C. Lee McKenzie

Young Adult and Middle Grade Author

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More About the #atozChallenge #reflections & Hats Off Corner Welcomes Libby Heilly

May 16, 2016 By C. Lee McKenzie

Last week I listed some of the blogs that I visited again and again because they were interesting or funny or I knew I’d learn something if I stopped in. I’m continuing with that because even though the AtoZ REFLECTIONS is officially over, my reflections aren’t. Here are more bloggers who worked hard on their post and who delivered some great content in April.

BB Creations had some of the best movie information all month along with some special and creative cards she crafts. I have enough movies to keep me busy forever.

Rhyme Time chews up your brain and spits it out so you either set everything to rhyme or you dream of cats every night.



J.H. Moncrieff, One of Queens of Horror, did her best to scare me to death with her posts. Unfortunately, she had to drop out before she finished me off. 

Journaling Woman had my attention when she revealed her theme-Dying Oddly. To me dying in any fashion isn’t appealing, but Oddly intrigued me. And her posts kept me hooked. Death by scarf, death by zorbing, death by grief and on and on. Highly imaginative theme, JW.

We lost another super blogger due to “life interference,” when Hilary had to stop posting in Positive Letters. . .inspirational stories, but she’ll be back next year, and I hope we get to see more of those posts. 

Again, I can’t post all that I enjoyed and visited daily, or your eyes will glaze over, but if I was there a lot, you know I loved what you were doing.

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Libby Heilly





Blurb:
Sixteen-year-old Grape Merriweather has just moved to Sortilege Falls and already she knows something isn’t right. A small pack of teenage models, too beautiful for words, holds the town in their sway. The models have no plans on making Grape’s life easy. But no matter how cruel they are to Grape and the other “Normals”, no one can stay angry with them for long.

Grape’s life changes for the better, or so she thinks, when Mandy, the only “nice” model, befriends her. But that’s when the trouble truly begins. Mandy’s friendship places Grape smack in the middle of a medical mystery that has the entire town on edge. One by one, the models fall ill from an incurable disease. Grape quickly realizes that the models’ parents are hiding a secret, even as they watch their children die. To save her only friend, Grape will have to find the truth–and that means putting her life in danger.

Brief Bio:

Libby Heily began writing after spending years as an obsessive reader. Nothing was safe from her eyes – she tore through books, magazines, cereal boxes, and shampoo bottles with equal enthusiasm. Libby’s written plays, screenplays, flash fiction, short stories, and novels. When not spending time in made up places with invisible friends, she enjoys running, hiking and performing improv in Raleigh, NC. 

Enter to win a copy of Welcome to Sortilege Falls – hosted by Goodreads:

Where to find Libby on the web:

libbyheily.com
Instagram
Twitter
Facebook
Amazon
Goodreads

Wattpad

Excerpt:

Grape is being taken by her new neighbor, Graeson, to meet his friend, a club owner who wants desperately to be a vampire. Grape suspects that the vampire wannabe knows more than he is telling about the mysterious illness gripping the models. Below is the beginning of their exchange:

Stale air filled the club. The smell was so old, so ancient, that it distracted her for a few moments from the man sitting on a throne in the middle of the room. Even in the dim light, she recognized Graeson’s vampire-wannabe friend. It seemed as if he recognized Grape as well, judging by the pointy-toothed grin he gave her. His tailored black suit and red tie made him look even more like a member of the bloodthirsty undead. Stretched out in front of the throne lay a woman wearing a green bikini beneath a sheer body stocking. Her silky red hair lay splayed out around her. The woman glanced at Graeson and then sealed her gaze on Grape.

“Graeson, you brought a friend,” the vampire said in his clipped accent.

The door shut behind them, sealing out the sunshine. Dull yellow and blue light bathed the room. Candles and strings of Christmas lights provided most of the illumination in the club—that, and the faint glow of the vamp’s skin.

The few patrons in the room looked up from their board game to inspect the newcomers. They sat tucked away in a booth in the far corner. Mugs of steaming coffee were the only things on the table that Grape recognized. She wasn’t sure what their costumes were about, but she noticed that none of them were dressed like vampires, though one did seem to be wearing a werewolf mask.

“Role playing,” the vamp said, catching the direction of Grape’s gaze. “It is a specialty here, no?”

“I can see that,” Grape said, glancing from him to Graeson, the only two people in the room dressed in costumes that were suitable for real life as well. The woman on the floor could have worn hers to the beach, she guessed, but it didn’t look appropriate for an afternoon out.

