Spotlight: After Anne: A Novel of Lucy Maud Montgomery's Life by Logan Steiner

As a young woman, Maud had dreams bigger than the whole of Prince Edward Island. Her exuberant spirit had always drawn frowns from her grandmother and their neighbors, but she knew she was meant to create, to capture and share the way she saw the world. And the young girl in Maud’s mind became more and more persistent: Here is my story, she said. Here is how my name should be spelled—Anne with an “e.”But the day Maud writes the first lines of Anne of Green Gables, she gets a visit from the handsome new minister in town, and soon faces a decision: forge her own path as a spinster authoress, or live as a rural minister’s wife, an existence she once called “a synonym for respectable slavery.” The choice she makes alters the course of her life. With a husband whose religious mania threatens their health and happiness at every turn, the secret darkness that Maud herself holds inside threatens to break through the persona she shows to the world, driving an ever-widening wedge between her public face and private self, and putting her on a path towards a heartbreaking end.

Beautiful and moving, After Anne reveals Maud’s hidden personal challenges while celebrating what was timeless about her life and art—the importance of tenacity and the peaceful refuge found in imagination.

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About the Author

Logan is a lawyer by day and a writer by baby bedtime. My writing explores motherhood and the creative life.

My debut novel, AFTER ANNE, will be released on May 30, 2023 by HarperCollins. For fans of Anne of Green Gables and for anyone who loves learning about the real lives of authors responsible for creating our most enduring characters, the novel tells the life story of the author Lucy Maud Montgomery.

After graduating from Pomona College and Harvard Law School, I clerked for three federal judges, spent six years in Big Law, and spent three years as an Assistant United States Attorney. I now specialize in brief writing at a boutique law firm.

Balancing lawyering, writing, and mothering is not easy, but I have found that they complement more than compete. Being a lawyer makes me a clearer writer, being a writer makes me a happier lawyer, and being a mother makes me a more grounded one of each.

I live in Denver with my husband David, our daughter, and the cranky old man of the house, a Russian Blue cat named Taggart.

Spotlight: High Wire by Kam Majd

Thriller

Date Published: March 13, 2023

Publisher: ‎ Mindstir Media

A WOMAN STANDS ACCUSED

BUT THE COST TO PROVE HER INNOCENCE

MAY JUST BE HER LIFE

Captain Kate Gallagher has a plane to land and a daughter to get home to. But first, she's got to contend with a confrontational co-pilot, blizzard conditions, and something far more treacherous-a plane contaminated with a lethal computer virus. When the controls refuse to respond to her commands, she has two choices: Turn the plane around or trust her instinct.

One day later, the world's press is picking through the mangled remains of Flight 394 and crying pilot error. To clear her name, Kate must endure humiliation and blame, and the risk to herself and her family, until she comes face to face with the madman who created the virus. There, she uncovers a shocking conspiracy that has already zeroed in on a new target: another plane, another deadly disaster.

With only seconds to save the 262 passengers on board, Kate Gallagher will fight her way back into the pilot's seat and up into the air, in a life-and-death race against time, and a computer virus that is wired, running, and ready to kill again. And the price for saving all those lives may be only one... hers.

Excerpt

1 CHAPTER 

The jolt was sudden and caught both pilots off-guard. Each reached for the controls instinctively. After a tense moment, and when it became clear that the autopilot was still holding, First Officer Edmond Bell cautiously eased his grip and tentatively leaned back in his seat. 

“Can’t wait to get this damn night over with,” he muttered—just loud enough to be heard. 

In the dark cockpit, Captain Kate Gallagher’s face, illuminated by the faint green glow of the instrument lights, was a portrait of concentration. 

“Five more minutes and it will be,” she whispered back. 

Bell shook his head. “With my luck, we’ll be up here for another hour, holding, waiting for a clearance to land, then have to go back and try this damn thing all over again tomorrow.” 

Kate let the comment pass as she had so many others that day. After fourteen hours, three landings in bad weather with an irritable first officer who thought he was Superman, all she wanted was a little time with her daughter, Molly, a warm bath, and a soft Mozart symphony to unwind to. But first, there was the business of landing the plane. 

“I’m showing winds of almost sixty knots up here at four thousand feet. 

Ask them if there’s been any change since the last report.” 

Bell picked up the mic. “Kennedy approach, this is Jet East 394. We need the latest surface conditions.” 

“Jet East 394, this is Kennedy.” The controller sounded as weary as they were. “It’s not getting any better, Sir. Reported ceiling is still at two hundred feet but the winds have picked up now. Wind three-four-zero at two-eight, gusting three-niner knots with blowing snow. There is a half an inch of packed snow on all runways, but we haven’t had a landing here for almost fifteen minutes, so I have no braking-action to report.” 

