Monday, September 28, 2020

Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour Kick Off: MISLEADING A DUKE by A.S. Fenichel @asfenichel #historicalromance

 



MISLEADING A DUKE

A.S. Fenichel
Historical Romance

Finishing school failed to turn them into proper society ladies. Now these four friends vow to remain single until they find suitors worthy of their love and devotion…

Betrothed to a man she has barely met, Lady Faith Landon calls upon her three best friends—the self-proclaimed Wallflowers of West Lane—to help uncover the secrets of her mysterious fiancé. Her suspicions are aroused when she learns that he has recently returned from France. Is he a traitor to his country? The truth is quite the opposite. Nicholas Ellsworth, Duke of Breckenridge, is a secret agent for the English Crown who has just completed a risky mission to infiltrate Napoleon’s spy network.

After his adventures, Nicholas craves the peace and quiet of the country and settling into domestic bliss with his bride. Until he discovers Faith’s deceptive investigation. How can he wed a woman who doesn’t trust him? But a powerful spark has ignited between Nicholas and Faith that could bring about a change of heart. Faith seizes her second chance to prove to Nicholas that they are a true love match but his past catches up with them when three French spies come to exact revenge. Surviving rather than wooing has become the order of the day.

Praise for Misleading A Duke

Fenichel’s high-octane second Wallflowers of West Lane Regency romance (after The Earl Not Taken) follows a reluctantly betrothed couple as dire circumstances help them to see past their bad first impression. Lady Faith Landon earns the ire of her fiancé, Nicholas Ellsworth, the Duke of Breckenridge and a spy for the English government, when she and her friends snoop into his past. Faith hopes to explain that she was anxious and trying to learn more about him before their wedding day, but she needs the help of Nick’s friend and fellow spy Geb Arafa to convince him to hear her out. Geb requests Nick meet him at his hunting lodge, Parvus Castle, to discuss an urgent matter that Nick assumes to be of national importance. But when Nick arrives, he finds Faith waiting to plead her case. Her explanation is interrupted when French spies invade Parvus, take both captive, and torture Nick for information about the movement of English troops. Imprisoned together, Nick and Faith form an unshakable bond as Faith tends to Nick’s wounds and Nick witnesses her kindness and unflinching bravery. Fenichel juxtaposes the mannered world of Regency aristocracy with the gritty, life-or-death situation of Nick and Faith’s captivity to excellent effect. This immersive, fast-paced novel will have readers on the edges of their seats.