“Would you like something to drink?” the vamp asked. “Or to eat? This one, I’m sure has a great appetite.” He nodded his head to Grape as he spoke.

“I’m not hungry. What do you mean about my appetite?” How the hell could he know she ate all the time?

“I meant no harm. You are a teenager. Teenagers eat constantly.”

“I’ll have some wine,” Graeson said, not looking up from the woman at the vamp’s feet.

“Dear, get our guests some wine.”

The woman stretched out her lanky body. She stood in one elegant motion. Her red hair trailed down her back to the tops of her buttocks. There was no sign of the white cream that Graeson wore, but her skin was deadly pale nonetheless.

“That’s my ex-girlfriend,” Graeson whispered to Grape as the woman walked away.

“No way.” She couldn’t imagine a world where that woman and Graeson dated.

“So, Grape Merriweather has decided to speak to me again,” the vamp said, his eyes twinkling. 

“Not  on  purpose,” Grape  said, her voice flat. She didn’t feel nearly as nervous as she had the day before in the hospital, but that was mostly because it was hard to be intimidated by a man when just behind him sat a boy in troll makeup arguing that the spell he’d used should have vanquished the wood nymph to his right.

“You know her?” Graeson asked his friend.

“We have been acquainted,” the vamp said. “Grape is such an unusual name.”

“My name isn’t the most unusual thing in this room.”

Graeson glanced quizzically from the man on the throne to Grape. “Liam, when did you meet Grape?”

“Liam?” Grape tried hard to keep herself from chuckling. “Like the actor?”

“I was Liam first,” the vamp said. “Many, many years before this so-called actor.



Quote of the Week: Maybe stories are just data with a soul.” Brene Brown, Author

Are you still reflecting on the bloggers you connected with on the @atozchallenge? Want to try Sortilege Falls? Sounds interesting, right? I’d like to know what’s wrong with those models and what their parents are hiding.



Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: AtoZReflections, hat's of corner, New Books

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Medeia Sharif

May 6, 2016 By C. Lee McKenzie

I know it’s Friday and I don’t blog on Friday unless I screw up and forget something important on Monday! And I did. However, I’m here to try and make up for spacing out and not posting this when I promised.



Hats Off Corner Welcomes Medeia Sharif

A LOVE THAT DISTURBS by Medeia Sharif
Evernight Teen, June 17, 2016

Maysa Mazari is alarmed by her mother’s talk about arranged marriage. Meanwhile, as a hijab-wearing Pakistani-American, she wants to find love on her own. Her judgmental Muslim clique has protected her from racist taunts, although the leader, Aamal, is turning on her as Maysa strays from the group because of her attraction to Haydee.

Haydee Gomez is a former gang member and juvenile detention student. Now living with a clean-cut aunt, she wants to turn her life around, even though one person will never let her forget her roots—Rafe, her abusive pimp. Haydee attempts to pull away from a life of prostitution when she develops feelings for Maysa, although Rafe isn’t willing to give her up too easily.

Finding themselves in danger from Maysa’s friends and Haydee’s pimp, it’s apparent their love disturbs everyone around them as they fight to stay together.

Find Medeia – YA and MG Author

Blog   |   Twitter   |   Goodreads   |   Instagram   |   Amazon

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: hat's of corner, Medeia Sharif, New Books

Look Who’s the Follower of the Month & Hats Off Corner Welcomes Yolanda Renee

March 28, 2016 By C. Lee McKenzie

Available on Amazon

Today I’m excited to host two writers. One is my first Follower of the Month. She’s been a long-time writer friend and she was the first one to take me up on my offer in March’s Email Connect. Welcome Beverly Stowe McClure. 

If you’re featured I:

  • buy, read, and review your latest book
  • mark your book as AM READING on Goodreads
  • feature you and your book(s) in my monthly EMAIL CONNECT email
  • tweet your book link(s) for 4 Wednesdays, 3 times a day during your month
  • post one facebook post with a link to my review
  • feature you on The Write Game on your month (this month’s an exception since the AtoZ Challenge starts, so I’m posting it a bit early)
  • Pin and feature your latest book cover to my Pinterest Board, Book Covers that Catch my Eye.
Congratulations, Beverly. And thanks for always being so supportive of others who write books.

Hats Off Corner

And my second and very wonderful guest is Yolanda Renee! With her latest book.
Murder & Obsession
Yolanda Renée
Published by Curiosity Quills Press, Murder & Obsession is the third book in the Detective Quaid Series.

