Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2026

SHADOWS OF THE MISSING by Lauren Carr Review, Trailer & Interview


 

Book Details:

Book Title SHADOWS OF THE MISSING (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #5) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult Fiction (18 +), 434 pages
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:   May 5, 2026
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

"Are you into murder mysteries? Then look at Lauren Carr's books if you want a cold case to unpack and enjoy. Then her latest series, "Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery," is an excellent series to get your fix or bite into." - 5-Star Review by Nightime Reading Center

"The Geezer Squad. They might not be in their prime physically anymore, but their combined intellect and skills at deduction are phenomenal." - 5-Star Review by FUONLYKNEW

"Lauren Carr's Geezer Squad has brought sexy back to mature men and women, whose kickass attitude and smarts sizzle as they melt the clues to those cold cases!"
 - Laura Fabiani, Library of Clean Reads


Book Description:

In the shadows of the missing, the truth lies buried.

Helen Clarke-Matheson believed she had escaped the shadows of her past, building a new life with Chris. But the past has a way of resurfacing, and when her sister arrives with a DNA test, Helen’s world is once again turned upside down. Her sister shattered the family history Helen believed to be true. Her young father hadn’t abandoned his family, and her delusional mother didn’t wander away from her children.
Chris Matheson and the Geezer Squad, a quirky team of retired seasoned sleuths working under the guise of a book club, are drawn into a deeply personal investigation. They must wade through decades of buried secrets and conflicting accounts to uncover the truth behind the parents’ disappearances. As they peel back the layers of deception to unravel long-forgotten clues, they confront the lingering specter of murder and long-hidden crimes. Can they piece together the fragments of the past to bring closure to Helen and her siblings, or will the truth remain buried forever?

Buy the Book:
(available for pre-order)
Amazon
BookBub
add to goodreads

Enjoy These Other Geezer Squad Mysteries:


Book Details:

Book Title CHRIS MATHESON COLD CASE MYSTERIES BOX SET (Book 1 thru 4) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult Fiction (18 +), 434 pages
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:   Oct 5, 2025
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

Book Description:

Dive into the thrilling Chris Matheson Cold Case Mysteries
 with this exclusive box set, featuring the first four books in Lauren Carr’s bestselling series! Join retired FBI agent Chris Matheson and his quirky “Geezer Squad” as they unravel chilling cold cases, blending razor-sharp suspense, laugh-out-loud humor, and small-town charm. Perfect for fans of cozy mysteries, detective thrillers, and gripping whodunits, this collection delivers over 1,000 pages of heart-pounding investigations.
What’s Inside:
  • ICE: Chris Matheson’s first case pulls him into a web of betrayal and murder tied to a decades-old disappearance.
  • Winter Frost: A chance encounter with his late wife, alive—years after the State Department declared her dead in a terrorist attack—shatters Chris’s world.
  • The Last Thing She Said: A cryptic dying message sparks a race against time to catch a killer hiding in plain sight.
  • Chris Crossed Murder: When a body clutching Chris Matheson’s federal agent badge is found dead in the snowy woods near an international airport, the Geezer Squad’s Christmas turns into a chilling whodunit.
Why You’ll Love It:
  • Compelling Characters: From Chris’s sharp detective mind to the Geezer Squad’s eccentric antics, every page brims with personality.
  • Twist-Filled Plots: Expect jaw-dropping surprises and clever red herrings that keep you guessing until the end.
  • Kindle Unlimited Ready: Binge-read this addictive series with your KU subscription or own it forever!
With over 500,000 books sold across her series, Lauren Carr crafts mysteries that hook you from the first clue to the final reveal. Ideal for readers of The Thursday Murder Club and fans craving witty, fast-paced crime fiction. Grab this Chris Matheson Cold Case Mysteries Box Set today and start sleuthing!

