Teaser Tuesdays-The Fifth Servant

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

    “And she kept on screaming, whoever she was, shrill screams rippling through the air, shredding the brief moment of peace on this gray morning.  My feet sprang to life, carrying me toward the disturbance.”

    Page 20, The Fifth Servant by Kenneth Wishnia

    What are you reading?

Guest Author: Chelsea Cain author of The Night Season

Origin Story
By Chelsea Cain,
Author of The Night Season

*Chelsea Cain’s newest thriller, The Night Season, will be out March 1, 2011.*

I always knew I would grow up to write gory thrillers.

That’s a lie.

The truth is that I wanted to grow up to be a fire-dog. There was a vintage fire truck at the park we used to go to when I was a kid and I just really liked the idea of riding on the back of it, ears perked, black and white fur tickled by the wind. My parents were hippies, so didn’t want to limit my potential by telling me that I couldn’t grow up to be a Dalmatian.

I never did get a job as a fire dog, so in that sense I’ll always be a failure.

My mother wanted me to grow up to be a potter. We had a clay spinning wheel for a while in the backroom of an apartment we rented, and I have to admit I was pretty good at creating lopsided earthenware pen vases, if you like that sort of thing.

But in retrospect I always had a fascination with the macabre.

It started with the pet cemetery. A kitten of mine was hit by a car and I buried her in an elaborate ceremony under the Rhododendron bush in our front yard in Bellingham, Washington. Then, walking home from school a few months later, I came across a dead bird. I picked it up, put it in my lunchbox, carried it home and buried it under the Rhododendron. I found eight more dead birds that week. They all went into the cemetery. Who knows what kind of bird epidemic was sweeping through my town. I guess I’m lucky I didn’t catch bird flu.

Eventually kids in the neighborhood started hearing about the cemetery and would appear at my door cradling their dead pets. By the end of that year I had buried fifteen birds, three cats, a hamster, a rabbit, a chicken, and about a dozen gold fish. Each corpse was laid in a shoebox, cushioned with toilet paper, and presented with a piece of costume jewelry from a collection that someone had given me. I would then bury the box and say a few words to whoever was present. I had a special vintage ladies hat I would wear for the occasion. It was black, with white silk flowers piled on it, and a torn black net veil.

I was not an ordinary child.

At the time I was very interested in the Green River Killer. He was our local serial murderer. They found his first victims in 1982. I was ten years old. He went on to kill dozens of women, mostly prostitutes, many of them teenagers. It was the first time that I was aware that there was that sort of danger in the world — That you could go out one day, and they might find you the next day, dead, naked in a river. His main killing ground was about an hour and half from the town I grew up in. But I still thought about him when I was walking my dog alone at night. I followed the stories in the newspaper and I knew that there was a task force assigned to catch him. I liked that idea — a team of professionals who were working really hard to keep me safe from the bogeyman.

I still wasn’t thinking about writing gory thrillers. Though I will admit that, in seventh grade, I got 40 pages into a novel about a female PI. I typed the entire thing in a cursive font. I thought it looked fancy.

Journalism. That was my college goal at the University of California, at Irvine. I didn’t know anyone who wrote books, and after the fire-dog disappointment, I wanted to be realistic about my professional aspirations.

I even went to graduate school in journalism at the University of Iowa where I wrote a column for The Daily Iowan, dyed my hair dark red and stared reading Sylvia Plath. Literary towns will do that to you.

But there was one thing about journalism that I didn’t like at all: talking to strangers. Writing books, on the other hand, requires talking to far fewer people. And Iowa City, home of the lauded Iowa Writers Workshop, was full of people writing books.

So I wrote a few too.

That’s a lie.

I moved from Iowa to Portland to New York and back to Portland with brief stays in Florida and Pennsylvania, and in the process wrote a dozen books over the next ten years.

But I only published a few.

The rest were really, really bad.

Don’t worry. I had a real job. I was a creative director for a PR firm. (My hair was very blond at this point.) Then I fell in love with the clerk at my local video store, and in the throes of an identity crisis (I had dyed my hair red again), I retired from PR at the grizzled age of 31. I married the video store clerk and a year later, pregnant with my daughter, I was up late at night and I came across an episode of Larry King Live about the Green River Killer.

They had caught him in 2001, nearly twenty years after his first victims were discovered, and he had a name: Gary Ridgway. I hadn’t thought about the Green River Killer or that case in years, but there, live on TV, were the cops from the task force I remembered as a kid. I recognized them from the newspapers photographs that were burned into my mind. They had spent their careers looking for this guy. And they had caught him. Finally.

