Spotlight: The Drift by C. J. Tudor

Genres: Suspense & Thriller | Gothic & Horror

Three ordinary people risk everything for a chance at redemption in this audacious, utterly gripping novel of catastrophe and survival at the end of the world, from the acclaimed author of The Chalk Man.

Hannah awakens to carnage, all mangled metal and shattered glass. After she was evacuated from a secluded boarding school during a snowstorm, her coach careered off the road, trapping her with a handful of survivors. They’ll need to work together to escape—with their sanity and secrets intact.

Meg awakens to a gentle rocking. She’s in a cable car stranded high above snowy mountains, with five strangers and no memory of how they got on board. They are heading to a place known only as “The Retreat,” but as the temperature drops and tensions mount, Meg realizes they may not all make it there alive.

Carter is gazing out the window of an isolated ski chalet that he and his companions call home. As their generator begins to waver in the storm, something hiding in the chalet’s depths threatens to escape, and their fragile bonds will be tested when the power finally fails—for good.

The imminent dangers faced by Hannah, Meg, and Carter are each one part of the puzzle. Lurking in their shadows is an even greater danger—one with the power to consume all of humanity.

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Spotlight: Seven Perfect Days by Francesca Vespa

Publication date: February 17th 2024
Genres: Adult, Comedy, Contemporary, Romance

Synopsis:

Sometimes your friends break your heart the most.

Maggie Lomax dodged the most painful moment of her life, but her eccentric best friend Alexandra isn’t going to let her get away that easy. High School might finally be over, but they still need to clean up the mess left behind.

Things look grim, until Maggie meets Adam Moon, a handsome foreign student and sweet, kind soul who’s just as messed up as her. The only problem is he disappeared, and nobody knows what happened to him.

An unusual offer from an old school acquaintance to travel abroad may be a chance for Maggie to move on. New sights, new sounds and new adventures may be just what she needs, but the past has a way of catching up with her, and so does Alexandra. Maggie may find her guy, but it could be at the worst possible time.

This contemporary romantic black comedy travels the world, hopping islands, traversing continents, sailing oceans. It tells a big tale from small intimate ones. The story is set on the sails of courage, flying a flag to joy and friendship, heartbreak and love.

Excerpt

Dear Maggie, 

As I’m sending this snail-mail anyway, I thought I’d include this note. Sitting down at my old typewriter, I had an eerie feeling of Deja-vu, because we were once pen-pals. I’m trying to block that thought out with the hard thwack of the ink on paper, because I can’t stand to remember anything from high school. 

Let’s just address the largest elephant in the room: that I’m absolutely furious with you. Not because you involved me in this nonsense, or even because you kept all this from me in the first place, but simply because you gave Sophie an opportunity to do something that I would have killed for. 

I could have used all that money to visit the religious shrines of Burma, live in Tokyo as an exotic prostitute, spend time in an opium den in Marrakesh, or maybe just stay right here and not work for a few years. The fact that Sophie pissed it all up the wall, and you are now the one graced with the chance to engage in risky behavior in the Orient, appalls me greatly. That you may even lose a finger or two is just salt in my wounds. 

Half of me wanted to let you rot over there, but I have far bigger betrayals to deal with right now. I can’t even give you the cold shoulder while helping you, because the sad truth is that for the sake of my sanity, I need unburden myself on someone and I can’t risk boring the people around me. They’d probably think I was having some sort of delusional episode if I ranted to them like this. 

I bumped into Sophie a while back. She said she was in town for only a few days. We agreed to meet for lunch, but she never showed up. She ignored my messages, and I supposed she had left again. A few weeks later I get a postcard from you with a hysterical letter stapled to it about a situation you both concealed from me all this time. 

So you needed to know where she was, and in order to find out, you turned to me, an impoverished loon. Your instincts must be pretty good, because I found her, but even with my connection to her family and friends it took enormous effort. She said she would be returning to Indonesia, but her brother said she was off hitchhiking. Nobody else had any idea where she was. I tried everything I could think of. I even tried being really uncool by visiting Grandma’s house to use the internet, but still got nothing. 

