Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: The Dead Cry Justice by Rosemary Simpson

Book Description

Heiress-turned-sleuth Prudence MacKenzie and ex-Pinkerton Geoffrey Hunter step out of the elite society of Gilded Age New York as they venture into the city’s crime ridden streets and most dangerous neighborhoods to search for two missing children . . .

THE DEAD CRY JUSTICE

May 1890: As NYU Law School finally agrees to admit female law students, Judge MacKenzie’s daughter Prudence weighs her choices carefully. Chief among her concerns is how her decision would affect the Hunter and MacKenzie Investigative Law agency and her professional and personal relationship with the partner who is currently recuperating from a near fatal shooting.

But an even more pressing issue presents itself in the form of a street urchin, whose act of petty theft inadvertently leads Prudence to a badly beaten girl he is protecting. Fearing for the girl’s life, Prudence rushes her to the Friends Refuge for the Sick Poor, run by the compassionate Charity Sloan. When the boy and girl slip out of their care and run away, Prudence suspects they are fleeing a dangerous predator and is desperate to find them.

Aided by the photographer and social reformer Jacob Riis and the famous journalist Nellie Bly, Prudence and Geoffrey scour the tenements and brothels of Five Points. Their only clue is a mysterious doll with an odd resemblance to the missing girl. But as the destitute orphans they encounter whisper the nickname of the killer who stalks them—Il diavolo—Prudence and Geoffrey must race against time to find the missing children before their merciless enemies do.

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Elise’s Thoughts

The Dead Cry Justice by Rosemary Simpson always involves a mystery, returning characters, and a social issue during the Gilded Age.  This historical novel delves into a very tough and disturbing topic.  But Simpson is such a gifted author and writes in a manner that does not go over the top. She realizes a line should not be crossed, leaving the subject matter up to the reader’s imagination.

The story opens with the main character, Prudence MacKenzie, heiress turned sleuth with her partner, Geoffrey Hunter, contemplating if she should accept the offer to attend NYU’s law school.  It is now 1890 and women are making strides, but she is not sure how she will be accepted among the students and professors.

While weighing her decision a street urchin steals her sandwich.  A chase ensues leading her to a badly beaten girl. The girl’s eyelashes and eyebrows have been replaced with tattoos, her skin is bleached artificially white, and she has been repeatedly raped. A Quaker refuge for the poor agrees to care for the boy and girl, both to traumatized to speak. Somehow, they slip out.  Prudence, with the help of Geoffrey and some other contacts, are determined to find the children.  They visit orphanages, brothels, a photographer, newspaper journalist, and a house of dolls.  Their only clue is a mysterious porcelain doll that oddly resembles the missing girl.  To their shock, they discover other young girls in the same situation. They now have a race against time to find the children and the perpetrators before it is too late.

This is an important issue to bring front and center since sex trafficking is still present today with very little coverage or outcry as it was in the 1890s. Readers will understand how Simpson brings to life the Gilded Age in New York City through detailed descriptions, real-life people such as Jay Gould, Jacob Riis, and Nellie Bly, and a riveting mystery.

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Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper: How did you get the idea for the story?

Rosemary Simpson:  Each one of my Gilded Age Mystery books has a social setting, murder, and the two main characters.  In this book it was the social exploitation of girls and women. It was a topic that needed to be addressed.  The deeper I got into my research I realized there are a lot of parallels of what is happening now.  At the time of my research Jeffrey Epstein was in all the papers.

EC:  What about the abuse?

RS:  It was horrific back then. The girls felt homeless.  It was emotional and physical.  The girls were bleached, tattooed, made to take arsenic and lead, starved, drugged, and beaten. Parts of this are true today. There was a great deal of abuse.  Usually, it was the women themselves who were blamed for the sexual exploitation.  The clients were rarely blamed.  I kept looking and looking for major outcries against this. No one wanted to admit that this horrible issue could exist. I wanted it to be believable and to be realistic in the historical context.

EC:  Lead and arsenic taken?

RS:  Yes.  It was done for hundreds of years to whiten the skin. It was a lead paste.  It also did damage to the brain and other parts of the body.  The arsenic was a very small amount used in cremes.

EC:  Another relevant issue today is your quote about criminals?

RS:  You are referring to this one, “Criminals arrested should be detained, but walked free.” This book takes place before Theodore Roosevelt became the police commissioner.  Before him, the NYC police department was tremendously corrupt.  Until Roosevelt came along there were not many who wanted to clean up the corruptness.  People could pay to walk away after they committed a crime.  What is happening today, with criminals getting out, is a replay of what has already happened, many and many times.

EC:  Some of this story reminded me of the movie, “Oliver?”

RS:  There were a lot of orphanages in NYC.  They meant well and many were reformers. There was something associated with being an orphan as if it were the child’s fault.  In the absence of stern parental control there was organized institutional control.  Children were not assumed to be innocent, but the thought pattern was they tried to get away with everything unless there was a tight hold on them. A lot of the orphanages existed because of the donations.  They were very grim. As soon as the orphans got to be a certain age, they were shown the door.

EC:  Role of the dolls?