Bell replaced the mic in its cradle and pinched open the iPad screen to expand the approach chart. Jabbing his index finger at the number, he said, 

“Right at the limits of Cat-One and too windy for auto-land. Better make this one count, Captain,” he said almost mocking. “Last thing I want to do is go all the way back to Dulles.” 

Kate shook her head. She didn’t know what the hell this guy’s deal was, but the fact that she was a woman hadn’t escaped his attention. Add to the fact that she was barely thirty-four, a full five years younger than he, with an extra stripe on her epaulets, and she had a problem she could do without. 

A woman, especially one as striking as Kate Gallagher, occupying the captain’s chair was still a rare sight. She wore little makeup and bothered even less about her chestnut hair, which she wore shoulder length. 

Her skin was not the fair color of her father’s Irish ancestors’: it was a shade darker, olive-hued, favoring her mother’s Greek heritage. Her eyes, more green than blue, were the only thing she had inherited from him. Everything else, from her perfectly arched eyebrows to her nose, long and narrow and just the tiniest bit crooked, came from her mother, as did her independence, stubbornness, and fiery temper. It was that particular trait she was feeling mostly now. Back on the ground, Kate might have been tempted to give Bell a taste of it. But up here, her sole priority was the safety of the two hundred and eleven passengers and twelve crew members who were anxiously waiting for the moment the wheels finally touched the pavement. 

The airport was just to their right and less than fifteen miles away. On a clear night, she would be able to see not only the lights of the two parallel runways, but also Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan, and half of the Jersey shore. 

But tonight, as they fought their way through the turbulence and one of the worst snowstorms the Northeast had seen in a decade, she could barely see the nose of the aircraft, less than five feet in front of her. 

“Jet East 394, turn right to a heading of zero one zero. Descend and maintain three thousand feet. You are cleared for the ILS, runway three-one-left at Kennedy.” 

Kate punched the Approach button on the glare shield and reduced the speed. The engines wound back and the jumbo jet began a shallow, descending turn into the thick, muddy night. With a flick of a switch on the yoke, she kicked off the autopilot, and with her clammy hands gripping the controls, Captain Kate Gallagher guided Jet East flight 394 onto the final segment of its approach into Kennedy International Airport. 

The intensity of the turbulence multiplied almost immediately. Outside, the beam of the landing lights illuminated sheets of snow, which looked heavier than she ever remembered. With one hand still on the controls and her total attention focused on the instrument panel, Kate tightened her seat belt and felt the restraint of the shoulder harness pull against her body. 

“Better make sure everyone’s down,” she said. 

Bell picked up the interphone and punched-in two numbers. “You guys ready?” 

“Yeah, all buttoned up,” the senior flight attendant said. 

Dorothy Maples was in her fifties, with dark eyes and brunette hair cut page-boy short. She sat on the jump seat at the front of the cabin facing her passengers, smiling and trying hard to hide her apprehension behind her best business-as-usual face. Like everyone else, she was eager to put an end to this very long night. 

The landing gear had already thumped into place and the actuator motors had sounded as they slid the flaps from the trailing edges of the wings and readied the plane for its landing. Preparing themselves for their imminent arrival, the passengers jostled to get a look at the ground below, but all they could see was a wasteland of dense, black clouds intermittently glowing blood red from the reflection of the flashing beacon light. 

Kate could sense the mounting anxiety in the cabin just behind her. She had been a passenger enough times herself to know what it felt like to be trapped tight in a sea of seats, waiting for the moment the wheels touched the earth. 

She adjusted her five-foot-eight inch frame in the seat and wiped her hand on her pant legs. Let’s get home, she told herself. 

“Localizer captured. Glide slope’s alive,” Bell announced, as the Flight Director on the primary instrument indicator on the captain’s side flashed amber twice. 

“Flaps thirty,” Kate instructed. Bell moved the handle to its proper position. 

Barely a moment after that, the crosshairs that formed the Flight Director began to move slowly to the right, indicating that the plane was moving to the left, away from its intended course. 

“Localizer,” Bell called out immediately, but Kate was already making the correction and turning the aircraft slightly to the right. Seconds later, the needle settled back in the center, then started to move again, this time to the left. 

They were descending now, less than a thousand feet above the ground, in zero visibility and with no room for error. 

“You’re off the center line again. Localizer,” Bell barked, his eyes darting between the small white needle and the captain to his left. 

“Come on,” Gallagher muttered to herself. “You’ve done this a thousand times before. Trust the instruments. Just trust the damn instruments.” 

The Flight director began to move again, but this time did not stabilize. It oscillated from one side to the other like a broken toy. But this was no toy, and this close to the ground, there was no room for child’s play. 

“Let’s get out of here,” Kate said, simultaneously advancing the throttles and pulling back on the yoke. “Initiating go-around. Give me maximum power. Flaps twenty.” 

