Spotlight: The Sound of Love by Kyle Shoop


The Sound of Love 
Senses of Love Book 1 
by Kyle Shoop 
Genre: Contemporary Romance 


"Words that can't be spoken can still be sung." 

Experience the compelling, heart warming romance of Charlotte and John as they express thru music what can't be said in words. 

Charlotte and John grew up as young orphans in the secluded outskirts of a rural town. Each day, they’d sneak out to the nearby forest to escape the cold grasp of the orphanage’s tyrant-ruler. However, the safety that came from their friendship was suddenly ripped apart when they got caught. 

Years later, Charlotte conquered the marketing world in downtown Portland. Having gained normalcy in her life since her days in the orphanage, Charlotte never expected her world to be turned upside down by John abruptly being thrust back into her life. 

But the years since the orphanage had not at all been kind to John, leaving him unable to open up to Charlotte about the details. Can John’s love for songwriting be the key to finally opening up? 

Would the reunited friends discover that John's rekindled love for music also rekindle their long-awaited, and much desired, love? 

"I adored every second of this sweet, heartwarming story." - Amazon Reviewer 

This book includes a free music soundtrack that can be listened to while reading along the lyrics contained in the story. The songs were written and recorded by the author, providing a unique way to experience this compelling romance novel. 






Kyle Shoop is a multi-genre author of compelling stories. His new "Senses of Love" series is a romance series that provides rewarding and inspirational stories.

Kyle is also the author of the Acea Bishop Trilogy, which is an action-packed fantasy series. All books in that series are now available, with Acea and the Animal Kingdom being the first book.

At a young age, Kyle was recognized for his storytelling by being awarded the first-place Gold Key award for fiction writing in Washington State. After spending several years volunteering in his wife's elementary classrooms, he was inspired to write the Acea Bishop Trilogy. He is now motivated to finish his the new romance series. In addition to writing novels, Kyle is also a practicing attorney. 

Kyle and is wife and two children are currently living in Utah.





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Spotlight: The Aftermath of Drifting Away by Audrey Beaudoin

The Aftermath of Drifting Away
Audrey Beaudoin
(Fate, #1)
Publication date: July 15th 2020
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance

We survived the plane crash.

We survived days on a raft in the middle of the ocean. Right when all hope to get rescued crumbled, we shared a kiss that left me heartbroken―my first and last kiss.

Or so I thought. Because we didn’t die.

My plan is to never see Chris Ross again. To keep hanging out with his sister without crossing his path. Getting my life back together and working on my goals are the only things that matter. I have plans, and they don’t include love.

But then he shows up at my workplace, asking for my friendship. When I learn something that changes everything, I’m determined to stay away and not let myself fall for him.

Too bad he’s persistent. Too bad I can’t stop thinking about the damn kiss. Too bad it’s nice having him around and being his friend.

If things were to change, they could get really complicated…

The Aftermath of Drifting Away is a sweet contemporary forbidden romance. It is the first book in the Fate series that can be read as a stand-alone.

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EXCERPT:

“It hurt when I learned you didn’t want to see me at all,” he confesses, and my lips part open. Chris looks up to the sky, squinting. “I thought I’d done something wrong, or…”

He doesn’t finish his sentence. I swallow, ready to ease his doubts. “You didn’t.”

“Really?” As soon as his eyes bore into mine, I know he’s thinking about the kiss.

The kiss I’m trying to forget, that makes me feel both embarrassed and hot.

We already talked about it once, and there’s no way I’m bringing it up again. It’s in the past.

“I want you in my life.”

I nearly choke on my saliva. Chris watches me closely, his calm expression contrasting with the shock on my face. I wasn’t expecting that much sincerity or that sentence alone to come out of his mouth.

That sounds permanent, and I’m not used to that.

I tuck a lock of hair behind my ear, clearing my throat. “As a friend?”

He exhales through his nose. “Yeah. As a friend.”

This is it, then. I smile faintly. “Then we need to get to know―”

I gasp when Chris opens the bag, showing me what’s inside. Sushi. My eyes fly back up to his amused ones. “This is how you get my friendship.”

