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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Book Tour: FIGHTER PILOT'S DAUGHTER by Mary Lawlor @marylawlor5 @pumpupyourbook

 


The story of the author as a young woman coming of age in an Irish Catholic, military family…



Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War tells the story of Mary Lawlor’s dramatic, roving life as a warrior’s child. A family biography and a young woman’s vision of the Cold War, Fighter Pilot’s Daughter narrates the more than many transfers the family made from Miami to California to Germany as the Cold War demanded. Each chapter describes the workings of this traveling household in a different place and time. The book’s climax takes us to Paris in May ’68, where Mary—until recently a dutiful military daughter—has joined the legendary student demonstrations against among other things, the Vietnam War. Meanwhile her father is flying missions out of Saigon for that very same war. Though they are on opposite sides of the political divide, a surprising reconciliation comes years later.

Read sample here.

Fighter Pilot’s Daughter is available at Amazon.

*****

╰┈➤Book Details

  • Genre: Memoir
  • Sub-genre: Women in History / Military Leaders Biography
  • Language:English
  • Pages: 323
  • Paperback ISBN: 978-1442222007
  • Kindle ISBN: 978-1442222014
  • Publisher: Rowman and Littlefield
  • Format: Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle, Audiobook

*****

╰┈➤Here’s What Readers Have To Say!

“Mary Lawlor's memoir, Fighter Pilot's Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War, is terrifically written. The experience of living in a military family is beautifully brought to life. This memoir shows the pressures on families in the sixties, the fears of the Cold War, and also the love that families had that helped them get through those times, with many ups and downs. It's a story that all of us who are old enough can relate to, whether we were involved or not. The book is so well written. Mary Lawlor shares a story that needs to be written, and she tells it very well.” ―The Jordan Rich Show
 
“Mary Lawlor, in her brilliantly realized memoir, articulates what accountants would call a soft cost, the cost that dependents of career military personnel pay, which is the feeling of never belonging to the specific piece of real estate called home. . . . [T]he real story is Lawlor and her father, who is ensconced despite their ongoing conflict in Lawlor’s pantheon of Catholic saints and Irish presidents, a perfect metaphor for coming of age at a time when rebelling was all about rebelling against the paternalistic society of Cold War America.” ―Stars and Stripes

*****

╰┈➤Read if you love…

✎ᝰ.📓🗒Memoirs

=✪=Military Family

🎖️Life as a Military Brat

🗺️⁀જ✈︎Travel

✌️The Sixties and the Cold War

✈️Fighter Pilots


Excerpt:

The pilot’s house where I grew up was mostly a women’s world. There were five of us. We had the place to ourselves most of the time. My mother made the big decisions—where we went to school, which bank to keep our money in. She had to decide these things often because we moved every couple of years. The house is thus a figure of speech, a way of thinking about a long series of small, cement dwellings we occupied as one fictional home.

It was my father, however, who turned the wheel, his job that rotated us to so many different places. He was an aviator, first in the Marines, later in the Army. When he came home from his extended absences—missions, they were called—the rooms shrank around him. There wasn’t enough air. We didn’t breathe as freely as we did when he was gone, not because he was mean or demanding but because we worshipped him. Like satellites my sisters and I orbited him at a distance, waiting for the chance to come closer, to show him things we’d made, accept gifts, hear his stories. My mother wasn’t at the center of things anymore. She hovered, maneuvered, arranged, corrected. She was first lady, the dame in waiting. He was the center point of our circle, a flier, a winged sentry who spent most of his time far up over our heads. When he was home, the house was definitely his.

These were the early years of the Cold War. It was a time of vivid fears, pictured nowadays in photos of kids hunkered under their school desks. My sisters and I did that. The phrase “air raid drill” rang hard—the double-A sound a cold, metallic twang, ending with ill. It meant rehearsal for a time when you might get burnt by the air you breathed.

Every day we heard practice rounds of artillery fire and ordinance on the near horizon. We knew what all this training was for. It was to keep the world from ending. Our father was one of many dads who sweat at soldierly labor, part of an arsenal kept at the ready to scare off nuclear annihilation of life on earth. When we lived on post, my sisters and I saw uniformed men marching in straight lines everywhere. This was readiness, the soldiers rehearsing against Armageddon. The rectangular buildings where the commissary, the PX, the bowling alley, and beauty shop were housed had fallout shelters in the basements, marked with black and yellow wheels, the civil defense insignia. Our dad would often leave home for several days on maneuvers, readiness exercises in which he and other men played war games designed to match the visions of big generals and political men. Visions of how a Russian air and ground attack would happen. They had to be ready for it.

A clipped, nervous rhythm kept time on military bases. It was as if you needed to move efficiently to keep up with things, to be ready yourself, even if you were just a kid. We were chased by the feeling that life as we knew it could change in an hour.

This was the posture. On your mark, get set. But there was no go. It was a policy of meaningful waiting. Meaningful because it was the waiting itself that counted—where you did it, how many of the necessities you had, how long you could keep it up. Imagining long, sunless days with nothing to do but wait for an all-clear sign or for the threatening, consonant-heavy sounds of a foreign language overhead, I taught myself to pray hard.