Tagline:
Flames burn between a hardboiled cop and a gifted artist but soon extinguish as another man’s obsession ignites into an inferno of desire, driving him to destroy the object of his madness…

Unrequited Love

The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary defines unrequited as “not reciprocated or returned in kind.”

The plot of Murder & Obsession involves unrequited love and the act of killing to acquire and or retain that love. Remember Fatal Attraction?

Have you ever felt that deeply towards another individual that you couldn’t let him or her go? I’ve always been of the mind that if he’s not into me, move on. However, for some folks, it’s not that easy. 

In Murder & Obsession, the antagonist is a man obsessed with a woman he can’t have. Why murder the object of your love? That goes against everything that makes sense for most of us. Yet, the sad truth in this country is that death by a lover or spouse happens daily.

Statistics prove that on average, more than three women are murdered by their husbands or lovers every day. Although, if you watch Snapped, you know life insurance seems to be a major factor too.

Blurb:
As wedding bells echo like the ring of toasting champagne glasses in the ice carved mountains of Anchorage Alaska, Detective Steven Quaid rehabs his grandfather’s cabin into a honeymoon cottage for his new bride. 

When he returns from a hunting trip, Steven’s faced with five police officers, who “Want to talk.” Plagued by two unsolved murders, the Department is searching for answers.

The conversation comes to a deafening halt as the team finds a bloody crime scene in the bridal suite. 

“Where’s her body?” is a question Steven cannot fathom.  

Steven’s jaw clenches and his heart races. Images of Sarah streak through his mind. 

The silence breaks as an explosion of accusations vibrate through every fiber of his being. 
Steven bolts…

Although running is never the smart thing to do, Steven’s not thinking clearly and his escape into the wilderness of the Brooks Range proves almost fatal. 

This Steven Quaid mystery is both personal and heartbreaking.

Bio: Yolanda Renée
At one time adventure called to me and I answered. I learned to sleep under the midnight sun of Alaska, survive in below zero temperatures, and hike the Mountain Ranges. I’ve traveled from Prudhoe Bay to Valdez, and the memories are some of my most valued. The wonders, mysteries and incredible beauty that is Alaska has never left me and thus now influence my writing.

Despite my adventurous spirit, I achieved my educational goals, married, and I have two wonderful sons. Writing is now my focus, my newest adventure!

Read the 1st Chapter ~~ Goodreads ~~ Twitter ~~ Facebook ~~ Blog 
~~ Pinterest ~~ Amazon ~~
~~ BUY ~~




Quote of the Week: “Your friend is your needs answered. He is your field which you sow with love and reap with thanksgiving.” Kahlil Gibran

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Beverly Stowe McClure, Follower of the month, hat's of corner, Yolanda Renee

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Roland Yeoman

March 14, 2016 By C. Lee McKenzie

I have a bit of old business from last week before I turn everything over to Roland today. First, those amazing writers Jess and Steph, of Fairday Morrow fame, won a copy of Sudden Secrets for this meme. Just didn’t want to leave them out of the winners’ circle.

The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow




Hats Off Corner

And now start the drum roll. Hereeeeer comes Roland! Hope you’ll start a dialog with this author and find out what his new adventure is all about.

“Hope is a waking dream.” 
- Aristotle
Fairy Girl on Dragonfly
See how she reaches for the light!
Roland Yeomans here:
Lee has let me slip into her “Hats Off Corner” on her blog in my 
“Don’t You Hate Book Tours?” Book Tour.


Lee asked what gave me the idea for my latest novel:

To talk of my dream and how it is working out.

How it is working out?  
I haven’t sold a single copy.  
Why continue writing then?

Let me go the side route on this:
There is an older woman who has moved somewhere in my square of blocks.  Her back is permanently bent so she must walk always looking at her feet.
On my way to work, I see her walking to the grocery store pushing her brightly painted red shopping cart (She cannot drive with her head pushed down.)
She is always jauntily clothed in gaily colored garments done in impish style.  Her eyes may be forced to look at the dirt, but her mind is looking up into the clouds.

That is why I still write.  

“Once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return.”
 – Leonardo da Vinci

Our circumstances may force our eyes down, but our hearts can ride on the wings of dream, wonder, and hope always upward, always reaching out to touch the impossible.

Who knows?  One magic moment we may just make it.

Each of us are on that journey to the dream of becoming a self-supporting writer. We are at different stages of that adventure.  We wave at one another to rally each other.

Just that recognition lets us know we are not alone.

