Tag: Pacific Northwest

  • DESTINY’S SECOND CHANCE by Kate Vale, a heartwarming women’s fiction novel

    DESTINY’S SECOND CHANCE by Kate Vale, a heartwarming women’s fiction novel

    Two decades ago, librarian Isabella Campbell made the wrenching decision as a young, unwed mother to put her newborn child up for adoption. Though Bella wanted to keep her daughter, her rigid and disapproving parents insisted that a child needed both a mother and a father, not a single, inexperienced, teenage mother. Bella reluctantly agreed, but only if she was allowed to receive regular updates from the adoptive parents. The parents complied for a short period of time, but then Bella heard nothing more from them.

    Upon returning home from a business trip, Bella finds a letter from her daughter’s adoptive father, Nolan Harris, giving her permission to contact Destiny, who is now twenty-one. Bella is instantly thrown into emotional turmoil, thrilled yet very apprehensive. Would Destiny even want to meet or talk to her? Had her daughter’s adoptive mother, who had always disapproved of keeping Bella in their lives, continue to be a roadblock? And why had Nolan Harris chosen this moment in time to contact her after all these years?

    With a deft hand, author Kate Vale weaves this stressful, yet welcome complication into the daily events of Bella’s busy life—the distressing illness of a close friend who runs a local bookstore, the difficult relationship with her mother, who has never let Bella forget about her “little mistake”, and, of course, the new romantic interest in Bella’s life, Gavin, the nephew of her elderly ill friend. The result is a compelling novel rich in detail, heart-warming in its delicate yet realistic portrayal of the impact of adoption on all the lives it touches.

    Vale has a real talent for drawing characters one wants to get to know, and for understanding the emotional impact of the events that shape our lives. Destiny’s Second Chance draws the reader in from the very beginning, providing a thoughtful and satisfying story about people who feel like close friends.

    Life is messy, and life-altering decisions are never just good or bad, but rather create a mixture of emotions that run the gamut from satisfaction that one perhaps made the right decision, to guilt or despair over the toll that decision has taken in the intervening years. Vale understands this, and has described these conflicting emotions beautifully.

    This book will stay with readers long after they put it down. Highly recommended for those who enjoy women’s fiction and stories of family relationships.

  • BLUE: a novel by Kayce Stevens Hughlett – transcends genres with its complexity of story and psychological suspense

    BLUE: a novel by Kayce Stevens Hughlett – transcends genres with its complexity of story and psychological suspense

    This lyrically written, beautiful story of three emotionally broken yet connected women begins in present day, illustrating the current struggles each faces to simply hold it together and get through each day. The tale then slowly unravels—as these women’s lives unravel—to reveal the mystery in their past that connects them.

    We meet Izabel—a young woman who arrived on Shaw Island in Washington State without any memory of her life up to that point. Taken in and cared for by the nuns, she then trained as a doula, a birthing coach. Izabel now lives on Orcas Island and is a valued member of the community, but it soon becomes apparent that she is struggling with the re-emergence of repressed memories.

    As those memories surface, her current life begins to deteriorate: She dreams of a teenage girl, experiences birthing pains after a particularly difficult night with one of her clients, and almost melts down in a coffee shop when a name mentioned by a friend sounds horribly familiar. Izabel knows that she must deal with whatever is happening to her and turns to a close friend and mentor for help.

    Not far away in Seattle, we meet Monica, a single, clinically depressed woman with a closeted addiction. Her life is unraveling, and she has no idea how to put it back together. Through a sequence of events she meets Jack, a psychotherapist, who cares deeply about her and supports her as she grapples with overcoming her problems.

    And Daisy dreams in shades of blue about the fantastical world of Tausi in which creatures talk about philosophy and an evil master is plotting her demise. Is she having a near death experience? Or is she really dreaming? Where is she?

    Kayce Stevens Hughlett has used her extensive background in therapy and as a life coach to create a novel about the deeply rooted psychological connections between all of us. Blue is a story that is at times wonderfully whimsical, and at others, poignant, heartfelt, and even suspenseful.

