Blog Tour/Feature Post and Book Review: Trust No One by Roger Stelljes

Hi, everyone!

Today I am sharing my Feature Post and Book Review for TRUST NO ONE (Agent Tori Hunter Book #8) by Roger Stelljes on this blog tour.

Below you will find a book description, my book review, an about the author section, and the author’s social media links. Enjoy!

***

Book Description

In a cabin by a lake, a mother and father tuck their little girl into bed and kiss her goodnight. But they can’t enjoy the evening summer breeze—because this is no ordinary family on vacation. This is a family with nowhere left to run… and no one left to trust.

When FBI Agent Tori Hunter and Detective Will Braddock are called to a crime scene at a remote hunting cabin, they find blood everywhere. A small pink suitcase has been left behind, filled with children’s clothes and medicine. Has a family been murdered on vacation, or did they run just in time?

The team quickly tracks down the details of the family renting the cabin. But Braddock freezes at the last name. He claims to have never heard it before… but Tori can always tell when her partner is lying.

Furious that Braddock might keep something from her when lives are at stake, when two New York City detectives show up in Minnesota with questions for Braddock her fears are proved right… because there’s a murder case in Braddock’s past he never told Tori about. It took over his life just after his wife died, and forced him out of the city for good. Why did he keep it secret?

Tori has no time for games. Tracking down suppliers of the medicine from the cabin is her one lead to find this family before it’s too late. But with fingers pointing at Braddock, and her own instincts screaming that he’d never betray her or the shield, Tori will have to put her own career on the line to defend the man she trusts above all else—and find the real killer with a deadly score to settle.

Goodreads:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/239555373-trust-no-one?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=uRTxVkJLtJ&rank=1

Purchase link: https://geni.us/B0FKNJBZX8social

***

My Book Review

RATING: 5 out of 5 Stars

TRUST NO ONE (Agent Tori Hunter Book #8) by Roger Stelljes is an action-packed thrilling tangled web of a crime plot that intertwines flashbacks in Detective Will Braddock’s past in the NYCPD which seems to jeopardize his present life with former FBI agent Tori Hunter in Minnesota. This is the eighth book in this great series and can be easily read as a standalone, but I read the books in order to follow the two main protagonist’s growing relationship.

Detective Will Braddock gets a call from a snitch from an old case in NYC who has come to Manchester Bay for help. The case involved one of his friends from the NYPD who was killed while he worked the case because his nephew was involved. At the time, Will’s wife was dying of cancer, and he just did not want to work on it as he normally would. He refuses to get involved, but the next day Tori and Will get called to a hunting cabin riddled with bullet holes and blood everywhere, but no bodies.

Two NYC cops from Will’s past show up at the police station and accuse Will of being dirty. After leaving the station, they are both nearly killed. Tori has had enough and decides with the help of their friends to turn this hunt around and go after the hunters by becoming the hunters themselves to keep those she loves safe.

This series is amazing, and this book even topped the rest for me. I could not put it down. The book is intricately plotted and full of surprises, so I was never sure what to believe so I had to keep turning the pages. Tori is smart, strong, and intelligent and so is Will, which makes for head butting along the way, but it also is what made them attracted to each other. The beautiful descriptions of the lake they live on and all the different types of weather and terrain in Minnesota brings it to life.

This is an overall well written and very strong police procedural/crime thriller series that I highly recommend to all lovers of the genre.

***

About the Author

Roger Stelljes is the acclaimed New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of pulse-pounding murder mystery and suspense novels, including the Tori Hunter and McRyan Mystery Series. Roger’s crime thrillers are noted for their fast-paced, yet intricate plots filled with layered and complex characters.

Roger started his first novel in July 2002 while on vacation in Minnesota’s Brainerd Lakes area and has been writing ever since. His debut book, The St. Paul Conspiracy, was nominated in genre fiction for the Minnesota Book Awards along with finalists Brian Freeman and William Kent Krueger. With his follow-up, Deadly Stillwater, where Vince Flynn hailed Roger as a “powerful new thriller voice”, he won the Midwest Independent Book Publishers award for commercial fiction.

