsmann was going to have to find a woman, and he was going to have to do it soon.

– Excerpted from A Dream in the Wilderness by Jean Hackensmith, Jean Hackensmith, 2024. Reprinted with permission.


About the Author
 

I have been writing since the age of twenty. (That’s 47 years and, yes, I’m disclosing my age.) I am the proud mother of three and grandmother to four wonderful grandchildren. After losing who I thought was the love of my life, my late husband Ron, in November of 2011, I met Rick. So, it is definitely possible to have more than one “love of your life.” Rick and I were married in July of 2018 and are still going strong today. He is my soulmate, my confidant, and my biggest fan. He has read every book I have ever written (even the romances!) 

Next to writing, my second passion is live theater. I founded a local community theater group back in 1992 and directed upwards of 40 shows, including three that I authored. I also appeared on stage a few times, portraying Anna in The King and I and Miss Hannigan in Annie. I am sad to say that the theater group dropped its final curtain in 2008, but those 16 years will always hold some of my fondest memories. 

I moved from Superior 15 years ago, seeking the serenity of country living. I also wanted to get away from the natural air conditioning provided by Lake Superior. We moved only 50 miles south, but the temperature can vary by 20-30 degrees. I guess I’m a country girl at heart. I simply love this area, and am lucky to, once again, have someone to share its beauty. I love the solitude, the picturesque beauty of the sun rising over the water, the strangely calming effect of watching a deer graze outside your kitchen window. Never again, will I live in the city. I am an author, after all, and what better place to be inspired than in God’s own backyard.

Let’s Connect!

X: https://x.com/Author911 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/jean-hackensmith-61554012674412/ 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/32957713?ref=nav_mybooks 

 



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Friday, February 21, 2025

Guest Post by Linda Hornberg author of Picture Garden (#spotlight, #Contests- Enter to win a signed copy of the book)

 

I want to welcome Linda Hornberg to Books R Us. Linda is surfing the blogosphere with I Read Book Tours. She has written a guest post just for my readers. Enter below to win a signed copy of the book. Thanks for stopping by.


Book Details:

Book Title:  Picture A Garden by Linda Hornberg
CategoryMiddle-Grade Non-Fiction (Ages 8-12), 160 pages
GenreChildren's Non-Fiction. 
Publisher: Peanut Butter Publishing
Publication Date: January 28, 2025.
Content Rating: G: Topics only include gardening and being outdoors. 
Book Description:

What springs to mind when you hear the word GARDEN? Would it surprise you to learn that the world just outside your door is overflowing with art, science, humor, drama, intrigue, and colorful personalities? Nature has you surrounded. It's time to come out with your hands gloved and your feet galoshed, ready to sow some spinach, pick a peony, mulch a maple, root a rose, graft a grape, stake a spruce, water a walnut, and hug a hemlock.

Set down your screens and take up your trowel.

Adventure awaits!

The stories inside this book are nearly all true. I have never actually seen a chorus line of worms decked out in feather boas, but I can guarantee that there are plenty of real-life larvae out there merrily chewing up the scenery. You can turn orange from eating too many carrots, and there really is a tiny plant island called a liverwart--although there probably are no tiny castaways living on it. Welcome to gardening for smarties. Never stop thinking, wondering, and digging, and you’ll never be bored. Have fun.
Guest Post: 

My Wild Life

The Makings of a Crazy Cat Lady: Linda R. Hornberg

I call myself a zookeeper, because I am always feeding, grooming or cleaning up after some manner of creature —but, thankfully, no elephants. My own menagerie, domesticated and non, consists first and foremost of a highly privileged indoor family of Felis domesticus (their civilized habits hinted at, if not guaranteed, by their species name). The current rescued housecat population includes Marnie, an eight-year-old Torbie (that’s a tortoiseshell/calico with an overlying tabby print on its coat), five-year-old ‘tuxedo’ Simone, and three of her four kittens: Paloma (Siamese), Soliban (Burmese) and Soliban’s twin, Mirabai Willow. (The fourth kitten, tortie Fiadh, lives with her adoptive family.) The kittens turned four in September, but they will always be kittens in my mind, because I met them when they were approximately two hours old, and tiny enough to fit two to a hand, if Simone would have let me. Two rescue dogs, Pocky (a Basenji/Jindo mix) and Holly (a hairless, blind Poodlet), round out the domestics. Outdoors, I support a mini-murder of crows, a wayward seagull I call Larry, and a growing family of squirrels I have given up naming, apart from Ursula, R.D. and Naachi. (All domestics were spayed at the earliest opportunity.)

