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Sunday, November 30, 2025

Review: Parade of Peril (Jenna McGregor Cozy Mystery #4) by Willow Thorne

Parade of Peril

Jenna McGregor Cozy Mystery #4

by Willow Thorne

Published: November 30, 2025

Genre: Cozy Mystery, Mystery, Suspense, Cozy Culinary Mystery, Cozy Animal Mystery, Amateur Sleuth Mysteries

 

Blurb:


When Maple Grove’s beloved Halloween Festival takes a deadly turn, café owner Jenna McGregor finds herself once again serving up lattes—and unwanted mysteries.

What starts as frosting-fueled chaos at the annual Cake Walk quickly spirals into something darker when a hometown troublemaker turns up dead in a scarecrow costume. Before long, a shocking second body appears—this time right on Jenna’s own parade float. With gossip brewing faster than espresso and half the town tangled in secrets, Jenna, her glitter-loving best friend Lisa, and their unflappable neighbor Mildred must untangle a web of rivalries, revenge, and small-town drama.

Armed with caffeine, intuition, and an alarming knack for stumbling over corpses, Jenna races to unmask a killer lurking among Maple Grove’s pumpkins and parade floats—before the next victim’s name is written in caramel drizzle.

Cozy, clever, and full of heart, Parade of Peril blends humor, hometown charm, and a touch of Halloween mischief in a mystery that proves even the sweetest small town can hide a bitter truth.

Goodreads ~ Amazon


My Review:

From the first page to the last, I was captivated by the thrilling world of Parade of Peril, the fourth installment in the Jenna McGregor Cozy Mystery series. The title perfectly captures the story's essence, and I could vividly imagine the festivities, hearing the laughter of the children as if I were part of the parade.

However, the cozy atmosphere was shattered when Jenna discovered the town bully had been murdered, and a woman was found dead on Jenna's own float.

As Jenna and her friend Lisa delve into the investigation, they uncover a web of suspects, each with a potential motive for the killings. The plot thickens as the two amateur sleuths try to unravel the connection between the two victims and bring the culprit to justice.

Jenna's lovable golden retriever, Biscuit, is always up to mischief, much to the delight of Jenna's parents, especially her dad, who enjoys playing with him. The family even likes to bring Biscuit home to their farm so he can roam and explore.

The captivating mystery novel, Parade of Peril, had me hooked with its twists and turns as I raced to uncover who would commit such a heinous act. 

I highly recommend giving this thrilling story a read.

Check out all the books in the Jenna McGregor Cozy Mystery Series I’ve read.


Murder on The Menu

Goodreads

Amazon


Scones, Secrets & Sabotage #1

Goodreads

Amazon


Hotter than Coffee and a Killer Brew #2

Goodreads

Amazon


Harvest of Shadows and Dark Brews #3

Goodreads

Amazon


Parade of Peril #4

Goodreads

Amazon


Connect with Willow Thorne

Preorder Blitz + #Giveaway: The Book of Wine and Sorrow by Eric Avedissian @angryreporter @RABTBookTours




The Martyr's Vow series, Book 4


Urban Fantasy/Adventure

Date Published: 12-15-2025

Publisher: Shadow Spark Publishing



Newlyweds Armand and Vonnie are traveling to Armenia, where Armand hopes to reconnect with his estranged culture and investigate his family’s troubled history. But when a sadistic oligarch kidnaps them, their honeymoon spirals into a living nightmare.

Frightened and far from home, Armand and Vonnie race against time to locate a powerful artifact before their captor does, or they’ll join the dead in the underworld forever. The couple’s frantic quest takes them to lush mountains, desolate monasteries, and bustling markets, but they’re not traveling alone. A distant cousin with a penchant for stretching the truth, a mythological strongman who hurls boulders like skipping stones, and a stuffy ghost with a love for poetry join them on this macabre treasure hunt.

Armand must summon the courage of his ancestors and sacrifice himself for love, or the Scribe of Death will come for his beloved.

 

Bittersweet and brutal, The Book of Wine and Sorrow is the thrilling conclusion to The Martyr’s Vow series and a heart-aching testament to survival and wrestling with your demons.

 

 

About the Author

 


 Eric Avedissian is an adjunct professor and speculative fiction author. His published work includes the award-winning novel The Ocean Hugs Hard and the Martyr’s Vow series (Accursed Son, Mr. Penny-Farthing, Blood Family, and The Book of Wine & Sorrow). His short stories appear in various anthologies, including Across the Universe, Great Wars, and Rituals & Grimoires. Avedissian received a 2024 Fellowship in Prose from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and a ridiculous number of books. Find him online at www.ericavedissian.com if you dare.