Born and raised in Minnesota, Roger still lives there with his family. In addition to his work as an author, Roger is a partner in his law firm. Roger is an avid sports enthusiast and enjoys spending time outdoors boating, attending hockey games, and honing his golf game.

Social Media Links

Website: https://www.rogerstelljes.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/roger.stelljes

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rogerstelljes/#

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/rogerstelljes.bsky.social

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/trust-no-one-an-utterly-gripping-mystery-thriller-novel-agent-tori-hunter-book-8-by-roger-stelljes

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Dead Line by Marc Cameron

Book Description

In the White Mountain Wilderness of Interior Alaska, twenty-four-year-old protected witness Sam Lujan is lonely for his old life. So much so, the young Apache not only breaks the cardinal rule of the Witness Protection Program—by revealing his whereabouts to his mother, he invites her to join him to see the Northern Lights. It’s her lifelong dream. No worries. It’ll be safe.

When Deputy U.S. Marshals Arliss Cutter and Lola Teariki discover Sam has gone missing, they’re asked to make a quick trip into the remote wild to make sure the witness is indeed protected. But there’s no such thing as a quick trip. Not when they’re plunging headlong into the frozen unknown at fifty-eight degrees below zero. And not when they aren’t the only ones searching. Valeria Kot, the vengeful daughter of the criminal Sam testified against, has been waiting and watching for years for just the opportunity to strike back. She’s found it—and has dispatched a sadistic hit squad to make sure Sam pays in the most savage way possible.

Once Arliss and Lola reach the trailhead it doesn’t take long for them to realize they’re dealing with more than a witness who’s broken protocol. Tracks in the snow and tell-tale signs signal an armed team—one that’s already a step ahead of them. For Arliss and Lola, and a desperate mother and son on the run, the death-defying, frigid temperatures are the least of their worries.

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Dead Line by Marc Cameron, a former US Marshal, is very realistic.  This is no surprise considering he draws upon his past experiences to create riveting storylines.

This story has Deputy U.S. Marshals Arliss Cutter and Lola Teariki chasing multiple killers. Royce Decker, a former member of the St. Louis Metro PD, is on the run in Alaska for hiring a hit man to kill his pregnant wife. Also, there is Butch Pritchard, a killer-for-hire, who ruthlessly killed the woman and her unborn baby. While this is going on, a mob hit squad is heading into their area to take out a snitch in witness protection.

Besides pursuing these killers, Cutter and Teariki must contend with the Alaskan weather. Readers feel the wind chill factor with Cameron’s vivid descriptions along with the frigid coldness that has the temperature falling to minus seventy-two degrees.

Along with these plotlines, readers get more of Cutter’s backstory. He is now trying to come to terms with his estranged mother, Ursula, who left him with his grandfather when he was five years old. She has now suddenly appeared and has hit him with a new revelation. There is also the continuing saga of how Mim, Cutter’s late brother’s wife, and he are trying to forge a relationship.  Then there is the relationship between Cutter and his partner Lola who he looks upon as a daughter, yet realizes she is too impulsive and may need to take a step back before she reacts.

All of this makes for a wonderful story that has personal relationships which humanize the characters.  But not to be forgotten is the intense action that will have readers quickly turning the pages.

***

Author Interview

Elise Cooper: The idea for the story?

Marc Cameron: About 25 years ago I was on a training mission with the tactical tracking unit. It is like a real SWAT team that we operate in the woods. This happened right after I moved to Alaska.

EC: Did you get the ideas for weather playing a role in the story from your experiences?

MC: Yes. When I was working there it was winter. There was a case where the Marshals drove through Fairbanks, and the sign said 58 degrees below.  As we drove North it got colder. Having spent 4 days in a cabin and deployed from it in snow machines, we learned about wind chill.  Plus, the scene when I had Lola fall through the ice was realistic. I have been out on the lake ice. There is a time when people should not go out because of the cracking underneath their feet.  There were times I had to chase people across the ice and thought ‘this is pretty dangerous.’

EC:  Did you ever fall through the ice?

MC: I have never fallen through the ice.  But I did jump through a hole in the ice to know what it is like and to learn how to get out. Falling through the ice in a river is dangerous because of the current.  The key to falling through the ice on a lake is for people to relax and swim their way out, kicking their feet up, to come out of the water like a seal. It is doable if someone does not panic.

