Saturday, March 28, 2020


Paisley Memories
By
Zelle Andrews

Tess Cooper's life is nothing like a young 17 year old teen thought it would be. Her father and the only person who cared about her, supported her and loved her, has just died. The whispers at his funeral leave her feeling rejected and alone. All she has left is Paisley, her out-0f-wedlock daughter with Downs syndrome, her dad's rundown 1957 Thunderbird, her dad's lucky wheat penny, and the family photo album. Nothing to hold her to Brooksville, Alabama but hardships, mistakes and bad luck. She was leaving and not looking back.

But where is she headed? What is she going to do? Especially how is she going to support a child she doesn't feel adequate to raise? One with special needs. The challenges and responsibilities are heavy and her options are few. After a year "on the road" and going from place to place, Tess finds herself in the small beach town of Panacea, Florida. As fate would have it she's taken in by a woman named Butterball. Tess isn't very willing to be a "house guest" of Butterball and her "mini-feathered bowling balls with beaks" but she would only be there a week or two. Enough to make a few bucks and move on. Oh, but that's just the beginning of what happens to Tess. The beginning of a book I was drawn into from page one.

I loved the characters in this story. Tess is a bit self-centered at first but what teen isn't? She grew on me and my heart went out to her. Butterball is a hoot! I fell in love with her and her timely words and wisdom. Her quips and sense of humor are hilarious. Paisley is adorable. A little girl who wins the hearts of whomever she meets. Tess's best friend, Gabs is what a best friend is. There are so many characters in the story I felt connected to. I became a part of the little town they are in.

This story is written from Ms. Andrews' heart. She pulled at MY heart with Tess's story. There were so many passages that had me laughing out loud! Her humor is GREAT! There's a scene at the "Sopchoppy Worm Grunting Festival" (I didn't know there was such a thing!) that had me laughing so hard! Then there were parts of the story that were heart wrenching. Tess is running from a past that had so much heartache. ""I came here with Paisley trying to run from my past....But it's impossible to escape what you're running from when you bring it with you." There were surprises and a couple of twists I didn't expect. A wonderfully written story.

I enjoyed this book very, very much. I want to thank Ms. Andrews for the honor and opportunity to read this novel and for the gift of her story telling talents. I had such a good time reading it. It was an escape just when I needed it. A very special five star read for me. All opinions and thoughts in this review are my heartfelt own.

Sunday, March 22, 2020



The Last of the Moon Girls
By
Barbara Davis

For some people family legacy and history can be something they want no part of.  This is the case for Lizzy Moon, or her proper name, Elzibeth Moon,"She couldn't even have a normal name",  the last in the line of gifted healers she's descended from. Nine generations have come before her and now it all comes down to Lizzy. She's inherited the Moon Girl Farm from her grandmother, Althea, after she passes away.   Lizzy has been gone from the farm for eight years making her own future away from the finger pointing, humiliation and mostly the rejection of her own mother, Rhanna.  Now she's faced with returning to her childhood memories and saying goodbye once and for all.  Her grandmother has left her a library of nine journals, "Books of Remembrances",  all written by her ancestors with one story still to be told.  Hers.
What will be the story in Lizzy's journal?  Will she even write a single word in it?  She has no desire to be connected to or keep Moon Girl Farm.  She's the Last of the Moon Girls and the sooner that happens, the better.  As Lizzy returns to the farm to prepare to sell it, she feels a pull to clear her grandmother's name for the awful deaths of two young girls found in the pond on the property.  Opening wounds of a town that has no tolerance for the Moon Girls is risky but she knows in her heart who her grandmother was.  Finding the truth is her one last gift to her grandmother. 
Thus I began the journey with Lizzy.  From the prologue that magickly captured me with the voice of Althea, through the pages of Lizzy's journey,  Ms. Davis' storytelling skills had me lost in the pages.  Turning them with anticipation, eager to follow Lizzy through the emotional challenges of her choices and where they would lead.  I fell into the history, magick  and the beliefs of the Moon Girls as Lizzy remembers her childhood.  The characters of Evvie, Rhanna, and Andrew are descriptively written and intricately woven through Lizzy's decisions and emotional choices.   I loved how the final written words of Althea to Lizzy were perfectly inserted as the story unfolded.  Guiding Lizzy as she faced forgiving and letting go.  Helping her with the choices she needed to make. 
For me this was an enthralling escape into a beautifully written story.  It was the story of Lizzy.  A Moon Girl.  What would the words be that filled "The Book of Elzibeth"?  "There are a hundred names for what we are-and all of them are wrong.  Because we're not one thing. We're many things."  The journey for each of us is unique.  Lizzy's journey was a generational legacy that she trekked through to discover her place in that lineage. 
I want to thank Ms. Davis for the copy of this intriguing and intricately written book.  I am very honored for the opportunity to have read it.  I loved it!  All opinions and thoughts are my heartfelt own.  It's a five star read for me.

