Labels

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Teaser + #Giveaway: The Brothers Brown, Part 2 by R. G. Stanford @RABTBookTours




for the sake of family


Family Saga, Historical Fiction, Native American

Date Published: 12-01-2025


Based on a true story.

Set in the late 1890’s, The Brothers Brown - a family saga, Part 2 - For the Sake of Family is a sweeping frontier saga of love, guilt, and redemption - an unflinching portrait of a man’s descent into madness amid the unforgiving wilds of Indian Territory.

When Matt Brown boards a northbound train, he carries more than a pistol. He carries the weight of his brother’s death, a marriage strained to its breaking point, and a conscience at war with itself. A doctor’s brown vial of medicine offers fleeting relief but soon draws him into a darker world where pain and guilt blur into something far more dangerous.

His wife, Milla, proud and rooted in her Choctaw heritage, stands as both his anchor and his judge as the world around them shifts under the weight of change and loss.

From Fort Smith, Arkansas, to the wooded banks of Bokchito Creek, two families are bound by tragedy and love, vengeance and mercy. A celebration meant to heal ignites old resentments. A family gathering ends in bloodshed. And a winter dance turns deadly, forcing each to face the cost of survival, forgiveness, and the ties that bind them.

Steeped in the spirit of the Choctaw Nation and the rough mercy of the Old West, For the Sake of Family is a haunting tale of madness, murder, and the fragile hope that redemption can be found on the far side of ruin.



Excerpt


Closest to the flames was an old man with long, stringy hair. He wore a blue cotton pullover shirt, collarless and loose, with colorful ribbons sewn to the front and sleeves. The ribbons swayed with his motions as he chanted and stepped in place to the timing of the chant. He held two sticks about a foot and a half long with strands of beads tied to the ends and struck them together in time with the chant.

 With each step, the old man’s ankle rattles shook. The dried tails of rattlesnakes fastened to leather strips grew louder and faster as his steps grew heavier. Many of the men had rattles tied to their ankles as well, while the women’s moccasins tingled with strands of beads hanging from the fringe. 

 Matt watched in awe as the people danced. 

“Way-yak-un-way-yak-a,” the leader sang, striking the sticks in measured rhythm, one-and-a, two-and-a, one-and-a, two-and-a. On the twelfth beat, each pair of dancers turned to one another, their right foot kicked dirt inward as they voiced a loud, “woah.” 

Spellbound, Matt watched, mouthing the chant under his breath along with the dancers. Then his breath caught. Milla stepped into the firelight, dancing beside a woman he had never seen before. 

 He gasped aloud, never having seen his wife like this, dressed in full traditional attire, her body moving gracefully in the fire’s glow. For an instant, she seemed a stranger, and yet more truly herself than he had ever known. 

 She turned her head, eyes lifting toward the trees. Matt stumbled backward, ducking for cover. He had to get out of there. 

 He spun around and nearly collided with John. 

“Shhh.” John pressed a finger to his lips and grabbed Matt’s arm, guiding him quietly away from the gathering. 


 

About the Author


Raised on the beaches of South Texas, R.G. Stanford has always been drawn to stories that transcend time. That passion was ignited in 1976 with the discovery of Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire, and deepened with The Feast of All Saints just a few years later. Though historical fiction wasn’t an immediate calling, a personal journey into genealogy changed everything.

With no close relatives nearby, R.G. Stanford turned to online resources in search of extended family. That search became a twenty-year journey through genealogy websites, Federal Census records, the National Archives, and old newspapers. Along the way, R.G. Stanford uncovered incredible stories about her family and the people who once lived in the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory.

Compelled to record the truth of her family in the lore, sprinkled with imagination, R.G. Stanford is a history lover, a research buff, and a passionate genealogy enthusiast. She is also a mother, a grandmother, and a teller of stories, now living near Orlando.


Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Instagram


Purchase Link

Amazon Author Page



RABT Book Tours & PR

Teaser: Player by Jamie Targaet @RABTBookTours @changelingpress




Motorcycle Club Romance, Suspense, Christmas Romance

Date Published: December 12, 2025




I’ve played every game there is. But this time, it’s for keeps.