EC: Did you ever track human traffickers, one of the plot lines in this story?

MC: I have dealt with lots of human trafficking. When I first moved to Alaska in 1991 there was a bunch of exotic dancers who were pimped out and trafficked by the Russian mob.  I take bits of pieces of cases I worked on.

EC:  What about tracking law enforcement criminals, the other plot line?

MC: There is a whole new set of dangers to be aware of when trying to find a fugitive that is former law enforcement or former military  Online there is so much out there we now assume people have a lot of skills.

EC: How would you describe Alriss’s mom, Ursula?

MC: She has secrets, can be fearless, and he has a lot of her personality.  She left her sons when they were young and now Arliss has found out he has a stepsister.  She is imperfect. When she was younger Ursula realized she was not going to be a good mother for her sons. Now she is trying. She was never evil.

EC: What about the Mim/Cutter relationship?

MC: Readers will see where it is going by the end of this book.  Over the course of the next couple of books there will be some struggles, trying to figure out how to move forward.  It was clear at the end of the last book, Bad River, that they were moving forward. It will be a journey for them. 

EC: What about the next book?

MC: The next book is titled Back Track, out this time next year. There will be more of a progression in the Mim/Cutter relationship. Half of the next story will go back to 1977 when Grumpy is in his 40’s, moving from Texas to Florida.  This is the year Arliss is born. Part of the book will happen in 1977, and part will be in present day, landing in Arliss’s lap. It is sort of a Cold Case of Grumpys.

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.

Book Tour/Feature Post and Book Review: A Kind of Hush by JoDee Neathery

Hi, everyone!

Today I am sharing my Feature Post and Book Review for A KIND OF HUSH by JoDee Neathery on this Black Coffee Book Tour.

Below you can find a book description, my book review, an about the author section, and the author’s social media links. Enjoy!

***

Book Description

A Kind of Hush examines how life is seldom a tidy affair exploring whether there is a gray area between right and wrong. 

The Mackie family, after enduring an unthinkable tragedy with the death of their young son, finally moved toward a new life until one June day while enjoying an outing at a nearby rugged park, their lives again turned upside down. A plunge off a shale cliff left one parent dead and the other solely responsible for their teenage daughter and seven-year-old son. Was this an accident or something more heinous, and if so whodunnit and whydunit? The heart of the novel centers on how each survivor deals with the circumstances and subsequent revelations surrounding the incident while a mantle of ambiguity – a kind of hush – hangs between them like a live grenade without its pin.

Awards

  • 2024 FINALIST AMERICAN LEGACY BOOK AWARDS, Literary Fiction
  • 2022 SILVER MEDAL WINNER, READERS’ FAVORITE ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL BOOK AWARDS, Literary Fiction
  • 2022 WINNER INTERNATIONAL FIREBIRD BOOK AWARDS, Literary Fiction
  • 2022 FINALIST, NATIONAL INDIE EXCELLENCE AWARDS, Mystery
  • 2022 MILLENNIUM BOOK AWARDS SHORTLISTED CANDIDATE AND CATEGORY WINNER, Literary Fiction

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58509546-a-kind-of-hush?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=d39Gx6kCnd&rank=1

Universal link for the book on Amazon

***

My Book Review

RATING: 5 out of 5 Stars

A KIND OF HUSH by JoDee Neathery is a fictional family drama and suspense story that follows a family through tragedy, family drama, healing, and compassion while trying to determine the correct choices and consequences of their actions. There are a lot of gray areas and complex circumstances throughout this standalone fictional story that kept me questioning what I would have done in the same situations.

This story starts awhile after a family tragedy. The Mackie family loses their middle son, Boo, to a choking accident while his older ten-year-old sister, Willa, is babysitting. The family is just starting to come back together, but there is still deep-rooted blame from mother to daughter and back from daughter to mother.

The family goes to a local park and waterfall where another tragedy occurs. Both parents and their teenage daughter, Willa fall down a shale drop. Their youngest seven-year-old son, Gabe, is hiding by a tree. Was this an accident? If not, who did it and why?

