Sophia Jones | Author
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Renea Mason's Imposters' Kiss

1/26/2014

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Yowzers, look at that cover! I had the pleasure of critiquing this steamy shorty when Renea was still in the drafting stage. Let me tell you folks, this one is well worth a read and also acts as a fabulous introduction for her novel, Symphony of Light and Winter.

Book description:
In a night of passion, two lost spirits find solace in an impostor’s kiss: one longing for a love that doesn’t yet exist, the other drowning in pain and guilt over love lost. Neither is what they seem…but what they learn will change them forever…

Take a peek: 
“Who is she?” This was not a question I expected. Even though I was comfortable being nude, most humans were not. I saw in her mind what horrors men had bestowed upon her. The massive erection I sported should have frightened her, but with each quick glance I made in her direction, I saw she stood firm and resolute, while twirling the blindfold between her fingers. 

“Who?” Not the time to speak riddles. 

“The woman for whom that kiss was intended.” 

“Oh.” I brushed my hands through my hair. The long, black strands fell one by one back into place. I sighed. “She’s my love. My light. But she is out of reach.” 

“I have a confession.”

Buy links:
Amazon
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Nessie Strange's Debut Novel Living Dead Girl

1/17/2014

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I'm very excited to give a shout out to my author buddy, Nessie Strange. Congratulations lady on the publication of your fist novel! I adore your cover! Give the inside a look-see folks:

Jen MacLellan has hit a dead end…

Jen knows tattooed, blue-haired Jack Norris is trouble the minute he opens his front door. And being a mortician in the avante garde East Side of Providence, Jen has seen a lot. Jack has recruited Jen’s teenage brother Drew to play drums  for his less-than-respectable punk band, and Jen has no choice but to follow their gigs to keep her little brother out of trouble. But when Drew goes missing, she finds herself in the awkward position of asking for Jack’s help. Shocked that he agrees, Jen decides she may have misjudged him. Worse, she might even like him.

 But when Jen is brutally attacked, she awakens in the hospital where a Sid Vicious look-alike greets her with the news: she’s dead, and he’s the reaper assigned to take her away. Yeah, not so much. Refusing to leave, Jen’s spirit watches helplessly as her loved ones suffer, powerless to ease her family’s grief or prevent the police from accusing Jack of her murder. Desperate to help them, Jen convinces the reaper to bring her back. But reanimating corpses isn’t as easy as it looks, and neither is finding a killer before it’s too late…

Chapter 1:

Providence, Rhode Island

Was it a full moon? Because it seemed like crazy hit town and we got flooded. The funeral home was packed with more bodies than usual. I’d spent the past half hour explaining to a grieving family why an open casket really wasn’t the best option for their grandmother who’d been dead for over two weeks. Believe me, it wasn’t. I’d never been so happy to lock the front door.

Dad and I were cleaning up the prep room when my nineteen-year-old cousin Ethan appeared in the doorway with his hand shoved in a bag of chips. Like all the men in the family he towered over me, a height that was punctuated by another three or so inches of reddish-brown white boy ’fro. “You guys want the bad news or the really bad news first?”

The beginnings of a migraine pulsated in my right temple, growing more insistent by the second. It was now after ten o’clock at night. The only thing I wanted was to shower and get ready for bed.

Dad closed the stainless steel cabinet where we kept all the bottles of embalming chemicals. “Just lay it all out there.”

“Man, you guys are no fun.” He stuffed another chip in his mouth, then wiped his hand on the front of his Naruto T-shirt. “All right. We got another stiff, and Drew’s at some shady party getting hammered.” Ethan grinned.

“What?” I said. “Drew is…what?”

“You know, getting sloshed, shitfaced, cocked, drunk—”

“I know what it means, you ass.”

Dad looked at me, frowning. “Isn’t he supposed to be working on a science project?”

“What, like how many beers does it take to get to the center of a—?”

“Ethan, knock it off,” I snapped. “Yes, he was supposed to be working on a science project. I should’ve known.”

“Right? Nobody does homework on Friday nights.”

“You’re really not helping.”

Dad sighed and slumped his shoulders. “Well, one of us will have to go get him.”

“Why don’t you guys flip for it?” Ethan held a quarter between his thumb and forefinger and waved it in front of my face. “C’mon. Heads, Jen gets him; tails and Uncle Andrew does it. It’s foolproof.”

Foolproof? Ha. Right. Try suckered. Dad and I looked at each other and shrugged. My sixteen-year-old brother deserved the mother of all ass-kickings. Was it wrong that I was hoping for tails? Tails meant filling out some paperwork and escorting a body from the hospital morgue. It meant no aggravation. That body wasn’t going to argue or give me an attitude. My brother?

Yeah, different story.