 

Heather -- Brick promised me a good paying job. I just didn’t know he was working for a cartel. When their money went missing, I was hunted along with him, used and finally left with the Hounds of Hell MC in Mercy to answer for his crimes. If not for Player, I would have wound up dead or worse. He claimed me as his old lady to keep me from being turned over to the cartel. He shielded me, fought for me. And somehow, I started to believe I mattered again. The cartel is still gunning for me, but Player’s not backing down. He says I’m his, and I want to be. If we can survive this.

Player -- I’m called Player for a reason. My life’s been a string of one-night stands and bad decisions. Until Heather. She’s scared and in over her head, but there’s something about her I can’t shake. When Brick left her in Mercy, running from the cartel he stole from, I made a choice. I don’t care what she’s done or what they think she knows. Heather is under my protection now. And if anyone wants her, they’ll have to go through me -- and every single brother I’ve got.

 

Warning: Player contains adult language, explicit sex, violence, threats of torture, stalking, and references to past emotional abuse. It also features a dirty-talking alpha biker who will cross every line to protect the woman he claims as his own.



EXCERPT

 

Player

The Hounds of Hell clubhouse sat at the far end of Main Street, past the reach of the twinkling lights and holiday carolers who’d turned Mercy’s annual tree lighting into a full-blown event last night. Normally, the Hounds didn’t bother with Christmas decorations because they were too much trouble, too much cheer. But this year was different.

Deva, Razor’s old lady, made it clear even if the club wasn’t going to feel like home, the place could at least look the part for the holidays. No one was going to tell the president’s lady no. So now mismatched strands of blinking lights clung to the porch like a half-hearted apology, and the scent of pine fought to cut through layers of leather, smoke, and liquor. Inside, the mood was anything but festive.

Since Player had lost a bet, one he still claimed was rigged, he’d earned the honor of decorating the Christmas tree Deva had dropped off at the clubhouse the night before. The tree was still boxed in Razor’s office, fake pine branches and all, along with a tub of lights, ornaments, and exactly one glitter-covered star Snow refused to touch.

Player had his hand on the doorknob, figuring he’d grab the box and let Razor know he was making good on his punishment. But then he paused, hearing Razor and Snow talking in low and clipped voices, the kind of conversation you didn’t interrupt unless invited. Whatever was going down in there, it wasn’t about garland or tinsel.

He heard the rumble of a bike pulling in out front. Curiosity made him let go of the doorknob and head for the front of the clubhouse to see who’d come calling.

The bike now parked out front belonged to Brick, a patch from the Mississippi chapter in Biloxi. From what he remembered, the guy was all swagger and no spine. Player didn’t like him, but Brick had never been dumb enough to test anyone here directly. He’d visited Mercy a couple of times in the past, but he always had the good sense to fly under the radar.

A second rider dismounted, swinging one long leg over the back of the bike. A woman. No, not just a woman. A vision.

Her dark jeans clung to her like old sin, her boots dusted with grit from the road. A leather jack hung too heavy on her slender frame. When she pulled off the helmet, she shook loose long, glossy dark spirals of hair. She turned her head enough for Player to catch a flash of wide green eyes and a full mouth. A woman who looked like that should be all sass and fire, but there was a wariness about her. Her gaze moved over the front of the clubhouse as though being there filled her with dread. She expected trouble.

Was she with Brick? How had he gotten a woman who looked that good? Brick looked like he’d crawled out from under a busted oil pan and hadn’t changed his shirt since. He had a thick neck, and a gut stretching the bottom of his cut. He wore his hair slicked back, as if he thought he still had a full head of it. The man’s nose was twisted from too many fights he probably hadn’t won, and a mouth that curved like he was about to lie.

Brick turned and spoke to her. She nodded and followed him. There was a subtle shift in her posture. Her shoulders were tight. She was bracing for a fight.

Player wasn’t buying those two as a couple. She didn’t belonged on the back of Brick’s bike or in his bed unless money was involved. Staying in the shadows near the main entrance, he folded his arms and watched as Brick swaggered toward the clubhouse.

The main door opened, and Brick walked in with the woman, just in time to see Razor and Snow walk back to the front of the house.

“Brick,” Razor said, voice flat. “Didn’t expect to see you.”

Brick gave Razor a lazy grin. “I’m calling in that favor, brother. Need a place to crash for a while. Lay low.”

Favor, huh? Player stepped toward the front door. Razor didn’t do favors. Anyone who knew the man knew that. But Player had a pretty good idea what favor Brick was talking about.

