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South Hills Sidekicks: Uninvited by Megan Summers and Leah Spiegel

South Hills Sidekicks by writing duo Megan Summers and Leah Spiegel follows a group of teenagers on the brink of starting their senior year of school. Alley suspects that this year will be the same as the rest, and dreads going to school and hanging out with a bunch of girls who are wealthier than she is … but that all changes with Kirsten, a girl in her “friendly” clique, goes missing. Names are thrown out as suspects, but the leading man in the polls is Shane, typical cool-guy-on-campus, who is cocky and full of himself. But is he really the man responsible? The cops seem uninterested so she and the rest of her gang start doing a little sleuthing of their own, but that makes things worse for their cause because now the police are starting to pay attention, but not in the way that they imagined. Will they ever find out what happened to Kirsten? Or will they end up just like her if they don’t stop digging around?

I found South Hills Sidekicks to be quite fun. I honestly didn’t expect much from this book in the beginning because I just felt like it was definitely out of my age range and that it wouldn’t necessarily apply to me, and yes, whilst that is true since it takes place in high school, I still found it entertaining. Not only is it full of mystery and intrigue … but this book is actually funny (which is something that I didn’t expect). I would definitely recommend this book to a younger crowd and I feel like the authors have a solid book on their hands.

[Rating: 4/5]

Gale Martin On Building A Great Story Around Anecdotes

Building great story around anecdotes
by Gale Martin
Your first sentence can dazzle. Your prose can incite or enrapture. But ultimately, it is your storytelling that is going to keep readers hooked.
How many books have you read that failed to deliver on the promise inherent on the first several chapters? More than a few, I’ll bet. I tend not to give up on a book, even if the middle is soggy and the end falls flat. Having published two novels thus far, I know all about the challenges in telling a book-length story. I prefer to give authors chances to redeem themselves and usually hang in until the last page. But I’m happiest if I’m caught up in the story.
How does a writer tell a good story? In my experience, it’s all about collecting anecdotes.
I write contemporary fiction, so anecdotes work for me. The opening of my new novel GRACE UNEXPECTED (Booktrope Editions 2012), in fact, the entire premise for the book, is built around two anecdotes. First, I traveled to Shaker Village in New Hampshire in 2005, and came away with some impressions I’m predicting many other people did not: while I was inspired by the order and the ingenuity of the Shakers (did you know they invented the clothespin?), I thought it was a shame that generations of women bought into the myth that they couldn’t be the equal of men without sacrificing intimacy with them. Then my smart young professional protagonist in GRACE UNEXPECTED tried on these impressions for size, and they clung to her like a pencil skirt, one size too small.
A few years later my husband and I were detoured off Route 9 near Wilmington, Vermont, onto a two-hour back roads detour trying to make an Easter dinner seating time of 3 p.m. Now, the roads in Pennsylvania may be rutted and potholed. But at least they are paved. It was the height of New England mud season, and the detour sent our rear-wheel drive Camry barreling down unpaved roads for miles and miles. I never thought we’d come out alive and intact—the car and the people inside.
When I began writing GRACE UNEXPECTED in 2007, both these anecdotes surfaced in the opening chapter—the mud road detour combined with the overarching story reflecting Grace’s takeaways from Shaker Village, that whole generations of women denied themselves the privileges of sex and child-bearing in order to fully participate in Shaker society.
As the book progresses, other anecdotes are incorporated, from experiences with college presidents whose idiosyncratic behaviors are suffered by their lowly subordinates to a news story about a museum visitor who defaced a priceless painting when she kissed it, leaving a big fat lip print on its unprotected surface.
How do you tap into anecdotes? Here’s how I do it. At the same time I take part in something—anything, really—I also detach from it—just as if I were standing over myself or having an out-of-body experience. Then, using my mind’s eye, I watch myself take part. Later, I record as many details as I can until I have a full-bodied anecdote.
Do we as writers have to detach from all our life experiences to watch ourselves participating in events and activities for the rest of our lives? In a word, yes. It may sully our enjoyment of things initially, but eventually it makes bona fide storytellers out of us.
Do all books begin with anecdotes? Not all, I’m sure. One of the faculty members where I obtained my graduate degree in creative writing was inspired to write a book from an image that was powerful and robust enough to inspire his storytelling. However, if you want your reader to stay connected, you’d better have all the things readers expect from fiction (clear writing, interesting characters, clean prose) but, foremost, a great story.
If you have other ways of capturing stories for your fiction, I’d love to hear about them. In the meantime, as you embark on your day, think about adding to your anecdote collection!
* * *

