Showing posts with label Barbara Bretton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barbara Bretton. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

What I'm Reading and Binge Watching This Week

So I just finished Dark on Netflix last night. Arg, my brain hurts. Time travel paradoxes and time loops... But seriously, wow. Apparently many people feel the same about this German show because filming for season 2 starts June 25.

For months it has popped up in my recommendations but I didn't think I would like it. Finally I said, screw it, I'll give it a try. 


The first episode was kinda slow and really consisted of me thinking to myself "what the fuck is this?" But by the second episode I was hooked. 


The show centers around two main time periods 1986 and 2019 though you will see a bit of 1953 and 2052 before the season ends. 33 years between each time period. You will see the same group of people mostly in each timeline, or their relatives. 


The entire show is very twisty and dark as hell. Secrets, lies, trying to figure out who is good, who is bad or if things are really so black and white. By the end you feel like everything is a gray area.


You can watch the show in German with English subtitles or English dubbed. Personally I HATE subtitles. I want to enjoy a show, not read it. I save reading for my books. The English dub is annoying at first. Disembodied voices that don't match the lips...but you get used to it after awhile.


Netflix has really made me enjoy sci-fi shows more than I ever thought I would. 


I LOVED Altered Carbon and Travelers.  Altered Carbon has not been renewed yet for a season 2 but Travelers has been filming season 3. I don't know a release date yet.


I've been trying to find something else to take up the quiet space, so I returned to The Killing. And I instantly remembered why I stopped watching it. The emotional stuff leaves me gutted. When Rosie's parents, then her brothers find out she's dead....but I'm trudging through half-heartedly watching it.



In non-fiction books I'm working my way through Ghostland an American History in Haunted Places by Colin Dickey  and in fiction I'm reading The Sugar Maple Chronicles: 4 Book Collection by Barbara Bretton. I read the first 3 books years ago when they first came out. I thought I had read book 4 but after going through them I realized I had not. So I'm finishing that so I can move on to Enchanted (The Wedding Story): The Sugar Maple Chronicles - Book 5 and 
Entangled: The Homecoming: The Sugar Maple Chronicles - Book 6


This summer I plan to catch up on all my series. I finally read Kim Harrison's The Turn last week. Damn. Made me really miss The Hollows. But good news. She announced a new Hollows book is coming...with Rachel and Ivy! 

Next up will be catching up on the Charley Davidson Series by Darynda Jones. I heard 13 is the final book. I haven't read book nine yet. *Sigh* But I am catching up, slowly but surely.

So what are you reading or watching these days?

Monday, November 10, 2014

Spotlight Stranger In Paradise by Barbara Bretton






Stranger In Paradise
Home Front
Book Two
Barbara Bretton

Genre: Post -World War 2 Romance

Publisher: Free Spirit Press

Date of Publication: October 15, 2014

ISBN: 9781940665085
ASIN: B00MTC0RBY

Number of pages: 347
Word Count: approx. 70,000

Cover Artist: Tammy Seidick

Blurb/Book Description:

Before they became The Greatest Generation, they were young men and women in love . . .

The year is 1953 and London is throwing the party of the century. Even though the ravages of World War II are still visible throughout the kingdom, the world is gathering on the Mall to celebrate the coronation of England's beautiful young queen.

For almost ten years, journalist Mac Weaver has been far from his New York home. America has changed since the war ended and he wonders if there's still a place for him in the land of backyard barbecues and a new Ford in every driveway.

However a chance encounter with beautiful English reporter Jane Townsend is about to change his life forever. As the new monarch waves from the window of her fairy-tale glass coach, a homesick Yank and a lonely Brit fall in love.

One week later, Mr. and Mrs. Mac Weaver board the Queen Mary for New York and a guaranteed happily ever after future in the land where dreams come true.

But there are dark shadows on the horizon that threaten Mac and Jane's happiness and family scandals that just might tear them apart . . .