All hope was not lost, however. Through my network of traveler kids, itinerant hippies, oogles, drifters and indigent druggies, I have chased Sophie for months. I never lost the trail, but even when I got close, she was always still ten steps ahead. First, she had just left a commune with friends in Hippieland, then she was going from town to town playing her fiddle with a traveling bluegrass band called Billy Jeans and the Trouser Boys, then she was apple-picking, and then I wasn’t so sure.  

Maybe she was on the run from you, or maybe she was just a nomadic person. Maybe it was both. It seemed she would always be out of my reach, until finally came the break I needed. Her mother called and said there was someone holding a meeting to track down acquaintances of Bram’s, and Clara asked that I not attend. 

I explained that I had to go because there was a possibility someone who knew Sophie would be at this meeting, and I was hoping they could put me in touch with her. Wankers call that sort of thing “networking”. 

I went and scanned the room for people who seemed familiar. That stupid girl who spoke at the funeral was there; you remember the one with all the feathers? Her name is Amythyst with two Ys for some reason. Perhaps her parents can’t spell, or perhaps they were just trying to make the word ‘rhythm’ feel less special. I always thought she never met Bram, but in speaking to her for only a few moments I came to realize she knew him very well. This has happened over and over again over the years. He must have had about ten best friends who I was totally unaware of.

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About the Author

Francesca Vespa studied linguistics. She is neurodivergent, lives in South Australia with two incredible children, as well as cat named Simon and a dog named Diesel. Seven Perfect Days is her debut novel.

Spotlight & Giveaway: Aftershock by Zhang Ling

A catastrophic disaster in China triggers a mother’s heartbreaking choice and a daughter’s  reconciliation with the past in this engrossing novel by the author of A Single  Swallow and Where Waters Meet. Perfect for fans of Amy Tan, Lisa See, and Min Jin Lee. 

In the summer of 1976, an earthquake swallows up the city of Tangshan, China. Among the  hundreds of thousands of people scrambling for survival is a mother who makes an agonizing  decision that irrevocably changes her life and the lives of her children. In that devastating split  second, her seven-year-old daughter, Xiaodeng, is separated from her brother and the mother she  loves and trusts. All Xiaodeng remembers of the fateful morning is betrayal. 

Thirty years later, Xiaodeng is an acclaimed writer living in Canada with a caring husband and  daughter. However, her newfound fame and success do little to cover the deep wounds that disrupt  her life, time and again, and edge her toward a breaking point. Xiaodeng realizes the only path  toward healing is to return to Tangshan, find her mother, and get closure. 

Spanning three decades of the emotional and cultural aftershocks of disaster, Zhang Ling’s intimate  epic explores the damage of guilt, the healing pull of family, and the hope of one woman who, after  so many years, still longs to be saved.

Excerpt

July 28, 1976 Tangshan, Hebei 

Parts of Wan Xiaodeng’s memory of that night were extremely clear, so clear that she could recall every texture of every detail. Other parts were blurred, only a rough outline with smudged edges remaining. Years later, she wondered whether her memories of that night were just an illusion, developed from reading so many documentary accounts of the event. She even thought that perhaps there had been no such night in her life at all. 

It had been hot. Summer nights were generally hot in Tangshan, but this particular night was outrageously so. The sky was like a large clay pot that had been baked all day, overturned and sitting atop the earth, blocking out even the slightest hint of a breeze. It was not just the people who were hot, but the dogs too. They barked from one end of the street to the other, filling the neighborhood with the sound of howling. 

The Wan family had an electric fan that Comrade Wan had built himself using leftover materials from the factory, but the fan’s motor had burned out after constant use. The Wan family, like all their neighbors, was left without a fan as they suffered through the raw heat that night. 

Her mother, Li Yuanni, slept alone in bed. Her father was on the road, and the two children were crammed into the other bed with their uncle. They had slung their army-green bags over their shoulders when they went to bed. Xiaodeng heard her mother and her uncle toss and turn, their thin fans sounding like firecrackers as they slapped, stirring up a breeze and driving away mosquitoes all at once. 

“Isn’t the food in Shanghai different from ours?” her mother asked her uncle through the thin wall separating the rooms. Her uncle’s troop was stationed in a suburb of Shanghai. 