Each character in this story is given a voice. They discuss and react to the circumstances of the fall and the revelations surrounding the fall. There are other players involved in the family’s lives that work to help them heal and find justice for the dead parent. I have to say that the character I truly loved was Gabe. His sense of love, wonder, and innocence even throughout all the upheaval of the other characters gave me moments of laughter and a feeling of wonder. He is one of those children that is young but has an old soul and he was a good break from all the others. This book will keep you questioning decisions made and if you would make the same.

I highly recommend this fictional drama and suspense, and the conclusion still has me waffling.

***

About the Author

East Texas author, JoDee Neathery, has written two award-winning novels, Life in a Box, published 2017, and A Kind of Hush released July 2021. Both have won the International Firebird Book Awards for literary fiction and were awarded Readers’ Favorite 5-Star designations. A Kind of Hush received critical acclaim as one of five finalists in the highly contested mystery category of the 16th annual 2022 National Indie Excellence Awards, the 2022 Silver Medal Winner, Readers’ Favorite Annual International Book Awards, Literary Fiction, and was a shortlisted finalist in the 11th annual 2022 Millennium Book Awards and Winner in the literary fiction category 

Her journey to publication followed an unconventional path void of author credentials, but with the encouragement of her book club, a passion for the written word, a vivid imagination, a sense of humor, and a story to tell she plucked a few personalities off the family tree and Life in a Box debuted asking the question, how much would you sacrifice to hide a secret. “One of those all too rare literary gems.” Midwest Book Review and a 5-Star review posted on Amazon UK offered this assessment, “There is an understated audacity to her style of writing which I find quite spellbinding.”   

A Kind of Hush was born in the middle of the night when the first sentence, the ending, and a profile of a young boy appeared. “I didn’t know the whole story but knew Gabriel Edward Mackie had to be in whatever I wrote next.” Praise followed.  “This family drama is steeped in suspense, but its likable cast of characters is its main draw,” Kirkus Reviews. “Witty, warm, uplifting, and utterly heartbreaking.” Book Viral Review. “Poignant and emotionally rich.” Book View Gold Medallion. “Intelligent, crisp prose.” The Prairies Book Review.

JoDee chairs her community book club, is writing another novel, Dust in the Wind, and contributes a lighthearted look at life with her byline, Back Porch Musings, to a local newspaper. 

Social Media Links

Website: https://jodeeneathery.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JoDeeNeatheryAuthor

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/a-kind-of-hush-by-jodee-neathery

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Believe Me Now by S.M. Govett

Book Description

Natalie Campbell loses time. She’ll wake up in different places with no memory of how she got there. The blackouts are a symptom of her PTSD, which began after she was sexually assaulted by her boss, who was found not guilty. But she found ways to cope by setting up routines and relying on her supportive husband, Ryan. Then one day, her husband is accused of committing the same crime that ruined her life.

Natalie desperately wants to believe he is innocent, but when Alice Lytton, the young woman who accused him, is found murdered in the woods near their house, she begins to doubt the man she married.

DI Helen Stratton is also healing from old wounds. Her older sister disappeared when she was 16, and the police didn’t bother to investigate. Vowing to help other lost and vulnerable girls, she joined the force. Stratton is ready to do whatever it takes to catch the killer and bring justice to her sister and Alice.

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Believe Me Now by S. M. Govett is a gripping thriller with a very puzzling case. The dual narration between a victim and a detective help to make the story more suspenseful.

The victim is Natalie Campbell, who ten years ago was sexually assaulted by her boss who was found not guilty.  One day later, he died of a heart attack and ever since Natalie has been receiving threatening letters.  She has blackouts, a symptom of PTSD. Now ten years later she has found ways to cope by setting up routines and relying on her supportive husband, Ryan. But that comes to an end when Ryan is accused of committing the same crime of sexual assault. To make matters worse, Ryan’s accuser is found dead in the woods.

Investigating the crime, DI Helen Stratton thinks Ryan is guilty.  She, like Natalie, is suffering from a backstory of the disappearance of her sister Karen.  She joined the police to help other lost and vulnerable girls and to do whatever it takes to catch the preparators.