RS:  Young women were being traumatized and deprived of their basic humanity. They were turned into objects. The porcelain hand-painted bisque dolls are now antiques and even back then were very valuable. The best ones did come from France. They were so beautiful they were collector’s items and usually were not played with. When I was a child, about five, I got a gorgeous doll from my French aunt.  It was in a huge red and gold box, wrapped in huge red ribbon.  I was afraid to take it out of the box for fear I might drop it. After my aunt left, I took it out of the box.  It was gorgeous.

EC:  Did the All-American Doll Shop influence you?

RS:  I bought some of these dolls.  But the idea was to make the dolls lifelike.  But I was reversing it. I was making the real girls look doll-like.  I only remembered these dolls during the rewrites.  In my story it was a way of depriving the exploited girls to be human. Just as today, with sex trafficking, these girls are treated as objects.

EC:  Were women really admitted to law schools during the 1890s?

RS:  Most of the women were working in a husband’s law firm or writing wills/trusts.  They were not arguing in full court before a jury.  My character Prudence wants to defend someone in a court. Society is beginning to open up to achieve some sort of equality.

EC: How would you describe the young brother Zander who tried to save his sister from exploitation?

RS:  An Oliver Twist kind of character:  Resilient, crafty, quick on his feet, smart, does not give up, and very loveable.  He bonded with his dog Blossom.  An unquestioning love and loyalty.  He is also protective, caring, and kind.  He realizes to save his sister he has to manipulate society.

EC:  Next book?

RS:  It will be out this time next year and is titled, Death at The Falls.  It takes place at Niagara Falls. Prudence has passed the bar, but no one will hire her.  She and her partner Geoffrey go to Niagara Falls to help her aunt’s friend who is accused of murder. The social aspect is the push pull between private exploitation of the Falls and the public effort to preserve the natural beauty of the falls.

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Marriage Can Be Mischief by Amanda Flower

Book Description

Millie Fisher may be widowed, but she leads a full life in her Amish hometown of Harvest, Ohio. There’s her quilting circle, her Boer goats, her gift for matchmaking—and the occasional murder . . .

Millie is happy that her childhood friend, Uriah Schrock, has returned to Harvest after decades away. He was sweet on Millie in their school days, but she only had eyes for her future husband. Now, there’s a new spark between them, so Millie is concerned when Uriah doesn’t show up at the Harvest concert series—or for his job as the Village square’s groundskeeper. Perhaps Millie has been involved in too many murder investigations, but she has a sinking feeling. And when she and her best friend, Lois, find Uriah with the police, it seems she’s right . . .

A film crew is in Harvest to make a movie about a forty-year-old unsolved murder. A skeleton has been found at the bottom of a ravine—and Uriah is certain it’s his sister, Galilee. Right before Uriah left Ohio, she disappeared, and her harsh husband, Samuel, was found fatally stabbed with a knitting needle. The sheriff declared that Galilee killed him and ran away. Uriah never believed the theory, and he’s come back to Harvest hoping, Gott willing, Millie will help him stitch together the truth . . .

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Elise’s Thoughts

Marriage Can Be Mischief is a cozy mystery in the small town of Harvest Ohio.  It features Amish quilting matchmaker crime solver Millie Fisher and her English friend Lois Henry.

This installment has Millie’s childhood friend, Uriah Schrock, returning to Harvest to find out what happened to his sister, Galilee.  Forty years ago, her abusive husband Samuel was found dead, and she has disappeared.  But now a film crew doing a documentary on this cold case find a human skull and bones.  After a DNA test the skeleton is found to be Galilee.  The Sheriff who dislikes the Amish quickly determines that there is no new evidence to reopen the case and rules that she had killed her husband.  But Millie realizes things do not add up and she agrees to find out the truth.

Always present to help Millie is her best friend, Lois.  They are as opposite as can be.  Millie is a widow who still mourns her late husband, while Lois is a three-time divorcee. Millie is reserved and Lois is flamboyant. Lois has purple/black spiked hair and Millie dresses in her Amish clothes.  Even with these differences they are inseparable except for going to Church.  Both spend their spare time trying to solve the murders in Harvest.  Now they are trying to clear Galilee’s name and prove that someone else committed the murder.  But it could be costly since the killer will do anything to make sure Lois and Millie are stopped.

Per usual, Amanda Flower does not disappoint.  She consistently has likeable characters, charming settings, and engaging mysteries with plenty of humor to go around.

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Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper: Idea for this story?

Amanda Flower:  There has been so many murders in Harvest.  Because both series are doing well there will be more killings. I wanted a cold case.  It works out for it to be in the Matchmaker series because Lois and Millie are in their sixties, which means they would have been around forty years ago as adults, when the murder took place. I also want to build a case around an Amish restaurant.

EC:  Is there an Amish Corner Beach restaurant for real?

AF:  No, but it was based on those Amish restaurants with big buffets. Buses come in with tourists to get big family size meals.  It is like Thanksgiving every single day.  There must be at least ten restaurants that all look the same and serve the same food.

EC:  Why did you put in the Amish proverb at the beginning of the book?

AF:  You are referring to this one, “A house is made of walls and beams; a home is made of love and dreams.”  The crime that happened is really based upon spousal abuse. It is usually very hushed. I did not want to ignore it as a problem.  I used this quote because the victim had a house, but it was not a real home for her since it was not a loving place. I just made the connection of the Barbra Streisand song, “A House is Not a Home.”

