
















My Rating: 5/5
Texas Ranger? Former Army Girl? Murder Mystery with a dash of paranormal? YES PLEASE!
This book was surprisingly delightful! Texas Ranger Crock Ward is given a cold case, the death of Esme Green. This case leads him to the wonderful house of Dr. Laz Corona, in which case also leads him to his twin sister Tess. While not quite a romance, these two obviously have chemistry and could in the future have some sort of relationship between the two.
The characters in this book were well developed. Their interactions with each other were clever and enjoyable to read. This book was quite suspenseful and I found myself staying up late to read the book despite the fact that I have a bed time as an adult with 2 kids to take care of. I couldn’t help it! I honestly wasn’t sure what I was expecting when I dove into this book, but it really surprised me how much I enjoyed it. I really loved how it wasn’t just a mystery, but had a little paranormal to it was well. And the Corona family was contagious to read about. I just wanted to read more and more of them!
If you enjoy Texas Rangers and a good, solid murder mystery with a little paranormal details in it, then this book is definitely for you! I couldn’t recommend this book enough, it’s purely delightful!





Every element page includes: *where the featured element comes from* *when it was discovered* *scientific info about the element* *everyday uses for it* *a bunch of interesting facts* *a unicorn who wields its magical powers representing each element* The book also has an amazing unicorn-themed periodic table plus special pages featuring elemental compounds and alloys. Now, that’s Techno-Magical!
CLICK TO PURCHASE


Just like the cover, Magical Elements of the Periodic Table, will give you a top to bottom page of art and education. In its alphabetical array, Sybrina Durant, presents a unique way to learn the elements and their many uses. Some that even a parent reading to their child can learn!
I love the design elements placed in this book! Pun absolutely intended. As an artist; the level of detail, color use, and creativity is amazing. The friendly characters and placement did a great job of informing without overwhelming the page. It speaks to the good communication involved. Having pictured examples of the uses for each element was a great touch and widens the use for younger ages as well!
I feel I’m using a lot of exclamations in this review, but I want readers to know how impressed I am with this book. In an educational format, elements of the periodic table and their structure can overwhelm or seem dry to a young student. However, the writing and design of this book is cleverly presented in a fantastical way. Their accompanied unicorns have special abilities that hint to the many uses of each element. My favorite being Pearl, the Potassium-Horned Unicorn, that cleans everything she touches. I had no idea Potassium was used in soaps and detergents as well!
I remember learning about elements in school and I wish I’d had something as fun as this book! I have no doubt many children will easily follow and learn something from this. It certainly can be used in lesson plans and as a creative way to begin learning about their more in depth atomic structure and history. By the end, Durant includes more about alloys and compounds as well.
Did I mention a fun song to match? Watch the book trailer to hear it and don’t miss out on the giveaway for a chance at the book, trading cards, and a unicorn themed poster!






Purchase on Amazon

The Puppy Adventures of Porter & Midge begins with two children excited at the prospect of bringing their two puppies to a parade. As such, they begin a journey to help train and prepare their puppies for the exciting event.
I liked the level of detail that went into what training involves and that it’s always accompanied by showing comfort and safety to the dog. As you’ll see below in the Author descriptions, the experience of dog owning and training definitely shows.
As the two children take their puppies to different events and places, they keep calm and learn to have fun training their dogs. It has a great message about this process since sometimes training dogs can be a bit stressful.
The artwork for this book was great in it’s level of detail. Everywhere you looked on each page had some form of interest without seeming cluttered. I especially liked how the animals on each page had slightly more detail to make them stand out more. The colors were especially vibrant and each page exuded a fun and exciting tone.
For the overall story, I think that this is a great start for children to read if they want a dog. Training in some form is always necessary for puppies and this picture book kindly but firmly teaches that point.