I am not completely crazy. I do not attempt to groom the squirrels. I do feed them, and — before I figured out the drawbacks to doing so— I did allow them to set up household in the eave of my sunporch (after two attempts at removing the nesting material, I realized how persistent and determined a desperate, expectant squirrel can be: enter Ursula, mother of one). Ursula’s little kit, whom I dubbed R.Diaz (Latina humor), provided enormous entertainment with his (her?) energetic antics in the squirrel run, during the month that I was stuck at home during COVID lockdown. Ursula will still come straight up to me and take a peanut from my fingers. Naachi (identifiable by the small, square punch out in her ear —remnant of a past fight or mating bite—appears daily at the platform feeder. Do not imagine that I have only these two daily regulars at my platform feeder; the other half dozen or so (only six, seems like more…) simply lack clear identifying marks. Larry the Seagull has been a neighborhood resident for at least

fifteen years, and is recognizable by his voice. He and the crows get bread crusts and kitty kibble, tossed onto the carport roof. The crows are descendants of noble King Cracky — now gone, but remarkable for his habit of standing between me and my vehicle, to offer thanks in multiple ‘words’, or remind me on days I forgot to toss some bread. He never left me shiny treasures, but I have kept some feathers. Of course I hang suet and seed feeders, too. (I refrain from naming the songbirds. What do you take me for!)

 
BUY THE BOOK:
AMAZON ~ B&N
add to goodreads
Meet the Author:
Linda Robin Hornberg grew up in New York, drawing endless paper dolls and adventure comics with her sisters, Brenda and Heidi. She also enjoyed collecting shiny mimosa seeds in little bottles, nibbling parsley from Mom's tomato patch, sword fighting with Iris leaves and flipping cicadas back onto their feet. Her incessant doodling landed her at the Hartford Art School. She received her BFA in Printmaking from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Further formal studies led to classes in children's illustration and certification in landscape horticulture.

Linda is a permanent transplant to Seattle, where she remains an enthusiastic gardener, insatiable reader, unapologetic punster, and incurable cat lady. Please do not offer her your strays. 
 Connect with the author:

Tour Schedule:
Feb 10 – Locks, Hooks and Books – book review / giveaway
Feb 10 - @acourtofspinesnpages * - book review / giveaway
Feb 10 - @bearyintobooks * - book review / giveaway
Feb 10 - @thebookishren * - book review / giveaway
Feb 10 - @my_fair_fiction * - book review / giveaway
Feb 10 - @bookarlo * - book review / giveaway
Feb 11 – A Mama's Corner of the World – book review / giveaway
Feb 11 - @this.human.reads * - book review / giveaway
Feb 12 – @Myfictionalmusings – book review
Feb 12 - Sandra's Book Club – book review
Feb 12 - @jilljemmett * - book review / giveaway
Feb 13 – Deborah-Zenha Adams – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
Feb 13 - Gina Rae Mitchell – book review / guest post / giveaway
Feb 14 – Paws.Read.Repeat – book review / giveaway
Feb 14 - @bookwale_sharmaji * - book review / giveaway
Feb 14 - @onceuponafrida * - book review / giveaway
Feb 14 - @bookscape__ * - book review / giveaway
Feb 17 - @onceuponamaltesereader * - book review / giveaway
Feb 17 - Liese's Blog – book spotlight
Feb 18 – Books With a Chance – book review / guest post / giveaway
Feb 18 - Country Mamas With Kids * - book review / giveaway
Feb 19 – @michellegodardricher * - book review / giveaway
Feb 19 - @regallywritten – book review / giveaway
Feb 20 – icefairy's Treasure Chest – book review / giveaway
Feb 20 - @thebookishdreamers * - book review / giveaway
Feb 20
FUONLYKNEW - book review / guest post / giveaway
Feb 21 – Books R Us – book spotlight / guest post / giveaway
Feb 21 - @speedreadstagram * - book review / giveaway                
Feb 24 – @junebug_reads – book review
Feb 24 - @sparetimer866/ - book review / giveaway
Feb 25 – China Sorrows – book review / giveaway
Feb 25 - @onemorechap * - book review / giveaway
Feb 26 – Kim's Book Reviews and Writing Aha's – book review / guest post / giveaway
Feb 26 - @kiv_coffeeandpages * - book review / giveaway
Feb 27 – @Leannebookstagram – book review
Feb 27
Happily Managing a Household of Boys - book review 
Feb 28 – Library Lady's Kid Lit – book review / author interview / giveaway
Mar 1 - @nissa_the.bookworm * – book review / giveaway
Mar 2
The Bibliophilic World - book review / giveaway
Mar 3 – Frugal Freelancer – book spotlight / author interview / giveaway
Mar 4 – Cover Lover Book Review – book review / giveaway
Mar 5 – @readsandmusic * - book review
Mar 6 – @lizzies.reading.recs * - book review / giveaway
Mar 7 - @bookishengineerblog – book review
Mar 7 - @adeela_books * - book review
Mar 7
Faith and Books - book review / giveaway
PICTURE A GARDEN by Linda Hornberg Book Tour Giveaway