    But most of all, it is an uplifting tale about how three women who have spent years only half alive and struggling, and who, with the help of a supportive network of friends, eventually deal with past traumas and are able to find their way back to each other.

    Blue transcends genres with its complexity of story and psychological suspense. It would not be a surprise if it appears on Oprah’s Book Club list. A poignant, inspiring tale of three women, emotionally damaged by the events of their lives, who ultimately find their way back to each other.

  • FIRE TRAP by Richard Mann, a mystery-thriller novel

    FIRE TRAP by Richard Mann, a mystery-thriller novel

    The biotech start-up Genetrix has been begging for a fourth round of funding from the venture capitalists at Hillberg in order to keep pace with well-funded rival, Roark, in a race to see who can put a breakthrough drug delivery system into the marketplace first.

    Just when the high-tech movers and shakers should have been positioning themselves for a taste of profit, the top research and development scientist at Genetrix dies in an absolutely epic explosion that shakes its headquarters in Silicon Valley.

    And that is the white hot intense opening of this clever whodunit. Was it murder or suicide? And who gets the insurance money after a heavily covered “key man” has died?  It is up to ace insurance investigator Randy Justice, who just opened his Justice Investigations office in Portland, Oregon to connect the dots and match wits with the hipster swells of the high-tech corporate elite.

    Randy’s pretty good, knows his own flaws, and can enjoy a scotch. He can handle tough corporate venture capitalists, and he can wrangle with his two feisty teenagers. Randy knows when to play his hunches and his sidekick, Arnie, keeps him focused.

    Randy moved to Portland because he just inherited his parents’ performance theater. He splits his time between a love of the theater and the thrill of chasing down bad guys. I found the author’s frequent glances into the world of the performing arts to be both charming and informative, and he seems to freely enjoy poking fun at the quirks of West Coast culture.

    In Fire Trap, first-time novelist Richard Mann dives fearlessly into the shark-infested waters of venture capitalists and high tech in this mystery-thriller. Mann juggles the complexities required of the successful whodunit with the sure-handed skill of a veteran mystery writer.

    Indeed, Mann seems to be completely at ease with the genre. He demonstrates a solid knowledge of his material, managing to massage potential deal breakers such as the mundane intricacies of policies and insurance investigation, along with forensic science, into Fire Trap’s tightly knitted plot without losing momentum or the white hot intensity of the narrative pace.

    Fire Trap is a totally satisfying mystery/thriller that, in spite of a few nods to the stereotypical, it thrills, amuses, and entertains. Randy Justice faces the deadly dynamics of the biotech corporate world while managing to squeeze a little theater culture and some romance into his life. Mann’s packing so much entertainment into the confines of a mere 206 pages is no less than a marvel—it’s a mystery! First-time novelist Richard Mann has hit one out of the park with this fascinating and uniquely clever whodunit.

    Reviewer’s Note: Fire Trap won First Place in the Clue Awards Private Eye Category for 2013.

     

  • Awards Banquet Information, Books By the Bay Book Fair, and the Chanticleer Authors Conference

    Awards Banquet Information, Books By the Bay Book Fair, and the Chanticleer Authors Conference

    cac3-150x1502.pngIn less than 3 weeks, the Chanticleer Authors Conference, with Awards Banquet, and the 3 Day Book Fair will begin (CAC15)! It is an exciting and busy time here at Chanticleer Reviews!

    We’ve had requests for more information about the annual  4 day CAC15 event that will take place on September 26, 27, 28, & 29, (Saturday through Tuesday Evening) 2015 in Bellingham, Wash. Of course, there is more detailed information on the Chanticleer Reviews website.

    Here is a quick synopsis of what to expect at CAC15.

    First of all, attendees may register for the complete four days, three days,  two days, one day, or just the Awards Banquet day. There are many options to choose from to accommodate most schedules.

    Lodging is available at the Hotel Bellwether, rates starting at $189 per evening OR the Lakeway Best Western, rates starting at $118 per night including shuttle service to and from the Lakeway.