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RABT Book Tours & PR

Review: Soul Siege (The Unfallen Series (Landon Walker Thrillers) #7) by Judah Lamb

Soul Siege

Landon Walker Thrillers

The Unfallen Series #7

by Judah Lamb

Published: November 30, 2025

Genre: Contemporary, Christian Fiction, Christian Suspense

 

Blurb:


Another one.

Months after his own mysterious awakening,

Landon hears whispers of a young man in Missouri.

A young man without any memory,

the same uncanny ability to heal.

Landon knows the signs all too well.

He has to help.

But what he uncovers in the quiet suburbs,

is far more sinister than a shared past.

It's a revelation that will shake the very foundations of his beliefs,

and test the limits of his faith like never before.

Soul Siege is the seventh book in The Unfallen: a fast-paced, action-packed Christian suspense series. Fans of novels by Frank Peretti, like This Present Darkness, or fans of Colleen Coble, Alana Terry, Creston Mapes, or Lynette Easonwill fall in love with Landon Walker. An on-the-edge-of-your-seat redemption story.

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub


My Review:


Soul Siege is an excellent addition to the Landon Walker Series. I know I’ve said this before, but I truly believe that each new book in the series gets better. Soul Siege is clear proof of that. Right now, it might even be my favorite. After finishing this book, I’m eager to see what the next one will bring.


From the very first page, Soul Siege grabbed my attention and kept it until the very end, and even now, I’m still hooked. I really enjoyed this book because it was both exciting and thought-provoking.


One day, a man named Caleb Mercer shows up unexpectedly in Blue Springs, just like Landon did before him. Caleb says he’s a healer. Landon isn’t sure, but he’s determined to find out the truth. He hears about a gathering and asks Sarah to help him investigate a man who says he can work miracles.


Landon seeks the truth and helps others find it. He holds Bible study sessions at the library where he works. He encourages his students to look for answers on their own by exploring their surroundings.


Soul Siege is a fast-paced read that will definitely keep you busy for a few hours. Pick up a copy today and follow Landon on his search for the truth.


Check out all the books in The Unfallen Series I’ve read.


The Unfallen #1

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Broken Wings #2

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Mortal Coil #3

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Lux in Tenebris #4

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Extra Nos #5

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Holly Fire #6

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Soul Siege #7

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Amazon

BookBub


Connect with Judah Lamb

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Review: The Case of the Silk Widow (Lady Theodora Ashcoombe Mystery #3) by Daisy Landish @daisy_landish

The Case of the Silk Widow

Lady Theodora Ashcoombe Mystery #3

by Daisy Landish

Published: November 29, 2025

Publisher: ‎Beaches and Trails Publishing

Genre: Short Read, Cozy Mystery, Historical Mystery, Victorian Cozy Mystery

 

Blurb:

Murder draped in silk. Secrets stitched into every seam.

When a gifted seamstress is found dead among bolts of fabric, strangled by her own measuring ribbons, society is quick to call it a tragic accident. But Lady Theodora Ashcombe suspects otherwise.

Summoned to Mayfair’s most fashionable dressmaking establishment, Theo and her clever cousin Bea soon discover hidden compartments, coded patterns woven into silks, and whispers of a smuggling network using fashion houses as cover.

As Inspector Hargrave and Jasper Welles clash over both the case and Theo’s safety, the trail of evidence leads straight to the world of espionage—where elegance masks treachery and betrayal can be cut from the same cloth.

With Pip’s keen nose for danger and Bea’s gift for cracking textile ciphers, Theo must unpick the lies before another innocent falls victim. But as society’s gaze sharpens on her newfound role as consulting detective, can she balance independence, duty, and the ever-growing tangle of her own heart?

✨ Fans of Deanna Raybourn, Anna Lee Huber, and Netflix’s Miss Scarlet will adore this witty and romantic Victorian cozy mystery.

Step into the gaslit world of The Lady Ashcombe Mysteries—where fashion hides conspiracies, respectability masks crime, and a determined sleuth proves that justice is always in style.

Join Daisy's newsletter at daisylandishromance.substack.com


Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub



My Review:


The Case of the Silk Widow was a fascinating and captivating tale that had me hooked from the start when Theo received a letter from Mrs. Ashworth requesting assistance in determining the true fate of her employer, Sarah Fletcher.