The two Ryan engines began to howl, clawing their way into the black, wintry sky. 

“Kennedy tower, Jet East 394 is on the go,” Bell announced on the mic. 

“Roger Jet East 394, this is Kennedy tower. Climb and maintain three thousand feet. Contact New York approach on 124.9.” 

“We’ll go to approach.” 

Flying through the turbulence, snow, and clouds, the pilots of Jet East flight 394 retracted the flaps and gear and climbed to the designated heading and altitude. Once there, they prepared for one more shot at landing before lack of fuel would force them to divert to their alternate airport. 

“You’ve got the plane. I’m going to make a P.A.” Gallagher said. Bell took over the controls. 

“Ladies and gentlemen, as you can tell, we have aborted the landing. It’s strictly a precautionary measure and there’s nothing to be alarmed about. 

We’re currently being vectored into a position to begin the approach again. 

We should be on the ground in less than ten minutes.” 

“I’m back,” Kate said. She reached for the controls but felt some resistance. She looked up. Bell was still gripping them. 

“I’ve got the plane,” she said, looking over at him. But he didn’t even acknowledge her, and he didn’t let go. He just sat there, his hands wrapped around the controls, staring dead ahead at the instruments. 

What the hell was this, a mutiny? Was he saying that he could do a better job? That she was dangerous? What? 

She had never flown with this character before, so she had no way of reading him. Did he have a problem with her, or all women? Or was he just a dick. 

Either way, she had no time for this bullshit. 

“I’ve got the plane,” she snapped, and jerked the controls slightly to one side. 

Bell silently relinquished control without looking at her. 

Kate looked over to him one last time with a glare that could melt steel. 

They were going to get on the ground, shut down the engines, and park the plane. After that, Bell had better pray that God was on his side because she was going to rip him limb from limb. She turned away from him and focused back on the instruments with renewed purpose. 

“Landing gear down. Flaps thirty after you get three green,” she ordered and Bell did as he was instructed. 

They were below fifteen hundred feet again, in the clouds and flying at 170 miles per hour, when the Flight director began to twitch again. Kate corrected immediately, but felt a new stiffness in the controls. She looked at Bell, but his hands were in his lap. She looked at the overhead panel and checked the anti-icing equipment. Everything was on. If the unresponsiveness of the controls was not caused by surface icing, then what? 

The crosshairs of the Flight Director came back to the center, but like a pendulum, began moving in the opposite direction again. What the hell was happening? Was this her

Kate wanted to say something, but hesitated. She wasn’t going to give Bell the satisfaction. Still what the hell was going on? Was this an instrument malfunction? 

She glanced over at Bell’s Flight director, then at the standby instruments. 

All three indicated the same thing: the aircraft was moving erratically off course and she wasn’t able to correct it. So if this wasn’t an instrument malfunction, that left only one thing...It was her. 

The captain never handed over his command, not at a time of crisis—not to someone like Edmond Bell. But as Jet East 394 descended below five hundred feet, still unstable and off course, Gallagher considered doing just that. 

Maybe Bell was right, she thought. Maybe they all were. Maybe she should just hand the plane over, let him land, then bolt from the airport and never come back. 

BULLSHIT! She scolded herself. This was her plane and those people were her responsibility. “Focus, Goddammit,” she said loud enough to be heard. “Focus!” 

Taking back an ounce of control felt good, and Kate felt herself breathe. 

But passing through three hundred feet, the Flight Director began to move again, this time faster than it had previously. Again, Kate attempted to correct, but the instrument continued to move erratically, and by the time the aircraft had reached two hundred feet, it was fully deflected to one side. They were sinking fast, too fast. 

“Go-around. Go-around,” Bell shouted, a clear note of panic in his voice. 

Kate had already pressed the small go-around button on the throttles. 

“Going around. Max power, flaps twenty,” she commanded a second time. 

“Push the throttles up, way up.” Once again Jet East 394 struggled its way back into the night sky. Then it happened. 

It began with a shallow turn to the right. Kate immediately corrected it by turning the controls in the opposite direction. The plane responded for an instant, then continued to roll slightly back to the right. She applied more pressure, but it wasn’t enough. With both hands on the controls, she pushed to turn. Still it wasn’t enough. She felt as if something was fighting her—as if Bell had finally decided to take over. But she could see his hands, one still on the throttles, adjusting maximum power, the other reaching for the microphone so he could tell the tower that they had aborted the second approach. He was doing what he was supposed to, they both were. Just as they had done ten minutes ago, just as they had practiced a thousand times before in the simulator. But this was different. Something was wrong. Something was very wrong. 

“Push with me,” she shouted to Bell, who threw down the mic, and grabbed the controls with both hands. 

“What’s happening?” he yelled, but Kate had no time to explain. 

“Terrain, terrain, pull up, pull up,” the computer-generated voice warned. 