–Publishers Weekly


Amazon → https://amzn.to/3a99S4d




Chapter 1

The home of Geb Arafa, a mile outside of London
The last person Nicholas Ellsworth expected to find at his good friend
Geb Arafa’s dinner party was Lady Faith Landon. Yet there she was,
Nicholas’s fiancée, maddeningly pretty and equally aggravating. She fit
perfectly with the lush décor and priceless artifacts in Geb’s parlor. “Lady
Faith, I had not expected to find you here. In fact, you and your friends’
presence is an astonishment.”
“I hope you are not too put out. It seems Lord and Lady Marsden have
become fast friends with Mr. Arafa, and that friendship has extended to
the rest of the Wallflowers of West Lane.” Despite his desire to be rid
of her, Faith’s soft voice flowed over him like a summer stream and he
longed to hear that voice in the dark, in their bed. The way her curves
filled out the rose gown set his body aflame and there seemed nothing he
could do about it.
He shook away his attraction, reminding himself that this was a sneaky,
manipulative woman whom it had been a mistake to attach himself to. The
fact that he longed to find out if her honey-brown curls were as wild as they
promised, despite her attempts to tame them into submission, shouldn’t
matter. Nor should his desire to get lost in her wheat-colored eyes and
voluptuous curves. This was a woman made for loving.
Lord, he hated himself. “I wonder that your being here with those
friends is not some dire plot in the making.”
He had reason to be suspicious. When he’d first arrived home from
France, in the spring, she and her friends had engaged in spying on him
and trying to ferret out his past. It was intolerable. He should have called
off the engagement, but the thought of ruining her for good society didn’t
sit well with Nicholas. Instead he’d offered her the opportunity to set him
aside, but she had refused to do so as of yet.
She frowned, and was no less stunning. Her full lips longed to be kissed
back into an upturned state. “We are here because Mr. Arafa invited us.
He’s your friend. I’m surprised he didn’t mention it.”
Nick was equally bewildered by Geb’s silence on the matter of Faith
and the other members of the Wallflowers of West Lane. He had met them
on several occasions during his feeble efforts to get to know Faith. Her
instant suspicions that he was hiding something may have led to her friends’
actions, but he still couldn’t let the slight die. Though he did admire the
strength of the friendship between Faith and the three women she’d gone
to finishing school with. They were as close as any soldiers who fought
and died together. Even if they called themselves “wallflowers,” there was
nothing diminished about any of the four.
“He is not required to give me his invitation list.” It pushed out more
bitterly than intended.
Those cunning eyes narrowed. “I think you would like it exceedingly
well if he did.”
That she wasn’t wrong raised the hair on the back of Nick’s neck. He
had not been able to keep many friends over the years. His work for the
Crown had made that impossible. Now his friendship with Geb Arafa was
in jeopardy as well.
He bowed to her. “I do not always get what I want, Lady Faith.”
Head cocked, she raised one brown eyebrow. “Don’t you, Your Grace?”
Geb chose that moment to stroll over. His dark skin set off his bright
tawny eyes, and though he dressed in the black suit and white cravat
typical of an Englishman, there was no mistaking his Eastern background.
“Nicholas, I’m so glad you are here. I thought you might be held up
with politics.”
Nicholas accepted his offered hand. “I finished my meetings and
came directly.”
Smiling in her charming way, Faith’s golden eyes flashed. “I shall leave
you gentlemen to catch up.”
Both Nicholas and Geb bowed and watched her join her friends near
the pianoforte.
“She is a delightful woman, Nick. You should reconcile and marry her.”
Geb ran his hand through his black hair, smoothing it back from his forehead.
Not willing to let his attraction to Faith rule his decisions, Nicholas
forced down the desire seeing his betrothed always ignited in him. “She
is sneaky and devious. I shall wait for her to give up and call off.”
“I would have thought such character traits would appeal to you.” Geb
lowered his voice. “After all, you are a spy with much the same qualities.
You might consider speaking to the lady and finding out the details
behind her actions.”
“Why don’t you just tell me what you know, Geb?” It was obvious his
friend knew more than he’d disclosed thus far. Nicholas asking for more
was futile. If Geb was going to tell him more than he already had, he would
have done so months ago when he’d first informed him that Poppy and Rhys,
now the Earl and Countess of Marsden, were investigating his character.
Being spies meant that Geb and Nick kept their own counsel most of the
time. As an information broker, Geb was even more closemouthed than
most spies. He only offered what was necessary to complete a contract or,
in this case, to inform a friend of something less than critical.
“I am not at liberty to divulge that information.” Geb’s white
teeth gleamed.
“I didn’t realize you were so keen on keeping a lady’s secrets,”
Nicholas teased.
Grabbing his chest, Geb feigned a knife to the heart. “I would never tell
tales of a good woman. There have been a few ladies of our acquaintance
who were not reputable, and those who are part of our line of work whose
secrets I had few scruples about divulging.”
“Indeed.” As much as he wanted to be angry with Geb for befriending
Faith and her friends, he couldn’t manage it. The truth was, Geb was quite
discerning about who he called friend.
During the time he’d spent with them, he couldn’t help but like them as
well. They were the most spirited and brightest women he’d ever known. He
recalled a beautiful blonde in Spain who had tried to put a knife between
his ribs, and shuddered. At least he didn’t think these Wallflowers were out
for his blood, just his secrets. What he didn’t know, was why they were so
keen on divining his past. He might be a fool to think them innocent. His
trust of a sweet face in the past had nearly gotten him killed.
Geb nudged him out of his thoughts. “Talk to the girl.”
Glancing at where Faith stood drinking a glass of wine and talking
to Poppy Draper, Nicholas mused over if they were plotting their next
attempt to invade his privacy. “Perhaps later. First, I would like a glass of
your excellent cognac.”
“Avoiding her will not make your situation better,” Geb warned, his rich
Egyptian accent rounding the words and lending a sense of foreboding.
“The lady will decide I am not worth the trouble and find herself a less
complicated gentleman to attach herself to.”
Nodding, Geb said, “I’m certain that is true. She is too lovely for half
the men in London to not be in love with.”
Nicholas wished that thought didn’t form a knot in his gut. He also
longed for a day when Faith wouldn’t enter his mind a dozen times. She
had gotten under his skin before he’d even met her, and he couldn’t rid
himself of her spell. Even knowing it had been her mother and not the
lady herself who had written to him when he was in France hadn’t dulled