This story is fast paced and riveting. Readers will be on the edge of their seats as they try to figure out who can be believed and who cannot. It appears most of the characters are suspects and are guilty including Natalie and her husband Ryan. The twists add to the suspense and will throw people a curveball.

***

Author Interview

Elise Cooper: Does this book have two stories about bosses making advances?

Sarah (S. M.) Govett: I wanted to write how there are power imbalances that come into play and how power can be abused. There was a mutual one and one without consent. Detective Helen Stratton had a mutual one but did face additional challenges. Yet, her boss still had some power over her.

EC: How did you get the idea for the story?

SMG: I wanted to write a thriller with belief systems.  For example, there is such a thing as rule of law, innocent people will walk free, guilty people will go to jail, or if someone works hard, they will succeed. I wanted to take them away from my protagonist, Natalie, one by one, so her whole world crumbles.

EC:  How would you relate both characters, Detective Stratton and Natalie?

SMG: I wanted them to seem like chalk and cheese characters.  They both had traumatic events in their life.  Natalie responded by cocooning her life where her home is her only safe place, and she does not want to step outside of it. Whereas Stratton has overcome her trauma by developing a tough as nails exterior with a softer underbelly that very few people see. I like the idea that “home” represents safety and a prison.  These are two women whose life and personalities have changed because something happened in their past and they were not believed. Stratton and her mom were not believed by the police when they said Karen, the sister/daughter, had not runaway. Both Natalie and Stratton coped in completely different ways.

EC: How would you describe Natalie’s PTSD?

SMG: She has an inner strength and is stronger than she thinks she is, which she discovers at the end. She has a form of PTSD. Hers has come about because she was sexually assaulted by her boss and then she is not believed in court. This has fractured her memory system giving her blackouts during stressful triggering situations and has her carry out tasks she will not remember.  There are three strikes for her: she was assaulted by her boss, she was not believed, and had a stalker, her attacker’s wife.

EC: How would you describe Natalie?

SMG: She feels powerless. She runs from trauma, insecure, anxious, and paranoid. In the book she thinks she is existing rather than living.

EC: How would you describe Ryan?

SMG: Protective, calm, controlled, and gets frustrated.

EC: How would you describe the relationship between Ryan and Natalie?

SMG: He wants her to push herself, engaging more with the outside world other than with her best friend, Rachel. He is very supportive.  He agreed to move and not be around families with young children since she could no longer become pregnant after the rape. She considers him her soulmate who represents her home, rock, and stability. Yet, she chased Ryan away and does not take any responsibility that in some ways the marriage is faltering.  She still really loves him, but his touch can be triggering.

EC: How would you describe Detective Stratton?

SMG:  Untrusting, sarcastic, can be seen as caring, and wants answers. She has a fire in her to get cases having to do with young women who have disappeared.  For her, these women always represent her sister.

EC: What about the role of Alice?

SMG: She accuses Ryan of rape.  Now Natalie has her trauma played all over again. She wants to make something of herself and is considered charming, a people person.  Ryan became intimate with her once. I think Ryan’s actions are flawed but understandable but there are a lot of readers who think he is an absolute baddie for what he has done. Natalie at first believed her because besides Ryan no one believed her.  She is very wary of doubting the testimony of women when it comes to sexual assault.

EC: How would you describe Stratton’s boss who had the affair with her, Parker?

SMG: He is a jerk, wants power over her.  He is gutless. I want all my characters to be flawed instead of incredibly bad.  He is a weak flawed man. He is attracted to Stratton, wants sex with her, but also wants to be married. He is weak.  He wants to have what he wants.  When it becomes difficult for him, he wants to walk away unscathed. She sees him as a weak man.  She could destroy his life by making the affair public and she knows he is a little bit scared of her. But she will not do it. Because he knows this is the anniversary of her sister’s disappearance, he is mistakenly trying to protect her by sheltering her from work. Whereas what she really needs to do is to drown herself in work.

EC: Next books?

SMG: There will be more Stratton, but I’m also excited about a sci-fi thriller that I’ve recently completed.

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.

Feature Post and Book Review: Buried by Anna J. Stewart

Book Description

Solving her biggest case means facing her greatest fear.

Trust can kill.