– Excerpted from Fighter Pilot’s Daughter by Mary Lawlor, Rowman and Littlefield, 2013. Reprinted with permission.


About the Author

Mary Lawlor is author of a memoir, Fighter Pilot’s Daughter: Growing Up in the Sixties and the Cold War (Bloomsbury 2015) and two books of cultural criticism, Recalling the Wild: Naturalism and the Closing of the American West (Rutgers UP 2000) and Public Native America (Rutgers UP 2006). She studied at the American University in Paris, the University of Maryland, and New York University. She divides her time between Easton, Pennsylvania and Gaucin, Spain. Her novel, The Translators, is set in 12th century Spain and fictionalizes the experiences of Robert of Ketton, first translator of the Koran into Latin. She hopes to see it out next year. In the meantime, she has started a second novel, The Women’s Hospital, set in 18th century Spain and inspired by the life story of an Irish woman whose family moved to Cádiz, escaping English oppression in their own country.

You can visit her website at https://www.marylawlor.net/ or connect with her on Twitter or Facebook.



Sponsored By:

Review: Death at the Old Shell Mound (Skye Marina Cozy Mystery) by JJ Bleu

 

Death at the Old Shell Mound

Skye Marina Cozy Mystery

by JJ Bleu

Published: April 13, 2026

Genre: Mystery, Cozy Mystery, Amateur Sleuth, Humor, Coastal 

Blurb:


A fresh start. A dead body. And an island that clearly missed the memo about “peace and quiet.


Skye arrives on Seahorse Island hoping for sunshine, second chances, and a little ocean time before starting her new job at the local research center, not a murder scene waiting for her.

But when Luna, her loyal black poodle, leads Skye to the corpse of a local nuisance in a place everyone insists does not exist, her calm coastal reset officially ends.

Curious by nature, Skye notices patterns others miss.

Between caffeine-fueled gossip at the Saltwater Sunrise Café, late-night dancing with her growing circle of friends, and help from a charming boat captain, she begins connecting dots others would rather leave scattered.

Ranger Tom’s career is on the line after the victim accused him of altering island boundaries. The victim also accused Mark, the local research center’s director, of doctoring records.

When threatening texts appear on Skye’s doorstep, uncovering the truth is the only thing keeping her from becoming the next victim.

Purchase Death at the Old Shell Mound on Amazon


My Review:

Skye and Luna have relocated to Seahorse Island in search of a new beginning and some enjoyable moments in the sun before she embarks on her new position at the local research center.

They are relishing a sunny day walking along the beach when Luna discovers a deceased body. Skye uncovers clues that many others fail to notice. Skye begins to inquire around the island to uncover what transpired to the unfortunate individual they found on the beach.

The investigation raises numerous questions that most islanders prefer to keep concealed. How far are these individuals prepared to go to protect their secrets? Indeed, if Skye does not uncover the truth soon, she may become the next victim.

Death at the Old Shell Mound kept me captivated as I sought to discover what happened to this unfortunate man and why someone wished to harm him. Additionally, what were they trying to conceal that led to this? What secrets does the island harbor, and why are they being hidden? There are so many questions that keep the narrative flowing quite smoothly.

I eagerly anticipate reading more in this delightful series, the Skye Marina Cozy Mystery. I am excited to see what lies ahead for Skye and Luna in their upcoming adventure.

I strongly recommend acquiring a copy of Death at the Old Shell Mound today!

Book Blitz + #Giveaway: Nocturne by Tricia D. Wagner @WagnerAuthor @XpressoTours

Nocturne
Tricia D. Wagner
Publication date: April 14th 2026
Genres: Fantasy, Young Adult

In NOCTURNE, sixteen-year-old Livi learns the truth of who she is—a Siren, her people known only to legends. She must learn to master her powers of influence, strength, and destruction to stop a warmongering Admiral from drafting her best friends, capturing and killing her people, and decimating her homeland of Nocturne.

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / iBooks / Kobo

EXCERPT:

Livi stood before the tavern’s bleak threshold, its heavy door cobbled of wrecked ships.

She peered through its ragged window, quieting the wiser part of her, an inner voice calling for her to turn back. And truly, she was stunned that she’d mustered the daring to try this.

There were dozens of men here—sailors all brooding over their flagons, many looking to be harboring grudges.

The tavern’s splintery walls were studded with trophies—toothy payaras, dry in their death throes, tacked beneath golden portraits of infamous Korps Mariner ships and their dread captains.

The men frequenting this sand-dusted, fish-pongy tavern—The Orphic, were the sun-beaten sailors and damaged soldiers of Merritaine, mercenaries and relieved fighters who’d reached the shore of old age still breathing.

No one dared step a toe in The Orphic unless he bore epic tales—bloody acts of acclaim on the baleful blue seas.

Many here had killed. Some for honorable causes in noble wars, yes. But they’d killed.

For all their savagery, though, they were brave.

Livi had heard enough stories to understand them as uniformly dauntless and skilled. If anyone could help her skip Merritaine’s coast and reach Nocturne, he’d be drinking here.