    Saturday, Sept. 26th sessions and events will take place at the Bellingham Yacht Club, at Squalicum Harbor on beautiful Bellingham Bay.

    • Registrations open from 9 a.m.  until 5 p.m.
    • Coffee, tea, and soda will be available along with snacks (included with registration)
    • Sessions begin at 9:30
    • Casual Luncheon (included with registration)12:30
    • Sessions restart at 1:30
    • Last session ends at 4:45 p.m.
    • “Appy Hours” sponsored by Books I Love will begin at 5 p.m.
    • BYC opens doors to membership
      • Cash (no host) Bar available
      • Appetizers will be provided
    • Casual dinner buffet begins at 6:15 (included with registration)
    • The Penny Stinkers Band (live music and dancing) starts at 7:30 p.m.

    Sunpdf2015 conf-poster-11x17print-outlines (1) (2)day, Sept. 27th we move to the luxurious Hotel Bellwether located on beautiful Bellingham Bay and the BOOKS By the BAY BOOK FESTIVAL begins!

    • Registration open from 8:30 until 5 p.m. at the Hotel Ballroom Foyer.
    • Book Room Manager will be available for Book Drop-off beginning at 9 a.m. at the Hotel Ballroom Foyer.
    • Coffee and Tea will be available adjacent to the Book Room and Exhibitor’s Hall
    • Sessions begin at 9 a.m.
    • Book Room open from 11 a.m. until 6:30 p.m.
    • Keynote Luncheon Presentation begins at 12:30
    • Sessions begin at 1:30
    • Author Panel Discussions (open to the public) 4 p.m.
    • “Appy Hours” presented by Books I Love begins at 5 p.m.
    •  Cash No-host bar
      • Appetizers available at 6 p.m. (included)
    • Book Room closes at ~6:30 p.m.
    • Buffet Dinner with Announcements and Keynote Speakers 7:00 p.m.
    • The party continues at the Lighthouse Bar at the Hotel Bellwether

    Monday, Sept. 28th the conference continues at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether located on beautiful Bellingham Bay.

    • Registration open from 8:30 until 5 p.m. at the Hotel Ballroom Foyer.
    • Coffee and Tea will be available adjacent to the Book Room and Exhibitor’s Hall
    • Be sure to sign up for reserved spaces at local restaurants. Sign-up sheets will be located at the registration table. Each restaurant group will have a Dinner Diva or Divo to lead the way. All are with walking distance.
    • Sessions begin at 9 a.m.
    • Book Room open from 11 a.m. until 6:30 p.m.
    • Keynote Luncheon Presentation begins at 12:30
    • Sessions begin at 1:30
    • Author Panel Discussions (open to the public)
    • “Appy Hours” cocktail networking presented by Books I Love begins at 5 p.m.
      • Cash No-host bar
      • Appetizers available at 6 p.m. (included–adjacent to Book Room and Open Bar)
    • Book Room closes at ~6:30 p.m.
    • Dinner Time: Reservations with Chanticleer’s Dinner Divas and Divos at begin 7:15 – 7:30
      • The Hearthfire
      • Giuseppe’s Al Porto
      • Kiru Kiru Sushi
      • Anthony’s Seafood
      • The Lighthouse at the Hotel Bellwether
      • The Loft (casual dining)
      • Nicky’s Bella Marina (the best Fish and Chips in town/Burgers/fresh salmon ) located near the BYC — very casual.
    • The party continues at the Lighthouse Bar at the Hotel Bellwether

    Tuesday, Sept. 29th  Tonight is the Awards Banquet at the Hotel Bellwether Ballroom