"This generation of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny."
--Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Available at Amazon   Kobo  Smashwords  BN  iTunes


Chapter 1

Mac Weaver hadn't seen a crowd like this since V-E Day eight years ago. He'd led off yesterday's story with that statement and he could lead off today's story with it as well. Hundreds of thousands of jubilant British subjects crowded the narrow streets, all vying for a glimpse of their brand new queen. They were a good-natured group, even those who believed the monarchy should go the way of the dinosaur, a group banded together by centuries of tradition, generations of civility, and years of war. A far cry from the chaos he'd experienced in Korea just three short months ago.

"Shove over, yank," said a wiry reporter in a Harris Tweed jacket. "Can't expect me to see over a skyscraper."

"Sure thing." Mac stepped back and let the English reporter move in front of him.

"Grow them tall in the States," the reporter said over his shoulder. "Texas?"

"New York."

"Same thing, isn't it, yank?"

"Yeah," said Mac with a rueful laugh. "In a way it is."

When you were three thousand miles away from home, it really didn't matter what state you were from. As it was, Mac stood out like a 6'3" sore thumb as he waited in front of Westminster Abbey for the procession to arrive. An All-American sore thumb.

He thought like an American, he moved like an American, he talked and joked and worked like an American. Hard to believe he hadn't been back home in over seven and a half years. He patted the ticket in the inside pocket of his battered trench coat. Well, that was about to change. Last night he'd managed to pull some strings and book passage on the Queen Mary. In less than a week he'd be back in New York where he belonged.

That was, if he belonged anywhere at all.

One of the drawbacks to being a foreign correspondent was the fact that you spent a lot of time in hotels with room service dinners and tattered guidebooks for company. Not that he didn't enjoy the life of a rolling stone. He'd never given a hell of a lot of thought to things like families and permanence. His folks had enough permanence for the entire Weaver clan. Les and Edna had been in the house in Forest Hills for almost forty years and, God willing, he knew they'd be there another forty more. And if his kid brother had lived, Mac had no doubt Doug would have followed suit.

Someone in the Weaver family had to blaze new trails and see the world and that someone was Mac. His first job had been as a cub reporter for the New York Daily News and his coverage of a major garment district fire had attracted notice. One thing led to another and before he was twenty-five, he was working in the Paris office of the New York Times. Then the war came and duty called. His reputation as a journalist had cushioned Mac from the worst of it. He'd been in danger--but not too much danger. He'd smelled the gunfire--but not up close. He'd covered the war but he'd never really been part of it.

When his brother died, Mac wondered why in hell the Almighty had chosen to take Doug's life and spare his own. But, of course, there were no answers to that question--at least none he could come up with. So Mac drank a lot and swore a lot and wrote some of the best war stories of his career while he was drinking and swearing.

Those stories had made his name and now, eight years after the Allies' victory, he was still riding high on them. He could probably parlay his credits into another few years on the foreign beat but he knew when it was time to hang up his passport and move on. Of course, that wasn't the entire truth. His bureau chief had made it patently clear that Mac's presence was getting to be a bit of a problem.

"It's not that we don't respect your work, Weaver," the old boy had said during their last meeting. "It's just that the higher-ups think it's time for a change, what with the problem in Korea almost over and all that."

The problem in Korea. That said it in a nutshell, didn't it? You couldn't go around telling everybody that the Emperor had no clothes before they finally asked you to look the other way.

Besides, the strangest thing had happened: he was homesick. He was tired of fighting, tired of running, tired of seeing young men die. All the lessons we should have learned during the last war seemed to have been put aside like yesterday's news. The players may have changed, but the script was still the same: the perennial struggle to see who is king of the mountain.

America's isolationist days had disappeared with the first bomb dropped on Pearl Harbor. There was no turning back to the days of smug security, sure in the knowledge that we were inviolate. With power came responsibility. With prosperity came ambition.

We overstepped our bounds. We made mistakes. Mac wrote about them. The McCarthyites read about them and made a note of his name. And that was why it was time to move on.