Back when Sadie had first showed up in Mercy, before becoming Axel’s old lady, they’d found a tracker on her car, put there by the abusive Mafia boyfriend she’d been running from. To throw him off, Ryder, Axel’s twin, had driven the vehicle all the way to Mississippi. The Biloxi Hounds had been the ones to help him make the tracker disappear without a trace.

If that was the “favor” Brick meant, it wasn’t much of one. Ryder wouldn’t have needed a lot of help to lose the tracker. If Brick was desperate enough to stretch the truth about something like that, there was a lot more to why he’d shown up here with a woman on the back of his bike.

Razor’s stare was ice cold. Apparently their president didn’t like Brick any more than Player did. Player leaned against the wall, letting his presence be known. Brick’s gaze moved toward him and back. Player smiled.

Razor looked Brick over like he was already sorting out the lie. “Funny,” he said. “I don’t remember owing you shit.”

Brick tipped his chin up. “You don’t, huh? What about when Ryder came down to Mississippi with that tracker you needed gone? Who do you think helped him ditch it in the bayou, so no one found it?”

Razor’s gaze didn’t so much as flicker. “I remember Biloxi helping him out. Didn’t know that meant you specifically.”

Brick gave a shrug meant to look casual. “I was there. Helped ditch the thing myself. Figured that kind of help might buy me a place to breathe for a few days.”

“You think you’re in the right place for that?” Razor’s voice was low, dangerous.

Snow shifted beside him, arms crossed. Player watched the way Brick’s gaze bounced between them, like he couldn’t decide who’d swing first.

“You want a roof? I want answers,” Razor went on. “Why you’re here. What kind of heat’s chasing you.” Razor’s hazel-eyed gaze shifted to the woman standing behind him. “And her? She yours?”

Brick gave a one-shoulder shrug. “Yeah. She rides with me.”

“Didn’t ask if she rode in with you. I asked if she’s yours.

“Heather’s with me,” Brick said, a little more force in his voice now. “You don’t need to worry about her.”

“If she’s under this roof, she’s my business,” Razor told him. “You want her here, then I need to know she’s not a problem.”

Brick chuckled without humor. “She won’t be. She knows how to stay quiet.”

Snow’s jaw muscle moved. Their VP didn’t like men who talked about women as if they were property. Not in his clubhouse. Not since he met his little blonde baker, Emily.

Snow remained silent, his gaze locked on Brick like he was already considering the consequences of dragging the fucker out by his dirty collar. Player felt the same way, and not only because Brick was an asshole. They’d all seen worse. What bothered him was the way the young woman with him stood behind him. She was keeping quiet, and she didn’t look down or even move. Seemed like she didn’t want to draw attention. Was she afraid of something? The only thing he knew for sure about her was she didn’t belong with a man like Brick. Player couldn’t decide if that made her more interesting or more dangerous.


About the Author

Jamie Targaet is the author of the Hounds of Hell MC. She's anxious to introduce you to this club of gorgeous, dominant men and the lucky women who surrender to them. The ride is going to get wild at times, not going to lie. But there's thrilling action, scorching hot sex scenes, and all the feels.

Jamie writes erotic romance for Changeling Press, a little fanfiction on the side, and she's an aspiring horror writer in another life. She enjoys time with her family (including the fur babies). She likes good horror movies and shows, emo metal and classic rock, and time spent in other worlds writing and reading. She loves hearing from readers and is looking forward to hearing from you.


Author on Amazon

Author’s Website


Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress



RABT Book Tours & PR

Review: Wine and Whispers (Sophie Brooks Mysteries #1) by Daisy Landish @daisy_landish

Wine and Whispers

Sophie Brooks Mysteries #1

by Daisy Landish

Published: January 11, 2025

Publisher: Beaches and Trails Publishing

Genre: Cozy Mysteries, Crime Fiction, Mysteries, Culinary Mystery, Fiction, Mysteries, Woman Sleuth

 

Blurb:

She came to Sonoma for a fresh start. She found a mystery that could cost her life.

After discovering her husband's betrayal, food blogger Sophie Brooks leaves behind her successful farm-to-table restaurant in Oregon and heads to Sonoma for a fresh start. With her camera, cooking skills, and loyal online following, she's ready to rebuild her life as a digital nomad—documenting the culinary world's hidden gems one delicious dish at a time.