Through the brume of pipe smoke, she measured each face for hints of affability. Or at least for traces of good humor—signs that someone might consider her offer. If she could just single out one sailor more approachable than not, perhaps she could move to him unnoticed.

But that wouldn’t happen. Women scarcely set foot here, and sixteen-year-old girls certainly didn’t.

A few of the sailors came across as jovial—but even they harbored an undercurrent of trouble in their looks, their ease striking like a gusty southerly bathing the seaside, forecasting a typhoon’s assault.

The afternoon seemed all at once to grow late, a shaft of misted sunlight sluicing through the windows and casting the place in watery relief.

In fixing on that panorama of ocean, Livi could almost see Nocturne’s peaks in the deep west, its moonstone shores marbled with the shadowy ash given by its volcanic chain.

Those heights, she had to reach. For it was said that Nocturne’s high places were hived with sea caves—chambers shining with waters rumored to have healing properties.

Some believed those springs could stave off even death.

Livi eased from her jacket a small jar of pearls, each perfect, as plump as a blueberry—these a mere sampling of the trove she’d collected. They ought to be more than enough to buy passage to Nocturne from someone here bearing the skill, and the gall, and the ship, and the time to set sail for the Isles, along with some assurance that he could ferry her through storms, over waters where lurked sharks and killer whales and squids that tore up boats, and finally beyond the dread Maelstroms.

Livi had imagined this moment many times—making her bold approach in The Orphic, striking a deal. She’d imagined that arriving at this brink would feel like the onset of her escape.

But in finally standing here, readying to approach men alleged to be the most barbarous in Merritaine, the idea seemed beyond reckless.

Célian, her best friend—maybe more—would be sick at the thought of her here. And truly, in darkening this threshold, she felt she was skimming the rim of the Maelstroms, those great whirlpools unceasing in their churning, twisting what strayed near straight down in a tempest, claiming ships and seafarers alike as a part of themselves.

The bright Merrow Ocean glinting in, though, delivered some steadfastness. For at the sight of its rolling, Livi could gather a sense of what it might feel like, teaming with someone here, cruising on his scabrous ship to the treacherous west.

A man seated at the tavern’s back corner stood out a touch.

He looked a decade younger than the rest, and he had all his limbs, which was saying something. He seemed not resentful, or affable, or angry—just somber. His solemnity made it clear that he wanted to be left to himself.

But it also lent an impression of patience. Maybe he’d listen.

She edged open the tavern’s door and crept in. She eased behind a column in the entryway and held still.

She’d have to get to the somber man quick. If she drew too much attention, the barkeep—a tall man, his eyes sharp to check all the action, his manner busy and swift with his bottles—would cast her out before she could lay down one word of her offer.

Or worse—he’d let the men handle the disruption.

Livi stepped from the shade, into the amber light of the tavern.

Author Bio:

As a young reader, writers were like gods and goddesses to now author Tricia D. Wagner. She never could have imagined weaving tales like her favorite storytellers, until a fateful April dinner conversation with her husband about a lecture he attended got her mind whirling. By the end of that summer, she’d written 400,000 words: a speculative fiction trilogy. Wagner felt as if she’d emerged from a cocoon as some new sort of creature. She was hooked.

It was important to Tricia to sharpen her skills, and she immersed herself in workshops, guides, and writing communities, learning from editors how to hone her craft. She did this for years, and the result is her newly released novella The Strider and the Regulus, two independently published novelettes, four soon-to-be published novellas, and five as yet unpublished novels. She found writing to be a method for becoming the person she felt she was born to be. Wagner finds that writing inspires her to be a better person, truer to herself.

The ideas and substance of Tricia’s writing comes from a very deep place that is strongly stimulated by setting. Often, when she has completed a story, she feels as if she’s been to her story world, whether it’s on the map or not. She likes to believe all the places she writes about exist somewhere, somehow.

In writing her stories, Wagner was surprised and delighted to discover how real the characters become to an author; that for many writers, their characters end up as their most treasured friends. She loves to delve into them to mine their natures, secrets, and desires—to tell their stories with the legitimacy they deserve. In studying her characters, she finds she has the opportunity to shape herself, inching closer to the person she wants to become.

Wagner believes revision is magical in its power to make a good book great, and early drafts are only the beginning of a story’s journey. Any idea can wind up a good story, but with reflection and time and improvement, it can become art. Once Wagner completes a revision project, it feels miraculous how many fresh approaches have manifested and how much truer the story feels.

Wagner hopes her readers feel enchanted when they read her stories; that after completing one, it seems they’re drifting out from under a spell. This is exactly how she feels when she finishes writing a story. She hopes to that her writing might expand their minds, spirits, and worlds a bit, and she hope they fall in love with her characters and are moved by her artistry of language.

When she isn’t writing poignant works of literary fiction, Wagner is a Director of Adult Education – ESL Programs at a community college, a job and staff that she loves. In her spare time she enjoys refining her writing craft to discover new angles and landscapes that might enrich her writing palette. One such example is a recent course she took in learning to read ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, something that’s sure to end up in a story at some point. Wagner lives in Rockford, Illinois, with her husband and three darling cats.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Instagram / X


GIVEAWAY!