I was safe.

And I thought to myself: gory thriller!

That would be fun to write.

(You find that you have lot of time on your hands when you suddenly are not drinking because you are pregnant.)

So I wrote HEARTSICK. Having begun a book while pregnant and finished it with a baby in the house, I can tell you it is a feat that cannot be adequately praised.

But I guess that I shouldn’t be surprised to find myself writing thrillers. It does bring together many of my interests: forensic pathology, medicine, damaged heroes, dead pets, Nancy Drew, TV cops shows, my home of Portland, Oregon, and having an excuse to be alone in a room for long periods. Sometimes I think being a thriller writer might be as fun as being a fire-dog.

But I guess I’ll never know for sure.

Copyright © 2011 Chelsea Cain, author of The Night Season


Title: The Night Season
Author: Chelsea Cain
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Publication Date: March 1, 2011
Hardcover: 336 pages
ISBN: 9780312619763
Genre: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller

Book Synopsis:

With the Beauty Killer Gretchen Lowell locked away behind bars once again, Archie Sheridan — a Portland police detective and nearly one of her victims — can finally rest a little easier. Meanwhile, the city of Portland is in crisis. Heavy rains have flooded the Willamette River, and several people have drowned in the quickly rising waters. Or at least that’s what they thought until the medical examiner discovers that the latest victim didn’t drown: She was poisoned before she went into the water. Soon after, three of those drownings are also proven to be murders. Portland has a new serial killer on its hands, and Archie and his task force have a new case.

Reporter Susan Ward is chasing this story of a new serial killer with gusto, but she’s also got another lead to follow for an entirely separate mystery: The flooding has unearthed a skeleton, a man who might have died more than sixty years ago, the last time Portland flooded this badly, when the river washed away an entire neighborhood and killed at least fifteen people.

With Archie following the bizarre trail of evidence and evil deeds to catch a killer and possibly regain his life, and Susan Ward close behind, Chelsea Cain — one of today’s most talented suspense writers — launches the next installment of her bestselling series with an electric thriller.

Author Bio:

Chelsea Cain’s first three novels featuring Archie Sheridan — Heartsick, Sweetheart, and Evil at Heart — have all been New York Times bestsellers. Also the author of Confessions of a Teen Sleuth, a parody based on the life of Nancy Drew, and several nonfiction titles, Chelsea was born in Iowa, raised in Bellingham, Washington and now lives in Portland, Oregon, with her family.

For more information about the author please visit her website, follow the author on Facebook and Twitter.

My sincere gratitude to Chelsea Cain and FSB Media Associates for making this post possible. My review of The Night Season will be up this month.

Beleaguered, Overwhelmed, and Careworn

Has anyone ever felt as though what needs to be done in a day could easy extend to a week and one’s week really needs an entire month to complete and worse, one does not know where to begin? If so, that is where I find myself this afternoon.

The last time I felt this way I had a just turned 2-year-old toddler wanting me home after my rather lengthy five month hospital stay, a twin in the NICU fighting for his life and his identical brother losing what little weight he had at a dangerous rate. The NICU of course was sectioned off due to severity do the twins were not in the same area and of course my precious two year old was at home still wondering where mummy was. I was so torn: which child do I spend time with, how much time, which child should come first.  Impossible choices.

While I am not facing any literal life and death scenarios currently, thank heaven, I am indeed facing a week that promising to be nothing short of Herculean task. I beg all my faithful readers and those new to Rundpinne to please be patient. Old and new readers to my blog alike know I typically review one to two books per day and while my schedule for this week was in fact doable when I scheduled it months ago, a lot can happen in just a weekend to turn one’s world upside down. My goal is to try and get at least the two tour books read and reviewed. I will be ecstatic if I can achieve this goal, and I imagine the tour hosts will be as well.

My point, of course I must have one (sorry the left hemisphere and right hemisphere of my brain are not cooperating) I will get back into my reviewing groove, I am not in a reading slump nor is it a lack of desire, I want to read the books (oh the line-up looks so very good!) however I must choose this week between a hobby, albeit one I adore and I am quite passionate about, or my family’s needs. It is no contest; my family is my heart and will always come first.