Forensic specialist Dr. Cassia Davis learned that lesson when she placed her faith—and her life—in the hands of the man she loved. Four years later, despite debilitating agoraphobia and PTSS, she lives a virtual life teaching and consulting online, locked away from the world she’s come to fear. Her expertise and guidance helped to uncover a mass burial site in the Hollywood Hills, the biggest case of her career, but her inability to actively work the scene calls her competence into question. Work is all she has left. If she’s going to remain in charge, she’s going to need someone on the ground. Someone who understands how she thinks and what she can do. Someone willing to do anything to make up for the past.

Some mistakes can’t be forgotten. Or forgiven.

FBI Special Investigator Mitchell Keaton’s lapse in judgement nearly cost Cass her life. It did cost him her love. Every case he’s worked since has been an exercise in redemption. Becoming Cass’s eyes and hands out in the field means reconnecting to her in ways that reignites old desires. Despite his unforgivable betrayal, Mitch can’t help but feel there may be hope for them after all.

But the deeper they dig into the burial site, the further into danger they fall. Invisible enemies determined to stay in the shadows have plans to stop them. Plans that begin with exploiting the one thing Mitch and Cass have no defense against: the past.

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/236362600-buried?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=hxwA8noALi&rank=1

***

My Book Review

RATING: 5 out of 5 Stars

BURIED (Circle of the Red Lily Book #3) by Anna J. Stewart is an exciting, edge-of-your-seat addition to the Circle of the Red Lily romantic suspense series. This can be read as a standalone because Ms. Stewart does an excellent job of filling in information from the overarching conspiracy of the Circle of the Red Lily, but I feel they are best read in order to keep continuity with all the changes in the characters’ personal lives and relationships.

 Dr. Cassia “Cass” Davis is one of the foremost forensic specialists in the country, but for the last four years she has lived her life virtually after barely escaping a serial killer she has severe PTSS and agoraphobia. She and her assistant, Nox, have helped their friends, the women of Temple House, with their investigation and discovered a mass grave in the Hollywood Hills. She is frustrated with her inability to work on the crime scene in person and someone behind the scenes is calling her competency into question. She is told she needs someone on the ground she can trust from the FBI, and she knows just who to call.

FBI Special Investigator Mitchell “Mitch” Keaton has waited four years for a call from Cass. Becoming Cass’s person on the ground at the mass grave is a way to not only ask for forgiveness, but to hopefully receive a second chance with her. Mitch has been keeping a secret though and an enemy from their shared past has new plans for them both besides the Circle of the Red Lily.

This series just keeps getting better and better. The women of Temple House are all interesting in their own right but add the intrigue and danger of the Circle of the Red Lily, and the men who have become involved with them, you have a read that is impossible to put down. Ms. Stewart does a wonderful job at showing Cassia’s abilities even while dealing with her life cocooned in her apartment and the empathy shown by her female friends when they discover why she is so isolated. Mitch is a steady and loving with Cass and when the romance heats up, sparks are flying. I enjoyed more time spent in the story with Elliot, Cass’s service dog, his back story and his pivotal role in the plot. I will say that while this series always offers many surprise twists throughout, the epilogue in this book left me shocked! I need the next book sooner rather than later!

I highly recommend this thrilling romantic suspense and the entire Circle of the Red Lily series.

***

About the Author

Award-winning, USA Today and national bestselling author Anna J Stewart writes sweet to sexy romances for Harlequin and ARC Manor’s CAEZIK (Kay-Zehk) Romance. Her sweet Harlequin Heartwarming books include the Butterfly Harbor series as well as the ongoing Blackwell continuity series. She also writes the Honor Bound series for Harlequin Romantic Suspense and has contributed to the bestselling Coltons. Her Circle of the Red Lily romantic suspense series, published by CAEZIK, will launch with EXPOSED in November of 2022.

A Holt Medallion winner (BRIDE ON THE RUN), as well as a Golden Heart, Daphne DuMaurier, and National Reader’s Choice finalist, Anna loves writing big community stories where family found is always the theme. Since her first published novella with Harlequin in 2014, Anna has released more than fifty novels and novellas and hopes to branch out even more (horror romance, anyone?). Anna lives in Northern California where (at the best times) she loves going to the movies, attending fan conventions, and heading to Disneyland, her favorite place on earth. When she’s not writing, she is usually binge-watching her newest TV addiction, re-watching her all-time favorite show, Supernatural, and wrangling two monstrous cats named Rosie and Sherlock.