The third book in Daisy Landish's Lady Theodora Ashcoombe Mystery Series is titled The Case of the Silk Widow. With its numerous turns full of intrigue and mystery, The Case of the Silk Widow kept me glued to the page, wondering what had happened to Sarah. Did Sarah discover something that led to her demise?

I had a great time reading The Case of the Silk Widow, and I am eager to see what happens to Theo and Pip in the next installment of the Lady Theodora Ashcoombe Mystery Series. Which mystery will they encounter next?

Some of my best work I’ve seen in a long time is the world-building for the Lady Theodora Ashcoombe Mystery Series it always seems to leave me wanting more.

For another mystery to solve, I highly recommend picking up a copy of The Case of the Silk Widow right now!




Check out all the books in the Lady Theodora Ashcombe Mysteries I’ve read.


The Case of the Clockwork Canary #0

The Avid Reader


The Case of the Vanishing Heiress #1

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


The Case of the Murderous Botanist #2

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


The Case of the Silk Widow #3

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Connect with Daisy Landish

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub

Website ~ Facebook ~ Twitter/X ~ Instagram

 

Book Blitz: It Came Upon One Christmas Eve by S R Kerr @RABTBookTours

 


Holiday Short Stories




This is a selection of short stories perfect for the dark, cold nights of the Christmas season. Each warm tale is set on Christmas Eve and is best enjoyed from a comfortable armchair by the fireside, as the special ambience of Christmas fills the room and our hearts.

Within these six stories, you will discover a rich variety of seasonal magic. One tale takes you to a snowbound ancestral home, where family secrets are finally revealed beneath a blanket of white. Another follows a German refugee in the 1940s who, by joining the local junior football team, finds hope and a sense of belonging during the festive period.

You'll also encounter unexpected meetings at a lonely country crossroads, where characters' destinies become entwined on the most magical night of the year. The collection journeys further afield to the warmth and wonder of an Australian Christmas, where high summer temperatures provide a striking contrast to the traditional spirit of the season.

One story features two old neighbours returning to their hometown, doing their utmost to recreate the cherished Christmases of years gone by. Each narrative offers its own unique perspective on the joy, togetherness and wonder that define this special time of year.

This book is lovingly crafted for readers of all ages and backgrounds who delight in the spirit of Christmas. Let these stories bring warmth and festive cheer into your home.


About the Author


Steve's interest in writing came from the early 1970s when his somewhat unconventional English teacher encouraged his creativity. His creativity and imagination went back however to childhood when he would create stories and draw them in a series of pictures. He has always had a strong interest in History and music. As a teenager he composed many songs but never met with success his creative abilities were slowly channeled into writing books.His first Novel " A Cafe In Arcadia",about life in an insular Greek town, was published in 2014. He had already published " The Christmas Tree Of Tales " in 2013 under the name S R Kerr Under the same name,he also published another book of short stories for Christmas,"It Came Upon One Christmas Eve"..In 2021 he published another novel "The Winding Streets Of Kolonaki" set in Athens..His last book to be published was the non-fiction Eurovision ;A Plea For Respect(Continental Songs And British attitudes). He counts a love of music in his interests as well as travel and reading. He has travelled extensivly to places as diverse as Pakistan and Peru and hopes to visit Japan, Hong Kong and the USA in the near future. Growing up next to the beach on the River Tay in his home town was a a major influence on him as was living in a castle. He was always interested in anthropology and visiting other countries where he often immersed himself in their culture. Places he visited and lived in inspired much of his writing, as did his interest in psychology, people watching. He worked as a lecturer, tutor, journalist ,civil servant in London where at a point he shared a house with the group The Test Department. He is at the moment working on three other books 1)Short Stories For Christmas 3)The afternoons of Sanjay Bassinger. 4.)The Golden Road To Glyfada

 

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Friday, November 28, 2025

Audiobook Tour: The Pink Dress by Jane Little Botkin @jane_l_botkin @RABTBookTours



Memoir of a Reluctant Beauty Queen


Memoir

Date Published: September 30, 2025

Publisher: She Writes Press/Tantor

Narrator: Ann Marie Gideon

Run Time: 8 hours and 4 minutes



For fans of Little Miss Sunshine and Secrets of Miss America, this memoir from a national award-winning author reveals the reality of being the first Guyrex Girl in the 1970s. Beauty pageant stories have never been this raw, this real.

Growing up in West Texas, Jane Little Botkin didn't have designs on becoming a beauty queen. But not long after joining a pageant on a whim in college, she became the first protégé of El Paso's Richard Guy and Rex Holt, known as the "Kings of Beauty"—just as the 1970's counterculture movement began to take off.