A half-dozen red lights began to flash in the pilots’ faces. 

There had been no training for this kind of scenario. Kate had two choices: continue the go-around and hope that whatever was causing the problem would correct itself in the next second, or—

Instinctively she chose the second option, grasped the throttles, and pulled them back to idle. The roar of the engines instantly died and Jet East 394 began to plunge into the darkness. 

“What are you doing?” Bell shouted, lurching over to force her hands off the throttles. He was too late. 

From the corner of her eye, Kate saw an orange and red flash. An instant later, the controls shuddered in her hands as the aircraft was forced violently upright. The tip of the right wing hit the ground, causing the nose to pitch up and veer in the opposite direction, completely out of control. Within an instant all hell broke loose. 

There was the sickening sound of scraping metal, and vibrant flashes of red, orange, and yellow erupted all around them. Agonizing screams of terror were followed by a sensation of weightlessness as the aircraft bounced over and over again. The heat, the smoke, the fire...and then, blackness. 

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About the Author

Kam Majd is an Edgar® Award-nominated author of character-driven, edge-of-your-seat suspense novels. He has climbed in and out of cockpits for 44 years, 35 of which have been at American Airlines, with his most recent position as a 777 captain. Born in Iran, and educated around the world in India, England, and the United States, Majd and his wife Lori now live in Southern California with their two daughters, Megan and Sydney, nearby.

Connect on his website

Love Me Today First Chapters Sneak Peek

NYT Bestselling Author A.L. Jackson has the prologue AND first chapter of her upcoming single dad, enemies-to-lovers romance, Love Me Today, available to read now. Coming May 29th!

Prologue

Energy crackled through the dim-lit hall.

Tension binding the oxygen in attraction and need.

Every-fucking-thing I could no longer ignore as I stared at her where she hovered in front of her door.

“Caleb.” My name barely hit the air.

At the sound of it, I broke.

I crossed the space. No restraint left.

My hand dove into her hair at the side of her head, and I curled the other around her waist and tugged her against me.

We collided in a torrent of greed.

Mouths and tongues and spirits that no longer knew how to exist without the other.

We spun, gripping at each other, desperate to erase every inch of space as I kissed her.

Kissed her with a madness that burned me to the soul.

This woman who’d scored herself into the places I wasn’t supposed to let her go.

Because I knew what I brought into the lives of the people I cared about.

I knew the price they paid.  

And I should have known what touching her would cost…

Chapter One - Paisley

Leave it to me to be late, but it couldn’t be helped.

Gathering the straps of the reusable grocery bags, I slung them over my shoulder and shifted my cell to my other ear as I hustled out the automatic doors of the small grocery store.

“You know I don’t have many details,” I told my bestie Dakota as I jogged toward my old truck in the parking lot, my boots thudding hard on the pavement. I pinned my phone between my ear and shoulder so I could dig my keys from my bag. “You know Ryder got me the gig. Some cousin he doesn’t know all that well has a little girl who got her first pony, and she needs to learn how to ride it. Easy peasy.”

Extra cash in my pocket. Exactly what I needed.

“Are you sure you don’t just want to come and work with me at the café? We’re slammed this morning. I could really use the extra help.”

A small chuckle got free. “Which is why you’re wasting your time on the phone with me?”

“Hello, bestie duties. I needed to get the details before you run off to some rando stranger’s house in the middle of nowhere. You haven’t even talked to the guy. You could end up dead in a ditch somewhere. Buried in a shallow grave. Locked in an attic or basement with some freak telling you that you’re his new pet.”

I could physically feel Dakota shudder through the phone. She was so dramatic.

“You really should stop listening to true crime podcasts before you go to bed at night. Your paranoia is getting out of control. Besides, this is Ryder’s cousin we’re talking about. He isn’t going to send me to some serial killer’s house.”

At least I hoped so because it was super odd this guy had only communicated through email, all formal and calling me Ms. Dae, referring to himself as Mr. Greyson as he gave me the precise time to show at his ranch.

What a weirdo.

As far as I knew, Ryder had spent summers with him growing up, but they hadn’t seen that much of each other as adults, and the mysterious Mr. Greyson had moved into Time River about six months back. In all that time, I didn’t think anyone had ever even met the guy, which considering the size of the town we lived in, that was on the questionable side.

He had to be some kind of recluse, I guessed.

“It’s fine,” I told her. “You know Ryder wouldn’t lead me astray.”

“Okay, just text me as soon as you’re done. I want all the details. Or wait, come into the café so you can tell me face-to-face. Even better.”

A giggle slipped up my throat. “You missed me while I was away, didn’t you?”

“I won’t even try to deny it. This town was boring as crap without you.”

Regret pulled at my ribcage. The intense kind because you could never make up for time that had passed or the things you had missed. But I couldn’t wallow in the mistakes that I had made, I could only make sure I never repeated them again.

