Friday, May 15, 2026

THE LAST FATAL HOUR by Jan Matthews Excerpt, Interview & giveaway

THE LAST FATAL HOUR by Jan Matthews Banner

THE LAST FATAL HOUR

by Jan Matthews

May 4 - 29, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

The Last Fatal Hour by Jan Matthews

For Leona Gladney, former woman soldier of the Union Army, life goes on despite the echoes of the battlefield in her heart. Now a suffragist and budding socialite in Brooklyn Heights, she yearns for a literary life and family. But her husband’s business partner embezzles their money and disappears.

The society matrons of Brooklyn Heights turn a gimlet eye on Leona after the suspicious death of a wealthy friend. Leona will do anything to find justice for her friend and clear her own name, but she finds only secrets, seances and murder.

Book Details:

Genre: Historical Mystery
Published by: Coffee&ink Press
Publication Date: April 7, 2026
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 9798232470982
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

The blot of ink stuck to her finger, tacky like drying blood. Leona scrubbed at it with her handkerchief as the clock chimed two hours after midnight. She capped the inkwell, and while the ink dried on her most recent entry, she organized the copies with ribbons. Blue for Daphne and red for Ruth. With shaking hands, she slipped the copies into stiff cardboard folios and tied them closed. Sighing, she set them on the desk in front of her.

The flames in the hearth beckoned. This wasn’t the first night she’d yearned for obliteration. It wouldn’t come if she gave in to the urge to throw her labor into the fire. Only paper and ink would vanish, leaving the memories behind.

Pen and ink or back to the laudanum.

A grim thought, the grimmest of all.

The words had clawed their way out tonight. She’d begun the memoir of her time as a Union soldier months ago with the hope her drowning spirits would revive once the words dropped to the page. Yet the foreboding crept through her and tightened around her throat as the little study filled with familiar shadows. This old terror had become a second skin, like the tattered and dirty uniform she’d once worn.

Over the monotonous chatter of the rain, the clock ticked away the seconds until her husband came home. Leona moved to the window, pushed aside the heavy velvet curtains, and looked out at night-shrouded Cranberry Street. A lamp glowed in a window across the street. Homesickness for Boston, for life before the war, for herself before the war, settled on her. The wind threw a heavy splash of rain against the window, and she jumped back, letting go of the curtain.

Pacing the study, her restless thoughts rushed on without fatigue. To keep the memories inside only fed the persistent mental return to the battlefield, and the outpouring of words somewhat tamed her tormented soul. She stopped and touched the folio. Work would save her: work, family, friendship, and love. Maybe she’d write a story about two clocks. A natural clock which kept good time and a mad clock that twisted time out of true.

The street door below opened and closed. At last Gil, home safe. She couldn’t even bring herself to scold him for being so late. Leona listened for his footsteps as she crossed the room to tuck the folios into her desk drawer and locked it. She closed the gaslight apertures in the study and turned up the flame on the wall sconces in the drafty hallway so he could find his way. In the bedroom, she shed her dressing gown, stepped out of her slippers, and kicked them under the bed. Gil made his clumsy climb up the stairs. When he stumbled into the room, she pulled the covers back. He fell into bed fully clothed beside her, mumbling and fretful, the sharp ripe scent of whiskey lacing his breath.

She laid her hand on his shoulder. Beneath the cloth of his shirt, his skin was cold and damp. “Rest now, go to sleep,” she whispered.

***

At first light, Leona had dressed in a blue and cream day gown and made her way downstairs for breakfast. The creeping dread of the night before had waned. She rubbed her gritty eyes and yawned again. Mrs. McCarthy poured coffee from the silver pot, the familiar, civilized table a welcome sight. The scent of bacon made her stomach growl.

“Are you well, m’um?”

Leona glanced into the broad face of their cook and housekeeper, a sturdy and mature woman with a comforting Irish burr. She wore her fading blonde hair in a crown around her head.

“I didn’t sleep much.” Leona yawned again behind her fingers.

Gil’s heavy tread on the stairs made them both jump, and Mrs. McCarthy squeaked.

“I’ll bring more breakfast in a jiffy.” She fled through the side door to the kitchen just as Gil ducked through the hall entrance.

Leona rose and smiled at her husband. He’d made a great effort to come down early after returning so late. She accepted his peck on the cheek, poured him coffee and set it between them, wifely mask in place. He glared with bloodshot eyes at the letter in his hand, and her stomach clenched.

“It’s not all bad news, Gil.” She’d read the contents of the letter before leaving it on his desk in his study, as Grandfather had addressed it to both.

He raised his hazel eyes to her. “You recall Henry has absconded with all our funds?” he asked in a sarcastic tone, squinting at the letter, then back at her.

She no longer knew what to say about Gil’s former business partner, Henry Caldwell-Jones. The police were still looking for him. It put the devil in Gil’s eyes to speak of it, so she tried to let it be, not wanting to distress him even more.

“Of course, I remember, Gil. I—”

“And now your grandfather won’t give me a second loan. I’ll have to go back to the bank and ask them again.”

