Blood Ribbon by Roger Bray @rogerbray22 #PublicationDay #BlogBlitz #Spotlight @rararesources

Hi and welcome to my spot on Roger Bray’s Blood Ribbon blog blitz!

Happy Publication Day, Roger Bray 🙂

Blood Ribbon - Publication Day

Many thanks to Roger Bray and to Rachel @ Rachel’s Random Resources for the opportunity to join in with the celebrations.

Roger Bray

Blood Ribbon

Blood Ribbon

When there’s more than secrets buried, where do you start digging?

When Brooke Adams is found battered, bleeding, and barely conscious, the police are at a loss as to who her attacker is or why she was targeted.

Then, PI Rod Morgan turns up convinced that Brooke’s attack is the latest in a string of unsolved disappearances dating back twenty-five years.

The police, however, aren’t convinced, so Brooke and Rod must investigate the cases themselves.

As secrets from the past start unravelling, will they find Brooke’s attacker before he strikes again, or is that one secret that will stay buried forever?

Purchase Link –

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Blood-Ribbon-theres-secrets-digging-ebook/dp/B07F9CC32X/

About Roger Bray

Roger Bray2

–  I have always loved writing; putting words onto a page and bringing characters to life. I can almost feel myself becoming immersed into their lives, living with their fears and triumphs. Thus, my writing process becomes an endless series of questions. What would she or he do, how would they react, is this in keeping with their character? Strange as it sounds, I don’t like leaving characters in cliffhanging situations without giving them an ending, whichever way it develops.
My life to date is what compels me to seek a just outcome, the good will overcome and the bad will be punished. More though, I tend to see my characters as everyday people in extraordinary circumstances, but in which we may all find our selves if the planets align wrongly or for whatever reason you might consider.

Of course, most novels are autobiographical in some way. You must draw on your own experiences of life and from events you have experienced to get the inspiration. My life has been an endless adventure. Serving in the Navy, fighting in wars, serving as a Police officer and the experiences each one of those have brought have all drawn me to this point, but it was a downside to my police service that was the catalyst for my writing.

Medically retired after being seriously injured while protecting a woman in a domestic violence situation I then experienced the other side of life. Depression and rejection. Giving truth to the oft said saying that when one door closes another opens I pulled myself up and enrolled in college gaining bachelor and master degrees, for my own development rather than any professional need. The process of learning, of getting words down onto the page again relit my passion for writing in a way that I hadn’t felt since high school.

So here we are, two books published and another on track.

Where it will take me I have no idea but I am going to enjoy getting there and if my writing can bring some small pleasure into people’s lives along the way, then I consider that I will have succeeded in life.

Social Media Links –

https://twitter.com/rogerbray22

https://www.facebook.com/rogerbraybooks/

https://rogerbraybooks.com/

 

 

The Bespokist Society Guide to London by The Bespokist Society @TheBespokist #BlogTour #GuestPost @rararesources

Hi and welcome to my stop on the blog tour for The Bespokist Society Guide to London 🙂

The Bespokist Society Guide to…London

Many thanks to the author and to Rachel @ Rachel’s Random Resources

Guest post…..

Celeb vegan hairdresser Juno Marshall tells The Bespokist Society about his incredible cat, Darby.

When I opened Darby’s I was desperate to create a vegan hair salon where people could finally have their hair cut without feeling like ignorant murderers. Little did I know I would end up changing society forever.

Darby and I met when he was only a kitten. I was in a really dark place after realising I’d eaten some butter ghee and we started looking after each other. For me Darby’s veganism has always been a very personal choice of his. He’s simply never shown any interest in meat and has always been quite happy to gobble up whatever fruit and veg I have lying around (mushrooms and swiss chard are his favourites!).

It was only when he started bringing other neighbourhood cats into the salon for snacks of cauliflower and beetroot that I realised that Darby was actually becoming a vociferous advocate of a vegan lifestyle. He can be very persuasive and although I can’t speak his language, I can often see him engaged in heated debates in the streets. He has also started becoming highly political and while I don’t necessarily condone his actions, I did feel a pang of pride when I discovered him and his pals had ambushed the local artisan butcher and scratched his trousers.

Now that – thanks to Darby – the vegan message has spread through the cat (and now even canine) communities, the salon has become something of a symbol of tolerance and kindness in a crazy city. We’ve had a lot of amazing vegan celebs through the doors but sadly it’s also had its downside. Darby has been the victim of anonymous death threats (we believe that Whiskas and Pedigree Chum could be to blame…) and recently we experienced a hate crime when someone dropped a haribo gummy bear by the hairdryers.