This time moving on meant moving back to where it had all begun: New York City. His hometown. For weeks now he'd had the feeling he was on the verge of something big. Something exciting. Something different from anything he'd ever done before. An adventure. He didn't know what it was exactly, but he knew it was right around the corner, if he only knew where to look.

He'd seen everything and done everything there was to do. Two wars. A broken engagement to a lovely Frenchwoman who wanted more out of life than a well-used passport. He knew the inside of every bar from London to Beirut and back again. There was nothing left to explore--nothing, that was, except the country he'd left behind. London, however, was a demanding mistress. If you looked closely enough, you could still see the scars of war on the magnificent old city but those scars only added to her lustre and brilliance. He'd done his best work there in London, written his best stories, seen the best that mankind had to offer. His admiration for the British people was boundless. Their bravery was the stuff of which legends were made. Not that Mac had committed any acts of bravery himself. Bravery required a certain involvement and Mac had danced through most of his life avoiding exactly that.

It hadn't taken Amy Sterling, his home town girlfriend, long after V-E Day to figure that out for herself. I need someone who's there for me, Mac, Amy's letter had said. Someone who'll be there when I need him, not running all over the globe...

Well, Amy had gotten her wish. She had a husband and a house and three kids. Rumor had it she went to PTA meetings and drove a Ford station wagon and made the best apple pie in Richmond Hill. And if she ever thought about Mac it was probably with a touch of pity that he was all alone.

You'd think he'd have learned, wouldn't you, by the time he found Suzette. But, no. Same mistakes. Different continent. Suzette and her husband Bernard lived with their children in a chateau in the Loire Valley.

Even his rowdiest friends had all settled down into marriage and their own personal baby booms while Mac covered everything from murders to movie stars to coronations. "You've got the life, pal," they'd said when he'd gone home for a visit in 1946, all hail-the-conquering-hero. "No mortgages for you. No dirty diapers and two a.m. feedings for our Mac." Mac Weaver shoveling snow in the driveway? Not on your life. Punching a time clock in some dreary office? You've got to be kidding.

Mac Weaver with someone who cared about him?

Sorry. Can't help you there, Mac.

Maybe it was the thought of going home that was getting to him. For thirty-five years being alone hadn't bothered him. Lately, however, he'd begun to feel the pinch of time as he watched colleagues go home to wife and kids while he spent his nights in pub after pub, bemoaning the state of the world.

Or maybe he'd seen one war too many. Sure as hell nobody had been ready to go to battle again so soon after the end of World War II. It had been hard to tackle the issue of Korea. First of all there was the question of nomenclature. Washington balked at the word "war." "Police action" had a certain arrogant cachet while "conflict" implied a battle of words not weapons. The carnage he'd seen had been anything but a war of semantics.

Once again a generation of young men were laying down their lives and this time it was difficult to figure out what they were fighting for. Europe was still struggling to recover from the ravages of World War II--and starting to wonder if they should watch their eastern borders as the USSR gathered strength and purpose.

Panmunjom. The Yalu River. Inchon. Places that had been unknown three years ago were on every tongue today. The fledgling United Nations was stretching its wings with this conflict and Mac didn't have a hell of a lot of confidence that the outcome would be what everyone hoped for.

He liked his battles clearly defined, with good guys and bad guys, and an ending like one in a Hollywood B-movie. When you can't even call a war, a war, you're in big trouble. He'd made reference to those feelings in a column three months ago and, before he knew what hit him, he found himself transferred back to the European beat.

At least with a coronation, there was no doubt about who the good guy was, not when she wore a frilly white dress and a crown of diamonds and emeralds and rubies. Leave it to the Brits: they bitched and moaned about the obsolescence of royalty in the nuclear age, but give them an occasion to break out the glass coach and the high-stepping horses, and they came out in number to cheer their monarch on.