    • Registration open from 8:30 until 6:30 p.m. at the Hotel Ballroom Foyer.
    • Coffee and Tea will be available adjacent to the Book Room and Exhibitor’s Hall
    • Sessions begin at 9 a.m.
    • Book Room open from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m.
    • Keynote Luncheon Presentation begins at 12:30
    • Sessions begin at 1:30
    • “Appy Hours” cocktail networking time presented by Books I Love begins at 5 p.m.
    • Author Panel Discussions (open to the public)
      • Cash No-host bar
      • Appetizers available at 6 p.m. (included)
    • Book Room closes at ~7 p.m.
    • The Annual Chanticleer Awards Dinner with Announcements followed by the Chanticleer Awards Ceremony 7:15 p.m.
    • The celebration party continues at the Lighthouse Bar at the Hotel Bellwether

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    What May First Place Award Winners Expect at CAC15:

     

     

    • First Place Awards Designation on Name-tag
    • Gold Award Seals for books (seals will be placed on award winning books that will be for sale in the book room) and will be given to First Place Award Winners upon picking up registration packets.
    • Priority for Book Signing Events at Books By the Bay
    • Recognition at the Awards Banquet (on screen)
    • Presentation of Chanticleer Blue Ribbons at Awards Ceremony – on stage
    • Group photo with other 1st Place Award Winners of the related genre
    •  All First Place Category Winners will compete for the Overall Genre Grand Prize (i.e., CLUE, CYGNUS, Chatelaine, etc.)
    • The Grand Prize GENRE Award Winners will be announced after all First Place Category Winners (in attendance) for all genres have been recognized.
    • The Overall Genre Winners will compete for the CHANTICLEER BEST BOOK GRAND PRIZE of $1,000 will be the last award announced

    Any Finalists attending will be asked to stand and be recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet.

    The Books By the Bay Book Fair will be held at the Hotel Bellwether on Sun., Mon., & Tues. from 11 a..m. until 6:30 p.m. The book room will be open to the general public for 3 days. Parking and admission is free.

    Upon picking up your name badge and program, you will receive your gold stickers to put on your books in the book room. If your books were shipped ahead, we will adhere the stickers to the winning titles.

    And then a few weeks later, you will receive your digital badges to use for websites, digital media, Internet and Social Media, and your winning title will be placed in the queue for receiving its Chanticleer Book Review package. And, of course, there will be more goodies to come!

    Bublish

     

     

    • Each 2014 First in Category winner of each genre competition will receive a 6-month subscription to Bublish’s Authorpreneur Dashboard.  Winners will be contacted by email after the Genre’s Official List of First in Category Winners has been posted on the Chanticleer Reviews website. 
    • Each of the Ten Genre Grand Prize  winners will receive a 1-year subscription to Bublish’s Authorpreneur Dashboard and a one-hour social media intensive session with Bublish professional social media experts (a $370 value for  each of the Ten Genre Grand Prize Winners). Prize to be awarded at the 2015 Chanticleer Authors Conference Awards Banquet for Best Books 2014.  
    • The Chanticleer Overall Grand prize winner will receive one-week of social promotions of their book through all Bublish social outlets (Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and Pinterest) AND an email blast to all Bublish readers.  This is valued at $500 for the week of social promotions and $225 for the email blast.  Prize to be awarded at the 2015 Chanticleer Authors Conference Awards Banquet for Best Books 2014.  

    Now that is something to CROW about!

    Don’t Delay! Register Today! 

    If you decide to attend, please accept these discount codes to use for registration:

    • $100 off from 3 or 4 day package: D4MQ9J2UD72M
    • $50 off from the one or two day registration package: 50OFFCWCCAC15

    https://www.chantireviews.com/save-the-date/

    If you are planning to attend, please let me know as soon as possible so that we can send you information about the book room, etc.

    Don’t delay! Register for CAC15 today!

    There are also conference specials for two different hotels at two different rates. These can be found on the website.

    As always, if you have any questions, concerns, or suggestions, please do not hesitate to contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com

    THE SCHEDULE WILL BE PUBLISHED SHORTLY! Thank you for your patience!