“I promise you will be bored no more,” I said like a solemn oath. “Mack’s Friday night?”

These cowgirl boots were made for dancing, and I was about to set them free.

“Um, you could not keep me away. Kayden is having a sleepover at my mom’s, and this girl is ready to get her party on.”

Dakota’s son was almost two. He’d been born while I’d been living in Arizona. It was just another thing I’d missed—being there when he was an infant, being there for my best friend.

“I can’t wait,” I told her. “I gotta run. I just picked up my grandpa’s medication and need to drop it off at his house before I head out to this interview, and I’m wicked late already.” 

“Give your grandpa a hug for me.”

“Will do. Talk to you soon, Doodle-Boo.”

“Bye, Paisley-Cakes.”

Ending the call, I yanked open the door to my old truck who I lovingly called Maybe.

Her hinges creaked in protest.

Yes, I’d named her. She’d been with me from the beginning, since I was sixteen and had scraped together enough money to buy her, and she’d been by my side through every escapade I’d embarked on ever since.

I tossed the grocery bags across the bench seat and hopped in, and I pushed myself up close to the steering wheel as I leaned in and stuffed the key into the ignition. I bounced as I gave it a little gas and cranked it over, coaxing her with sweet nothings. “That’s it. We have this. It’s you and me, Maybe. Don’t let me down now.”

She roared to life.

And I mean, roared, my old girl rumbling and chugging and vibrating like a raring beast. I caressed a hand over the weathered dash that sported a crack rivaling the Grand Canyon that ran from one side to the other, a perfect reflection of the one that ran across the windshield. “You’re so good to me.”

My phone pinged, and I glanced to the side where it was sitting on the seat.

Ryder: Don’t be late.

I rolled my eyes. As if.

Okay. Fine. I was always late.

Ryder knew me well. And truth be told, I didn’t want to make him look bad, so I pressed down on the brake as I shoved the gear into reverse.

Plus, I really needed this job. No, I really wanted this job.

I could feel the hope of it vibrating through my spirit, and I needed to get my butt in gear before I messed up this opportunity before it even started.

I glanced in the rearview mirror, squinting against the blinding rays of morning light that streaked in as the sun climbed into the endless expanse of blue Colorado sky.

All clear.

I gunned it out of the spot.

I jarred forward when Maybe banged into something from out of nowhere. The sound of grating metal was garbled by the screech that tore up my throat.

I rammed back on the brakes, holding tight to the steering wheel, blinking through the confusion, before my mind finally caught up to what had just happened.

“Crap,” I grumbled under my breath, and I tossed it into park and hopped out. I absolutely didn’t have time for this.

My boots hit the pavement, and I rounded the rear to find Maybe’s tail-end banged up against the bumper of a shiny black Range Rover.

Just freaking awesome.

The SUV was halfway out of its spot, too, and appeared to have been pulling out to head the opposite direction. The two vehicles had made impact right in the middle of the aisle.

I knelt to inspect the spot where we’d collided.

Relief gusted.

There was only a small dent and a scratch on the Rover’s bumper, and my truck didn’t have any damage at all.

It didn’t look bad. Nope, not too bad at all.

Except I was pretty sure the other driver might not agree when I felt the dark cloud descend from above.

Warily, I looked up, and my heart pitched in my chest.

I could barely make him out with the sunlight that blurred around him, the man a silhouette of darkness that towered two feet away. That didn’t mean I couldn’t feel the stone-cold eyes glaring down at me.

“Are you hurt?” His tone was completely at odds with the question.

“No. I’m fine.” It came out shakier than I’d anticipated.

Air huffed from his nose, and his deep voice was a rumble of condescension as he looked at the damage on his bumper. “I guess it’s too much to ask people to watch where they’re going.”

I pushed to standing, my words cracking with anger. “Excuse me? You ran into me.”

Okay, we’d run into each other, but if he was going to be a jerk about it…

A displeasured scoff blew from his nose, and he stepped forward.

I really hoped my eyes hadn’t actually popped out of my head when it brought him into view.

Bollocks and ballsacks.

I’d backed into an Abercrombie model.

Or maybe a Greek God reincarnated.

He glowered, his jaw and cheeks as hard as the icy blue eyes that seemed to glow from his ridiculous face. He was all sharp angles and polished stone, his lips so full and red that my tongue unconsciously stroked over mine.

Correction.

Fallen angel.

That’s what he was.

A dark one who’d been booted right out of paradise for being a giant dick.

His brow lifted, his dark blond hair mostly short, cut close on the sides, but the longer pieces on top were pushed back, making him look fiercer.

My stomach twisted.

“I ran into you?” he challenged.

I crossed my arms over my chest. “Um, yes, you did. You’re clearly farther out of your spot than I am. Besides, doesn’t your fancy-ass car have some sort of warning system to keep you from crashing right into unsuspecting people?”