“He only wants to speak with you face to face about our situation,” she said, in her grandfather’s defense. “He’ll help us, Gil. He did offer to speak at the lyceum on his return from Ohio, to help raise funds. It isn’t as if—” Or was it? “We won’t lose the house, will we?”

The muscles in his lean face twitched as Gil fought to hide his disappointment, and her heart broke a little more to witness it. “Your grandfather does not bring in the interest he once did.”

It was true Leona’s grandfather, poet, abolitionist, and Transcendentalist, didn’t bring in the money he used to at readings in New York and Brooklyn, but he didn’t suffer for it.

Gil raked his fingers through his thick, brown hair and opened his mouth. Mrs. McCarthy entered with his breakfast, apparently stopping what he meant to say next. He reached inside the pocket of his trousers and pulled out a small notebook and pencil. Laying them on the table, his frown deepened.

Once Mrs. McCarthy had bustled out again, Leona said, “I could write to Aunt Louisa.” Who was not truly an aunt, but a friend of her mother’s.

He opened the notebook and touched the tip of his tongue to the pencil. “We cannot afford to feed and house a man of Bronson Alcott’s caliber,” he replied with heaviness. He bent his head to the columns of numbers on the pages.

His confidence and spirits were usually high, and it hurt to see him laid so low. She did mean Louisa Alcott herself, not her father Bronson Alcott, as the speaker for the lyceum to draw a crowd. Her novel, Little Women, published two years before, had become hugely popular.

“I’ll sell the lyceum, that should help,” Gil murmured, eyes downcast.

Leona winced. It was where they’d met nearly a year before. At a loss again, she glanced down at her lapel watch—9 o’clock already. She stood and set cups and plates on the tray.

“Let Mrs. McCarthy do that.” His pencil went on calculating their precarious position.

“I don’t mind. I’m off to see Daphne this morning. I won’t be home until the late afternoon.” Taking a deep breath, she dared to ask, not expecting an answer. “How much do we owe?” She blew out her held breath, apprehension biting at her. “Why won’t you tell me how much Henry has stolen?”

“He’s made me a laughingstock.” His handsome lips formed a tight smile, but he didn’t look at her. “Don’t you worry, Leona, leave it to me. This will all be over by Christmas.”

***

On the street, she began to walk, then turned to observe the window where Gil labored, smoke curling from the chimney. The image stayed with her as she made her way to the newsstand around the corner and waited patiently for her turn to buy a paper. The sunny day, though cold, had driven people outdoors, well wrapped in fur-collared coats and wool scarves. Woodsmoke and the sharp tang of the river mingling with the scent of baking bread drifted on the breeze. She chewed on the frustration that he wouldn’t share their financial details with her. It made her more fearful not to know. Though she kept the memoir and chapter stories a secret from him, this was hardly the same.

Passing the newsstand, an article about the new bridge caught her eye so she bought the latest Brooklyn Eagle. The previous summer, the four of them, Henry, his wife Helen, herself, and Gil, had stood at the end of Noble Street to watch the construction of the giant caissons in the naval yard. Though approval of the bridge was a long-foregone conclusion, the article was typical of the Eagle’s awful anti-consolidation fear mongering. The article repeated the claim linking the boroughs would only bring the dregs of Manhattan’s Lower East Side into Brooklyn’s pure white Heights. The wrongness of such an attitude churned her stomach.

Leona folded the paper and tucked it under her arm with the folio, sighing. Who would save the poor of this world from the hatred of the rich? Her spirits drooped lower.

She breathed deep the November air on familiar, tree-lined Remsen Street, where she’d lived for two years before marrying Gil in August. The red door of the brownstone opened, welcoming her in. Timothy, the butler, took her hat and coat. Before he disappeared with them, his eyes met hers with a familiar blue twinkle.

“I’ll tell her you’re here,” he said.

“Thank you.” She inhaled the sweet smell of hothouse roses set in vases along the long hallway and waited for word of her arrival to reach Daphne and her nurse Audrey.

Audrey approached from the depths of the house. Her eyes, though hooded, were a pure delphinium blue, blonde hair pinned tight to her head. She wore a plain uniform of dark gray with long cuffed sleeves and a white apron.

“Mrs. Van Wyn is in the Lavender Room.” With a curt nod, she turned away.

When they first met, Leona and Audrey had often shared tea and conversation, but of late Leona felt nothing but a wall of smothered animosity between them. They hadn’t argued, as such, though she had an idea where the strained relations came from.

“Is she well?” Leona asked.

For a moment, she didn’t think Audrey would answer, but the woman turned toward her again. “She passed a quiet night. The laudanum helps.”

Leona frowned. Audrey flicked a dismissive hand and went on her way.