When I wrote Death in the House of Life, (my 1895 Egyptian Steampunk Adventure), I had Mark Twain speak of the voyage he made famous in his The Innocents Abroad. I thought: why not tell that tale?

The Not-So-Innocents Abroad is a 1867 Steampunk journey: the maiden voyage of the Xanadu, the first Air-Steamship where …

A man with the blood of death in his veins is embarking on a perilous journey of learning how to be married to an alien empress…

11 year old orphan, Nikola Tesla, finds himself mentored by Mark Twain who is as much a child as the boy …

An insane Abraham Lincoln and a crippled General Sherman ally themselves with monsters to enact revenge upon Samuel McCord only to find it is a journey leading to dark places …

The twin sister of the empress finds herself falling in love with the husband of her hated sister – the man who sees the hurt little girl bruised by living in the cold shadow of her regal twin.

A global war of vampire kingdoms is being waged unknown to the living …

The vampiric Abigail Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Empress Theodora circle one another, looking for weakness in their opponents, blind to their own.

A Being older than the creation of light is moving his pieces on the board of the world as he has for millennia …

Yet, like The Lord of the Rings (especially The Fellowship of the Ring), my novel is one of friendships won, lost, and regained, of how the darkness around us is not as important as the light we carry within us, and of how that light is born of two hearts hesitantly reaching out to one another and finding its soul-mate.
The journey we start is never the one we finish.

Give my novel a chance.  Go to its Amazon Page and try the LOOK INSIDE feature:

I write to music.  Do you? Here is the selection that I am writing a scene in the sequel, The Not-So-Innocents at Large where the Sidhe fly their sky-boats to challenge the Empress Meilori Shinseen, flying over England.

Much to their regret, the Sidhe learn Meilori is, indeed, a star-child.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hguvzsLUD5E 

And there you have it folks! Want to give Roland a boost and venture over to good old Amazon? Take a look at what’s he’s created. And since Roland’s already provided us with two great quotes, I’ll let those be my quotes of the week. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Blog Hops, hat's of corner, Roland Yeoman

Winners, Monday Meme, Hats Off Corner Welcomes Anna Simpson and #InkRipples Whew!

February 8, 2016 By C. Lee McKenzie

Winners

Thanks to everyone who took the time to visit on IWSG Wednesday and asked for an eBook of Double Negative. I put your names in the hat and drew Alexa Winters and Bish Denham. They’ll have their eBook ASAP.



Monday Meme

Don’t forget to join Tara Tyler, Christine Rains, and me on this easy-peasy HOP. Post a MEME during the week (use your own pic or an easy meme maker app) - and if you can’t think of anything, pass on encouraging words from one of your reviews, or an inspiring quote!

Visit others. That’s it!

Then the awesome hostesses will hop around and Ooo and Ahh and choose one entry each to win an ebook. AND two lucky random participants will win a $20 GC. Enter and spread some warmth!

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Anna Simpson

About the Mystery: 

Emma never dreamed of being a super-sleuth. In her mind, she’s more Scooby Doo than Nancy Drew and when her nosy neighbor, Mrs. Perkins, drags her to an anniversary party to solve a mystery, she rolls her eyes, buys a box of chocolates and hops in the car.
What’s a party without an attack on its host—or more accurately on the host’s grandson, sparking an allergic reaction and moving the party to the hospital waiting room. Suddenly, everyone is a suspect. Emma and Mrs. Perkins, along with Great Aunt Alice (a spirit with boundary issues who keeps stepping into Emma’s body like a new dress and playing matchmaker), dive into an investigation that almost gets Emma killed along with the man they are trying to protect. With so many reasons to kill him and so much to be gained if he died, Emma and Mrs. Perkins must unravel the tenuous ties that point to every member of his family as potential killers.
Even if it means going back to the psych ward, Emma will protect her friend and this innocent man. What good is freedom if it’s haunted with guilt?

What Some Are Saying:

Sherry from fundinmental says:
“I love writing that can pull emotions from me and White Light does that.”
Laura from Laura’s Ramblins and Reveiws says:
“There’s lots to laugh at and some serious business to draw you deeper into the story.”
Mary from Goodreads says:
“This is a great beach read with mystical elements. Simpson creates colorful characters, intriguing plot, and with her use of dialogue keeps the story moving along.”