I flung a hand toward his showpiece, scowling hard to prove my point.

Annoyance had him readjusting the cuffs of his suit jacket.

His suit jacket.

Seriously, who was this guy and where did he come from? He was obviously lost. Men like him didn’t belong in Time River, a spec of a small town in Nowhere, Colorado.

But he wouldn’t be the first tourist to stray from the big city and onto our streets. Seeking the beauty of the plains set in a backdrop of breathtaking mountains and the gorgeous river that ran through. In the winter, the mountains would be covered by snow, but at this time of year, only the soaring peaks were painted white, the snow slowly melting as the fullness of the summer approached.

The irritation the man wore was almost palpable. “It warned me, but since you flew out of your spot without care in that monstrosity, there was no time to avert the accident.”

Monstrosity?

“How dare you call Maybe a monstrosity.” I set my hand on the tailgate like it could shield her from the slur.

Exasperation seemed to shake his head as he shifted a bit to the side, and he had the audacity to rake his teeth over that full bottom lip. He returned his potent gaze back to me, blowing out a sigh of resignation. “You know what, I don’t have time for this.”

“Like I do,” I spat, trying to ignore the buzzy power radiating from him.

It wasn’t like he was beefy or anything. Everything about him was lean and hewn, but I’d bet my ass everything under that suit was sculpted in strength. Deceptively smooth. He was the type of guy who would strike before a person even knew he was coming for them.

I propped my hands on my hips. “Do you want my insurance information or what? Or we can exchange numbers or whatever. You barely have a scratch on your car, but I’m sure you’re going to want to get it fixed.”

Like this guy would settle for anything less than perfection.

“No, I don’t want your information. I’ll handle it.”

My mouth dropped open. I didn’t know if I was offended or relieved. “I do have insurance, you know.”

“Congrats, but I think I’ll see to things for myself.”

I blinked.

Congrats?

Without saying anything else, he turned on his heel and strode around the side of his car, taking that dark, broody, self-righteous ego with him.

I stood there gaping at his overpowering form as he slipped into the driver’s seat, the man far too tall and powerful for anyone’s good.

He didn’t spare me a glance when he put the SUV into drive, his tires squealing as he peeled away.

“Grrr…what a freaking jerk,” I shrieked. And still, I stood there staring as he took off onto Manchester, the main street that ran through Time River.

The second his SUV disappeared, I tore myself out of the trance he had me under and hightailed my ass back to the driver’s side of my truck and climbed inside. I shoved it back into reverse the way I’d done before I’d been so rudely interrupted and finished pulling out of the spot, then I shifted into drive and gunned it.

Sorry Ryder, now I really was going to be late.

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Connect with A.L.

A.L. Jackson is the New York Times & USA Today Bestselling author of contemporary romance. She writes emotional, sexy, heart-filled stories about boys who usually like to be a little bit bad.

Her bestselling series include THE REGRET SERIES, CLOSER TO YOU, BLEEDING STARS, FIGHT FOR ME, CONFESSIONS OF THE HEART, FALLING STARS, and REDEMPTION HILLS novels. Watch out for her upcoming stand-alone, LOVE ME TODAY, releasing May 29th!

If she’s not writing, you can find her hanging out by the pool with her family, sipping cocktails with her friends, or of course with her nose buried in a book.

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Spotlight: Drink Wine and Be Beautiful by Kimberly Sullivan

Publication date: May 26th 2023

Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Women’s Fiction

Synopsis:

Italian Tales of love, betrayal, longing, desire – and hope

Italy serves as the backdrop for stories of Italian women and expatriate women living in Italy.

A freak snowstorm in Rome changes the travel plans of two women, touching their lives in ways they could never have imagined. An ambitious Italian professional working in Brussels rails inwardly at her privileged boss, until fate presents her with a rare opportunity. A long desired trip to Bali, Indonesia serves as a needed chance for introspection. A cautious housewife in Rome thinks back to a fateful missed connection in Florence. A first-time mother feels debilitating guilt for not bonding with her newborn, until an elderly neighbor provides her with a new perspective.

The twenty-one stories in this collection follow women’s lives as they confront betrayal and love, alienation and community, despair and-ultimately-hope.

Excerpt

Snake Charmers and Donkey Carts

Marrakech

THE HAWKERS’ CRIES FILLED THE SQUARE, the guttural sounds of Arabic throbbing in Manuela’s ears. All around her, men yelled out in that strange language. Men were everywhere. They brushed past her in the marketplace crowds, and she shrank back. Unfamiliar smells filled the air.

She clung to Adriano’s hand as they walked through the Jemaa el-Fna square, willing herself not to cry. A cobra reared up his ugly head, its black tongue flickering, only a few feet from where she stood. She bit her tongue to keep herself from screaming. The snake swayed from side to side as the snake charmer played music on his pipe. A fat man in dirty robes approached her with another snake, trying to wrap it around her neck.