Darby however has been my rock and has been utterly unshakeable in his commitment to our cause. I couldn’t be prouder 🙂

The_Bespokist_Society_Guide_to_London_COVER Large

The Bespokist Society Guide to…London

“sparse… some glaring omissions” FoodPorn London

“only page 23 is of mild interest” http://www.londonpetlover.com

“Wow!!! A genuinely bespoke city guide!!!” Tommy Sponge, Chairman, The Bespokist Society

You have in your hands one of the most curated city guides ever created. As the first travel book produced by the hugely influential Bespokist Society, this handy guide takes you to a London you’ve never seen: a London of challenging Etruscan restaurants, edgy branding parlours, emoji hotels and hidden Icelandic communities; a London where 8-ply toilet paper is a thing.

On the way, meet an eclectic band of inspiring Londoners – from scriveners to socialites via urban wordsmiths and coffee preachers – and see why London is now the global epicentre of Bespokist consciousness, community and culture.

Purchase Link –

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Bespokist-Society-Guide-London/dp/1912615142/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1523828780&sr=8-1&keywords=bespokist


Author Bio –

The Bespokist Society Guide to London is a work of fiction written by born and bred Londoner, Jeremy Liebster. Somewhat surprisingly, Jeremy is also a city lawyer – formerly at DLA Piper and now a General Counsel within a large private equity group. Jeremy is utterly obsessed with travel books and although he might poke fun at urban fads, hipster fried chicken is his guilty pleasure. He also has an unusual interest in clothes hangers.

Social Media Links –

@TheBespokist

www.bespokistsociety.com

Check out the rest of the blog tour for reviews, and more, with these awesome book bloggers…..

The Bespokist Society Guide to…London Full Tour Banner

Enjoy!

Conspirators of the Lost Sock Army and the Loose Change Collection Agency by That Author Guy @AuthorDanOBrien #BookBlast #Excerpt

Dan O'Brien cover

Synopsis:

Have you ever wondered where your loose change went? The missing sock that disappears without a trace: where could it be? Robert has seen it all. He spends his days watching awful daytime television and taking extended naps on his plush couch. One day, a strange little man appears beneath his couch, a leprechaun named Colin. Together, they hatch a plan to reclaim Colin’s lost fortune and defeat an army of lost socks and an evil gremlin. Carefully illustrated by the talented Steve Ferchaud, it reminds us that you’re never too old to have one more adventure. Loved by adults and children, this illustrated fairy tale is meant to be read aloud.

An excerpt from Conspirators of the Lost Sock Army and the Loose Change Collection Agency:

Robert heard the voice again, the thick Irish accent clear as the little man spoke. “That’d be like me calling ye human all the time, not very polite that’d be.”

He opened his eyes slowly and saw the little man, the leprechaun, perched on the couch. Reclined back against the armrest, a pipe snug between his teeth, he snapped his fingers.

The light of the overturned lamp flickered on and floated back to the now right-side-up table. Robert watched in disbelief, his mouth hanging open and a bewildered look plastered across his face.

Robert pointed shakily. “Not a leprechaun?” he asked, the confused expression deepening.

The leprechaun sighed and stepped off the edge of the couch and landed upon the air as if it were another floor. The smoke from his pipe followed the tiny sprite as he stopped close to the huddled man. He tipped his tam-o’-shanter and pulled the pipe from his lips.

“We haven’t the time for this, laddie. I require your help, Robert Pendleton, and I be afraid that I have little time for lengthy introductions. You can call me Colin.”

Robert’s face twisted in befuddlement.

“Colin, the leprechaun,” he repeated––a long pause before he breathed once more.

“Just Colin, less you want me to be calling ye Robert, the human, all the time,” chided the sprite as he blew a colossal bundle of smoke from his lips.

Robert opened his mouth and then snapped it shut. His mind spun. “What can I do for you, Colin?” he finally managed to say.

The leprechaun eyed him for a moment and then as quick as Robert could blink, the sprite rested comfortably on the couch once more. “That’s better, laddie. Though I imagine you be thinking of pinchin’ yerself to see if this be real. I can assure ye that this be no dream.”

Robert nodded numbly.

“I be from another world just outside the one you know. A place of magic and wonder,” began the leprechaun, ignoring the vacant look on Robert’s face as he continued. “And in this place, we sprites live quite happily. You’ve heard of a leprechaun’s pot-o-gold?”