Social Media Links

Website: https://www.authorannastewart.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorAnnaJStewart

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/annajwriter.bsky.social

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/buried-circle-of-the-red-lily-3-by-anna-j-stewart

Friday Feature Author Interview with Elise Cooper: Mrs. Endicott’s Splendid Adventure by Rhys Bowen

Book Description

Surrey, England, 1938. After thirty devoted years of marriage, Ellie Endicott is blindsided by her husband’s appeal for divorce. It’s Ellie’s opportunity for change too. The unfaithful cad can have the house. She’s taking the Bentley. Ellie, her housekeeper Mavis, and her elderly friend Dora—each needing escape—impulsively head for parts unknown in the South of France.

With the Rhône surging beside them, they have nowhere to be and everywhere to go. Until the Bentley breaks down in the inviting fishing hamlet of Saint Benet. Here, Ellie rents an abandoned villa in the hills, makes wonderful friends among the villagers, and finds herself drawn to Nico, a handsome and enigmatic fisherman. As for unexpected destinations, the simple paradis of Saint Benet is perfect. But fates soon change when the threat of war encroaches.

Ellie’s second act in life is just beginning—and becoming an adventure she never expected.

***

Elise’s Thoughts

Mrs. Endicott’s Splendid Adventure by Rhys Bowen is a gripping novel.  No matter what book Bowen writes, readers feel they are taking the journey with the characters and are transported into the setting. The descriptions of the town and its residents are very detailed.

Readers meet Ellie Endicott in Surrey, England during 1938. After raising two grown sons and having devoted her entire married life to catering to her husband’s needs, her husband wants a divorce. He has met a younger woman and tries to bulldoze Ellie into a favorable financial settlement.  She will have no part of it and decides to hire her own lawyer who helps her obtain a fair settlement. 

Deciding to take a trip to the South of France, she steals her husband’s Bentley and agrees to take two companions along. Mavis Moss, her loyal housekeeper who has an abusive husband, and Miss Smith-Humphries, a pillar of the community dying from heart disease but wants to revisit happy places of her youth.  While stopping for gas they rescue a pregnant young girl, Yvette, who claims she is being kidnapped.

The Bentley breaks down in the inviting fishing hamlet of Saint Benet. They’re aided by handyman, Louis; Nico, a mysterious fisherman; and welcomed by other villagers including a resident gay English couple. While exploring the small town of Saint Benet they find an abandoned villa in the hills and decide to fix it up and rent it from the owner. The simple paradise of Saint Benet is perfect until fate plays a role and WWII looms over their heads.

The three women blossom and enjoy the beautiful setting of their second chance lives, having a splendid adventure, until the German troops move into the village in 1942-43. The women and the villagers face hardships, betrayals, danger, uncertainties, and retaliations. When the war comes to an end readers realize these women were resilient, inquisitive, caring with strong minds, hearts, and souls.

This book captivates readers from chapter one and never lets up.  It shows the strong bond between friends as well as how a middle-aged woman can find true love with Nico, a villager.

***

Author Interview

Elise Cooper: Idea for the story?

Rhys Bowen: There were driving forces behind this story.  We were on this lake, and I saw a villa that must have been abandoned for years.  It was beautiful once but now the shutters were hanging off and the grounds were full of leaves.  I thought who could walk away from something as gorgeous as this and why were there no heirs? I wanted to bring it back to its formal glory.  It stayed with me, so I had a character do that, vicariously.  I loved giving these women this close bond and second chances in life.

EC: Is this a woman’s adventure story?

RB: It is a story about invisible women. Middle-aged women can be conceived as no longer physically attractive.  I noticed this many times in my own life after I became a certain age.  Miss Marple is invisible with her knitting as nobody notices her. She sees and hears everything.  I wanted to write how women were not treated well by life or had lived someone else’s life. I also wanted to write the strength of women bonding and how they could blossom into the people they should be. These three women were not treated well and has a sense of belonging.

