Bookspotlight/ The Bookshop Detective

Title: The Bookshop Detective (The Bookshop by the Sea series)

Publisher: Waverley Books

Publication Date: May 2017

Formats: Kindle and Paperback

ISBN: 978-1849344456

Genre: Contemporary women’s fiction/humour/mystery

Page Count: 256

 

 

Buy Links:

Kindle – https://amzn.to/2KLTNqO
Paperback – https://amzn.to/2KwD7Ew

When a ghost ship is spotted on the horizon one spring evening, bookseller Eleanor Mace decides to investigate the myths and legends of Combemouth, the seaside town where she runs The Reading Room. As Eleanor digs deeper into the town’s history, she becomes intrigued by a Victorian crime report and is determined to find out what happened to a boy at the centre the case – one with intriguing links to the present.

As Eleanor begins to uncover the truth – aided by the vicar but somewhat stalled by the local librarian – she has an unexpected challenge on her own horizon. Daniel – her husband of six months – is determined that they give up their separate homes and find a new place together. But Eleanor adores her cottage by the sea and resists, guaranteeing that things turn a little frosty as the summer begins.

A celebrity book launch, an exploding dress and some salsa-dancing pensioners make this a mystery with a difference.

Author Bio

Jan Ellis began writing fiction by accident in 2013. Until then, she had led a blameless life as a publisher, editor and historian of early modern Spain. She fell into fiction when a digital publisher approached her to write a history book, then made the mistake of mentioning women’s fiction, which sounded much more fun.

In 2017, her four e-novellas were published in paperback by Waverley Books who also commissioned a brand-new title, The Bookshop Detective.

Jan describes her books as romcom/mystery with the emphasis firmly on family, friendship and humour. She specialises in small-town settings, with realistic characters who range in age from young teens to 80-somethings.

As well as being an author, Jan continues to work at the heart of the book trade. Jan Ellis is a nom-de-plume.

Website: www.janelliswriter.com

See also Stellar Scribes website: https://stellarscribes5.wixsite.com/stellarscribes

Facebook: Jan Ellis (Writer)

Instagram (even if I don’t know how it works…)

https://www.instagram.com/jan_ellis_writer/

Events:

I chaired a ‘romcom’ panel at WestonLitFest this spring (and have been invited back for 2019) and have also spoken at Tiverton Literary Festival. Thanks to The Bookshop Detective, I was part of a crime and mystery evening at The Big Green Bookshop in North London with best-selling authors Lisa Cutts, Simon Booker and William Shaw. In October 2018, I will again be talking about the book at the Yeovil Literary Festival.

I’m a member of ‘Stellar Scribes‘ and together we speak at libraries and run creative writing workshops. I’ve also appeared in the local press and spoken on the radio about my books which, at their core, are about family, friendship and the humour inherent in everyday life.

My paperbacks are widely available from libraries, and Waterstones currently stock them in five of their South West branches. I’ve also been lucky enough to earn shelf space on the shelves of independent bookshops across the country.

When I’m not being Jan Ellis, I do sales and marketing for part of the Booksellers Association of the UK and Ireland (BA) and I’m a non-fiction publisher by trade, which means that I’ve been attending the London and Frankfurt Book Fairs for more years than I care to remember…

Other paperback titles:

An Unexpected Affair and A Summer of Surprises (no. 1 in The Bookshop by the Sea series)

French Kisses and A London Affair

The  Bookshop  Detective by  Jan Ellis – Extract  for Cindy’s Love of Books.  

 

 Six  months  into their  marriage, bookseller  Eleanor and her husband  Daniel have still  not moved  in together.  Dan’s ex-­‐wife  Freya is always ready  to stir things up…

 Extract  from Chapter  8 A Blast from  the Past

Jogging  down the  hill the thought  nagged at him that  his first marriage had  failed and  his second  was not going  as smoothly as he  would have wished. How  committed  was Eleanor  if she didn’t  want to set up  home with him?

He had  reached the  end of the path  where it joined the  main street when he bumped  into Freya  looking cool  and elegant in  a pale blue dress,  a pair of outsize sunglasses  perched on her  head.

  “Well  hello, Dan.  And where are  you going in such  a hurry?”

  “It’s  called jogging,  and I’m going home  if you must know.”