Get it today on Kindle!

Dan O'Brien

Dan O’Brien has over 50 publications to his name––including the bestselling Bitten, which was featured on Conversations Book Club’s Top 100 novels of 2012. Before starting Amalgam Consulting, he was the senior editor and marketing director for an international magazine. You can learn more about his literary and publishing consulting business by visiting his website at: www.amalgamconsulting.com. Follow him on Twitter at @AuthorDanOBrien.

 

Busted #BlogTour #AuthorInterview with @MicheleKhoury #BUSTED #Lovebooksgrouptours

Hi all and welcome to my spot on Michele Khoury’s Busted blog tour 🙂 

Busted blog tour

Many thanks to Michele Khoury and Kelly @ Lovebooksgrouptours

Interview with Michele Khoury…..

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

Sure, Kerry. My name is Michele I. Khoury, and writing is my third career. I took a Beginning, Intermediate, and Advanced Novel Writing Program through the University of California at Irvine’s extension program, where I began my debut novel, Busted.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

In the third class, the writing professor lectured on the key plot points, then issued the homework assignment to plot a novel. While driving home, the genesis for Busted’s storyline magically came to me: how three people collide over cocaine, and the impact on their lives.

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

The twenty-four-year-old main character, Gina McKenna, is a composite of many people— including myself, several artists and teachers. When I started writing the novel, I was ignorant about cocaine, and as I learned so did Gina; her naïveté mirrored mine.

Another character, the DEA Special Agent is patterned after a Lt. in Narcotics for the Anaheim Police Department, (the same city where Disneyland is located). The Lieutenant answered my zillion emails, explaining the legalities of apprehending drug dealers.

How do you pick your characters’ names?

When I visualized how the characters looked, dressed, and thought, their names popped into my mind.

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

I’m a slow writer. I dedicate three days a week, seven hours a day, with a goal of writing seven to ten pages. Then I edit, rewrite, edit, and rewrite. A month later I may return and trash the pages, or rewrite them again. I’m not exaggerating when I say Busted had at least a hundred versions.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Michael Koryta, Karin Slaughter, Liane Moriarty, Laura Lippman, and David Baldacci.

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

I would love to meet Stephen King. I admire his brilliance, and rather than ask him anything specific, I’d enjoy conversing with him. His woo-woo stuff is mind-boggling, and I’d like to know if he’s as crazy as his characters.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Unfortunately, no. My parents didn’t read to my brother or I, and I was fourteen-years-old when I read my first book. It was about a young girl who went away to a school that also boarded horses. I loved horses, and the story captured my imagination. I haven’t forgotten the book, but try as I might, I can’t remember the title.

When did you start to write?

In 2007. I regret not taking creative writing classes in college. I focused on business and had huge successes with Xerox, Apple Computer, and for twenty-one years, my own business teaching technology companies around the world how to sell.

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?

Is there a book you wish you had written?

Oh, this is a tough question. I believe each author has the right to write their story the way they want.

I was one of three out of fourteen students my writing professor chose to mentor in a weekly writing group. Six to eight students (many from previous classes) attended. We’d bring copies for everyone, including the professor. Each author had fifteen minutes to read their pages and receive constructive criticism. At the end of the day, the author’s name is on the cover, and the author decides what does or doesn’t happen. When I read a novel, I accept what the author wrote; if I don’t like the story, the genre, or the writing style, then I may not read that particular author’s work again.

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?  

Imaginary Friends

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?

The fictional character I’d love to converse with is Queen Elizabeth 1—AKA The Virgin Queen. I’m fascinated by her success in ruling from 1158 until 1602. I’d invite her to our home for tea.

What are you working on right now?

I’m working on my second book, The Sheriff’s Wife. The theme is domestic violence and abuse. Having grown up in an abusive environment, I understand the fear and trepidation associated with physical and emotional harm. For the last eight years I’ve been a board member for Human Options, a non-profit dedicated to ending domestic violence and abuse. I care about social issues, and this is one topic where I can show horrific experiences being transformed into survival and success.

Tell us about your last release?

Busted was released on April 13, 2017, and I had my first book launching party on May 17, 2017.  I’m blessed with loving and supportive friends: 140 people attended, and I sold eighty-seven books.

Do you have a new release due?

No. The next publication is a couple of years away. (Like I said, I’m a slow writer.)

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

Go out to dinner with my husband, our two sons, daughter-in-laws, and four grandchildren. They’re with me through the ups and downs, so when there’s a celebration, I want to share it.

How can readers keep in touch with you?