  • The CHATELAINE 2014 AWARDS for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Finalists

    The CHATELAINE 2014 AWARDS for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Finalists

    The Chatelaine Awards recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Novels. The Chatelaine Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Awards International Writing Competitions.

    chatelaineWe are pleased to announce the Chatelaine Awards Official Finalists List for 2014 Entries, otherwise known as the “Short List.” The Official Finalists Listing is comprised of entries that have passed the first three rounds of judging from  the entire field of entrants. To pass the first three rounds of judging, more than sixty pages of the works below  have been read and have deemed worthy by the CBR judges of continuing in competition for the Chatelaine FIRST IN CATEGORY positions and their prize packages.

    Congratulations to the CHATELAINE AWARDS 2014 FINALISTS:

    • Isabella Hargreaves  for The Persuasion of  Miss Jane Brody
    • Kathy Bryson for Feeling Lucky 
    • Sarah Katz for Hidden Miracles
    • Catherine A. Wilson and Catherine T. Wilson for The Order of the Lily 
    • Danica Winters for  Montana Mustangs 
    • Jennifer Snow for The Trouble with Mistletoe 
    • Dr. Evan Mahoney for Nongae of Love and Courage 
    • Kaylin McFarren for Buried Threads
    • Deborah Hining for A Sinner in Paradise 
    • Kerryn Reid for Learning to Waltz
    • Peggy Patrick for Surrendered II
    • K.C. Simos  for Ambrosia Chronicles: The Discovery
    • Donna Barker for Mother Teresa’s Advice for Jilted Lovers
    • Diane Green  for Dragon Wife
    • Nadine Christine for Quintal’s Return; Home Again, Home Again; and Remembering Love
    • Ashlinn  Craven  for  Maybe Baby 
    • A. Clarke Scott for A Dissimulation of Doves 
    • Noelle Clark  for Rosamanti 
    • Jamie A. Waters  for The Two Towers
    • Martha Rather for Kismet or Kamasutra  
    • Nancy Marie Bell for Christmas Storm
    • Janet K. Shawgo  for Find Me Again 
    • Betty Codd for Eleanor Grace  
    • Julie LeMense for Once Upon a Wager
    • Kristine Cayne  for Deadly Betrayal 
    • K.C. Berg for  Fallen Angel
    • E.E. Burke for Her Bodyguard
    • Debra Pickett for Reporting Lives
    • Gita Simic and G.T. Symms for As for Costanza
    • Eleanor Tatum for Swamp Home 
    • Cauleen Noël for The Changes Within Us
    • Lisa Souza for Beauty and the Bridesmaid
    • Patricia Sands  for The Promise of Provence 
    • Callie James for Innocent
    • Kim Sanders for The Ex Lottery
    • Jianna Higgins for Just Going and Just Wondering  
    • Sharon Struth for Share the Moon    
    • Kate Vale for Destiny’s Second Chance     
    • Colette Saucier for Viuda

    Good luck to all the Chatelaine Awards Finalists who made the Short List as they compete for the First In Category Positions!

    More than $30,000 dollars in cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Winners annually.

    cac3The Chatelaine First in Category award winners will compete for the Chatelaine Grand Prize Award for Women’s/Romance Book 2014. Grand Prize winners, blue ribbons, and prizes will be announced and awarded on September 29th at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash.

    The First In Category award winners will receive an award package including a complimentary book review, digital award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2015 Chatelaine Awards. The deadline is August 31, 2015. Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2015 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Ten genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

    Who will take home the $1,000 purse this September at the Chanticleer Awards Gala and Banquet?

    Last year’s Chanticleer Grand Prize winner was Michael Hurley for The Prodigal.

    Last year’s Chatelaine winner was Kate Vale for Choices

  • The M&M Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Novels 2014 First Place Category Winners

    The M&M Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Novels 2014 First Place Category Winners

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the M&M Awards 2014 for Mystery & Mayhem Cozy Novels, a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions.

     mandm-126x150.jpgThe M&M Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of cozy mysteries novels. The First Place Category Winners will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala held in late September 2015.