The introduction of laudanum in Daphne’s life began not long after Leona moved to Cranberry Street with Gil that summer. The spas and cures Daphne’s grandson Benedict and his wife arranged didn’t seem to help anymore. The family hired Audrey, who administered the laudanum, a common enough panacea. Laudanum’s presence always disturbed Leona, and she had protested to the family, but no one listened. Audrey had become cold after this discussion. Leona believed some of Daphne’s pain came from her daily battle with grief. Leona often feared her own grief and the overuse of laudanum, prescribed by a respected doctor in Boston, had killed the child from her previous marriage to Jack Davenport. Poor dead Jack.

***

Excerpt from The Last Fatal Hour by Jan Matthews. Copyright 2026 by Jan Matthews. Reproduced with permission from Jan Matthews. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Jan Matthews

Jan Matthews is an American expat living in the sunshine in Portugal.

She is (finally) retired from HIM and writes historical mysteries from the Middle Ages to World War I. When not writing or drinking coffee and wine in nearby cafes, she knits and crochets for charity and reviews books on her blog.


Interview:

  

  1. When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?

When I was a kid, like 4th or 5th grade, I knew I wanted to be the mind behind the story.

That’s how I described it to myself at the time, but it was almost like I could peep behind stories and see how they were presented.

 

  1. How long does it take you to write a book?

That’s a hard question for me, which I still find kind of amazing, because we live a fairly quiet life, even when I was working. But in the past, when I would write during the day and work at night, the books got done faster (I wrote 4 books and a novella under the pseudonym Heloise West). It took too long to write The Last Fatal Hour, but I wrote and rewrote until it had the shape I wanted. I pulled subplots and added characters who eventually got taken out again. But from when I started it, in 2018 to publication (April 7th 2026) those have been some emotionally turbulent years. I must be one of the few people who didn’t write during the pandemic. I worked at the hospital and drove into the office three days a week, a long commute, overtaken by worry. I made masks from literal scraps and fretted about my mother in assisted living. (She’s ok). Then I worked from home again and got back to writing after work.

 

  1. What is your work schedule like when you're writing?

Again, not an easy question! We moved to Portugal in September of 2025 and that took a lot of time and effort (we’d do it again in a heartbeat—we love it here) then we took Portuguese classes and spent some time getting to know the ex-pat community. But I did finish the novel, the finalfinalfinaldraft and started the process of uploading to Draft2Digital, finding reviewers, marketing etc. But. My ideal writing days would be four days a week, 3-4 hours in the morning or afternoon. This is what I’m aiming for when language classes end in a few weeks.

 

  1. When did you write your first book and how old were you?

When I was in my late 30s (late 90s) I had the opportunity to go back to college, so I went back full time, though I was working full time. I wanted to be a Medieval History major and to that end, took a medieval history survey class, fall of Rome to around the Black Plague. But it was too much to do both, so I just signed up for a class or two, one of them being a lovely Art of the Crusades course which covered the historical crusades from three standpoints (Christian, Muslim, Jewish) in art, literature, song etc…great class. I came to love Italian Medieval History and wrote a story about a doctor solving murders in 13th century Siena (my favorite European town). I wrote the whole thing through,100,000 words, put it through a critique group, but it was crap, in the end. I do wish I kept it. I purged it, unfortunately. I still love the character and the background, and it is possible to resurrect this character and put him back to work. It was 2010 when I finished it, I think, so I was 50. I wrote some short stories previously and a few got published, but I have never liked writing short stories and don’t find them satisfying to write. I like to read them, I admire the skill, but it’s just not for me.

 

  1. How many books have you written? Which is your favorite?

The Last Fatal Hour is my fifth book. I wrote a contemporary gay romantic suspense trilogy starting in 2014, then published a novel called Ardent in 2017, the last for a while. I published with small presses and most of themhave folded. Ardent I am revising, hoping to get it published by the end of the year. I think I’ll revise the novella, too, a historical suspense story set in 18th century Siena.

 

  1. Do you have any suggestions to help me become a better writer? If so, what are they?

For me, becoming a better writer meant writing and re-writing. Read the books, take notes on technique, sign up with your genre’s professional groups (RWA, Thriller Writers etc) and join critique groups. Take everything with a grain of salt and keep writing. I’m partial to Save The Cat for structure, KM Weiland for technique. Let your characters talk to you in journals and letters. Writing is a muscle and the more you work it, the stronger it gets.

Catch Up With Jan Matthews:

coffeeandinkbooks.wordpress.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads - @coffeeink
BookBub - @coffeeandink1
Instagram - @coffeeandink197
X - @coffeeandink2
BlueSky - @coffeeandink2.bsky.social

 

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Thursday, May 14, 2026

Sinner's Prayer by Dwain Lee Interview & Giveaway

Sinner's Prayer (A Dan Randolph/Greg Zhu Mystery) by Dwain Lee

About Sinner's Prayer

Sinner's Prayer (A Dan Randolph/Greg Zhu Mystery)

LGBTQ+ Traditional

 Mystery 2nd in Series following Plausible Deception

Settings - Primarily Louisville, Kentucky, along with southwestern Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston 