Nocturne Blitz


Release Blitz + #Giveaway: Cece in Wonder Land by Bonnie S. Priever @RABTBookTours




Women’s Fiction

Date Published: April 14, 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing


Sometimes wonder finds you when you least expect it.

Cece Belle is a high-functioning neurodivergent. She’s also a big believer in destiny, but when her soulmate Robby dumps her mid-flight to Israel, she instantly regrets ever telling him she’s on the spectrum.

Not one to dwell in misery, Cece sips some chamomile hibiscus tea to set herself straight. And with meditation and spirituality on her side, she looks to what’s next. Yet another blow hits when she is kicked out of her rabbinical studies program for “strange behavior.”

Then, she meets Joel. With his quirky demeanor and ability to say all the right things, he gives Cece the desire to begin a new relationship. There’s only one main obstacle: Cece loves living in Los Angeles, and Joel is a diehard New Yorker.

She marries him anyway, despite misgivings that extend beyond their geography. After all, this is her carefully drawn plan—marriage, then kids, then happily ever after. Sometimes though, the best-laid plans are better left in dreamland where they can’t go awry.

Cece in Wonder Land is a twisty journey down a rabbit hole of unexpected anxieties, disappointments, and more questions than answers. But where there is hope, there is life, and maybe Cece can hang on for the next bit of wonder bound to come her way.



About the Author

 

Born and raised in Los Angeles, Bonnie S. Priever majored in communications studies at UCLA before moving to Philadelphia. There, she attended the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, which prepared her for an assistant directorship at the Israel Levin Senior Adult Center in Venice, California.

As a way to process emotions and stay connected to her spirituality, Bonnie started writing about her experiences. In 2023, Newsweek published her personal essay about the challenges of aging. Currently, she combines her passion for writing and her love for live theater as a reviewer for CurtainUp, an online theater magazine.

Bonnie loves to travel but always looks forward to coming home to LA. She has one grown son and a backlog of great ideas. Based on a true story, Cece in Wonder Land is her first novel.


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RABT Book Tours & PR

Virtual Book Tour + #Giveaway: Whispers of the Elixir by C.P. Silver @GoddessFish


This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. C.P. Silver will be awarding a $25 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

Blurb: 

A matriarchal empire. A princess with forbidden magic. A mother who would kill to protect her own legacy.

As heir to the Min empire, Tori has learned to wear her collar well — speaking her mind just enough to feel like herself, defying her empress mother just enough to survive the guilt of submission. But she's hiding a secret that would see her sawn in half: a forbidden elemental power tied to the world's mythic past. If discovered, her mother would execute her own daughter without hesitation. And Tori knows it.

When discovery becomes inevitable, she flees into Peach Blossom Grove — a mythic realm of ghost-flowers, sentient forests, and immortals who remember a world before empires. In this ancient realm where immortal masters train magic-wielders and sentient weapons choose their owners, magic is neither blessing nor curse but a reflection of who you truly are. Here, Tori finds what the palace never gave her: belonging. But the trials are brutal, designed to break her before they remake her. And as her mother's ambition threatens war, Tori must choose — suppress the power that could doom her, or embrace it and become the one thing her mother fears most.

Herself.

Whispers of the Elixir begins the Order of the Ember series — a slow-burn, character-driven epic fantasy of legacy, sacrifice, and the strength of a princess destined to rise from the shadows and claim her place in legend.

Here you will find the political intrigue of Andrea Stewart, the immersive worldbuilding of Patrick Rothfuss, and the emotional weight of M.L. Wang. 
Purchase Whispers of the Elixir on Amazon, All Other Retailers

 

Read an Excerpt


Tori fought the feeling of being on a leash. She raised a hand halfway to the feathers fastened around her neck, hesitated, then let it fall.

“Is it itching, Princess?” Lady Elnora said, watching her.

“Like all insanity, but no point fiddling with it.”

Her gentlewoman adjusted the feathered ruff anyway, providing no relief whatsoever. It didn’t matter. Collared or not, today she would prove she was not her mother’s lapdog.

She struggled to see above the red filigree rail of the Imperial Observation Pavilion—where the royal family sat, far above the masses—the weight of her ceremonial robes resisting her every effort. Imperial decorum, it seemed, had not been designed with mobility in mind. It was times like these that she regretted her small stature; her mother, no doubt, could see perfectly.

Once she finally shifted forward, however, her three-story vantage point allowed her a perfect view of the float parade winding through the city of Silver Fox Springs in a ribbon of color and sound.

“I still don’t see them,” Tori said, craning her neck forward.

Elnora’s smooth brown finger pointed the way. Blending seamlessly with the sculptures of giant mythical creatures adorning the streets, Tori’s pantomimists balanced on their stilts, waist pouches packed so tight with skades that the little stones stretched the seams. Pantomimists had never been seen before at the Tailu Spring Festival—and would remain hidden, until her plan required it.


Interview with C.P. Silver

Could you tell us about any research trips you took for this story? Which places did you visit, and what made them essential to your writing?

