Friday, May 22, 2020

Teaser Tuesday ~ Once In A Blood Moon by Dorothea Hubble Bonneau



Southern Historical
Date Published: June 11, 2020
Publisher: Acorn Publishing

Heaven Hill Plantation, upriver from Georgetown, South Carolina, 1807: Sixteen-year-old Alexandra Degambia is the daughter of a wealthy African American planter and a social-climbing mother who can pass for white. Balancing on the tightrope between girlhood and the complicated adult world of Low-Country society is a treacherous undertaking.


Early Reviews

Alexandra is a tenacious heroine who’s easy to root for, and the author elegantly articulates her precarious position between white and black society. Overall, this novel explores issues of equality and personal freedom in thought-provoking ways.

Sharp writing, an original plot, and a strong female protagonist make for an engrossing read.
-Kirkus Review

This tale of desperation, injustice and courage is a much needed addition to our grasp of our nation's history. A 5-star reading experience. Highly recommend!"
Laura Taylor – 6-Time Romantic Times Award Winner

Excerpt


Alexandra longs to impress Monsieur. She imagines dancing with him before bedazzled spectators. She panics. He’s an accomplished dancer. What if the orchestra does play a waltz? She’ll make a fool of herself.
“I guess I could go down and dance for a little while,” Alexandra says, rising from the porch swing.
Before the young women reach the bottom of the stairs, they see a stranger wearing the sheriff’s badge galloping toward them from the back road. Three of his deputies ride hard on his heels.
Callie leans close to Alexandra. “Let’s duck behind the snowball bush before they see us,” she says. She sets the quilt on the porch swing and hides the Dancing Masters behind the geranium planter.
But the men are coming too fast. The girls are only half way down the stairs when the men rein their lathered horses to a stop.
The new sheriff, who wears a top hat too small for his head, points at Alexandra.
“Girl! Git me some water.”
Alexandra edges toward Callie and reaches to take her hand. Callie moves away. Cold sweat drenches Alexandra.
“You deaf? Git me some water. Now!” The stocky man’s eyes graze over Alexandra’s body. He clucks his tongue and turns to Callie, “You’re too old to be dressing your slaves in your own clothes like they was dolls. I recommend you burn that fine dress to avoid being tainted by the sins of Hamm.”
“These are my clothes!” says Alexandra.
The sheriff and his deputies laugh.
“Tell him, Callie! These clothes are mine.”
“You let your girl speak to you in that tone?” The sheriff asks.
“I’m not her girl!”
Alexandra plants her feet. Callie backs toward the door.
“Callie! Tell him.”
Callie edges into the house and eases the door shut. Alexandra faces the sheriff. “My daddy will want a word with you,” Alexandra says, her fire rising.
When she sees a vein on the sheriff’s neck pump the venom that makes men crazy, the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end. She sighs with relief when Tante Isabelle glides out the back door like a cool breeze. Mother follows, arms akimbo, lips pressed tight.
“Where’s Sheriff Adams?” asks Tante Isabelle in her blue-velvet voice.
“Heart attack. He’ll recover more than likely, but he won’t be back to work for a long time, if ever. Traveling judge deputized me. I’m following up on a slave who escaped from the George­town jail. You seen a big, black buck with a crooked nose and a little finger missing on his left hand?”
“I haven’t made the acquaintance of such a man,” says Tante Isabelle. “How are Mary and Margaret getting along?”
“Who?” asks the sheriff.
“Sheriff Adam’s wife and daughter.”
“Don’t know ’em.”
“Y’all are new to the Georgetown area, aren’t you?”
“Yes, Ma’am.”
“Surely, you’ve heard of Heaven Hill, the oldest plantation on the Santee,” continues Tante Isabelle.
“Yes, Ma’am,” says the sheriff.
Alexandra can tell he’s lying from the way he shifts in his saddle and looks to his men to provide him with the correct answer.
“Well then, I am pleased to present the mistress of that famous plantation, Miss Josephine Degambia.” Mother curls her lips into her Mona Lisa smile and nods.
The sheriff tips his hat.
“And her daughter, my niece, Alexandra Degambia,” Tante Isabelle continues.
The sheriff’s eyes bulge as Alexandra forces herself to curtsey.
“Carolina Gold, the most sought-after rice in the world, is shipped all over the world from Heaven Hill, but I’m sure you knew that, Sheriff. Where’d y’all say you’re from?” Tante Isabelle doesn’t wait for his answer. “Now, if all y’all are still thirsty, you and your men are welcome to use the well in back of the blacksmith’s shop. The water’s fresh and sweet, sure to cool you down on a hot day like this. When you’re done, be so kind as to show yourselves to the main road.”
The sheriff turns his horse and kicks it to a canter. When he and his deputies are specks on the horizon, Callie slips onto the porch from the back door followed by her mother. “Shall we stroll in the maze garden?” Callie asks Alexandra.