#ireadbooktours

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Interview of Rick Lenz author of Mit Out Sound (#Contests- win an autographed Copy of The Book)


I want to welcome Rick Lenz to Books R Us. Rick is the author of a Mit Out Sound. The author has provided my readers with an interview. You could win an autographed copy of the book. ENTER below. Thanks for stopping by
 

 

 Book Details:


Book Title:  MIT OUT SOUND by Rick Lenz
Category: Adult Fiction (18 +), 378 pages 
Genre: Hollywood Tie-in Literary Fiction
Publisher:  Chromodroid Press
Release date:   February 2025
Content Rating: PG-13 +M. My book is rated PG-13 + M for swear words, one non-explicit sex scene, adultery and references to abuse and one on page murder.
Book Description:

"It's time to make a mess," said Emily.Would-be movie producer Emily Bennett didn't believe the legend of a lost movie, starring James Dean and John Wayne. But when she meets two uncannily talented celebrity impersonators-Jimmy Riley and Tom "Duke" Manfredo, and stumbles upon the elusive film editor who stole the master negative of Showdown, it dispels her doubts, fills her with a courage she didn't know she had, and she sets out to complete the movie.

But as Emily and her stars prepare for day one of shooting, they find themselves entangled in a complex love triangle with Oedipal undertones, mirroring their own past lives and off-screen dynamics. As doubts about their ruthless director, Solange Borugian, surface, Jimmy's and Duke's friendship is turned upside down, while Emily and her brother Ben, struggle with their own unresolved issues and are forced to confront their dying father.

On location in Arizona, amidst Apache holy grounds and the magic of day-for-night shooting, the lines between past and present blur and the flawed characters' backstories intertwine into a tumultuous finale that exposes their hidden animosities, demons, and loves.
INTERVIEW: 

How long have you been writing?

Close to sixty years. Soon after I graduated from college (Theatre Arts, University of Michigan), I got a job directing the Jackson (Michigan) Civic Theatre. Although I could never talk the board into producing one of the plays, I found myself writing during that time, I began to pile up pages and scenes and a couple of complete (very messy) plays. In the next forty (plus) years, I had my plays performed off-Broadway, in regional theatres, and one was produced on PBS. I also wrote several episodes of a short-lived TV series called Aloha Paradise. Television writing pays well, but I didn’t have much fun doing it. I started writing novels about twenty years ago.

Do you have another profession besides writing?

Yes. I was an actor. I dearly loved it until they started asking me to play older white male functionaries. Maybe there are, as Stanislavski said, no small parts, only small actors, but there are dull parts. I decided to spend full-time writing and said goodbye to my acting agent. Once in a while, I miss performing, but mostly not. Mostly, I’m glad to have my current writing project to go back to every day.

Did you actually know John Wayne personally? How did that play into writing this story?

Yes, I did. I acted with him in his last film, The Shootist. Through a series of coincidences, Emily, the protagonist in Mit Out Sound, finds herself working as an assistant for Richard Boone (Have Gun, Will Travel), another actor in The Shootist. This then precipitates a conversation between Emily and Wayne, in which she gathers all her nerve and questions him about a legendary lost movie called Showdown.

You’ve got several strong female characters in this book, set in a time period when women weren’t typically in charge on film sets. Was this intentional?

It was very intentional. I know, as a man at this moment in cultural history, I’m generally expected to have a “man’s” point of view. I didn’t spend a lot of time with my father growing up, and aside from my pals (mixed gender), I spent most of my time with my mother and sister. I have always felt very strongly that I am qualified to write women characters. I love them. I find it easy to identify with them.