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Maison Laide Press 

Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 25, 2026 

Print length ‏ : ‎ 328 pages

Paperback ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8218702953

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GT28D7W6 

Digital ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8218704353 

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GTC9G4C6 

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The remains of a highly regarded church member who disappeared without a trace almost forty years earlier are found buried in the basement of Parkvale Presbyterian Church in Louisville. Almost immediately after the discovery, another much-beloved former member dies by suicide at a lonely scenic roadside overlook. Are the two deaths related? Presbyterian minister Dan Randolph is pondering his legacy as retirement nears. Now, he's got to deal with the murder, too, which hasn't just dug up bones, but also long-held secrets of misconduct, sexual abuse, and scandal-along with angry demands for his own ouster, with some claiming he's mishandled the situation. SINNER'S PRAYER is the second in a series of mysteries featuring Dan Randolph and his violin-making husband Greg Zhu. As the mystery unfolds, readers get an engaging, humorous, sometimes frustrating, and often touching look into their very different personalities and their unique relationship. At the same time, the book examines serious issues of not only the underlying murder, but suicide, sexual abuse within the church, homophobia, and the changing social realities of living as one's authentic self, told through a series of flashbacks from present time to 1985. Follow Dan and Greg as the mystery makes its way through southwestern Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston as well as their hometown of Louisville. Who killed the man in the basement-and why?

About Dwain Lee

DWAIN LEE is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (USA). He is a graduate of Penn State University and Trinity Lutheran Seminary. Before entering the ministry, he was an architect in private practice for many years, mostly in Columbus, Ohio. He and his husband currently live in Louisville, Kentucky, where he works, writes, supports the arts, and is active in various forms of social justice advocacy. He has two daughters he is immensely proud of, enjoys travel, gardening, home repair, camping, and yoga, and is a member of the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels.

Interview:

  1. When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
    Even when I was just five or six years old, I was fascinated by books and the way they felt in my hands and spoke to my heart. Almost as soon as I could print, I crafted my own little books and wanted to be able to offer that same magic to others through the power of story.

Despite my early fascination with books and writing, I didn’t write anything seriously until I was middle-aged, having a couple of magazine articles published when I was in my thirties or forties. But I didn’t really seriously consider writing novels until I was in my sixties—my first novel, Plausible Deception, was published when I was 64 years old, and this one,Sinner’s Prayer,is following about a year and a half later.

2.      How long does it take you to write a book?

Both of my books took just about a year and a half from initial, bare-bones concept to published book. When I’ve told people that in the past, some will think that’s very fast, while others consider it ridiculously slow. I’m sure everyone has their own pace and style—as well as recognizing that for myself and many others, we’ve got day jobs and can’t devote every waking hour to writing—but for me, that’s been a workable timeframe.

  1. What is your work schedule like when you're writing?
    I truly envy authors who can establish a predictable, structured writing routine or discipline. With professional retirement not too terribly far away, I’d love to be able to move in that direction in the future, but for now, my writing schedule is much more piecemeal and “grab it when you can get it.” I wish that weren’t the case, but for now, it’s my reality.

  2. What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
    My writing tends to get split between two very different settings: either a very quiet, isolated setting at home, or while sitting in a loud, crowded coffee, with little in between. I’ve been sitting in the coffee shop trying to work out a scene when I’ll inadvertently overhear a snippet of conversation or a turn of phrase that fits perfectly into what I’m trying to work out in the moment, and I’ll work them into the manuscript almost verbatim. It’s happened more than once, and I laugh each time it does—if I’d been cloistered in the “writing den” at home, I’d have missed that bit of real-time inspiration.

  3. How do books get published?
    Unless lightning strikes and you get a literary agent or a major traditional publisher interested in your work, a book gets published through a lot of hard work, skinned knees, and lessons learned the hard way, either working with a small independent “hybrid” publisher or self-publishing. With my first book, I worked with a hybrid publisher who brought me together with an editor and book designer, coordinated small-run offset printing, and handled wholesale distribution. Those were all things that I didn’t know anything about, and I’m grateful for the assistance and education that it gave me. However, that assistance came at significant cost—and all of the expenses of getting the book in print came directly out of my pocket, not the publisher’s. Being a small publisher/distributor led to limited avenues for placement in retail outlets, and there were other issues that weren’t consistent with my overall goals for the second novel, both in terms of overall process and economics. So for the second novel, I chose to self-publish under my own imprint. I built on the lessons learned from the first book, maintaining full control over the process and improving overall economics. I also chose to work with Ingram Spark for printing and domestic and international wholesale distribution through major retailers.

  4. Where do you get your information or ideas for your books?
    My two books are part of a series that feature the same protagonists—the Reverend Dan Randolph, a gay Presbyterian minister in his 60s, and his husband, the internationally known professional violin maker Greg Zhu. The inspiration for these two characters was probably the easiest part of the process, since they’re modeled very heavily on myself and my own violin-making husband. The idea for the first book came directly out of actual experiences that the two of us had while at a violin association convention in California—the theft of the rare Stradivarius violin that was the cornerstone of the story was purely fictitious, but the violin itself is very real, as were many of the ancillary scenes portrayed in the book. In the second book, the inspiration was found not in my husband’s musical world, but in my professional world of the church. Here again, while I’ve never had to deal with a murdered body being found buried in my church basement, many of the characters and contours of the story are very real and common to that world.

