Cover Reveal: Love & Agita

Today Grayson Avery and Rockstar Book Tours are
revealing the cover for LOVE & AGITA, a Rom Com which releases September 30,
2022! Check out the awesome cover and enter the giveaway!

 

On to the reveal!

About The Book:
Title: LOVE & AGITA

Author: Grayson Avery

Pub. Date: September 30, 2022

Publisher: Farcical Press

Formats:  Paperback, eBook

Pages: 312

Find it: GoodreadsAmazon, Kindle, B&N, iBooks, Kobo, TBD, Bookshop.com, Buy direct
from Grayson


“The Hating Game meets My Big Fat Greek Wedding!”


You think you have a crazy family? Meet Leo Donati, a great guy from a wacky New York Italian family, who is expected to live his life a certain way. There are a few family rules etched in stone that he has done his best to follow:

1. Attend Sunday family dinner. It’s at 2:00. Nobody knows why.
2. Love your mother.
3. Never tell Nonna you’re full. Unless you have a death wish.
4. Marry Italian.
5. Family comes first. Always. Friends come and go, but family is
forever.

The only problem? He’s not living his best life. Not even close. Single,
lonely, and spending way too much time at the gym burning sexual energy and
ungodly amounts of pasta, Leo hopes his life will change when his father hands
over the family business. If only things were that simple. A takeover offer on
the business puts Leo on the war path against a strikingly sexy, but overly
competitive Jewish woman who is seemingly intent on ruining his life. At least
that’s how Leo sees it.

As tension rises and Italian tempers flare, Leo wonders if perhaps hate isn’t
the most accurate word for how he feels about his new nemesis. But it could
never work. Yeah, the pizza bagel exists, but real-life cultural divides are
more complicated than that, aren’t they?

Humor abounds as corporations and cultures collide. Leo tries to thwart the
takeover, find love and happiness, while also trying to avoid being bludgeoned
to death by his Nonna’s wooden spoon.

Love & Agita is a laugh-out loud, romantic comedy that has it all: twists,
turns, emotional depth, sparkling chemistry and hilarious banter that flies off
the page.

 

Excerpt:

1

Family is like lasagna. At least my family is. Pasta. Meat.
Sauce. Cheese. All ingredients have their own unique characteristics, a role to
play, and interact differently with each other. My parents are the pasta, firm
enough to set boundaries, but can soften under some heat. My siblings are the
meat. You’ll understand when you meet them. Nonna is the sauce, adding a little
spice and sometimes making things go down a little smoother. And I’m pretty
much the cheese in my family, tasty with a little bite, keeping the rest of it
together.

Done well, lasagna is a wonderful recipe. All I can tell you
is that my family is not always done well…Lasagna is easy to assemble, but
under too much heat, things get messy. And the heat was about to get turned up.
We’re not talking normal, run-of-the-
mill 350 degrees. The oven was about to go nuclear and the
cheese that holds everything together was about to be stretched to its limits.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves here. Let me introduce
myself. My name is Leo Donati, although my mother calls me Leonardo when she’s
angry. Thwacks from a wooden spoon and an unleashing of Italian curses usually
accompany the wrath. Even at thirty years old, the damn things still sting
like, well, like a mother… It’s because her forearms are like bricks, built by
millions of revolutions stirring the marinara sauce.

If you haven’t figured it out yet, my family’s Italian. And
if you’re gonna hang with us, you should know our rules. We only have a few,
but they’re not to be broken unless you want to become acquainted with the
aforementioned spoon.

1. You must attend Sunday family dinner. It’s at 2:00. Nobody
knows why.

2. You love your mother.

3. You never tell Nonna you’re full. Unless you have a death
wish.

4. You marry Italian.

5. Family comes first. Always. Friends come and go, but
family is forever.

These rules are etched in stone. There’s also an unwritten
rule that states women have to have half of their wardrobe in animal print. I
don’t necessarily agree with that one, but the rest are legit, and I live by
them every day. Or tried to. I was single with not a whole lotta luck in the
lady department, despite my rugged handsomeness and world-class charm.
Surprising, I know.

