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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Blog Tour: Boy Altared

 




Historical Fiction

Date Published: April 1, 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing



Amid the vibrant landscape of San Francisco in the late 1960s, eleven-year-old Jamie steps into the confines of a dark confessional booth. With promises of confidentiality, Father Nelson uncovers a chilling secret buried deep within the young boy’s subconscious.

Intrigued by his grave past, Father Nelson brings him into the church as an altar boy under the mentorship of Harry, an older acolyte. The priest quickly gains control over Jamie, using the boy’s complicated history and his own undisputed authority to initiate a dark turn in their relationship. Jamie falls deeper into the world of religion, and his blooming friendship with Harry becomes a needed distraction from the somber realities of the church.

Shaped by major cultural events, from the Manson murders to the moon landing, to Woodstock and the Civil Rights Movement, Jamie’s life unfolds as he navigates religion, power, and loss of innocence. A haunting coming of age story, Boy Altared explores a seismic shift into adulthood during one of the most turbulent decades in history.




Excerpt

Jamie follows Harry’s lead, watching closely as each item is placed with care. The white linen cloth is smoothed across the altar. The chalice gleams under the soft glow of candlelight. Everything has a place. Everything matters.

“Pay attention,” Harry says quietly.

Jamie nods.

He takes the corporal in both hands, careful not to wrinkle it, and lays it exactly where Harry showed him. The small gold bells catch his eye—ornate, delicate. When he lifts them, they chime softly, the sound lingering in the air.

“Where do these go?” Jamie asks.

Harry guides him to the side of the altar and gestures toward a cushion between two chairs. “Right there. We’ll sit here during Mass.”

Jamie sets them down gently. The faint ringing feels important, like something not to disturb.

They move behind the altar, where Harry points out each object in turn. The tabernacle. The crucifix. The thurible, its chains faintly clinking as it sways.

“We burn incense in there,” Harry explains. “It’s like prayers rising to heaven.”

Jamie watches as Harry lights it, a thin ribbon of smoke curling upward. It drifts into the light streaming through the stained-glass windows, turning the air hazy and bright at the same time.

“These are for the procession,” Harry says, handing him the staff. “You’ll carry the cross.”

Jamie grips it carefully, the cool metal steady in his hands.

They take their places at the entrance as the church begins to fill. Voices soften. Movements slow. The space seems to shift as people settle into their seats, their attention drawn forward.

The scent of incense thickens, wrapping around everything.

Through the haze, Father Nelson appears.

Harry leans closer. “Wait for the signal.”

Jamie keeps his eyes on him, ready.

A small nod.

That’s all it takes.

Harry begins to swing the thurible in a slow, practiced rhythm. The smoke deepens, the air growing heavier, more sacred. Jamie steps forward, his movements careful, deliberate. The weight of the cross feels larger than he expected, though he holds it steady.

As he walks down the aisle, he scans the faces in the pews, searching.

For a moment, everything narrows—the sound, the light, the quiet presence of the crowd.

He places the cross in its stand and steps back, moving beside Harry again.

Together, they kneel.

The smoke rises.

And Jamie follows it upward, as if it might carry something of him with it.

 

 

About the Author

 

 J.S. Pavoggi was born in 1957 and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, the sixth of eight children in a devout Catholic family. He attended parochial school, served as an altar boy, and came of age during the turbulence of the Vietnam War era and the cultural upheaval that followed.

After a 40-year career in public service with the United States Postal Service—where he also served as a union representative—Pavoggi experienced a life-altering heart procedure that changed the way he saw the world. What began as an impulse to write a better streaming series evolved into a powerful, fictionalized account of survival and healing.

His debut novel, Boy Altared, is a deeply personal work of historical fiction rooted in memory, silence, and resilience. Pavoggi lives in Arizona with his wife of 38 years. They have three children and four grandchildren.

 

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RABT Book Tours & PR

Blog Tour: The New Life Blueprint

 



A 21st-Century Guide for Success, Health, Wealth, and Happiness in a Complex World


Motivational Self-Help

Date Published: January 14, 2025

Publisher: Forbes Books



2025 Global Book Awards Silver Medalist in Self Help Success

Life is coming at us fast. It’s easier with a guide for life navigation.


The world has changed more in the last few years than in the previous fifty, rendering our traditional blueprints for life, work, and success outdated. Strategies that once promised a clear path to the American Dream, like pursuing a conventional education or climbing the company ladder, no longer guarantee continual progress toward our goals. Many of us find ourselves unprepared and uncertain, struggling to adapt to the accelerating pace of change. In this new era, the questions arise: what are the key drivers of success and sustainability? How can we navigate this complex world effectively?

The New Life Blueprint: A 21st Century Guide to Success, Health, Wealth, and Happiness in a Complex World by best-selling author Dr. Natalia Peart, with Christopher Burge, offers an insightful approach to navigating life more holistically and sustainably in our rapidly changing world.