what he knew and liked about Faith Landon.
“One day you shall have to tell me how you came to this, my friend.”
Geb signaled for Kosey, his servant.
The extremely tall Egyptian wore a white turban and loose black pants
and a similar blouse. He carried a tray with two glasses of dark amber
cognac. “Dinner will be ready in ten minutes, sir. Will that please you?”
Kosey spoke English in an Eastern way, which made the language warmer
and less harsh to the ear. It gained looks from some of the other guests,
but Nicholas liked the formal, old-fashioned speech.
“Very good,” said Geb.
Nick observed the gaping of the other guests. “Why have you invited
these snobs to Aaru, Geb?”
“Flitmore has some items I wish to obtain and Humphry has proved to
be a good source of information about certain parliamentary discussions.”
“I trust you would never use such information against my beloved
country.” A knot formed in Nick’s gut.
“No, but I might try to sway other members of your government. I like to
know what is happening in my adopted country, Nicholas. That is all. As a
foreigner, I have no say. This gives me some needed control.” Geb grinned.
Nick held back a scolding that would do no good.
“Do not look at me so ill. I merely use information to my advantage
just as everyone else does. I will share bits with them or buy back pieces
of Egyptian art. It will harm no one.”
Kosey moved to the door where he waited for word from the cook that
dinner was ready to be served.
Lord and Lady Flitmore gaped at Kosey. Perhaps it was his height as
he towered over everyone in the room. It might have been his odd clothes.
Whatever it was, their shocked regard needled at Nicholas.
Faith stepped between him and the couple. “Lady Flitmore, it’s nice to
see you again. I heard your daughter Mary would be here tonight, but I’ve
not seen her. I hope nothing is wrong. I know how she can get into mischief.”
Lord Flitmore coughed uncomfortably. “Mary had some trouble with
her gown and is coming in a later carriage. She will be here any moment.”
As if on cue, a footman announced the arrival of Lady Mary Yates.
A slim woman with red hair and flawless skin sauntered into the room.
Pretty in the classical way, her long, thin nose appeared in a perpetual state
of being turned up at everyone and everything. Hands folded lightly in
front of her, she walked directly to where Faith stood with Mary’s parents.
In a voice without modulation, Mary said, “Mother, Father, I’m sorry to
be late. I hope no one was waiting on me.”
The lack of any emotion in Mary’s voice made it difficult to tell if
she was sincere or just saying what was expected of her. “Thank you for
sending the carriage back for me.”
Lord Flitmore pulled his shoulders back and beamed at his daughter.
“Dinner has only just been announced, my dear girl. Please say hello to
His Grace, the Duke of Breckenridge.”
Mary made a pretty curtsy and plastered a wan smile on her rosy lips.
“How do you do, Your Grace?”
Bowing, Nick couldn’t help but notice the look of disdain that flitted
across Faith’s face. “A pleasure, Lady Mary. I’m pleased you could come
tonight. Do you know Lady Faith Landon?”
Another curtsy and a smile that likened to a wolf, and Mary said,
“Lady Faith and I went to the Wormbattle School together. We have been
acquainted for many years. How are you, Faith?”
Faith raised a brow. “Very well, Mary. You are looking fine. Your parents
tell me you’ve had some issue with your gown this evening.”
Mary’s gown was dark blue and threaded with gold. It pushed all her
assets up to the breaking point of the material at her breast and flowed
down, showing off her perfect figure. She blushed. “Just a small issue that
my maid and a needle and thread resolved easily enough.”
The ladies leered at each other.
Clearing his throat, Lord Flitmore said, “Mary, let me introduce
you to our host.”
“Of course,” Mary agreed, and with a nod to Nick, all three Yateses
left the circle.
Faith watched after Mary but had schooled her features to a pleasant
expression that no one could have noted anything amiss from. Nick had
many questions, but none of them were any of his business.
“Shall we go in to dinner?” As they were officially engaged, Nick
offered Faith his arm and they preceded the others into the dining room.
The long table had rounded corners and was draped in white linen.
Fine china leafed with gold, and highly polished crystal and silver, made
the setting gleam under three fully lit chandeliers hanging overhead, and
with four standing candelabras placed in all corners of the room. The
high-backed, dark wood chairs were cushioned with a pale blue damask.
It was decidedly English, and extremely elegant, to appeal to Geb’s guests.
At the head of the table, Geb welcomed everyone formally to his home
before launching into a story of being on a sinking ship, and the diners
were riveted despite the fact that most of them would not invite an Egyptian
man of no known rank into their own homes. Faith smiled warmly at Geb,
and Nick wondered if she were different. Would his friends, regardless of
their origins, be welcomed to her table?
He shook off the notion. He would not be going through with marrying
Faith Landon, no matter how much he desired her or how kind she pretended
to be. She had betrayed him with her spying, and he wouldn’t have it.
Another exception to the apparent prejudice against Geb were Rhys
and Poppy Draper. The earl and his bride genuinely liked Geb and had
become fast friends with him after being stranded at his house in a storm.
“Did you swim to shore from that distance, Mr. Arafa?” Poppy’s
blue eyes were wide and her dark hair and lashes made the color all the
more demonstrable.
Geb’s cheeks pinked and he laughed. “I’m afraid nothing so heroic,
my lady. I was hauled out of the ocean by a small fishing vessel. My lungs
were full of water and I caught a terrible ague and spent three weeks in
a Portuguese hospital.”
They all laughed with Geb.
Rhys Draper took a long pull on his wine. “I would be willing to bet
you were the most interesting thing those fishermen plucked from the
Atlantic that day. And you were damned lucky. Not only could you have
drowned, but if this had happened a year later, you might have been caught
up in Napoleon’s invasion.”
“Indeed, luck was with me that day and many others.” More sober, Geb
gave Nick a knowing look.
Nick noted his friend’s careful use of luck rather than invoke the name of
the Prophet in a room full of Christians. Knowing how religious Geb was,
Nick knew what he was thinking. They had experienced many adventures
together, and luck, Allah, or God had seen them through some things that
at the time, seemed impossible.
The footmen served the soup.
Nick noted that many of the guests poked at the fine broth, vegetables,
and bits of tender beef, but didn’t eat. The Yates family were among those
who would not eat from the table of an Egyptian but would be happy to
attend, since Geb was a good resource for many business dealings. Not
to mention the depth of Geb’s pocketbook.
Faith, Poppy, and Rhys ate with gusto. Perhaps more than was natural,