Readers are welcome to email me at: mkhoury18@gmail.com, follow me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorMicheleKhoury/, Twitter: Michele Khoury@MicheleIKhoury;

subscribe to receive my blogs: http://michelekhoury.com/blog/,  or visit my website: http://www.michelekhoury.com.

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

If you’re interested in writing, I encourage you to take a novel writing course from a local college. Unless you have a degree in writing, you’ll save yourself a great deal of heartbreak by having professional guidance. (Beware of writing groups who are not led by a professional: their feedback can be fatal.)

There’s nothing like entering “the zone” and creating a new world. When five hours feels like five minutes, you know you’re having fun.

I love conversing with readers: please feel free to contact me. I wish you the best.

Warmest Regards,

Michele

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Michele 🙂

Busted cover

 Blurb 

Impacted by the recession, twenty-four-year-old artist Gina McKenna is down to her last few dollars and days away from living in her car when a successful businessman buys a painting and commissions another. As their relationship evolves, she’s seduced by his charm and mesmerized by his luxurious lifestyle until she discovers he’s a drug kingpin. As her world turns upside down, she struggles to survive vicious brutality. 

Miguel Lopez is a cocaine supplier with a weightlifter’s physique and ‘the rules do not apply to me’ attitude. Maniacal and ruthless, he has no qualms about killing anyone who interferes with his distribution network, including Gina.

Dedicated to eradicating illegal drugs, DEA Special Agent Bobby Garcia spent months and hundreds of thousands of dollars working undercover to buy his way up a dealer chain to identify the moneyman. When his fourteen-year-old daughter overdoses on cocaine, he traces the blow to Lopez. As Bobby’s mission becomes personal, he makes emotional decisions, which negatively impact civilians and his job. Unable to let go, he risks his career to orchestrate the biggest drug sting in Southern California. What happens isn’t what he expected.

When a deputy district attorney meets Gina at a party, he is smitten. As his attraction grows, so does Gina’s involvement with the DEA’s case, of which he is the designated prosecutor. Mindful of his professional ethics, he tries to stifle his feelings.

Sex and violence permeate the twists and turns of this cautionary tale about choosing one’s friends well. 

Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2KI1MW8

 

About the Author

Khoury, Michele 04-16-4872_cover

Writing is Michele I. Khoury’s third career. After graduating from the University of California at Riverside with a Masters degree in Economics, she worked at Xerox, where she set multiple sales records, and Apple Computer, where she received the Business Development Manager of the Year award. For twenty-one years, she was an international business consultant and taught technology companies around the world how to sell.

Her writing career began when she took the Beginning, Intermediate, and Advanced Novel Writing Classes offered through the University of California Irvine’s extension program. She was one of three out of the fourteen students her professor choose to mentor and attended weekly critique sessions for six years. BUSTED is her debut novel, and she is currently writing her second book, which is about domestic violence and abuse.

She lives in Orange County, California with her husband and rescued dogs, Bubbles and Thriller.

For more information, please visit http://www.michelekhoury.com.

Waiting for Aegina by Effie Kammenou @EffieKammenou #BlogTour #AuthorInterview #WaitingforAegina #Lovebooksgrouptours

Hi all and welcome to my stop on Effie Kammenou’s Waiting For Aegina blog tour 🙂

waiting for aegina blog tour

Many thanks to Effie Kammenou and to Kelly @ Love Books Group Tours

Interview with Effie Kammenou…..

Effie Kammenou

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

To start with, I live in New York with my husband and two daughters. I originally went to university to study theatre, but alas, an Oscar was not in my future. I ended up earning a living in the optical industry and raising a family. Once they’d grown and entered into careers of their own, I craved delving into something creative once again. I thought about going back and taking acting classes, but once I began writing, I knew I had found my new passion.

Waiting For Aegina is the second book in The Gift Saga. The focus changes a bit in this instalment, though. Evanthia’s Gift was a two-part love story and family saga. Anastacia and her daughter, Sophia, were the main characters. Throughout the book we get glimpses of Sophia’s lifelong and most trusted friends. Waiting For Aegina explores the relationship between all five of these girls/women and their individual stories, heartbreaks and triumphs. This is a story of friendship, loyalty and expectations. Teenage ideals are sometimes shattered and other times realized, even if not in the way it was planned.