I will make it through this week and Rundpinne will return to normal, no doubt I shall be back to inundating everyone with my opinions of numerous books.  However,  for now, I ask for a little understandning and a lot of patience.   If it were not for my readers, I would not bother with a book review blog.   I thank each and every one of you in advance.  May each of you have delightfully wonderful weeks filled with bookish goodness.  If book ideas are needed, please check my lists.

*I will be checking out the memes; It’s Monday What Are You Reading and Teaser Tuesdays, as I do so adore those two.  One can really grow one’s TBR list.  If I do not visit your blog as usual, although I shall try, I will the following week.

It’s Monday What Are You Reading?

It’s Monday What Are you Reading is the perfect way for me to begin my week and allows me to focus on what needs to be read and to see what I have or have not accomplished the previous week. I also enjoy discovering new books by visiting other participants blogs.

I Read and Reviewed (click the title to be taken to the review):

  • Gideon’s Sword by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
  • 13, rue Thérèse by Elena Mauli Shapiro * Tied-Favourite Book of the Week
  • The Devil’s Star by Jo Nesbø *Tied-Favourite Book of the Week
  • All That’s True by Jackie Lee Miles
  • Beatrice and Virgil by Yann Martel
  • A Light At Winter’s End by Julia London
  • Hush by Kate White
  • The Oracle of Stamboul by Michael David Lukas
  • Death of a Chimney Sweep by M.C. Beaton
  • The House of Six Doors by Patricia Selbert
  • This week I am planning to read/review: (there is not a chance I will get all of these books read, the week is not a promising one for reading.  However, I am trying to be optimistic by listing my proposed schedule.)

  • To Defy A King by Elizabeth Chadwick
  • Shaken by J.A. Konrath
  • The Science of Kissing by Sheril Kirshenbaum
  • Staying At Daisy’s by Jill Mansell
  • Revolution by Deb Olin Unferth
  • The Fifth Servant by Kenneth Wishnia
  • Unfamiliar Fishes by Sarah Vowell
  • The Lincoln Lawyer by Michael Connelly
  • When the Thrill Is Gone by Walter Mosley
  • Between a Rock and a Hot Place by Tracey Jackson
Visit next Monday to see if I managed to accomplish my reading goals.

The Sunday Salon (TSS: 2/27/11)

The Sunday Salon.com

Life: Where did the month go?  It is the last Sunday Salon of February 2011!   Time is moving so very quickly.  February was a month filled with excellent books and I am hoping March proves to be just as wonderful.

Family Update: It was a lovely week.  We went to a performance our oldest was in and then he and his a cappella group travelled to Chicago for an International competition.  He had a wonderful time in Chicago visiting the sights, shopping, and watching a production of  Les Misérables.  Since he did not get home until early this morning I will not know more until he wakes.  All is well with my family.  My son has narrowed in on choice for Universities, which means soon the suspense for us will be over, until it is the twins’ turn.  They will be visiting colleges and Universities soon.

Saturday Night: It was just DH and me, since our oldest was out of town and the twins had other plans.  My husband agreed to an Austen themed movie night.  I loved it, but I do not think cared for it too much, however he was quite a trooper.

Read and Reviewed: I read and reviewed 9 books and spotlighted a 10th. Please take a look at my reviews, I read some truly brilliant books this past week and had a very difficult time choosing a favorite.

If you do not want to wait until Monday to see the entire list for the week, all my reviews are up and as usual I love comments.

Today I will be reading: (if I have time) The Terror of Living by Urban Waite

Happy Reading and please feel free to leave comments or suggestions.

Visit the The Sunday Salon.

Book Review: The House of Six Doors by Patricia Selbert


Title: The House of Six Doors
Author: Patricia Selbert
Publisher: Publishing by the Seas
Publication Date: February 22, 2011
Paperback: 330 pages
ISBN: 978-0578064406
Genre: Literary Fiction

From the Publisher:

Thirteen-year-old Serena is torn from everything that’s familiar on her island home. She leaves her beloved grandmother, her father, and two of her siblings to move with her mother and older sister to Florida, and then to California.

“Everything will be better in America”, her mother tells her. They arrive in the US to find nothing as expected. Speaking Dutch, Spanish, and Papiamentu (the native language of Curazçao) but limited English, Serena learns to pretend that everything’s fine while struggling to live up to her mother’s impossibly high expectations; always afraid to send her mother into another downward spiral of dark depression. Serena juggles responsibility for her mother’s well-being with school, a secret boyfriend, and a growing desire for independence. But the streets of Hollywood hold many dangers for young girls.

