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Monday, December 29, 2025

Book Tour + #Giveaway: Echoes of Fortune: Shadows Over Cozumel by David R Leng @RABTBookTours



Mystery, Thriller

Date Published: November 11, 2025

 


What would you risk to uncover a secret buried for over 150 years?

From bestselling and multi–award-winning author David R. Leng comes the next pulse-pounding installment in the Echoes of Fortune series.

His debut, Echoes of Fortune: The Search for Braddock’s Lost Gold, captivated readers and earned a 4.5-star rating on Goodreads. Now the adventure continues with a brand-new novella that plunges deeper into history’s deadliest secrets.

When historian Jack Sullivan, Smithsonian curator Emma Wilson, and fellow former Navy SEAL Steve Johnson set out for a Thanksgiving dive off Cozumel, they expect nothing more than warm waters and forgotten wrecks. Instead, they uncover a Confederate ghost ship that vanished in 1865—along with a sealed brass tube containing secrets powerful enough to change history.

But they’re not alone. Shadowy mercenaries and a black-hulled yacht stalk their every move, determined to silence them before the truth surfaces. From dazzling reefs to the back alleys of Veracruz, Jack and his team are forced into a deadly game where history isn’t past—it’s a weapon.

Some secrets don’t want to be found. And some will kill to stay buried.

Perfect for fans of Steve Berry, Clive Cussler, Dan Brown, and James Rollins, Shadows Over Cozumel delivers nonstop action, historical intrigue, and a mystery that spans centuries.



About the Author

 

 David R. Leng, known for his expertise in risk management and insurance, now ventures into the world of fiction with his latest historical thriller, Echoes of Fortune. With a distinguished career spanning over 30 years, David is the author of International #1 Best Sellers including "Insured to Fail" and "The 10 Laws of Insurance Attraction," and has saved clients over $42 million in premiums and overcharges. As Executive Vice President and Partner of the Duncan Financial Group, David is celebrated for his innovative Risk Profile Improvement Process and has earned numerous accolades, including Advisor of the Year by the Institute of WorkComp Professionals. An avid contributor to industry publications, David’s passion extends beyond his professional achievements to include boating, skiing, woodworking, and supporting his local high school’s musical productions. His foray into historical thrillers reflects his deep storytelling skills and a lifelong commitment to engaging and captivating audiences.


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Review: Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls (A Maggie Wright Cozy Mystery #7) by Tessa Aura

Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls

A Maggie Wright Cozy Mystery #7

by Tessa Aura

Published: December 29, 2025

Genre: Mystery, Suspense, Cozy Mystery

 

Blurb:


The Winter Gala was meant to honor victims— not add another to the list.

Renee Morrow, a budding journalist, dies just as she’s about to hand me a warning—and her exposé dies with her.

Biscuit, my loyal hound, and I chase shattered pearls, hidden microchips, and an old locket that won’t stop burning against my skin. But the truth tangled in this case feels too close to my own splintered past.

Suspects are everywhere: a curator guarding the museum’s reputation, a historian obsessed with my former identity, a janitor cleaning up the wrong mess, and an accountant whose ledgers bleed red.

And Harper—my partner, my undoing—hides a lie that could break me.

Blackmail. Cover-ups. Legacies polished white as pearl and red as blood.

As the snow falls and the killer circles closer, the past catches fire— and this time, I might not outrun the flames.

Goodreads ~ Amazon


My Review:

I am thoroughly captivated by the Maggie Wright Cozy Mystery series by Tessa Aura, and the seventh installment, Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls, is a fantastic addition to the collection. It kept me engrossed as Maggie tried to piece together the past with the present.

Maggie’s past has returned to trouble her more than ever following the death of a woman named Renee Morrow, a journalist who claimed to possess information she intended to publish. However, it seems someone was determined to prevent that information from coming to light. What was it about Renee's findings that was so crucial? And was it linked to Maggie in any way? If so, how?

I found myself on the edge of my seat as I awaited Maggie and Biscuit's progress in cracking the case. Maggie’s investigation uncovered numerous suspects with potential motives, but who was truly responsible for Renee’s fate?

The intrigue and tension propelled me forward to the conclusion as I attempted to assist Maggie and Biscuit in uncovering the hidden secrets. Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls was packed with unexpected twists and turns that caught me by surprise.

The vivid descriptions were beautifully crafted, making it effortless for me to visualize the story unfolding in my mind, as if I were right there, experiencing everything as one of the characters. I eagerly look forward to diving into the next book in the Maggie Wright Cozy Mystery series to discover what awaits Maggie and Biscuit.

I wholeheartedly recommend that all fans of mystery pick up a copy of Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls immediately!