and Nick decided they had also noticed the rudeness of the other guests.
Besides the Yateses, Sir Duncan Humphrey, his wife and two sons,
Montgomery and Malcolm, were in attendance as well as William Wharton
and his wife. All were well respected among the ton and had obviously
not come for the food or company. They didn’t speak other than the
occasional thank you.
On Nick’s right, Faith sipped the last of her soup and turned to Mary.
“You didn’t like the soup?”
“I’m not hungry. I’m certain it is quite good.” Mary narrowed
her eyes at Faith.
“It’s really too bad, it was the best I’ve tasted.” Faith smiled warmly
and turned her attention back to Geb. “Poppy told me how wonderful your
cook is and now I can taste the truth of it.”
“You always did have a great love of food, Faith.” Mary’s voice rang with
disdain and she peered down that thin nose at Faith’s curvaceous figure.
Poppy looked ready to leap across the table and do Mary physical harm.
A low laugh from Faith calmed the situation. “I suppose where I am
fond of a good meal you are fond of a good bit of gossip. We each have
our hidden desires. Don’t we, Mary.”
It was a warning, but Nick didn’t have enough information to know
what was at stake.
Mary bit her bottom lip and narrowed her eyes before masking all
emotion and nodding. “I suppose that’s true of everyone.”
A flush of pride swept over Nick. He had no right to feel any sense
of esteem for Faith’s ability to outthink another woman and put her in
her place. Yet, he couldn’t help liking that she had not been bested by a
bigoted daughter of parents who would attend the dinner party of a man
they clearly didn’t like, but wanted something from.
Turning his attention back to Geb, Nick noted his friend’s amusement
at the social volley going on at the table. Geb smiled warmly at Poppy as
she changed the subject to the delectable pheasant and fine wine.
By the main course, Nick had given up on the other end of the table
and was ensconced in a lively conversation among the four people around
him. Rhys was well versed in politics and they discussed the state of coal
mines. Faith and Poppy both added their opinions, which were well thought
out and more astute than he would have thought for ladies of their rank.
Perhaps he should rethink his views of what ladies ponder in the course
of a day. Clearly it was more than stitching and tea patterns.
Geb, too, ignored the reticent group at the far end of the table and joined
the banter. When Kosey announced that cake and sherry were being served
in the grand parlor, Nick was disappointed to leave the conversation.
As soon as they entered the parlor, Flitmore cornered Geb about the
sale of several horses, and Sir Duncan wanted to know when the next
shipment of spices from India would be arriving.
Stomach turning at their duplicity, Nick escaped to the garden.
Geb had torches lighting the paths. The gardens here were one of Nick’s
favorite places in England. They were orderly and wild at once. White
stones lined the lanes meant to guide one through the low plantings. It
was a maze but without the threat of becoming lost. The fountain at the
far end broke the silence of the pleasant autumn night. Soon winter would
turn the garden into a wasteland and a good snow would give it the feel
of an abandoned house.
Nick sighed and walked on.
“Are you determined to be alone, or might I join you, Your Grace?”
Faith called from only a few feet behind him.
He must be losing his training for her to have sneaked up behind him
without notice. “Is there something you wanted, Lady Faith?”
She stepped closer. Several curls had freed themselves of her elaborate
coif and called out to Nick to touch them. “It is a lovely garden.” She
glanced around and smiled.
“Yes. Geb has taken bits from all his travels and placed them in his
home and this garden. I think it brings him comfort.”
Faith’s golden eyes filled with sorrow. “Do you think Mr. Arafa is
lonely here in England?”
“It is never easy to live amongst a people not your own.” Nick considered
all the time he’d spent in France, Spain, and Portugal and how much he’d
missed the rainy days in England and people who understood his humor.
“The Wallflowers are very fond of Mr. Arafa. We have not entertained
much, but I will see that he is added to our invitation list. Perhaps a circle
of good friends will make him feel more at home.” She’d placed her index
finger on her chin while she considered how best to help Geb.
Adorable.
He needed to be free of this woman. “You didn’t say what it was you
wanted, Lady Faith.”
Frowning, she walked forward and down the path. “Must I have a reason
to walk in the garden with my fiancé?”
Leaving her to her own devices and returning to the house flitted through
his mind, but it would cause gossip and he was curious about her reason for
seeking him out. “We are hardly the perfect picture of an engaged couple.”
“No. That is true. I wanted to apologize for any undue strain I may
have caused you by trying to find out what kind of character you have.”
“Is that your apology, or shall I wait for more?” he said when she
didn’t elaborate.
She stopped and puffed up her chest. Her cheeks were red and fire
flashed in her eyes. “Why must you be so difficult? Even when I’m trying
to be nice, you find fault. The entire situation was mostly your doing. If
you had been open and honest, that would have been an end to our query
and none of the rest would have been necessary.”
Even more beautiful when she was in a temper, he longed to pull her
into his arms and taste those alluring lips. He was certain just one tug
would topple all those curls from the pins that held her hair in place and
he could find out if they were as soft as they appeared. It was maddening.
“I hardly see how it was my fault. You and your friends spied on me and
involved Geb, which is unforgivable.”
As soft and lovely as she was, a hard edge caught in her voice. “I
suppose, then, you will not accept my apology. I see. Well, in that case,
I’ll leave you to your solitude.” She turned to walk away and stopped, eyes
narrowed into the darkness beyond the gardens, which were surrounded
by tall evergreens.
Following her gaze, Nick saw nothing, though the hair on the back of
his neck rose. “What is it?”
“I felt eyes on me, as if someone was watching.” She shivered and
continued straining to see in the shadows.
“I’m sure you are imagining things.” He dismissed her worry.
That hateful glance fell on him before she plastered false serenity on
her face. “Perhaps.”
He preferred the disdain to the untruthful agreement. Why he should
care when he wanted nothing to do with her, he didn’t know. “Shall I escort
you back inside, Lady Faith?”
“You are too kind, Your Grace, but I can manage the journey on my
own.” With a curt nod, she stormed away from him toward the house.
16 A.S. Fenichel
Unable to look away, he admired the gentle sway of her hips until she
climbed the veranda steps and went inside. Lord, how he longed to hold
those hips and slide his hands up to that slim waist, and so much more.
He shook away the wayward thoughts before he embarrassed himself
with his desires.
One thing was certain, Faith Landon would be his undoing.










