What’s Up?
Guess who’s back!
Bone to Pick and Skin and Bone are up on Amazon now! What do you think? I really struggled with the refresh on these ones because I loved the original covers so much. I think the direction I went with these worked well?
It's going to be quite the Blind Date With a Book #eggstravaganza beginning Friday, March 29th and running through the weekend - we're creating the dating profiles and are already at 110 with dozens more to go!
If you're not in the MM and MMM+ Romance Reviewed Facebook Group yet, join now!!!
Pupdate of the Week
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…he’s right. That is a potato. I don’t think it will be popular even on discount chocolate day.
Seriously though, that’s a potato!
Shout-Out of the Week
Being a psychic in the small seaside town of Fox Harbor is challenging enough, but winter months are brutal. Not that using his clairvoyant abilities to hunt down lost pets isn’t thrilling, but Lorenzo wouldn’t mind a tiny bit more excitement in his life.
Be careful what you wish for?
Things get more stimulating when the charismatic Dr. Ian Thatcher takes a romantic interest in him. Unfortunately, their promising evening takes a ghastly turn when an old man dies on Lorenzo’s doorstep, after warning Lorenzo his life is in danger.
Before Lorenzo can say “Give me my old boring life back, please” his home is ransacked, a fiery being tries to burn him to death, and he’s informed he’s the only hope to save the world.
…yeah, feeling that!
Must Read of the Week
This is just really cool.
The Bartender and the Lost Literary Masterpiece
In 2021, Jack Chadwick, a twenty-seven-year-old barman and part-time go-go dancer, was browsing the shelves of the Working Class Movement Library, outside Manchester, when he spied an arresting book cover. The hand-drawn illustration showed a skeleton kneeling in supplication, its arms outstretched. Chadwick knew of neither the book, “Caliban Shrieks,” nor its writer, Jack Hilton. But he became absorbed in the text. At closing time, after several hours of concentrated reading, he closed the book and asked the librarian what she could tell him about the author. Very little, she said—only that, after a brief literary career, Hilton had disappeared.
This is diabetes in a box, but….I’d try one!
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