About the Author

Dorothea Hubble Bonneau is an award-winning novelist, produced playwright and optioned screenwriter. Inspired by a quest for justice, her work is informed by her love of family, nature, and the literary arts.

Dorothea is a member of Author’s Guild, Women in Film, Squaw Valley Community of Writers, Aspen Summer Words Alumni, and Historical Writers of America.

Contact Links

Twitter: @DorotheaBonneau


RABT Book Tours & PR

Friday, May 8, 2020

Blog Tour ~ Keep Forever - Inspired by A True Story by Alexa Kingaard



Keep Forever
Alexa Kingaard
Published by: Acorn Publishing
Publication date: March 28th 2020
Genres: Historical Romance, Women’s Fiction

“Unlike some war stories that focus on intense, harsh and graphic depictions of post-combat trauma, this tale unfolds gently, like an Edna Ferber novel, spread across many decades, detailing the impact this soldier’s illness has on an entire family, including children and grandchildren. KEEP FOREVER is a wonderful, emotionally satisfying read that I highly recommend. ”
GARY SEIGEL, author of “Haskell Himself”

Paul O’Brien’s idyllic childhood in Southern California comes to a halt when his mother dies in the summer before his senior year of high school and a very different persona of his father emerges – isolating himself inside the house, turning to alcohol for comfort, and barely noticing his only child. Simultaneously, the war in Vietnam is sending shock waves around the world and young men from one coast to the other are being called upon to serve. Paul enlists in the Marines before receiving his draft notice.

Elizabeth Sutton is eager to gain some independence from her father’s old fashioned notions and looking forward to her first year in high school. At fifteen years old, tragedy strikes with the loss of both parents in an auto accident, turning her childhood into one of responsibility and worry overnight. The four siblings are scattered when her nine-year-old twin sisters are sent to live with their Aunt and Uncle on Nantucket Island, and Elizabeth is left behind in Boston with their grandmother. Her older brother, Sam, enlists in the Marines, eager to join the conflict a world away as opposed to dealing with the one unfolding at home.

A bond develops between Paul and Sam in Vietnam, and both are injured in a bloody battle that costs Sam his right hand and sets the stage for a lifetime of nightmares and sleepless nights for Paul. Matched by similar tragedies at a young age, Elizabeth and Paul’s first introduction by Sam upon their return from Vietnam is the beginning of friendship and love that survives five decades.

After marrying, welcoming their first child, and inheriting a small beach house, the couple adapts to their new surroundings, but distant memories of Vietnam continue to haunt Paul. In an era when veterans refuse to speak of their pain and the government denies that thousands of soldiers are coming home irreparably damaged, he is left to deal with the challenge of caring for his loved ones amidst his his erratic flashback episodes and moods. As their lives unravel from the lingering effects of PTSD, Elizabeth learns to accept the burden that Paul brought home, and together they make their own memories to keep forever.