There’s one more thing to know about my family before you
meet them. As wacky as they are, I love them more than anything. They’re fun,
loud, exciting, albeit slightly embarrassing, but I couldn’t imagine being
anywhere else when I’m with them. Most of the time, I love being a part of the
Donati family. Being a part of something bigger than myself. Having people I
can count on. Most of them. Some of them. Well, my mother and grandmother. And
Pop when we’re not clashing at work.

We own a print shop or actually, a bunch of them. Donati
Printing. My grandfather started the business, then gave it to my father, who
has run it for the last twenty-two years, and I’m eagerly awaiting my turn at
the helm. I’m only thirty and I’ve been in the business almost twenty years
myself. I started way back when child labor was an acceptable practice. I was
what they call a Printer’s Devil, doing just about everything: changing ink and
paper, stacking boxes, collating projects, and even making local deliveries on my
Mongoose bike. Now, I’m the Vice President, in charge of the operations of
seven shops spread across Long Island.

It’s probably best to start this story on the Friday morning
before I got our October financials. It’s what really turned up the heat on
said lasagna. After a client meeting with The Hampton’s magazine that I hosted
at our eastern facility in Riverhead, I headed into our first shop and de facto
headquarters in Huntington at about noon. The acidic smell from the print
facility grappled with Rebecca’s sweet-smelling perfume. Rebecca worked the
front and was one of the few non-Donatis employed at HQ, not because I ran out
of cousins, but because we needed people to actually work. Most of our
employees were some sort of relation and saw their paychecks as more of an
allowance than for services rendered.

Rebecca looked up when I entered. “Hey, boss.” She was about
six inches shorter than me at about 5’6” and thin, with oversized red glasses.
She wore a vintage ‘I love 80s hairbands’ t-shirt with tight jeans and her
brown hair in a ponytail. She was cute, but more in a sisterly kind of way. I
actually liked her more than my own sister most of the time.

“How’s it going in here?” Rebecca huffed. “Frankie’s late on the Grappolo job. Again.
Claims the machine is slow. But it’s only ‘slow’ for him,” she said, heavy on
the air quotes.

I nodded. “I’ll look at the machine and have a chat with
him.”

“None of them listen to me,” she admitted, slumping into her
chair.

“Join the club,” I said, laughing.

The door burst open behind me. My mother’s voice boomed
through seemingly half the town, “I’m here!”

My beautiful mother enjoys making a good entrance. The first
thing I always notice about her is her thick, wavy black hair and blue eyes.
And the halo floating above her head on most days. Always dressed to the nines.
That day, she wore black pants with a white blouse covered by a white apron
that tried, but couldn’t hide a shiny gold belt. Her black high heels were a
size below circus stilts and her earrings of linked crosses dangled to her
shoulders like small weathervanes.

“Give me a kiss,” she said, admiring my handsomeness, and
then engulfing me in a hug.

I did as I was told.

She pinched my cheek and said, “Such a handsome boy. Is it
wrong of me to say since you look like me? It’s a wonder you’re not married
already.”

I groaned, wondering if she just broke the record on how
quickly she brought up my lack of a life partner. “Please, not today, Ma. Why
are you still wearing your apron?”

My mother pulled Rebecca in for a hug. “Your father likes his
veal nice and hot. I took it straight from the oven.”

“You cook in this?” Rebecca asked, admiring her blouse.

“When you find the one you love, you want to take care of
them and be wanted by them. Plus, I have to save my animal print for when I’m
feeling frisky.”

I threw up in my mouth and then managed to say, “Tell him to
put it in the microwave. You’re gonna kill yourself running around in those
shoes. And me with your T.M.I.”

My mother nodded to me as she spoke to Rebecca. “He used to
try on my shoes when he was a kid. And my bras.”

Rebecca laughed while I said, “Thank you for that, mother.
Always so helpful.”

“I want to take care of your father. Someday you’ll have a
wife who cooks for you like I do for your father. The key to an Italian man’s
heart is through his stomach.”

“I don’t need to know that, Ma. I need to know the key to a
woman’s heart.”

Rebecca said, “It’s through his tongue.”

My mother chuckled. “She’s not wrong. Your father, well, he’s
not the best down there, but—”

“Ma, please. Geez, can we talk about something else? Let’s
get Dad his veal before it gets cold.”

She headed toward the door, key fob in the air. “Help me get
the food.”