“INSPIRATION: WHERE BOOK IDEAS COME FROM?”
GUEST POST FROM SHANESSA GLUHM
Like most authors, I’m often asked, “Where do your book ideas come from?”
As a reader, I’ve been curious where other authors got their famous ideas, so I did some research.
Many of the ideas for Stephen King’s books came to him in dreams, including one of my favorites, Misery. On a flight, King dozed off and had a dream about a popular writer who was kidnapped by a psychotic fan. He woke up, made notes on his cocktail napkin, and started writing Misery that night in his hotel.
Author Suzanne Collins got her idea for The Hunger Games channel surfing one night. On one channel she saw young people competing in a reality TV show, and on another channel footage of the Iraq war. Those two things fused together in her mind, and Katniss Everdeen was born.
J.K. Rowling was stuck on a train when an image of a boy starting wizarding school began to form in her mind. She didn’t have a pen, so she spent the rest of the four hours on the train developing the story of Harry Potter in her mind.
Children’s author Roald Dahl kept idea books from childhood on. I also have a similar book where I keep my ideas, and those ideas come from a variety of places.
The idea of the twist in Enemies of Doves came from my best friend. But the rest of it? Well, I knew I needed to build up to that twist, and I realized the story had to be set in the past or that twist couldn’t work. I knew what I wanted the title to be, so I realized I had to work doves into the plot somehow. And I knew as a theme I wanted to examine the relationship between brothers.
For A River of Crows, the idea struck as I was listening to the radio while driving in Texas with my youngest son. I passed a creek named Crow’s Nest Creek. At that moment, an old Keith Whitley song came on the radio: “I’m Over You”. In my brain, a connection formed between this song and this creek. I imagined a family torn apart by something that happened at Crow’s Nest Creek. Something that left a father and daughter estranged. I knew this father and daughter were huge Keith Whitley fans, and that the father went to prison the day Keith Whitley died. (I had no idea why yet). And even though this song is seemingly about the loss of a romantic relationship, this daughter associated it with the loss of the relationship with her father.
I also remembered a video I’d seen recently about the intelligence of crows and how they can be trained to speak and mimic human voices.
This creek, song, and YouTube video came together to form a story. By the time I pulled into my driveway, I had a basic plot of A River of Crows outlined in my mind.
It should be noted that I also passed a creek called Cannibal Draw on that drive, and thought that too would be a great name for a book. Thankful a story idea didn’t form then because it would be a much different and darker story, wouldn’t it?
Ideas really do come from everywhere— a favorite movie, a nightmare, a newspaper article, our best friend, a childhood memory, an overheard conversation between strangers, people we’ve loved, people we’ve hated, a small creek we pass by, a song on the radio that stirs something inside of us. Ideas present themselves to us every day and all are bubbling with possibility. Pay attention to where your imagination wanders.
But the fact remains, the ideas are the easiest part. Neil Gaiman puts it like this, “The ideas aren’t the hard bit. They’re a small component of the whole. Creating believable people who do more or less what you tell them to is much harder. And hardest by far is the process of simply sitting down and putting one word after another to construct whatever it is you’re trying to build: making it interesting, making it new.”
But that’s a blog for another time.







“Dina Gachman Mastering Grief Through Writing”
On Open to Hope podcast, hosted by Drs Gloria and Heidi Horsley