Inspired
By
A True Story

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / iBooks / Kobo


Author Bio:

ALEXA KINGAARD, a California native, currently resides in Carlsbad and is the mother of a son and daughter who continue to be her biggest fans and cheerleaders.

October 13, 2011, was the day that changed her life forever when her ex-husband, a Vietnam veteran, took his life during a PTSD flashback episode. Inspired to share this tragedy that continues to rob husbands and wives of their spouses, children of their parents, mothers of their children, brothers and sisters of their siblings, and comrades of their friends, Kingaard relied on her own experiences to shed light on this crisis. The burden brought home is not partial to Vietnam, but is an insidious aftershock endured by combat veterans of all conflicts.

Kingaard continues to pursue her literary career, writing about nostalgia and the human condition, the common denominator of our lives. 

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Sunday, May 3, 2020

Book Tour & Giveaway ~ LouIsa: Iron Dove of the Frontier & Buddy... His Trials and Treasures by Will Edwinson


LouIsa: Iron Dove of the Frontier 
by Will Edwinson 
Genre: Western Historical Fiction 


THE IRON DOVE OF THE FRONTIER...

At twenty-one, LouIsa was already a sagacious woman. She had been privileged to attend finishing schools in the East where she learned the ways of "Ladyship" and studied piano under the tutorship of masters, becoming proficient with the classical works of Mozart, Bach, Chopin, Beethoven, Liszt, and many others.

LouIsa: Iron Dove of the Frontier is a story about a tough, but well-educated genteel woman of quiet strength who, when it became necessary, could get down and dirty and fight as adeptly as the best gutter rats. But also, when necessary, she could don a party dress and be perfectly comfortable with Vassar graduates. 



Chapter Two

Dodge City, Kansas
LouIsa sat facing the saloon owner across his desk. She was pitching him for a job playing piano in his saloon.
You can’t be serious, Miss Houston. Classical music in a frontier saloon? I don’t think so. This is Dodge City, Kansas, ma’am. The men who frequent my place are a bunch of hell raisers. Why. . .they’d shoot you in the first ten minutes, then proceed to shoot hell out of my saloon. I’m sorry, Miss Houston, but I don’t think a classical person is what I need. Now if you can sing and play honky tonk pi ana, maybe we can do some business.”
LouIsa smiled inwardly. I can do that, she thought. Once the boys get to know me and get comfortable with me, that will be the time to introduce them to the classics. She stretched her hand out across the desk.
You’ve got a deal, Mr. Lewis. When do I start?”
How about tonight?” he asked.
LouIsa shook her head no. “I need a couple of days to get settled in,” she said. “Today is Thursday. How about my starting on Saturday?”
Saturday’s a pretty rough crowd, Miss Houston. Wouldn’t you rather ease into this a bit
more gradual?”
I don’t think that will be necessary, Mr. Lewis. I can handle them.” Her thoughts drifted back to Wichita. She remembered her altercation with Bart Ricklin, She hoped she wouldn’t have to resort to that sort of thing again.
*****
Three months had passed since LouIsa had started playing at the Trail’s End Saloon. Those three months fostered both ups and downs for the fancy shootin’, rough ridin’, high brow Minnesota born, Montana raised maiden. She started off playing honky tonk pi-ana for the cowboys, but after a while, eased them into the classics. They balked at first, but after listening to her spell- binding spiritual artistry at the piano, they were soon hooked on her music.
Word spread all up and down the cattle trail about the high class lady that played high brow music in what had always been known as the roughest saloon in Dodge City, and cowpunchers were actually enjoying it.
In contrast to this adoration by the cowboys, LouIsa had her detractors. The Women’s Christian Temperance League was livid that this “cheap saloon girl” attracted so many men to her lair. Not only were the so called rough cowboys frequenting the Trail’s End, but so were the local farmers, ranchers, and merchants.