  Freya  arched a  slender eyebrow  in a subtle gesture  that managed to convey  amusement,  curiosity and  a tiny bit of  disdain. “And where  is home these days?”  

  Daniel  stood with  his hands on  his hips panting  slightly. He nodded  towards the  sea front  and the bright  red door of his  house. It was known  as The Widows’ House  because  of the two  women who had  lived there before  him. “You know perfectly  well where  I live,” he  said, immediately  angry with himself  for falling into  Freya’s  trap.

  “With  Edwina?”  

  The  infuriating  woman always  knew how to push  his buttons for maximum  effect.  “My wife’s  name is Eleanor.”  

  “Of  course  it is. Silly  me.” Freya smiled.  “It’s odd, but I could  have sworn I saw you  coming  out of the  bookshop cottage  with bags of clothes  the other morning.  Don’t  tell me  you still  haven’t persuaded  Eleanor to move in  with you.” She laughed  outright.  “Or has your  snoring grown so  bad she makes you  sleep half a mile  away?”  

Daniel  could feel  the pressure  building at the  base of his skull,  partly as a result  of pounding  down the road  and partly from  being put on the  spot. It felt as though  he’d been  caught out,  even though he  and Eleanor made  no secret of their  unconventional  living arrangements.    

  “Why  the hell  do you care  who I live with  and where?”

  “Oh,  idle curiosity.”  

  “Well,  it’s none  of your damn  business. Now, if  you don’t mind, I’ve  got work to  do.”  And with  that he turned  and ran towards his  house, furious with himself  for  losing  his temper  when they both  knew that Freya only  had to ask their daughter  Emily what  Daniel’s living  arrangements were.  Freya had played him  for  a fool,  yet again.      

Once  at the  house, he  stomped angrily  around the kitchen  ruing the day he had  let her  take their  very expensive  coffee maker. He  had bought the damn  thing  for her  birthday only  a few months before  their marriage broke up  and, yes, he  could  quite easily  afford to buy  a new one but it  rankled nonetheless.   

  He made  himself a  cup of nasty  instant coffee and  headed for the shower  where  he hoped  a blast of  cold water would  help push Freya’s face  from his mind. But  it was  not to be.  Even though they  ran into each other  fairly regularly, Dan’s  heart  always missed  a beat when he  saw Freya’s familiar  figure in the distance,  a leather  folder of  architect’s plans  under one arm.  It had  not been  his idea to  divorce and the  pain of dividing up  ‘stuff’ had been hard,  but nowhere  near as hard  as wrenching Freya  from his heart. She  was his first  love and  her abandonment  had left him hurt  and angry.

When  they separated,  Daniel told her to  take whatever she wanted  from the cliff-­‐top  house they had  designed together,  a decision he regretted  when she emptied  the kitchen  of all their  best knives and  gadgets.

Freya  really was  the most infuriating  woman Daniel knew, yet  he couldn’t help  feeling  proud of  what she’d  achieved professionally.  Since their separation, she  had gone  from strength  to strength and  he had almost grown  used to seeing her  name in  the tabloids  as the ‘wacky’  architect responsible  for the latest startling  development.  

Daniel  picked up  the mug of  cold coffee and  swished it angrily  down the sink.

Pushing  the wet hair  from his face he  examined his face in  the bathroom mirror.

“When  will you  ever get the  hang of women?”  he asked his reflection.  The face in the  mirror  had no answer.    

[Ends]  

Sunday’s In Bed With….

Welcome to our Sundays In Bed With… Meme! The meme that dares to ask what book has been in your bed this morning? Come share what book you’ve spent time curled up reading in bed, or which book you wish you had time to read today!

This is being hosted by two of the sweetest people I have the privilege of knowing in real life, Kate and Kim. Sadly we don’t talk like we use to because you know real life happens but there is not a day that goes by that I don’t think of them both.

Good Morning Everyone. What a crazy week its been and sadly not much reading was getting done.

Its that time of the year for vacation and this year we didn’t go anywhere because we had to buy a new car in May so its been basically a get things done off our every growing to do list as a home owner and this week I have been tackling my bookcases and other chores.

So nothing much was read last week and I am currently reading these:

Children Of Blood And Bone: The Orïsha LegacyBelieve Me: A NovelThe Girl on Camera

What are you reading?