All you had to do was look around at the faces in the crowd and you'd see he was absolutely right. The wiry reporter in front of him was probably from a working class family in Birmingham. That gent over by the bobby had Oxford written all over his aristocratic face and a blood line bluer than the Danube. Charwomen mingled with society grande dames--at least the grande dames who hadn't received an invitation from the Queen. Rich man, poor man, beggarman, thief. They were all represented in the throng. School kids, young mothers, beautiful women with glossy black hair tumbling over their shoulders--

Wait a minute. His gaze returned to the vision jockeying for a front row position in the dense knot of people near the bobby. . . . she'd smell like rose petals in the spring . . . her voice would be gentler than a summer rain . . . Small, delicate features in a fine-boned cameo of a face framed by a silken cascade of lustrous waves. If she topped five feet two, she was lucky. . . . candlelight and soft music . . . she'd step into his arms, her head resting against his chest as they danced . . . It was a wonder she hadn't been trampled by the mob. In New York, she would have been flattened in a minute.

But this wasn't New York. This was London. Girls with porcelain skin like that didn't live in Queens or Brooklyn. Her eyes are blue, he thought, ignoring the roar of the crowd and the clip-clop of horses' hooves approaching. Cornflower blue . . .

"Hey, yank! Where you off to? The queen's about to arrive." Mac no longer cared. He pushed his way into the crowd to meet the woman of his dreams.

Continue Reading This Sneak Peek at http://www.barbarabretton.com/sip.shtml


About the Author:

A full-fledged Baby Boomer, Barbara Bretton grew up in New York City during the Post-World War II 1950s with the music of the Big Bands as the soundtrack to her childhood. Her father and grandfather served in the navy during the war. Her uncles served in the army. None of them shared their stories.

But her mother, who had enjoyed a brief stint as Rosie the Riveter, brought the era to life with tales of the Home Front that were better than any fairy tale. It wasn’t until much later that Barbara learned the rest of the story about the fiancĂ© who had been lost in the war, sending her mother down a different path that ultimately led to a second chance at love . . . and to the daughter who would one day tell a little part of that story.

There is always one book that’s very special to an author, one book or series that lives deep inside her heart.  SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY and STRANGER IN PARADISE, books 1 and 2 of the Home Front series, are Barbara’s. She hopes they’ll find a place in your heart too.





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

Monday, February 14, 2011

A Review of Spun by Sorcery by Barbara Bretton



.5





4.5 Fangs for Spun by Sorcery
by Barbara Bretton
Book Description:

Chloe is always losing things-but an entire town? Just when she was about to settle down in Sugar Maple with her soul-mate Luke MacKenzie, her Fae enemy Isadora strikes, and her new hometown is gone. Even the Book of Spells, her lifeline to magick, can't help her now. Just in the nick of time, her friend Janice roars up in Chloe's ancient Buick with Penny the cat and her yarn stash in tow. If she is going to save her home she has to go back to Salem, where family secrets and centuries- old feuds pull her into the fight of her life.

My review:
Chloe Hobbs has managed to misplace the entire town of Sugar Maple. She's not sure what she did but she knows she did something that made her beloved home disappear. Now she has to figure out what to do to get it back which involves a crazy road trip that is a wild ride like no other to Salem, Massachusetts.

Falling trees, scary empty alternate reality truck stops, and death defying plunges off a cliff are just a few of the "minor roadblocks" that Chloe, her boyfriend Luke and best friend Janice have to face before reaching Salem- where it all began.

But is there anything or anyone left in Salem that can tell Chloe what she needs to know, that can help her get Sugar Maple back before it's too late?

When they first arrive in Salem it doesn't look good but finally they find a connection Chloe never expected that can help her get Sugar Maple back...if she wants it bad enough.

This is the most action packed of all three Sugar Maple books yet. From page one things are crazy and just continue to get crazier.
I missed the normal characters of Sugar Maple but it was great seeing the story progress and learn more about Chloe's history.