About Anna: 

Anna Simpson lives near the Canadian-US border with her family. Even though she’s lived in several places in British Columbia, her free spirit wasn’t able to settle down until she moved back to her hometown.
She is easy to find though, if you know the magic word — emaginette. Do an internet search using it and you’ll see what I mean. 🙂
 You can connect with Anna here: Blog, Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads

Want to see for yourself? Here’s an Excerpt: 
In a half acre of green sits one flowerbed, brimming with Lily of the Valley. I remember the first time I saw them over fifteen years ago. The delicate white bells could only be fairy hats. Today, the round base of cemented river stone is still full of waxy green spear tips. I don’t see fairy hats anymore. No, now I enjoy the effects of nature—its simple perfection.

Mrs. Perkins does it best. In fact, everything around Mrs. Perkins is perfectly cared for—her home, her yard, her car—all perfect.

But not today. A dark line sits between the jamb and the edge of the door.
A few inches of shadow drives my calm away and prickles the long blonde hairs at the nape of my neck. Butterflies in my stomach tell, no scratch that, demand I find my phone and go next door.

Available Now

Amazon, Chapters/Indigo, B&N, iTunes, Google Play or Goodreads

Hope you’ll check out Anna’s book. 

And because I’m now MEME-CRAZED (Thank you Tara and Christine), I’ve joined these three other lovely peeps in #InkRipples. It’s a monthly meme created by Kai Strand, Mary Waibel, and Katie L. Carroll. They post on the first Monday of every month (I know I’m late. Don’t nag me, okay?) with a new topic. They’re all authors, but you don’t have to be to participate.

The idea of #InkRipples is to toss a word, idea, image, whatever into the inkwell and see what kind of ripples it makes. They provide the topics and will be blogging about them on the first Monday of the month. You can spread your own ripples by blogging about the topic any day of the month that fits your schedule, just be sure to include links back to Katie, Kai, and Mary.
February-Chocolate (How could I not weigh in on this topic?)
March – Feminism
April – Poetry
May – Memories
June – Movies
July – Inspiration
August – Guilty Pleasures
September – Banned Books
October – Masks
November – Heritage
December – Cookies
Or you can simply share your thoughts on social media using the hashtag #InkRipples. You might simply comment on one of their posts to play along. Tag them and they’re always happy to share your posts and thoughts to keep those ripples going and intersecting.
There is no wrong way to do #InkRipples (with the exception of following basic human decency!). It’s about having a conversation, sharing ideas, and connecting. So if this sounds at all interesting, please do participate in whatever way you can. And feel free to use any of the meme’s images (created by the wonderful Mary Waibel).
Today my contribution to the #InkRipples topic is simply this! Babies Wearing Chocolate! How much fun is this? I want to play smash the chocolate cake, too. How about you? Don’t you want to wear your food once in a while like you did when you were a baby? Read the quote of the week and then answer the question. 
SEE MORE BABIES WEARING THEIR FOOD
Quote of the Week: “Normal is just a cycle on the washing machine.” Whoopie Goldberg.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: hat's of corner, Meme Hop

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Jessica Haight and Stephanie Robinson

December 14, 2015 By C. Lee McKenzie

It’s great to be back and to kick off my return I’m welcoming Jessica Haight and Stephanie Robinson to the HATS OFF CORNER! 

Release date: DECEMBER 1, 2015
Delacorte Press/ Random House Kids Books
MIDDLE GRADE/ ages 10 and up
ISBN: 978-0-385-74471-3
Authors: Jessica Haight & Stephanie Robinson
Illustrator: Roman Muradov
Publicity Contact: Samuel Terris [email protected]

Eleven-year-old Fairday Morrow is less than

thrilled that her family is moving thousands of miles from civilization to the

quiet country town of Ashpot, Connecticut, where she’s absolutely certain

she’ll die of boredom. 

As if leaving Manhatten and her best friend,

Lizzy, the only other member of the elite Detective Mystery Squad, weren’t bad

enough, Fairday is stuck living in the infamous Begonia House, a creepy old

Victorian with dark passageways, a gigantic dead willow tree, and a mysterious

past. 

Before she can even unpack,

strange music coming

from behind a padlocked door leads Fairday up a spiral staircase and into a

secret room, where she finds an ancient mirror, a brass key, and a curious portrait

of a red-haired lady. These seemingly unrelated items prove to be the first in

a series of clues that takes Fairday, the visiting Lizzy, and their new squad

member, Marcus, on an amazing adventure.


Can the members of the Detective Mystery Squad piece

together the puzzle before it’s too late? Or will whatever’s causing trouble

find Fairday and her friends first? 


Catch the Book Buzz. . .