When Sophie arrives at Cartwright Vineyard, she's captivated by the scenic beauty and sustainable practices. But beneath the picturesque rows of grapevines, secrets are fermenting. After vineyard owner James Cartwright is found dead in what appears to be a tragic accident, Sophie's instincts tell her something's not right.

As Sophie digs deeper, she uncovers a web of deception, blackmail, and old rivalries. The powerful vineyard owner next door seems determined to acquire Cartwright's land by any means necessary. When threatening notes appear at Sophie's door and inventory starts mysteriously disappearing, she realizes she's getting too close to the truth.

With the help of James's niece Claire and charming local restaurant owner Nate, Sophie must solve the mystery before she becomes the next victim. But in a town where everyone has something to hide, distinguishing friends from enemies might be as challenging as perfecting the perfect wine pairing.

Wine & Whispers is the first book in the Sophie Brooks Mysteries series, perfect for fans of culinary cozies and armchair travel. If you love delicious food descriptions, picturesque settings, and mysteries with a dash of romance, you'll devour this farm-to-table cozy mystery.

Pour yourself a glass of wine and escape to Sonoma today

Join my newsletter for updates, sales and promotions at daisylandishromance(.)com.

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub


My Review:

Wine and Whispers is the first book in the Sophie Brooks Mysteries series by Daisy Landish. This novel transports readers to the picturesque wine region of Sonoma, California, specifically the Cartwright Vineyard, where hidden truths are surfacing amidst the vines.

Following the revelation of her husband's betrayal, Sophie opts to take her culinary blog on the road, with her initial destination being Cartwright Vineyard, where she forges a friendship with Claire Cartwright. However, the vineyard is facing sabotage in numerous ways.

It's no secret that vineyard proprietor Angela Mason covets Cartwright Vineyard for herself and may resort to any means necessary to claim Claire’s uncle’s estate.

When Sophie discovers threatening notes at her doorstep and notices that someone is pilfering inventory from the Cartwright vineyard, she realizes she is inching closer to uncovering the truth behind the events that led to Claire’s Uncle James's downfall; she might find herself in a perilous position as well.

Wine and Whispers had me captivated as I hurried through the pages to uncover the identity of the saboteur targeting the winery. With a town brimming with secrets, the list of suspects is extensive. The intrigue and tension had me on the brink of my seat, eagerly anticipating the unfolding of events.

I am excited to see what adventures await Sophie in Italy in the subsequent book, Olives and Obsessions, part of the Sophie Brooks Mysteries series.

I wholeheartedly recommend picking up a copy of Wine and Whispers today and assisting Sophie in unraveling the mysteries at the heart of wine country!


Check out all the books in the Sophie Brooks Mysteries Series I’ve read.


Feasts and Farewells #0.5

Goodreads

BookBub


Wine and Whispers #1

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Connect with Daisy Landish

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub

Website ~ Facebook ~ Twitter/X ~ Instagram

Book Tour + #Giveaway: Highlander's Holly & Ivy by Margaret Izard @GoddessFish



This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Margaret Izard will be awarding a Highlander's Holly & Ivy swag box* ($100 value) to a randomly drawn winner *US Only*. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

*Inside the box: Kissletoe Holiday Crystal Ornament, signed copy of book, Highlander’s Holly & Ivy book bag, Insulated wine glass with Highlander’s Holly & Ivy logo, Dublin shot glass with etched Highlander’s Holly & Ivy logo, Highlander’s Holly & Ivy bookmark, Highlander’s Holly & Ivy recipe card, Wild Rose Press (publisher) 2026 calendar delivered in custom printed Margaret Izard Author Book Swag Box.



Blurb:

A Christmas Companion book to the Stones of Iona Series.

In a land torn by politics and heritage, Alex MacDougall—Scotland’s Lord Justice Clerk—balances loyalty to the British crown and his secret role in preserving outlawed Scottish traditions. When tasked with retrieving a mystical stone tied to Scotland’s destiny, he crosses paths with Lady Iris Erskine, an Englishwoman captivated by Scottish culture. Disguised as Ivy, Iris masquerades as a highland lassie to be close to the dashing highlander.

Love blossoms between Alex and Ivy as tensions simmer between the English and Scots. While Iris vexes over revealing the truth to her handsome Scot, Alex grapples with his family’s secret duty to protect magic Fae stones. With his beloved targeted and hidden truths emerging, the world he once knew dissolves before his eyes.