Buy the Book:
Amazon.com ~ Audible 
add to goodreads


Book Details:

Book Title: ICE  (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #1) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult fiction,  364 pages
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:  February 26, 2018
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

"Lauren spins an amazing web of lies, murder and love that will have you on the edge of your seat...I love the way Lauren spun this novel - I could not put the book down! I had to know what happened to Sandy and her unborn child and how this disappearance was tied into a string of other murders. I never saw the end coming but it was perfect and suited the novel. A definite must read novel!" 5-Star Review by Carla at Working Mommy Journal

Book Description:
When Sandy Lipton and her unborn child disappeared, the court of public opinion found young Chris Matheson guilty. Decades later, the retired FBI agent returns home to discover that the cloud of suspicion cast over him and his family has never lifted. 

With the help of a team of fellow retired law enforcement officers, each a specialist in their own field of investigation, Chris Matheson starts chipping away at the ice on this cold case to uncover what had happened to Sandy and her baby and the clues are getting hot!


Book Details:

Book Title: WinterFrost  (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #2) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult fiction,  332 pages
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:  January 22, 2019
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

"Filled with twists and turns, Winter Frost reads perfectly well as a stand-alone, although it is part of a series. The author creates tension and suspense throughout by keeping the reader guessing; she keeps readers engaged with well fleshed out characters and a dash of humor. Sterling, the retired German Shepherd police dog turned card shark, is a new favorite. As the story flows, the truth unfolds, layer by layer, leading to a satisfying conclusion.

"Winter Frost was an entertaining, at times humorous read with suspense, some surprises, and even cute animals in the mix." Reviewof Winter Frost by The iRead Review
Book Description:
It all started with a chance encounter in the city with Blair, his late wife.

Chris Matheson and the Geezer Squad, working under the guise of a book club, dig into the events surrounding his late wife’s supposed death halfway around the globe. A state department employee shoots himself in the back three times. A CIA operative goes missing. A woman is targeted by an international assassin three years after being declared dead in a terrorist attack overseas. 

Nothing is as it seems. 

In his most personal cold case, Chris fights to uncover why the state department told him that Blair, the mother of his children, had been killed when she was alive. What had she uncovered that has made her a target? Who terrified her so much that she had gone into hiding and why are they now after him?

Book Details:

Book Title The Last Thing She Said (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #3) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult Fiction (18 +),  386 pages
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:   July 22, 2019
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

"Too many twists and turns to easily share about this book. Nevertheless, Carr has pulled off another "hit" that kept me reading in one setting until the clues were so well together that the villain fell into our laps...or Chris's, LOL Carr has put a lot into the book beyond the mysteries this time...Characters enjoyed chocotinis, visited book stores...and even blundered into getting engaged (the ring had been purchased 4 months ago)... But, for me, a special thank you for the political spoof at a time when politics at the national level is devastating, gave me a laugh and lightened the load of it all!" - Review by Glenda Bixler, Book Reader's Heaven
Book Description:
“I’m working on the greatest mystery ever,” was the last thing noted mystery novelist Mercedes Livingston said to seven-year-old Chris Matheson before walking out of Hill House Hotel never to be seen again.

For decades, the writer’s fate remained a puzzling mystery until an autographed novel and a letter put a grown-up Chris Matheson on the trail of a cunning killer. With the help of a team of fellow retired law enforcement officers, each a specialist in their own field of investigation, Chris puts a flame to this cold case to uncover what had really happened that night Mercedes Livingston walked out of Hill House Hotel. Watch out! The clues are getting hot!

Book Details:

Book Title Chris Crossed Murder (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery #4) by Lauren Carr
Category:  Adult Fiction (18 +) 
Genre:  Mystery
Publisher:  Acorn Book Services
Release date:   Feb 22, 2023
Content Rating:  PG-13 (Lauren Carr's books are murder mysteries, so there are murders involved. Occasionally, a murder will happen on stage. There is sexual content, but always behind closed doors. Some mild swearing (a hell or a damn few and far between). No F-bombs!