Excerpt from Confessions of a Knight Errant
By Gretchen McCullough
We had fled Cairo to Malta from the people who must remain unnamed, two years before: Kharalombos and me, his wife, my face covered with a black veil, a complete niqab. Of course, if Yasser Arafat could escape the Israelis across the Jordan River in 1967 fully veiled, disguised as a mother carrying a baby, why not me? Hiding out in Malta, I made wax knights at the Knights Templar Museum and enjoyed giving tours with factual tidbits to curious British tourists—a refreshing change from duties on tenure committees. Meanwhile, Kharalombos coached Spanish dancers, who preened and lunged in Who’s Got Talent tango Contests. I was a rogue professor wanted by Interpol; Kharalombos was wanted by the Egyptians for a problem too sensitive to be named. Even though we had rooms in a pension, with balconies overlooking a shimmery Mediterranean, and feasted on fried squid and red mullet almost every day, I still worried a SWAT team armed with assault weapons could burst through the doors at any time.
But now, we had sneaked back into Cairo to find Kharalombos’s son. My novel had been erased by the publishing conglomerate, Zadorf. In a hurry to get out of town, I had dropped my flash drive down an elevator shaft. The very last hard copy of my novel nestled underneath my bed in my old flat in Garden City—I had to find it, or else risk certain obscurity. This time around, I was disguised as a tourist in a loud Hawaiian shirt, wearing Ray-Ban sunglasses and a Howard Cosell-type toupee. Clad in a white suit, with a panama hat perched on his head, Kharalombos resembled a British colonial. I expected the police to appear with handcuffs the moment we got off the plane—straight into the box. My new identity: a vacuum-cleaner salesman from Ames, Iowa, who was going on a once-in-a-lifetime Nile cruise, a bonus for selling beyond quota; Kharalombos was a Greek olive farmer.
We sailed through the airport all the way to customs. Flashing on the arrival sign: Budapest, Cancelled. London, Cancelled. Munich, Cancelled. Moscow, Cancelled.
Only one officer manned the series of booths, immaculate in his black wool winter uniform. He was buttoned up to the collar. When he saw us gaping at the arrival monitor, he gestured to us, “Come in. Come in. You are jumping into the fire!”
Kharalombos asked, “Is it really that atrocious?” I could see he was tempted to lapse into Arabic.
Yawning, the officer cleaned his ear with a pen. Why didn’t he answer? Then he mimicked the American saying, “Have a nice day!” He stamped the passports, without the usual bureaucratic sense of conviction.
A rail-thin Pakistani, who looked like a student from Al-Azhar, stood next to us at the baggage claim, but avoided eye contact. He clutched a huge Quran, the cover decorated with gold. Did he think we were suspicious?
Our bags came in five minutes—unheard-of in the history of Cairo airport.
Grabbing my tiny suitcase, full of costume props, off the belt, I said, “Kharalombos, are you sure Happy City Tours will pick us up?”
“There have been demonstrations,” Kharalombos said, heaving his monstrous suitcase. “Didn’t you see the monitor at the Valletta airport?”
True, we had watched the Al-Jazeera video at the Valletta airport. But there were frequent demonstrations in Cairo over the years, all of which had fizzled out, or been squashed. Egyptian citizens raised banners, festooned in Arabic handwriting: “Justice Now!” They chanted: “Bread. Dignity. Freedom. Social Justice!” The image of yet another young man who had been tortured to death in a police station flashed on the screen: his face was disfigured beyond recognition.
We had dragged our bags through the Cairo airport, and exited the hall. The parking lot was completely deserted, except for a few cars. Only one streetlight gleamed; otherwise, it was a forbidding black—four o’clock in the morning. Usually the place was mobbed with relatives, hasslers, and enterprising entrepreneurs. Tour guides who intoned strange-sounding names as they raised their makeshift signs high. But this evening there were no drivers with signs. No Happy City Tours, either. And even the fleet of battered, black-and-white taxis that usually lined up to harass the weary traveler had disappeared. Where were they all?
Kharalombos pulled out his mobile phone. “I’ll call my uncle.” His uncle was a psychiatrist at the mental hospital, where I had been sent two years before. Kharalombos was my sane, colorful roommate—he was simply hiding in the hospital from the people who must remain unnamed. We had become fast friends and had teamed up to escape the authorities.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
“No line,” he said.
“Maybe there’s something wrong with your phone?” I asked. “You need another SIM card.”
“No,” Kharalombos said. “That’s not the problem.”
He sauntered over to the exit doors, where a policeman stood puffing on a cigarette.
“You’ll blow your disguise!” I hissed.
But Kharalombos was unconcerned and ignored me.
He lumbered back to where I was standing. “The government cut the networks. There’s a curfew.”
I should have stayed in Valletta. Why had I let Kharalombos talk me into returning to Cairo? For the sake of a little adventure, I was going to be arrested for a crime I hadn’t committed! I was no Julian Assange. One could understand, though, why Kharalombos would take such a risk to see his new son, Nunu. But was my novel worth ninety-nine years in jail, or even dying? Did I fancy myself the next John Kennedy O’Toole? Or maybe I was more like a dunce. I brushed this disturbing thought out of my mind, like a horsefly, before it had time to bite.
“The policeman said the demonstration against the BIG MAN and HIS MEN has become violent,” Kharalombos said. “Anyone who disobeys the curfew will be shot.”





