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Murder and Marinara (The Italian Kitchen Mysteries Book 1) (affiliate link)
Author Victoria Rienzi takes a break from writing murder mysteries—only to find herself caught in the middle of a real one…
Victoria heads back to the Jersey shore to explore her family’s roots and the specialty Italian cuisine their restaurant, the Casa Lido, is famous for. But she barely hits town before she finds that Oceanside Park is abuzz about a reality show slated to film on its beach. Not everyone in the cozy seaside town is happy with the news, and Victoria’s family is leading the protest.
But when the show’s brash producer winds up face down in the tomato garden after eating at the restaurant, things look bleak for the Rienzi clan—and Victoria finds herself in some hot pasta water. She served the dead man his last meal, her ex-boyfriend prepared it, and now the Casa Lido is on the verge of closing.
Vidalia: A ‘Not Quite’ Vampire Love Story (affiliate link)
Time is running out. The body count is multiplying. It’s all up to a cop, a vampire, and a self-proclaimed nerd to save the day.
Great job… Sexy boyfriend… Heiress to the Georgia Onion Empire… Vidalia Fitzsimmons had it all until the day bodies started dropping from the sky… literally.
Hold onto your hats, folks, you’re never gonna believe what happens next!
Girl on the Run (Detective Madison Knight Series Book 11) (affiliate link)
College student Courtney Middleton disappeared fifteen years ago. Everyone presumed she was dead…
Detective Madison Knight shows up at the local train station in the aftermath of a fatal shooting, and finds two women killed on scene. One was expecting her first child. The other was a wife and mother of two children and has Madison seeing a ghost from her past. She’s convinced the woman is her missing college friend, but why would she change her identity? And where has she been all this time?
There’s no lead on the gunman, but eyewitnesses tell of a mysterious young woman who may have triggered him. There’s no sign of her either—or another man who is said to watch over her all the time.
The Teacup Conspiracy (affiliate link)
In the Oregon coastal town of Greencastle, Gia Baxter faces the one-year anniversary of her husband’s death due to a drive-by shooting. All she has left is her cat, Merlin, and questions. Why had her husband refused to explain his moodiness? Instead, he’d given her colorful teacups as gifts. Eerily, teacups she’d stored away or donated reappear. How could that happen? Strange occurrences at work in the psychiatry office cause doubt. Is she slowly losing it?
Ex-cop Rand Grand opens his dream shop, Tea & Cakes. He’s delighted to meet Gia, a beautiful brunette who frequents his business. He discovers she’s lost her husband in the same incident that took his wife. Rand can’t accept the shooting as random. As the officer on the scene, he blames himself for the tragic loss of life.
Easy Does It: A Romance (Bank Street Stories Book 1) (affiliate link)
I always wanted to live at the beach. It had been my dream since I was a little girl. I longed to experience the sand and sea. My heart’s desire was to become a famous artist who painted scenes with palm trees and blue waters.
Finally, I was moving to a coastal town. It was only three hours from where I grew up, but it might as well have been paradise with how excited I was. My sister was coming with me, except she didn’t care about painting palm trees and beach scenes. She was only in it for the shirtless guys.
Abigail and I packed our bags and headed south to Galveston Island where we’d stay for the summer. In the fall she would return to college, but if I liked Galveston enough I would stay.
The Scottish Play (PolyAm Fam Book 1) (affiliate link)
Molly doesn’t date men.
Lachlan doesn’t date period.
So can they stick to the script?
Molly Rose’s final grad school project is to stage the play she wrote. How on earth did her girlfriend find the absolute perfect cast for the kilt-wearing Scotsman role? Well, he looks the part, but he knows nothing about acting.
It hasn’t escaped anyone’s notice that Lachlan Adair is ruggedly handsome. Molly’s polycule insists she keep an open mind, but she hasn’t dated a man since a series of disastrous attempts in high school, and she certainly doesn’t intend to start now.
Lachlan doesn’t know how he got roped into helping out with this MFA student’s thesis project, but she’s so curvy and cute. And she seems to like his accent.