Gale Martin’s humorous backstage novel Don Juan in Hankey, PA was published by Booktrope Editions in 2011. Grace Unexpected, contemporary women’s fiction also from Booktrope, was published in July of 2012. She has a master of arts in creative writing from Wilkes University. She has worked in higher education marketing for ten years and lives in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, a rich source of inspiration for her writing. Her blog “Scrivengale” can be found on her website at http://galemartin.me.
In addition, there are a limited number of print review copies of Grace Unexpected available and numerous ebooks for early readers on a first-come, first-served basis. Simply email galemartin (dot) writer (at) gmail (dot) com to request one.
You can find her at:
Website: http://galemartin.me
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Gale_Martin (@Gale_Martin)
Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/GaleMartinAuthor
Email: galemartin (dot) writer (at) gmail (dot) com

I Have Iraq In My Shoe by Gretchen Berg

I Have Iraq In My Shoe follows Gretchen Berg (author) as she gets hit head on by the recession. We watch as she hilariously goes about what used to be her life (gym membership, shopping addictions, Diet Coke lover) as she comes face to face with unemployment. What will she do? Well, what she decides will completely take you by surprise (and I know it took her by surprise as well). Gretchen decides to uproot her life as she knows it as she moves to the Middle East to teach English to conservative Muslin Iraqis. She expects to make a little money to pay off some debt back in the states, but she most definitely doesn’t expect to ever come to enjoy her new life in the desert. But, surprisingly, in the end she ends up loving it.

I am usually not a fan of memoir type books- I find that they either appeal to me completely, or not at all, and typically, they are in the later category. But, for some reason, this book really resonated with me. I absolutely loved how Gretchen found herself in uncharted territory and found herself in love and finally at home. This book is absolutely hilarious and I loved all of the fashion references and the mentioning of all of the things that she deeply missed from back home. Overall, a fantastic read and a really fun time! I would highly recommend this book to pretty much any woman who is in need of a good laugh and a heartfelt book.

[Rating: 5/5]