My mother didn’t cook for us every day. It was Fat Friday. At
least that’s what I called it. My mother brought lunch for the entire crew
every Friday. Trays and trays of salad, pasta, and something parmigiana-ed. It
didn’t matter what it was. Throw some breading, sauce, and cheese on it and it
was amazing.

We stepped outside into the crisp November air, a blue sky
overhead, and made our way toward her black Cadillac parked illegally in front
of the building.

“So, how’s Natalia?” my mother asked, popping the trunk. Her
halo faded.

I was too annoyed to enjoy the marvelous scent of my mother’s
sauce emanating from the trunk. I answered in a huff, “Ma, I told you we’re not
together. We’re just not compatible.” I prayed to Saint Monica, the Patron
Saint of Patience, who is also pretty much out of patience with the rest of my
family.

“I thought you were going to propose?”

I grunted as I picked up a box of four tin catering trays.
Even though I’m in great shape, she cooked for a small army. “I was absolutely
not going to propose to her. I don’t love her. We broke up months ago. You know
this.”

“I’m waiting for you to realize you made a mistake.” She held
the door for me as we returned and then lovingly slapped the back of my head.

I held back a growl. “I won’t settle just because you want me
to get married. I haven’t found the right person. I want to love and live my
life fully. Do you want me to get divorced?”

My mother led me into the break room, waving my concern away.
“We don’t get divorced. We make excuses that the church will accept for
annulment. Don’t worry, you’ll meet the perfect Italian girl. I just know it,”
she said with a twinkle in her eye.

I navigated two large tables and plopped the food on the
counter beside the tiled sink.

I turned to my mother to see a dartboard with my face on it,
the likely doings of my brother, Benny (Benito), and cousin, Frankie. “Can we
talk about something else? What’s going on in your life?”

“Oh, don’t get me started. Your father ate some of Nonna’s
mustache removal concoction. Again.”

I rolled my eyes. “Why don’t you just buy the Nair stuff in a
tube or bottle? Why does Nonna have to cook it on the stove? You know he can’t
resist what you both cook.”

“It’s more potent. After an Italian woman turns forty…we grow
hair in places…just forget about it.”

I threw up in my mouth and began opening the containers while
my mother grabbed the plates and silverware from the cabinets.

“So, what happened with Natalia again? She’s pretty and
sweet, and from a good family.”

I sighed and waited for my anger to subside before answering.

“Ma, I think we need to take you to the doctor to get your memory checked.
We’ve been over this. Twice just this morning. I don’t love her. She doesn’t
love me. I want to feel more than physical attraction to a nice person. I want
to find a love where you just know you have to be with that person forever.

Where you’re just…drunk in love with that person.”

“Your father farts the alphabet in his sleep. Is that
intoxicating love for you or what?”

I slapped some salad onto my plate. “Seriously, Ma. Where you
would do anything for that person, anything just to be with that person.”

“Your Papa was like that. He used to stare at Nonna’s
meatballs, hearts in his eyes. You know, the ones stuffed with gabagool. With a
little ricotta on top.”

“I’m serious.”

My mother removed her apron and tossed it across a chair.

“Okay. Okay. And Natalia doesn’t do that for you?”

“With Natalia, there’s no gabagool. No ricotta. Yeah, she’s
got the meat, but I want it all. We both agreed we weren’t right for each
other. I promise you, I want nothing more than to have kids and get married.”

“Not in that order,” she said firmly.

I laughed. “I didn’t list them in order. Ma, I gotta go.

Thanks for lunch. I can’t eat with the family today. I need to prep for a
meeting with Pop.”

“Make sure he respects your ideas. You’re such a smart boy.
You’ll be running this place one day. I’ll see you on Sunday, my love.”

 

I filled the rest of my plate with veal and a little
linguini, kissed my mother goodbye, and headed back out front to Rebecca like a
salmon swimming upstream, slipping around and between the salivating lunch
crowd.

“Becs, can you bring me October’s numbers before you grab
lunch? I gotta prep for my meeting with Pop.”

She held a stack of papers up. “Not sure you want to see
these.”

“That bad, huh?”

She just scrunched up her nose as a response and handed them
over. At least she didn’t fake hurl.

“Why are they so bad?” Rebecca asked.

“PremaPrint is discounting heavily. We lost two accounts.”

“We gotta do something.”