July 2018 Book Unhauling

I had so much success in 2015 unhauling books that I thought I decided to  continue this year after year and going into 2018 I will be doing the same thing again although the only thing I plan on doing differently is doing this 2x a year instead of monthly. I think I do this out of curiosity  for myself to see if I am giving more away then I am bringing in.

This summer I am making it a priority to clean and unhaul books that I have stacked and stored in my basement.  I really don’t need to hold onto these books anymore since I don’t tend to reread my books. I would rather they went to someone who would enjoy them just as much as I did.

Here is what I am unhauled this month:

  1. Autumn Falls by Bella Thorne
  2. 11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass
  3. Finally by Wendy Mass
  4. 13 Gifts by Wendy Mass
  5. The Prank List by Anna Staniszewski
  6. The Dirt Diary by Anna Staniszewski
  7. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle
  8. Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City by Kirsten Miller
  9. Gustav Gloom and the People Taker by Adam-Troy Castro
  10. You deserve a drink by Mamrie Hart
  11. Dream Girl by Lauren Mechling
  12. Dream Life by Lauren Mechling
  13. Dearly Departed by Lia Habel
  14. My Fairy unfair Godmother by Janette Rallison
  15. My Fairy Fair Godmother by Janette Rallison
  16. Messy by Heather Cocks & Jessica Morgan
  17. Little White Lies by Katie Dale
  18. Wither by Lauren DeStefano
  19. Firelight by Sophie Jordan
  20. Vanish by Sophie Jordan
  21. everneath by Brodi Ashton
  22. Hereafter by Tara Hudson
  23. Angelfire by Courtney Allison Moulton
  24. Wings of the Wicked by Courtney Allison Moulton
  25. Wildfire by Karsten Knight
  26. Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi
  27. Mightmares by Jason Segel & Kirsten Miller
  28. Unspeakable by Caroline Pignat
  29. Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo
  30. Christmas Bliss by Mary Kay Andrews

Total books released this month: 30

Total books released in 2018: 99

Total books released in 2017: 156

Total books released in 2016: 124

Total books released in 2015: 211

 

Book Spotlight/ Second Time Around

About the Book
 
Title: Second Time Around
Author: Nancy Herkness
Release Date: July 24, 2018
Publisher: Montlake Romance
 
Summary
 

Kyra Dixon, a blue-collar girl from the boondocks, is dedicated to her job at a community center that matches underprivileged kids with rescue dogs. When she runs into Will Chase—Connecticut blue blood, billionaire CEO, and her old college crush—she’s surprised that he asks a favor from her: to be his date for his uptight family’s dreaded annual garden party. If his parents don’t approve, all the better.

Kyra’s not about to say no. It’ll give her a chance to be oh-so-close to her unrequited love. What begins as a little fling turns so mad hot, so fast, that Kyra finds herself falling all over again for a fantasy that won’t come true. How can it? She doesn’t belong in Will’s world. She doesn’t want to. But Will does want to belong in hers.

All he has to do now is prove it. Will is prepared to give up whatever is necessary to get what his heart most desires.

Author Biography
 
Nancy Herkness is the award-winning author of the Wager of Hearts, Whisper Horse, and Second Glances series, as well as several other contemporary romance novels. With degrees in English literature and creative writing from Princeton University, she has earned the New England Readers’ Choice award, the Book Buyers Best Top Pick honor, and the National Excellence in Romance Fiction Award, and she is a two-time nominee for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA Award.

 Nancy is a native of West Virginia but now lives in suburban New Jersey with a goofy golden retriever.
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“Speaking of my family, I came here with an ulterior motive.”

“Oh?” What on earth could Will want from her?

“My mother throws an annual spring garden party—she calls it her Spring Fling—in Connecticut, on the family farm. She invites the whole extended family, all her friends, and my father’s business associates. I wondered if you might be willing to come with me. Next Sunday. Short notice, I know.”

His gaze didn’t waver from her face, which made it hard to respond, since she had to concentrate on not letting her mouth fall open in astonishment.

“I, um, well, that sounds like fun.” Total lie. It sounded terrifying. But she had Sunday off from work, so she had no commitments to stop her.

“Fun?” He shook his head. “It’s stuffy and tense and boring. My family all snap at each other when no one else is listening. That’s why I’m asking you to come as a buffer.”