And again Bretton ends the book with a cliffhanger making sure readers will continue to want more of this zany series.
Knitters will also find a wealth of knitting know how in the back of the book.


Friday, November 5, 2010

Guest Blog and Giveaway with Barbara Bretton


A friend of mine loves my contemporary women's fiction but the paranormal books leave her cold. She's never said it in so many words but when you've known and loved a friend for as long as I've known and loved her, it's isn't so much what she says that clues you in but what she doesn't say. My Sugar Maple books, the ones filled with knitting and magic, just don't seem to be on her reading radar.

We were comparing notes about upcoming books and deadlines and the never-ending terror that comes with facing the blank computer screen on a daily basis. (BTW that terror never goes away. It's as sharp and fierce and deadly today as it was when I wrote my first book in 1982.

I've just learned how to keep it in line.) She told me her new book would be released in December.

I took a deep breath. "My new one comes out on Election Day."

Her silence spoke volumes and I knew the time had come to call out that big pink elephant in the room.

"It's okay," I said with a laugh. "You're not a paranormal fan. I understand."

"I love your writing," she said, sounding relieved and embarrassed and everything in between.

"Your contemporaries are on my keeper shelf but . . . " Her voice trailed off.

"Go ahead," I said. "You can say it." I mean, I don't read westerns or thrillers. We all have different likes and dislikes and that's okay. This isn't school. You can read what you want to read without worrying about the reading police staring over your shoulder and tsk-tsking your choices.

It was my friend's turn to take a deep breath of her own. "Why?" she asked. "Why in the world would you stop writing down-to-earth, real-world books and start writing paranormal with vampires and ghosts and sorceresses-in-training?"

You have to admit it's a good question. It's also one I've been asked an awful lot since I began my Sugar Maple series two years ago.

I finally have an answer.

I love my very real earthbound world. I love my everyday life. Grocery shopping. Doing laundry. Paying bills. Rooting for Maks on Dancing With The Stars. Seeing my husband smile when I conjure up something deliciously spicy in the kitchen.
It's all good. Very good, in fact.

I wouldn't trade it for anything.

And yet despite that I sometimes find myself imagining a secret door just beyond the produce aisle at Shoprite or a hidden room accessible through my office closet or maybe a gathering of faeries in that odd little hideaway beneath the dogwood at the far end of the backyard. And who's to say those things aren't waiting for me, hidden in plain sight? They say that human infants are born with a "third eye" that sees beyond our three-dimensional world and grows dimmer as the baby moves out of diapers and into toddlerhood. I'd love to believe that's true. I'd love to believe that all we see isn't all there is, that the world is still filled with surprises and possibilities. I'd love to think the kilt-clad bagpiper who crested the hill behind a Long Island supermarket in 1985 was stepping from a dream and not a volunteer fireman late for an Ancient Order of Hibernians meeting.

What can I say? I'm a dreamer. Always was, always will be. The little girl who believed in Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy, Easter Bunny and guardian angels is alive and well, tucked deep inside my middle-aged writer's heart and these days she's writing about a magickal small town and yarn shop in northern Vermont and loving every minute of it.


The newest Sugar Maple book is Spun by Sorcery:

Readers love to visit USA Today bestselling author Barbara Bretton's Sugar Maple. There's just one problem-it's fallen off the map!

Chloe is always losing things-but an entire town? Just when she was about to settle down in Sugar Maple with her soul-mate Luke MacKenzie, her Fae enemy Isadora strikes, and her new hometown is gone. Even the Book of Spells, her lifeline to magick, can't help her now. Just in the nick of time, her friend Janice roars up in Chloe's ancient Buick with Penny the cat and her yarn stash in tow. If she is going to save her home she has to go back to Salem, where family secrets and centuries- old feuds pull her into the fight of her life.


If you haven't yet had the chance to read this series- now's your chance.


Barbara is generously offering five complete sets of the Sugar Maple Series.