     

    The M&M  FIRST PLACE 2014 Award Winners are:

    •  Amateur Sleuth: Wendy Delaney for SEX, LIES, and SNICKERDOODLES
    • Romance: Janet Shawgo for FIND ME AGAIN
    • Animals: Pamela Beason for THE ONLY CLUE 
    • Blended Genre: Winslow Elliott for SATI and the RIDER 
    • Classic Cozy: Stephen Kaminski  for DON’T CRY OVER KILLED MILK
    • Female Sleuth: Julie Mulhern for The DEEP END
    • Humorous: Ann Philipp for GRAND THEFT DEATH
    • American Mystery: Amy Beth Arkawy for DEAD SILENT 
    • Classic British Cozy: Marni Graff for GREEN REMAINS 
    • Y/A/New Adult: Julie Moffett for NO PLACE LIKE ROME 
    • Senior Sleuths: Mark Reutlinger for MRS. KAPLAN and the MATZOH BALL of DEATH
    • Legal/Medical/Lab: Ken Malovos for CONTEMPT of COURT

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    Congratulations to all of the 2014 M&M Finalists Short List! This is a highly competitive writing competition and many of the calls were close. We invite you to enter your new works into the M&M 2016 Awards.

    Congratulations to those whose works were selected for First Place Category positions. Good Luck to the M&M First Place Category Winners as they compete for the M&M AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the M&M AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2014 M&M category winner was announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala in September 2015. See the Grand Prize Winners.

    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2014 was March 31, 2014.
    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2015 was March 31, 2015.
    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2016 is March 31, 2016.

    GRAND PRIZE Overall M&M Awards 2013 Winner was:

    2013-MM1.pngBerndatte Pajer, for Fatal Induction    

    To view the 2013 M&M Award Winners, please click here.

    To compete in the 2016 M&M Awards or for more information, please click here.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are the reason literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also another reason our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C.  retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews international writing competitions.

     

  • SECRETS, LIES, and CHAMPAGNE HIGHS by Jeanette Hubbard, a cozy mystery

    SECRETS, LIES, and CHAMPAGNE HIGHS by Jeanette Hubbard, a cozy mystery

    Jeanette Hubbard’s Secrets, Lies, and Champagne Highs is a chick-lit quirky drama set in Oregon with crazy characters galore, an abundance of twists, and non-stop hi-jinks.

    Claudie O’Brien is interrupted while attempting to commit suicide with champagne and pills by the side of a river. Peter, who has taken to driving a tow-truck after being laid off from his job as a vice principal, finds her while camping with his friends. Meanwhile, Peter’s wife Chrystal yearns for a more elegant life. A floundering real estate agent, she now works as a hostess at a restaurant, resents her stepdaughter’s lack of interest in fashion, and has embarked on an affair with a quack doctor.

    Peter and Chrystal have just finished converting their garage apartment for his aunt when she dies suddenly. In order to receive the appropriate rezoning permits, they must find someone to establish residency there. Chrystal finds Claudie in the hospital and convinces her to pose as the aunt and live in the apartment for a year. Claudie, who figures she has nothing better to do and could use a distraction, agrees.

    Add in a deadbeat son cooking meth in a barn, a woman coming out of a month-long coma, an out of work English professor fired for seducing a teenager, secret identities, and an accidental death, and you have a recipe for nonstop hi-jinks.

    Claudie rediscovers a reason for living as she helps Peter’s children learn to cook and discover the truth about their stepmother. A subplot involving the proposed building of a spiritual retreat and miracle cures is amusing and timely.

    A polished writer, Hubbard weaves the multiple plot threads together deftly. This reviewer would like to see a more central focus on one or two of the characters instead of an ever-revolving cast of protagonists, which makes it hard for the reader to root for a favorite. The novel’s ending quickly ties up the threads of the many ongoing dramas and mysteries, but feels abrupt after so much build up. Overall, Secrets, Lies, and Champagne Highs is a fast-paced small town mystery with interesting characters that ends before it has really begun to explore the complex web of crimes and connections Hubbard sets up, which may be a prelude for a series. Nevertheless, fans of the chick-lit genre along with those who enjoy quirky dramas will enjoy escaping to Oregon and will be satisfied by Hubbard’s skillful writing craft. We look forward to enjoying more of Claudie O’Brien’s escapades.