Grace Unexpected By Gale Martin Sneak Peek – Chapter 1

-1-
SHAKEN AND STIRRED

I squinted through the muck on the windshield at the lane ahead. Then at the road map outstretched on my lap. I glanced back and forth between them: lane, map, lane, map. “Do all roads lead to mud?”
“That’s three in an hour,” Rae Ann said, white-knuckling the steering wheel. “There ought to be a law against slapping a route number on an old Indian trail.” She flipped on the windshield wipers, but nothing shot out to dissolve the mud. “We’re out of wiper fluid. And we’re lost.”
I had faith in maps. Together with dead shot compass skills, they’d lured me off the main roads onto paths uncharted by most tourists. That’s how I found a postcard-perfect salt lagoon behind a Mexican barrier beach, pure powder slopes in Patagonia, and a mountaintop waterfall in Japan begging for a moonlight tryst.
I pored over the map. “It says if we follow this road for three miles, it intersects with the road to Canterbury.”
“It says that, does it?” Rae Ann asked, her tone telegraphing her confidence in my navigation skills.
“You navigate. I’ll drive,” I offered. “Hop out.”
Rae Ann turned up her nose. “In this muck? These espadrilles are brand new.”
I glanced at her shoes—so clean they squeaked. “You don’t want to ruin those.” I grabbed a roll of paper towels off the back seat and toddled outside the truck. Mud oozed into my K-Swiss, formerly in virgin road-trip condition. I unwound some toweling and attacked the windshield, wiping clean an area the size of a bowling ball. Before climbing in on the driver’s side, I scraped the soles of my now mucked-up sneakers on the running board.
Rae Ann shimmied over to the passenger seat, her belly brimming with baby. “We’re stuck in Mudville, and it’s past lunchtime. My stomach is digesting itself.”
“Tell your stomach to relax. The only thing standing between us and Canterbury is a mud-coated, tree-lined goat path,” I said, flashing on a front-page news story about two female carcasses clad in Bermuda shorts clinging to a red SUV, one in childbirth, the other in midwifery, both fossilized in waves of mud.
“You better not mess up your brother’s truck.”
I clutched the gearstick. “And you better not go into labor.”
I threw the Explorer into drive. For the next four miles, it shuddered through wakes of ruts left by other vehicles, hydroplaning between gullies.
“Truck, Grace!” Rae Ann cried.
As a pickup barreled right at us, I cut the wheels hard, and we careened toward a stand of evergreens. Just before impact, I cranked the wheel to the left, and the truck skidded back onto the lane. When we arrived at the state road, the Explorer stopped shuddering, but Rae Ann hadn’t.
“Everybody okay?” I asked after I caught my breath.
She exhaled and patted her round tummy. “It pays to be a Savage, yes it does. You’d have made your mama proud.”
Gutsy driving wouldn’t have done it for Mom. I couldn’t conceive of anything that would impress my mother until I glanced in Rae Ann’s direction. “Yeah, maybe. If I looked like you.”
Now into her third trimester, my sister-in-law had that glow everyone ascribed to pregnant women. “Won’t she be shocked when I give birth to a ten-pound watermelon!” She pointed off to her right. “Look it. Out there. A double rainbow.”
Perfect parallel bows straddled the New Hampshire countryside. The lower one glowed and was well-defined; the upper was airy, almost translucent, though both sets of endpoints were visible. I’d never seen one up-close-and-personal before. It was the first time I realized their colors were reversed—the outer bow being the mirror image of the inner.
“A sign from on high, darlin’,” Rae Ann said, sounding tickled with herself, “interpreted for you heathens. We’ll be quakin’ with the Shakers in a jiff.”
“After this ride, I’ll see their quake, and I’ll raise them a shake,” I said. “That’s a poker reference, interpreted for you Southern Baptists.”
“You think we’re a bunch of killjoys?” She glared at me over the bridge of her horn-rimmed glasses and snapped her gum. “I’ve played penny poker.”
I blanched, my terror as genuine as a Botox pout. “And you haven’t been excommunicated by church elders?”
“I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that.” She took out a tissue from her purse and blotted her face. “Who knew New Hampshire was this muggy?”
Like tourists to Brigadoon, plumes of mist beckoned us from the road ahead. I plowed through the pea soup for another half a mile and paused at a stop sign. “Which way?”
She waggled her right arm and sucked back a bubble the size of Rhode Island. “Shaker settlement at Canterbury. Turn left.”
As we rounded the corner, rolling hills like mounds of mint frosting came into view. First a mythical mist. Then a double rainbow. Now hills so green we could have inhaled their color. The stage was set. This Canterbury was going to be some kind of magical place.
Visiting Canterbury had been Rae Ann’s idea. An early birthday present. That was Rae for you, always scouring the Internet for wrapped-in-a-bow vacation spots. However, I wasn’t excited about visiting a place where people gave up sex for life, kind of like I once gave up Gummi bears for Lent, but less painful.
“Shaker Village offers ‘renewal of the human spirit’,” Rae Ann had said after I agreed to make the trip. “All that stress from that nasty old job, including that nasty old boss? Z-zzzp!” she said, buzzing my temple with her index finger. “Better than electroshock therapy.”