He chuckles and hands me a pair of chopsticks. I eye hungrily the food, licking my lips. I’m about to take my first bite when I think about something.

“Wait. Did Kate tell you this is my favorite food?”

“She didn’t,” he replies right away, and I believe him. There’s something about Chris that makes you trust him. He looks and sounds genuine. “I think you mentioned it once…you know.”

I frown. “Did I?” What else did I say on the raft that I can’t remember? I shake my head, sparing him a curious glance. “You pay attention.”

Chewing, he blinks in my direction. “What?”

I grin and eat my first roll.

Author Bio:

Audrey Beaudoin is a YA and NA contemporary romance author. Being a French native speaker didn't stop her from writing her first English story in 2017. She loves writing sweet romance novels, sometimes with a touch of suspense and action.

She'll read anything from young adult to new adult. Contemporary romance, romantic suspense, sci-fi, and thriller books are her favorites!

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Spotlight: Empire High Untouchables by Ivy Smoak

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The Untouchables. That’s what everyone calls them. At least, it’s my best friend’s nickname for them. And since she’s the only one that talks to me at my new school, I’ll take her word for it.

The nickname probably comes from the fact that they’re exorbitantly wealthy. Old wealth. The kind that isn’t flaunted around. But you can tell by the way they carry themselves. Or maybe the name just refers to the fact that they’re so beautiful it’s almost hard to look at them.

No matter the reason for their nickname, it’s an ironic one. Because I’ve only been going to this school for a week and I already want to touch.

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About the Author

Ivy Smoak is the international bestselling author of The Hunted series.

When she's not writing, you can find her binge watching too many TV shows, taking long walks, playing outside, and generally refusing to act like an adult.

She lives with her husband in Delaware.

Connect:

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

Facebook Group:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/Smoaksters/

Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/ivysmoakauthor/

Twitter:  https://twitter.com/IvySmoakAuthor

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/IvySmoak

Bookbub:  https://www.bookbub.com/authors/ivy-smoak

Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Ivy-Smoak/e/B00TUORWMQ

Spotlight: The Do-Over by Jennifer Honeybourn

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Publication date: July 14th 2020
Genres: Contemporary, Romance, Young Adult

In The Do-Over, a teenage girl gets the chance to redo her past in this smart and charming YA novel by the author of When Life Gives You Demons, Jennifer Honeybourn.

Emelia has always wanted to fit in with the A crowd. So, when Ben, the hottest guy in school, asks her out, she chooses him over Alistair, her best friend—even after he confesses his feelings to her.

Six months later, Emilia wonders how her life would have been different if she’d chosen Alistair instead. Haunted by her mistake, she finds a magical solution that promises to rectify the past. As a result, everything in her life is different.

Different, but not better.

What happens if her second chance is her only chance to make things right?

Excerpt

Alistair doesn’t say anything for a long moment. It’s so quiet that I can hear the snow falling. 

He clears his throat. “I wanted to know if you want to go to winter formal,” he says. “With me.” 

I gape at him. A school dance is the last place that Alistair would ever voluntarily be seen, but he’s asking me to go with him anyway. As his date. It’s so un-Alistair-like that I’m momentarily thrown. 

My throat feels thick as I tuck my hands inside my jacket pockets. “Ben already asked me.” 

Alistair winces. He glances away from me. “So, what? He’s your boyfriend now?” 

I shrug. I have nothing to feel bad about. I should be happy—I was happy, until he showed up outside my window—but instead I feel hollow. I’m shaking, but I don’t think it has anything to do with the cold. 

He gives me one of his lopsided smiles and my heart aches. This is the worst. “Okay, well. No big deal,” he says. “Just thought I’d ask. Uh, I should probably get going. Before we both freeze to death.” 

I nod. “Okay. Talk to you tomorrow?” 

“Yeah, sounds good.” My chest tightens as I head back toward my house. I just want to get inside and crawl back into my bed, and hopefully the next time I see Alistair, we can pretend this conversation 

never happened. We can go back to ignoring these feelings we have for each other, and just stay friends. 

I’m almost at my door when I hear him hurrying to catch up with me, his high-top Converse crunching through the snow. 