[When did you write your first book and how old were you? (answered above)]

  1. What do you like to do when you're not writing?
    At least for a while longer, I deeply love serving my congregation as their pastor. But life is more than just work, even important work. We live in a 140-year-old “double shotgun” house in an eclectic near-downtown neighborhood of Louisville, which means that we live in a near-constant reconstruction project. It’s a good thing that most of my adult life, I was an architect and I actually enjoy home improvement projects. We tend to our tiny back garden and goldfish pond—our urban “microasis.” We enjoy time with our families, and we love dinner parties with a small group of friends, camping, yoga, and travel. In fact, we just returned from an extended vacation to Taiwan, an incredible experience that will undoubtedly become inspiration for parts of a future book.

  2. What does your family think of your writing?
    I’m very fortunate that my husband, my adult children, and other extended family are all supportive of my writing. It can be tricky at times if a character in a book is inspired by a family member, and you want the character to say or do or be something not completely consistent with their real-life inspiration, but that’s something that together, we’ve been able to navigate with only occasional stumbles.

  3. What was one of the most surprising things you learned in creating your books?
    Simply put, that it was a lot harder than I’d originally assumed—but hard or not, I could, in fact, do it, and I think pretty well, and I’m enjoying it immensely.

  4. Which book is your favorite?
    My two wonderful adult daughters have very different personalities, different passions, gifts, and outlooks. It’s similar with my books. Just as I don’t love one of my daughters more than the other, neither do I love one of my books over the other. They’re very different, but I love them both, maybe specifically because of those differences.

  5. Do you have any suggestions to help me become a better writer? If so, what are they?
    Keep writing, and writing, and then write some more. Read others’ writing, not only for the appreciation of what they’ve written, but how they’ve structured it. Live life fully and broadly; gain as much varied experience and knowledge of the world and the people around you as you can; there are an infinite number of stories waiting to be drawn out of them if you only really see them. Find a very good editor. Allow yourself to be challenged by them, and maybe sometimes get mad at them, and at all times, humbly and gratefully learn from them. Listen to other writers discuss how they go about the craft. Read some books about the subject—a good one that I’ve recently discovered is Page Turner by Barbara Kyle.

  6. Do you hear from your readers much? What kinds of things do they say?
    I love hearing from my readers! I wish I heard from them even more. I’ve gotten such wonderful and helpful feedback from them, and I truly take their thoughts to heart. They’ve offered thoughts regarding the characters I’ve created, the plot lines, whether X was believable or not, whether the solution to the mystery was sufficiently elusive and surprising, but believable once revealed, you name it, they’ve shared it!

  7. What do you think makes a good story?
    An plot that has a sufficient amount of universality of experience, at least in general terms if not specifics. Believable characters that can be appreciated, whether they’re “good” or “bad” characters, that have a realistic level of complexity and occasionally even internal contradiction—just like all of us—and that we want to journey alongside as the story unfolds.

  8. As a child, what did you want to do when you grew up?
    From the time I was eight or nine years old, when my parents built a home, I knew I wanted to be an architect. I was fortunate enough to have had that come true, becoming an architect in private practice and owning my own firm for most of my adult life. But life changes, and I was also fortunate to transition to a second profession that has been equally fulfilling, serving as clergy in parish, chaplaincy, and community roles. Now, as that chapter nears conclusion, I’m looking forward with anticipation for the next chapter.

  9. What Would you like my readers to know?
    I’d love for them to check out SINNER’S PRAYER, to appreciate the story and the depth of its complex characters, ultimately finding hope even while wrestling with some of the darker and difficult themes woven throughout it.

More generally, I’ve joked to some people that one important aspect of writing these books is to offer people a realistic and touching portrayal of a gay couple in their 60s—to show that they can resonate with readers of all ages, but also to show that life, especially gay life, doesn’t end at forty, or even fifty. If my readers didn’t recognize that before, I hope they will by the time they’ve reached the last page.

Thanks very much for this interview—and if any of your audience would like to reach out to me with questions, or just want to say hi, I hope they will.

 

Author Links Author's 

Purchase Links Author's Online Store (preferred) Amazon B&N

TOUR PARTICIPANTS
May 13 – Books1987 – SPOTLIGHT
May 14 – Deal Sharing Aunt – AUTHOR INTERVIEW
May 15 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – SPOTLIGHT
May 16 – The Mystery of Writing – CHARACTER GUEST POST
May 17 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT
May 18 – Sarcastically Yours, Jen – SPOTLIGHT
May 19 – Guatemala Paula Loves to Read- SPOTLIGHT
May 20 – Boys' Mom Reads! – REVIEW
May 21 – Sarandipity's – CHARACTER INTERVIEW
May 22 – Sapphyria's Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
May 23 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT
May 24 – Escape With Dollycas IntoA Good Book – SPOTLIGHT
May 25 – Carla Loves To Read – CHARACTER GUEST POST*

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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Friend Zoned by Samantha Hastings Cover Reveal and Pre-Order

 

Friend Zoned by Samantha Hastings

COMING AUGUST 17, 2026

From Samantha Hastings and Covenant Communications, Inc.