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

I get my ideas from many sources—family history, personal experience and even dreams. I’m a people watcher and even the smallest, seemingly insignificant moments can be the most inspirational of all. Each year my family and I attend the EPCOT Food and Wine Festival. It’s a crowded park at that time of the year. Actually, it’s always pretty crowded, but during the festival there are lines of people waiting to sample food & alcoholic beverages from kiosks that represent dozens of countries. I was sitting on a bench waiting for my family and I noticed a young couple sampling some of the offerings. It was apparent that the young man was enjoying what he’d just sampled and he brought the wax paper clad pastry up to his girlfriend’s lips. He watched her eagerly, hoping she would enjoy it as much as he did and smiled when her reaction was the same as his. He then sweetly brushed off a flake of pastry from her bottom lip, allowing his finger to linger long enough to caress her mouth before lowering his head to gently kiss her. The whole exchange couldn’t have been more than fifteen seconds but it stayed with me. There was so much love in the young man’s gesture. I could see from that tiny slice of their life that he cared deeply for her and it moved me. I decided I would write a similar sweet moment into one of my stories. (Hint – It’s in Waiting For Aegina)

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

Anastacia, Sophia’s mother, who was the main character of part 1 in Evanthia’s Gift, was based on my mother. In Waiting For Aegina, she is significant in some of the flashbacks going back to when the girls were in their teens and through their college years.

Two of the friends are very loosely based on my own childhood friends. I had some thoughts about what I had expected them to do with their lives. One, I was certain, would become a fashion designer. She made many of her own clothing and always had a sketchpad in her hands. The other, I was convinced, would become a prominent politician. Neither of these careers materialized, although they are both successful in their chosen careers. I decided to do a ‘what if,’ and base their characters on what I thought they would become. Career-wise only, though. The personalities and the family lives of the characters are nothing like my real friends.

There are other characters also, who have bits and pieces of people I know and love.

How do you pick your characters’ names?

Some of the names I choose are chosen for a purpose. Anastacia’s favorite holiday is Easter. In all three of the books in The Gift Saga, Easter has a special significance. It is the most important holiday in the Greek Orthodox calendar and the Greeks make a huge celebration of it after the strict fast during the Lenten period. Anastasi is the resurrection service and that is where Anastacia gets her name.

Sophia means wisdom in Greek. Sophia is mature and wise for her age during her teen years. She’s often idealistic, but level-headed, and reels Dean, her love interest, in from his rebellious ways.

The other names were chosen to fit the characters’ personalities or ethnic backgrounds.

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

I basically have a story plotted in my head and my mind never seems to rest. I often jot down notes throughout the day. I’ve even been known to pull my car to the side of the road and enter notes in my phone, and I’ve woken up in the middle of the night to do the same. I don’t outline. I simply begin writing and let the story flow organically. I keep an index card for each character as a reference. Once the story is out of my head and on paper (computer actually), I start my rewrites – many, many rewrites. Then I work with a critique partner and beta readers. I learned that recording the chapters also helps me. It’s a great way to pick up errors, pacing awkwardness and dialogue that doesn’t sound quite right. Finally, I put it in the hands of a professional editor, take her suggestions, rewrite again and submit it back for a final copyedit.

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

Ugh! Just five? Current or classic? I’ll give you both.

Bear in mind that I was a theatre major and much of my reading literature was in the form of plays.

Classic

William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, John Steinbeck, George Bernard Shaw

Contemporary

Sylvain Reynard, Deborah Harkness, Colleen Hoover, Adriana Trigiani, Kristin Hannah

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

That’s a tough one because I would want to meet Sylvain Reynard, however, he guards his privacy and I would never want to see that compromised by anyone. I would love to know more about his educational background. I have my theories, as all his fans do, but it would be interesting to learn more about him. He writes like a master and I want to know where his inspiration and thought process comes from.

Were you a big reader as a child?

Not really, although my parents exposed me to the classics from a young age. I remember my father reading to me every night. Mostly Grimms’ Fairy Tales and Aesop’s Fables. Later, my mother introduced me to Les Miserables, Rebecca, Lady Chatterly’s Lover, and East of Eden. But I never read much for pleasure as a child. It wasn’t until my late teens that I got hooked onto contemporary fiction.

When did you start to write?

My quick answer to that question is 2012, about six months after my mother passed away. But that’s not accurate. I’d been writing a food blog for several years before that, not only sharing recipes but also the stories that went along with the food—a tradition, custom or a memory. Each of the books in The Gift Saga contains recipes that coincide with the storylines. I just couldn’t help myself, and as it turns out, the readers love it! Before I published my first novel, I’d also contributed to a regional magazine, writing restaurant and book reviews and an occasional feature article.