Traditionally, success was a straightforward formula: get a degree, land a job, work hard, and enjoy the rewards. In The New Life Blueprint, Peart and Burge first examine the historical, contextual, and personal shifts that have made this old blueprint outdated. They make the case compellingly that this blueprint, which currently guides our educational, career, and life choices, was designed for a simpler, more predictable era but no longer applies in our new, more complex era.

They respond to this challenge by reinventing the old blueprint into a modern-era career, mental, financial, and lifestyle blueprint. Their new roadmap provides readers with the instructions and guidance they need to equip and prepare themselves to navigate their professional and personal lives, build resilience in constant uncertainty, and achieve the sustainable success, health, wealth, and happiness they seek.

Drawing on 14 disciplines, including neuroscience, economics, and performance psychology, as well as decades of experience as a psychologist, CEO, leadership and performance consultant, and Wall Street executive, the authors bring a wealth of knowledge to the table.

This book is not just about survival; it’s about flourishing in a world where change is the only constant. The New Life Blueprint not only captures the urgency and necessity for a redefined approach to living in a complex world but also provides a hopeful vision for thriving with confidence and clarity.

 


About the Author


Dr. Natalia is a multi-hyphenate psychologist, entrepreneur, business and career consultant, best-selling author, speaker, and Forbes Contributor.

She is the Founder and CEO of Blueprint Global, a human-centered innovation and design consultancy dedicated to helping people and companies prepare, navigate, grow, and lead sustainably in a constantly changing world.

Dr. Natalia has more than 30 years of experience helping leaders and individuals obtain their professional and personal goals. Throughout her career, she’s worked as a clinical psychologist, a leadership and performance consultant for large national Fortune 1000 companies such as Gallup to small businesses, an executive and personal consultant, a Chief Officer of a foundation, and CEO of a nonprofit organization, and now as an entrepreneur.

Whether she is working at the individual, organizational, or societal level, the common thread throughout her experiences is that she is driven by a desire to solve our big challenges involving how to grow and lead, particularly through disruptive change.

She has served on the Federal Reserve Board, 10th District, was a SXSW 2021 presenter, and has been featured in various media outlets, including Harvard Business Review, New York Times, FOX, Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, Yahoo Finance, Oprah Magazine, Black Enterprise, Glassdoor, Elite Daily, and Thrive Global.

She has also spoken at events ranging from small group workshops to three-thousand-person events. She has earned her B.A. with Honors in Psychology from Brown University, her PhD. in Clinical/Community Psychology from the University of Maryland, and completed her Clinical Internship at Boston Children’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School.


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Wednesday, April 1, 2026

PROMO: Montana Matrimonial News




Historical Fiction

Date Published: 10-07-2025

Publisher: NorthStar Press



Loneliness gnaws and chews like the relentless prairie wind. Dakota homesteader, Digger Dancy, props his feet in the oven and waits for the storm to end. His brother, George, barges into the soddy in a swirl of blowing snow. George announces he will abandon his claim to seek a wife. He can’ t stand the loneliness. Digger slaps a stack of old newspapers on the table and convinces him to place an ad for a correspondence bride in the Montana Matrimonial News. Doctor Gamla, the almost-doctor and midwife, treats George’ s frostbite, and offers a cure for his melancholia. She tells of two sisters living in tar-paper shacks along the Mad Dog River. The brothers cannot imagine how Doctor Gamla’ s cure will change their lives. Nickelbo’ s whole world is wheat. The homesteaders talk about crops, worry about the weather, complain about prices, and dream what they’ ll buy after the harvest. Asa Wainwright busts sod with a grasshopper plow. Ingrid Larson dallies over planting to avoid her sister’ s wedding. Drunken Oscar Borgom gets lost in a storm on the way to the outhouse. Through it all, Doctor Gamla delivers babies, treats ailments, and offers advice. “My cures work if you can stand them."

 

About the Author

 

 Candace Simar likes to imagine how things might have been. She combines her love of history with her Scandinavian heritage in historical novels that examine the early days of Minnesota and North Dakota. “I write historical novels to share painless history lessons about the fascinating and unique history of our region.”

Her historical novels include: Sister Lumberjack, book five in the Abercrombie Trail Series (North Star Press, March 2024) Follow Whiskey Creek (Sweet Honey Press 2023) Escape to Fort Abercrombie (Five Star Cengage 2018) Shelterbelts (North Star Press 2015), Blooming Prairie (North Star Press 2012) Birdie (North Star Press2011) Pomme de Terre (North Star Press 2010), and Abercrombie Trail (North Star Press 2009). Her short story collections: Dear Homefolks (River Place Press 2017) and The Glory of Ordinary Time (Wolfpack Press 2018). Farm Girls (River Place Press 2013) is a book of poetry co-written with her sister, Angela Foster. Candace’s short stories have been published in the anthologies: Spoilt Quilt (Five Star Cengage 2020), Librarians of the West (Five Star Cengage 2021); and Why Cows Need Cowboys (Two Dot Press 2021).