A.S. Fenichel gave up a successful career in New York City to follow her husband to Texas and pursue her lifelong dream of being a professional writer. She’s never looked back.

A.S. adores writing stories filled with love, passion, desire, magic and maybe a little mayhem tossed in for good measure. Books have always been her perfect escape and she still relishes diving into one and staying up all night to finish a good story.

Multi-published in historical, paranormal, erotic and contemporary romance, A.S. is the author of the several series, including Forever Brides, Everton Domestic Society, Wallflowers of West Lane and more. Strong, empowered heroines from Regency London to modern-day New Orleans are what really excites A.S., and that’s what you’ll find in all her books.

A Jersey Girl at heart, she now makes her home in Southern Missouri with her real-life hero, her wonderful husband. When not reading or writing, she enjoys cooking, travel, history, puttering in her garden and spoiling her fussy cat.

 


Website: http://asfenichel.com

Blog: http://asfenichel.com/blog

Twitter: http://twitter.com/asfenichel

Facebook: Http://facebook.com/asfenichel




http://www.pumpupyourbook.com

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Happy Book Birthday to SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY by Jackie Barbosa #bookbirthday @JackieBarbosa

 


We're thrilled to announce the release of Jackie Barbosa's SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY today! To help celebrate, we are asking our readers if you can pleeeeze pretty please pick up at copy at Amazon  and come back and tell us how you liked it? Or, leave a review at Amazon! 

Congratulations, Jackie, on your new historical romance, SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY!











Title
: SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY
Author: Jackie Barbosa
Publisher: Circle Press
Pages: 244
Genre: Historical Romance (Regency Era)

BOOK BLURB:

When Mrs. Laura Farnsworth discovers the blood-stained body of a man wearing the distinctive red coat of the British army, her first instinct is to let dead dogs lie. It has, after all, been just two days since the Battle of Plattsburgh, and the disposition of enemy corpses is hardly her purview. But then the man proves himself to be very much alive by grabbing her ankle and mumbling incoherently.

After almost twenty-five years in His Majesty’s service, Lieutenant Colonel Geoffrey Langston never expected to wake up in heaven, much less being tended by an angel. But when he regains consciousness in the presence of a beautiful, dark-haired woman and with no memory of how he came to be there, what else can he think? Except it’s rather odd for an angel to have an American accent.

As the long-widowed Laura nurses the wounded Geoffrey back to health, the attraction between them heats from a simmer to a boil. Bound by his oath to the British crown, Geoffrey should be working to find his way back to his regiment and from the, to England. Instead, he’s sleeping with the enemy…and thereby committing the crime of desertion if not treason. But then, who’s going to find out?

If only Geoffrey didn’t have a family back home who refuse to take “missing in action” for an answer.

ORDER YOUR COPY

Amazon Kindle   *    Kobo    *    Nook   *   Apple

Other Books by Jackie Barbosa:

Sleeping with the Enemy other books

_____________________

meet the author

Jackie Barbosa

Jackie Barbosa can’t remember a time when she didn’t want to be an author when she grew up, but there were plenty of times when she wasn’t sure she ever would be. As it turns out, it just took her about twenty years longer to grow up than she expected!

On the road to publication, Jackie took a few detours, including a stint in academia (she holds an MA in Classics from the University of Chicago and was a recipient of a Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities) and many years as a technical writer/instructional designer for a data processing company. She still holds her day job, but her true vocation has always been writing fiction and romance in particular.

Jackie is a firm believer that love is the most powerful force in the world, which that makes romance the most powerful genre in the world. Don’t ever let anyone tell you otherwise!

 WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website: http://www.jackiebarbosa.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackiebarbosa

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JackieBarbosaAuthor/

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour Kick Off: SURVIVING HIROSHIMA by Anthony Drago & Douglas Wellman




SURVIVING HIROSHIMA
Anthony Drago & Douglas Wellman
Biography

From Russian nobility, the Palchikoffs barely escaped death at the hands of Bolshevik revolutionaries until Kaleria’s father, a White Russian officer, hijacked a ship to take them to safety in Hiroshima. Safety was short lived. Her father, a talented musician, established a new life for the family, but the outbreak of World War II created a cloud of suspicion that led to his imprisonment and years of deprivation for his family.

Then, on August 6, 1945, 22-year-old Kaleria was doing pre-breakfast chores when a blinding flash lit the sky over Hiroshima, Japan. A moment later, everything went black as the house collapsed on her and her family. Their world, and everyone else’s changed as the first atomic bomb was detonated over a city.

After the bombing, trapped in the center of previously unimagined devastation, Kaleria summoned her strength to come to the aid of bomb victims, treating the never-before seen effects of radiation. Fluent in English, Kaleria was soon recruited to work with General Douglas MacArthur’s occupation forces.


_____________________





At 09 15:15am Tinian time - 08 15:15am Hiroshima time - the bomb drop sequence counts down to zero and Little Boy falls free from the bomb bay. Major Ferebee announces, “Bomb away,” but the everyone already knows that. Suddenly no longer struggling with its nearly 10,000 pound load, the Enola Gay has leaped upward, jolting the crew. Tibbetts immediately pulls the aircraft into a 155 degree right turn to put as much distance as possible between them and the blast site. They will have some time to make their escape. It will take Little Boy 44 seconds to fall to its designated detonation altitude of just under 2,000 feet.

In 44 seconds the future of warfare will be inalterably changed.

In 44 seconds tens of thousands of people will witness a horror never before seen.

In 44 seconds a 24-year-old Russian émigré, Kaleria Palchkoff, will be in the center of a horrendous conflagration never before unleashed in human history.