As much as I would have loved to travel for research, I couldn’t spare the time away from my family. We did, however, take vacations to the Caribbean and France to visit relatives, as well as to various places in Italy.

But although those trips weren’t specifically for research, there’s something about changing one’s state of being that helps the creative flow, and traveling is an obvious way to change one’s state. So, during our family travels, I was often surprised by how the little things—snippets of conversation, people’s quirky mannerisms, fragmented sections of architecture—helped inspire the dialogue, characterization, and world-building in my story.

What's the strangest thing you've ever had to research online for your book?

There were so many! But I would say my research on ancient and medieval torture methods was the weirdest. Not because the question itself is strange for a fantasy writer, but rather the questions that sprang from it. Like:

“What size saw do you need to saw through someone’s midsection?”

“How long would it take to kill someone with 1,000 tiny cuts?”

And although these gruesome methods never featured on-page in my finished story, such research might certainly make an inquisitive stranger standing nearby scoot away several steps.

What research (history, mythology, science) goes into your world-building?

In terms of science, it was mostly to do with natural phenomena, like the phases of the moon, or the odd botanical fact. For mythology, there was much more, especially Chinese and Japanese mythology, along with a fair amount of Greek and Scandinavian, and snippets from other places. Then there was culinary research, like the flavor of osmanthus wine.

But history took up the lion’s share of research. I was especially fascinated by the lives of ancient queens such as Catherine the Great of Russia, Cleopatra of Egypt, Wu Zetian of China, Ranavalona I of Madagascar, and Queen Athaliah of Judah, to name a few. They’re known for being brutal and ruthless—which of course they were—but they were no more so than the male monarchs of their time. Nor were they less accomplished in terms of political cunning, leadership, or intellect. These women had a great deal of influence on the mindset and behavior of the queens in my story world.

Have any of the people you've known, past or present, left a lasting impression on your writing journey? If so, we'd love to hear about a memorable experience that stands out to you.

There have been a few. But what comes back to me right now is my fourth-grade teacher, Mrs. McLaughlin. She gave us writing assignments, which I loved, and was always encouraging, but at eight years old, I can’t say that made much of an impact. What left a lasting impression on my writing journey came years later.

I was looking through my mother’s old filing cabinet, and found my fourth-grade report card. I was practicing law by this time, and just writing for fun whenever I could spare a moment—a kind of guilty pleasure, since I should have been doing more serious things, I thought. But when I flipped open this old report card out of curiosity, what was written inside made me stop and stare. I don’t remember the exact words now, but it was roughly,

“Your daughter has a considerable gift for writing. This should be watched closely for her future.” Something along those lines.

It made me rethink things for a few minutes. Then, over the years, the memory kept returning. And although it took me more than a decade to finally decide to write full time, the feeling of having been “seen” stayed with me, and has since then many times served as an encouragement to keep going.

Do you write in the same genre all the time?

Yes. Whether I’m writing short stories, novellas, a full-length novel, or even just a writing prompt for practice, I always find myself turning to fantasy. It was my first love, and it’s still the genre that inspires me most. I love the feeling it gives me, like anything is possible.

If so, have you ever consider writing in another one?

During my law practice days, I used to write a lot of contemporary fiction. Mostly stories about young females navigating life as new lawyers. In retrospect, I suppose it was a form of therapy!

Later on, I dabbled in millionaire romance, then paranormal shifter romance, both of which were great fun. But it was only when I started writing fantasy that I finally felt like I had come home.

Which character, supernatural or human, do you enjoy writing the most and why?

This is a tough one, since I have such fun writing all of my characters. But if forced to choose, perhaps it would be the crotchety old alchemy mentor, Master Kwai’le.

He makes my main character Tori’s life such a misery with his irritable nature and hopelessly frustrating teaching methods. Yet by the end, he has taught her everything she needs to know—not least of which is a healthy dose of humility.

He’s the kind of teacher you hate as long as you’re stuck with them, but later realize was the best thing that could have happened to you. And I loved writing him for two reasons:

First, because it allowed me to relive my own frustrating student experiences through another lens, this time controlling the outcome.

And secondly, because I just plain found him funny. He is the perfect antidote to Princess Tori’s inherited sense of self-importance, and their interactions always make me laugh.

About the Author:


C.P. Silver writes fantasy set in a world where matriarchy is absolute, with immersive worldbuilding, evocative prose, and emotionally complex characters. A former lawyer who also briefly studied Chinese medicine, her experiences shape the nuance and depth of her debut novel, Whispers of the Elixir, a slow-burn epic centered on legacy, inheritance, and the dangerous cost of power.

Raised in the Cayman Islands, she now lives in Europe. When not writing, she’s usually reading in a quiet nook or walking somewhere green, listening for the next story.

Connect with C.P. Silver

Instagram ~ Facebook ~ BlueSky ~ Goodreads ~ Website


Giveaway:



$25 Amazon/BN GC





Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.


Monday, April 13, 2026

Book Tour + #Giveaway: Unexpected Altars: Meeting God in Everyday Moments @OaklandComChrch @RABTBookTours




Christian Devotional, Inspirational Personal Testimonies

Date Published: 11-15-2025

Publisher: Acorn Book Services



Everyday moments become sacred altars where God meets you.