EC: The animal stars of this series are the goats, Phillip, and Peter.  Do you have goats?

AF: No, but we do want them eventually. We are going to do chickens first.  One of my neighbors told me chickens are like a gateway animal.  They are more low maintenance than goats. Millie’s nephews and the goats always are a good addition to the story.

EC:  Uriah and Millie are no longer an item?

AF:  He is uncertain of Millie’s feelings.  His mission to come back to Holmes County was to find out what happened to his sister.  This has tortured him for the last forty years, not knowing what happened to her. He really cares about Millie, but his emotions are preoccupied by his missing sister.  In the next book, he has returned home to Indiana.  He was very dedicated to his sister, and realizes Millie is still in love with the memory of Kip, her late husband.

EC:  You brought in Millie’s late husband Kip?

AF:  Yes.  He was steadfast and traditional Amish. They loved each other deeply. He was a kind and loving husband.  She is not over him.   Millie commented in this book, she does not know what he would think of her life now.  She and Lois are chasing murderers and she is not leading a traditional Amish life. 

EC:  Abuse?

AF:  Samuel, the abusing husband, and his wife, Galilee were never in love.  Theirs was a marriage of convenience.  Most Amish marry for love, but land and property were sometimes considered.  If a man wants something monetary, they will marry for that reason.  He did not love her and emotionally/physically abused her. 

EC:  The Bishop has so much say in someone’s marriage?

AF:  Yes.  This is one of the hard things for a non-Amish person to wrap their head around.  He is basically the law in the district and what he decides must be followed.  He is essentially chosen by G-d to lead the Church and the community.  It makes it difficult for anyone to leave, because they will be excommunicated, which means they must be “shunned” by everyone including their family. In this book, I had the current Bishop remove a wife if there is even a rumor of abuse. He is compassionate and understanding to the wife’s struggles.

EC:  The role of the sheriff?

AF:  He is unkind and evil.  He does not respect the Amish, considers them in a bad light, and has his judgement colored. He stays in this position of power because no one challenges him in an election. Sheriff Marshall has a lot of say with other law enforcement agencies in the state of Ohio. Eventually Aiden will challenge him in a future book. 

EC:  The role of baseball?

AF: The Amish will play baseball. Millie’s nephew, Micah, learned about baseball from an English boy who is his classmate.  He taught Micah about collecting baseball cards. Micah is fascinated with this hobby because he loves playing baseball.  Micah hides collecting baseball cards because there are pictures of the players on the cards.  Remember the Amish do not have faces on dolls and never take photographs, or have pictures of their family, for that reason.

EC:  How would you describe the victim, Galilee?

AF: Frightened.  When she was working at the restaurant, she was more herself and enjoyed being away from her husband. Overall, timid and scared of her husband Samuel.  She is kind and joyful at work, but at home she is closed off.

EC:  Next books?

AF:  The final book in the “Magical Mysteries Series” comes out in January 2022, titled Crimes and Covers. There is a murder outside a wedding tent.  In February 2022 Put Out to Pasture, the farm series comes out.  In March 2022 Frozen Detective will come out by Hallmark. It has a murder happening at a posh New Year’s Eve party at a ski resort. The murder weapon is a bow and arrow. Peanut Butter Panic, the “Amish Candy Shop Mystery Series” comes out in May or June 2022. It is set in Thanksgiving.  The busybody, Margot, has her mother coming to Harvest with her new husband, someone very much younger than her.  At dinner he drops dead from a peanut allergy. In July 2022 my first historical mystery comes out.  It is set in 1855 with the sleuths Emily Dickerson and her maid. The “Amish Matchmaker Series” featuring Millie will be out this time next year.  It is titled Honeymoon’s Can Be Hazardous. Lois’ ex-husband comes to Amish country with his new wife.  The next day his wife dies, and Lois is the prime suspect. There will be an issue of drug trafficking.

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch and The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge by Maisey Yates

Book Description – Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch (Gold Valley Book #13)

Gold Valley’s rodeo champion is facing the toughest challenge of his life—a Christmas wedding!

Legendary bull rider Jake Daniels has only one plan this Christmas—to ignore the pain the season always brings. Until his best friend, Callie Carson, shows up on his ranch with a marriage proposal. Jake has lived so close to the edge it’s a miracle he’s still alive—he knows all about risk. But marrying the woman he craves more than anything feels like the biggest risk of all.

Callie Carson may be rodeo royalty, but to fulfill her dreams of riding saddle bronc, she needs her inheritance. And to access that, she needs a husband. But Jake the husband is deliciously different from Jake the friend, especially after the wild heat of their wedding night. He was only supposed to be her cowboy for Christmas, but Jake’s every heart-stopping touch has Callie questioning how she’ll ever be able to walk away.

In bonus novella Her First Christmas Cowboy, Tala gets a surprise Christmas delivery—a cowboy on her doorstep!

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Book Description – The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge (Gold Valley Book #14)

When a bull-riding champion is left holding his friend’s baby, could it be time to put down roots in Gold Valley?