"Carr is a master at creating unique, complex plots and colorful characters, both evident in her latest cold case mystery featuring  Chris Matheson and the geezer squad. The plot is twisted, the mystery unique and the ending a surprise. A must-read!" - Review of CHRIS CROSSED MURDER (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery, Book Four) by Marilyn R. Wilson, Author, Speaker, Book Reviewer

"Lauren Carr is among my favorite mystery writers. She knows how to write a fun tale while keeping readers engaged. ...I would give Chris Crossed Murder one hundred stars if I could. I believe readers who enjoy reading well-written and clean cozy mysteries will most definitely want to read it. I have no doubt they will enjoy it as much as I did. The fifth installment from A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery series is on my radar for when it releases." - Review of CHRIS CROSSED MURDER (A Chris Matheson Cold Case Mystery, Book Four) by Amy Campbell, Locks Hooks and Books
Book Description:
It proves to be a Christmas to remember when the Matheson family receives the horrendous news that Chris Matheson’s body has been found in the woods near an international airport.

Everyone is stunned—especially Chris Matheson.

The mystery deepens when they discover the victim has Chris’s federal agent badge and appears to have been investigating one of his old cases.

The Geezer Squad’s latest case is not only a whodunit but who-got-dun. Is this a case of mistaken identity? Was Chris the intended victim? If not, then they must identify the murder victim to find his killer.

With Christmas days away, join the Chris Matheson and the Geezer Squad as they race to piece together the clues to their most puzzling case yet.

Buy the Book:
Amazon.com 
Audible
B&N
 ~ BAM
BookBub
add to goodreads


Meet the Author:

Lauren Carr is the author of over thirty acclaimed mystery novels, with more than half a million copies sold worldwide. Her fast-paced series—the Mac Faraday Mysteries, Chris Matheson Cold Case Mysteries, and more—blend twists, suspense, humor, and unforgettable characters (including clever German shepherds!).
 
It's Murder, My Son organically hit #1 in Mystery on Amazon, and her books consistently rank in the Top 20 Police Procedurals in the US and international markets.
 
A popular speaker and publishing consultant, Lauren lives on a mountain in Harpers Ferry, WV, with her husband and three spoiled rotten German shepherds.
Join the mystery at authorlaurencarr.com!

Interview:

1.      What literary pilgrimages have you gone on?

I used to do writers conferences, which are quite valuable. You meet other writers and people “in the biz.” I learned very quickly to be very selective about which ones are best for me. As a matter of fact, the very first writer’s conference was so bad that it was well over a decade before I went to another. The featured author who was contracted to encourage and help new authors was so unbelievably rude and arrogant, I was turned off by the entire industry. But I am a writer. It’s who I am. After dusty off my shoulders, I picked up my keyboard and went back to ork, vowing to never be like that with fellow writers.

I did the Writers Police Academy once and I learned a wealth of information there and highly recommend it for authors who write crime fiction.

2.      Does writing energize or exhaust you?

Energize. I actually get depressed if I am unable to write for a significant amount of time. When I had my son, 28 years ago, I hung up my writing to be a full-time mom. That lasted six months. Then I started writing A Small Case of Murder, my first mystery novel. Shadows of the Missing is my thirty-third book.

3.      Did you ever consider writing under a pseudonym?

Yes, and I do. Lauren Carr is my pen name. I’ve had Lauren Carr longer than I had my real married name. Your next question is, “Why do you use a pen name?” Answer: Because I have always hated my real name. That’s another story.

4.      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?

I write a number of series, but every book is a standalone. I have no continuing drama that makes you have to read all the previous books to know what is going on. I really hate that. And don’t get me started on cliffhangers. I absolutely hate it when a book ends in a cliffhanger. To me, a book with a cliffhanger is not a full book. What if I get hit by a truck before the next book with the ending comes out?