The wisdom of her grandmother, a mixed-race mystic, gives her solace, which she clings to tenaciously, despite the thousands of miles between them. Coming of age in a foreign land, faced with enormous obstacles, Serena finds her own two feet and the acceptance that sets her free.

My Review:

The House of Six Doors by Patricia Selbert is a coming of age story, which delves into the struggles of a family newly emigrated to the United States of America in the 70s and their struggles to make a home for themselves in this new country so very different from their beloved home in Curaçao. Selbert deftly writes about Curaçao and gives the reader a sense of being on the island while fluidly transitioning between this island setting and Los Angeles, as seen through the eyes of Serena. While Mama is a character I believe many would very much like to dislike, I tried to view life through her eyes and the struggles she faced on a daily basis with two daughters to raise in a new country, new cultural standards and biases, and no money. I truly enjoyed learning more about Curaçao and its culture, the struggles the family faced, as émigrés are heart breaking and yet uplifting with the offer of hope. Serena is sweet and her grandmother’s words help guide her through difficult times. The House of Six Doors draws the reader into a whole new world and shows the reader what the United States of America looks like through the eyes of a teenager who did not want to emigrate from her home country, the lessons she learns and the struggles she faces along the way. Selbert takes on many big issues and blends them together exceedingly well to create a very endearing and inspiring story. I would recommend The House of Six Doors to any reader looking for a beautiful story to be swept up into for a few hours.

About the Author:

Author Patricia Selbert is an experienced lecturer and multicultural novelist. With a BA in communications Patricia speaks Dutch, Spanish, Papiamentu and English. “I was born to Dutch parents in the jungles of Venezuela. I grew up in Curaçao, a Dutch island in the Caribbean. I moved to the United States in the seventies. I currently live in Santa Barbara, a picturesque town on the Central Coast of California cradled between the Pacific Ocean to the south and the Santa Ynez Mountains to the north.” Patricia’s Caribbean heritage has infused her with a passion for bright colors, delicious flavors, and the sea.

I received a complimentary copy of The House of Six Doors by Patricia Selbert from BookSparks PR to be a part of this tour and offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.

Book Review: Death of a Chimney Sweep by M.C. Beaton


Title: Death of a Chimney Sweep
Author: M.C. Beaton
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Publication Date: February 25, 2011
Hardcover: 256 pages
ISBN: 978-0446547390
Genre: Fiction, Mystery

From the Publisher:

In the south of Scotland, residents get their chimneys vacuum-cleaned. But in the isolated villages in the very north of Scotland, the villagers rely on the services of the itinerant sweep, Pete Ray, and his old-fashioned brushes. Pete is always able to find work in the Scottish highlands, until one day when Police Constable Hamish Macbeth notices blood dripping onto the floor of a villager’s fireplace, and a dead body stuffed inside the chimney. The entire town of Lochdubh is certain Pete is the culprit, but Hamish doesn’t believe that the affable chimney sweep is capable of committing murder.

My Review:

Most readers, if asked, will admit to having a certain genre or writer they read as a guilty pleasure and for me my guilty pleasure is reading M.C.Beaton’s Hamish Macbeth series. It was with immense delight that I agreed to review Death of a Chimney Sweep by M.C. Beaton, eager to read the latest release, to be transported back to the fictitious village of Lochdubh and its quirky inhabitants and Police Constable Hamish Macbeth. While this is the 27th book in the series, it can be read as a stand-alone book. Beaton deftly describes in vivid detail the landscape of the Scottish Highlands, her characters are well formed, unique and at times bordering on downright eccentric, creating such a charming and utterly endearing protagonist in PC Hamish Macbeth. Death of a Chimney Sweep is just that, Pete Ray is found dead on the moors and Hamish has on his hands not one, but two murders, first the person found dead in a chimney and then Pete, the man the villagers were certain was guilty of the first murder. Beaton writes a fast-paced mystery; it is with practised care that she easily draws the reader into the tale, masterfully crafting red herrings and dead ends along a twisting, winding path to the truth of the crime. As usual I found myself swept away to the Scottish Highlands and enjoyed solving the murders. Fans of M.C. Beaton will enjoy this book and those who have yet to read her works will quickly become enamored with Hamish and the village of Lochdubh. I would recommend Death of a Chimney Sweep to any reader who enjoys a well-written mystery novel.