Check out all the books in the Maggie Wright Cozy Mystery series I’ve read.


Fatal Check-In #1

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Secrets in the Pines #2

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Murder and Memories #3

Goodreads

Amazon

BookBub


Buried Truths #4

Goodreads

Amazon


Footnotes of a Felony #5

Goodreads

Amazon


Ledger of Lies #6

Goodreads

Amazon


Lockets, Lies and Deadly Pearls #7

Goodreads

Amazon


Connect with Tessa Aura

Goodreads ~ Amazon ~ BookBub

 

Teaser: Spirit Bear Conspiracy by Anne Kane @AnneKane @RABTBookTours @changelingpress



Brotherhood of the Wild 1

A Riptide MC Romance


MC Romance

Date Published: January 2, 2026

Publisher: Changeling Press



My mission: Save my woman, guard the secret of the rare spirit bear, and take down the poachers.

Ryland -- I was tailing a gang of poachers, certain they’d lead me straight to their kingpin, when a stray arrow from a crossbow slammed into me. Pain lanced through me and everything faded to black. In that blur of unconsciousness, I could have sworn a pure white bear stood over me, calm as can be. When I opened my eyes again, a woman -- curvy and impossibly beautiful -- was watching me with the cutest look of mixed concern and distrust on her face.

Kimberly -- I thought I was alone on a tiny island off the coast of British Columbia until an arrow from a crossbow barely missed skewering me. With my dog Diego at my heels, I ran to hide in a maze of caves, my heart pounding. Crouched down in the dark, I listened in terror as voices and footsteps floated to me from outside. I prayed the shooters wouldn’t find the spirit bear that inhabited this place. When I finally crept back out into the daylight, I found I wasn’t the only target -- but the unconscious man lying in a pool of his own blood wasn’t talking. Victim or one of them?


Excerpt
Copyright ©2026 Anne Kane

Ryland

A sudden squawk of alarm sounded directly in front of me. The quiet morning exploded into sound as a covey of startled pheasants took flight.

Damn! I was hiding in the thick brush off the side of the path, out of sight of my quarry, but right behind the fucking birds. One of the poachers turned, aiming a crossbow straight at the panicked birds. Straight at me.

Double damn.

I ducked low to the ground, hoping to avoid detection. My handgun was nestled in its shoulder holster, and a couple of my favorite throwing knives were strapped to my thighs but there were six poachers and one of me. Not sure why they were using crossbows instead of firearms. Maybe they wanted to avoid making any noise that might bring attention to their presence, but I couldn’t imagine who they thought might hear them on this deserted piece of dirt off the coast of British Columbia.

Even without guns, though, the odds were against me. I braced myself as the arrow arced its way toward me.

Moving to avoid the projectile wasn’t an option. I couldn’t afford to let the poachers detect my presence. My mission depended on them not knowing they’d been made.

The shooter had already turned back to catch up with the rest of the group when the sharp tip of the projectile sliced through the meaty outer part of my upper arm. I gritted my teeth as blood spurted from the wound.

Son of a bitch, that hurt.

Still, it was a lucky shot -- a flesh wound, even if a painful one. I’d had worse. Just one foot to the left and it would have gone straight through my heart. A broadhead arrow could prove fatal under the right circumstances.

The flapping of the pheasants’ wings made so much racket that it drowned out any noise I made as I lowered myself to the ground, grimacing at the red stain spreading on my sleeve. I needed to staunch the bleeding. Like it or not, the chase was over for today.

I glanced down at my watch. I was cutting it close. I needed to get back to my boat and report in. If William didn’t hear from me on schedule, he’d send the troops storming in to find me and that would blow any chance we had of learning what these guys were up to.

I leaned back against a moss-covered tree stump in the center of the bushes. The sound of the poachers joking amongst themselves as they retreated let me know my presence hadn’t been detected.

Well, at least that was a positive.

I’d been tailing these jerks for almost a week now, ever since an anonymous tip-off to the Operations Center had clued William in on their activity in this neck of the woods. When they’d landed on this island though, I was baffled. What could there possibly be here that would interest an international ring of poachers? If they’d been farther north or on the mainland, I would have assumed they were going after bears for their saleable parts, a lucrative business these days. Bear gall was in high demand in the traditional Chinese medicine markets for its supposed healing properties. Bears were territorial creatures, though. On an island this small, the chances of finding more than one were slim, assuming you even found one. Hardly worth the effort of getting here.

Wincing, I shifted my weight slightly to take the pressure off my injured arm. I didn’t dare leave my hiding spot, not yet. I needed to be sure the poachers didn’t circle back. They were a nasty bunch, not above killing someone if they thought they could get away with it.