“When you put it that way, how can I refuse?” She would be like a fish that didn’t even know which way the ocean was. But the chance to see Will in his childhood environment was irresistible. In college, he’d dropped casual comments about racing his sailboat on Long Island Sound, or his sister getting thrown from her horse in a cross-country event, or his mother winning the club’s tennis championship. It sounded like The Great Gatsby come to life. She had to experience it just once. “I’d be happy to go with you.”

The expression that crossed his face was hard to read, except for relief. “That’s the best news I’ve had all day,” he said.

“What’s the dress code?”

“Casual. It’s outdoors. There are tents in case it rains. Although even the weather rarely dares to displease my mother.”

“‘Casual’ covers a lot of territory for women,” she said. “Not jeans, I assume.”

He thought for a minute. “Dresses, sort of colorful. Flat shoes because of the grass. Straw hats, if it’s sunny.”

“What are you wearing?” That might help.

“My uniform. Khakis and a button-down shirt. Loafers.”

“No tie?”

“Hell, no!” he said. “Shirtsleeves rolled up, too.”

She got the picture, and she had nothing appropriate to wear. She sighed inwardly. This was going to cost her more money than she could afford. However, she couldn’t resist the opportunity to journey into the exotic country of upper-crust Connecticut. Not to mention, spending time with her college crush, who was even more crushworthy now.

“Okay, a rolled-up shirtsleeves kind of dress.” She took a gulp of her club soda as she debated where to find a dress that looked expensive but was bargain priced.

“I’ll pick you up at noon. We’ll make a fashionably late entrance. Which means we won’t have to endure the party as long.”

“This sounds more and more delightful all the time.”

Will finally smiled, albeit with an edge. “It won’t be as bad for you. They’re not your family.”

“I hear you.” But at least he still had his mother and father. As complicated as her parents had made her life, she sometimes felt terribly alone without them.

He sat back against the banquette. “Now I’m looking forward to the party.”

“You don’t have to flatter me. I’ve agreed to go.” But she couldn’t stop a smile of gratification from curling the corners of her mouth.

“You might begin to have second thoughts.” He pulled out his cell phone. “May I get your number so I don’t have to track you down?”

He tapped at the phone’s screen as she rattled off her phone number.

“Do you still have my cell number or did you chuck my card?” he asked with that self-deprecating smile that always charmed her.

“Just text me and I’ll have it on my phone.”

“So you chucked it.”

The disappointment in his tone surprised her.

“No, it’s at my apartment.”

His fingers flew over the keys of his phone.

A ping sounded from her back pocket, indicating she’d gotten his text, and she started to reach for her phone.

“Read it later,” he said with a roguish glint in his eyes. He placed his empty glass on the tray. “My apologies, but I have to go. Overseas business makes for odd working hours.”

 

Guest Post by Nancy Herkness

Opposites Attract: Character Questionnaire from Second Time Around by Nancy Herkness 

Today it is a pleasure to introduce Will Chase and Kyra Dixon to readers! The hero and heroine are from Nancy Herkness’ newest release Second Time Around and the title of the story certainly is inspired by the characters’ story. The ‘first time around’ for this couple was in college when Will was dating Kyra’s roommate. This evil ex cheated on Will and while Kyra longed to comfort her secret crush, but she was firmly friendzoned.

Years later in an accidental meeting in NYC, Kyra and Will are reunited–only this time sparks fly with nothing to get in the way of igniting….except the fact that Will is a little (okay, a lot) out of Kyra’s social circle. This makes interacting with his family and friends a teeny bit awkward. But while Will may have money, he is also kind, funny, hardworking, and stubborn. Too stubborn in fact to let a little bit of status stand in the way of him and the woman he wants.

However, we have to ask: Just how different are these two characters really? Read on for a questionnaire where we find out if Will and Kyra are true opposites or if they are more alike than they realize.

***

Question #1: What can you tell us about your favorite childhood memory?

Kyra: My father worked at the Mack Truck factory so he was very wiry and muscular, even though he was short in stature. When I was a child, he would toss me up in the air and catch me. I’ll never forget feeling the strength of his hands wrapped around my waist as he boosted me up, the sense of exhilaration as I flew through the air, and the security of knowing with absolute certainty that his steely, powerful arms would be waiting for me when I came down.