“Everything comes in small servings. I’m so afraid I’ll finish it all in one bite that I don’t even dare start. It’s very refined, a mix of sweet and sour,” her uncle answered. 

Her mother tutted enviously. “No wonder those women in the South have such delicate skin. See how they eat, and how we eat. I heard that the weather in the South is good too. The summers and winters there are not as uncomfortable as ours, right?” 

“It’s a coastal climate with four distinct seasons. Their winter is warmer than ours, but it’s still uncomfortable without heating. In summer, it’s hot during the day, but cool at night, so at least you can sleep well.” 

Her mother sighed. “All my life, I’ve been a frog at the bottom of a well. I really want to see the big city one day.” 

Her uncle was silent for a while, then mumbled, “It’s my fault. If it wasn’t for that telegram, you would be living in the provincial capital—” 

Her mother interrupted. “It’s all up to fate. Who can fight against fate? If it were not that telegram, it would have been something else. God doesn’t like me.” 

Her uncle slapped a mosquito on his arm, killing it. He wiped the blood from his palm onto the wall. “When Xiaoda grows up, I’ll take him to Shanghai to study. That can count as fulfilling your dream too.” 

Xiaoda stomped his foot on the bed board excitedly and said, “Xiaodeng and me will go together.” 

There was a rustling sound from their mother’s bed. She got up in the dark and took off her close-fitting undershirt. She had never slept topless, but the past few days had been so unbearably hot. 

“Isn’t this year wickedly hot? Look at the heat rashes on the kids. They’ve scratched so much they have little white spots all over. When their father comes back and sees it, he’s going to be so upset.” 

Their uncle laughed and said, “He seems easily upset with everyone, but when he sees these two precious kids, his temper disappears.” 

Their mother laughed too. “You should see his parents. They have three sons, but only one grandson, Xiaoda. They wish they could put him in the palm of their hand and worship him like a bodhisattva.” 

Their uncle felt Xiaoda’s leg. The boy was thin, but very strong. He didn’t move. He was probably asleep. 

“He’s grown well. He’s a good kid. I’ve never seen him throw a temper tantrum. But I think you two are fonder of Xiaodeng.” 

“A son forgets his mother as soon as he’s married, but when a daughter grows up, she’s her mother’s warm jacket. I just wish she were more easygoing. She holds a grudge.” Her mother yawned, a long, slow yawn. “Go to sleep. Those two rascals have been talking to you all night. You’re tired.” 

He grunted in agreement. The sound of fanning slowed down, and it was soon replaced by fine snoring. Xiaodeng’s eyelids drooped, but she felt that there were ten thousand bugs crawling over the wet, sticky mattress, biting her. She heard her mother get up in the dark, grope about, bump into something, and let out a pained yelp. Xiaodeng knew that her mother was going out to the courtyard to relieve herself. She usually used the chamber pot in the house, but with the awful heat these days, the smell would fill the whole house. When she finally stumbled her way into the courtyard, Xiaodeng vaguely heard her mumble to herself outside the window, “God, why is it so bright tonight?” 

Suddenly, an earth-shattering sound cut off her mother’s voice like a knife. 

Xiaodeng’s memory also cut off here, losing shape. All she could remember were faint pieces, like dust particles flickering at the beginning of an old film. Later, she would try and collect these dust particles to connect them into a whole picture, but it never worked. It remained a deep, impenetrable darkness. Not the kind of darkness that arrives when you turn off the light at night—no, that darkness could be torn with a slit in the curtains or a crack of light under the door. This shadow was a quilt with no seams, draped over her head, smelling like dirt, growing heavier and heavier, until it felt as if her forehead was squeezed flat and her eyes were about to pop out from her head. 

She heard people scream. Someone shouted, “The Soviets have dropped an atomic bomb!” Her mother was moaning, a string on a Chinese violin that was about to break. She tried to move, but found that only three toes on her right foot were functioning. She wiggled them back and forth, left and right. She bumped into something soft, a body. For a moment, she thought it was her mother—but it couldn’t be; her mother was moaning somewhere far away. It was Xiaoda. She wanted to shout, yell, cry for help, but she had no voice. 