If there is one thing you want readers to remember about you, what would it be?

It sounds banal to me, even as I write it, but I think one of those things that’s worth repeating is that there is no time limit to honing a craft. It can be just as exciting and fulfilling at eighty as it was when you were young and first discovering that any art or craft you have a feel for and work at, you can get better at. This may include ignoring all the rules, like, “Never end a sentence with a preposition.”


Buy the Book:
Amazon ~ B&N ~ BAM
Bookshop.org
BookBub
add to Goodreads

Meet the Author:

When Rick Lenz retired as a stage and film actor (playing opposite Ingrid Bergman, John
Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Walter Matthau, Peter Sellers, etc.), his passion for drama refused to retire with him. Although he was an actor most of his life, he is also a seasoned writer.

His plays have been produced Off-Broadway, on PBS television, and in regional theatres across the country. Rick’s memoir North of Hollywood was called “masterful” by Writer’s
Digest. His first novel, The Alexandrite was named “one of the best books of the year” by Kirkus Reviews. Bret Easton Ellis called it “almost impossible to put down.” Booklife calls A Town Called Why, “An absorbing tale of mystery and revenge… nuanced … powerful.” Rick’s books have won several awards, including, Readers Views (first place), the Chanticleer Somerset Grand Prize for Literary, Contemporary and Mainstream Fiction, an IPPY Award, and a Foreword Book of the Year. Most recently, his time-travel love story Hello, Rest of My Life was a 2022 Silver Nautilus Book Award winner (fiction), and Eric Hoffer Award finalist (fiction).

He lives in Los Angeles with his wife Linda and an ever-shifting array of animals.

connect with the author:  website  ~  x/twitter  ~  facebook instagram goodreads bookbub

Enter the Giveaway:

MIT OUT SOUND by Rick Lenz Book Tour Giveaway



Saturday, February 15, 2025

Book Blitz of Can't Help Falling in Love by Mariah Ankenman (#Contests- Enter to win $20 Amazon gift card.)

Can’t Help Falling In Love
Mariah Ankenman
Publication date: February 13th 2025
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Growing up with three brothers, Charlie Jackson had to be tough. Some might call her the B word, but she simply defends those who need it. Unfortunately, not everyone sees her protection as defense. Like the judge who ordered her to take anger management classes after she messed up her jerk ex’s car. Not a problem, a few months pretending to listen to a bunch of people talk about accessing feelings should go down as smooth as the vodka her family makes at their distillery.

Luc Woolf knows all about harboring anger at the world. Growing up with a father who liked the bottle more than his family, he suffered his fair share of rage. But he gave up that emotion long ago when he realized anger did nothing but make a person miserable. These days, he keeps a cool head and helps others process their emotions as a therapist. However, when he volunteers to moderate an anger management course, he meets the one person who tests his careful control, Charlie Jackson.

The two couldn’t be more at odds, but they can’t deny the scorching heat between them. This bad girl wants to show this good boy how much fun breaking the rules can be. After all, opposites attract. But when the struggles of real life interrupt their fun times, will their differences pull them apart or bond them together?

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EXCERPT:

Luc Woolf sat at the table, a smart-ass grin ticking up the corner of his mouth. “We have to stop meeting like this.”

The smooth, deep voice washed over her like silk. She would not laugh at his ridiculous attempt at humor. But damn it all, she felt the curve of her lips as a smile she couldn’t seem to stop, turned them up.

“Damn small towns.”

He chuckled. “I thought you owned a bar?”

“I do.”

“But you’re a server on the side?” He tilted his head. “There a large abolition following in Kismet I’m not aware of?”

“No. The distillery does great. So great in fact that we expanded into a restaurant. One of the servers had an emergency and needed her shift covered.”

Dark brows rose. “And the boss filled in?”

“We’re a family run establishment.” She shrugged. “It’s what you do when your family needs help. You help.”

Something passed through his eyes. Respect. She had no idea why, but it made a warm fuzzy feeling rise in her stomach. Luc seemed to understand and even applaud her actions of the evening. Stupid. She didn’t give a rat’s ass what he thought.

Then why was her heart suddenly racing?

“So,” he grabbed his menu again, breaking the moment. “What’s good here?”

“Everything. And I don’t just say that because I co-own the joint. Our chef is amazing. What do you like?”

“I’m not picky.”