Thursday, March 12, 2020


Carolyn's Song
By
Elizabeth Huss

It's been many, many years since I was a freshman in high school. Stepping into the pages of this book was like taking a jaunt down memory lane. Many of the situations, feelings, activities, friends, and classes are still essentially the same as they were back when I was that age. This story is about young girl, Lynn James, and her experiences as she begins her high school years at Trelawney High School.

It's intimidating enough to pass through the doors of the school into the freshman hall as it is, but then a request by Mrs. Pennington has Lynn delivering a white envelope to Mr. Zimmerman in the SENIOR hallway. What could ever happen to a freshman entering into the exclusive senior territory? There is the feeling of inferiority as Lynn walks through the gauntlet of senior eyes all challenging as to why she's in their terrain. But what happens when she delivers the envelope sets up the premise for the rest of the story.

Ms. Huss totally took me into the teen-challenged world of Lynn with her emotions, experiences, thoughts and a high school crush. From the locks on the locker that wouldn't open, to the bells that ring for classes knowing you're going to be late. Then there's the intercom that blares and static that we all remember. To the popular senior, Sandy, who is THE most popular dream guy in school, to hurt feelings of being disappointed and thinking she was stood up. All the issues that take place as young people live through their school years. This is one girl's story of maneuvering through the high school labyrinth that so many of us also went through. Then add her best friend, Patty, into the mix and it's a similarity for our own years in high school.

The characters in this book are totally relatable and I easily slipped back into my own high school years understanding what they were going through. The giddiness and the giggling made me think of my own best friend. The "wondering if he likes me" and "he's looking my way!" excitement. "Are you going to homecoming?" and "Do you want a ride?" questions that I also asked and was asked. This is a book I would definitely have no problem for my young teenage daughter to read. It's a sweet story that kept me interested and took me back to remember my own high school friends, teachers and what it was like being there.

Carolyn's Song is a book that I enjoyed walking down memory lane as I turned the pages but it's also one I believe a young teen girl will find interesting and entertaing. Friends, pep assemblies, football games, Homecoming, teachers and classes, favorite hangouts, and much more all come together to make this a book I would definitely recommend. I want to thank Ms. Huss for the honor of reading her book. All opinions and thoughts are my heartfelt own.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020