I closed my eyes, gritting my teeth against the pain lancing through my arm. The slow drip of water hitting the rocks beside me had a mesmerizing effect. Or was it the blood from the wound?

I pivoted my head to look at my injured arm. Despite the copious amounts of blood staining my shirt and the ground beneath me, the wound didn’t appear serious. The flow of the blood would have cleaned out any foreign debris, and the arrow had missed hitting the artery.

Yup, I’d definitely had worse.

Using my good arm, I pulled a knife out of the sheath strapped to my thigh and sliced a large swath of fabric from the front of my shirt to use as a makeshift bandage. A tight compress would staunch the bleeding long enough for me to make my way back to the mainland and get it taken care of properly.

I struggled to remove my belt, the worn leather creaking and groaning in protest as I pulled it loose.

It should not have taken that much effort. Maybe I’d lost more blood than I thought. Didn’t matter. I wasn’t dying, and the mission took precedence over a little discomfort.

The reason we had decided to investigate this group was the anomalies. This was one loaded group of badass poachers. Normally poachers were a solitary bunch, untrusting and cynical in the extreme. Finding two or three teamed together to go after larger prey wasn’t uncommon but teaming up like these guys were doing was totally out of character.

I’d been following them since they’d arrived from Hong Kong and met up with a local guide of questionable repute. It was evident that the meeting had been scheduled ahead of time. Prior to heading north, the five stayed at the Vancouver Airport Hotel for the night. That meant they had money behind them. They’d rented a Jeep and driven to their staging area, where they parked the Jeep in a forestry site lot on the coast. A fully stocked boat, complete with captain, was waiting for them, and they motored straight to this little island.

That was a considerable amount of effort just to reach this deserted piece of land in the Pacific Ocean. If not for the bug I’d managed to plant on one of the poachers at the airport, I would have lost contact with them. It was impossible to track a boat on the open ocean without visual sightings, so stealth required electronic solutions.

It would take someone with local knowledge to even find the island. It certainly didn’t show on international maps, and as far as I knew it wasn’t big enough to have a formal name, just a number on the navigation grid. That still didn’t explain what the attraction was, though. Given the people involved, there had to be some tie-in to the illegal poaching running rampant in this part of Canada. I just needed to figure out what it was.

I’d heard rumors one of the protected spirit bears inhabiting one of the small islands in this area. I knew they were extremely rare, but no one had been able to verify the story, and I put it down to a myth the locals used to lure tourists to the area. A quick Google search confirmed that the small population of spirit bears in this part of the world lived farther north, around Haida Gwaii.

Surely a group of international thieves would know better than to get taken in by such a blatant tourist-trapping lie? The parts from such a creature would be worth a devil’s ransom, but it would be difficult to harvest salable items from a myth. More likely, they were after something else, something valuable. But what?

I folded the soft strip of flannel from my shirt and placed it over the wound on my arm. The bleeding had slowed, a good sign. Gritting my teeth, I wrapped the belt around the makeshift bandage and pulled it tight.

A searing bolt of pain sliced through the raw wound, and colored dots danced before my eyes. I concentrated on my breathing as I waited for the throbbing to subside.

Looked like the wound was worse than I’d thought.

I’d left my medi-kit on the boat, but I’d seen a birch tree a few lengths back. My grandfather had been a bit of a survivalist and had shown me how to make a traditional wound dressing from birch bark. That would serve to dull the pain until I retrieved the medi-kit and the heavy-duty painkillers in it. I’d outgrown that macho, I-can-take-the-pain stage a long time ago.

I got to my feet, using the massive tree stump to steady myself. For a moment, the world swam in front of my eyes. Great, just what I needed.

I closed them, waiting for the forest to stop moving. When it did, I pushed off from the stump, trekking slowly in the direction of the beachhead where I’d left my boat.

One foot in front of the other. Easy as that. I could do this.

My arm throbbed, and I glanced down. No fresh blood. Good.

I stopped by the birch tree, dropping to one knee. Using a sharp-bladed hunting knife to slice off a few lengths of bark, I shredded it into fibers and formed them into a compress. Sucking in a deep breath, I gently placed the birch bark poultice over the raw flesh and reapplied the dressing, securing it with the belt.

Resting for a bit to let the pain ease up, I rose to my feet and continued in the direction of the boat.

Seconds later, I stumbled over a surface root, thudding heavily to my knees. The loss of blood must have weakened me more than I’d realized, and it took a long moment before I managed to get back up. I picked up a broken tree limb, leaning on it for balance.

My focus narrowed. I needed to get to the boat. Keeping my hold on the makeshift walking stick, I took a step. Better, much better.