About Friend Zoned

Four years ago, Trina Kimball confessed her love to her lifelong best friend, Dan Latu, only to be rejected. A doctoral degree from Oxford University and a published book later, Trina has cut Dan from her life and moved on. But when she inherits her grandmother’s house, she returns home to Salt Lake City to renovate it.

Dan shows up on her front porch looking for a plus-one to his high school reunion, and Trina realizes her childhood friend is just as dangerous for her heart as he used to be. Counting on his visit home being short, Trina doesn’t know what to do when Dan keeps showing up. From removing carpets and painting walls to repairing cars and boosting her author career, Dan seems determined to fix the friendship they once had.

Trina has decided to focus on love, not fear, but will her heart ever be satisfied in the friend zone?

 

 

Romantic Comedy 

Print length ‏ : ‎ 224 pages

ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1524429619 

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1524429614

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Preorder Today! Amazon

About the Author

Samantha Hastings met her husband in a turkey sandwich line. They live in Salt Lake City, Utah, where she spends most of her time reading, eating popcorn, having tea parties, and chasing her four kids. She has degrees from Brigham Young University, University of North Texas, and University of Reading (UK). She writes cozy murder mysteries under Samantha Larsen.

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Devious Web by Shelley Grandy Giveaway & Interview


 

Book Details:

Book Title:  Devious Web - A Novel by Shelley Grandy
Category: Adult Fiction, 272 pages
Genre: Mystery, Suspense, Thriller
Publisher: SparkPress
Publication Date: October 2024
Content Rating: PG -13 rating for: There are no f-words but there is some violence (attempted murder) and some non-explicit references to sex, alcohol and recreational drugs.
Book Description:

Gone Girl's twists, The Social Network's scheming, and Agatha Christie's sleuthing come together in this suspenseful novel, a bingeworthy mystery set in Toronto that spans corporate intrigue, murder, and marital mismatch. Who would want to harm a well-liked CEO at the top of his game, and why? In the summer of 2021, Canadian tech entrepreneur Tom Oliver is considering selling his company to a Silicon Valley buyer when he becomes the target of an unknown perpetrator. As his friend and homicide detective Jason Liu investigates a web of secrets and deceit, Tom's inner circle of family and colleagues comes under scrutiny.

Devious Web brings you into the world of business, US politics, social media, and family drama. If you were enthralled watching Suits and Succession, you'll enjoy the high suspense, fast pace, and unexpected plot twists of this compelling novel. 
Buy the Book:
Amazon ~ Amazon.ca ~ Audible
B&N Indigo ~ BAM 
Bookshop ~ Walmart
add to goodreads
Meet the Author:

Shelley Grandy is a Canadian communications professional whose type-A personality and honors journalism degree from Ottawa’s Carleton University fueled a career that started in newspapers and progressed to twenty-five years at high-tech
company Nortel. 

She subsequently founded Grandy Public Relations Inc. and has supported tech sector clients in Ontario and Quebec for the past sixteen years. 

After writing countless press releases and technical articles for trade media, Devious
Web
 is Shelley’s debut fiction novel.

When not writing, Shelley enjoys intriguing Netflix-style productions and is known to frequently reference scenes from Grace and Frankie

You can also find her at the boarding stable with her horse, Briosa. Shelley lives in Trenton, Ontario, Canada, with husband of thirty-plus years Roy, husky dog Luka, and cat Otto, within spoiling distance of her beautiful granddaughters, Emilia and Olivia Oulds.

Interview:

April 9, 2026

 

1.    What literary pilgrimages have you gone on?

About a decade ago, my early print-runsigned copy of“I Married Adventure” by Osa Johnson—the colorful story of adventurers in Africa—was inadvertently thrown away during a downsizing move. Not only was ita monetary loss given that the book hasincreased in value as a collectible, it was also a personal loss because the book had belonged to my late mother. I went looking for a copy as close to the original as possibleand had success througha small-town Canadian independent bookseller. I still regret losingmy mom’s original,but I treasure the replacement copy found on my ‘pilgrimage’.

2.    What is the first book that made you cry?

I read “The Red Pony” by John Steinbech when I was young and I was devastated by the plotline invoking the boy’s pony becoming sick with strangles and dying. I was always ‘horse-crazy’ and loved animals in general, so stories involving tragedy or mistreatment are difficult for me to read.

3.    Does writing energize or exhaust you?

I’m energized by writing and that’s because, after formulating plotlines and characters in my mind, it’s exciting to let them spill out onto the page. Writing with passion means sometimes the keyboard can scarcely keep up with the pace of the story. I tend to get immersed in writing and become oblivious to how much time has passed, much as I lose track of time at the stable with my Friesian horse, Briosa.