She stumbled backward, afraid she might faint, but thankfully Adriano was pulling her away, toward the dark, labyrinthine streets of the souk. Here she would do battle with the scooters and the donkey carts, but at least there were no snake charmers poised to place a slimy, wriggling serpent around her neck in exchange for coins.

Manuela breathed in deeply. It was all too much. The blood coursed through her veins at double-speed. Her heart pounded in fear and revulsion. She leaned in closer to Adriano, his comforting solidity managing to calm her and provide her with the courage she lacked in this odd city.

“Min fadlak,” said a robed man, indicating his wares.

Manuela instinctively shrunk from his attentions, but Adriano stepped closer, examining the delicate lamps shining in the dark marketplace. Their intricate patterns cast colorful, elaborate illuminations through inky night sky. Even she could recognize its mystic beauty.

“Kam else’er?” said Adriano.

The two men began haggling over the price, and Manuela stood silently, a spectator to the show. Life was a spectacle here, but one she took no pleasure in observing.

Three days into her holiday in Marrakech, Manuela felt only anxious and confused. The streets were too narrow. She had to remain vigilant not to step in the droppings left behind after the donkey carts passed. There were too many people pressed too closely together. People stood so close when they spoke to you. Adriano told her it was rude to step back, but she couldn’t help herself. The yells in Arabic sounded harsh and threatening to her ears. The sights and sounds, the colors and smells were too exotic.

Manuela could only relax when they returned to their riad in the evening, though even there she could not completely escape the lingering sense of foreignness. The wooden keyhole doors were too small, and she kept bumping her head on their frame. The sweet smell of spices filled the apartment with a cloying scent she was unable to banish, even after opening the windows for long periods of time in the hopes of airing the room.

She would step into the shower and rinse the city’s dirt and grime from her body, before enveloping her skin in a soft robe. When Adriano pushed her gently down to the bed, a sense of familiarity would calm her, and she could temporarily forget all about the stresses of this chaotic city.

Yet each morning she felt drained and exhausted once again, unable to face another day, desperate to return home, where things were safe and familiar. She longed to hear Italian spoken in the squares, to enter a restaurant and know that familiar foods were on the menu, to be capable of conversing with the shopkeepers.

To belong.

But what could she do? Adriano seemed to thrive in this new environment. He craved exotic places. Where had he learned to count in Arabic? He and the hawker were aggressively shouting figures back and forth, and she saw the spark of excitement in Adriano’s eyes. For her, this city was hell on earth. For him, an exotic tale out of Arabian Nights.

She breathed in deeply once again, attempting to quell the panic attack she could feel working its way through her body. The hawkers came closer with their oils and their soaps and their leather slippers. She closed her eyes and suppressed the desire to scream.

Back home, her days were spent cutting through the red tape of property purchases in Tivoli and placating demanding clients. Her hard-earned vacation was supposed to relax her, not cause greater stress.

She’d begged Adriano to go back to the Sardinian resort they’d visited this past spring, with its well-designed bungalows, soft, white sand beaches, perfectly ordered rows of umbrellas and beach chairs, and crystalline waters beckoning just before them.

Just smelling the salt air caused a sense of well-being to wash over her body. She’d thought Adriano would book the tickets for the resort, as they discussed. It was charged to her account, after all. Instead, he stopped off at her house with two tickets to Marrakech.

“You’re going to love it,” he said, kissing her on the neck. “It will be an adventure. I swear, you’ll never want to come back to Italy.”

She sighed. Not wanting to return to Italy wasn’t the problem. It was Morocco where she never wished to set foot again.

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About the Author

Kimberly grew up in the suburbs of Boston and in Saratoga Springs, New York, although she now calls the Harlem neighborhood of New York City home when she’s back in the US. She studied political science and history at Cornell University and earned her MBA, with a concentration in strategy and marketing, from Bocconi University in Milan. 

Afflicted with a severe case of Wanderlust, she worked in journalism and government in the US, Czech Republic and Austria, before settling down in Rome, where she works in international development, and writes fiction any chance she gets.

She is a member of the Women’s Fiction Writers Association (WFWA) and The Historical Novel Society and has published several short stories and three novels: Three Coins, Dark Blue Waves and In The Shadow of The Apennines.

After years spent living in Italy with her Italian husband and sons, she’s fluent in speaking with her hands, and she loves setting her stories in her beautiful, adoptive country.

Connect:

https://kimberlysullivanauthor.com/

https://twitter.com/Kimberlyinrome

https://www.bookbub.com/profile/kimberly-sullivan

https://www.instagram.com/kimberlyinrome/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/21814220.Kimberly_Sullivan

Spotlight: Still the One by Dylan Allen

Release Date: May 25

FREE IN KINDLE UNLIMITED

There are men who will love you. 