“I really enjoyed this book. It was a marvelously

done, debut, thriller novel. Ms. Robinson and Ms. Haight are great authors that really

pull you into their story. I couldn’t get out until that final sentence. And, by then I

wanted more. To say I want a second book is an understatement. The writing style is

compelling, and makes me feel as if I was there with Fairday and her friends. I really

like the illustrations in the book. They are like the ribbon on a present, or the icing

on the cake. I give this book five out of five bookworms!”
~ Erik

Weibel/ This Kid Reviews Books  

“Mixing realism and

fantasy, Haight and Robinson’s debut opens with 11-year-old Fairday’s move from

Manhattan to a small town in Connecticut, where her relentlessly cheerful parents

plan to turn a dilapidated Victorian into a bed and breakfast. No sooner has the

family arrived than eerie sights and sounds begin to haunt Fairday. The house turns

out to hold dark secrets that everybody in town suspects but nobody can explain: a

perfect mission for Fairday and her best friend Lizzy’s Detective Mystery Squad

(DMS).”
~ Publishers Weekly

“Fifth-grader

Fairday Morrow’s new home lives up to its spooky reputation, but she and her

companions in the Detective Mystery Squad find out why. At Begonia House, strains

of bagpipe music issue from behind a padlocked door, grains of sand in an hourglass

have stopped falling, and a malevolent weeping willow looms in the backyard. A

magic mirror shows an invisible door; a wardrobe hides secrets and a portal. Ruby

Begonia vanished more than 50 years ago. Is there also a ghost? Fairday has a new,

helpful friend in classmate Marcus, and her best friend Lizzy can visit on weekends

to help solve the mystery. What more could readers want?”
~ Kirkus

Reviews



JessicaHaight is a true New Englander,

with a deep desire to be near the ocean and a

love of the four seasons. She enjoys drawing while standing up and cultivating

magic in her garden. She easily floats away in the pages of a good story and is

still waiting for her owl from Hogwarts.

StephanieRobinson lives with her husband in a quiet

town, though not as quaint as

Ashpot. After teaching fifth grade for almost fifteen years, she is now

enjoying her role as a school media specialist. 

Fairday’s

Blog

Fairdayfiles.com
@DMSfiles

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: DMS, hat's of corner, New Books

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Stephen Tremp and a few Bad Girls

November 9, 2015 By C. Lee McKenzie

Thanks Lee for hosting me today. And thanks everyone for stopping by. As a writer, you can find inspiration anywhere and everywhere. My wife belonged to a Bible study group and one of the books they went through was Bad Girls of the Bible. I flipped through it a few years ago and sure enough there were some really Bad Girls doing really bad things. Some were repentant while others met a terrible death. I thought this would be a good topic as the thirteen antagonists in Salem’s Daughters are all Bad Girls. 
Potiphar’s Wife: Her name doesn’t appear in the Bible but this wild woman was bad news for Joseph. Sold into slavery by his brothers, Potiphar bought Joseph to be a household slave. Potiphar was ‘Captain of the Palace Guard’ and his title giving reference to butcher or executioner. 
And his wife had the hots for Joseph.
She caught him by his cloak and said, “Come to bed with me!” But he left his cloak in her hand and ran out of the house. Genesis 39:12 
Joseph ended up spending many years in the dungeon on her false accusations he came on to her before being released and rising to second in command in Egypt. 
Delilah: She betrayed her husband Samson for money and he ended up a prisoner of the Philistines who blinded him. Samson did get his revenge by collapsing a stadium full of Philistines. 
Rahab: A prostitute, she helped the Israelites capture the city of Jericho she lived in. In exchange, her life and those of her family were spared for her cooperation. 
Jezebel: Often the measuring stick for bad girls everywhere. She incited her husband King Ahab to worship false deities, persecute the true prophets, and brought false witness against common folk and had them killed. Her ultimate demise: she was thrown off the top of a tower by members of her own court and ended up in a big splat where wild dogs ate her. 
Mary Magdalene: She had seven demons cast out of her, was repentant of her sins, and followed Jesus. She is commonly portrayed as a prostitute but her lifestyle was never spelled out specifically. She is mentioned twelve times in the Gospels, more than most of the disciples. 
Sapphira: She and her husband Ananias were killed suddenly after lying to the Apostles about money. 
Jael: She was actually a good person as she killed Sisera to deliver Israel from the troops of King Jabin. She was more of a bad-ass than bad. 
“Then she went softly to him and drove the peg into his temple until it went down into the ground while he was lying fast asleep from weariness.” Judges 4:21. 
Well done, Jael. Well done, indeed. 
Question: Do you have any favorite ‘Bad Girls’ regardless of the source? 
Short Blurb: A four hundred year old evil is unleashed when the daughters of those killed during the Salem Witch Trials find a new generation of people to murder at a popular modern-day bed and breakfast. 
Stephen Tremp writes Speculative Fiction and embraces science and the supernatural to help explain the universe, our place in it, and write one of a kind thrillers. 
Me with Spawn Number Two
You can read a full synopsis and download Salem’s Daughters by Clicking Here. 
Stephen Tremp posts weekly blogs at his website Breakthrough Blogs. 
Next Stop: Wednesday November 11th with Michael Di Gesu at In Time.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: hat's of corner, New Books, Stephen Tremp