Not to burst her Bubble Yum, but I had two bad bosses. Anything that allowed me to forget either one of them was worth the trip. For sheer stress relief, I’d prefer caving in the White Mountains. Not Rae, not even in LBP times—Life Before Pregnancy.
She wasn’t much of a tomboy. Not exactly a Southern belle either. Much too practical. But quite the looker nonetheless. My brother, Glen, got transferred to Georgia where pretty girls grow on trees, met Rae Ann, and plucked her, so to speak. Even in her last trimester, though she swore she might be confused for a Beluga whale, she still turned heads with her Snow White countenance and coloring.
Though Shaker Village was hardly my first choice for a vacation spot, if Rae Ann saw it as a cheap ticket to a couple hours of serenity, who was I to complain, considering her swollen ankles and constant heartburn? We’d be home by Saturday, plenty of time for my thirty-fifth birthday celebration with Christian. I had a premonition I’d be getting something, oh, unforgettable from him on Sunday.
By the time Rae Ann and I pulled into the parking lot, we were weary, muddy, mystified, battle-tested, and hankering for food. Our last sustenance had been around nine o’clock. Deep fried chocolate cake stuffed with Twinkies and ice cream in Grafton. Breakfast must have done a number on her blood sugar. “Want to hit the café?” I asked.
“I really want to do the Dwelling House tour. Last one of the day starts in five minutes. I can hang in there. I’ve chewed this gum so long I’m putting flavor back into it.”
Minutes later, we were staring down the most imposing building at Canterbury, the Dwelling House. It towered stories higher than the rest of the settlement, its distinctive L-shape jutting into a colony of rectangular houses with triangle roofs in the same design as the houses of my childhood drawings.
I pointed to a Goliath of a man approaching. “That might be our guide now.”
“Afternoon, folks,” he said brightly. He had a barrel chest and a full head of hair pushing gray. “I assume y’all are here for the Home Tour.”
A Southern expert on the Canterbury settlement? What a disappointment. I had been in New England three days and had yet to hear one yokel declare, “You can’t get they-ah from he-ah.”
“Where y’all from?” People shared their home states, and he yupped his approval. Virginia, Florida, Ohio.
“Pennsylvania,” I called out.
“Georgia,” Rae Ann offered, and the guide tipped his hat to her.
One man from Texas had embarked on the extreme Shaker circuit that summer, having visited his first settlement in Kentucky last week, with plans to travel on to Maine after today’s stop. He must have been an expert compared to me. All I knew was that Shakers made chairs with clean lines, hung them on walls, and never took rolls in the hay.
Our guide ushered fifteen of us up the landing and into a small room on the first floor. “The Shakers were actually Quakers who danced and shook in worship to purge the sins from their body. Since 1792, the Canterbury Shakers committed themselves to making a heaven on earth by practicing common ownership, pacifism, sexual equality, and celibacy.”
Celibacy leads to utopia? Who knew?
“By 1840, the Shakers numbered around 6,000 full members in eighteen major communities in eight states, making them the most successful utopian society in America.”
How could a bunch of people who never had sex possibly know what they’re missing?
The guide was saying the Shaker population at Canterbury swelled between 1793 and 1837.
“Rae,” I whispered. “How do you swell the population in a celibate community?”
“Child adoption and converts. They must’ve corralled some nineteenth-century streetwalkers and said, ‘Go live with those Shakers, or you’re doing time in the clink.’”
The guide indicated some floor models of the Dwelling House under glass, in various stages of expansion, and waved us on into the next room. “All dwelling spaces were divided so that men and women did everything separately. As we head into the hall, we’re going to be Shakers. Brothers, take the right-hand staircase up to the living quarters. Sisters, head to your left.”
All the “Sisters” climbed one flight of steps via separate-but-equal staircases and entered a common sleeping area. A half-dozen twin beds with white coverlets were lined up against white-washed walls. I felt a tightness in my chest and a twinge in my abdomen. “How could grown women live like this? Absolutely no privacy.”
“What’d they need privacy for?” Rae Ann said. “All they did was work, worship, and sleep.”
“Look, Harv,” one of the women in our group said. “All those small beds in a row. Doesn’t it look like a dollhouse?”
More like a nuthouse, I thought.
“Now that you’ve seen their sleeping quarters, let’s talk about Shaker industry,” the guide said. “The Shakers were praised for their culture of work. It was their daily calling. They designed simple furniture with care. Their devotion to the idea of work led to the invention of the circular saw, the clothespin, the flat broom, a wheel-driven washing machine, even fashion. Follow me, folks.”
“The clothespin?” I said, not realizing it had been invented. “I’m impressed.”