Simar is a Spur Award winner and Spur finalist from the Western Writers of America for her Abercrombie Trail series. Shelterbelts was a finalist in both the Willa Literary Awards in Historical Fiction and the Midwest Book Awards. Escape to Fort Abercrombie holds a Will Rogers Gold Medallion and a Peacemaker Award from Western Fictioneers.

Her short stories and poetry have received awards from the Bob Dylan Creative Writing Contest, Lake Region Review, League of Minnesota Poets, National Federation of State Poetry Societies, Dust and Fire, and the Laura Awards for Short Fiction.

Candace enjoys sharing her research and writing with groups and book clubs across the nation.


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RABT Book Tours & PR

Blog tour: Circus Bim Bom

 

 


A Cold War Adventure


Historical Fiction/Cold War Fiction w/romance subplots

Date Published: 03-01-2026

Publisher: Bim Bom Books



There are no accidents in life, only opportunities wearing different clothes."

When the first privately owned Soviet circus arrived in 1990 America as the Soviet Empire unraveled, its elite performers expected to build cultural bridges through spectacular shows. Instead, this prestigious troupe faced a perilous journey through Cold War America.

Circus director Yuri had to navigate treacherous waters where American mobsters, Soviet agents, and political forces circled like predators. Young aerialist Anton dreamed of becoming a clown against his family's wishes, while forbidden romances and unexpected connections bloomed between Soviet performers and Americans who saw past the ideological divide. As high-stakes conspiracies threatened to tear the circus family apart, they had to choose between the authoritarian chains of home and the uncertain promise of freedom.

As The Ringmaster reminds us, "The best Soviet stories are like vodka—they burn with suffering, intoxicate with conflict, keep you stewing in reflection, and yearning for your heart's desire." This genre-bending tale explores whether human connection can transcend ideology—and whether storytelling can bridge the divides that separate us.

 


Excerpt

The Clown Alcove

Chapter 3 — November 1989, Moscow Circus Museum

Note to host: This excerpt is self-contained. Anton and Josef are teenage circus students on a school field trip. Anton harbors a secret dream of becoming a clown, something his father, a respected aerialist, would consider a disgrace.

Anton lingered in the clown alcove while his classmates moved on.

A cordoned-off table displayed a lifelike head of Oleg Popov, the “Sunny Clown,” under a glass dome with an open window. Anton recognized Popov—his favorite—and felt a sudden urge to touch the uncanny likeness. Sharp and oddly realistic.

He slipped behind the velvet rope, wondering if someone had embalmed Popov’s head.

The head featured his signature skewed checkered cap pinned with a white silk chrysanthemum, a bright yellow wig, and a red nose. He wore a gentle smile, and his eyes were—wait! Anton thought he saw Popov’s eyes blink. It happened so fast, he wasn’t sure. His heartbeat quickened.

Anton figured his imagination was deceiving him—that the clown alcove atmosphere was playing tricks on him. Anton lingered. Popov’s smile felt like an invitation. He remained still, but nothing happened, so he admired the other clown displays. However, Popov’s eyes seemed to follow him. He walked back and forth in front of the bust; sure enough, the eyes appeared to track his movements. He called out to Josef, but the class had already headed to the auditorium.

Popov’s eyes stared straight ahead. Anton leaned over the rope to inspect them; they looked watery. He ducked under the velvet rope and peered under the table skirt. In a blur, someone yanked him under the table, and a hand covered his mouth.

“Shhh,” whispered a painted face, finger to lips. Stunned, Anton complied, and the stranger removed his hand.

Who is this guy? He was crouched under the table, in blue overalls and a striped shirt. Aside from white greasepaint around his eyes and the fact he was hiding under the table, he appeared normal.

“You’re a very clever fellow,” the man remarked.

Anton caught his breath. “Who are you, and why are you inside Popov’s head?”

“Fair questions. My name is Tikhonov Tikosander Shevchenko, but my friends call me Tiko. Come to think of it, even my enemies call me Tiko. But of course, I am a clown.” He held out his hand for a handshake. BUZZZ. The slight shock from the hand prank startled Anton.

“I am so sorry.” Tiko grinned. “I forgot I had that on. Here, take it.” He handed the palm buzzer to Anton.

Tiko settled in with his new friend. “To answer your question, I’m workshopping my new Popov table prop. What better place to try it out than at this clown exhibit? What do you think?”

“Well, it’s kind of creepy,” Anton admitted, unable to suppress a grin. “But I love it.”

Tiko’s painted eyes twinkled. “That is what I was going for.”

Josef returned, looking for his lost friend.

“Hey, Anton. Where’d you go?” he whispered as he walked around the table, assuming Anton was loitering in the alcove. “Hey, Kalinski is asking for you. She sent me to find you. Come on, we’re headed to the animal enclosures. You don’t want to miss the big cats, right?”