He said that, but they were half an hour away from Denver. Hipster central. Trends took off like wildfire in the city and spread like the plague to the small tourists ’towns like Kismet. Currently they’d had to accommodate for everything from Paleo to gluten free patrons. She had no problem catering to a customer who had a food allergy, but she really hated the bandwagon eaters who fussed and complained because they were strictly gluten free and then ordered a piece of cheesecake with graham cracker crust.

“No allergies? No weird fad diets?”

“Do I look like I do fad diets?” He arched one eyebrow.

No, he did not. In fact, the man looked like he ate steel for breakfast and iron for dinner. A dark V-neck sweater clung tight to his chest revealing just a hint of chest hair. The sleeves were pushed up past his elbows, revealing tightly muscled forearms. Damn, had she ever found forearms sexy before? She did tonight.

“A meat and potatoes kind of guy?” Her mouth felt too dry. She swallowed, trying for the life of her to find some saliva. “Our steak is amazing, but if you prefer fish, we have a great salmon with dill sauce.”

He held the menu in his fingers, but his gaze focused on her. “It all sounds amazing.”

Her breath caught in her throat, brain blanking. How did this guy render her speechless with just a look? It wasn’t fair. No one should be that sexy.

“Um, yeah. It is.” Clever Charlie. “What can I bring you?”

He placed the menu at the edge of the table, eyes never leaving hers. “You pick.”

“What?”

“You own the place. You know what’s best. You pick something for me.”

Shaking herself out of whatever weird fog she’d been in, she laughed. “You want me to pick your meal.” He nodded. Licking her lips, she placed her hand on the table and leaned down. “How do you know I won’t poison you?”

He wasn’t exactly her favorite person, and she’d made no bones about it. He leaned toward her until they were inches apart. She could smell the sharp mint of his breath, feel its warmth on her lips and cheeks. Her blood began to heat, heart racing in her chest. This was ridiculous! She should not react this way to a man who’d done nothing but annoy the crap out of her since the moment she ran into him.

“You do need me to sign off on your anger management course. If I suddenly die after eating at an establishment you own it might look pretty sketchy to the judge,” he said the words in a teasing tone, the dimple in his cheek catching her eye at his wide grin.

Laughter bubbled out of her. “True. Plus, it’d be a shame to poison all that sexy.”

The moment the words left her mouth she wanted to shove them back in.

Surprise lifted his brow. “You think I’m sexy?”

Embarrassment flooded her, so she did what she always did when she felt insecure. She pushed away from the table, crossing her arms over her chest, and brought out her trademark sarcasm. “Don’t fish for compliments. You own a damn mirror.”

He grinned, leaning back in his chair. “You’re not so bad yourself, Charlie.”


Author Bio:

Bestselling author Mariah Ankenman lives in the beautiful Rocky Mountains with her two rambunctious children and loving spouse who is her own personal spell checker when her dyslexia gets the best of her.

Mariah loves to lose herself in a world of words. Her favorite thing about writing is when she can make someone’s day a little brighter with one of her books. To learn more about Mariah and her books visit her website www.mariahankenman.com

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Friday, February 14, 2025

Review of Live Fast by Brigitte Giraud (#Autobiography)

 

 


About the Book:

Paced and structured with the inevitable suspense of a countdown, Brigitte Giraud’s tense and haunting novel follows one woman’s quest to comprehend the motorcycle accident that took the life of her partner Claude at age 41.

The narrator of Live Fast recounts the chain of events that led up to the fateful accident, tracing the tiny, maddening twists of fate that might have prevented its tragic outcome. Each chapter asks the rhetorical question, “what if,” departing from an image or memory from early years in Algeria during the war, to moving to the suburbs of Lyon, buying and renovating a home where they could “put down their suitcase for a whole life.” A sensitive elegy to her husband and a subtle, precise vision of a lasting love, Live Fast is a moving and electrifying portrait of two people caught up in the mundane activities of life, forgetting that living itself can be dangerous.

 

 REVIEW:

I have read many autobiographies, but "Live Fast" is unique and interesting. It is a touching reflection of grief, despair, and loss. After the death of her husband, Claude, the author struggles with numerous questions about the circumstances of the accident, which are addressed as the narrative progresses. This is a powerful book where the author emphasizes the importance of recognizing that life moves swiftly, urging us to cherish each day as it may be our last.  

Purchase Book:

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Disclaimer: I was given a copy of the book by the publisher and I was not compensated for my review