I nodded. “That’s what my meeting with my father is about. We
have to get with the times and start advertising online.”

“Good luck with that.”

I headed into my office and pored over the numbers while I
ate. Nonna would’ve been upset with how little I ate, but the numbers were that
nauseating. I couldn’t remember the last month they were that bad. The silver
lining was that at least it gave me ammo to help me shift my father’s thinking,
and I was gonna need a lot of firepower.

One thing you have to know about my father is that he’s old
school. There’s a certain way to do things and you don’t change them. Even if
the business is getting pummeled, apparently. He is a tough man to get to know
and to get through to.

But I had to stand up to him. I promised myself I would. It
was time he allowed our business to enter the next generation. Our new reality.
Printing was a tough business. Consolidation going on all around us. Rising
paper costs. Geographic borders widening. And that was before the family drama.

Just before the meeting, I slipped into the bathroom,
splashed some water on my face, and stared at myself in the mirror. “It’s my
time. Be strong. You’re a smart boy.” I rolled my eyes, and tried to shake my
mother’s voice from my head.

A voice echoed from the stall behind me, “You got this, bro!”

I nearly crapped in my pants. “Jesus, Benny. Why are you
always in here?” Meet meatball number one, my brother, Benito.

“I have irritable bowels.”

“You’re allergic to hard work is what it is.” I shook my head
as I left.

“Good luck, bro! You got this!”

Just as I was heading into the meeting, my phone rang. It was
meatball number two, my sister Gianna.

“Yo, sis.”

“Can you watch the kids tonight? Sal and I want to go out.”

“Hello, to you, too. Can’t tonight. I’m going out.”

“Please? We never get to. I already have reservations at
Alberto’s.”

“You always go out. And Mom’s on my case again about getting
married.”

“So, go out tomorrow night. Please? I’m begging. I need a
break. You love the kids, don’t you?” She went straight for my jugular. I adore
my nieces and nephew.

“Of course. More than you. Like your kids are Alberto’s and
you’re Olive Garden.”

She whined a drawn out, “Pleeeease?”

I huffed and let out a retaliated, “Fiiiine.”

“Thanks, big bro. You’re the best.”

“Mm, hmm.” I stuffed my phone into my pocket with another
huff and whispered, “Just livin’ my best life. Can’t even stand up to my
sister.”

I took a few minutes for myself outside, psyching myself up.

I headed back in at 2:00 and smacked myself in the face. I gotta do this.
For my future. For the family’s future.

 

 

About Grayson Avery:

Grayson Avery is a romantic comedy author of The Sweet Water
Circle, published by the humor-focused imprint, Farcical Press. 

Writing is Grayson’s passion. For so many people, reading is
a chore or something they don’t even do, so he tries to write stories that
transform that experience for them. His focus is on creating fast-paced and
laugh-out-loud (like real LOLs, not the fake texting kind) romantic comedies
and adventures to contend with so many competing forms of entertainment. It’s
his mission to be better than Real Housewives…is that even possible? 

Grayson is also an entrepreneur, a baseball coach, husband,
and father. He would like to one day bury the hatchet with his arch nemesis,
Bradley Cooper, on a Maury-Povich-themed episode of 
Between Two
Ferns, 
write a screenplay with Tina Fey, and hit the USA Today and NY
Times Bestseller’s lists with massive amounts of inappropriate humor. Buy a
book, will ya?

While he claims he is the most handsome author writing in the
rom com genre, more pictures exist of the Loch Ness Monster and Big Foot than
of Grayson. He also claims he is often mistaken for Tom Cruise’s cousin and has
been featured barechested on more than a dozen naughty novels. Independent fact
checkers hired by Grayson have verified said claims.
 

Website | Facebook | Instagram | Goodreads | Amazon | BookBub

 

Giveaway Details:

Win one of
ten personalized and autographed paperback copies of LOVE & AGITA. US Only.

Ends
September 20th.

Enter Here!  https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/351624-love-and-agita?fbclid=IwAR0iY5q8xkSZmEHZNj1r7wt8jeltD4j0iodX2JzUkFbcbNm_Bf48Ho5aNhg

 

Release Day Blitz: Ask The Girl

I am so excited that ASK THE GIRL by Kim Bartosch is available now and that I get to share the news!