Anton was about to scurry out, but Tiko yanked him down, put a finger to his lips, pulled out a white grease paint marker, and applied the paint around Anton’s eyes. Tiko pointed up, and Anton nodded, lifting into Popov’s head. From there, he saw Josef circling the table and peering around the gallery panels.

“Anton, come on. Kalinski’s losing her patience,” Josef said in an urgent whisper.

Anton tracked Josef’s movements through Popov’s eyes, a thrill of mischief surging through him. His heart thudded in his chest. The momentary claustrophobia quickly gave way to excitement. He bit his lip to keep from laughing. So, this is what it must feel like.

Josef circled the table once more, oblivious to Anton’s ruse. “Okay, I’m not getting in trouble; this one is on you,” he said as he started down the hall. His shoulders slumped with a mixture of frustration and resignation—he was tired of covering for Anton but wasn’t ready to abandon his friend, either.

“Yo, Josef, wait!” Anton called out. Josef froze and then spun around.

“Anton, cut it out, man; this is not funny.”

Anton put Josef out of his misery. “Hey, Josef. Look at Popov.”

Josef peered at Popov’s face. “What about it?”

“Look at his eyes.” Anton crossed his eyes, and Josef jumped back, nearly knocking over a display panel.

Grinning from ear to ear, Anton climbed out from under the table, and they both burst into laughter.

As Anton turned toward Tiko, who had just re-entered Popov’s head, he gave a parting wave. Tiko responded with a wink.

Josef and Anton were still giggling when they caught up with their classmates. Anton still had white greasepaint circling his eyes.

Kalinski turned beet red. “Anton and Josef, stop clowning around!” Unaware of her pun.

At that, Anton and Josef collapsed into convulsive laughter. Tears streamed down their cheeks, and mucus ran from their noses. Anton struggled to breathe. They averted their eyes from each other but couldn’t resist. Each glance triggered another uncontrollable burst of laughter and tears. Josef nudged Anton with his elbow, and Anton, still gasping for breath, wiped the sweat from his face, squeezing his eyes shut.

Katyana stood over them, glaring in rebuke. “You two are hopeless.” This only made them laugh harder, and she stormed off in frustration. Beneath her irritation flickered something else—a twinge of envy at their easy camaraderie, their freedom to be foolish without the weight of legacy on their shoulders.

They knew they were in trouble and considered throwing themselves at Kalinski’s mercy, but it didn’t matter if she exiled them to Siberia; they were struggling to breathe.

“Wait outside the animal enclosure,” Kalinski ordered. “We’ll discuss this at school. Anton, I’m having lunch with your mother tomorrow—we’ll have much to talk about.”

Anton’s stomach dropped. What if my father finds out? His father claimed clowns were dreamers, not real performers. But at that moment, Anton felt it in his bones—his future wasn’t in the air, but in the ring, making people laugh. Class dismissed.


About the Author

 

 Cliff Lovette is a father, storyteller, and dog lover living in Sandy Springs, Georgia. For over 40 years, he practiced entertainment law, serving as Senior Vice President at LaFace Records and representing artists including Usher and Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes. His passion for bridging historical divides led him to co-produce a groundbreaking reconciliation event between descendants of Buffalo Soldiers and Lakota Native Americans. In 1990, when Bobby Liberman—road manager for the first privately owned Soviet circus touring America—became his client, Cliff discovered the true story that inspired this debut duology.


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Author's Edition 

books.by/bim-bom-books 

The Author's Edition comes with:

• Signed bookplate

• Digital circus poster

• Charter Bim Bom Book Club Membership

• Exclusive access to "Rabbit Hole" chapters


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Blog Tour: Call in the Dogs

 




Western/Cowboy,  Cherokee, Outlaw

Date Published: 02-26-2026

Publisher: Write the West Press an imprint of Paperback Press, LLC Springfield, Missouri



Levi Kuratowski, better known as “Little Kansas,” only thinks his days of carrying a gun are over. With a trading license approved by the Cherokee Nation he is determined to build a trading post on the banks of Spring Creek. Soon however he must set his hammer aside and take up his colt revolver. Upon receiving word that the outlaw Bill Kirby has escaped custody he prepares to face his old adversary.

Levi’s friend, Cherokee rancher Turon Turtle vows to offer aid and his rifle. Turon’s strong willed sister, Ruth, has a different vow in mind for Levi. Levi soon finds the determined Ruth as challenging as the inevitable showdown that has yet to come.

For the first time since leaving Europe three years earlier his has a sense of home. He finds customers in the neighboring Cherokee and travelers. More importantly he finds friends. Unknown to Levi is the whereabouts of the outlaw Kirby. Can Levi rely on his new friends and community? Will Levi be able to hold on to what he has built and face the man who thinks nothing except for the destruction of Levi and all he holds dear?

 



Excerpt

“Queenie is out in front,” Turon Turtle said, reaching over to put a stick on the fire.