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Anthony “Tony” Drago was born in Camden, New Jersey and spent much of his early childhood at his paternal grandparents Italian grocery store. From a young age, his mother, Kaleria Palchikoff Drago, would tell him the captivating story of her journey from Russia to Japan and then to the United States. It created Tony’s foundation for his love of history—especially his family’s history—bringing him to write this book.

After retiring in 2006, Tony doubled down on his passions—flying his airplane, restoring his classic car, and traveling the world with his wife, Kathy. Tony and Kathy have been married for forty-five years. They have three adult children and enjoy spending their days on the beach in their hometown of Carmel, California with their eight grandchildren and dogs, Tug and Maggie. For more information about Kaleria and the book, visit http://www.survivinghiroshima.com.




Douglas Wellman was a television producer-director for 35 years, as well as dean of the film school at the University of Southern California. He currently lives in Southern Utah with his wife, Deborah, where he works as a chaplain at a local hospital when he isn’t busy writing books.
For more information on Doug and the books he has written, visit his website at http://www.douglaswellmanauthor.com.







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Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour Kick Off: UNDER A FULL MOON: THE LAST LYNCHING IN KANSAS by Alice Kay Hill @akhillauthor #TrueCrime


UNDER A FULL MOON: THE LAST LYNCHING IN KANSAS
Alice Kay Hill
True Crime

UNDER A FULL MOON: The Last Lynching in Kansas tells of the tragic abduction and death of an eight-year-old girl at the hands of a repeat offender in 1932. This crime stands apart as the last mob lynching in Kansas. Based on true events, this account takes a deep dive into the psycho-social complexities of pioneer times and their impact on this particular crime and the justice meted out to the perpetrator.

Beginning in the year 1881, and written in a chronological narrative non-fiction format, author Alice Kay Hill vividly weaves the stories of the victims and the families involved. She reveals how mental and physical abuse, social isolation, privations of homesteading, strong dreams and even stronger personalities all factored into the criminal and his crimes.

Spanning the years of settlement to the beginnings of the Dust Bowl, historic events are lived as daily news by the seven families whose lives become intertwined. Historically accurate and written with an intimate knowledge of the area, UNDER A FULL MOON is as personal as a family diary, as vivid as a photo album found in an attic trunk, and will remain with the reader long after the book is closed.




Amazon → https://amzn.to/3kI18XG


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Their son Addison Alanson (A.A.) is born on a spring day in 1889. Children are one crop that can be counted on. Drought, grasshoppers, late freezes and early frosts might take out fields and gardens, but the babies are persistent in their regular arrival. Mary is thirty-eight years old.

In rural homes a girl is trained for motherhood and learns the basics of house management through helping to raise younger siblings. Typically, not long after puberty, she will be married and delivering or nursing babies without let up for most of her life. Often her first daughters have children before she herself is done.

Mary gazes into her squalling newborn’s face and knows that his life can be taken in a moment. Though she would never know the numbers, she was clearly aware of childhood mortality. In 1870, two years after her marriage to Alanson and while they were living in Nebraska, 114 deaths occurred in their county. Nearly 100 of those were children, most less than five years of age.

Cholera infantum had taken their little boy, John. Mary would never forget his extreme distress as vomiting and diarrhea drained his life so quickly, his feverish lips cracking like parchment, his skin becoming translucent until she could trace his veins and see his heart thumping below his heaving chest.

Not long after John was buried a near neighbor lost her not quite one-year-old when he choked on a piece of seed corn. The frantic mother carried his lifeless body from home to home while screaming for someone to save her purple faced child. Anything and everything could happen to these defenseless babies. As she puts Addison Alanson to her breast Mary shivers, teeth chattering from childbirth strain and fatigue without hope or expectation of relief.

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Alice Kay Hill is passionate about her Kansas heritage. She has published in Hobby Farms magazine and written an instruction manual title GROW TOPLESS: A Modified High Tunnel Design for Headache Free Extended-Season Gardening which is available on Amazon. UNDER A FULL MOON: The Last Lynching in Kansas is her first narrative non-fiction work.






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Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour Kick Off: RECKLESS IN RED by Rachael Miles @rachael_miles #RegencyRomance





RECKLESS IN RED
Rachael Miles
Regency Romance

Lena Frost is a force to be reckoned with. A woman who has made her way in society without family or fortune, she’s about to realize her first big success as an artist. . . . Until her business partner makes off with her money, leaving her with little more than her hopes—and a dead body in her studio. Now Lena is at the mercy of a strikingly handsome stranger demanding answers she dare not reveal . . .
Is it her seductive eyes, or his suspicion that she’s up to no good that have Clive Somerville shadowing Lena’s every move? Either way, his secret investigation for the Home Office has him determined to uncover Lena’s hidden agenda.  But the closer he gets to her, the more he longs to be her protector. Is she a victim of circumstance? Or a dark force in a conspiracy that could destroy everything Clive holds dear?  Discovering the truth could have dire consequences, not only for Lena, but for his heart . . .

Reckless in Red was a 2019 finalist for the Holt Medallion in Historical Fiction and a first-place winner in the 2020 National Federation of Press Women’s communications contests in the category Fiction for Adult Readers: Novels.

Praise for Reckless in Red

An artist preparing a huge exhibition is disheartened when her business partner absconds with her money, but the event introduces her to an aristocrat who ultimately becomes her greatest ally against a shadowy enemy.