Do you sometimes wish you could hear from God? Do you feel like you are too insignificant for Him to care about your daily battles with loneliness, grief, change, and doubts?


God talks to each of us – from the young husband and father who accidentally torched his home, to the claustrophobic pastor making her way through a historic tunnel in Israel, to the mystery author having a close call with a stink bug.


God can speak to us through that soft voice inside your head; or the perfect words for your circumstance uttered on Sunday morning; or He can come to you in a powerful revelation.


Turn your doubts into divine encounters. Discover how God is speaking to you today through these 101 inspirational faith stories. These stories will transform your doubts into powerful encounters with God’s grace, guiding you to find Him in unexpected places.


UNEXPECTED ALTARS is a collection of stories of faith from real people, just like you, who have experienced God’s grace and presence in their lives. Their authors pray that this Christian devotional will inspire your daily spiritual life. Each story is a powerful reminder that God meets us right where we are—building altars of worship in the ordinary and the extraordinary. Perfect for daily devotion, small group discussion, or personal encouragement.


Start your journey to find God in the unexpected! Order UNEXPECTED ALTARS today!

 



UNEXPECTED ALTARS: MEETING GOD IN EVERYDAY MOMENTS is an anthology written by multiple authors, edited by JoAnne Alexander, and published by Lauren Carr for Oakland Community Church, a non-denominational church located in Charles Town, West Virginia.

All royalties from this devotional book will be donated to the building fund for Oakland Community Church's new building. Oakland's goal is to design a biophilic building that takes advantage of the beauty of our Jefferson County location.


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RABT Book Tours & PR

Book Tour + #Giveaway: Forest Legend by Dan Ellens @RABTBookTours




The Tale of Ol' Split Toe


YOUNG ADULT FICTION

Science & Nature/Environment Science Fiction/Time Travel Literature & Fiction/Action & Adventure

Date Published: 03-31-2026

Publisher: Mission Point Press



Mother Nature struggles to maintain equilibrium in a changing world while fire, disease, logging, human displacement, and war repeatedly destroy forests of centuries-old trees. Split Toe, a deer chosen at birth for a unique education, travels through time to understand the interconnected workings of a Michigan forest. He meets humans along the way: Ice Age hunters who trap and kill a mastodon; Mukwoh, a young Ojibwe hunter who stalks Split Toe through swamp and forest; loggers clearcutting Michigan’s white pines; Edra, a woman advocating for the trees; Angus and Grace, pioneers who become a first generation of family farmers; scientists from the future studying the impact of nuclear radiation.

Split Toe witnesses two hundred years of conflict building between modern humans -- who fight to control the natural world -- and Mother Nature, who repeatedly reaches for balance. He wonders whether human ways will ultimately overpower Mother Nature, until he meets a boy who changes everything.



Interview with Dan Ellens, author of FOREST LEGEND: THE TALE OF OL’ SPLIT TOE

Could you tell us about any research trips you took for this story? Which places did you visit, and what made them essential to your writing?

The story takes place in a mid-Michigan forest and wild tag alder swamp. Spending 3000+ nights isolated in the wilds of mid-Michigan, in a treehouse without electricity, with woodstove heat and with handpump water should qualify as the kind of research needed to establish the character of the book, FOREST LEGEND: THE TALE OF OL’ SPLIT TOE. I also made trips to Hartwick Pines State Park, and Estevan Pines Nature Sanctuary to observe two iconic stands of Michigan’s old growth white pines. I visited logging museums in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and at Hartwick Pines State Park. I visited Indigenous earthworks hidden in the forest of mid-Michigan. I also interviewed octogenarian mid-Michigan farmers for first-hand accounts of life on the family farm, and to understand Michigan’s PBB disaster. I suppose you could consider several canoe trips down Michigan’s Clam and Muskegon Rivers research also..

What's the strangest thing you've ever had to research online for your book?

I did plenty of research regarding the Ice Age in the Great Lakes region - written material and online. I was captivated by the Ice Age food chain. Plants and animals. Small animals (like a shrew) that existed during the Ice Age and were eaten by larger animals (like dire wolves). I also researched online information about when solar eclipses were visible in Michigan’s history in order to add authenticity to the time-travel mechanism invented for FOREST LEGEND. I researched the environmental effects of nuclear disaster. How did nature react at Chernobyl and Hiroshima? I did online research to find out how far wild animals in Michigan travel during their lifetimes, which I found to be particularly interesting topic.

What research (history, mythology, science) goes into your world-building?

FOREST LEGEND is in its own way a teaching novel. It provides plenty of accurate historical and natural science tidbits for readers to discover, and authentic settings for each time period that Split Toe travels in. But more than that I hope readers finish the book with a better understanding of how a forest and individual trees work. How it is born, lives to maturity, dies, and is reborn. I hope readers feel the lifespan of a tree, the lifespan of a forest. To add authenticity to the science and settings, I read more than fifteen books that support my writing. Many of them are listed in the reference section at the end of FOREST LEGEND. The book that inspired the rest was FINDING THE MOTHER TREE by Suzanne Simard.