Midwife Mallory Chance is ready for a fresh start in Gold Valley. And when she locks eyes with a handsome cowboy across the saloon, it feels like fate. After too many years wasted on her cheating ex, good girl Mallory is read to cut loose and prioritize herself. But when the dust settles on their hot night together, it turns out that her mysterious one-night cowboy is none other than her new landlord—and someone she’ll be seeing very regularly around Gold Valley.

Bull rider Colt Daniels has a wild reputation, but after losing his friend on the rodeo circuit, he’s left it all behind. If only he could walk away from his guilt as easily…or the temptation of Mallory. He can’t offer her the future she deserves—what does a cowboy with a heart as damaged as his know about forever? Then his friend’s tiny daughter ends up in Colt’s care. Colt has never wanted to rely on anyone, but he needs Mallory’s help taking care of the baby he’s beginning to love as his own. But is it all still temporary, or is it their chance at a forever family?

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch, “Gold Valley” book 13, and The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge “Gold Valley” book 14, by Maisey Yates both have an underlying theme of overcoming grief.  In addition, each book has a novella that also touches on grief. There is a range of feelings that are present in each: hope, joy, despair, anger, and understanding. As with all her books, Yates is the master of banter between the characters.  Whether making the reader laugh or cry they feel they are a fly on the wall as they listen to the characters’ conversations.

Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch has best friends, Jake Daniels, and Callie Carson, agreeing to a marriage of convenience. What makes this book fun is that all the Daniels family is front and center.  But the plot focuses on the cousin Jake and Callie.  She shows up at his ranch with a marriage proposal. To fulfill her dreams of riding a saddle bronc, she needs her inheritance. And to access that, she needs a husband.

After losing his parents, along with the other Daniels’ children, in a plane crash, he refuses to get attached, believing that once he loves someone, he will lose them. So, he decides to just exist and not feel.  Callie also has feelings of loss, because she feels she is her parent’s replacement to Sophie, the daughter they lost to an illness before Callie was born.

The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge features Jake’s brother Colt Daniels.  He also has issues with grief and loss; besides his parents he lost a good friend on the rodeo circuit.  He agrees to have a one-night stand with Mallory Chance. But the small town epitomizes the saying “it’s a small world,” after he turns out to be her landlord and related by marriage to her brother, Griffin. Mallory became a mid-wife after having a still-born birth and has now decided to move closer to her brother.  She wants a fresh start, especially from her live-in boyfriend of fifteen years who is a man-child.  Colt and Mallory become close when they decide to work together to tend to a newborn. This baby, his goddaughter, was left with him by the mother who wants a fresh start.

Both books have a solid romance with interesting characters. These books are page-turners as readers take a journey with the characters.  Family loss, grieving, and finding love are themes that have great meaning.

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Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper: You explore grief in both books?

Maisey Yates:  A lot of my stories have conversations with grief.  Funny, but my books that deal with heavy grief tend to win awards.  In case, you want to know, I did write these books prior to having a real adult experience with grief, when I lost my mother. One of the books was written while my mom was in hospice. One of the wonderful things about writing is the healing process.  I know I can deal with these horrible things that come up after a death and put them in my stories.  For me, grief is a good vehicle to push my characters to the edge.

EC:  There is a lot about rodeos in Rodeo Christmas at Evergreen Ranch.  Do you like them?

MY:  Yes!  I enjoy going to rodeos.  My goal is to get out to the Pendleton Round Up rodeo in Oregon. It is a week-long celebration of western heritage that includes parades, concerts, a night pageant, shops, and of course rodeo events.

EC:  How would you describe the hero, Jake Daniels?

MY: Very broken and protective.  There was a thread that called my heroes “disasters in Stetsons that are in need of therapy, not a relationship.” I thought no way.  These are fictional characters who need love and are afraid of commitments because of something that went on in their life.  He is brave, vulnerable, and caring. 

EC:  How would you describe the heroine, Callie Carson?

MY:  Stubborn, determined, sassy, a tough cookie.  She is a straight-talker, honest, spirited, and strong.  When I was writing her, I thought about one of my favorite books growing up, Caddie Woodlawn, a historical western. Caddie Woodlawn is a real adventurer. She’d rather hunt than sew and plow than bake and tries to beat her brother’s dares every chance she gets.  At the end of the book, she is more receptive to those feminine qualities of cooking.  At first, I was disappointed, thinking she caved. But when I read it again as a teenager, I understood why she embraced some feminine qualities.  I like my heroines to have a journey going from Tomboy to woman. Callie realizes she does not have to give up her interests, nor does she have to reject the idea of femininity to be strong. 

EC:  Callie saw with the Daniels’ family how she too could be feminine and strong?

MY:  You are referring to the book quote, “Sammy, was a flurry of motion, hair, and diaphanous fabrics.  Police Chief Pansy was the female counterpart to Ryder, with Rose, the youngest, most stubborn, and outspoken.  Iris, the oldest of that sibling group, was maternal, but with a dry, quiet wit that snuck up out of nowhere.  They are people who know their own minds but are all different.  They show her, she can be different, but also strong.” Callie also noticed that Rose was a lot like her, a spirited tomboy about her own age.  Pansy was tough as nails and very spirited.  Iris was softer and more traditional.  Sammy was an earth mother.  Callie found it fascinating to by surrounded by all these different kinds of femininity.  