Will: My parents’ house had a two story library with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and ladders on rails to reach them. It seemed like a magic cave filled with treasure to me. Once I convinced them that I would treat the books and the room with respect, they allowed me free run of it. I spent many a happy hour deciding which book to read and then stretching out on the Oriental rug to read it. Sometimes I even walked in merely to smell the scent of books waiting to be read.

Question #2: When you were growing up what types of activities did you enjoy?

Kyra: I was a voracious reader, and loved going to the public library where the librarians would set aside books they thought I would like. However, my favorite time spent there was wandering among the shelves until a book called out to me. Ice skating and riding my bike got me outdoors when Mom decided I’d spent too much time inside reading. Mom liked to shop, so we went “malling”, as she called it. I enjoyed that because I always got a treat.

Will: Reading was my activity of choice. However, my sister would sometimes bother me until I came to help her with her beloved horses at the stables, and I got to like that, especially because it was away from our parents. Tennis wasn’t bad. I hated sailing, which my mother forced me into. Couldn’t wait to give that up. I did the usual sports in school: soccer, lacrosse, basketball, etc. Working up a good sweat was satisfying.

Question #3: When it was time for college, how did you decide to attend Brunell college?

Kyra: I couldn’t afford to go far from home, so I stuck to schools in Pennsylvania. Brunell was the best school that offered me a good financial aid package. It also had a terrific English lit department, which was my passion. I only wish I had been able to finish my degree there.

Will: Brunell was my first flash of rebellion. Pops went to Harvard; Mum went to Princeton. I refused to apply to either of those. I wanted to study the classics and a noted authority on Homer taught at Brunell.

Question #4: What was your favorite part about college?

Kyra: Playing quote wars with Will Chase! Well, pretty much anything that had to do with Will. This smart, rich, golden boy from Connecticut was so alien that he fascinated me. Okay, so I loved the classes, too. I was pretty drunk on the whole “learning for the sake of learning” concept. The campus is gorgeous as well. All those brick buildings with white trim and vast, rolling, green lawns.

Will: The classics professor who made me choose Brunell, Dr. Weiss, was a spectacular teacher and mentor. His classes made me think and stretch and grow. Sometimes he’d hold class in his home where he always served the most delicious, sugary doughnuts from the local convenience mart. Every now and then, I still buy a box of those for nostalgia’s sake.

Question #5: What’s your career? How did you choose it?

Kyra: I didn’t exactly choose my career, if you could call it that. I needed to pay off the debt from college and my parents’ health issues and heard that bartenders at high end clubs in New York City could make a lot of money. I knew a little bit about bartending—and cooking— from working at a local restaurant in my hometown, so I packed up and moved. I also cook for the kids at the Carver After-School Care Center, which I love. But I started there only because the job offered a free apartment.

Will: I’m the CEO of Ceres, a multinational chain of cafés that I founded. I started the company because I didn’t want to join my father’s law firm, as he expected me to. Do you see a theme here? It was satisfying to battle the challenges of building a company, never knowing from day to day if it would survive or fail. Now that it’s grown so huge, I find myself restless.

Question #6: Do you have an active social life? What is a favorite date you have been on recently?

Kyra: Social life? I tend bar at night and cook for kids during the day. Who has time for a social life? I can’t remember the last time I went on a date.

Will: I’m the face of Ceres so I attend quite a few charity events, if you consider that a social life. I’m not sure I do. Between that and the hours I work, dating isn’t a priority. Not to mention, a broken engagement left a sour taste in my mouth when it comes to romance. My favorite recent charity event was held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where I could wander through the classic Greek and Roman art exhibits without a crowd. That was an unexpected pleasure.

Question #7: What are your goals for the future? Where do you see yourself in a few years?

Kyra: My most urgent and immediate goal is to pay off my debt. Sometimes it feels like a boulder crushing me into the sidewalk. If I ever manage to do that, my aspiration is to finish my college degree in English lit and get a job as an editor at a publishing house. Hey, a girl has a right to her pipe dreams, doesn’t she?

Will: My goal is to figure out where the hell I see myself in a few years. Right now, my future looks like more of the same: long hours at work, too much business travel, attending events for PR purposes, and resisting my mother’s efforts to marry me off to one of her friends’ daughters. Not an exciting prospect.