There are men who will break your heart.

But for me, there was only one man and he was destined to be both.

I used to believe in fairytales. 

I thought my happy ending was inevitable. 

Until I lost my father, my home, and the gorgeous golden boy I loved in the blink of an eye.

I rebuilt my life with one thing in mind - certainty.

I didn’t get my happy ending, but I spent my days making other people’s come true. 

I wasn’t happy, but I was in control.  

It was enough. 

Until my first love crash lands back into my life and

I start questioning everything about my perfectly constructed life. 

I realize that I may have moved on but my heart stood absolutely still.

And when he asks for a second chance, I throw caution to the wind and say yes.

Back in the grown up arms of the man he’s become, I rediscover a passion and pleasure I’d forgotten existed.

But our second chance is a double edged sword that forces us to face the minefield of our complicated past. 

He starts asking questions 

I’ve spent a lifetime trying to ignore. 

In the battle between my future and my past, will love be enough to overcome the secrets that tore us apart the first time?

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Meet Dylan Allen

Before I was "Wall Street Journal and USA Today Bestselling Author, Dylan Allen", I was a lawyer who was unhappy at work and a bookworm who wanted nothing more than to get lost in stories I loved. I've always written for myself as a creative outlet, but in the year leading up to my 40th birthday, I decided to do something that had always been on my bucket list...write a book.

I'm not an independently wealthy person and had no intention of leaving my career. I didn't think it was even possible to make a living writing the stories that lived in my vast and dynamic imagination. 

That book, now called Then Came You, was so warmly and broadly received that I decided to write another. And then another... And two years after I accidentally found this amazing career, I left my job and went all in on my dream. 

It hasn't been a smooth journey. It's been full of volatile ups and downs. But, it's been the most rewarding and exciting thing I've ever done. 

My favorite part of this job is connecting with my readers. I'm so honored by the kind and interesting people who read my work and reach out to connect to me. 

I write compelling, dramatic, emotional romances with exceptional, diverse characters you'll root for and never forget. 

I'm a self-proclaimed happily ever junkie, I loves creating stories where under dogs find a love worth fighting for.   When I'm not writing or reading, eating, or cooking, I indulges my wanderlust by planning her next globe-trotting adventure.

I was born in Accra, Ghana, raised in  Houston, Texas, and finds that home is where my heart is. 

I'm a proud graduate of Tufts University, Howard University School of Law, and the London School of Economics. Nearly twenty years ago, I married the love of my very own book boyfriend and together we're raising two wonderful sons who are the light of our lives. 

I believe in the power of dreams and know that nothing is beyond our reach if we're willing to work hard and step out of our comfort zone to grab it. 

I hope you find hours of entertainment and joy in my books! 

Keep up with Dylan Allen and subscribe to her newsletter: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/5ef90086caabca0028b30df8

To learn more about Dylan Allen & her books, visit here!

Connect with Dylan Allen: https://www.dylanallenbooks.com/contact

Cover Reveal: Smooth Hoperator: A Fake-Relationship Romance by Sylvie Stewart

(Love on Tap, #2)

Publication date: July 6th 2023

Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

SMOOTH HOPERATOR: A FAKE-RELATIONSHIP ROMANCE

After tanking my career in politics, I’m looking for new direction. But my GPS must be broken because it keeps leading me to a kooky librarian’s front steps.

It’s not easy, but I’m doing my best to let go of my old ambitions and embrace the simple life of slinging beer at my family’s brewery. But some powerful players from my past are determined to cause problems for me and my family.

When a chatty local librarian with the wardrobe of a third grader and the optimism of Spongebob begins sticking her nose into my business, I want to tell her to get lost. As fate would have it, though, Sunny and her ill-tempered grandfather are my only remaining option to get free of my past for good.

It will take some convincing to get this goofy, goat-loving librarian on board with my risky plan. But if she’ll do things my way, I’ll return the favor by playing her fake boyfriend to make her true love finally take notice and fall head over heels.

But the deeper we get into this venture, the more I realize there’s nothing fake about Sunny at all. Including the way I’m beginning to feel about her.

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About the Author

USA Today bestselling author Sylvie Stewart loves bad jokes, dirty rom-coms, country music, and baby skunks—preferably all at the same time. Most of her steamy contemporary and romantic comedy novels take place across her favorite state of North Carolina, and her characters never run out of snarky banter or snacks. When her laptop closes, Sylvie is a sucker for hugs from her twin boys and a good laugh with her hot-nerd hubby. If you love smart Southern gals, hot blue-collar guys, and snort-laughing with characters who feel like your best friends, Sylvie's your gal.

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Stay up to date on all things Sylvie! https://sylviestewartauthor.com

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