ARC Review: Murder at Blackwood Inn by Penny Warner

Murder at Blackwood Inn is the first book in the new cozy mystery series, Haunted Dead and Breakfast, by Penny Warner. Carissa Blackwood has come to Pelican Point to help her aunts start a new business, Blackwood Bed and Breakfast Inn, in the old family home. From the moment she arrives it’s apparent to theContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Murder at Blackwood Inn by Penny Warner”

ARC Review: Murder in Miniature by Katie Tietjen

Murder in Miniature by Katie Tietjen is book 2 in the Maple Bishop series but is easily read as a standalone novel. Set in 1947, recently widowed Maple Bishop is the owner of a small business making dollhouses, and on the side she has begun creating miniatures of crime scenes to aid the local policeContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Murder in Miniature by Katie Tietjen”

ARC Review: A Tale of Two Dukes by Emma Orchard

A Tale of Two Dukes by Emma Orchard is a standalone (from what I can tell) Regency romance. Viola was 17 when she wed the Duke of Winterflood, a man about 30 years her senior, in order to provide him with an heir, and protect her family from penury. Her life is miserable until theContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: A Tale of Two Dukes by Emma Orchard”

ARC Review: A Murderous Business by Cathy Pegau

A Murderous Business by Cathy Pegau is the first book in the Harriman & Mancini Mystery series, and is set in New York in 1912. Margot Harriman is the president of a cannery, B&H Foods, having inherited the business from her parents. As the story opens, Margot enters the cannery to pick up some papersContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: A Murderous Business by Cathy Pegau”

ARC Review: Game On by Ki Stephens

Ki Stephens’ book Game On is a standalone contemporary romance set around the worlds of college football and cheerleading. Ella Davies is a college student from the UK attending Whitland University, in Nashville Tennessee for a year to participate in their cheerleading program. Hudson Fox is the star quarterback at Whitland, and when the twoContinueContinue reading “ARC Review: Game On by Ki Stephens”