EC:  What were the roles of Jake and Callie’s parents in the book?

MY:  Jake and his family addressed grief from different angles.  Jake lost his parents, while Callie’s parents were still hurting over losing her sister Sophie.  Her late sister was a shadow over Callie just as Jake’s parents were a shadow over him.  They are not there, but in a sense are there, affecting everything Jake and Callie did. 

EC:  Please explain the quote, “Take the shrapnel out, heal the wound.”

MY:  Jake had issues.  He is hanging on to what is infecting the wound.  The wound is kept festering because he feeds it so it can never heal.  Jake doesn’t want to let go of the pain because he sees it as keeping him safe where he does not have to move on. He does not want to be happy because he fears it can be taken away so the wound will reopen.

EC: The True Cowboy of Sunset Ridge had an ex-boyfriend, Jared, who was mean.  I thought you would have him come back to Mallory and have Colt react.

MY:  I wrote that scene where Colt punches him in the face.  I took it out because I did want the plot to quit being about Jared.  He should not have any more space in her life.  For me, she told him to F off, so she was done with him.  Instead, I wrote a scene about her dealing with a client emergency.  This way Mallory was able to grow and address her own issues.  I basically bait and switched myself.

EC:  How would you describe Colt?

MY:  A control freak and alpha male. Artistic.  He crafted wood, which is how he expresses himself.  He also plays the guitar.  My husband and family are all musicians. The scene where Colt picks up the guitar at family gatherings is what our family does.  I unintentionally reference and admire my dad and husband.  I project them onto my heroes.

EC:  How would you describe Mallory?

MY:  Smart, a work in progress.  She has a strength in work, but not so much in her personal life. She is loyal, persistent, feels she must prove herself, and wants to save people.

EC:  What about the relationship?

MY:  With Jared, he was more of a habit.  She did not love him.  It was dysfunctional, one-sided, and created low self-esteem.  She grew and matured, while he never did.  It fostered the worst parts of each other.  They were co-dependent. 

EC:  What about the relationship with Colt?

MY:  He is supportive.  He thought they were matched together because of fate.  They both helped each other with their own issues.  I think at times he is more vulnerable than she was.

EC:  How about the sibling relationship between Mallory and Griffin?

MY:  They had a good home life, but with different parental experiences.  She felt very overshadowed by him.  She saw him as exceptional.  I think some of it is older child versus younger child.  She idolizes her older brother and sees him as better than her.  Mallory has a little bit of hero worship and a little bit of jealousy.

EC:  What about your next books?

MY:  In March 2022 will be the book written with my author friends: Nicole Helm, Jackie Ashenden, and Caitlin Crews. It is titled Sweet Home Cowboy and comes out in March 2022. Four Hathaway sisters had grown up apart, but they agree to move to Jasper Creek, Oregon, to revitalize their grandfather’s farm.  It is very humorous.

In May 2022 Unbridle Cowboy, in the “Four Corners Ranch series” has hero Sawyer Garrett becoming a single dad to tiny baby June. He needs to find a woman to be a mother to his infant daughter. He decides to do it how the pioneers did: he puts out an ad for a mail-order bride. Accepting is Evelyn Moore. She can’t believe she’s agreed to uproot her city life to marry a stranger in Oregon. But having escaped one near-disastrous marriage, she’s desperate for change. This series will have some cross-over with the Gold Valley and Copper Ridge series.

In June 2022 Ruby McKee Comes Home will be published.  Ruby McKee is found abandoned on a bridge as a newborn baby by the McKee sisters, she’s become the unofficial mascot of Pear Blossom, Oregon, a symbol of hope in the wake of a devastating loss. Ruby is on a quest for the truth about her origins, but it uncovers a devastating secret. It will have a romance, a little bit of mystery, and family.

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: An Unexpected Distraction by Catherine Bybee

Book Description

Family secrets and fresh romance collide in this heart-pounding Richter series installment by New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Catherine Bybee.

Jacqueline “Jax” Simon knows how to expose secrets: she’s a skilled operative with MacBain Security and Solutions. When Jax hears her parents are divorcing, she races to London to find out why. She’s determined to learn the truth, especially when her investigation uncovers why her parents sent her to Richter, the German military school that made her a fighter.

Andrew Craig collects Jax at Heathrow Airport as a favor. He’s heard she’s a handful, but he didn’t know she’s dangerously gorgeous too. His instant attraction could change his life…or end it.

Jax doesn’t want to fall for Andrew, but soon he’s worming his way into her life. Together, they infiltrate Richter to discover if it has returned to its covert purpose: training children to be spies and assassins and blackmailing parents to look the other way. As the attraction between the two intensifies, so do the secrets exploding all around them. How deadly are those secrets—and who will survive?

***

Elise’s Thoughts

An Unexpected Distraction by Catherine Bybee shows why she is a master storyteller who writes formidable characters. Readers get to catch up with her past heroes and heroines: Claire, Cooper, Sasha, Neil, and Gwen. But anyone who has not read her should considering the great mix of suspenseful drama, action, and romance. With each new installment the series gets better and better.