The birch bark compress supplied some relief from the pain in my arm. I’d had worse injuries back in my military days. I could do this.

Concentrate. The boat.

Need to get to boat.

Need to report back in.

Whatever these guys were after, the Brotherhood of the Wild would put a stop to it. We had the advantage of operating internationally, bypassing local bureaucracy. And we had money. Money could open doors and make officials look the other way.

Boat. Need to get to the boat.

I stumbled again, pausing to lean on a tree until my vision cleared.

Clenching my jaw, I pushed myself upright and took one step. Then another.

Leaning heavily on the walking stick, I steadied myself. The notion of balance seemed to have deserted my brain entirely, and I compromised with a slow shuffling gait that kept me on my feet and heading in the right direction. That was really all I needed.

I felt myself start to fall again and reached out for the closest tree. Had I even made it twenty feet since the last time I’d had to reach for a tree? Maybe. But not much farther.

I took a deep breath and tried to clear my head. Nope. Wasn’t going to work this time. Never mind. I just needed to keep moving in the direction of the boat. That was all.

Just keep moving.


About the Author

Anne Kane lives in the beautiful Okanagan Valley with a bouncy little rescue dog whose breed defies description, a cantankerous Himalayan cat, and too many fish to count. She spent many years trying to fit in and act normal, but finally gave up the effort. She started writing romance in 2008, and her fate was sealed when she won a publishing contract with Red Sage Publishing and just a month later Changeling Press accepted her first submission. Since then she has published more than thirty stories in a variety of sub-genres, all with a happily ever after.

She has two handsome sons and six adorable grandchildren and enjoys spending time with them whenever she can. Her hobbies, when she’s not playing with the characters in her head, include kayaking, hiking, swimming, playing guitar, singing and of course, reading.

 

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Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15



RABT Book Tours & PR

Teaser + #Giveaway: The Legacy of a Lie by Ron Elcombe @RABTBookTours

 


Contemporary Fiction

Date Published: January 15, 2026

Publisher: Windy Ridge Publishing


The Legacy of a Lie unravels a web of family secrets when the past resurfaces, threatening everything its keepers tried to protect. At its center is Maarit McDonough Malone, a brilliant yet flawed budding opera singer whose scandalous choices ripple across generations.

Her daughters—Kay, a celebrated mezzo-soprano, and Anna, a self-doubting composer—must confront the emotional fallout of their mother’s long-buried lies. Alongside them are a young, truth-seeking journalist, a lawyer, and a priest, all carrying the weight of secrets they are professionally and morally bound to keep.

Set in the haunting beauty of Minnesota’s river bluffs and Lake Superior’s North Shore, this is a story of legacy and redemption—of truth breaking through the cracks of deception and healing in the wake of generations of silence.


Excerpt


She turned the radio off as she pulled into the drive-through at the Coffee Stop. The attendant, too perky for the morning hour, wished her a great day and passed a medium coffee with cream but no sugar through the window. Only two meetings were scheduled for the day: the first with her boss at 11:00 a.m. and a division meeting at 1:00. With any luck, she’d escape the office early.

Instead of turning north to I–94 and Saint Paul, the car pulled out of the Coffee-Stop driveway onto the main street and turned south toward Red Wing. Maarit was surprised at the easy merge into the lighter-than-usual highway traffic.

“Why is the sun in my eyes today?” Maarit muttered. “It wasn’t yesterday.” Within a few minutes, where she expected stop lights, stop signs were spaced apart at irregular intervals. Long stretches of unfamiliar road stretched to the horizon. She looked at her watch and frowned. She should have been at work twenty minutes ago. The highway transitioned into a street with no curb or shoulder, then evolved into a narrow gravel road. She tried to turn around, but the car slid off the narrow shoulder into a ditch.

Confusion became fear. The front bumper hit an orange snow fence. The car shuddered. Forward motion ceased. Engine warning lights glowed red throughout the vehicle. Fear became panic. She tried to yell for help, but only a faint whisper escaped her lips. Her head throbbed. Everything blurred. Then, everything went dark as she lost consciousness.

 

About the Author

 

Ron Elcombe is a professor emeritus at Winona State University (MN), where he taught various advertising and mass communication courses for 25 years. His eclectic career encompasses teaching instrumental music, as well as sales and marketing roles for multiple companies. He has been published in the Lake Country Journal and several professional academic journals and has attended seminars on fiction writing at the Iowa Summer Writers Festival. "The Legacy of a Lie" is the first book in a three-novel series. He resides in Rochester, Minnesota, with his wife, Sharon, and enjoys summers on the golf course and at the family cabin in northern Minnesota.


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