Have any of the people you've known, past or present, left a lasting impression on your writing journey? If so, we'd love to hear about a memorable experience that stands out to you.

When I decided to write this story, FOREST LEGEND, I sat down for six weeks and wrote for 14 hours a day. The only input at that time was Cathy Kwantes, my spouse, who read each chapter as I went. Taking the story (which is essentially the same story today) from its first manuscript to what its published form involved the input of many people. I was receptive to everyone’s input. I took it all into consideration. Each person helped me in their own unique way. I learned plenty about writing from the people who gave me feedback on FOREST LEGEND.

I consider Bill Gleason my pivotal mentor. Bill is the former publisher of Skin Diver Magazine. Now he operates a publishing company called The Science Bookshelf, that produces books about sea level rise and climate change. His honest advice helped me to focus on writing mechanics that impact the reading experience. We had long discussions. He suggested that I do things to speed up the pace of the story, such as reducing paragraph and chapter length, eliminating repetition, run-on sentences, and passive voice. Under his guidance I changed the manuscript from seven long, time-based chapters to thirty three short event-based chapters. Bill’s help led to every other improvement. Bill was like a teacher for me. I kept everything we talked about in my mind for every enhancement that followed. Bill seemed inspired by the message. He liked seeing a person with my forest lifestyle writing about the topic communicated in FOREST LEGEND. Bill read the manuscript more times than any other person. Bill is a busy man, but he made time for me, and for FOREST LEGEND. Thank you Bill.

Do you write in the same genre all the time?

I write books to connect people with nature and to promote people doing outward bound things that add a touch of adventure to their lives. I also write a kind of email blog called Michigan Forest Life. The blog is meant to be inspirational, to bring a small dose of forest Zen to its readers. There are more than 850 editions of Michigan Forest Life since it began in 2018.

If so, have you ever consider writing in another one?

FOREST LEGEND is my first fiction piece and my first book introduced in the YA genre. It incorporates the thinking of my four nonfiction books. FOREST LEGEND is a new genre for me – both fiction and YA.

Which character, supernatural or human, do you enjoy writing the most and why?

Split Toe has been my favorite character to develop. I found creating the character of Split Toe to be liberating. Split Toe is a real deer placed into real settings, but existing with a thread of magical realism - he time-travels, exhibits a spiritual understanding, communicates with the seen and unseen world around him, and develops love and relationships with humans who he meets along the way.


About the Author

 

Dan Ellens is an outdoor enthusiast who is passionate about connecting people with nature. He spends nearly half of each year in an isolated, electricity-free treehouse on Winterfield Pines Nature Sanctuary with woodstove heat, handpump water, and oil lamp lighting.

Dan has written four nonfiction books intended to inspire adventure, promote self-sufficient lifestyles, and connect people with nature.

While not in the wilds, Dan and his wife live in the small community of Salem, Michigan.


Contact Links

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LinkedIn: Daniel S. Ellens


Purchase Links

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Week Blitz + #Giveaway: Golfing, Gardens & Ghosts by Mary Seifert @mary_seifert @RABTBookTours


Cozy Mystery

Date Published: 01-28-2026

Publisher: Secret Staircase Books, an imprint of Columbine Publishing Group, LLC



School’s out for the summer and math teacher Katie Wilk needs something to occupy her time, something beyond helping to plan Jane Mackey’s upcoming wedding. So, when Jane suggests golf lessons and Katie secures a part-time job at the Shady Oaks Country Club to cover the cost of her golfing gear, it seems like a win-win plan. Unfortunately, the club’s irascible golf pro seems to make enemies wherever he goes, so when his body turns up near the 14th hole, it’s anyone’s guess who might have done him in.

Katie doesn’t really want another murder to investigate, but Officer Ronnie Christianson is back to his old ways, and it looks like he’ll do what it takes to implicate her in the death. And Katie just happens to have seen a potentially incriminating clue, behind a secret garden wall that few know about. Can Katie, Jane, and Ida ask enough questions to find out what really happened before the police come after her?

 

Praise for this amazing cozy series by multiple award-winning author Mary Seifert:

2024 Chanticleer International Book Awards - Semi-Finalist - Mystery & Mayhem category

2024 Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Award - Top Pick - Cozy Mysteries

2024 International Impact Awards - Winner - Books in a Series

 

“…. a solid 5 out of 5 stars. For those seeking not just a mystery but an immersive experience, Mary Seifert's debut novel [is] the perfect companion for a cosy night in, a cup of tea, and a journey into the heart of a captivating mystery.” – Maverick, Movies & Murder, Online Book Club.org

 

“...an intricate mystery with plenty of action and suspense. Plus, I like the dog.” David Housewright Edgar Award winning author of Something Wicked

 

“From navigating small town life to solving puzzling murders, Katie and Maverick are a delight.” —Mindy Mejia, international bestseller author

 

“Immediately captivating! Katie and Maverick are destined to become a notable amateur sleuth team in the mystery world.” –Connie Shelton, USA Today bestselling author

 