Artist Lena Frost is a survivor. She’s survived a weak father and a difficult stepmother. She survived in France during Napoleon’s war. She’s even rebounded from her lost career when she finally had to flee France after having been betrayed. Now she’s spent three years preparing a huge exhibition, which is the talk of London. So when her trusted business partner disappears with all her funds just two weeks before the gala opening, she’s nearly defeated. Especially when he leaves her an enigmatic message implying she’s in danger. But she can’t give up: “She would have to reinvent herself again. The very thought of it made her almost weak with despair.” Fearing she’s being followed, she winds up at The African’s Daughter, a bookshop owned by her Anglo African friend Constance Equiano, who introduces her to the Muses, a group of aristocratic ladies who meet monthly at the shop. Through them, she meets Lord Clive Somerville, brother of the Duke of Forster and the Regency equivalent of a forensic pathologist. When it becomes clear that someone is trying to kill Lena and more than one of her exhibition artists has disappeared mysteriously, Clive vows to keep her safe, help her open the exhibition, and discover who’s behind the threats. Author Miles continues her smart, intriguing Muses Salon series (Jilting the Duke, 2016, etc.) with another bright, accomplished heroine who fights for her happiness with an unexpected perfect match.

A unique storyline, a dose of suspense, and a circle of intelligent female friends enhance a successful romance.
Kirkus Reviews

The suspenseful fourth in Miles’s Muses’ Salon series (after Tempting the Earl) captivates with clever prose and an unconventional heroine. In 1820 London, painter Lena Frost drifts on the fringes of society due to her checkered past, but she hopes that her upcoming exhibition will catapult her into artistic fame. Her hopes are dashed when her business partner disappears with all of their money. Then several people, all with some connection to Lena, are murdered. Enter Clive Somerville, who is the younger brother of a duke and is a surgeon who serves among the Home Office’s investigative ranks. His inquiries into the rash of killings lead him straight to Lena’s doorstep. His fascination with Lena blurs the lines between suspicion and desire, and his urge to question her quickly transforms into a need to protect her. The only flaw in this intricately crafted historical romance is the unbelievable speed at which the connection between the protagonists develops. Readers looking for a change from Regencies will find this witty Victorian tale refreshing.