*****


Buddy... His Trials and Treasures 
by Will Edwinson 
Genre: Contemporary Historical Fiction 


Do you need a little stress relief in your life?
Travel back to the world of Buddy Crawford, a simpler, slower- paced world where Cokes were a nickel, movie tickets were a dime, and ten cents bought you a double dip ice cream cone. These engaging, award-winning stories about a young boy growing up in rural America during the 1940s provide a relaxing respite from today's fast-paced world. They may even revive old memories of your own childhood.

Follow Buddy and Cousin Mont as they gather beer and pop bottles from the roadway barrowpits. Join him and his friends at the river swimming hole for a swim, or go fishing for carp in the irrigation canal. Experience the fun as he tours the countryside in an old Model T Ford with his friends. What better way to spend a relaxing two hours than immersing yourself in these stories.

Buddy is somewhat reminiscent of Tom Sawyer in that he quite often finds himself in hot water. Unlike Tom, Buddy's misdeeds are without forethought. They happen because Buddy is...well...he's just Buddy. 


Fishin’

     The year was 1944; it was Buddy’s ninth summer, and today was the first day of summer vacation. Buddy lay in bed listening to the sunrise symphony of the birds. He had been awakened earlier by the ringing notes of their singing, chirping, and chortling as the harmonious tones drifted in through his open window.
     He looked forward to lazy days of fishing and swimming in both the canal and his favorite river swimming hole the “23.”  No one really knew why it was called the 23, except that someone years ago was supposed to have dropped a rope down into the pool with a weight tied to the end.  When it reached the bottom it was marked, and it allegedly measured twenty-three feet to the bottom.  Buddy still enjoyed going to the fields with his father, but he also enjoyed these times of just being a boy.
     He continued listening under the comfort of the warm covers.  As he did so, he thought to himself, I wonder if Mont or Lionel can go fishing with me today, I’d sure like to see if we can catch old Big Tom.
     When he entered the kitchen for breakfast that morning, his father had already left for the farm.  His mother told him, “Daddy decided to let you sleep in this morning.  He thought you might like to play with your friends. Have you made any plans for today?”
     “Well, how about if I go fishing?”
     “With whom?”
     “I thought I’d go see if Mont or Lionel could go with me.”
     “Okay, but you promise to be careful, and don’t fool around too much.”  Mrs. Crawfrod knew that the boys would not confine the activities to just fishing, but would have to get in a little swimming as well.  Buddy was a pretty good swimmer by now, but even so, his mother was still apprehensive of him going swimming with a bunch of boys, most of whom were older than he.
     Buddy finished his breakfast, grabbed the gourmet lunch consisting of tuna fish sandwiches, bottled peaches, potato chips, a thermos of milk, and the chocolate cupcakes his mother usually baked for these occasions; picked up the willow fishing pole his dad had fixed up for him; and ran out the door yelling, “Ill see you later, Mamma.”
     With the bill of his baseball cap tilted on the top of forehead, exposing a lock of his natural platinum blond hair, he hurried on over to his cousin Lionel’s house to see if he and his older brother Monty could go fishing with him.  Buddy really liked Monty.  He was a gentle, kind soul, and though he was several years older than Buddy, he always treated Buddy with respect, just as if they were both the same age.  Some people thought Monty was mentally retarded; actually, he just hadn’t quite caught up with his peers.  He and Buddy got along fabulously, because Buddy never really paid attention to the fact that Monty was not quite as swift as the other kids his age.  He accepted him as he was, and there was nothing Monty would not do for Buddy.
     Buddy tore into the room just off the kitchen that was used as Monty’s bedroom.  Lionel had left, and Monty was still in bed.