About the Author:

M.C. Beaton lives in the Cotswolds with her husband. In addition to the Hamish Macbeth series, she writes the Agatha Raisin mystery series.
Audio and Video

I received a complimentary ARC of Death of a Chimney Sweep by M.C. Beaton from Hachette Book Groups to offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.

Book Review: The Oracle of Stamboul by Michael David Lukas


Title: The Oracle of Stamboul
Author: Michael David Lukas
Publisher: Harper
Publication Date: February 8, 2011
Hardcover: 304 pages
ISBN: 978-0061576652
Genre: Historical Fiction

From the Publisher:

An elegantly crafted, utterly enchanting debut novel set in a mystical, exotic world, in which a gifted young girl charms a sultan and changes the course of an empire’s history

Late in the summer of 1877, a flock of purple-and-white hoopoes suddenly appears over the town of Constanta on the Black Sea, and Eleonora Cohen is ushered into the world by a mysterious pair of Tartar midwives who arrive just minutes before her birth. “They had read the signs, they said: a sea of horses, a conference of birds, the North Star in alignment with the moon. It was a prophecy that their last king had given on his deathwatch.” But joy is mixed with tragedy, for Eleonora’s mother dies soon after the birth.

Raised by her doting father, Yakob, a carpet merchant, and her stern, resentful stepmother, Ruxandra, Eleonora spends her early years daydreaming and doing housework—until the moment she teaches herself to read, and her father recognizes that she is an extraordinarily gifted child, a prodigy.

When Yakob sets off by boat for Stamboul on business, eight-year-old Eleonora, unable to bear the separation, stows away in one of his trunks. On the shores of the Bosporus, in the house of her father’s business partner, Moncef Bey, a new life awaits. Books, backgammon, beautiful dresses and shoes, markets swarming with color and life—the imperial capital overflows with elegance, and mystery. For in the narrow streets of Stamboul—a city at the crossroads of the world—intrigue and gossip are currency, and people are not always what they seem. Eleonora’s tutor, an American minister and educator, may be a spy. The kindly though elusive Moncef Bey has a past history of secret societies and political maneuvering. And what is to be made of the eccentric, charming Sultan Abdulhamid II himself, beleaguered by friend and foe alike as his unwieldy, multiethnic empire crumbles?

The Oracle of Stamboul is a marvelously evocative, magical historical novel that will transport readers to another time and place—romantic, exotic, yet remarkably similar to our own.

My Review:

Exotic, mystical, and engrossing, The Oracle of Stamboul by Michael David Lukas takes the reader back to the last days of the Ottoman Empire and deep into Sultan Abdulhamid’s court.  Purple and white hoopoes usher in the birth of Eleonora Cohen whose birth and life was foretold. Raised by her father and Aunt, young Eleonora is quite precocious and instead of being without her father she travels to Stamboul as a stowaway to be with him. Eleonora’s gifts are soon recognized by the Sultan, who invites her to court, relies on her knowledge and soon becomes interested in far more than her political acumen.  Lukas has created a beautifully exotic debut novel that will take the reader back in time to the seat of the Ottoman Empire.  Through vivid imagery and detail the reader will have little doubt they are in Turkey.  The sights, sounds, and smells are so richly described it made me yearn to travel.  Lukas has created a marvelous ensemble of characters and Eleonora is absolutely endearing, delightful, and mysterious.  The Oracle of Stamboul was utterly fascinating in its exotic nature and mystical premise, and stunningly lyrical prose.  Lukas has created a stunning debut novel and definitely is an emerging author to be watched.  I highly recommend The Oracle of Stamboul to both readers and book discussion groups.

About the Author:

Michael David Lukas has been a Fulbright scholar in Turkey, a late-shift proofreader in Tel Aviv, and a Rotary scholar in Tunisia. He is a graduate of Brown University and the University of Maryland, and his writing has been published in the Virginia Quarterly Review, Slate, National Geographic Traveler, and the Georgia Review. Lukas lives in Oakland, less than a mile from where he was born. When he isn’t writing, he teaches creative writing to third- and fourth-graders. He is also the author of The Oracle of Stamboul: A Novel.

To learn more about Michael David Lukas please visit his website.

For more reviews of the book, please follow the book tour.

I received a complimentary copy of The Oracle of Stamboul by Michael David Lukas from TLC Book Tours to be a part of this tour and offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.