I remember as a young girl in junior high school, writing a play with a friend of mine. It was a memory I’d forgotten about until recently. It seems the passion was simmering below the surfaced the whole time.

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?

All these questions I’d never thought about before! I’m a sucker for a happy ending. Jenny doesn’t die in Love Story. She’s miraculously cured, and she and Oliver live to be old and gray together. Or, Scarlett runs after Rhett in Gone With The Wind, and after a lot of grovelling and promising to change and redeem herself to everyone she’s wronged, he takes her back.

Is there a book you wish you had written?

No. When an author writes it comes from the soul. It’s personal and everyone’s perspective is his own. I don’t wish to write what was in someone else’s heart or experience. I do occasionally read a passage and think to myself, ‘Why can’t I express myself as eloquently?’

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?

Living with Keffie. I need to explain that. My name is Effie. Actually, it’s Efthemia, but that’s another story. Kefi is a Greek word that evokes the joy and love of life and a spirit unique to the Greeks. I love life and have a positive attitude. If you put my name together with kefi, you get Keffie.

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?

That’s a dangerous question since I really like sensual love stories and I happen to be quite enamoured with a certain professor immortalized by the Canadian bestselling author, Sylvain Reynard in the Gabriel Series. However, Gabriel is now happily married to the lovely Julia, so it would be quite nice to meet with both of them for an espresso in Florence. Afterward, I’d ask the Dante specialist to kindly escort me to view the Botticelli drawings he’s loaned the Uffizi Gallery.

What are you working on right now?

I just finished writing and publishing The Gift Saga, a bittersweet time for me. It’s going to be hard to say goodbye to these characters. I just had the entire saga formed into a box set and book three is now being produced in audio for Audible.

I’m taking a tiny break and spending the summer on promotion and making appearances at book events and book clubs. I already have the next series plotted in my mind and I’m anxious to get started.

Tell us about your last release?

Chasing Petalouthes: Book Three in The Gift Saga was released on June 3, 2018. Petalouthes is the Greek word for butterflies. In this book, I go back to the core families, focusing on the current generation of young people as they go from their turbulent teens and into adulthood. The five friends from Waiting For Aegina are still featured and vital to the story, so you will be seeing more of these women who call themselves ‘The Honey Hill Girls.’ This book has been drawing in a younger demographic as mothers have contacted me to say they have passed to book to their daughters.
All of the books are generational and there is something in each of them that women of all ages can relate to.

Do you have a new release due?

Chasing Petalouthes was recently released, but it is now being produced on audio and should be released by the end of the summer.

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

Nothing really. I’m just happy! But with this last release, we did open a bottle of champagne. I went to the Champagne region in France to do research for a section of Chasing Petalouthes. I came back with bottles that could only be purchased there from small boutique champagne houses. We popped the cork on one of those!

How can readers keep in touch with you?

I am very available and happy to connect with readers. I’m so thankful for all the comments, emails, reviews, messages and photos readers send me of themselves reading my books.

Social media links

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/EffieKammenou/

Twitter

https://twitter.com/EffieKammenou

instagram

https://www.instagram.com/effiekammenou_author/

Goodreads page

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14204724.Effie_Kammenou

Linkedin

https://www.linkedin.com/in/effie-kameno-speyer-961682107

Food blog

https://cheffieskitchen.wordpress.com

Newsletter signup page

http://eepurl.com/bIoJl1

Fan contact e-mail

effiekammenou@gmail.com

Bookbub

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/effie-kammenou

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

Yes. Although The Gift Saga centers around two Greek-American families, you do not have to be Greek in order to understand or enjoy it. I do have a loyal following in the Greek community, but the larger percentage of my readers come from various backgrounds. In essence, this is a love story, a friendship story, a generational story that is relatable to most of us.

I think that’s it! I’m pretty much an open book. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me.

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Effie 🙂

You’re very welcome and thank you for this interview.

It’s a pleasure!

Waiting for Aegina cover

Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2z3CsFl

 

Blurb 

 

Book Two in The Gift Saga: The continuation of Evanthia’s Gift…

 

In 1961, five little girls moved into a suburban neighborhood and became inseparable, lifelong friends. They called themselves the ‘Honey Hill Girls,’ named after the street on which they lived. As teenagers they shared one another’s ambitions and dreams, secrets and heartaches. Now, more than thirty years later, they remain devoted and loyal, supporting each other through triumphs and sorrows.