Excerpt from Winning Maura’s Heart
By Linda Broday
Maura lifted her chin. “Does the name Lucius Taggart mean anything?”
Calhoun reeled from the shock. “The hangman is your father?”
This answered everything—why they started the orphanage so far from town, Emma’s shorn hair, the reason neither girl had ever married.
“Good Lord!” He ran a hand across his eyes.
“So you see why things are the way they are. Keep your pretty words and compliments and save them for someone with a use for them.”
Calhoun threw his legs over the side of the bed and sat up. “Look here, Maura Taggart. I’m not in the habit of paying lip service. Not with you or anyone. I mean what I say, and I meant every word, every compliment. There’s only one thing keeping me from courting you and it’s not your father.” He gave a snort. “I don’t give two hoots about Lucius Taggart.”
“Others have said the same thing but they all left.” Maura lifted her head, her voice quiet. “Forgive me, but I don’t believe you. I’m too old to play games, Calhoun. I’m smart enough to know that life has passed me by.”
“Only if you let it. You’ll never get anywhere by sitting down and giving up.”
“Give up?” she asked sharply. “Is that what you think? We’ve fought hard for everything we’ve gotten. Fought for the right to survive, to take up room on this earth. Wiped spit off our faces and walked away with heads held high. That’s not giving up. But there comes a time when a woman has to face reality.”
She had a point, but he couldn’t accept it.
He got to his feet and hobbled to her in his stocking feet. He placed his hands on her shoulders. “How’s this for reality? I like you and I like spending time with you and no, it has nothing to do with you patching me up. I’m not confusing gratitude with the closeness I feel with you. The only thing that is keeping me from courting you is the fact I have some dangerous business to take care of. The kind that might get me killed. Not only me, but everyone standing close and I won’t do that to you. Understand?”
“I’m trying. In the meantime, I can’t let false hopes take root.” Her voice dropped to an anguished whisper, “That would finish me. Better to have no hope at all.”
“Lady, when I get this settled and I still draw breath, I’m coming back.”
“I can see you mean that.” She put a hand to her throat. “You have to get well before you can ride out and that might be a while.”
“You’re telling me. It’s all I can do to get to the door right now.”
A teasing glint sparkled in her blue eyes. At least the sadness was gone. “See? And you’re talking about walking over to the mission.”
“That’s going to be more than talk. I am going to do that, with or without your help. So there. I’ll go stark raving mad if I have to spend another meal in this room by myself. I want to meet these kids, get acquainted with the nuns. I want to see Baby Juliette and the new puppy and all sorts of things you’ve told me about.” He lowered his voice and lifted a tendril of her hair that escaped from the loose knot on top of her head. “But most of all, I want to sit with you at the table and eat a meal. That’s going to be icing on the cake.”
“Then I should get moving.” She glanced at his boots on the floor. “I guess I’m going to have to help you get those on or you’ll be tearing your stitches out again.”
“That’s the God’s honest truth.”
“Okay then. Sit in the chair, Mr. Stubborn.”
“At least I did get my socks on by myself.” He sat down. “I’m not real sure how we’re going to do this. I can pull on one side with my good right arm and maybe you can pull on the other.”
“We can try it.”
Calhoun wondered if she realized how close she’d have to get. As hard as they were to get on, there wasn’t any other way.
And what would that do to his sanity?
With the fragrance of Lily of the Valley drifting around him, Maura positioned herself and leaned over grabbing the top of his boot. Mere inches away, her nearness had him struggling for breath.
Both of them tugged but only got his foot in about halfway. Trying again, she leaned down further until she was almost in his lap, pulling and yanking as hard as she could.
His yearning body tried to betray him. He closed his eyes. Not now.
“I’m going to get this on one way or the other.” She blew back a strand of fallen hair.
Before he knew it, she threw her leg across his lap and sat with her back to him. Reaching down, she put her fingers in the loops and gave a big yank. That did it.
“Thank God for a woman who doesn’t give up on boots,” he murmured. The temptation to touch her, to put his hands around her waist, rose up with a strong need that surprised even him.
However, before he could blink, she removed herself from his lap. Her cheeks were bright red. “I’m sorry, but that’s the only way to get them on.”
“Do you hear me complaining?” Darn his grin that tried its best to form. “Only one more to go.”











Welcome to the hometown everyone wants to call their own.Welcome to the Comfort Stories
The Comfort Stories are contemporary stories of smart women, their best friends, sweet second chances, and the Texas Hill Country. Set in Comfort, Texas, the stories reveal modern, female entrepreneurs discovering their grit to reinvent themselves, find their purpose in life, and discover that a second chance at romance can sometimes be the choice that changes everything.
The stories are filled with unconventional families, a village of characters and familiar landmarks, friends who become lovers, grumpy heroes, athletes, musicians, awesome women doing awesome things, and even a rekindling of a marriage at Christmas. With a PG-13 rating, this series will transport readers to a wholesome, clean town where good things eventually happen.
Sweet Comfort is the newest novel set in Comfort, Texas, and it’s the first book in the new Comfort and Joy cozy mystery series.
THE COMFORT STORIES SERIES:
Comfort Plans, 2017, 320 pages
Emeralds Mark the Spot, 2018, 54 pages
Comfort Songs, 2019, 348 pages
Comfort Foods, 2020, 385 pages
Comfort Zone, 2021, 287 pages
Comfort Christmas, 2022, 128 pages
THE COMFORT AND JOY SERIES:
Sweet Comfort, 2023, 311 pages