That's 5 Sugar Maple sets of 3 books each (CASTING SPELLS, LACED WITH MAGIC, and SPUN BY SORCERY) for 5 winners drawn at random.


Open to US Shipping Only


Winner TBA Wednesday Nov 10

To Enter Leave a Question or Comment for Barbara

Be Sure to Include Your Email

Saturday, September 5, 2009

A Review of Laced with Magic by Barbara Bretton


.5
Four Point Five Fangs for Laced with Magic


Barbara Bretton take us back to Sugar Maple, Vermont in Laced with Magic the follow up to Casting Spells.

Luke and Chloe are doing good, so good he's even moved in with her and seems to be dealing well with the magical mishaps and townspeople, too bad some of them aren't too thrilled with him.

Then things go downhill quickly when Chloe announces Luke is going to be the permanent chief of police at a town meeting, before discussing it with him. Then his ex-wife shows up and drops a bombshell - she's been seeing and talking to their dead daughter Steffie-a daughter Chloe knew nothing about.

To really make things bad- Steffie's spirit is being held hostage by Isadora, the crazy Fae leader that Chloe banished to another realm. Isadora's hell bent on taking Sugar Maple to the other side and away from all humanity, but that will put many of the town folk in jeopardy but there are some who agree with her and are making Chloe and Luke's life miserable.

Bretton has woven (or should I say knitted) another engaging tale of magic versus humanity in an intriguing story I couldn't put down.

I hope Chloe and Luke can work things out and that Sugar Maple will be safe from Isadora but the book ends with a real cliffhanger that leaves you wondering "What now?"

It was strange to read the story from three different points of view. I am used to just one or two but to be inside the head of Chloe, Luke and Luke's ex Karen left me a little confused sometimes but it was nice being able to get the story from all angles.

It's interesting to see how preconceived notions based on appearances can really effect our judgement of people. Just because someone is beautiful doesn't mean life is easy. Chloe and Karen are complete opposites but both think the other is prettier, more womanly, etc yet in the end they are quite similar and see that no one has a charmed life-even if they have magic. I love how Bretton worked that into the story- that we shouldn't judge a book by it's cover, or a person by how they look.

I also love her knitting references though I had to look some things up because I know NOTHING about knitting it makes the story new and fun learning about knitting terms and how into it some people are.

Laced with Magic will pull you right back into Sugar Maple and leave you rooting for Chloe and Luke.

All I want to know is: when's the next book going to be out?

Monday, August 3, 2009

Barbara Bretton Guest Blog and Laced with Magic Giveaway




I'm starting to think longingly about the Federal Witness Protection plan.

No, I haven't been secretly forging a life of crime here in the home state of the Sopranos. It's a whole lot scarier than that. Laced With Magic hits the stands tomorrow and I'm plotting my escape!

You would think I'd be used to it by now, wouldn't you? I've been down this road almost fifty times over the years and it never gets easier. Oh, I'm not complaining. Pre-publication jitters are a very small price to pay for the privilege of seeing my name on the spine of a book but that doesn't mean my stomach doesn't do a double back-flip every time a new title is released. Writing and publishing a book is like being strapped into the front car of a roller coaster, one of those loop-di-loop coasters that pull a 360 at 80 miles per hour while your entire life passes before your eyes.

And we keep coming back for more!

A few months ago I had the pleasure of visiting with all of you and sharing a little of the story behind Casting Spells. Laced With Magic is the sequel, a continuation of Chloe and Luke's love story with more magic, more love, and more knitting than ever before. I'm delighted to tell you that there will be even more Sugar Maple stories to come: I just signed a two-book deal for books #3 and #4 in the Sugar Maple Chronicles.

See? I'm so excited that my words are running away with me. Okay, Bretton. Take a deep breath. Center your thoughts. Back to Laced With Magic. Publishers Weekly awarded it a coveted starred review which definitely put another one of those smiles on my face. But you know what? Putting a smile on your face is what's really important and I hope Laced With Magic will do exactly that.