 

Evanthia’s Gift follows the life of Sophia Giannakos. In Waiting for Aegina the saga continues from the perspectives of Sophia and her friends as the story drifts back and forth in time, filling in the gaps as the women grow to adulthood.

 

Naive teenage ideals are later challenged by harsh realities, as each of their lives takes unexpected turns. Now nearing their fiftieth year, Sophia, Demi, Amy, Mindy and Donna stand together through life-altering obstacles while they try to regain the lighthearted optimism of their youth.

 

Can be read as a standalone. For the full emotional impact on the character’s live and histories, read Evanthia’s Gift.

 

Author Bio

 

Effie Kammenou is a believer that it is never too late to chase your dreams, follow your heart or change your career. She is proof of that. At one time, long ago, she’d thought that, by her age, she would have had an Oscar in her hand after a successful career as an actor. Instead, she worked in the optical field for 40 years and is the proud mother of two accomplished young women.

 

Her debut novel, Evanthia’s Gift, is a women’s fiction multigenerational love story and family saga, influenced by her Greek heritage, and the many real life accounts that have been passed down. She continues to pick her father’s brain for stories of his family’s life in Lesvos, Greece, and their journey to America. Her interview with him was published in a nationally circulated magazine.

 

Evanthia’s Gift: Book One in The Gift Saga was a 2016 award finalist in the Readers Favorite Awards in the Women’s Fiction category.  Waiting for Aegina is Book Two in The Gift Saga and Chasing Petalouthes is Kammenou’s latest release, completing the series.

 

Effie Kammenou is a first generation Greek-American who lives on Long Island with her husband and two daughters. When she’s not writing, or posting recipes on her food blog, cheffieskitchen.wordpress.com, you can find her entertaining family and friends or traveling for ‘research.’

 

As an avid cook and baker, a skill she learned from watching her Athenian mother, she incorporated traditional Greek family recipes throughout the books.  

 

She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Theater Arts from Hofstra University.  

The Beachside Sweet Shop by Karen Clarke @karenclarke123 @bookouture #BookReview

the-beachside-sweet-shop-kindle-jpeg

The Beachside Sweet Shop has been on my Netgalley list for far too long and I’m so glad I finally got around to reading it. It is such an enjoyable read, with such lovely characters, I couldn’t help but find myself captivated by the beautifully written, heart-warming and often quite amusing story.

We meet Marnie Appleton, who is a very likeable 29 year old. She is successfully running a sweet shop, inherited from her late grandfather. Things are ticking along nicely, but it seems that Marnie isn’t 100% settled. She has always felt the need to travel, to follow in her mothers footsteps, and she did for a little while with her then boyfriend, Alex, but since then there has always seemed to be something to keep her in Shipley.

When she wins a business award for the sweet shop it spurs her on to give the place a bit of a revamp, but not all of the publicity it leads to is positive. However, she decides to try a new line of home-made, low sugar sweets (to appease the sugar police!) but nothing is ever straight forward!

At the same time she’s trying to keep her relationship with her new assistant, Josh, strictly professional and trying not to think about Alex now having a new girlfriend. Also having to contend with her best friends partner not being her biggest fan for some unknown reason and her mother returning from her travels, there is much more to this story than meets the eye.

I loved Marnie’s friendship with Beth. They are so amusing together. I also couldn’t help but like Marnie’s mother, Laura. I pretty much loved all of the character’s really. Even Isobel! She would totally do my head in, in real life, but she’s a great character to read!

Overall, an uplifting story which made me giggle and brought a tear to my eye. I loved it from the first page to the last. I’ve already added the second book in the series to my list.

Many thanks to the author and Bookouture for my review copy via Netgalley.

Via AmazonUK…..

‘Within the first page turn I was laughing out loud… It was a delight to read.’ 5* Rachel’s Random Reads

When Marnie Appleton inherited a sweet shop from her grandfather she was determined to do his legacy proud. The shop has been a much-loved feature of the little seaside town of Shipley for years, but now Marnie needs to bring it up to date, and she’s recruited gorgeous new assistant Josh to help.

Marnie gets busy redecorating the shop and choosing delicious new sweets to stock, but things are never that simple: new neighbour Isobel, a fame-hungry blogger, is on a crusade against sugar, and she’ll go to any lengths to secure bad publicity for Marnie’s shop.

Marnie fights back with homemade sugar-free treats, but with her best friend Beth heavily pregnant, her grandmother Celia recovering from an operation, and her very recently ex-boyfriend Alex returning to Shipley with a new love, Marnie has a lot on her plate.