4.    What is your writing Kryptonite?

Artificial Intelligence, especially my favorite platform ChatGPT, is like Superman’s Kryptonite for doing the research behind my writing. Need to know what a certain geographic area looks like in less than three minutes? Want to know more about the US electoral process? Just ask your favorite AI platform and you’ll have the answers in record time. But while AI is useful for background information and context, I agree with those whopushback against AI-generated content that threatens authentic creativity.

5.    Did you ever consider writing under a pseudonym?

No, I never thought of being like “Lady Whistledown” in theNetflix seriesBridgerton, who writes under a nom de plume. Being an older writer with a debut novel, I’m pleased to put my name on it as the author. What I did find interesting was how long it took me to accept that I had a published book and to describe myself as an author because it was such a newexperience.

6.    What other authors are you friends with, and how do they help you become a better writer?

My author friends and contacts write in different genres, not mystery. The help they’ve provided has related less to the writing itself and more to encouraging my publishing process. A prime example is Kelley Keehn, a prolific non-fiction finance writer who contributed a blurb for my novel’s cover. I have paid forwardthe supportfrom others by providing blurbs and reviews on behalf of fellow authors who also published with SparkPress.

7. Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?

My plan for Devious Web and the sequel I’m currently writing is to have continuity for readers of both books,while at the same time enabling the sequel to stand on its own for new readers. Even though the debut novel will not be a prerequisite for enjoying book number two, I would recommendthat readers enjoy both books in sequence.

8.   8. What authors did you dislike at first but grew into?

Perhaps surprisingly, renowned Canadian author Margaret Atwood’s heavily descriptive style challenged me when I was younger. But I’ve discovered that her work is an acquired taste, nowimparting timeless messages that resonate with me and countless others as evidenced by the renewed popularity of The Handmaid’s Tale.

9.   9. What’s your favorite under-appreciated novel?

Is it presumptuous to say my own😊? What I mean by under-appreciated is that I have a lofty goal for Devious Web, and that is for the book to be made into a Netflix short series or a movie. So far Hollywood has not come calling, but seeing other authors’ works adapted for the screen is exciting. Examples are the Netflix productionThe Lincoln Lawyer based on books by Michael Connelly, and the movie version ofThe Housemaid by Freida McFadden.Having heard myown charactersbrought to life by the narrator of my audiobook, it would be exciting to take the next step with a screen adaptation of Devious Web.

10. As a writer, what would you choose as your mascot/avatar/spirit animal?

I was born in the Chinese Year of the Horse and my spirit animal is a horse. Not only have I owned horses for the past 45 years, but I relate to the characteristics attributed to a horse spirit animalincluding desire for personal freedom, inner strength, and powerful forward momentum in life. Writing has been a huge part of that forward momentumthrough dedicated effort, from working as a journalist, to corporate communications and public relations, to becoming an author.

11. How many unpublished and half-finished books do you have?

Numerous random story ideas have popped into my head over the years, but the only one that truly resonated was Devious Web. I first jotted down ideas for the book over a decade ago and tucked them in a desk drawer in deference to my day job.  The book idea resurfaced at Christmas 2020, and after discussion with my daughter about the viability of the storyline, I finally tackled the writingin 2021. I have only one half-finished book—the sequel to Devious Webstarted in February this year and nearing first-draft completion, fingers crossed.

12. What did you edit out of this book?

I had intended to include a Prologue in Devious Web, andI wrote a couple of versions.But I soon discovered it was more effective to jump into the story without preamble. I also rearranged some chapters to bring intrigue closer to the start of the book.My favorite reader comments reference action starting quickly,andliking the pace of the book overall.

13. If you didn’t write, what would you do for work?

An aspect of my roles in corporate communications and public relations was media trainingtechnology sector executives in Canada and the US. I enjoy preparing spokespeople for interviews,especially in response to crisis situations, so my non-writing career would be in executive media coaching.

14. Do you hide any secrets in your books that only a few people will find?

Like Alfred Hitchcock who famously had a discreet cameo in each of his films, I have invoked some personal references within Devious Web that will notnecessarily stand out to the reader. When choosing character names,I drew from business mentors I have admired as well as family surnames—Wilson and Armstrong for example—that only other family members might recognize. I also sprinkled into the story my personal mantra of“the best revenge is massive success” attributed to Frank Sinatra, and my father’s adviceto be careful what bridges one burns in business.

15.  What is your favorite childhood book?

The book I valued most as a child was a beautifully illustrated copy of Aesop’s Fables which was the prize for my first academic achievement in early public school. Unfortunately, my young border collie chewed the binding and edges of the book,so my prize had a short shelf life. But I loved the message behind each of the fables,brought to life by animals imbuedwith human traits. The stories speak to the fact that human nature has not changed throughout the ages, given that Aesop is believed to have lived in ancient Greece between 620 and 564 BC.