“Stump is close behind,” Ounce Pathkiller grunted.

The two Cherokee had been speaking mostly in English for the benefit of the third man, Levi. Known to most in the area as Little Kansas. A nickname he picked up while cowboying out West where he had met the Cherokee Turon Turtle.

Born and raised in a poor family in Poland, fox hunting was foreign to Levi Kuratowski. Only the rich had hounds. Here he sat with two Cherokee, a hemisphere away from home.

“How can you tell which dog is in the lead?” Levi asked while staring at the night sky.

“Each dog sounds different. Has its own voice,. as people do,” Ounce replied.

“Yeah, Queenie has a sharp tone. She’s the boss. Now, Ounce’s dog Stump has a deeper bark, as if he’s in a well. Also, he sounds as though he’s way behind Queenie,” Turon added while grinning and giving Ounce a sidelong glance.

Ounce spoke in Cherokee, too quick for Levi to understand the words, but he understood the gesture.

“Stump catch that old fox, you’ll see,” Ounce added.

“Better be an old fox if Stump is going to catch it.” Turon pulled a tobacco pouch from a coat pocket and unrolled a small paper between his fingers.

Ounce once again grunted.

“I heard you priced Stump to Ned Foreman for fifty dollars,” Turon said, carefully dumping tobacco on the paper then rolling a cigarette.

“Yeah,” Ounce said while accepting the tobacco pouch and papers from Turon.

Reaching for a burning stick to light his cigarette, Turon asked, “What makes him worth fifty dollars?”

“I traded two twenty-five-dollar fighting roosters for him.” Ounce built his own cigarette.

The smiling Turon reignited his stick and leaned over to offer Ounce a light. “Why don’t you breed Queenie to Stump? Get some pups,” Levi asked.

“I would rather she got snake bit,” Turon said, tossing the stick into the fire.

An owl let out his night call not far away. Levi thought nothing of the bird. The two Cherokee went quiet. Owls were harbingers of death, giving warnings for the Cherokee. Minutes passed before anyone spoke.

“I should probably get back to the wagon and store,” Levi said, standing up to stretch.

Since coming to the Cherokee Nation, the quiet Jewish immigrant Levi had become a small-time celebrity. A celebrity brought on by Turon’s exaggerated stories about their trip from Texas driving Turon’s Hereford bull home. A brief misunderstanding between Levi and four Cheyenne over the ownership of the bull turned into a full-out battle. A haphazard capture of an outlaw who tried stealing Levi’s horse on the Cimarron River became a quick-draw gunfight.

 


About the Author

 


 Born and raised on the Ozark Plateau. Charlie Amos grew up in the footsteps of outlaws, cowboys, and woodsmen. He currently lives in Oklahoma with his wife, children, and dog Banjo. When he is not tending cattle and kids he is reading and writing about the American West. Years of working in agriculture, forestry, trucking, and teaching school has laid the foundation of telling our American story through relatable characters. Writing westerns for westerners, and everyone else.


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Tuesday, March 31, 2026

PROMO: Boy Altared




Historical Fiction

Date Published: April 1, 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing



Amid the vibrant landscape of San Francisco in the late 1960s, eleven-year-old Jamie steps into the confines of a dark confessional booth. With promises of confidentiality, Father Nelson uncovers a chilling secret buried deep within the young boy’s subconscious.

Intrigued by his grave past, Father Nelson brings him into the church as an altar boy under the mentorship of Harry, an older acolyte. The priest quickly gains control over Jamie, using the boy’s complicated history and his own undisputed authority to initiate a dark turn in their relationship. Jamie falls deeper into the world of religion, and his blooming friendship with Harry becomes a needed distraction from the somber realities of the church.

Shaped by major cultural events, from the Manson murders to the moon landing, to Woodstock and the Civil Rights Movement, Jamie’s life unfolds as he navigates religion, power, and loss of innocence. A haunting coming of age story, Boy Altared explores a seismic shift into adulthood during one of the most turbulent decades in history.

 

About the Author

 

 J.S. Pavoggi was born in 1957 and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, the sixth of eight children in a devout Catholic family. He attended parochial school, served as an altar boy, and came of age during the turbulence of the Vietnam War era and the cultural upheaval that followed.

After a 40-year career in public service with the United States Postal Service—where he also served as a union representative—Pavoggi experienced a life-altering heart procedure that changed the way he saw the world. What began as an impulse to write a better streaming series evolved into a powerful, fictionalized account of survival and healing.

His debut novel, Boy Altared, is a deeply personal work of historical fiction rooted in memory, silence, and resilience. Pavoggi lives in Arizona with his wife of 38 years. They have three children and four grandchildren.

 

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PROMO: The Snob




Dark Romance, Age Gap

Date Published: April 3, 2026



Carley Mathers isn’t just the “party girl” daughter of a congressman. She’s more. But these days, in a world of fake friends, she’s determined to keep only true ones close. Because she puts them at arm’s length, her classmates at college refer to her as “The Snob.” But she comes from wealth and means -- she shouldn’t be able to mix with her bodyguard, right?