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

A dog, of course! I have a dog in every book. It’s become a pattern that every new dog in my family becomes a character in my book. Gnarly. Sterling. Both have crossed the rainbow bridge.

Right now, mentally, I am thinking about a plotline for my new muse, Gracie. She is a German shepherd, of course. At sixty-five pounds, she is a small German shepherd.

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

Two. Best in Murder (A Mac Faraday Mystery #15)will be coming out this fall. Gnarly judges a dog show at the Spencer Inn.

The second book, It Came Upon a Midnight Murder will take longer. I was not pleased with how the storyline was going. But I think I can fix it … eventually … maybe. This might be the first book that I had to completely abandon … but I’m not as quitter.

7.      What did you edit out of this book?

Oh! Why did you have to ask about that? I had an entire storyline that involved Helen’s adopted father Red, babysitting the girls at the Matheson Farm while the Geezer Squad was in Elkins, WV, working on her birth parents’ missing persons case. It was a darling subplot. I felt like I had to include Red because I introduced him in Chris Crossed Murder. But when I finished the book,I had to admit that this subplot was one of those darlings that I just had to kill.

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

Ah, do you mean Easter Eggs? Yes. Not a bunch, but some devoted readers of my other books have been tickled to spot an egg or two. In Shadows of the Missing, some noticed that Chris makes reference to The Spencer Inn in one scene. Readers of the Mac Faraday Mysteries know that this if the 5-star resort that Mac Faraday owns.

9.      What is your favorite childhood book?

The Bobbsey Twins. This series introduced me to mysteries. I’ve been hooked ever since.

 

My Review:
Lauren Carr has done it again! I have really enjoyed other books series by her and love that each book is a stand alone. What happens when your past comes back to haunt you? What if you were the victim of circumstances and the world around you? There is nothing quite like the bond between siblings. Especially when family bonds are tested. Did their parents disappear? Are they dead? Are they even their parents by blood? Were they faithful to each other? There are so many questions and twists and turns. As the questions get answered I found myself really starting to like these characters. I did get a little nervous when someone showed up dead, and was relieved when I found out who the corpse really belonged to. Then you add in the Geezer Squad and the intriguing cold case. There is so much in this story. I can not wait to read more from this author and I would love to see this series made into a television series! I am giving this book a 5/5. I was given a copy, however all opinions are my own. 

connect with the author: website ~ facebook ~ instagram ~ X/twitter ~ pinterest ~ goodreads




Monday, May 11, 2026

Delaware Behaving Badly / First State, True Crimes by Dave Tabler Trailer, Review, Interview & Giveaway




Book Details:

Book Title:  Delaware Behaving Badly / First State, True Crimes by Dave Tabler
Category: Adult Non-Fiction, 286 pages
Genre: True Crime
Publisher: Dave Tabler
Publication Date: Jan 1, 2026
Content Rating: PG +M: crime is messy. this book has murder, rape, kidnapping, etc. 



Book Description:

Delaware Behaving Badly is a gripping, true-crime-inflected history of the First State's darker moments-scandals, betrayals, and criminal exploits that once made headlines but have since faded from public memory. Drawing on newspaper accounts, court records, and archival materials, author Dave Tabler uncovers stories that range from oyster pirate skirmishes and Prohibition-era rumrunning to political corruption, violent revenge, and fraudulent wartime schemes.

The book brings to life the eccentric figures and forgotten corners of Delaware's past with scene-driven storytelling and deep research. Among the cases covered: a 19th-century embezzler who vanished with bank funds and turned up in Havana; a Prohibition enforcer accused of moonlighting as a bootlegger; a serial predator released on furlough who assaulted again; and a bookie war that upended Wilmington's underworld. Each chapter presents a standalone narrative, but together they form a mosaic of lawlessness, defiance, and the uneasy intersection between crime and power.