“I thoroughly enjoyed this debut book by Mary Seifert! This well written and thoughtful story kept me engaged with fun characters, interesting information and mind and math puzzles. Looking forward to book two!” James, 5-star online review

 

“Fun read! The author has an authentic voice and has done her research. The plot covers many topics: dogs, history, the inner workings of hospitals, family dynamics, and more. I especially enjoyed the puzzles and little-known historical facts that were part of the story. Maverick, Movies & Murder kept my interest and left me wanting more. Highly recommend!” Beth, online 5-star review

 

“…very much looking forward to her next!!! I can’t get enough of Ms. Seifert’s books!!” – proudarmymom, 5 stars

 

“…plenty of unanticipated twists and turns. It kept [me] up reading to see what was going to happen next!” RHN, 5 stars online

 

“Maverick, Movies, and Murder isn't merely a cosy mystery; it's a literary embrace, a narrative that unfolds in layers, revealing both the familiar and the unexpected.” OnlineBookClub.org review

 

Excerpt

“I can’t imagine you didn’t inherit my ability to sit still and do absolutely nothing. I’m the king of procrastination.”

I laughed. “This from a man who plans every minute of his day.”

“Yes, but I make certain I plan all my sitting-still time first. I might have some ideas for you.”

Poised to take note of Dad’s constructive contributions, I said, “Do tell.”

He leaned back in the chair and crossed his arms. “You could pick up a new hobby.”

“I could teach you to cook. Maybe. Or you could bike.”

I plopped my elbow on the table and supported my cheek in my hand. “You and Ida have tried to teach me to cook. It’s been practically impossible, and there’s only so much biking I can do.” I shook my head yet listened for something novel.

“You could sleep in.”

“Tried that.” I side-eyed my pup and exhaled.

“You could learn a craft like … crocheting or knitting.”

Two more words made the list. He waited for an enthusiastic response, which didn’t happen, but nuggets of ideas turned over in my head as I chewed my final morsel of bacon. Our landlady, Ida Clemashevski, was a creative whiz not only at cooking, but with her passions of art, acting, music, and probably crafting as well.

“There’s always fishing,” he said, cautiously optimistic. “Or get a part-time job?”

I jotted a few words next to his recommendations and drew a fish.

Dad asked, “What’s that?”

Having confirmed my lack of any artistic talent, my sketch disappeared under scribbles. “I’ll think about taking up a hobby, but meanwhile, it seems I’ll simply have to resign myself to mundane chores …” I hopped up. “Nothing exciting. Something like doing the dishes.” I juggled the serving platters, plates, and silverware and deposited them in the sink, leaving the delicate cups for a second trip.

Soap foamed under the cascade of hot water, and I scrubbed slowly to eat up at least a portion of my free time. Although Dad reached for a towel, I shooed him out of the kitchen, knowing how much he valued his predictable weekday schedule: a hearty first meal of the day, a one-mile walk around the neighborhood—rain or shine, an in-depth read of the newspaper from cover to cartoons, an exercise class at the Y, and his volunteer stint at the library.

“No doubt, by week’s end you’ll have discovered a new and more streamlined method for doing dishes. You know I love you.” He kissed my forehead and headed for the door and a day of sunshine. “But we’ve got to keep you occupied and out of trouble, or you’ll never get rid of the crazy nickname you earned.”

I called to his retreating back, “Just because I’ve been in the wrong places and involved in the resolution of several serious crimes, I really don’t think I deserve the moniker ‘Katie Wilk, the murder magnet.’”

 

About the Author


Mary Seifert is the mastermind behind the captivating Katie and Maverick Cozy Mysteries, a 2024 International IMPACT Award winner for books in a series. If you love a thrilling whodunit with a sprinkle of humor and a dash of charm, her books are for you. Her novel Maverick, Movies & Murder was a finalist for the 2023 American Fiction Award, and Santa, Snowflakes & Strychnine earned a spot as a 2024 Chanticleer Murder and Mayhem finalist. Set in the picturesque landscapes of West Central Minnesota, where the lakes begin, Mary’s stories are as cozy as a warm cup of cocoa on a chilly day.

Mary’s love affair with books began in her grandfather’s secretive basement backroom library, where she read childhood favorites, Heidi, Black Beauty, National Velvet, Charlotte’s Web, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and devoured works by literary greats such as Agatha Christie, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Erle Stanley Gardner, Wouk, Chandler, du Maurier, Ellery Queen, Margaret Mitchell, Steinbeck, Hemingway, Salinger, Bradbury, Tolkien, and Pasternak, to name just a few. These early literary adventures, combined with lively book discussions with her mother and siblings helped shape her love for mysteries and complex narratives. Her father’s gift of outrageous storytelling added exaggeration to her arsenal, lending a playful twist to her writing.

Mary grounded her passion for storytelling when she shared her love of reading with her children, solving puzzles alongside beloved characters like Nancy Drew, the Boxcar Children, and the Hardy Boys, and that passion is growing, watching the next generation learn to read. She proudly believes her kids, their significant others, and her grandchildren are the smartest in the universe, and she’s not shy about letting the world know it!


Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

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Instagram


Purchase Link

Amazon



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