Can two hearts bound by fate be enough to stave off an evil Fae intent on destroying the MacDougall Clan, or will Alex lose all he loves?

 

Purchase Highlander's Holly & Ivy Here

 

Read an Excerpt


Iris strode down the street beside her faithful maid, Laurel. “Miss, yer Gaelic is awful, and that accent.”

Iris clipped her reply. “What of my accent?”

Laurel groaned. “It’s English, very English. Ye’ll stand out like a sair thumb among all the Gaels.”

She wrapped the plaid, no arisaid tighter around her. “Sair, you mean sore?” She kept walking. “I am dressed like you. I can walk like you. I’ve un-styled my hair.”

Laurel barked a laugh. “Ye walk like royalty, and no matter how much Gaelic ye learn, ye still sound like the Queen of England.”

Iris stopped and turned to her maid. “I want to meet your people. Not because of the novelty.” Laurel rolled her eyes, making Iris smile. “Well, aye, the novelty, but I want to learn the culture, about yer people.”

Laurel’s eyes crinkled. “Ye really want this lass?” Iris nodded. Laurel took her arm in hers as they continued at a slower pace. “Then we need a plan, a canny one at that.” She breathed. “Ye’ll be my cousin. Ye wear the Comyn plaid, so ye’ll be a Comyn. Stay beside me, and for all that is holy, don’t speak. We’ll say ye have a throat injury, so ye can’t talk.”

Iris stopped. “But what if I have a question or something to say?”

Laurel pulled her along the lane. “Ye don’t have anything to say, and questions are for later. Just watch and listen. No talking.” They came up to the bridge—many had already gathered as the slaughterhouse's smell blew their way. Iris held her wrap to her nose, wondering how they tolerated the stink.

A woman approached and took Laurel into a hug. “So glad I am to see ye today.” Laurel hugged her back. “Mabina, glad I am to be here.” She waved to Iris. “My cousin, who is mmmm…”

Iris’ eyes went wide. She didn’t want to use her real name and be found out before it was all over. She panicked and glanced around. The pub beside the bridge already had decorations for the holiday season, and holly and ivy graced the doorway.

She pointed to the ivy, and Laurel grinned. “Ivy. Ivy Comyn.” She leaned over, whispering to Mabina, “She doesn’t talk, an old injury from a redcoat who tried to have his way with her. Her throat don’t work no more.”

The woman tsked, “Sorry I am to hear it, Ivy.” Iris nodded as the plaid fell away from her head.

Mabina smiled. “Ye are a pretty thing, though.”


Interview with Margaret Izard

    What is your favorite part of the book?

    What I loved writing most was giving Alex and Iris a world that wasn’t just full of candlelight and tartan—but steeped in culture-war, shifting loyalties, and magical stakes. Their love must navigate not only desire and destiny, but the weight of history and the burden of clan vs. crown. That dual struggle—love against change—is where everything felt electric for me.

    So, the romance blossoms naturally, but the landscape isn’t peaceful. Politics, pride, and myth swirl together, and the reader senses both the pull of hope and the danger of what the lovers must abandon or fight for. That interplay—where holding on means risking everything and surrendering means choosing a new future—is what I think makes the book truly special.

    Does your book have a lesson? Moral?

    Yes—Highlander’s Holly & Ivy carries a quiet but powerful lesson. At its heart, the book is about choosing which traditions define us and which ones we outgrow.

    Alex and Iris come from opposite worlds—Scottish and English, Highland and Lowland, duty and independence—yet they’re forced to navigate a landscape shaped by suspicion, divided loyalties, and the heartbreak left after Culloden.

    The moral woven through their love story is this: love survives when people are brave enough to challenge the expectations they were raised with.

    You can honor your heritage without being imprisoned by it. You can build a future that isn’t dictated by politics, fear, or the past. And sometimes the traditions worth keeping aren’t the ones you’re born into—they’re the ones you choose together.

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

    My characters are a blend of historical truth and imagination. Alex MacDougall comes from a long line of real historical figures—his ancestors, Mary Comyn and Roderick MacDougall, are rooted in documented Scottish clans and events. Their legacy shaped who Alex needed to be: a man standing at the crossroads of duty, identity, and a changing Scotland.