Avoiding myth and conjecture, Tabler grounds his accounts in documented fact, often quoting directly from contemporary sources to preserve the raw tone and urgency of the times. Though the crimes differ in scope and era, they all reveal something essential about Delaware's legal system, social tensions, and the limits of justice.

Meticulously curated and written in a crisp, journalistic style, Delaware Behaving Badly does not seek moral closure or tidy resolutions. Instead, it invites readers to confront the discomforting truth that bad behavior-official and unofficial-has always found its place even in the quietest corners of America. This is Delaware history stripped of its polish and presented with an unflinching eye.



Meet the Author:

Ten year old Dave Tabler decided he was going to read the ‘R’ volume from the family’s World Book Encyclopedia set over summer vacation. He never made it from beginning to end. He did, however, become interested in Norman Rockwell, rare-earth elements, and Run for the Roses.

Tabler’s father encouraged him to try his hand at taking pictures with the family camera. With visions of Rockwell dancing in his head, Tabler press-ganged his younger brother into wearing a straw hat and sitting next to a stream barefoot with a homemade fishing pole in his hand. The resulting image was terrible.

Dave Tabler went on to earn degrees in art history and photojournalism despite being told he needed a ‘Plan B.'

Fresh out of college, Tabler contributed the photography for “The Illustrated History of American Civil War Relics,” which taught him how to work with museum curators, collectors, and white cotton gloves. He met a man in the Shenandoah Valley who played the musical saw, a Knoxville fellow who specialized in collecting barbed wire, and Tom Dickey, brother of the man who wrote ‘Deliverance.’

In 2006 Tabler circled back to these earlier encounters with Appalachian culture as an idea for a blog. AppalachianHistory.net today reaches 375,000 readers a year.

Dave Tabler moved to Delaware in 2010 and became smitten with its rich past. He no longer copies Norman Rockwell, but his experience working with curators and collectors came in handy when he got the urge to photograph a love letter to Delaware’s early heritage. This may be the start of something.
Interview:

What literary pilgrimages have you gone on?

The summer between my freshman and sophomore years in college I decided I was going to fill in the gaps in my high school reading. I had spent far too much time in high school only reading the CliffNotes versions of things, and regretted that I hadn’t really absorbed much from the books I was supposed to be reading deeply. I tracked down a copy of the Harvard Great Books list. I made it through Dante’s Inferno, Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, and Madame Bovary. I started in on The Red and The Black, but it just didn’t engage me, and I bailed on the project at that point.

 

What is the first book that made you cry?

Hands down: The Runaway Bunny. It made me cry as a kid, because some part of me needed to hear that no matter how far I ran, someone would always come find me. That's a pretty powerful thing to hand a child. Then years later I decided to read it to my 10-year-old niece, and I could barely get through it with dry eyes, but for completely different reasons. This time I was the one doing the chasing, not the running. That book hits you twice, and it hits you harder the second time.

 

Does writing energize or exhaust you?

It depends a lot on the environment. If I’m under a tight deadline, if I’ve hit a wall in a piece I’m working on, if Idon’t have a quiet place to write, then sure, it’s exhausting. Most of the time it’s energizing. I’m an early bird: I get up at 4:30 most mornings, walk the dog for 20 minutes to get the blood moving, drink a cup of coffee, then sit down to write for about 2 hours before breakfast. My wife is a late sleeper, so the house is dark, quiet. My writing desk is my world when I’m sitting there. I’m not thinking about chores, or bills, or anything but writing. Lately I’ve been playing Tibetan bell music in the background, and that helps reinforce the meditative state that works best for me when writing.

 

What is your writing Kryptonite?

A chaotic environment. I’m not one who can bang out a piece with a laptop perched on my knees in a noisy airport terminal, for example. Lord knows I’ve tried!

 

Did you ever consider writing under a pseudonym?

Never. I always felt a pseudonym was a protective device in a situation where use of the author’s real name would cause problems. I’m not hiding from anyone or anything. Also, I don’t write in radically different voices, another instance where a pseudonym might be useful. A Dave Tabler book is pretty clearly a Dave Tabler book.