Ethan slapped the quarter onto the table and lifted his hand. “Heads, my lovely cousin.”

Wonderful.


Buy Links:
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All Romance EBooks
Kobo

About Nessie:

Nessie is a Massachusetts native and mother of two who has dabbled in everything from abstract painting to freelance sports reporting. She also loves a good story, whether it’s reading or writing one. Active membership in a writer’s critique group has helped erase the memory of two horribly written practice novels. LIVING DEAD GIRL is her first real novel.
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To Catch HER DEATH BY BOONE BRUX: MY FINAL REVIEW FOR THE COFFEE TALK WRITERS

1/12/2014

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This is a bittersweet review for me as it will be my last for the Coffee Talk Writers. The CT ladies have been a wonderful source of inspiration and support for me this past year, and it has been a privilege to work with them in a business capacity to help each other develop and nurture our individual writing careers. While I've decided to step away from the professional aspects of the group, I'm glad to still keep my friendship with these talented ladies and look forward to watching their journeys continue in 2014. 

After careful reflection, I acknowledged I  wasn't enjoying my role as a reviewer, and by extension of that, I was potentially doing a disservice to some of the authors and the works I was critiquing since I was not their intended audience. The bottom line is, when you receive ARCs through any sort of book touring site, they're often not titles you would have picked up on your own. And that's pretty vital, that initial spark of reader interest. If it's lacking even before page one, it can make for some long and painful reading. I tried to be fair by only posting reviews I rated three mugs and above, so I hope that tempered my personal preferences and the fact that some of the stories were far removed from what I would have chosen to read during my free time. I am taking away some valuable insight from this experience: As an author I'll continue to offer my own stories as ARCs, but only to those who have expressed an interest. I will, of course, continue to post reviews here on my site. I'm a bibliophile and love to spread the word when I've found a book that's resonated with my heart and touched my soul- but those reviews will be independent and just my personal musings.

Now, on with the show! 

To Catch Her Death by Boon Brux was an incredible read, and as I clicked to the last page at two in the morning, it nearly convinced me to stay on as an official reviewer if only to get the opportunity to read more books just like it. But that's the thing, To Catch Her Death truly is one of a kind. Paranormal suspense, drama, comedy, touches of horror, with the potential for the sequel to fall into romance; Ms. Brux's tale fits all of these categories and keeps the reader enthralled from the first sentence to the final, delicious paragraph. 

Need a peek? Here you go:

   The cold October wind swirled around me and slipped between the collar of my black polar fleece jacket and neck. Shivers rippled along my shoulders. I yanked the zipper up and walked to the front door, tilting my chin toward the sky so I wouldn’t breathe on the collar of my jacket. I hated when my breath flash froze the material to my face. It was like a mini wax job. And considering the lack of attention I’d given my upper lip over the last year, I wasn’t taking any chances.
   I pulled open the glass door to the convenience store and held it for a large, bald guy with bad
manners and a worse looking trench coat. He didn't even say thank you—rude bastard. Normally I
would have made some snarky comment, but something about the way he skulked past sent a
serious case of the heebie-jeebies through me. Instead I ignored him and headed for the soda
machine. Something about fountain pop made it better than drinking it out of a plastic bottle. Maybe there was more fizz, less sweetness. Maybe it was the straw. A lot of things taste better with a straw. Mr. No Manners slinked past me and around the back of the store to the refrigerated section. I focused on getting my jumbo beverage, not making eye contact with him.
   The crinkle of snack cake wrappers sounded behind me and I glanced over my shoulder. The first
thing I saw was firm, male buns. The man straightened and perused the artificial ingredients on
a package of pastries. 
   I silently scoffed. From his trim physique and well-rounded tush, it was obvious this guy had never enjoyed the luscious processed goodness of a mass-made pastry. He was too fit—too outdoorsy looking, with his healthy glow and casually tousled brown hair. He definitely gave off an, I hike and compost Alaskan man vibe. People like him rarely bought anything that contained more than three ingredients and those pastries were only eaten by hardcore junk-foodies. I never touched them myself. The texture reminded me of soggy florist foam or
crumbling sheet rock. Not that I’d ever eaten either. 
   I might have been a grieving widow but I wasn't dead, so I gave Mr. Snack Cake one more 
appreciative look before returning my attention to filling the vat of soda. 
   I’d just snapped on the cup’s plastic lid when a deep voice shouted, “Give me all your cash.” (To Catch Her Death, page 10-11)

Told from first person point of view, readers are introduced to Lisa Carron, widowed a year, mother of two teens, oh yeah, and newly appointed Grim Reaper. Give this one a read folks, it will not disappoint. As soon as Ms. Brux has the sequel available, I'm going to snatch it up. Five mugs!

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    Sophia Jones, conjurer of sweet and steamy romance

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