After a great noise from the shifting rubble, her mother’s voice suddenly became clear. “I need to get dressed. This is humiliating.” 

“Saving lives is all that matters. You’re still worried about such things?” That was her uncle’s voice. 

Her mother remembered, and she suddenly screamed, “Xiaodeng! Xiaoda!” 

For as long as she lived, Xiaodeng would never forget her mother’s cries that day. 

In the darkness, Xiaoda suddenly started to slam himself violently against the solid walls around him. Xiaodeng couldn’t see his movements, but she could feel that he was like a fish stuck in a quagmire, desperate to escape. She moved her right hand and found that it was a little freer, so she directed all her strength into that hand and pushed upward. Suddenly, she saw a thin line of the sky. It was tiny, like the eye of a needle. Looking out through the needle’s eye, she saw a woman covered in blood. The woman was wearing only a pair of underpants, and there were two plaster-covered balls dangling from her chest. 

“Mama! Mama!” 

Xiaoda started shouting at the top of his lungs. Xiaodeng had lost her voice, so Xiaoda’s voice was now their common voice. He shouted for a long time, until his voice gradually weakened. 

“It hurts, Xiaodeng.” Xiaoda fell silent, as if he knew their situation was hopeless. 

“Oh God! Xiao . . . Xiaoda is under here. Help! Someone help me!” their mother cried. 

Their mother’s voice was not at all like her usual voice. It was more like a current that had broken from her body and gone on its own way, sharply barging through the air and cutting through everything that blocked its path, smashing it all to pieces. 

There was a burst of chaotic footsteps, and the sliver of sky disappeared from Xiaodeng’s sight. It was probably someone lying on the ground, listening. 

“Here. I’m here,” Xiaoda said weakly. 

Then there was their mother’s roaring, gasping sound, like a wolf. Xiaodeng guessed that their mother was digging through the rubble. 

“It’s useless. The child is under a cement slab. You can only pry it with tools. You won’t be able to dig them out with your hands.” This was the voice of a strange man. 

There was another burst of chaotic footsteps, and someone said, “I’ve got the tools. Get out of the way.” 

There was a jingling sound, then it stopped again. A voice stammered, “This slab was laid flat. If we pry up one end, it will slide all the way to the other.” 

The two children were stuck, one on each side of the slab.
There was a dead silence all around.
“Please, tell me which one to save.” It was her uncle talking now. Her mother banged her forehead on the ground. “Oh God! God!” Following a brief struggle, her mother’s voice fell. Xiaodeng heard her uncle snap at her mother. “If you don’t tell me which one, they’ll both be gone.” 

After a seemingly infinite silence, her mother spoke. 

Her mother’s voice was low. The people around her may have only guessed at what she said. But Xiaoda and Xiaodeng both heard the two syllables perfectly, and the slight pause in the middle. 

Her mother’s words were “Xiao . . . da.” 

Xiaoda’s body suddenly tightened, becoming a rocky lump. Xiaodeng expected him to say something, but he said nothing. There was a noise like rolling thunder overhead, and Xiaodeng felt that some- one had slammed a hammer into her head. 

“My sister . . . Sis!” 

That was the last thing Xiaodeng heard before she fell into a deep sleep. 

It grew light. The sky was ugly, full of disjointed, cottony clouds. The earth still trembled intermittently, and the razed city had suddenly broadened, making the horizon visible at first glance. Without the familiar buildings, the boundary between sky and earth seemed to have changed drastically. 

That day, they found a little girl lying face up beside a huge, half- fallen banyan tree. It was a corpse that had just been dug up, and it had not been moved yet. There was a good deal of blood on her forehead but almost no visible injury to other parts of the body. Her eyes, nose, and mouth were covered with mud. It seemed she had suffocated. The sky-blue shirt she wore had been torn to shreds. She was practically naked, but she still had a nearly perfect army-green bag with an image of Tiananmen Square on it slung across her shoulder. 

“What a pretty little girl.” 

Someone sighed regretfully, but no one stopped. They had seen too many bodies like this along the way, and they would see still more as they continued. That day, their concern was only for the living. They had no time to look after the dead—not now, and not for quite some time. 