Dacre Jennings has been given the job of protecting Carley while she’s off at college. The same classmates who make light of her silence also make fun of him, too. He doesn’t care that they think she lives with the old man. He’d rather she lived with him than alone. He sees the real woman, and he’s been in love with her for as long as he’s worked for the family.

With threats on her life, Dacre refuses to let Carley be used or abused. He’ll put his life on the line for her, as long as he knows he’s got her heart as well.




EXCERPT

Carley Mathers closed her notebook and put her pen back in the front pocket of her backpack. She wasn’t a fan of taking notes, but the only way she’d keep the dates for all the paintings straight was to write them down.

“Going home to Grandpa?” Selena, one of the girls Carley thought she might become friends with, asked. “Hang around people your own age. Do some gambling. Party or something else that’s normal?”

“Would it kill you to go to the frat party?” Missy snapped. “You like to drink. Guys like you. Might get us some action and we could win some money, since you’ve got tons. You can spare some. Any of that ring a bell?”

Carley rolled her eyes and zipped her backpack. She’d had enough of those vices. It was time to grow up and settle down -- or at least take her education seriously. Growing up the daughter of a politician and influencer was bad enough, but she’d exploited her position for years.

She grabbed her backpack and turned on her heel, ignoring the women. She hadn’t come to the University of Nevada to be sucked into a gambling situation. She’d wanted to further her education.

“God, she’s such a fucking snob,” Missy said. “Won’t talk to anyone.”

“That old man is her boyfriend,” Selena said. “Probably won’t let her go out. Has to keep her on a leash.”

If they only knew… Carley left the lecture hall and met Dacre in the lobby. “Hiya, Grandpa.”

“Grandpa?” Dacre left his post by the doorway and fell in step with her. “That’s a new one.”

“Not all that new.”

“Who said it?”

She stopped near the entrance doors to the art building and nodded over her shoulder. “The two brunettes over there. They wanted me to go to a frat party and make a damn fool of myself. I’ve had it with those days.”

He held the door for her as she stepped into the early October sunshine. “It’s warmer than I thought it would be.”

“I don’t mind. I like the warmth.” She elbowed him as they walked together. “They said I’m a snob.”

“You are.”

She jabbed him again. “Take that back.”

“Sorry, but no.” He kept walking. “You don’t talk to anyone, don’t mix with your peers, and keep to yourself.”

“That doesn’t make me a snob.”

“No,” he said. “But you come to class wearing expensive stuff and not talking much. It allows people to make up their own stories about you. They know what you’ve done and expect you’ll keep doing it.”

She sighed. She’d been such a bad girl in her younger days. Younger days… who was she kidding? She was only nineteen. But in her short years, she’d drunk most everyone under the table. She’d partied more than anyone her age should’ve been doing and tried too many things that should’ve been forbidden for someone underage. Being the child of wealth meant no one kept her in line -- certainly not her parents. As far as she was concerned, her parents used her bad behavior to further their own causes.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to touch a nerve.”

“It’s okay.” She shrugged. “It’s not like I can hide my past. I can’t hide my name, either. Everyone thinks they know who I am, but no one takes the time to get to know the real me.”

“You don’t exactly open yourself up to it.” He joined her at the truck. “You’re a wonderful person and cute as a button, but no one sees it. All they see is you keeping tight-lipped and away from everyone.”

“Wouldn’t you?” She fell onto the passenger seat. She waited for him to do a quick search of the vehicle before he joined her in the cab. “All clear?”

“Clear.” He closed the driver’s side door. “I don’t blame you for being guarded. I told you, it’s perfectly fine. You’ve had a lot of attention, and I get why you don’t want it.”

She clicked her belt into place. “But?”

“But you’re not going to escape it. Unless you change your name or completely change your face, you’re going to have to put up with the attention.” He put the truck into gear. “The girls said you’re a snob?”

“And wanted me to go to a party to act the fool and get them guys.” She arranged her backpack between her feet, then withdrew her phone. The device buzzed, drawing her attention. “Sorry. I won’t be your circus animal.”

“I’d like to think that’s not the case, but I’m sure it is.” He drove across the student lot. “It doesn’t help that I’m following you around and trying to keep you safe. They see me around and think I’m some kind of old pervert.”

“My grandfather.” She swiped through the screens to her texts. “You don’t look that old.”

“Grandfather?” he asked. “I’m only twenty years older than you. Yes, I could be your father, but grandfather? I’m hurt.”

“You don’t look thirty-nine.”

“Forty, but who’s counting?”

“When did you turn forty?” She put her phone down and stared at him. “Why didn’t I know when you had your birthday?” She’d been oblivious for years, but this was inexcusable.

“Two months ago.” He shrugged and flexed his hands on the wheel. “It’s okay. I try not to remember it.”