The tour group tramped behind the guide into the next room. “To your left are textiles Shakers used to generate wealth. That hooded cape,” he said, pointing to an elegant, floor-length wrap, “was conceived by a pair of sisters who used a train tour to promote sales up and down the East Coast.”
Rae Ann leaned in close and whispered, “Look how much people can get done when they give up sex, Sister Grace.”
But who’d want to make that trade-off? I thought. I’d never given up anything for sex.
The guide cleared his throat and turned to face the group. “In practicing common ownership of goods and equality of the sexes,” he said, “Shaker women had professional opportunities that married ladies from the same time period never had.”
“Even Shaker sisters knew women couldn’t have it all,” Rae Ann said, “long before our generation came to their senses.”
I scoffed. “Don’t give them too much credit. Maybe they were too chicken to venture outside their cozy utopia on earth to try life on their own.”
“Nothing wrong with wanting to be part of a community,” Rae Ann said. “It’s good for you.”
“Any questions, folks?” the guide asked.
A tall lady in front of me raised her hand, and the guide gave her a nod. “Isn’t celibacy another anti-woman stance perpetuated by men who wanted to distance themselves from women’s original sin?”
Don’t know if I’d have had the guts to ask that question in this setting, but her observation sounded reasonable to me. For hundreds of years, women have been blamed for the fall of mankind, incriminating themselves because of what Eve allegedly made Adam do in a mythical garden ages ago.
“I’m not here to change your views, religious or political,” the guide explained. “What I can tell you is that Shaker women were equal to men when it came to religious leadership. Unlike other religions practiced during the same time period, women participated fully in religious life because they were not distracted by childbearing.”
Rae Ann folded her hands across her big tummy, cradling it and the precious cargo inside. “I think I’m going to be somewhat distracted for the next, oh, eighteen or fifty years.”
Wait a minute. So men take us seriously as long as we deny our sexuality? “You don’t have to choose between being a whole person and being a mother.”
“What if I want to be a whole mother?”
I groaned too loudly. People turned around and stared. I lowered my voice. “You can be whatever you want. It’s 2012, not 1912.”
The guide waved us on. “For the last leg of the tour, we’ll head to the Meetinghouse, which was attached to the living quarters,” he explained. “Worship was as much a part of Shaker life as working and eating. Though they’re known for worship, they also wrote thousands of hymns, including a pretty famous one, ‘Simple Gifts’. Y’all know that one?”
People nodded vigorously.
“I love that song,” Rae Ann said, and started humming it.
“Ready, folks?” the guide asked. “There were men’s and women’s entrances into the Meetinghouse, too. I’m counting on y’all to take the proper one. We don’t want to rattle any Shaker ghosts.”
While Rae Ann continued on toward the Meetinghouse, I stopped to view a photographed portrait of a Shaker woman, taken around 1880. She was covered in a shoulder-to-toe charcoal cape dress. Her hair had been pulled off her face into a no-frills bonnet, and the only exposed flesh appeared deathly white. She was a study in pinched propriety down to her last epidermal cell. The guide was saying something about how the few Shakers alive today were cloistered in Maine. The sour Shaker lady locked eyes with me. Was she sneering?
Gallivanting across the back roads of New England had taken more out of me than I expected. And this trip was supposed to be my renewal? The more I learned about these Shakers, the more uncomfortable I became.
While I inspected the face in the photograph, the corners of her mouth turned downward ever so slightly. “Did you see that?” I whirled around, but everyone else had moved on to the Meetinghouse.
She was sneering at me! I glowered back, fanning myself, and gave her a piece of my mind:
You know why you’re all shriveled up? You lived without any earthly pleasures. Your bedroom looked like a sanitarium. I, on the other hand, made my own choices, better choices. And as for that myth that women can only cleanse themselves of their original sin by giving up sex and working ourselves to death, well, I don’t buy it. Women can be sexual creatures and be taken seriously. Go ahead and rattle whatever it is you rattle. I dare you.
I broke free from her icy scowl and followed the others into the Meetinghouse. The scent of mildewed wood overwhelmed my nostrils, and I couldn’t catch my breath. “I need some fresh air.” I hurried past Rae and the rest of the group, stalked through a Meetinghouse door—indifferent to whether it was for men or women—and plopped myself on the stoop outside.
Rae Ann waddled after me. “What’s wrong, darlin’?”
“I think I’ve had enough of Shaker Village for one day.”
“You left through the men’s exit,” she observed. “Shame, shame. You’re going to be haunted by Shaker spirits.”
“Now that you mention it,” I said, “I could go for some spirits. A double something with a splash of anything. Let’s find a watering hole. And a hamburger.”
Rae Ann lifted her purse strap onto her shoulder. “Onward. To find some beef.” She sang, “‘Tis a gift to be simple. ‘Tis a gift to be free. ‘Tis a gift to la, da, dum, de, dum, de, dah.’”