EC: How would you describe Ellie?

RB: She never lived her own life and is now a middle-aged woman. There is this book quote how she feels all alone, “It was fine when I had my friends with me, but now I find myself alone.  I had everything I desired, people I loved and who loved me. And one by one they have been taken away.  I have this lovely big house and beautiful view but nobody to share it with.”  I wanted to give her everything she wanted: friends, a beautiful house, a love interest, and a baby.  Then all those were taken away. I wanted to explore how strong she was when once again everything was taken away from her. I think she is a survivor, optimistic, is willing to take risks, and resilient by the end of the book.  But in the beginning, she was broken, angry, resentful, the perfect housewife, and feels hopeless at times. Throughout she is sensible, passionate, vulnerable, and reasonable.

EC: How would you describe Miss Theodora Smith-Humphries?

RB: She is critical, sickly, formidable, smug, blunt, organized, faithful, and a good listener. We never really know her.  She gave the world the face she wanted them to see, that of an efficient smart spinster who runs everything, and who people are slightly scared of.  But no one knows she had a great romance. She was not sweet, attractive, and submissive so she never had that good marriage. She had a romance that could never be, after both her married employer and she fell in love. She accepted the role of the mistress.

EC: How would you describe Ellie’s former maid, Mavis?

RB: She is scared, street smart, loyal, and has a great relationship with Ellie. She is closest to a friend and confidant Ellie has ever had. In England people don’t say something if they see something because of the stiff upper lip attitude.  Yet, Ellie realizes Mavis was abused and she must save her. When Mavis gets to France she blossoms. She becomes a strong person in the community. Yet, she lives the first half of this book in fear of her husband, always having walked on eggshells.

EC: How would you describe Yvette?

RB:  Young, pregnant, sacred, and a shadow figure. She plays the part well of a vulnerable person. Mavis realizes she is not who she says she is. Mavis has good instincts.

EC: What is the role of WWII in this book?

RB: I wanted to show the brutality of the Germans, and how Ellie and company tried to save Jewish men.  Ellie took a big risk by staying in France, but she is so happy there she decides to stay.  Then she becomes an enemy alien, unable to get a ration card or identity card. The first years of the war are not bad for the South of France. Everything is fine for her until the Germans become stationed in her village in 1943. There was a resistance cell in Marseille that smuggled out Jewish people.

EC: How come the Germans ignored the villa?

RB: They did not know it existed until quite late in the story.  It was not visible from the village, up in the hillside hidden away. As long as Ellie and company stayed quiet, she was safe until the Germans found out they were smuggling Jewish men out.

EC: What about the relationship between Nico and Ellie?

RB: It was confusing to both, but they did love and respect each other. In the end they found a soul mate in each other.  I wanted Nico to be an enigmatic figure.  People thought of him as a local fisherman, yet he never fished that much.  Ellie thinks he is a smuggler and although attracted to him does not want much to do with him because she thinks he does things against the law because he has plenty of money. The moment the war starts he helps the resistance cells by bringing in weapons and gasoline.  I wanted him to be the classic bad boy in the beginning, attractive to Ellie, but dangerous.

EC: What about the village of Saint-Benet, is it based on Cassis?

RB: It is a little town outside of Marseille, an area where there are fields surrounded by high cliffs. It has a pretty waterfront with cafes surrounding it.  I went there last year to make sure I had all the details correct. I did not want to call the village Cassis because I wrote things that did not happen there.  It was much easier to make it the fictional town of Saint-Benet, very much like Cassis.

EC: Next books?

RB: The next book comes out in November, titled, From Cradle to Grave, a Royal Spyness novel. Georgie is given the nanny from hell is one part of the story. The other part has a possible serial killer getting rid of aristocrats.

The next Molly Murphy book comes out in March, titled Vanished in the Crowd.  It focuses on the role of women.  A woman scientist is working on the polio virus but gets no credit and has the findings published in her husband’s name.

The next historical novel has a working title, From Sea to Sky, coming out next July.  It is about an elderly famous writer who is suffering from dementia and cannot finish her last book. A young writer is hired to finish it for her.  The young writer sees things that makes her believe the story is not fiction.

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.