The Lost Mother: A Novel (affiliate link)
During the Great Depression, rural Vermont suffers along with the rest of the country, and Henry Talcott, with only occasional work as a butcher, is reduced to moving into a tent on the edge of Black Pond with his two children. Their beautiful but unreliable mother has left them, and Henry is devastated by her desertion. He hasn’t told Thomas or Margaret why she left—or if she will return.
Told from twelve-year-old Thomas’s perspective, The Lost Mother follows this shattered family as a wealthy neighbor begins to woo the children as companions for her strange, housebound son, and Henry weighs an unexpected proposition, the consequences of which may cost him everything.
Peace Out, Dawg!: Tales from Ground Zero (Doonesbury) (affiliate link)
As 9-11 shakes the Doonesbury world, many of its denizens are drawn inexorably toward Ground Zero–Mike to attend a memorial service for a former employer; B.D., reactivated for crowd control and celebrity tourism; Marcia Feinbloom to hit on firefighters; and Zonker to deliver potent fruitcakes to weary rescue workers. Those on the home front are no less affected by events: “I no longer care what Madonna had for breakfast,” laments Boopsie, proof positive that Everything Has Changed.
Half a world away, in Al-Qaeda Qountry, a burka-clad Roland Hedley is captured by a freelance warlord, then wounded by a can of Spam during a massive friendly food drop. Feyzabad Station Chief Havoc’s effort to rescue the downed journalist speaks well for the new, improved CIA, which has somehow managed to parlay its “massive” intelligence failures into cult status on the nation’s campuses. How else to explain Jeff Redfern’s new internship with “Acme Imports”–and his sudden affinity for shaken-not-stirred libations?
Hunted for Christmas (Love Inspired Suspense) (affiliate link)
It’s a chilling Christmas in Wyoming when an agent running for his life is taken in by a beautiful veterinarian in this suspenseful holiday romance.
A mole has framed undercover DEA agent Rogan McNally, and now his own agency and the drug cartel he infiltrated are after him. Hiding out in the mountains of Wyoming, he’ll need to keep ahead of his pursuers while surviving the harsh winter.
But when Rogan is wounded just as a snowstorm hits, he needs to take the nearest shelter he can find . . . a rural barn belonging to veterinarian Trina Lopez. Saving Rogan’s life puts Trina in the crosshairs. Now both of them are on the run—and in need of a Christmas miracle.
Ron Carlson Writes a Story: Tips from a Master of the Craft (affiliate link)
Ron Carlson’s short stories have been featured in The New Yorker, Harper’s Magazine, and elsewhere, while his numerous collections have won critical acclaim. In this series of personal essays, Carlson explores his own process, inviting the reader to watch over his shoulder as he creates the short story “The Governor’s Ball.”
“This is the story of a story,” Carlson tells us. But as he crafts a tale, he also offers practical advice for writers, covering everything from the first glimmer of an idea to the final sentence. Carlson urges the writer to refuse the outside distractions—a second cup of coffee, a troll through the dictionary—and attend to the necessity of uncertainty, the pleasures of an unfolding story.
The Dreaming Suburb (The Avenue Book 1) (affiliate link)
In the spring of 1919, his wife’s death brings Sergeant Jim Carver home from the front. He returns to be a single parent to his seven children in a place he has never lived: Number Twenty, Manor Park Avenue, in a South London suburb.
The Carvers’ neighbor Eunice Fraser, at Number Twenty-Two, has also known tragedy. Her soldier husband was killed, leaving her and her eight-year-old son, Esme, to fend for themselves.
At Number Four, Edith Clegg takes in lodgers and looks after her sister, Becky, whose mind has been shattered by a past trauma.
No one knows much about the Friths, at Number Seventeen, who moved to the Avenue before the war.
A Lost Love (affiliate link)
Brooke Adamson knew how devilishly handsome magnate, Rafe Charlwood felt about her. She was his wife after all—or rather she had been, until a terrible car accident three years ago, which Rafe still believed had claimed her life.
Now she’s returned, with a new face and identity, to claim her son. But even though she despises Rafe—almost as much as he hates the memory of the woman he married—resisting his sinful touch and devastating kiss proves more difficult than Brooke ever anticipated . . .
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2