“That’s not right. We should’ve had a party.”

“You were moving into school. I had better things to do and you didn’t need to be concerned with me.” He kept driving through campus to the condominiums.

“I don’t care. I would’ve liked to have known so we could’ve had a party, even if it was just you and me.” She would’ve done something nice for him and even bought a present.

“Your father told me to keep it quiet.”

“He’s a jackass.” She wasn’t the biggest fan of her famous father. “I hate that he said that.”

“It’s okay.”

“Stop saying that.” She picked her phone up again. “This stupid thing won’t stop buzzing. I don’t have anything due or reminders set.” She’d been careful to note when she had to turn in projects and if she had tests so she didn’t blow her grade point average. She refused to keep riding her parents’ coattails.

“What’s up?” He parked in the garage of the condo they shared. “Another test?”

“Nope.” She scrolled through the message, then swiped to her email where she read the rest of the information. “Fucking hell.”

“Watch your mouth.” He put the garage door down and took the key from the ignition. “What’s wrong?”

She sighed and scrolled through the mandate again. “It would appear my father is being considered for a role in the president’s cabinet and he -- my father -- has decided to have a party. He’s dictating I show up at said party and that I wear something slinky, he says, so I can attract a husband. The president’s son will be there, as well as the son of a diplomat and some dipshit who has an artificial intelligence startup. Why is he throwing me at these men? What if I don’t like them?”

“You don’t.”

“Duh.” She turned her phone over on her lap. “He’s sending the private jet to come get me.”

“Don’t you have a test on Monday?”

“I do. Art history.” She folded her hands on her phone. “I don’t want to go, but I can’t refuse him.”

“I know.” He opened the driver’s side door. “But it would’ve been nice if he’d have told me.” He rounded the hood to her side of the truck.

“You didn’t know?”

“Nope.” He slid his phone from his back pocket. “Not a word.”

“You’re coming with me.” She insisted on it. “I’m not going if you don’t.”

“I’m not leaving you to those wolves.” He opened her door for her. “Sweets, I’m stuck to you like glue.”

“You’re good glue.” She grasped his hand and squeezed his fingers. She’d had a crush on him for years but kept that to herself. He didn’t see her as a desirable woman. She was “cute as a button.” What young woman wanted to hear that? It was a kiss of death. Like telling her she was one of the guys. She allowed him to help her from the truck, then stumbled forward into his arms.

“Hi.” He crooked his brow. “You okay?”

She’d always felt a tingle when he touched her. Now, that tingle had turned into full electrical jolts. Her pussy throbbed and she longed to kiss him. He didn’t look forty. Hell, he barely looked thirty. What he did look like was sexy enough that she wanted to wrap herself around him. He was just her type -- older, tall, slightly graying at the temples, a weathered look around his eyes and just the right amount of stubble on his cheeks and chin to abrade her skin. Plus, he had killer blue eyes.

“Carley?” He tipped his head. He’d started wearing a baseball cap and zipped hoodie to blend in more with the college students. “You’re staring at me.”

“What’s not to stare at?” She stayed in his arms and sighed. “You’re…” She almost said dreamy, but that wasn’t right. He was dreamy, but he was more than that. With him, she felt safe. Respected. Heard.

“Not me,” he said. “I’m not supposed to be touching you.”

“Do you want to?” She stood and righted herself, trying to look less flustered. “Sorry. I should behave.” She grabbed her backpack before hurrying into the condo. She’d made a fool of herself and hated that she’d allowed herself to be vulnerable, even if only for a second.

“Carley.” He hurried after her. “Wait.”

 


About the Author

Megan Slayer, aka Wendi Zwaduk, is a multi-published, award-winning author of more than one-hundred short stories and novels. She’s been writing since 2008 and published since 2009. Her stories range from the contemporary and paranormal to LGBTQ and white hot themes. No matter what the length, her works are always hot, but with a lot of heart. She enjoys giving her characters a second chance at love, no matter what the form. She’s been nominated at the LRC for Best Author, Best Contemporary, Best Ménage, Best BDSM and Best Anthology. Her books have made it to the bestseller lists on various e-tailer sites.

When she’s not writing, Megan spends time with her husband and son as well as three dogs and three cats. She enjoys art, music and racing, but football is her sport of choice. She’s an active member of the Friends of the Keystone-LaGrange Public library.


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Blog Tour: In Her Own Backyard

 



Thriller

Date Published: March 26, 2026

Publisher: Acorn Publishing



Every street holds a secret . . .

 

New to the neighborhood and reeling from the traumatic birth of her second child, Marlowe Moore is barely holding it together. Battling postpartum depression and anxiety, she’s desperate for stability.

But when she learns that a woman who once lived in her family’s new home vanished without a trace, Marlowe becomes obsessed. As strange things happen and neighborly smiles feel like veiled threats, Marlowe can’t shake the feeling that someone is hiding something.