If you haven’t yet heard about this wonderful book, be sure to check out all the details below.


This blitz also includes a giveaway for a $10 Amazon GC’s courtesy of Kim &
Rockstar Book Tours. So if you’d like a chance to win, check out the giveaway info below.

 

About the Book

Title: ASK THE GIRL

Author: Kim Bartosch

Pub. Date: September 6, 2022

Publisher: Woodhall Press

Formats: Paperback, eBook, Audiobook

Pages: 110

Find it: GoodreadsAmazon, Kindle, Audible, B&N, iBooks audio, Kobo, TBD, Bookshop.org


Nobody believes sixteen-year-old Lila Sadler, who was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.


Nobody believes that Lila’s sister Rose is possessed by the ghost of Katy Watkins. As Rose’s health worsens each day, the only way to save her is to uncover the awful truth of Katy’s death so many years ago.


And nobody knows what happened to Katy on October 31, 1925.

Not even Katy. Unaware that she was murdered, Katy has wandered for a hundred years in complete ignorance, until the day she meets Rose and Lila.


Together Lila, Rose, and Katy must confront their demons to escape this hell. But will they be able to escape? Can they forgive the
unforgivable?

 

Book Trailer:

Excerpt:

PROLOGUE

Katy

THE EARTHY AROMA of decay nestles in her nose. She
spits out a mouthful of soil. Her teeth are gritty and  she grinds her jaw
as she digs in the dirt with a stick.  Digging deep so the message will
remain until next  time. The stick breaks. 

“Damn!” She throws the stick. Her companion, a  black
dog with a white star patch, sniffs the air then  growls. 

Katy stops. “Coyote, are they here?” 

The dog whines, stands, and begins to pace. The  leaves
whisper as a cool breeze passes through. High pitched screeches and the click
of gnashing teeth echo  in the distance.  

Coyote barks.  

Katy’s heart drops in her chest. She doesn’t have  much
time. She claws at the ground; her nail tears off  and blood mixes with
the dirt, but she does not stop.  

Coyote barks and barks and barks. Katy digs and  digs
and digs. 

  She needs to finish. She needs to make sure the
message remains so that it will be here for her next  time. So she will
find it and remember. 

Coyote barks. Katy digs. The wind howls. It whips
around her. The loose dirt stings her face and eyes.  Tears stream down
and she chokes back a sob.

Time freezes into silence. Nothing moves. 

The wind stops.  

Coyote stops barking.  

Katy stops digging and looks up. 

A loud thump shakes the ground, followed by a low
watery growl. The smell of rotten eggs linger. “Come, Coyote!” Katy’s foot
slips in the loose soil as  she pulls herself up and runs. Coyote bolts
ahead. The creature chases her and the dog.  

  It flies over her message but does not disturb
the soil. 

Ask the girl.

 

CHAPTER 1

Lila

I WAS TOLD every person experiences three deaths.   The
first is when the body stops working. The second is when you’re sent to your
grave. The third is in the future, when the last person  who remembers you
dies, and speaks your name no  more. 

My father has died twice but still lives on in my
heart. But this doesn’t comfort me. 

I pressed my forehead against the cold glass as  I
stared out the car window. Trees and buildings  whizzed by, sending a wave
of nausea through my  body. I inhaled deeply, pushing it back along with
a  deep ache of loss. No more late-night movies. No more  corny jokes
about how I’m not allowed to date. No  more childhood home as the car
pulled onward to our  new lives in Missouri with my aunt and uncle. 

A furry black blur dashed out from behind a  billboard
sign. “Mom, watch out!” 

The car lurched as Mom and Rose jumped from my
outburst. “Lila, what is it?”

I waited for the thump, but instead only heard the
steady rhythm of tires on pavement. I whirled around,  expecting to find a
flattened animal out the back window—but nothing. “Didn’t you see it?” 

“See what?” Rose asked, peeking out the back. “I think it was
a cat or dog?” 

“I don’t see anything.” Rose turned back around.  Her
head was shaking as she nestled her earbuds into  her ears. She thinks I’m
making things up, again. I  know she thinks I’m being the dramatic,
unreliable  older sister. The sister she can’t count on, who stirs
up trouble and starts fires. But I didn’t start the fire. No one believes me
that I didn’t do it. I was just at the  wrong place at the wrong time. I
tried to explain that  to Mom and Rose, but they didn’t believe me. But
it’s  been that way ever since I was diagnosed with bipolar
disorder. When people know, they treat you differently,  even your
family. 