 

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

I don’t hang out with writers. I’m not hostile to doing so, but I’vejust always been kind of a lone wolf. I have a tiny circle of friends, and I kind of enjoythe fact that, not being writers,they don’t ‘talk shop’ about writing.

 

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?

Definitely the latter. I’ve published 5 books to date, another releases in June 2026, and I’m working on two beyond that. They all have ‘Delaware’ in the title. They’re all history books, but different topics. So, in that sense, they can certainly stand on their own. I lived in NYC for decades but was never drawn to writing about it. Why? Because zillions of authors write about New York! I’m drawn to the offbeat, the underdog, the path less traveled. In the case of my Delaware body of work, I love when my readers respond “Oh! I never knew that!” even if they grew UP in the state.

 

What authors did you dislike at first but grew into?

C.S. Lewis. For some reason my first encounter with him was NOT the Narnia Chronicles, but the Screwtape Letters. He struck me as a ponderous professor lost in a cloud of abstract sermonizing. And THEN I came across The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, and fell under his spell.

 

What’s your favorite under-appreciated novel?

I think Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage has fallen out of favor, but for me it’s one of the most compelling war stories ever written. I’m working on a new Civil War history at the moment, and I re-read Red Badge just recently to revisit if there was inspiration to be had. I wasn’t disappointed. What’s always intrigued me about Crane and his novel is that he never fought in that war himself. Yet he somehow got closer to the interior truth of War than most writers who actually lived through one. Crane wasn't really writing about the Civil War, though. He was writing about fear, ego, and the gap between the story we tell ourselves and the truth of what we actually did.

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

Ha! Never thought about that. Well, I guess an owl. As I get older, I hope I’m getting wiser. No guarantee of that, of course. But it’s an ideal I strive for.

 

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

Just two. The Civil War book, and a book about the evolution of the hotel industry. I’m not one to start and stop numerous projects at once. For my personality, that would simply scatter too much energy. When I commit to a project, I want to dive deep. But I always want to be out ahead of the book release curve, so that I’m not caught flat footed with nothing published for long periods. So two books ahead of whatever I’m working on seems to be a good match for me.

 

What did you edit out of this book?

So much. So very much. This is why we writers need editors. For the crime book in particular, I had huge numbers of stories that I felt could have been added. But my editors (I work with two) both pointed out that if a specific crime story didn’t move the overall narrative arc along, it did not earn a place in the book. I’ve learned to respect their judgement.

 

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

I worked in ad space sales for years, because for me as for most writers, writing doesn’t pay the bills. But it’s not what I want to be remembered for. It was my day job.

 

Do you hide any secrets in your books that only a few people

will find?

No. I’m not that kind of a writer. I want to state my case very clearly to the reader, not play games.

 

What is your favorite childhood book?

Treasure Island. A map with an X on it. An island. No parents. No school. No obligations. Just danger, and treasure! I feel like Robert Lewis Stevenson understood so clearly that boys don't just want adventure, they want a contained world where the rules are clear and the rewards are real.

 


connect with the author: website ~ facebook ~ pinterest ~ instagram ~ goodreads
My Review:
Wow. I have driven to and through Delaware. The First State. Who knew? I really enjoyed this book. I have driven to Delaware when I was younger and 2 years ago. I would have loved to have had this book then. I would have loved to visit some of the places that the author mentions in his book. The author starts in the 1600's and ends in 2011. Newspaper clippings, quotes and true accounts add to the enjoyment of this read. The history itself is worth it. From talking about the witch trials to laws and acts put into affect were amazing. Tories and underground gambling, I really enjoyed this book Historians, crime buffs, even travelers would get something from this book. I am giving this book a 5/5. I was given a copy. all opinions are my own.

Enter the Giveaway:
DELAWARE BEHAVING BADLY Book Review Tour Giveaway