A pink, rose-covered gown—a Guyrex creation—symbolizes the fairy tale life that young women in Jane's time imagined beauty queens had. Its near destruction exposes reality: the author's failed relationship with her mother, and her parents' failed relationship with one another. Weaving these narrative threads together is the Wild West notion that anything is possible, especially do-overs.

The Pink Dress awakens nostalgia for the 1960s and 1970s, the era's conflicts and growth pains. A common expectation that women went to college to get "MRS" degrees—to find a husband and become a stay-at-home wife and mother—often prevailed. How does one swim upstream against this notion among feminist voices that protest "If You Want Meat, Go to a Butcher!" at beauty pageants, two flamboyant showmen, and a developing awareness of self? Torn between women's traditional roles and what women could be, Guyrex Girls evolved, as did the author.

 


Interview with Jane Little Botkin

    How did publishing your first book change your process of writing?

    It was my second book that changed my process of writing. My editor asked me to read Hampton Sides’s On Desperate Ground, a book about the Korean War. The Korean War? I saw that Sides set up each chapter uniquely, not anything that a reader would notice. The narrative is braided, chapter by chapter. I learned to relax in my writing, loosely weave my narrative and tell a darn, good story in the process. No prescriptive structure, nor “pantsing” either, but a braid that has starts and stops, like rubber bands added to control the flow.

    What was an early experience where you learned that language had power?

    With a university press, an author submits a manuscript to an acquisitions editor. That editor sends the paper to at least two peer reviewers who have some knowledge of the subject. The reviewers report back to the press and the author with comments. With my first book at the University of Oklahoma Press (OUP), I received a review from an older academic author who claimed that I used purple prose in a section of the biography. I was indignant! I had an English degree, taught high school seniors for thirty years, and I surely knew not to use any ornate language. But darn it! He had been right. I learned that less is more when an author wants to make a powerful point. That less can be beautiful. An author should show the reader with the briefest of descriptions, both tangible and concrete, and never tell the reader what you want to impart.

    What one thing would you give up to become a better writer?

    I would not sit so long at my computer, writing. I know this sounds counterproductive, but I would attend more writing groups where I could learn from others. My experience as a writer, though successful, has been a series of lonely hard knocks—learning by failures and poor experiments. Isolation is not good for writers until they are ready to sit down and write!

    Tell us a little about yourself? Perhaps something not many people know?

    I am typically a scholarly western biographer, that is, a university press author. I love the journey, the research in places not typically considered. But before I became this type of writer, I was a Texas beauty queen—a blonde one! (No jokes please). Beauty was not the attribute I most protected, but a good brain and my education were. I love researching, the “a ha’s” aspect of making connections, and finally the actual writing.

    If you had to do something differently as a child or teenager to become a better writer as an adult, what would you do?

    I would learn to pay more attention to detail, the nuances of others’ speech and small gestures. I would have listened better to my elders about family stories. Now, when I write something related to family history, I regret not asking more questions and paying attention to my ancestors’ faces, reactions, etc. I have learned to be a better reader of people as I age, but as a youngster, I took everything on face value.

    What is the biggest surprise that you experienced after becoming a writer?

    My first book was a national award winner. This was so unexpected and so wonderful that I became hooked. Like Sally Field at the Academy Awards, I thought “They like me! They really like me!” My subsequent books have garnered successes as well.

    Could you tell us a bit about your most recent book and why it is a must-read?

    The Pink Dress, A Memoir of a Reluctant Beauty Queen, is a product of Covid when I could not venture out to research, after a challenge from other women authors in a San Antonio bar at a writing conference. I had been clowning at our table, imitating an East Texas beauty contestant’s thick accent when she discovered that her efforts to win Miss Congeniality at a Miss Texas-Miss America pageant had been sabotaged. My suitemates and I had eaten an enormous Texas-shaped cake that she hoped to share the next morning. I had the ladies in stitches when a literary agent said I should write the book. I had to think on this really hard. The Pink Dress is not a comic narrative, but a story about forgiveness and growth through America’s Counterculture Era. Yes, the beauty pageant business is the frame of the narrative—and there is humor—but also a dysfunctional American family, a jealous mother, a rebellion against social norms, and several self-inflicting wounds. Readers have shared with me that they cannot put the book down. They skip work, read until all hours of the night, etc. Some see themselves in my story, and it is cathartic.