As with the other heroines in the series, Jacqueline (Jax) Simon is a badass woman.  They all are put in dangerous undercover situations by the private investigation security company they work for.  Having overcome the corrupt boarding school that basically raised them these women, Sasha, Olivia, Claire, and Jax have skills that would make James Bond jealous. 

In this story, Jax returns to her native England after receiving a call from her brother.  He needs help figuring out why their parents split up and their dad has moved in with him. The parents are being very secretive about their marital problems. Through her own investigation, Jax discovers that her being sent off to the German military school, Richter, has something to do with her parents’ marital problems. With the help of her current boyfriend, Andrew Craig, Jax’s brother’s best friend, they infiltrate Richter hoping to find if it’s returned to its bad ways, training the children there to be spies and assassins while blackmailing the parents to look the other way. 

Along with the action are relationship stories.  Jax must overcome her feelings of abandonment by her parents.  Because she has never had a close relationship with her mother, they both must have heart-to-heart chats about their feelings.  In fact, many times throughout the book Jax says to her mother, “you did not know, because you never asked.” Jax also has come to realize she has feelings and is attracted to Andrew.  He is not intimated by her skills with guns and spy technology and is very supportive.

When finished, readers will be disappointed because the gripping story has ended and at this time there is not another book in the making.  Anyone who enjoyed this book should contact Catherine to continue the storyline, especially since it appears that the ending was a bit of a cliffhanger.  Let Catherine know if there should be more books in the series by contacting her at https://catherinebybee.com/contact/.

***

Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper: How did you go about finding the idea for this story?

Catherine Bybee:  Overall, the previous books, “The Bride Series” prompted the espionage writing for this series.  Neil, the head of McBain Security and Solutions is a character I kept alive in all the books.  The challenge of any series is making sure each character has a different focus; although, there are similarities between them.  My heroine, Jax, highlights the other side of what happened at the Richter School.  She was not being groomed to be an assassin and was there because her parents wanted to keep some secrets.  They wanted to keep her isolated.  By the way, sending children off to a boarding school happens a lot in Europe even though it is a foreign concept to Americans.  Jax seemed to avoid the controversy and focused on receiving an exceptional education.

EC:  In the beginning this book highlighted Claire versus Sasha?

CB: Claire is Sasha’s “Mini-Me.”  She is not as hard, jaded, and worldly as Sasha. To find out about Sasha’s life people might want to read the whole “First Wives Series.” It explains the reason Sasha turned out the way she did.  She is more reserved and more of a loner than Claire.  She cannot sit still and even in this book works solo. Both Claire and Sasha are very competitive, which is seen in the books when they participate in obstacle courses.

EC: You are speaking about the Camp Pendleton Mud Run and skydiving out of an airplane?

CB:  Yes.  The Mud Run used to be open to the public, before Covid.  I did dive out of an airplane when I was in Hawaii a couple of years back.  My friend and I did it tandemly with a professional.  I checked it off my bucket list so it is not something I will do again.

EC:  Are Neil and Sasha co-equals?

CB:  Even though it is Neil’s team he never treats anyone as an employee.  Claire becomes a daughter to him with Jax as his stepdaughter.  Throughout this series, as well as all my series, the family is those chosen not the ones born into.  For example, Jax and Claire are sisters of choice and are close.

EC:  How would you describe Jax?

CB:  She did not have a very good actual family life although she does redeem her relationship with her mother.  She is wounded and feels neglected.  She is the epitome of the poor little rich girl, very aware of how privileged she is. She was never a troublemaker but made sure while at school the skills were learned.  She is sassy, loyal, daring, witty, traditionally English, and resourceful.

EC:  How would you describe Andrew?

CB:  He is a different type of hero than the others in the series.  Andrew is a pencil pusher.  Upper crust British, determined, traditionalist, thoughtful, and a good listener. 

EC:  How about the relationship between Andrew and Jax?

CB:  He is the perfect man who her parents would have picked for her, but the opposite of what she thinks she needs.  I made sure he did not have a life in her world.  I wanted to show how men can be supportive of women who are like Jax.  He never felt emasculated and was willing to be a part of her life.  At first, Jax is standoffish because her parents wanted someone like him for her.  Sometimes children need to come to grips that their parents are not always wrong.  As they get to know each other she is surprised that she is attracted to him.  The challenge for me was to have them fall in love without it feeling forced.  He is good at making her think it is her idea and then gets what he wants from her.

EC:  What role do Jax’s parents play?

CB:  They are the type that had children because that is what was expected.  They are reserved, uppity, and never appreciated or understood her.  They always underestimated her.  I based it on a personal level for me because my parents underestimated me my whole life. 

EC:  The ending was up in the air?

CB:  I did not look at it as a cliff hanger but that the series came full circle.  If there is a next book, I could explore how the school groomed these children and taught them to be assassins.  Because most of my readers thought the ending was a cliff hanger, I guess I will have to write another book. I do not want to reinvent the wheel with a new espionage series when I have so many rich characters to play with. I would love to hear from people as to what they think about a fourth book in this series, https://catherinebybee.com/contact/.

EC:  What about your next book?