Book Review: Hush by Kate White


Title: Hush
Author: Kate White
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks; Reprint edition
Publication Date: February 1, 2011
Paperback: 368 pages
ISBN: 978-0061576652
Genre: Fiction, Suspense, Mystery

From the Publisher:

When Lake Warren learns that her husband, Jack, is suing for full custody of their two kids four months after their separation, she’s pretty certain that things can’t get any worse. The upside is that she’s working with the Advanced Fertility Center as a marketing consultant, alongside the attractive, flirtatious Dr. Keaton. But the morning after their one-night stand, Lake finds Keaton with his throat slashed and discovers that things can indeed become worse—they can become deadly.

So as not to jeopardize her case for custody, Lake is forced to lie to the police. Having just been intimate with a man who has been murdered, and wanting to protect herself from being charged with the crime, she begins her own search for the truth. Meanwhile, the police start looking at her closely, people at the clinic start treating her with hostility, and strange clues begin dropping—quite literally—on her doorstep, and Lake realizes that she is dangerously close to dark secrets, both about Keaton and the clinic. But can Lake stop what she’s started before it’s too late?

My Review:

Hush by Kate White is a delightful suspenseful mystery. Lake Warren works at a fertility center, her husband is filing for custody of their children and Lake’s lawyer advises her to stay away from anything that might cause scandal. Fair enough or so it would seem, but poor judgment leads Lake to spending the night with her colleague. In her defense he was quite handsome, but she awakens to find him murdered in bed. Rather than phoning the police, Lake decides she will solve the crime herself, as one using poor judgment might, especially one fearing losing their children in a custody hearing. On a whole, Hush is an engaging mystery filled with some unexpected twists and turns. One character in the book I really enjoyed was the protagonist, Lake Warren, who the reader watches make a series of poor choices, which will either make Lake annoying for readers or wonderfully human, and I found her to be refreshingly flawed. Lake is frustrating and irresistible at the same time, and one cannot help but adopt her growing sense of paranoia. Lake does not know whom to trust nor does the reader, making the story fly by as the reader needs to know who will get custody, should Lake survive. Hush is neither dark nor deeply thought provoking, two traits I usually look forward to in my suspense books, yet I enjoyed reading Hush immensely and found it to be more of a suspenseful mystery than a full on suspense novel. White grabs the reader’s attention from the beginning and keeps the reader engaged throughout the book and gives the reader an inside look into fertility clinics. I would recommend Hush to any reader who enjoys a good suspense-filled mystery novel.

About the Author:

Kate White is the editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan magazine and the New York Times bestselling author of the Bailey Weggins mystery series and several popular career books for women, including Why Good Girls Don’t Get Ahead but Gutsy Girls Do. She lives in New York City.

To learn more about Kate White please visit her website or like her on Facebook, or follow her on Twitter.

For more reviews of the book, please follow the book tour.

I received a complimentary copy of Hush by Kate White from TLC Book Tours to be a part of this tour and offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.

Book Spotlight: A Light At Winter’s End by Julia London


Title: A Light At Winter’s End
Author: Julia London
Publisher: Pocket
Publication Date: February 22, 2011
Paperback: 400 pages
ISBN: 9978-1451606843
Genre: Fiction

From the Publisher:

Holly Fisher opens her door one day and finds her estranged sister Hannah standing there with a glassy look and her nine-month old baby on her hip. Before Holly knows what is happening, Hannah has left her baby with Holly and disappeared. Three months later, fresh out of rehab for addiction to painkillers, Hannah shows up sober, contrite, and wanting her son back. But Holly is in love with the baby and not willing to give him up to the mother who abandoned him.

Into the middle of this extraordinary conflict between two sisters walks a lonesome cowboy, Wyatt Clark (Summer of Two Wishes) who knows a thing or two about childcare and fractured families. He’s had his own troubles and has stayed away from women the last couple of years, but he can’t resist Holly and the baby. But when Holly is delivered a devastating blow and returns the baby to his mother, Holly is too distraught to continue her relationship with Wyatt. It will take an extraordinary turn from Hannah to bring Holly and Wyatt together so that they both may find the happiness that has eluded them.

About the Author:

JULIA LONDON is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of numerous historical romance and women’s fiction novels. She is a four-time finalist for the prestigious Romance Writers of America’s RITA Award for excellence in romantic fiction. A native Texan, Julia lives in Austin.

I received a complimentary copy of A Light At Winter’s End by Julia London from Simon and Schuster to offer my honest review of the book. Receiving a complimentary copy in no way reflected my review of aforementioned book.