    One reader wrote: “This book is no happy fairytale – it shows all the dreams and illusions girls used to have when they entered the world of pageants. It’s raw, it’s real. It’s beautifully written. It’s also an incredibly feminist read, it’s a tale of a strong woman who knew what she wanted and who persisted, despite it not being quite in alignment with that time’s ‘traditional values’ of what a woman was supposed to want to do with her life.”


About the Author

A NATIONAL AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR, JANE...

melds personal narratives of American families often with compelling stories of western women. Jane is a late bloomer as an author. After teaching for thirty years, she was honored by the Texas State Legislature by formal resolution for her work with local history and education in 2008. She edited and directed publishing fifteen volumes of Texas local history with her former students before she decided to write on her own. Jane's first book propelled her membership on the Western Writers of America board and later as its vice president. Jane continues to judge entries for the WWA's prestigious Spur Award; reviews new book releases; authors articles for various magazines; and speaks to groups in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas.

JANE'S FIRST TWO WORKS HAVE WON NUMEROUS AWARDS IN HISTORICAL BIOGRAPHY AND WOMEN'S STUDIES...

including two Spur Awards, two Caroline Bancroft History Prizes, the Texas Book Award, and the Barbara Sudler Award for the best book written on the West by a woman. Jane was also a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award, High Plains Book Award, two Women Writing the West’s Willa Literary Awards, Independent Book Award, Foreword Indies Book Awards, and Sarton Book Award.

Released in fall 2024, Jane’s third book—what she calls her Covid book—is The Pink Dress, A Memoir of a Reluctant Beauty Queen, a Foreword Indies Book Award winner in pop culture and Women Writing the West's Willa Literary Award finalist in creative nonfiction. The narrative brings far West Texas to life during the 1970s’ American Counterculture era.

Jane's newest book, The Breath of a Buffalo, A Biography of Mary Ann Goodnight, will be released from the University of Oklahoma Press tentatively in fall 2026.

Today Jane blissfully escapes into her literary world in the remote White Mountain Wilderness near Nogal, New Mexico, when she is not speaking at various events or preparing for her next nonfiction book.


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Book Tour + Reivew + #Giveaway: Carrie Ingalls: The Forgotten Sister by Clarissa Willis @willis_clarissa @RABTBookTours




Non-fiction Chapter Book Juvenile Fiction

Date Published: 10-30-2025

Publisher: Solander Press



While her sister Laura chronicles their life on the frontier, Carrie Ingalls forges her own path. This is the story of the “forgotten” sister, a frail child who grows into a resilient woman of the American West. From the hardships of pioneer life, Carrie emerges as an independent journalist, newspaper editor, and landowner, quietly shaping the futures of fellow homesteaders and proving that strength comes in many forms.



My Review:

I love every part of the Ingalls family. I have read the Little House on the Prairie series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. I have also watched each episode of Little House on the Prairie many times. In fact, I am currently re-watching it again. 

I was excited to find a book about Carrie Ingalls, The Forgotten Sister, by Clarissa Willis. I looked forward to reading it, and I was very happy with it; I only wish it had been a little longer. I really enjoyed learning more about Carrie and her path into adulthood. Carrie became a self-reliant journalist, newspaper editor, and landowner. 

When I started reading about Carrie’s life, I was determined not to let anything distract me, and I succeeded. I finished it in one sitting, but honestly, that was easy because it’s a short story about the Ingalls family, full of details about Carrie’s experiences, which I really enjoyed. 

I highly recommend Carrie Ingalls: The Forgotten Sister to all fans of Little House on the Prairie. Make sure to get your copy of Carrie Ingalls: The Forgotten Sister today!



About the Author

 


 Award-winning author Clarissa Willis writes children's books. She has authored four picture books and one chapter book. Bloomers on Pike’s Peak, the story of Julia Archibald Holmes, received a Will Rogers Medallion Award and was a finalist for the Women Writing the West 2025 WILLA Literary Award in Children's Picture Books. Her book Fast as the Wind: The Story of Johnny Fry Pony Express Rider won a Will Rogers Medallion in 2023. The Three Little Pigs and the Not So Big Bad Wolf, released in early 2025. It tells a familiar story with a new twist. She believes childhood is a journey and strives to make it joyful through her books and public speaking.

Clarissa loves traveling and has a special connection to the American West. She finds inspiration in the red rocks of Sedona, Arizona, and the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. In fact, her next book, Not from Around Here, is set in Sedona and chronicles an unusual friendship between a young cowboy and his friend from far away.


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