    But the real spark for Highlander’s Holly & Ivy came from a tiny wedding announcement I found buried in an old Scottish newspaper—just a single line about a Highland solicitor marrying an “English rose.” That little clipping told me everything I needed to know about the tension and tenderness of a cross-cultural marriage in the years after Culloden. It inspired the dynamic between Alex and Iris, and what their relationship would have meant at that time in history—hope, unity, and the quiet courage of loving across a divide.

    Iris herself is entirely fictional. I created her to embody the “English rose” mentioned in that announcement, shaped to contrast and complement Alex’s world. She isn’t based on a real woman, but she represents what such a woman might have faced stepping into the Highlands after the rebellion.

    So, while the foundation is historical, the heart of the story—the love, the conflict, the courage—comes from imagination.

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

    Of all the characters I’ve created, the Fae are my absolute favorites. They’re my greatest creative outlet—playful, mischievous, breathtakingly magical, and sometimes delightfully devilish. Writing them gives me complete freedom. I can throw them into impossible odds, twist their destinies, test their loyalties, and they always rise in the most astounding ways.

    The good Fae are full of wonder and heart; the dark ones are wicked in all the ways a writer secretly loves. They let me explore extremes—beauty, danger, temptation, power—while still anchoring everything in emotion and story.

    No matter which book I’m writing, the Fae are the characters who surprise me the most. They breathe life into the world, sharpen every conflict, and make the magic feel inevitable. They’re not just part of my stories—they’re the heartbeat of my entire romantasy universe.

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

    The character from Highlander’s Holly & Ivy I’m least likely to get along with is Lieutenant Patrick Tytler of the Queen’s army and the fifty-sixth brigade. He’s a man who constantly oversteps his authority, fueled by personal vengeance against the Scottish rather than any sense of justice or duty. He represents the worst kind of power—petty, vindictive, and eager to use his position to settle old grudges.

    That said… I thoroughly enjoyed writing his earned ending. There’s a special kind of satisfaction in giving a character like him exactly what he deserves.

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

    Alex MacDougall’s response:

    “She gave me a harder road than I would have chosen, but she understood me—my duty, my grief, my loyalty to my clan and my country. She didn’t make anything easy, yet she gave me the one thing I never expected after Culloden: a future worth fighting for. I might grumble about the trials she threw at me, but I’d thank her for Iris every single time.”

    Iris Erskine’s response:

    “She saw my heart before I ever stepped onto the page. She let me be curious, stubborn, and brave in a world where I was never meant to belong. She gave me a place in the Highlands—and a man who challenged every expectation I had of love. If I could say one thing to her, it would be thank you… for letting an English rose take root in Scottish soil.”

    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 definitely write every book so it can stand on its own—you can pick up any title and enjoy the romance, the magic, and the adventure without reading the others first. But behind the scenes, I’m absolutely building a much larger interconnected world. I call it my Stones of Iona megaverse.

    All the books—whether they’re set in the historical Highlands, the modern world, or the Fae realms—tie into the same mythology, the same ancient magic, and the same shifting balance between the Good Fae, the Tuatha Dé Dannan, and the evil Fae, the Formoire. Characters reappear across timelines, legacies echo through generations, and choices made in one book ripple into another.

    Readers who follow the whole megaverse get to see how everything weaves together: the Stones, the clans, the dragons, the curses; even the tiny details hidden in earlier books that bloom into major revelations later.

    So yes—each book stands alone, but they also connect into a sweeping, layered tapestry. The Stones of Iona world is always expanding, and I love giving readers that sense of discovery as the pieces click together across the entire megaverse.


About the Author:



Margaret Izard is an award-winning author of historical fantasy and paranormal romance novels. Her latest awards are 2024 Reader’s Favorite Honorable Mention for Stone of Love and 2024 Spring BookFest Silver Award for the same title. She spent her early years through college to adulthood dedicated to dance, theater, and performing. Over the years, she developed a love for great storytelling in different mediums. She does not waste a good story, be it movement, the spoken, or the written word. She discovered historical romance novels in middle school, which combined her desire for romance, drama, and fantasy. She writes exciting plot lines, steamy love scenes and always falls for a strong male with a soft heart. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband and adult triplets.

Connect with Margaret Izard




Giveaway:



$25 Amazon/BN GC





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