We pick up the story a few months after Casting Spells ends. Chloe's newfound magickal powers grow stronger every day . . . and so does her love for Sugar Maple's resident human, Luke MacKenzie. They/re teetering on the brink of taking their relationship to a more permanent level when Luke's ex-wife shows up in town and Chloe discovers that the residents of Sugar Maple aren't the only ones keeping secrets: it seems that Luke has been keeping a few of his own!

I'm giving away five copies of Laced With Magic to five lucky readers. All you have to do is leave a comment and I'll choose five winners at random on Sunday. Winners' names will be posted here and on my blog at http://bmafb.blogspot.com – I look forward to hearing from you.

Drop by my website http://www.barbarabretton.com/ or knitting blog romancingtheyarn.blogspot.com and say hello! There's always a contest going on.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Today's Guest Author is Barbara Bretton



Today our guest author is Barbara Bretton. Her most recent novel is Casting Spells, about a quaint little town that seems perfect to the outside eye-but really it is home to all kinds of paranormals. The main character is a sorceress with no magic who owns the knitting shop and acts as major of the town- Chloe.
Today Barbara discusses ideas.


Ask a writer where she gets her ideas and you always get the same answer.

Everywhere.

And it's true. Ideas really are everywhere. They're in the produce aisle of Shoprite. They're in the local diner. Sometimes they're even on some gorgeous tropical beach, hiding at the bottom of a pitcher of lovely margaritas.

I'm a writer. Over the course of twenty-something years, I've published almost fifty books and that means I know a little something about ideas and where they come from.

Which is why I'm going to tell you exactly where I got the idea for CASTING SPELLS.

My dentist's waiting room while I was preparing to die.

Now I hate dentists. Okay, not the actual dentists themselves. Some of them are very lovely people. But, let's be honest here: the things they do to our poor unsuspecting mouths are probably against the laws of the Geneva Convention. Needles, drills, all manner of sharp instruments the Marquis de Sade would have loved.

So there I was, sitting alone in the waiting room, trying not to hear the cries of pain coming from the other room. (Yes. I'm exaggerating.) I had already flipped through back copies of the American Dental Association journal when my gaze landed on a fancy display of brochures for (hold on) dental implants.

Not exactly the kind of reading that puts you in a relaxed frame of mind but I'm one of those people who'll read the backs of cereal boxes so I grabbed for it. To my surprise it was kind of interesting. You could still eat steak without worrying that your teeth will land on the table. I could see the benefit. No wonder he had the stack of brochures placed next to a back issue of AARP's Modern Maturity.

Suddenly a question popped into my head, "But what happens to an aging vampire when his teeth start to go? Do they make uppers and lowers for the undead? Is there a dentist out there who would fit a vampire with implants?"

I pretty much giggled my way through my time in the dental chair, thinking of the possibilities.

And then I forgot all about it for almost four years until I was chatting on the phone with a knitter/writer friend of mine. We were talking about what makes one yarn shop better than the rest and I said, "I wish there was a magic knit shop where your yarn never tangled, your sleeves always came out the same length, and you always, always got gauge." (If you're a knitter, you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.)

Well, the next day my imagination was on fire. It was Labor Day 2006. A cold rainy September Monday. I'm not sure how the two ideas came together but they did and in a few hours I suddenly had created the magical town of Sugar Maple, Vermont with its resident vampires, werewolves, witches, trolls, house sprites, shapeshifters, mountain giants, and Chloe Hobbs, the half-human half-sorceress owner of the knit shop of my dreams. Toss in a murder, a Fae enemy, and a hunky human cop who comes to town to solve the crime and you have CASTING SPELLS which, I'm happy to say, is still available. And I'm even happier to say that the sequel, LACED WITH MAGIC, will be on the stands August 4.

(And yes I do have some retired vampires in my book who zip around in Rascals and don't let dentures slow them down.)