CB:  In June 2022, will be a kind of a women’s fiction book.  The new series is called “The D’Angelo’s” and is titled When It Falls Apart.  It takes place in Little Italy, San Diego.  It is based on my real life where I had to deal with an aging father, while at the same time piecemealing my life back together because of my own tragedies and issues.  The heroine, Brooke Turner, has always had a complicated relationship with her father. But when his health takes a turn for the worse, she drops everything to care for him. What Brooke doesn’t anticipate is the unraveling of her long-term relationship and a cross-country move to San Diego’s Little Italy. She will have a romance with Luca, a single father.

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Deadly Target by Elizabeth Goddard

Book Description

Criminal psychologist Erin Larson’s dreams of a successful career come to a screeching halt when she nearly loses her own life in a boating accident on Puget Sound and then learns that her mother tried to commit suicide. She leaves her job as a criminal psychologist to care for her mother in Montana. At least she is able to produce her podcast, which focuses on solving missing persons cold cases.

Nathan Campbell’s father was investigating such a case when he was shot, and now Nathan needs to enlist Erin’s help to solve the case. She’s good at what she does. The only problem? She’s his ex.

As the two dig deeper, it becomes clear that they, too, are being targeted–and that the answers to their questions are buried deep within the past Erin struggles to explain and longs to forget.

The race is on for the truth in this gripping and complex tale of suspense, intrigue, and murder from USA Today bestselling author Elizabeth Goddard.

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Deadly Target by Elizabeth Goddard has a suspenseful mystery with a sweet romance. This is the second book in the Rocky Mountain Courage Series. Each book highlights the life of three childhood friends with this one featuring criminal psychologist Erin Larson. 

After barely surviving a kayaking incident Erin Larson receives a call from her former boyfriend that her mother attempted suicide.  Dropping everything, she travels to Montana to take care of her mother, bringing her current career to a halt.  She comes face to face with Nathan Campbell, a search and rescue climber and diver, who feels betrayed by her after she walks out the relationship.  He is also feeling betrayed by his estranged father who has also come back into his life.

Unfortunately, their reunion is short lived.  Trying to bond on a fishing expedition, Nathan’s father tells him about a cold case investigation he is working on his own. As he is talking someone shoots him in the head, rendering him unconscious.  Because Nathan wants answers, he begins his own investigation into the shooting and cold case.  Knowing that Erin has a podcast dealing with cold cases of missing children Nathan turns to her for help.  She and Nathan begin to work together to fit all the pieces of the puzzle together, and soon they find themselves caught in the target sights of someone who is trying to kill them.  They also must come to grips with secrets of their past, feelings that the old flame is burning again.

This plot is fast paced with many twists and turns. There are a wide range of suspicious characters who could be the culprit.  The story highlights hope, faith, and trust.

***

Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper:  Why the different settings of Washington, Montana, and Boston?

Elizabeth Goddard:  I grew up In Texas and have traveled extensively with my husband.  We currently reside in Washington State.  My husband is a Montanan, so I have knowledge of that area. I have ben to other locations including Boston and I do live near Puget Sound Washington.

EC:  How would you describe Nathan?

EG:  He is a good guy but has many disappointments in his life.  He tries to take a bad situation and look for a silver lining.  Because he was estranged from his father, he has daddy issues he is trying to work through.  Overall, he is supportive, caring, and protection.

EC:  How would you describe Erin?

EG:  She is a dark character with a dark cloud hanging over her.  She went into criminal psychology to understand the criminal mind.  She has suffered from loss and pain and wants answers.  Erin is broken with inner demons but is also a survivor, determined, and analytical.  Another layer to her personality is being supportive of the police which is why she said, “Cops.  They protect the rest of us from the ugliest crimes, the evil we don’t want to know exists.”

EC:  What about the relationship?

EG:  They have trust issues but also feel something strong between them.

EC:  What would you say is the theme?

EG:  The importance of family.  An important part of my life is family, which is everything. 

EC: What role does the Cold Case podcast play in the story?

EG:  It adds a whole new layer.  I listened to crime podcasts to get a feel.  One brought me to tears and it took me days to get over it.  I wanted to have an accurate portrayal of crime and the evils in this world.  I hope readers feel what the family is going through.  In her own life, Erin wants answers and to provide closure for herself and others.  She is trying to understand why people commit crimes.

EC:  What about your next book?

EG:  It is titled Critical Alliance and comes out next July.  It will feature Alex’s story. There will be suspicious deaths, lethal threats, and whispers of espionage that all have one thing in common, a beautiful cybersecurity expert with a dark past.

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Lights Out by Natalie Walters

Book Description

CIA analyst Brynn Taylor developed a new program to combat terrorism, and she invited members of foreign intelligence agencies to America to foster cooperation between countries. Now one of them, Egyptian spy Remon Riad, is missing.

Jack Hudson has been working for the Strategic Neutralization and Protection Agency (SNAP) for almost nine years and takes the lead in hunting down the missing spy. But he isn’t at all pleased to find out Brynn is involved. It’s hard to trust a woman who’s already betrayed you.

Every lead they follow draws them dangerously deeper into an international plot. Kidnapping, murder, explosions, poisoning–the terrorists will do anything to accomplish their goal of causing a digital blackout that will blind a strategic US military communications center and throw the world into chaos.

Can Brynn surrender control to a man who doesn’t trust her? And can Jack ever get over what she did to him? The fate of the world–and their hearts–hangs in the balance.