####


connect with the author: website ~ facebook ~ instagram ~ linkedin ~ goodreads

Enter the Giveaway:
DEVIOUS WEB by Shelley Grandy Book Tour Giveaway



Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Transcendence by Katrina Kimball Excerpt & Giveaway


Transcendence
Katrina Kimball

Genre: Paranormal Thriller, Dark Fantasy
Publisher: Rowan Prose Publishing
Date of Publication: April 28, 2026
ISBN: 978-1-961967-80-9
ASIN: B0F711QN1B
Number of pages: 348 pages
Word Count: 85,482
Cover Artist: Rowan Prose Publishing

Book Description: 

When a demonic entity seeking revenge starts tormenting her family, a young woman must rediscover their shared past and embrace her own divine power in order to save not only those she loves, but the creature bent on her destruction.

If you asked Alexis Ferelli what her biggest challenges are in life, she’d say it’s parenting her daughter, Luna, running her masseuse practice, and deftly avoiding conversations about marriage with her partner, Jack. At least, that was the case before she attended a séance. Now, the spirits are trying to contact her and there’s a demonic entity in her daughter’s closet.

Determined to find answers, she turns to the psychic from the séance and the spirit world for help. As she dabbles in the hereafter, she not only discovers another dimension filled with angelic guides, magic, and wonder, but also learns the shocking truth of her connection to the creature tormenting her daughter.

As the dark entity grows bolder and sets its sights on Jack as well as Luna, Alexis realizes that to save them all, she has to face the creature she once betrayed to bring it out of the darkness and back into the light.

Fans of Alix Harrow’s Starling House or Neil Gaiman’s Coraline will enjoy Transcendencs by Katrina Kimball.

Amazon     Books2Read

Excerpt:

Luna woke to a tapping sound coming from her closet. She knew closets weren’t supposed to make tapping sounds. She also knew that’s where monsters hid, in the back of dark closets or under your bed. Maybe that’s where aliens hid, too—waiting to catch you in your sleep.

The silvery light spilling through her parted curtains and pooling on the floor did little to soften the shadows. Through the gloom, she could see the outline of her closet. The door was shut. She cast a wary glance at the windowsill and the visible line of salt that gleamed in the faint moonlight. The salt was undisturbed, her window still closed against the night.

Tap, tap, tap.

She ducked under the covers and scooted to the far side of the bed. Tucked into the corner with her back pressed against the wall, she peeked out from under the blanket, her eyes glued to the closet.

Tap, tap, tap. The sound came again, swiftly followed by the soft click of the closet door as it started to inch open.

As she lay there, huddled in the darkness, too scared to breathe, a tall shadow, darker than the shades of night in which it had hidden, slowly stepped forward. Its red eyes reminded her of Aunt Dani’s cawing raven, the one with eyes like fire that scared you when you walked in the door. But these eyes were worse. Bright red flames surrounded a pupil an even deeper shade of red. And they were looking straight at her.

Frozen in fear, she watched as it glided closer, its footfalls silent, its eyes terrible and bright.

“Hello, little doll,” it whispered. 

Luna couldn’t tell if the thing had a mouth, for its entire face was black except for its terrifying eyes, but she heard the words just the same. A little voice in the back of her head was screaming at her to move, but it was too late, the thing was now between her and the door.

She remembered the bowl of salt on the nightstand next to her bed and finding her voice, tried to be brave.

“I am not a doll.”

“Oh, sweet child,” it sighed as it stepped into the puddle of moonlight, impossibly tall and darker than the nighttime shadows, “I shall make you my little doll. That’s all you’ll ever be.”

Its long arms ended in hooked fingers that looked as sharp as claws. Beneath eyes of flame ran a jagged slit where its mouth should be, as if someone had tried to draw a mouth, but had gotten it all wrong.

The scream that had been building for some time in the back of Luna’s throat finally worked its way free as the creature reached for her, talons grasping, eyes of flame leaping in the night.

She lunged for the salt next to her bed. Flinging the bowl itself at the creature, her eyes widened as it sailed right through it as if were truly just a shadow. Grains of salt flew through the air as the bowl shattered violently against the hardwood floor.

The creature jerked its head in the direction of her mother’s room and stared, its slash of a mouth widening into a gaping smile that made her stomach hurt. She could hear her mother’s footsteps racing down the hall.

Its head swiveled back in her direction, eyes alight with fire as its hideous smile somehow grew. Tears slipped down her cheeks.

“I’ll be seeing you little doll,” it whispered as it glided soundlessly back into her closet and snapped the door shut.

 

About the Author:

A horror enthusiast and lover of all things mysterious and unknowable, it was only a matter of time before author Katrina Kimball picked up her pen and mashed the paranormal, fantasy, and horror genres into one with her debut novel “Transcendence.” When she isn’t working on a novel or binge-watching shows about Bigfoot, ghosts, or aliens, she’s probably thinking about any one of those three things. She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her two children and her adorable Boston Terrier, Beaux.