She spirals further into paranoia, fixated on the abandoned case and determined to seek justice. But how can a woman who feels lost find a missing person?

Juggling the demands of her beloved family and her harrowing mental illness, Marlowe doesn’t realize she is caught in a cat-and-mouse game that could cost her everything … including her life.

 


Excerpt

Prologue

I don’t think it through. I run out the door, my body instinctively kicking into survival mode and compelling me to move. Fast. Away. Now.

Outside, the cold night air hits my face and stings furiously. I peel off my shirt, bloody from a busted nose, but I never stop running. Everything escalated so quickly. Unsure of how it all happened, I don’t trust anything except my bare feet beating against the asphalt to the rhythm of the blood pounding in my ears.

A sharp pain shoots through my ankle. I don’t stop until I make it to a public place: the loop around Virginia Lake. At this hour, I am alone. Still, I stay out of the streetlamp’s glow. Glancing around in case he followed me, I limp over to the shore, splash water on my bloodied face, then heave the contents of my stomach into the cattails whispering wordless warnings to me. Straightening, I reach into my pocket to discover something disastrous. In the mayhem, I left my phone behind.

I can’t call for help . . . but I’m also unreachable. Maybe that’s a good thing? Maybe no one knows where I am. I sink back down, trying to think straight. The throbbing in my head drowns out reason. I can’t go anywhere, not like this. I’ll wait it out here for a while, then make my way back home. He has to leave at some point.

With no watch or phone, my only clues to the passage of time are the amber moon rising in the cloudy sky and my legs cramping in this crouched position. Surely, he’s cooled off by now, gone to his place. I hobble home hugging the shadows, shivering from low blood sugar and wondering who lives within the darkened windows looking down on me.

Should I knock, ask to call the police from someone’s phone? Would you, neighbor with the red door, risk the late hour and open to a woman you barely know? If you did, would you look suspiciously at my disarray, or would you lean in for a closer look at the bruises forming on my body? Would you ask, “How can I help?” Or would you convince yourself you shouldn’t get involved, that your eyes are probably playing tricks on you in the darkness?

My feet shuffle forward, leaving the impulse behind. At the sight of my garden gate, exhaustion descends heavily over my whole body. All I want is to crash into bed. I sleepwalk through the entrance, down the path, and reach for my door. Still ajar…?

In one swift motion, someone knocks me backwards off my feet. I land with a sickening thud. My vision blurs to blackness. And now, like the last lingering notes of a song your ears strain to hear, I am gone.

 


About the Author

 


 Ashley Hanna-Morgan is a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) certified in perinatal mental health (PMH-C). In addition to her work as a psychotherapist, she writes about mental health to advocate for change and inspire hope. In 2016, she wrote The Afterglow, a mindfulness and cognitive behavioral therapy curriculum that supports parents with postpartum depression and anxiety. In 2017, she published I Gave Birth to My Heart, a collection of poems about the secret anguishes and innumerable joys of reinventing oneself after postpartum depression.

When she isn’t counseling clients or volunteering with Postpartum Support International, Ashley loves to experiment in the kitchen and spend as much time outside as possible in San Diego, where she resides with her family. In Her Own Backyard is her first novel.


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Monday, March 30, 2026

PROMO: Forest Legend

 




The Tale of Ol' Split Toe


YOUNG ADULT FICTION

Science & Nature/Environment Science Fiction/Time Travel Literature & Fiction/Action & Adventure

Date Published: 03-31-2026

Publisher: Mission Point Press



Mother Nature struggles to maintain equilibrium in a changing world while fire, disease, logging, human displacement, and war repeatedly destroy forests of centuries-old trees. Split Toe, a deer chosen at birth for a unique education, travels through time to understand the interconnected workings of a Michigan forest. He meets humans along the way: Ice Age hunters who trap and kill a mastodon; Mukwoh, a young Ojibwe hunter who stalks Split Toe through swamp and forest; loggers clearcutting Michigan’s white pines; Edra, a woman advocating for the trees; Angus and Grace, pioneers who become a first generation of family farmers; scientists from the future studying the impact of nuclear radiation.

Split Toe witnesses two hundred years of conflict building between modern humans -- who fight to control the natural world -- and Mother Nature, who repeatedly reaches for balance. He wonders whether human ways will ultimately overpower Mother Nature, until he meets a boy who changes everything.


About the Author

 

 Dan Ellens is an outdoor enthusiast who is passionate about connecting people with nature. He spends nearly half of each year in an isolated, electricity-free treehouse on Winterfield Pines Nature Sanctuary with woodstove heat, handpump water, and oil lamp lighting.

Dan has written four nonfiction books intended to inspire adventure, promote self-sufficient lifestyles, and connect people with nature.

 

While not in the wilds, Dan and his wife live in the small community of Salem, Michigan.


Contact Links

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Goodreads

Instagram

LinkedIn: Daniel S. Ellens


Purchase Links

https://mybook.to/ForestLegend

Amazon Paperback

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