Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Virtual Book Tour + #Giveaway: Lucky Secrets by B.T. Polcari @btpolcari @GoddessFish


LUCKY SECRETS

B.T. Polcari

GENRE: Young Adult Cozy Mystery


BLURB:


College student Sara Donovan is in the homestretch of graduating when a mysterious package arrives with an invitation to an exclusive contest. One that will drastically change the winner’s life. Included are unsettling photographs from forgettable chapters in her life and a threatening note strongly suggesting she participate.

With no good options, Sara enters the contest and finds herself at a fabulous mansion up against eight formidable opponents, each with a dark secret and all racing to solve seven levels of riddles and puzzles.

After a contestant’s body is discovered, Sara contemplates dropping out when another package arrives, its chilling contents making clear she’s at the center of a dangerous game with deadly consequences if she quits. But what it doesn’t say is—what happens if she wins?

Purchase LUCKY SECRETS on Signed Copies, Amazon, Apple Books, Barnes & Noble, and Bookshop.org


Excerpt:

I spent the first two hours of every workday by myself while Finn was off with Bertie drinking his lunch, presumably trying to forget his ex-wife. On my first day way back on the fifth of August, I enthusiastically reported to work. I was stoked, ready to assist the unrenowned yet Majelski-recommended, and sorta sober, Melvin “Finn” Finnegan, with taking down perps, crooks, and degenerates. Instead, I spent that day and most of the last seven months digging up dirt on two-timing husbands, boyfriends, and insurance fraudsters, and tracking down the last location on the Internet for delinquent debtors and the occasional bond jumper. Truth be told, the only time I spent out of the office was walking from my car to the dang building and then back again for the trip home to Sketchville. But working the streets on a high-profile case? Any case?

Not a chance.

A typical weekday for me consisted of business and criminology classes in the morning, then grabbing a quick lunch of fifty-cent noodles and a cola before jumping in my traumatized hatchback more the color of gray primer than its original black and flying up I-59 to one of the more questionable areas of Birmingham for a scintillating five hours as a part-time receptionist and researcher for Finn. And if that wasn’t enough to light up my life each and every fricking day, my drive home was a daily battle-royale with crazed Birmingham commuters reminding this soon-to-be college graduate, hopefully, that I was no match for their unparalleled skill at breaking every traffic law in the book while exhibiting quite the fluency in sign language.



Interview with B.T. Polcari

    What is your favorite part of the book?

    This is such a tough question because there are so many fun parts to the book. However, if I can only pick one, since the story revolves around a very exclusive contest at an exquisite estate called El Sueño, it would be Chapter 7 where the nine contestants have their first mandatory dinner together at the mansion. I love this chapter because the reader gets a first real glimpse at how the contestants will be interacting with each other, and there is a fun appearance by El Sueño’s crazy chef.


    Does your book have a lesson? Moral?

    When I wrote the book, there was not a lesson I was intentionally trying to drive home to the reader. With that said, in retrospect, things are never what they seem to be. Ever.


    Are your characters based off real people or did they all come entirely from your imagination?

    Most came from my imagination. There are two real-life characters: Mauzzy and Bertie, the two dachshunds in the story who share their names with the real pups. Mauzzy’s character is 100% based on him, while Bertie is somewhat based on him (you’ll understand when you read the book). Also, the main character is loosely based on a real person who I took poetic license with to develop a fun multi-layered character with some over-the-top traits combined with real-life positive attributes.


    Of all the characters you have created, which is your favorite and why?

    By far my most favorite character is Mrs. Majelski, who has been in all three books in the series. And it’s not just me—many of my readers love Mrs. M. She is an octogenarian mystery woman with a very colorful past and a knack for showing up at just the right times in each story. I thoroughly enjoy writing her into scenes because there is so much I can do with her character. Consider that the little old lady effortlessly pumps iron in the gym; runs on the treadmill and through parking lots and garages; maniacally works the elliptical without breaking a sweat or loss of breath; nimbly clambers up walls in a rock-climbing room; deftly wields a blowtorch; is a part-time bouncer at Sunny Time’s Stein Room; drives a tricked-out monster truck with a full gun rack; knows how to hack security systems ranging from residential to high-end commercial ones; has shadowy links to international syndicates and intelligence agencies; and more. Even my developmental editor said, “I still wanna be Mrs. Majelski when I grow up.” How can I not love the old lady!!


    What character in your book are you least likely to get along with?

    Karsh Azarian, one of the contestants. He is an egotistical, pompous, arrogant jerk. And then some. We wouldn’t last ten minutes together in a room.


    What would the main character in your book have to say about you?

    Hopefully that I’m a good writer! Seriously, I think she would appreciate my recognition of her intelligence, problem-solving skills, and dogged determination. But the minute she says these wonderful things about me, there is no doubt whatsoever she would take big-time exception to and go on and on about my portrayal of her driving “skills,” her extreme lack of athleticism and clumsiness (and I’m being nice), and her tendency—at times—to overreact.


    Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?

    I go to great lengths to write each book as a standalone mystery while still making connections between each book. This is very difficult to do without giving things away, but I feel it is important since in the last two books I have been focused on “ageing up” the main character, who is a college freshman in the first book. At some point in her development, I won’t feel the need to make these connections, but not now. So, I put a lot of effort into making sure the subtle connections are quietly tucked away in the story.


    AUTHOR Bio and Links:


    B.T. Polcari is a graduate of Rutgers College of Rutgers University, an award-winning mystery author, and a proud father of two wonderful children. He’s a champion of rescue pups (Mauzzy is a rescue), craves watching football and basketball, and, of course, loves reading mysteries. Among his favorite authors are Richard Osman, D.P. Lyle, Frederick Forsyth, and Michael Connelly. He is also an unapologetic fantasy football addict. He lives with his wife in scenic Chattanooga, Tennessee.

    Connect with B.T. Polcari

    Website ~ Facebook ~ Instagram ~ X (Twitter) ~ Goodreads


 

Giveaway:


$20 Amazon/BN GC





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


9 comments:

Goddess Fish Promotions said...

Thank you so much for featuring LUCKY SECRETS today.

B.T. Polcari said...

A BIG thank you for featuring Lucky Secrets and giving me the opportunity to talk a little about the book.

Sherry said...

his looks like a very good book.

B.T. Polcari said...

Thank you for checking it out! The book has been getting great reviews, so... ;)

sohamolina said...

Thank you for this story.

B.T. Polcari said...

Thank you for dropping by and checking it out. It really is a fun story with a very cool mystery - but I can't tell you because, obvis.

Marcy Meyer said...

Sounds really interesting.

B.T. Polcari said...

Only one thing to do!! ;) Thanks for dropping by.

Michael Law said...

This should be a very interesting novel. Thanks for sharing.