I'm giving away five copies of CASTING SPELLS to five lucky readers. All you have to do is leave a comment and I'll choose five winners at random on Sunday. Winners' names will be posted here and on my blog at http://bmafb.blogspot.com/ – I look forward to hearing from you.

Drop by my website http://www.barbarabretton.com/ or my knitting blog http://www.romancingtheyarn.blogspot.com/ and say hello! There's always a contest going on.



Thanks for joining us today Barbara! I can't wait to read Laced with Magic. And Good Luck to all those who enter the contest for a copy of Casting Spells.

Remember everyone who enters please make sure you leave contact info so if you are chosen you can receive your free book. Thanks! ~RR

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Happy Earth day and Join Us for Author Barbara Bretton Tomorrow

Happy, Happy Earth Day Everyone!

I hope you are all being eco-aware and practicing recycling today.

I am planning my garden and shopping for herb seeds. I want to add lavender, rosemary and sage to my garden this year. I just have to figure out where to put it. Hubby always loves that (not) since he gets to drag out the tiller and break up the ground. Usually means heavy lifting and dirt hauling, too. Oh well, it is good for him.

I also need to figure out organic ways to protect my garden from the awful beetle type bugs that destroyed over half of it last year- even while using natural/organic pesticides.

Anyway I hope you all will join us tomorrow here at Fang-tastic Books. The wonderful author, Barbara Bretton will be joining us and giving away FIVE copies of Casting Spells. Woo Hoo! Now that's a giveaway.

I adored the book, Casting Spells. I even had the twinge of desire to learn how to knit. Then I talked myself out of it deciding that I have enough hobbies already I don't need a new one right now. I am already so busy I don't get to half of the things I really enjoy. Yet Barbara does a wonderful job of making knitting sound sexy and fascinating...Maybe someday.

I could crochet when I was a kid, after watching my mom for hours she taught me a few stitches and I made a few things but I haven't touched the needles in years so I don't remember anything. My mom's arthritis has halted her crocheting so even she hasn't done much in years and has forgotten many a stitch.

I can't sew either, another thing I really wish I knew how to do. If I could sew I would have all kinds of cool clothes and lingerie since I always have ideas...just no know how on what to do with them.

Ahh...for now I will stick to my books. Those I know what to do with. :-)

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

A Review of Casting Spells by Barbara Bretton


.5

Four and a half fangs for Casting Spells by Barbara Bretton

OK, who knew knitting could sound fun and sexy and could be the perfect setting for a paranormal romance, well that and the fictionally fun, supernatural town of Sugar Maple, Vermont where Chloe Hobbs, the only human in town is the owner of the knitting shop Sticks and Strings.

I don't speak knit talk so some of the terms had me lost but I skipped over all that because what really matters is that I do speak paranormal and romance.

Barbara Bretton's Casting Spells definitely cast a spell over me and I am sure it will cast a spell over you as well. I read through the book quick because I was so engrossed and I wanted to know what happened, who did what and of course if Chloe got the guy. The guy being Luke MacKenzie a cop who came to town to investigate the first murder in Sugar Maple's history. The cop that Chloe instantly falls for even though he's a human and she's half sorceress with currently no magically ability but still supposed to seek out only magical men for the sake of the town.

Ah it's a complicated situation and nothing is as it seems in Sugar Maple, not even to Chloe who has lived there all her life.

Casting Spells will knit you up into a web and won't let you go until the book is finished. It was completely engrossing and a fabulous story. I love how the characters change and evolve and how Chloe herself finally gives in and deals with what she has to do to make things right. And Luke, hmmm, always been a sucker for green eyes myself...something about the rarity of them. True green eyes you don't see very often...more like never.

The story was a fun whirlwind of plot, character development and flat out fun combined with good paranormal elements and heated romance. Everything a reader could ask for.

And I loved the cats who play minor rolls in the book, but the showstopper had to be the shape shifting friends and the maddening dancing silverware. Sounds crazy right?

Read the book, you'll love it.
 
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