“Whatever it was, I missed it,” Mom said. Her eyes  met
mine in the rearview mirror. “Lila, are you okay?”   “I’m fine.” She
thought I made it up too. “Sure?” 

  “Mom, I’m fine,” I said. 

Mom held up her hands. “Okay, okay.” 

The car went silent. 

Rose turned up her music, blocking me out. Mom  gripped
the steering wheel so tight her knuckles  were white as sun-bleached
driftwood. She mumbled  to herself, sighed, and clicked on the car’s
blinker.  It ticked loudly, announcing our descent onto the
Parkville exit. 

The car turned down Main Street, lined with old
Western-style brick buildings. Ancient homes perched  on the bluffs and
cliffs above the town. On the other  side, a muddy, choppy river flowed a
few hundred feet from the road.

“This place hasn’t changed much,” Mom said. Rose squirmed in
the front seat as she stared wide eyed out her window, her phone held up as
always,  recording a video. “I can’t wait to do my documentary.  I
found out that this town has a ghost!” 

“Well, there’s a lot of history in this town. That’s
for sure.” Mom drove the car slowly up Main Street.  “Too much history,”
she mumbled. Mom caught her  reflection in the rearview mirror and fixed
her hair frantically. She had the same blonde hair as I did, but  her eyes
were a brighter green. 

Aunt Theresa and Uncle John are nice but a little  different.
They’re complete opposites—my aunt, a true  Midwest lady who hugs, kisses
everyone, and makes the  best baked goods ever; my uncle, a rough,
tattooed, bald  biker who tells long stories about his good old days.
We  only saw them once a year, which was enough for me.  Now I have
to figure out how to live with them. 

We drove through downtown Parkville and entered  a
subdivision of colonial-type homes sitting high on  steep hills above the
road. Tall oaks and maple trees  shaded the street and sidewalk where
families in  shorts and T-shirts walked their dogs, rode bikes, and
pushed baby strollers. Eventually the houses became  fewer and Mom turned
onto a small gravel road with  a sign that read, “Cooper’s Inn.” The road
wound up,  and our small car groaned as it climbed the steep
hillside. The trees closed in around the driveway but  soon opened up to a
grand three-story Victorian home  with a broad wraparound porch and four
spiraling  pillars, much like Juliet’s tower. 

“Wow!” Rose was gazing out of her window. The  house
rested on a bluff overlooking the Missouri River,  rolling hills, bluffs,
and some of the town. “I always  love the view here.”

My aunt waited at the back door with a warm  smile and
waved as we pulled up. Her long dark  hair sprinkled with gray blew into
her face when she  stepped outside. She wiped her hands on an apron
dotted with flour and dough before tucking her hair behind her ears. Mom and
Rose went to greet her,  but I walked to the back of the car to get my bags
to  avoid the hugs and pinched cheeks. A flash of bright light appeared
out of the corner of my eye. Near the  forest, small globes of light
floated around the trees. I squinted to get a closer look. 

“Yoo-hoo, Liiilaaa!” My aunt walked toward me,  arms
wide open. My heart dropped and my chest  tightened, bubbling up against
the urge to scream or  cry uncontrollably, but I knew I had to get this
part  over. So I closed my eyes and let my aunt drown me in  her
arms. 

  It will be fine, Lila. 

Relax.  

Breathe.

 

 

About Kim Bartosch:

Kim is a young adult writer of
paranormal mysteries and thrillers. She is fond of ghost stories and has
experienced many hauntings during several paranormal investigations. She has contributed
many articles regarding travel, hauntings, and more on various sites. Kim has
been on several ghost hunts across the U.S. with her sister. She photographed a
ghost at the Crescent Hotel in Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

As an advocate for Autism and
Bipolar Disorder, Kim offers her support to many charities and programs, such
as
Joshua Center and
Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (
DBSA). Kim feels
there aren’t enough programs for mental disabilities. Her goal is to give as
much help to set up these organizations for success so individuals, such as her
autistic son and bipolar sister, will have the support they need.