Then came the rain, a rain that stirred up dust and stories, a rain that carried color and weight. The raindrops hit the little girl, and beautiful mud flowers opened one after another on her face. When the mud was washed away, a clean water droplet that had sat on the girl’s eyelid for some time suddenly quivered and rolled down. She opened her eyes. 

She sat up and stared blankly at the wilderness surrounding her, having completely lost her bearings. After a while, her eyes fell onto the bag she clung to, and the scattered memories gradually began to fall into place. She recalled something that seemed to have happened in the distant past. She stood up, swayed, and tore at the bag strap on her shoulder. It was a strong strap. She could not tear it off. She bent to bite it. Her teeth were as sharp as a little beast’s, and the threads began to slip between them, groaning miserably. Finally, the cloth broke. She rolled the bag into a ball, then flung it away ruthlessly. It spiraled through the air and got entangled in the branches of the half-fallen banyan tree, where it hung alone and helpless. 

She only had one shoe left. Using her clad foot, she searched for the road, which was really no road at all anymore. She walked along it for a while, then stopped and looked back at the path she had traveled. She saw the bag she had tossed, like an old sparrow hawk shot by a hunter, one dirty wing drooping from the branches of the tree. 

Wan Xiaodeng did not know at the time that this would be her last memory of her childhood. 

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About the Author

Zhang Ling (張翎) is the award-winning author of ten novels and numerous collections of novellas and short stories. Born in China, she moved to Canada in 1986. In the mid-1990s, she began to write and publish fiction in Chinese while working as a clinical audiologist. Since then, she has won the Chinese Media Literature Award for Author of the Year, the Grand Prize of Overseas Chinese Literary Award, and Taiwan’s Open Book Award. Among Zhang Ling’s works are A Single Swallow, The Sands of Time, Gold Mountain Blues and Where Waters Meet, her first novel written in English.  Aftershock, which was adapted into China’s first IMAX movie with unprecedented box-office success, will be translated into English by Shelly Bryant and published by Amazon Crossing on February 6, 2024.

Spotlight: A Conjuring of Ravens by Azalea Ellis

A Practical Guide to Sorcery Book 1 

Genre: Epic Fantasy 

In a world where magic is a science, Siobhan is a genius.

But even geniuses need schooling.


When Siobhan stumbled into the theft of a priceless magical book, she thought her dreams of becoming the world's most powerful sorcerer were destroyed.

But then a mysterious spell changed her life forever...

Siobhan is now wearing the body of a strange man and has a new identity—Sebastien. With a new chance for a new start, she allies herself with a local gang—secretly a revolutionary party funding itself through crime. Now, she is bound by vow to repay them in magic and favors.

But as Sebastien's reputation begins to bloom, and Siobhan's old enemies still lurk in the shadows, she quickly realizes that the secrets of this world are deeper and darker than she ever could have imagined.

Forced to juggle the two sides of her double life, Siobhan is determined to uncover the truth and take control of the name they gave her—The Raven Queen.

A Conjuring of Ravens is the first book in a hard fantasy series that includes: an intelligent protagonist, a rules-based magic system, and some hilarious misunderstandings.

Get it now. 

Excerpt

magical theory, desperation

I can’t let something this trivial stop me,’ she thought, glaring at the wood-bordered glass panes. ‘I need my grimoire.’

She made sure her feet were stable, then released one hand’s death grip on the windowsill. Her cold, clumsy fingers fumbled in one of the pockets of the ratty jacket she wore under the even more ratty cloak. She pulled out a soft wax crayon and carefully drew a small Circle on the glass, completely enclosing one of the hand-sized panes.

That was where the magic would take effect.

There could be no gaps in the Circle. Mistakes could be deadly.

Though she shook with the effort, Siobhan slowly drew a larger Circle around the first, dragging the crayon over the wooden divisions between the panes with careful precision. That was where she would write the Word, the instructions that would help guide the magic to the right purpose.

She drew a third, small Circle on the windowsill itself, then connected it to the outer Circle on the glass with a line. That was a component Circle, where she would place the Sacrifice, which would be consumed as she cast the spell.