And then there’s Josh, with whom Marnie is struggling to keep her relationship strictly professional…Will both the sweet shop and love flourish?

A deliciously heartwarming read about family, friends and handmade coconut ice. Perfect for fans of Cressida McLaughlin, Debbie Johnson, and Tilly Tennant.

What people are saying about The Beachside Sweet Shop:

‘I do love a book that can make me giggle after just a few pages. As well as being funny, the storyline had a homely feel to it, reading it made me feel comfortable, relaxed and welcome…It’s amazing how much drama one little sweet shop can create! I was captivated, and sometimes surprised, by the goings on in the little village shop…a bright read that left a smile on my face and my taste buds in need of some sweet treats.’ 5* V Family Fun

‘I smiled all of the way through this gorgeous heart-warming read. A lot of the sweets reminded me of my childhood. The fictional Seaside town of Shipley sounds gorgeous, I almost packed my bags and started looking on TripAdvisor for a place to stay. The characters and storyline are just everything I adore in a book. I can honestly say that I felt quite sad to be saying farewell to everyone at the end.’ 5* The Reading Shed

‘Brilliant! Such a beautiful, heart warming story! Loved every word! So well written. A magical, feel good tale. Loved, loved, loved. Highly recommend it to everyone.’ Renita D’Silva

‘Had me chortling away…really funny…A fabulous candy cane of a read. I absolutely loved it.’ 5* Short Book and Scribe

‘Light-hearted and witty…Kept me glued to the pages.’ 4* On My Bookshelf

I feared I would short circuit my Kindle with tears from laughing.’ 5* Books from Dusk til Dawn

Funny, heart-warming and entertaining.’ 4* Where the Reader Grows

Light, quick moving and engaging.’ 4* I am Indeed

Very enjoyable… a lovely read infused with warmth, humour and romance.’ Shaz’s Book Blog

Fantastically funny…an entertaining read.’ Jo’s Book Journey

‘A sweet and charming read.’ 4* Pretty Little Book Reviews

‘I really enjoyed this book … all the characters were lovable.’ 5* Katie’s Book Ends

‘This book was a great read, so easy to dive into and get lost…Highly recommend it…dive in and forget the world around you.’ 4* Trish B’s Blog

‘Such a sweet book (sorry, couldn’t resist)… A really cute, sweet (sorry, I did it again) read. Thoroughly enjoyed it.’ 5* Lilac Mills

I can’t wait to read the next.’ 4* Lilina Reads

A delightful British love story.For the Love of Books

A delicious novel…I highly recommend this.’ 5* With Love for Books

About the author…..

Karen is the author of the popular BEACHSIDE and SEASHELL COVE series of romantic comedies, published by Bookouture.

She’s also written three romcoms with a paranormal twist, all available to download

When she’s not working on her novels, Karen writes short stories for women’s magazines and has had over three hundred published globally. Some of them can be read in her short story collection ‘BEHIND CLOSED DOORS…and other Tales with a Twist’

Karen lives in Buckinghamshire with her husband and three grown-up children, and when she’s not writing loves reading, walking, baking and eating cake.

 

#FlashbackFriday with @LJRoss_author @ChristaWojo @NicolaMarsh @Fab_fiction @mredwards & @allisinclair #BookReviews

Hiya!

Hope you’re having a fab summer, so far.

Welcome to my Flashback Friday feature 🙂

On the first Friday of each month I like to have a little look back at the books I was reading during the same month in previous years (since starting my blog).

Feel free to join in!

(Don’t forget to share your link with us in the comments)

Here are my reviews from August 2017…..

Under the Spanish Stars (Wandering Skies) by Alli Sinclair @allisinclair @lyricalpress #BookReview

under-the-spanish-stars

The Lucky Ones by Mark Edwards @mredwards #BookReview

The Lucky Ones

#TheSister @Fab_fiction @bookouture @thecrimevault @littlebookcafe #BookReview #PaperbackRelease

The Sister cover

Saving Sara (Redemption Series Book 1) by @NicolaMarsh #Review

Saving Sara cover

SICK (The Sick Series Book 1) by ChristaWojciechowski @ChristaWojo #Review

SICK Psychological Thriller Series Novella 1 (1)

Holy Island (The DCI Ryan Mysteries Book 1) by @LJRoss_author #Review

Holy Island

 

Flashback Friday – August 2016/2017…..

#flashbackfriday with @Dougieclaire Liane Moriarty @ShappiKhorsandi @Wendy_Walker @KFrenchBooks @JessikahHope