Kim is an avid member of the
Society of Children Book Writers & illustrators (
SCBWI.org) contributing her time to many
events and conferences.

Website | Twitter | FacebookInstagram | TikTok | Goodreads | Amazon

Giveaway Details:

1
winner will win a $10 Amazon GC, International.

Ends
September 13th, midnight EST.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Release Day Blitz: Wrassle Castle Book 3: Put a Lyd on it!

I am so excited that WRASSLE CASTLE BOOK 3: PUT A LYD ON IT! by Paul Tobin, Colleen Coover, & Galaad (Illustrator) is available now and that I get to share the news!


If you haven’t yet heard about this wonderful book, be sure to check out all the details below.


This blitz also includes a giveaway for 2 finished copies of the book courtesy of Wonderbound &
Rockstar Book Tours. So if you’d
like a chance to win, check out the giveaway info below.

 

About The Book:

Title: WRASSLE CASTLE BOOK 3: PUT A LYD ON IT!

Author: Paul Tobin, Colleen Coover, Rebecca Horner (Colorist), Galaad (Illustrator), AndWorld Design

Pub. Date: September 6, 2022

Publisher: Wonderbound

Formats: Paperback, eBook

Pages: 96

Find it: GoodreadsAmazon, Kindle, B&NiBooks, Kobo, TBD, Bookshop.org


It’s the end! And it’s time for Lydia to step into the ring for a slam-to-the-mat finish
… something that she has trained for her entire life. For fans of The
Nameless City
Lumberjanes, and She-Ra!


THE FINAL SHOWDOWN IS HERE! IT’S THE CHAMPIONSHIP: FOR FREEDOM (HER BROTHER’S)
and GLORY (HER OWN)!


Lydia Riverthane readies herself for the finals of the Wrassle Castle tournament, hoping to win her brother’s freedom and get back his good name. But Lydia and her diverse group of friends, Chelsea, Nyle, and Dee, discover that the plot against the Riverthane family goes deeper than any of them thought. Lydia will have to dig deep and unlock the secrets behind her own wrassling if she wants to have any hope of saving her home and family.   

Book 3 of the three-book original graphic novel series.

“A rock ’em sock ’em hum-dandy knock-out of a graphic novel!”
Shannon Watters, Co-Creator of “Lumberjanes”

 

Excerpts:

 

 

 

 

About Paul Tobin:

 

Paul Tobin is the New York Times best-selling author of
the Plants vs. Zombies graphic novels, as well as a wide range
of other titles for all ages of readers. Paul wrote extensively for Angry
Birds
, and for Marvel’s all-ages “Adventure” line, and
teamed with artist Benjamin Dewey on the Eisner-nominated I Was The Cat graphic
novel, and with his Plants vs. Zombies artist Ron Chan for
their recently released Earth Boy graphic novel. Along with
his wife, artist Colleen Coover, Paul is the creator of the multiple
Eisner-Award-winning Bandette comics featuring the antics of
the world’s best—and most charming—thief. Paul and Colleen also teamed up on
their Banana Sunday graphic novel, and now as the writing team
on Wrassle Castle. Paul lives in Portland, Oregon, where he
feels that it rains frequently enough, but not hard enough.

 

Website | Twitter | Goodreads | Amazon | BookBub

 

About Colleen Coover:

 

Colleen Coover is a comic book storyteller and illustrator
living in Portland, Oregon. With writer Paul Tobin, she is the co-creator of
the comics Banana Sunday and Bandette. Colleen and Paul are the co-writers of
Wonderbound’s new series Wrassle Castle, drawn by the artist Galaad. When she
is not making comics or creating illustrations for a variety of clients,
Colleen spends her time spinning yarn, knitting sweaters, and eating ice cream.
She is a member of Helioscope, a collective of Portland-based creators. colleencoover.net

Website | Twitter | Instagram | TikTok | Goodreads

 

 

 

About Galaad:

Galaad is a
French comic book artist and a former freelance illustrator, animator, concept
artist, and storyboard artist for the entertainment industry – specifically for
video games and animation.

Website | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads

 

 

 

 

 

Giveaway Details:

2 winners
will receive a finished copy of WRASSLE CASTLE BOOK 3: PUT A LYD ON IT!, US
Only.

Ends
September 20th, midnight EST.

a Rafflecopter giveaway