     “Good morning, Mont,” Buddy greeted.  That’s what everybody called Monty, because another member of their group was also named Monte, only he spelled his name with an “e” on the end, instead of a “y”
     “How’s about you and me goin’ fishin’ in the canal today?”
     Mont rubbed the sleep from his eyes.  “Sure, he said.  “You bring any worms with you?  We’ll need some worms.”
     “Yeah, you’re right.  I plum forgot about bait.”
     Mont threw back the covers.  “That’s okay, we can dig some here.  My dad watered the garden last night, so there should be some good worms fairly close to the top.”
     “Terrific!” Buddy exclaimed. “You got a shovel?”
     “Yeah, but I gotta get dressed and eat something first.”
     After Mont and dressed and eaten his breakfast snack of cold cereal and toast, he walked out to the garage and came back with a spade and a can.
     “Good show, Mont.  Let’s get to it. You dig and I’ll pick the worms out of the dirt,” Buddy said.
     It was easy digging, so it wasn’t long before they had harvested a big can full of nice, fat juicy worms.  “Boy, these oughta make the fish smack their lips,” exclaimed and excited Buddy.  “Come on Mont, let’s get goin. I woneer if we’ll be lucky enough to snag old Big Tom, today.”  Big Tom was the name they had given to an old carp that resided in the canal.  They had been trying to catch him for two summers. They figured he must be at least four feet long and weigh fifteen pounds or more.
     It was a warm lazy day on the canal bank.  Buddy was studying the fishing pole Mont had brought.  “Isn’t that one of you Dad’s good poles?  Did you ask him if it was okay to use it today?”
     “Yes, ii is, Buddy.  And no, I didn’t ask him, because I didn’t know we would be going fishing until you came over to my house this morning and asked me to go with you. So I didn’t have a chance to ask him.”
     “Boy, I hope nothin’ happens to it, Mont.  I wouldn’t dare use one of my dad’s good poles without asking him.”
     “Nothin’s going to happen, Buddy.  And besides, we’ll be home before Dad gets’ home, and he’ll never know I borrowed it.”
     “Well, okay. It’s your neck, but I’d sure hate to lose a fishin’ partner because you get grounded for not asking to use that pole.”
     “Will you relax, Buddy?  Nothin’s gonna happen.  I’ll be real careful.”

***
     They had their poles anchored, and Buddy and Mont were lying on the bank chatting about this and that, not paying much attention to anything, when Buddy cried out, “Holy smokes, Mont!  There goes your fishing pole tearing lickety-split down the canal.  Quick, grab it. Grab it!”….






     



Will Edwinson is an award-winning story teller for his fiction, and an award winning columnist. His second book, Buddy ... His Trials and Treasures, won a first place in state competition, and a second place at national. His "A Bit Of Nostalgia" column that he wrote under another name, won second and first place, awards in two separate competitions from the Utah-Idaho-Spokane Associated Press Association.

Edwinson grew up in rural Southeast Idaho during the 1940s. After his college stint, he made his living on the family farm in Southeast Idaho as a dry land farmer raising barley and wheat, always holding onto the dream he had harbored for most of his life-that of being a writer-but still not confident that he had the necessary abilities and skills for such a career. After reaching mid-life, he determined that if he were ever going to be a writer, it was time to begin. His first book was launched when he was in his mid-fifties.

Edwinson is basically a self-taught author. His passion lay toward storytelling, so he began reading fiction of every genre to get a grasp of different writing styles and writing techniques. He also took advantage of the many books and manuals on writing that were available. These are mentioned on his Links & Lists page at his website, www.willedwinson.com. He is also a graduate of Writer's Digest Short Story Writing course.

In his younger years, Edwinson was also a semi-professional singer, performing on stages from Sun Valley, Idaho, to Lake Havasu City, Arizona. He also demonstrates a flair as an inventor. Out of necessity,to teach his two youngest daughters some rudimentary money management skills, he invented and Trademarked a children's allowance management system, "The Child's Checkmaster." which enabled parents and children to keep better track of the children's allowance draws and which also taught the children some rudimentary money management skills.

Will Edwinson currently lives in Tucson, Arizona. 




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