Publishers Weekly





Amazonhttps://amzn.to/3ftmvby

 Barnes & Noblehttps://bit.ly/31cAnBO

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Winter 1820
“That damned swindler.”
From the office door of Calder and Company, Lena Frost could see the key, left precisely in the middle of the empty desktop. Everything else was gone: Horatio’s inkwell, his penknife, his little toys, even the carved bird he’d been toying with for the last several weeks. She knew what it meant: Horatio had left. For good.
But did he take the money? She snatched up the key as she rounded the desk. Perhaps he’d left it—or at least enough to pay the remaining craftsmen and open the ex- hibition. Perhaps: the word felt hollow.
Five of the six desk drawers stuck out several inches. Horatio had left in haste. She looked through the drawers, now a jumble. Unused correspondence paper in a variety of sizes. An assortment of bills, paid—because she had paid them—to the end of the quarter. A handful of artist’s crayons, almost used up. She picked up the sanguine pencil, its tip a ruddy red against her hand, then tossed it back into the drawer. Horatio was a talented artist, but his real skill was with words, most of them lies.
Nothing in the drawers was of any importance.
Only the drawer where she kept the money box was still shut. If the money was gone, her only hope would be to keep it quiet until she could open the exhibition. Subscribers had paid in advance to see what everyone was calling the most important art exhibition of the year. If she didn’t open, she’d have to refund their money. If she could make it two more weeks . . .
She hesitated before turning the key, torn between needing to know and dreading the knowledge.
No. Whatever is here—or isn’t—I will face it, as I always have. She turned the key. The drawer opened about four inches, then stuck. Hope bloomed for a moment. Perhaps the money box was still there, wedging the drawer in place, its banknotes and coin all still neatly arranged in di- vided trays. She pushed the drawer in, then tugged it out. But nothing would make it open wider.
She slid her hand in flat; there wasn’t room to make a fist. Then she inched her fingers forward. She felt nothing but the wooden bottom of the drawer. When she reached the halfway point, her stomach turned sour. The box was gone. But she kept reaching, needing to know the drawer was empty before she let herself sink into the despair already pooling inside her.
At the very back of the drawer, almost past her reach, her fingertips felt the edge of a thick piece of paper. A banknote? Perhaps he had left her enough to open the exhibition? Or at least to pay her rent? Pressing the tips of her fingers against the paper, she dragged it forward and out. The note was folded over twice, and she hesitated a moment, afraid of what it might tell her.
The paper was fine, well made, one of the sheets she used to correspond with wealthy patrons and subscribers. That in itself was strange: Horatio normally wrote on paper with a large watermark of Britannia in the middle of the page. He’d play a game with the ghost image, positioning his salutation so that Britannia would look at the name of the addressee or so that her spear would intersect with his period to make an invisible exclamation at the end of his sentences. Lena had shaken her head at his games, finding it hard to remain angry or frustrated with him. But if he’d endangered the exhibition, she might remain angry with him forever.
Tightening her jaw, she unfolded the page. In the center, Horatio had lettered a single word: “RUN.”
The despair in her stomach turned instantly to an unreasoning fear. Every creak, every groan of the old building sounded like a warning. Run.
She pushed the drawer closed, locked it, and replaced the key in the center of the desktop.
Surveying the room, she tried to imagine where Hora- tio might have hidden the money box. But, other than the desk, two chairs, and the old engravings stuck with pins to the walls, the room was almost empty. Everything was just as it had been for the last two years, except the money was gone, and Horatio with it.
All he’d left her was the note. She held it out, examin- ing the way Horatio’s R curved oddly beneath the bottom of the U, and the final stroke of the N trailed upward. An extra blotch of ink widened the line slightly before the tip, like the hand of a clock. She held the page up to the light. No watermark, no secret design that played with the letters.
She stood, her arms wrapped around her chest, the note limp in one hand. She’d never expected him to betray her, to leave her with no way out but to run. All her energy, her passion, drained out onto the wooden floor and seeped away between the boards. The exhibition would fail. She would fail. And this time she had nowhere to . . . run.
She traced the malformed letters of the note once more, then she crushed it against her palm and shoved it in her pocket.
From the outer office, the hallway door creaked open. When Horatio’d said run, she had no idea he meant so soon. Suddenly afraid, she scanned the room. The inner office door was partly open. The drop from the window to the street was three stories. She had nowhere to hide, and only seconds to make a decision.
Heavy footfalls approached. Though the crew and the ticket seller had left soon after she’d returned, the office door remained open to prospective subscribers until she or Horatio left for the evening. But should the intruder be dangerous, she would have no help. She looked down at her clothes, her best dress and coat worn to meet a pub- lisher who’d agreed to sell engraved prints of the panorama. With only a moment to imagine a plan, she flung herself into a chair before the desk. Her only hope was to pretend to be someone else.
A tall man, strongly built, pushed the door open. Stand- ing in the doorway, he seemed like one of the statues from the Loggia dei Lanzi come to life. And he was beautiful. His clothes caressed his form, revealing powerful shoul- ders, narrow waist, and firmly muscled thighs. His black hair curled in thick waves like Benvenuto Cellini’s Perseus. In Florence, she’d marveled at the sculptures of the classical gods, their muscles detailed in marble or bronze. But she’d never realized how breathtaking it would be for those ancient heroes to come to life.
He examined the room slowly before he turned his attention to her. And when his eyes met hers, it was both exhilarating—and terrifying.
“Are you Mr. Calder? I wanted to subscribe to the ex- hibition in your Rotunda.” She kept her tone breathless and a little naive. “I saw a panorama once when I was a child—the Temples of Greece—and I’ve never forgotten it, how you could stand in the middle and feel as if you had been transported to a different place and time.” She spoke quickly, letting her words jumble together in a rush of enthusiasm. “I’m looking forward to seeing your painting. I’ve read all the clues you’ve advertised for de- ciphering the topic. I think it must be Waterloo. What else could be painted in such a grand scale? How hard must it be to paint all those figures—the horses, the flags, our men marching valiantly into battle? It must be such a glorious scene!”
“Don’t forget the carrion birds and the jackals ripping apart the bodies of the dead.” His voice was stern, but the sound of it resonated down the line of her spine. “Or the bodies broken apart by the cannon or the bayonet.”
“Well, sir!” She rose, feigning offense. “If you treat a prospective subscriber so rudely, I will spend my sixpence elsewhere.” She walked briskly toward the door. When he didn’t move out of her way, she stopped just out of his reach.
He was considering her carefully, examining her clothes and her figure beneath them. Under the focused attention, Lena felt exposed, like a rabbit who’d encountered a hungry hawk.
Refusing to be intimidated, she examined him in turn. His eyes were a cold green, his chin firm. His cravat, tied loosely around his neck, made her wish it was tied even more loosely. Her fingers itched for her sketchbook and pencil. Oh, that he would be just another would-be subscriber! Then—perhaps—she could convince him to sit for her. She pushed the thoughts away. He might be handsome, even devastatingly so, but if he were Horatio’s enemy, he would likely be hers as well.
He remained in the doorway, and his stare intensified. She felt the heat of it along her neck and cheeks. Her stomach twisted, but whether in attraction or fear, she couldn’t be certain. The silence between them grew, and Horatio’s message echoed in her ears: Run.
“Will you at least be a gentleman and remove yourself from the doorway?” She pulled her shoulders back, as she did with suppliers who wished to take their fee from Horatio instead of from her.
For a moment, he looked abashed, as if he hadn’t considered that his behavior was ungentlemanly.
“It appears we both have business with Calder, and we are both disappointed.” He stepped away from the door- way, giving her ample room to escape.
Then, as she passed, he offered her a low bow, as if she were a princess or queen. She felt his stare on her back as she walked purposefully, but not too quickly, to the outer office door. She refused to look back at him, afraid to reveal her fear—or her interest.
When she reached the outer door, she allowed herself one last look at her Greek-god-come-to-life, but he had already moved into the office and out of sight. She stepped into the hall, listening. A subscriber likely wouldn’t wait too long for Horatio to return.
She heard the desk drawers open and close, and papers rustle. Not a subscriber then, and her disappointment felt like a rock in the pit of her belly. She waited another minute, but when she heard him wrestling with the stuck drawer, she finally took Horatio’s advice. 
She ran.

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Rachael Miles writes ‘cozily scrumptious’ historical romances set in the British Regency. Her books have been positively reviewed by Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and Booklist, which praised her ‘impeccably researched and beautifully crafted’ novels, comparing her works to those of Jo Beverly and Mary Jo Putney. Her novel, Reckless in Red, won first place in adult fiction: novels in the National Federation of Press Women’s writing contest. A native Texan, Miles is a former professor of book history and nineteenth-century literature. She lives in upstate New York with her indulgent husband, three rescued dogs, and all the squirrels, chipmunks, and deer who eat at her bird feeders.







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