The School Mistress of Emerson Pass
By
Tess Thompson

There I am, sitting with a new Tess Thompson novel in my hands, feeling great excitement to begin a new series set in my home state of Colorado.   I love the Cliffside Bay series and how Ms. Thompson takes me on a virtual visit each and every time. I just know that this will be the same or even better, especially since she introduced the setting of the story, Emerson Pass, in a previous book "Healed: Stone and Pepper.  This new book is historical fiction and taking a step back in time to the early settling of a mountain town is just perfect for me.  It's a reminiscence that drew me in to the places I grew up knowing.  Ms. Thompson's artful writing skills perfectly placed me in the story with Quinn and Alexander. 
From the beginning scenes I was on the train trip through the mountains with Quinn from Denver to Emerson Pass.   The harrowing trip to a new life in a place she had no idea of what to expect.  "We cannot predict the joys and sorrows that await us on this journey through life." As she steps off the train, her life adventure begins to take place at a whirlwind speed.   The story opens up and I meet a whole cast of wonderful characters I quickly become attached to.  The book is written from Quinn's and Alexander's POV.  I love that.  I also enjoyed that there was a "spark" between the two of them from the beginning.  Ms. Thompson "tended" that small flame with a smoldering pace that kept building between Quinn and Alexander. 
I love the children in this story.  A whole schoolhouse full of individual and unique students. Each one with personalities and traits that set them apart from each other but they all "look out for" and accept each other.  They captured my heart as much as they did Quinn's.    The five Barnes children are so sweet and loving.  They are honest with their words but they are so caring for others.  Children who need a new mother after the tragic death of their own mother.  They are immediately attracted to Quinn.  Ahhh!!
I had an amazing adventure in the pages of this book.  There's the wild west feeling of a mountain town being settled in the elements of weather, a mysterious murder, a drunken father, and unaccepting citizens who make life difficult for some of the people.  These are subjects that Ms. Thompson writes through with a careful approach.  There is also the other end of life in the early development of Emerson Pass.  The breathtaking beauty of freshly fallen snow in the pines and the contrast against the remarkable blue sky.  The unity of the family and how they love and care for each other makes them endearing and lovable.  The desire of Alexander Barnes to build a town for all citizens to happily belong to.  There is courage and strength that is attained by the struggles and hardships but so worth the rewards in the end. 
I am so grateful for the honor of "stepping off the train" with Quinn and experiencing this book. It's a story that, for me, felt like it had uniquely blended aspects....a Downton Abbey/Sound of Music/Little House/and The Walton's all so specially mixed to make this a wonderfully delightful read.  Thank you, Ms. Thompson, for taking me "back in time" to start this new series with characters and a setting (you know I'm a Colorado mountain girl in heart) that I'm so excited to go along on.  I can't wait for the next novel in this series!  It's a huge Rocky Mountain High five stars for me.  Thank you!  All opinions and thoughts in this review are my heartfelt own.






Thursday, March 5, 2020


Stories We Never Told
By
Sonya Yoerg

"Life isn't a movie, her mother used to say, at least not one on the Hallmark channel. This must be what she meant." This book was maybe to the extreme of what Jackie is reminiscing about of her mother's thoughts on relationships. Definitely NOT Hallmark. This story is about relationships and twisted ones at that. Not just the way these characters interact with each other but what's going through their minds as well. There are several different ways these relationships connect and really about what they are. They are not what they seem. Jackie and Harlan. Jackie and Miles. Jackie and Grace. Jackie and Nasira. Jackie and Antonio. They are all individual but as the story develops, these all begin to intertwine into a complex thriller that I had no idea where it was taking me. And that's good!

The story is written in four different POV...but Jackie's is the main thread through all of the other characters. Each character is complex and well written. My feelings for each of them would change as fast as I turned the pages. I thought I would have them figured out and if I like or not like them. That would change again and again. Except for Jackie. She had my feelings all over the place but I was always pulling for her. "How is it possible to feel furious and devastated at the same time? Oh, and humiliated and heartbroken and gullible, too?" Each character has secrets. Some I never expected at all. Ms. Yoerg slowly and methodically wrapped me into an "as the plot thickens" story and kept me guessing. Secret feelings, secret relationships, secret sabotage, secret innuendoes....secrets, secrets, secrets....all twisting and turning. Who does Jackie trust? Can she even trust herself? Just when I thought things might work out for her, several twists I didn't expect are thrown in there. Wow!

This story has a mixture of all things that make a book a good read. Suspense, mystery, psychological and thrilling scenes, a touch of romance, revenge, unexpected surprises, drama to the max and a lot of "what's going to happen next?" I want to thank Lake Union, Netgalley and Sonya Yoerg for the honor of reading this book. All thoughts and opinions in this review are my own.

Christmas Memories By Nancy Carey Johnson If I could fill my  Christmas stocking with goodies and stories it would be filled to over flowing...