***

Thanks Nancy for doing this.

Review/ Rooftoppers

Review/ RooftoppersRooftoppers by Katherine Rundell, Terry Fan
Published by Simon Schuster Books for Young Readers on September 24, 2013
Pages: 279
Goodreads

Embrace possibility in this luminous novel about a girl in search of her past who discovers a secret rooftop world in Paris.
Everyone thinks that Sophie is an orphan. True, there were no other recorded female survivors from the shipwreck that left baby Sophie floating in the English Channel in a cello case, but Sophie remembers seeing her mother wave for help. Her guardian tells her it is almost impossible that her mother is still alive—but “almost impossible” means “still possible.” And you should never ignore a possible.
So when the Welfare Agency writes to her guardian, threatening to send Sophie to an orphanage, she takes matters into her own hands and flees to Paris to look for her mother, starting with the only clue she has— the address of the cello maker.
Evading the French authorities, she meets Matteo and his network of rooftoppers—urchins who live in the hidden spaces above the city. Together they scour the city in a search for Sophie’s mother—but can they find her before Sophie is caught and sent back to London? Or, more importantly, before she loses hope?
Phillip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials series, calls Rooftoppers “the work of a writer with an utterly distinctive voice and a wild imagination.”

I chose a book entitled, “Rooftoppers” off the shelves at Chapters.  It was next to another book I was considering and decided to bring this one home instead.  I’m glad I did.  This novel puts a unique twist on a somewhat common story-line.  A young girl, named Sophie, goes looking for her mother. However, she does so from above, and with help from above.  This is a wonderful adventure for boys and girls ages 10 and up.  Friendships are not limited to school yards and playgrounds.  In fact, the sky is the limit.

Orphaned during a shipwreck, Sophie floated into the possession of an elderly gentleman named Charles.  Charles is a quirky bookworm who dotes on Sophie and teaches her the ways of the world in a most unique manner.  When those who make decisions decide that Charles is not a proper guardian to care for Sophie, the two run away to Paris, in order for Sophie to avoid being placed in an orphanage.

Sophie always believed that her mother was alive.  Many told her that this was impossible.  However,…almost impossible means still possible…This belief motivates Sophie to find her mother.  From the rooftops in Paris, Sophie befriends a boy named Matteo.  Together, they walk tightropes and leap from buildings to find the cello music Sophie is positive comes from her mother.

Split knees, calloused hands and feet, and scraped chin, Sophie does not allow for anything to stand in her way.  From the heights of Paris buildings, she becomes a skywalker.  With the strongest belief in her heart and knowing that Paris is where she belongs, Sophie learns the ways of the skywalkers.  Without judgement, she accepts them for who they are, as they offer to accompany Sophie on her dangerous journey.

An exciting book, I could not put it down at night and fall asleep.  I wanted to read on and discover the secrets of Paris from above.

I may be wrong, but it is possible that you may enjoy reading this imaginative story through a whole new perspective.  As Sophie would say, “You should never ignore a possible.

 

Can’t Wait Wednesday July 25th

Can’t-Wait Wednesday is a weekly meme hosted here, at Wishful Endings, to spotlight and discuss the books we’re excited about that we have yet to read. Generally they’re books that have yet to be released. It’s based on Waiting on Wednesday, hosted by the fabulous Jill at Breaking the Spine.
If you’d like to join in, you can use the image above, the one below, or make your own. Please link back to Wishful Endings in your post and also add it to the linky widget posted each week so we all can come see what you’re excited about. If you’re continuing with the Waiting on Wednesday feature, feel free to link those up as well!
Believe Me: A Novel

ABOUT

In this twisty psychological serial killer thriller from the New York Times bestselling author of The Girl Before, an actress plays both sides of a murder investigation.

One out-of-work British actress pays the rent on her New York City apartment the only way she can: as a decoy for a detective agency, hired to entrap straying husbands. When the cops begin investigating one of her targets for murdering his wife–and potentially others–they ask her to lure the suspect into a confession.

But with the actress pretending to be someone she isn’t, differentiating the decoy from the prey becomes impossible–and deadly.

**I am pretty sure I will either have bought this when this is posted or will be buying it that week.**