Hats Off Corner Welcomes Life Lessons for the Teenage Girl and Kelly Tonelli

October 12, 2015 By C. Lee McKenzie

The tragic issue of cutting is what started me on the path to writing for young adults. In my debut novel, Sliding on the Edge, my main character was a cutter. Writing this book was my attempt to understand why young, bright kids were self-abusing. My research led me to a lot experts, but the book I’m featuring today wasn’t out yet, or I would have dug into it for more background information about the issues of teen girls and advice for dealing with those issues.
When I found Kelly Tonelli’s book on Book Blogs I asked her to share her expertise as a Licensed Clinical Psychologist on this topic. I’m so glad she agreed.
Hats Off Corner Welcomes Kelly Tonelli
Available at
AMAZON and BARNES and NOBLE
Cutting is when a person injures themselves by making cuts or scratches on their body with any sharp object – often deep enough to break the skin and make it bleed. These injuries can be placed on any spot on the body including arms, legs, stomachs, and wrists. 
Why kids cut:
  • Some kids cut as their way of coping with strong emotions, intense pressure or relationship problems. They may believe that experiencing physical pain will allow the release of emotional pain. 
  • Kids may be angry or ashamed about something they have done and are cutting in order to punish themselves for the “bad act”.
  • Cutting may be used as a distraction from painful thoughts and feelings.
  • The child may be trying to feel “something” – kids may feel emotionally numb and prefer pain to feeling nothing.
  • Cutting can be a “cry for help”. Kids may cut in order to let others in their lives see how distressed they are in hopes someone will be able to help.

Cutting warning signs:
  • Pattern of unexplained injuries, cuts and/or scratches. 
  • Insistence of wearing clothes that are counter to the weather (i.e., long sleeves or long pants on hot days) may be an effort to hide injuries.
  • Finding sharp objects where they wouldn’t be expected (i.e., razors, unbent paper clips, box cutters).
  • Blood stains on towels, tissues, clothes, sheets and blankets.
  • Locking self away from others – being secretive about activities while alone.
  • Series of “accidents” in otherwise not clumsy child.

What to do if you suspect cutting:
  • Talk with your child about your concerns. Do your best to avoid shaming the child, but focus on wanting to understand and help.
  • Problem solve alternative behaviors your child can utilize if the temptation to cut recurs. These can include: talking to you, physical exercise, writing about feelings, and distraction techniques (reading, TV, music, friends).
  • Know when to ask for help. A mental health professional is a great resource for you and your child. Make sure your child knows the therapist is a resource to help the family, not to “fix” them or because they are “bad”.
  • If your child shares future cutting incidents, do your best to come from a position of love and support, not anger and shame. Our goal is to increase communication about the behavior, not hide it away.
Thank you for such clear and helpful information, Kelly. I appreciate it and I’m sure my readers do, too. This practice isn’t going away from what I’ve read, so it’s good to have the word out. I hope none of you have  to deal with cutting in your lives, but if you do, I know Kelly’s information is sound and helpful. I enjoyed reading her book, and I’ve posted a review of Teenage Girl. HERE it is!

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Quote of the Week: “Nothing in life is to be feared; it is only to be understood.” Marie Curie

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: cutting, hat's of corner, New Books

Thoughts About Writing and Hats Off Corner Welcomes Susan McCarthy

October 5, 2015 By C. Lee McKenzie

Some Thoughts About Writing

  • I hate not knowing who the main characters are and where they’re headed, early in a story. If I read more than a third of a book and still don’t have the players firmly in mind, I’m more than annoyed. I may even close my eyes and pretend the book’s not there. 