“Actually, Em,” he says as I turn back around. “There’s something I need to tell you.” He’s standing at the bottom of the stairs, looking up at me, his eyes bright. “And I need to do it now before I completely lose my nerve. So just listen, okay?” 

I’m not sure that I want know what he’s about to say. In fact, I’m pretty sure that I don’t want to know—he’s going to ruin everything—but he’s already walking up the steps. He stops in front of me. 

“If you’re a bird, I’m a bird,” he says. 

I blink. Huh? 

“I could be fun, if you want,” Alistair continues. The tips of his ears are red. “Pensive . . . smart . . . superstitious, brave. I can be light on my feet. I could be whatever you want. You just tell me what you want and I’ll be that for you.” 

Wait. Is he quoting from The Notebook? 

My stomach flips. I think he is. Marisol and I have made him watch that movie a million times. He always pretends to hate it. 

Alistair sighs and rubs the back of his neck. “Look, what I’m trying to say is that I—” 

“I know what you’re trying to say,” I interrupt. I just can’t believe he’s saying it. I can’t believe that he’s doing this now. The depth of feeling in his eyes scares me and I don’t know how to handle it. I’m not ready for this. I’m not ready for him. He reaches for my arm but I step away. 

We’ve been friends forever. I don’t want to ruin what we have. Besides, I can’t just turn off my feelings for Ben. And, more importantly, I don’t want to. 

Alistair exhales and tips his head back to look at the sky. The silence between us stretches into awkwardness. “I don’t get it,” he says finally. “Why him?” 

I shake my head. I don’t know what to say. The truth is kind of embarrassing to admit, and it won’t make anything between us easier: Ben is good-looking, the most popular guy in school, and he likes me. Out of all the girls in our school, he noticed me. Is it so wrong to want to be popular, to spend weekends doing something other than playing board games? To want a different life from the one I have? 

But Alistair wouldn’t understand—being popular isn’t something he aspires to—so I just say, “Why not him?” 

He scowls. “I can think of a few million reasons.” 

“Come on. You don’t even know him.” 

“And I don’t want to,” he says. “Em, seriously, he’s a jerk. How do you not see that?” 

“People can change.” 

He shakes his head sadly. “Yeah, I guess they can.” Then he turns and walks away, leaving me alone on the porch, my eyes burning with tears as I watch him disappear down the street.

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About the Author

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Jennifer Honeybourn works in corporate communications in Vancouver, British Columbia. She’s a fan of British accents, Broadway musicals, and epic, happily-ever-after love stories. If she could have dinner with anyone, dead or alive, she’d have high tea with Walt Disney, JK Rowling, and her nana. She lives with her husband, daughter and cat in a house filled with books. Wesley James Ruined My Life is her first novel.

Connect:

https://www.jenniferhoneybourn.com/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15215579.Jennifer_Honeybourn

https://www.facebook.com/jenniferhoneybourn/

https://twitter.com/Honeybourn

https://www.instagram.com/jennifer_honeybourn/

Spotlight: The Bridesmaid by Vic P. Victory

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Genre: Adult Romance/Comedy

Release Date: April 2020

Summary:

May I introduce Emma to you? Emma, early thirties, dependable magnet for mishaps, “screw ups”, and small to medium catastrophes, trusting victim of womanizers, and a newly minted frustrated single. Nachos with cheese sauce, frozen chocolate tarts, family packs of vanilla ice cream, a little too much red wine, and a gigantic serving of self-pity are helping her drown her misery.When her friend Olga choses Emma to be her bridesmaid amidst her own personal crisis, she would rather burst into flames. After an initial period of stagnation, she begins to accept the task thrust upon her, and fully dedicates herself to project “Wedding”.If only it wasn't for the bride, who slowly mutates into a self-righteous, megalomaniac, obsessed with perfection and allergic to any well-meant criticism. In other words, a bridezilla. Despite Olga’s unrealistic expectations and unabashed fits of rage, Emma resists the thought of a jumbo-sized Kentucky fried chicken bucket, straightens her 3-buttons-blouse, pulls herself up, has another sip of red wine, and charges into the fight to save a wedding and a friendship.