She wrote the glyph for “fire” within it, though she would sacrifice no actual fire. It was close enough to the idea of heat to work. More fumbles into her many pockets turned up a vial of honey, of which she tipped a sluggish drop into the component Circle on the windowsill. Next, a small, rolled-up ball of similar stickiness—spiderweb. She reached for a wad of cotton, but found she had none.

Biting back a curse, she reached again for the wax crayon and wrote the glyph for “silence” in the space between the two overlapping Circles on the glass. She didn’t know the glyph for “stillness,” but she did know “slow,” so that’s what she wrote. She squeezed in what further detailed instructions would fit, but it wasn’t much. Finally, Siobhan drew a pentagon within the inside Circle.

She made the mistake of looking at the ground below and had to swallow down her lurching stomach and steady her trembling legs.

Magic required concentration. She couldn’t allow her circumstances to dull her wits if she wanted to succeed. ‘Grandfather didn’t teach me to be the type of sorcerer who has performance problems,’ she thought, sneering at her faint reflection in the glass.

‘He also didn’t teach me to make up spells out of desperation…’ This thought popped into her head unbidden, and she pushed it away. Untested spells were always dangerous.

It was always safer to copy a spell you already knew to work, which, ideally, had been proven over generations of regular use, than to try something entirely new.

If the magic rebelled and she lost control, she might die.

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About the Author

I’m the type of person that often has a wacky, shocking, or silly–but totally true–story to tell about my life.

The early part of my childhood was spent on a small farmstead, and I’ve got an active imagination that tends toward the outrageous and the macabre, which led to me being voted “most likely to borrow someone else’s car to transport a dead body.”

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Spotlight: The Wedding Party by L. R. Jones

Carrie and Oliver. A couple completely in love and the hosts of a wedding to remember at Colorado’s legendary Stanley Hotel. This is Carrie’s fairy tale come true. Her fiancé, Oliver, is Mr. Tall, Dark, and Handsome; successful; and utterly devoted to her. Now family and friends have gathered to celebrate. It’s sure to be a wild night as the drinks flow freely and the fun begins.

But the morning after is murder.

FBI agent Andi Castle was just supposed to be a plus-one. This should have been a calming weekend getaway from what she does best: catch killers. Instead, Andi’s on the hunt again. The hotel is on lockdown. Secrets are being unearthed. And no one is above Andi’s suspicions. But which secrets are worth killing for? Andi’s forced to find the answers fast…before someone else dies.

Buy on Amazon | Audible

About the Author

L. R. Jones is a pseudonym for New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Lisa Renee Jones, whose dark, edgy fiction includes the highly acclaimed novels The Poet, A Perfect Lie, and the Lilah Love series. Prior to publishing, Lisa owned a multistate staffing agency recognized by the Austin Business Journal. Lisa was listed as #7 in Entrepreneur magazine’s list of growing women-owned businesses. She lives in Colorado with her husband, a cat who always has something to say, and a golden retriever who’s afraid of her own bark.

Spotlight: The Neighbor Wager by Crystal Kaswell

The science of attraction is getting seriously tested…

Meet River. He used to be the nerd next door…only now he’s all grown up, got a sleeve of tattoos, and women seem to like him. A lot.

Even Lexi, the girl of River’s teenaged dreams, all bubbly sweetness—never noticed him. Until now.

There’s only one problem. They’re not meant for each other.

Now it’s up to Deanna, the super pragmatic, algorithm-fueled brains behind the new dating app Meetcute to make sure they realize it. River might be certain he knows true love when he sees it, but Deanna knows differently, and the future of her company is riding on it. All she has to do is prove to him that what he’s feeling for Lexi isn’t love. Not even close.

…even if it means making him fall for Deanna, instead.

Challenge accepted.

Buy on Amazon | Audible | Bookshop.org

About the Author

Crystal Kaswell writes scorching hot new adult romance novels.

She especially loves flawed characters who help each other heal. Her books are the perfect mix of heat, humor, and heart.

When she isn't writing, she's chain drinking tea, dancing, or debating which fictional character would be the best in bed. Originally from Southern California, she now resides in the Pacific Northwest, where she spends the rainy winters dreaming of sunny skies and balmy beaches.