  • I love adverbs, just not in novels. Oh, once in a while, but when I’m overwhelmed with the “he looked at her longingly/adoringly/angrily” I go a little mad. Write me something steamy instead. “He looked at her and longed to rip off that cashmere.” Now that’s more like it. 

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Hats Off Corner Welcomes Susan McCarthy

I loved reading Circling the Sun and The Aviator’s Wife, so when BantamDell asked me to host this author with such a high recommendation from those other authors, I said, “Yes.”
Hope you’ll enter to win a copy of this book. I am!


If you loved Circling the Sun by Paula McLain, then I have a treat for you! Susan McCarthy, author of the award-winning Lay That Trumpet in Our Hands, is back with a new historical novel, A PLACE WE KNEW WELL, set against the backdrop of Cold War panic. 

For the Avery family, the dark days of the Cuban Missile Crisis mark a turning point in their lives which will shape and forever change them. McCarthy captures pitch-perfectly the panic, tension, insanity and innocence of the time. The Avery family forms the emotional center of the novel, as their world starts to unravel during the heart-stopping buildup to the Cuban Missile Crisis.

a Rafflecopter giveaway
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The Great Time Lock Disaster has been entered in the Cover Wars Contest over at Masquerade Crew this month. If you like the cover, it would be great to have your VOTE. There are others there as well that are very exciting. 

Amazon



Quote of the Week: “The reader is the writer’s only unrelenting, genuine enemy. He has everything on his side; all he has to do, after all, is shut his eyes, and any work of fiction becomes meaningless.” Shirley Jackson, novelist

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: hat's of corner, New Books, Paula McLain

Why Blog and Hats Off Corner Welcomes Stephen Tremp

September 21, 2015 By C. Lee McKenzie

Why I Blog
by 
C. Lee McKenzie


Photo Source

I started blogging because my publisher told me to, and back then I did everything my publisher told me to do. The interesting thing that happened is this: I liked it. So why?

I learned a lot of new stuff for one thing, and that’s always a motivator for me. I had to figure out which program to set my blog up on, and then how to use it. Blogger worked for me because it didn’t have a long learning curve. I quickly     learned where the undo button was, so what could go wrong?

Photo Source

I quickly learned that, too. A lot could go wrong if I didn’t have content that was of value. What was valuable content anyway? I wasn’t a marketing guru. I didn’t have hot tips for writers. What was my platform? What was a platform? See? I had a lot to learn, so I kept going.

Then I discovered things like Awards and Hops and Groups. Yay! Now I was on a roll because more than the family cat was reading what I posted.

Then just as I had this blogging thing down, I burned out. Yep. Dry as a summer hill in California, and it happened overnight. I was quitting. I was burrowing into my writer’s cave and blowing off all this blogging business.

So why didn’t I? Why did I take a break and return? Here’s one reason: I missed the contact with the people I’d connected with. I missed knowing when they had new releases or rejections or a great new WIP. 

Was there any other reason? I thought about that and decided that without blogging I might have continued to read within my preferred genres. I wouldn’t have sampled books that I usually passed up. Because I was curious about what writer friends had created and I wanted to support their work, I found myself reading much more widely. 

And that thing about showing up to the blank page? Well, blogging taught me a lot about doing that every single day.   

So why blog? I guess those are three compelling reasons for me. 


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Here are the followers who won books in this month’s Back to School Special Offer. 
I had this idea to share books I’d read, enjoyed and reviewed with people on my Mailing List. I love to recycle, but reuse is even better. So congrats to: 
  • Bish Denham gets my ARC of The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
  • Beverly Stowe McClure gets my signed copy of Woven
  • L.L. gets my signed copy of Shooting Kabul. 

I’ll need your snail mail people, so email me that and I’ll send your books on their way!  I hope you enjoy these stories as much as I did.

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Hats Off Corner Welcomes Stephen Tremp

Stephen Tremp writes speculative fiction and his fourth novel, 
Salem’s Daughters, 
is supernatural thriller. 
A four hundred year old evil is unleashed when souls of the daughters of those killed during the Salem Witch Trials find a new generation of people to murder at a popular modern-day bed and breakfast.
For a full synopsis and to pre-order a copy of Salem’s Daughters for $2.99 (price goes up to $4.99 soon after release) 

Click Here.

Visit Stephen at his BLOG.

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Quote for the Day: “The different and the novel are sweet, but regularity and repetition are also teachers.” Poet Mary Oliver

Why do you blog? Ever think of giving up? Does Salem’s Daughters look interesting?

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Bloginess, hat's of corner, New Books, quote for the day, Stephen Tremp

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