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Spotlight: How the Deer Moon Hungers by Susan Wingate

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For those who enjoy reading books like Where the Crawdads Sing and My Sister's Keeper

MACKENZIE FRASER witnesses a drunk driver mow down her seven-year-old sister and her mother blames her. Then she ends up in juvie on a trumped-up drug charge. Now she’s in the fight of her life…on the inside! And she’s losing. 

HOW THE DEER MOON HUNGERS is a coming of age story about loss, grief, and the power of love.

Excerpt

PART ONE 

the beginning 

“a flower knows, when its butterfly will return, and if the moon walks out, the sky will 

understand; but now it hurts, to watch you 

leave so soon, when I don't know, if you will ever come back.” ―Sanober Khan

The Day Before 

I, one Miss MacKenzie Becca Fraser, was never one for saying fuck much. But as with life, things change. 

The year before, Dad removed Tessa’s training wheels. The bike had grown up, was halfway between a tricycle and a teenager’s bike. Her eyes glowed when the trainers came off. Her smile? Buoyant. My bike was what Tessa called a big girl bike—a beach cruiser in Tiffany box blue. Mine didn’t have ribbons shooting out of the handles. Can you imagine me going to school with ribbons out of the handles? My peeps would never let me live it down. 

The evening before what people called the worst thing that’s happened on the island since Becca Winthrop went and flopped over dead of heart failure at the liquor store, we set off on a night ride—Tessa and me. We left Mom at home stirring up dust with her favorite electric broom. Tuesday was a lazy fall night, one with the sun and moon in competition for the evening sky; with the sun being selfish for time, trying to hang on to day even though it knew it should just stop shining, give up, and go away. We’d stuck playing cards in the spokes of our tires to add to clicking crickets, tree frogs chirping, a not-so-distant fox hacking out a cough to alert its scattered pack of food found—a doomed rabbit or kitty kibbles left out on someone’s porch. Up the hill, deep in the woods, an owl’s Psalm echoed back from its mate as if they were holding invisible hands across the horizon, not wanting to let go. Their song played while we rode.  

We’d split the deck of cards, each one clipping twenty-six onto our tire spokes to deter animals from darting out into the lane ahead. Because that was all we needed—to crash into a raccoon crossing the street. Not much good for the coon either. But the road was deserted, and I kept Tessa in front, keeping my eye out for her. 

Tessa rode her bike fast like she was angling to lasso the moon, which sat high at the end of the road over Old Man Johnson’s cattle farm. The big, yellow ball lolled around atop a silhouette of gossamer evergreens framing a large swatch of grazing land. 

Wind fluttered that silky sable ponytail of hers as we came off the downhill side of False Bay Drive where the road at the end of summer stripes a path of thirsty grass along the strait, where cows graze in a pasture trimmed by a stand of golden poplars, crooked and bending toward the north sky away from steady winds coming off the water. Most people think that on our island in the Pacific Northwest, we live in slickers and galoshes year-round. But that’s the secret we have. Seattle gives our island a bad reputation, makes us soggy when we’re not. We live in what meteorologists call a banana belt or a rain shadow, so our island lacks the lush, drippy rainforests often found in other parts of the Pacific Northwest.  

Each downstroke of my pedals matched rhythm with the plastic ribbons whipping off Tessa’s handlebars, whizzing like a thousand bees around her hands. When she skidded to a halt in front of me, I yanked left, my wheels slipping as I swerved to miss her, no doubt balding a spot on the tire’s rubber. 

“What’s wrong with you?” I demanded, anger flashing hot in my cheeks and pooling into my chest. 

Tessa didn’t seem to hear me. She was gaping up at the sky with that moon gaping back at her.  

“What?” I repeated, but this time we were both fixed on the dang moon. 

“Do you see it, Mac? The deer?” Tess was in the habit of starting, finishing, and rereading Thurber’s The White Deer for, like, the millionth time—a read way above her grade. In fact, she often fell asleep with the stupid book open-faced on her chest. Then the next morning she’d stick a crow feather in the book to mark her place and set it on her nightstand, ready for her evening read.  