    The Secrets, Lies, and Champagne High’s strong development of its Oregon setting helps create a world of quirky people and familiar locations. Hubbard’s novel has a multitude of characters and twists that will keep readers turning the pages.

  • ENCOUNTERS on the FRONT LINE: CAMBODIA: a MEMOIR by Elaine Harvey

    ENCOUNTERS on the FRONT LINE: CAMBODIA: a MEMOIR by Elaine Harvey

    Encounters on the Front Line is the journey of a Canadian Red Cross nurse who, after traveling in far off reaches of Asia and Africa, finds herself in a refugee camp on Cambodia’s Thai border, in the midst of the war between the Vietnamese and Cambodia’s brutal Khmer Rouge.

    The encounter with the front line becomes a life journey told in three books: her experience in a refugee camp in 1980, a pilgrimage back in 2007-2008 in an effort to reconnect, and a third journey two years later as a mature woman and writer, seeking to pull together the experience that has marked her so deeply.

    The courage and resilience of the Cambodians survivors who serve with her, their beauty in the midst of the horrendous conditions shine through, even as the camp itself becomes torn by war. Harvey draws a vivid picture of contrasts: the abysmal conditions of the camp with the green of the surrounding rice fields, the terrors of the Pol Pot regime with the loyal gentleness of the individual Cambodians who serve with her. Photos increase the reader’s intimacy with these people, as does the poetry that runs through the book.

    Harvey’s return trips to reconnect and unravel the mystery of the land become a more personal search. It is again focused on people, both Cambodian and expats from around the world who have found their life’s work in Cambodia. The second visit focuses on an orphanage, Wat Opot, where she serves, and its American founder. The price of conflict is brought home by the stories of these tragic leftover of war—the children. In a land where poverty and conflict overwhelm, many find peace in Buddhism. Harvey finds that her greatest service lies in the healing touch.

    The honesty of this memoir—Harvey’s conflicting reactions to the filth and vermin—give it an authenticity that is refreshing. The third book in particular, we feel her frustration and grief at her failure to re-establish the personal connections of the first encounter. If it has any defect it is that the first book, given its subject matter, has a tension and intensity the other two do not.  And the personal search of the latter two is, that some readers may find it to be, at times, repetitive as the author reexamines her encounters. Life has moved on beyond her reach, and the intimacy and immediacy of war relationships cannot be reestablished. There is a large quotient of sadness in this last visit, and a once friend tells her that it is a mistake to cling too long.

    This is a very well written memoir and an intimate picture of a Southeast Asia  and its people. Readers will find their horizons broadened by Harvey as she shares her encounters as one who has served in the far reaches of the Third World, grown to love its people, then sought to give the experiences meaning. Harvey’s poetry and photographs add both variety and depth to the work, as they further the reader’s connection to the memoir beyond the power of prose.

  • JANUS UNFOLDING: EMERGENCE by C.A. Knutsen

    JANUS UNFOLDING: EMERGENCE by C.A. Knutsen

    In the remote town of Frazier, Washington, a house fire burns so inexplicably white-hot that the firemen are forced to retreat. There are no known materials used in home construction or interior decoration that can explain the heat and ferocity of the blaze. Upon closer examination of the charred remains of the structure, the firemen discover a body burned so completely that only bones survived. And in the surrounding property, they find the comatose bodies of three professional assassins, clearly laid out for the authorities.

    From that intriguing beginning, author C. A. Knutsen draws the reader into alternating stories in Janus Unfolding: Emergence—one placed slightly into the future, and one placed roughly in present day. Chapters flip back and forth from a crime scene investigation that initially stumps the authorities to a description of the childhood of a gifted boy named Jimmy, who exhibits unusual intellectual and physical prowess. The reader soon learns that the Jimmy, who became the adult Jim Post, a reclusive rich man about whom little is known, was killed in the house fire.