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Lights Out by Natalie Walters delves into national security, international intrigue, and inter-agency cooperation.  The plot has a national security agency looking for a missing foreigner who might be connected to terrorism, murder, explosives, and poisoning. 

The story opens with CIA analyst Brynn Taylor heading up a program she developed to combat terrorism.  She wants to make sure no terrorist falls between the cracks considering many are not the typical looking type.  To gain traction and to foster cooperation, members of other foreign intelligence agencies were invited to America.  But an Egyptian spy has gone missing.  Jack Hudson, who has been working for the Strategic Neutralization and Protection Agency (SNAP) for almost nine years, is asked to take the lead in hunting down the missing spy.

Unfortunately, Brynn is loaned out to SNAP and Jack must work closely together with her, someone who betrayed him eight years ago.  Trying to set aside their hurt, they work together to find leads that will stop the terrorist plot.

To lighten the load Walters writes great conversational banter. Readers get to know the characters and can decide who they want to hang out with. 

This story has a lot of suspense that keeps readers deeply engrossed.  Because of the plotline there is a sense of heroism to the story.

***

Elise’s Author Interview

Elise Cooper:  How did you get the idea for the story?

Natalie Walters:  Because my husband is in the military, we moved all around the US.  We have friends and neighbors who work for other government agencies.  During a dinner conversation with a friend, they told of how a foreign counterpart disappeared in this country.  They were training in the US and went missing for 16 hours.  Although it was an innocent situation, they sent him back to his country after he was found.  I rolled with it and thought what if that missing foreigner was committed to do harm to the US.

EC:  Does the SNAP Agency exist?

NW:  No, it is completely fictional.  My imagination with my husband’s help is how the name came about.  It stands for Strategic Neutralize And Protect against threats. The company is a private contractor like Blackwater.

EC:  The heroine is a targeting analyst-does that job exist?

NW:  Yes, the CIA does have these types of analysts. 

EC:  How would you describe Brynn?

NW:  She has gone through life changes because of her family background.  She needs to be in control to feel safe and has trust issues.  If she can control her work, she thinks she can control her life.  She does want to belong to a team who will have her back.  I would say she is guarded, suspicious, a workaholic, and focused.  She is also determined, independent, witty, and set in her ways.

EC:  There is a quote about terrorists?

NW:  Yes.  You must be referring to this one, “What makes terrorists so dangerous is their ability to blend in and deceive you.” Brynn is trained to study people.  Terrorists don’t always look like the typical type.  The point of the quote is to not profile because they could be from any race, ethnicity, and creed.  This is what makes fighting terrorism so difficult.

EC:  How would you describe Jack?

NW:  Loyal, dedicated, a leader, and a protector.  He sometimes comes off as rigid because he wants justice.  

EC:  What about the relationship?

NW:  Because of the betrayal, Jack doesn’t trust Brynn.  He is wary of his feelings and emotions.  Since Brynn is so focused with her job, she sometimes misses getting close. They are like oil and vinegar. Because of their past conflict they are confused about their feelings.

EC:  What about the co-workers Lyla versus Brynn?

NW:  The relationship is a little bit hostile.  Lyla sees Jack as a big brother. At first, Brynn is intimidated by Lyla.    She does not want to let Brynn hurt him again.  But as they work together Lyla begins to admire Brynn for her skills. 

EC:  What about the role of September 11th in the story?

NW:  It is an important part of Brynn’s backstory.  The war was brought to American soil.  SNAP was created to make sure another 9/11 does not happen again.  Those that work there are continually on guard.

EC:  There is a quote the shows family members have a different experience?

NW:  You are referring to when Brynn told the US President, “For most Americans, their lives moved forward, but for me and others directly impacted by that day, we can never forget.  I joined the CIA because I never want another child or family to go through what ours did.” Almost every American remembers where we were during that moment in history.  Everyone around Brynn received horrific news.  September 11th changed the course of her life.  I think for Americans who were not affected personally, that horrific day does not hold the same weight. I looked online and found out that the events took place over a short period of time.  But our world has been changed ever since.

EC:  Since you are a military family how has it impacted you?

NW:  We know many soldiers who joined because of 9/11.  Joining the military and any of the three letter agencies means that person swears an oath to protect the people of this nation.  They sacrifice time with their family.  They stepped up and stepped forward. 

EC:  There is also a humorous quote in the book?

NW:  Yes, about cell phones.  My youngest is going to be 21.  The earliest age my children got a phone was in late middle school.  Everyone is always on their phone, all generations.  The phone seems to be a part of someone’s body. 

EC:  What about your next book?

NW:  It is title Fatal Code and comes out the summer of 2022.  It will be Kekoa and Eleanor’s story.  They must monitor a neighbor who might be trying to develop a nuclear weapon.  There will be an update on Jack and Brynn’s life. 

THANK YOU!!

BIO: Elise Cooper has written book reviews and interviewed best-selling authors since 2009. Her reviews have covered several different genres, including thrillers, mysteries, women’s fiction, romance and cozy mysteries. An avid reader, she engages authors to discuss their works, and to focus on the descriptions of their characters and the plot. While not writing reviews, Elise loves to watch baseball and visit the ocean in Southern California, with her dog and husband.