Malena Lott on Summer and Creativity

On Summer and Creativity

by Malena Lott

Each season has its strengths, gifts supplied not only to nature and mankind, but to our outlook on the world around us. Personally, I’m a spring/fall fangirl, but I relish the dark winter nights, curled up by a fire; and summer, with its longer days and sweaty evenings on the deck, watching fireflies flit in the creek as I marvel at the chorus of night sounds growing louder as the sun goes down and my beer bottle empties.

Summer is about imagination and play. It’s the season of vacations and laughter, sunburns and splashing. Summer feeds the creative soul like a ripe watermelon to thirsty children. Morning pages come faster this time of year, so much so I can barely get it all down fast enough. My mind says, “more, more” when I think I have no more time to give, but of course there’s more time because summer days seem endless so I return to the screen again when the shade blankets the table just so or I sit cross legged after dinner with a notebook in hand to scribble the ideas that won’t let me be.

Creative writing isn’t so much about process or productivity as it is about permission to begin and to return to the page. Something “more important” always beckons – a hungry family, dirty laundry, “real” work that pays the bills. But to the creative writer, nothing feel more real than putting words on the page, first releasing them and then revisiting them and forming them into something bigger than they once were, building sentence to paragraph to scene to chapter to story to end.

You gave life to something that began as a blinking cursor. You shared a person’s hurt and healed them. You left something indelible on the hearts and minds of the reader that will last beyond the season. You are a writer.

Create.

Malena Lott s the author of three novels, The Stork Reality, Dating da Vinci and Fixer Upper; two novellas, Life’s a Beach and The Last Resort, several published short stories, including July’s “The Pool Boy,” and also writes young adult under the pen name Lena Brown. Readers can connect with her on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram under“malenalott” and she blogs about mojo and zen at malenalott.com.

Ship To Shore by Elizabeth Krall

Ship to Shore by Elizabeth Krall follows main characters Sally and Dermid, who meet on a ship while sailing across the Atlantic ocean. Sally is instantly drawn to Dermid and although they have a strong connection, their romance ends badly … and very quickly. But, there may still be hope for them as Sally accepts a job assignment on remote Scottish island nearby to where Dermid lives, although she insists that he isn’t the reason. But that quickly changes. Once Sally’s assignment is over, does she plan to stay in Scotland? Or will she return home?

Ship to Shore is a witty romance set against the North Atlantic as a backdrop, where two people must learn to trust their instincts and truly go for it in terms of love. At first they are both wary of truly committing to the other, but once they learn to trust their hearts, they are finally able to give in to one another. Overall, I really enjoyed this book. I believe I finished it in a few days and thought about it while I wasn’t reading, constantly wondering what would happen to Sally and Dermid and if they would ever wind up together. Thankfully, the ending doesn’t disappoint (although it literally happens at the very last minute). I loved the scenic descriptions and you can tell that the author definitely did her research. All in all, a wonderful read and a great escape during the summer time.

[Rating: 4/4]

How To Look Like You by Rose McClelland

How to Look Like You by Rose McClelland asks the simple question, “have you ever had a frenemy?” If you aren’t familiar with the term, it is an enemy who is also a friend … someone whom you smile and are friendly to their face, but behind their back are secretly filled with jealousy and green with envy. Most girls are familiar with the term, and it isn’t lost on Chloe and Ella either. Ella is a very talented young woman- she sings and acts amongst many other things, yet she envies Chloe’s steady relationship with Aidan and her supposed perfect body. On a fluke, Ella begins working closely with Aidan and begins to develop feelings for him although her loyalty should be to her friend. The two get close and Aidan invites her to join his band, sending Chloe on a rage. This small step triggers a “frenemy relationship” between the two girls and spirals the two girls into dangerous territory. Will they be ever be able to be friends again? Or are they destined to one day be completely enemies?

Oh my goodness, Rose McClelland nails this one (and some poisonous female relationships) right on the head. As a female, all women can relate to these kinds of friendships and I think that Rose did a fabulous job portraying both of the women and their different points of view and allowing their stories to intertwine in a way that allows the reader to really get to know the characters. As a reader, I felt like I definitely took a side (who wouldn’t), but not once did I ever feel like Rose did. I felt like both women’s stories were written very unbiasedly. Overall, a fantastic and truly unique read. You have another hit on your hands Rose! Well done!

[Rating: 4.5/5]

Secrets, Lies & PG Tips by Leanne Rose

Secrets, Lies & PG Tips by Leanne Rose follows self confessed hopeless romantic, Nina Parker. Narrated in first person (with a British accent and slang), the book starts off with Nina moving to San Francisco to pursue a flashy and glamorous life full of money, parties, fancy shoes, a fabulous career, and a knock-out hunk of a man that she sees frequently on TV. Although her head is constantly in the clouds, Nina is knocked back down to real life, where she works for an unappreciative boss, has no style, and definitely no man. Will things change for Nina? And will she ever get her happily ever after? Or will she be forced to live her life unhappily for the rest of her days?

Secrets, Lies & PG Tips starts off rather slow but stick with it … because it gets better. I love Nina’s story telling and the way that Leanne Rose makes the characters feel very authentic, with honest hopes and dreams and quite honestly, fantasies. By far Nina is my favorite character, but a close second would have to be Marvin- very witty and funny. All in all a great, quick read filled with romantic wishes and a great twist that the reader will not expect (I know that I didn’t). Overall, a quite enjoyable read.

[Rating: 3.5/5]