    Determined to find answers, Jim Post’s business partner, Jeff Pierce, along with the help of the Frazier and Seattle police detectives as well as an Artificial Intelligence program named Martha, work to discover why anyone would murder a man who had no enemies and who had dedicated his life to making the world a better place in which to live. The mystery of exactly what happened in those woods will keep readers eagerly turning the pages.

    This novel is, however, far more than a typical whodunit and crime scene investigation; it is a novel about the evolution of mankind. It is also a novel about the reactions of mankind once it learns of that evolution. Readers are drawn into the lives of each of the characters in the book, and are curiously compelled to find out what will happen to them, and whether as a species, Homo sapiens can accept the changes happening within our own societies.

    The extensive chapters of the main character’s childhood would make for slow reading if they weren’t essential to eventually understanding the theme of Janus Unfolding: Emergence. However, Knutsen’s accurate portrayal of martial arts scenes will appeal to those who have an interest in the subject. Similarly, readers who enjoy a dash of science fiction in their whodunits will find the descriptions of DNA sequencing and evolution of our species fascinating.

    This intriguing novel is not one that fits squarely into the mystery genre, or that follows the standard formula and plot for either a mystery or a SciFi novel. However, readers of both genres will find it a compelling and thought-provoking novel that crosses new boundaries. Highly recommended.

  • THE WATCHER by Lisa Voisin

    THE WATCHER by Lisa Voisin

    Mia Crawford is a vibrant, outgoing high school student in West Seattle with a close circle of friends. She shares most things in her life with them, but not the strange occurrences that keep her guessing her own sanity: cloudy dog-like creatures with menacing red eyes that chase her, voices cloaked in static, flickering lights, and even real people no one else sees. Mia’s family isn’t around much – Mom works a lot, her dad has a different life out of state, and her brother is away at college. She feels everything with deep intensity, as the smallest events trigger emotional responses landing on both ends of the spectrum.

    Two new boys arrive at her high school this year: the first is mysterious Michael, who experienced death after an accident but came back. He is beautiful, strong, and seems to show an interest in Mia, always showing up at just the right time. She quickly develops strong affections for him, but he does not reciprocate her feelings. Instead, he pushes her away, disappointing and confounding her, giving rise to her insecurities.

    Damiel, the other new boy, shows up dashing and debonair on his vintage motorcycle. All the girls swoon under his attention, and he pursues Mia persistently. Michael warns her to stay away from him, and she really doesn’t like Damiel. However, she is inexplicably drawn to him, in spite of being in love with Michael.

    Mia loves the study of ancient civilizations and literature. She lives out her painful crush through a classroom reading of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Sometimes she has visions of another world, seeing at times a meadow, a loom, and large birds circling in a fight to the death. She also knows she has some kind of connection with Michael, and that he and Damiel have a history. But nothing could prepare her for knowing the truth of that history, and her role in it.

    Things become heated when Michael and Damiel confront each other in an other-worldly fight over Mia. When she finally discovers the truth, it sends her on a soul-searching journey of love and redemption, and into a supernatural battle of good and evil, involving angels and demons.

    Voisin transports us visually into Mia’s world with rich details, from places as mundane as a wall locker in a school corridor, to a thrilling winged flight high above the city. We ache with Mia for Michael’s touch when he is near, and feel Michael’s pain for resisting.

    The mundanity of high school life and petty spats gives way to an other-worldly realm with life and death significance. Mia and Michael have a tragic past that occurred before recorded history, resulting in Mia’s early death and Michael’s fall from his fold into hell and guilt-ridden remorse. Only Mia’s strength can save them in this lifetime; is she up to the task?

    The author draws from principles of many different sources, from the Bible and the Quran to Tarot cards, giving none any greater importance than the others, and without judgment.  The Watcher will keep you guessing, and feeling, and leave you with great hope.

     The Watcher by Lisa Voisin was awarded the Grand Prize Award for Paranormal Novels, a division of Chanticleer Reviews Novel Competitions.