“There’s no deer in the moon, dork, but there might be a man if you look hard enough. You need to read real stuff. You’re getting weird.” 

“See its horns?” 

“Antlers.” I told her. “A hungry moon like that likes to eat seven-year-olds for dinner.” “Nuh-uh,” Tessa answered. 

I rolled my bike backward, parallel to hers, close enough to sneak my hand around the back of her head and yank her ponytail. 

 “Don’t,” Tessa yelped. 

I enjoyed hearing her whiny kid voice. Mom called it plaintive. But Mom liked to make things sound more sophisticated. Her beaten-up chest of drawers was a chiffonier. The mossy stone patio, a pergola. Mom wanted more out of life, and I suspected she harbored a few regrets. “Our island didn’t hold a candle to New York City,” she’d complained one night. “Not even to Seattle. At least Seattle has an international flair,” she’d said.  

Mom could have been a model if she’d pursued it, but she’d fallen in love, had kids. The what-happenedto-my-life syndrome seemed to have snagged her in a net she couldn’t get out of. She often talked about things she would do after Tess and I were out of school, when the house and her life were her own again. A longing filling her words, just enough for me to sense an underpinning of resentment. Her gaze would shift to the window, outside, away and away, but not for long; and she would chuckle. Then, she’d sit upright and say, “Oh, we wish on stars and mushroom caps for moon dust and fairies.” I don’t know where she got that phrase, but Mom always trotted it out when she got wistful. Maybe it came from Gramma Kiki. Who knows? It really doesn’t matter, but the oddity of a phrase like that will stick with you.  

And although our island boasted an international school—Spring Street School—our town was mostly country, with nothing international about it. We didn’t even have a stoplight. Just stop signs and, of late, one abused turnabout.  

When I glanced sideways at Tessa, she was straddling her bike as she stared up at the moon. I noted a certain otherness in her expression, as if we weren’t alone, as if the ghost of that deer she’d spotted in the moon had plopped onto her shoulders and was weighing her down. Her eyes seemed dark with worry and as deep as a pair of bottomless wells, shimmering with unshed tears. I think about that worry sometimes. It haunts me still. 

“Come on,” I said. “We’d better get home. Mom’s already in a snit.” 

“I wonder what the deer eats, Mac. Do you think it’s hungry?” 

“One thing it doesn’t eat, Tess, is cheese!” I said, laughing, but Tessa didn’t get it. She didn’t know then, or ever, about the man in the moon or about the cheese the moon was allegedly made of.  

I used to like the word allegedly. I’d learned it as a vocabulary word at the start of my junior year, and I got it right on a pop quiz in homeroom spelling. The teacher even had me write my sentence on the board: Gemma allegedly hid the pencil from me, but there was no evidence to prove that for sure. The sentences I would write with this word now could not be more different: I was allegedly taking care of Tessa when we went to the park the day after looking at the deer moon. And I was allegedly not watching when the car hit her.  Allegedly became an important word for me after Tessa died. It’s weird to recall how much I liked the word in my junior year but hated it afterward when I heard the cop use it. 

Allegedly,” he’d said, “the younger one was in the older sister’s care.” And then, as though no one understood, “The older one was supposed to be watching the younger one.” He said one as if we were buttons on a conveyor belt at some stupid button factory. The jerk. 

After Tess died, I started counting the days of the moon as it sketched out a path in the sky from crescent to half to gibbous to crescent again. I called it moon spying, and every month when the moon was ripe, I used to rush outside to search that big ol’ cheese wheel. Maybe I’d spy Tessa riding on the back of the deer ghost, but mostly I just hoped she might see me searching the moon for a glimpse of her.

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About the Author

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Susan Wingate is a #1 Amazon bestselling award-winning author of over fifteen novels. Susan writes across fiction and nonfiction genres and often sets her stories in the Pacific Northwest where she is the president of a local authors association. She writes full-time and lives in Washington State with her husband, Bob.

Connect:

Website: www.susanwingate.com 

Blog: www.susanwingate.com/blog 

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanwingate

Facebook: www.facebook.com/authorsusanwingate