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giveaway – Page 12 – Luv Saving Money

Beyond the Shadows Book Tour & Giveaway

Beyond the Shadows
by Loree Lough
Genre: Romantic Suspense
Elice Glasser is a widow with three young children to raise. Cabot Murray is an ex-cop who returns home to Freeland, Maryland, to deal with the pain of his own tragic loss: the death of his wife and daughter in a fiery explosion intended for him.
Grieving, their sorrow brings them together, and a friendship develops that leads then to explore the possibility of finding love again. But vengeful enemies and jealous rivals are determined to destroy the peace and happiness that Elice and Cabot have found in each other’s arms. Why are their rivals so intent on keeping Elice and Cabot apart? Loree Lough’s latest suspenseful romance is a page-turner!
At last count, best-selling author Loree Lough had 115 award-winning books (nearly 9,000,000 copies in circulation and 7 titles that earned book-to-movie options), 68 short stories, and 2,500+ articles in print.
An oft-invited guest of writers’ organizations, colleges and universities, corporate and government agencies in the U.S. and abroad, Loree loves sharing learned-the-hard-way lessons about the craft and the industry.
Once upon a time, Loree (literally) sang for her supper, performing alone and “opening” for the likes of Tom Jones, Dottie West, The Gatlin Brothers, and more. Though she refuses to share the actual year when she traded her Yamaha 6-string for a wedding ring, she IS willing to admit that, every now and then, she blows the dust off her six-string to croon a tune or two. But mostly, she just writes (and writes).
Loree and her husband split their time between a home in the Baltimore suburbs and a cabin in the Allegheny Mountains, where she continues to hone her “identify the critter tracks” skills. Her favorite pastime? Spending long, leisurely hours with her grandchildren…all seven of them!

He woke to the trilling of the phone, and spoke a groggy “Hello” into the mouthpiece.
Her husky voice said, “I hate to bother you, Cabot, but since you were a policeman, I thought …”
He’d never heard fear like that in her voice. Not when she told him about the phone calls. Not when
she mentioned the doorbell business. Not even when her tires had been slashed. The fact that she’d
lost her usual composure scared him. “I’ll be right there,” he promised.
During the drive between his place and hers, Cabot remembered how, after the crick in his neck

roused him, it had taken a second or two to realize where he was. She’d covered him with a sweet-
smelling white sheet and turned out all but one small lamp, to light his way in case he got thirsty or

needed to use the bathroom. To protect her from neighboring busybodies who’d talk behind her back
after seeing his Jeep in her driveway all night long, he’d scribbled a short note. “You’re something
else,” he wrote with orange crayon. “See you tomorrow.” Then he’d drawn a heart and left it on the
kitchen table.
Now, he pictured the note he’d found on his own kitchen table.
Her hands trembled when she handed him the note, and he noticed right away that it had been typed
on the same blue paper, using the same machine. Keep away from the cop, it said, or you’ll all be
sorry.
“Where did you find this?”
“It was on the kitchen table when I got up this morning, right beside your note.”
He’d hoped Elice found it taped to the door. This wasn’t good. Not good at all. If he hadn’t been so
concerned about what people might think, seeing his Jeep in her driveway until all hours, his presence
might have prevented this.
“You locked the door before you went to bed?” he asked, suddenly.
“Of course I did. Didn’t you have to unlock it to get out?”
Yes, and he’d made sure to lock it behind him, too.
“What about the window?” Cabot walked toward the sink to inspect the lock.
“Everything was fine. Normal. Until I found that.” It may as well have been a rattlesnake, coiled for
attack, the way she looked at the slip of paper in his hand.
“Well, whoever wrote it got in through here,” he said, pointing at a black scuffmark on the kitchen
counter. “He pried open the window and stepped right on in.”
She hid behind her hands. But almost immediately, she squared her shoulders and got hold of herself.
“I’m going to put on a pot of coffee.”
“Good. I could use a cup.” One hand on the back doorknob, he stuffed her note into his shirt pocket.
“I’m going outside to have a look around.”
Nodding, she sent him a trembly smile.
He couldn’t stand to see her this way. Cabot gave her a little hug. “Aw, honey. You okay?”
Again she nodded. But this time, she made an effort to look brave and strong. He hesitated, not
wanting to leave her alone, not even for the few minutes it would take to inspect the perimeter of the
house.
“Go,” she said, giving him a gentle shove. “I’m fine.”
And so he went.
Cabot was under the kitchen window when he heard the kids’ voices. Emily and Danny, debating
between scrambled eggs and Cocoa Puffs, Annie asking for her usual, Sugar Pops. He found several
large footprints and one handprint pressed into the red clay dirt. There were smudges on the white
window frame, and a few more on the pane itself.
The voice that lived inside him, offering warnings and advice, began to speak. It whispered three
names, and Deitrich would have headed the list, except it wasn’t like the ex-con to pull dumb pranks.

Pull a trigger, yes, but taunt a widow with notes and phone calls? Too juvenile for his taste. Besides,
Freeland was too small a town for a “strike now, pay later” guy like that.
Or was it? Maybe that’s precisely what Deitrich wanted him to think.
He needed to make some calls, find out if one of his cop friends could verify Deitrich whereabouts.
Man, how he hated the idea of leaving here. When this was behind them, he’d get a cell phone,
finally. If he had one now, he could go out back, make those calls from here, instead of having to
leave her again to do it at Foggy Bottom.

Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!

Honey and Salt Book Tour & Giveaway

Honey and Salt
by David Perlmutter
Genre: YA Fantasy
Bravery comes in all forms: fighting bullies and fighting your own demons.
Honey and Salt is a superhero novella that will draw you in the just fight of a few super heroines. The story is packed with action and humor.
Their quest against evil superheroes and against their own weaknesses is refreshing. You can identify with them and embrace their battles.
Rousing fantasy action with amazing young girls ready to fight for justice and for the oppressed.
If you enjoy a good action with an unusual plot, then this is the book for you.
David Perlmutter is a freelance writer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is the author of America Toons In: A History of Television Animation (McFarland and Co.), The Singular Adventures Of Jefferson Ball (Amazon Kindle), The Pups (Booklocker.com), Certain Private Conversations and Other Stories (Aurora Publishing), Honey and Salt (Scarlet Leaf Publishing), The Encyclopedia of American Animated Cartoon Series (Rowman and Littlefield, forthcoming) and Orthicon; or, the History of a Bad Idea (Linkville Press, forthcoming).
Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!

Godeena Book Tour & Giveaway

Godeena
by Stjepan Varesevac-Cobets
Genre: SciFi Adventure
Major Henry Broncon miraculously survives a battle with Ansker soldiers on the planet Morad. He is found under a pile of corpses, the only survivor; his best friend and the whole of his brigade remain in the field of death. Broncon is fully acquitted, receives a medal for bravery and is promoted to the rank of Brigadier, but he cannot forgive himself and he feels responsible for falling into the Ansker trap.
Shortly after, the Anskers are beaten and the war ends. The winning terrestrial colonies receive ownership of a system called Naude, comprised of various planets including Godeena. On the surface of Godeena, there is a huge, completely preserved but uninhabited city that scientists have named the Absolute. Analysis of the city reveals no signs of life. A team of scientists is sent to investigate what has happened to the people and animals of Absolute. A few days later the team is attacked and contact with the scientists is lost. The General Staff sends two teams of Special Forces to find out what has happened to the expedition but they also disappear, leaving no trace.
The Commander of the General Staff, General Hensell, is personally involved with the mystery. He requests Brigadier Henry Broncon to gather a unit, composed of the worst inmates from the inescapable prison, Hades, to investigate what is happening on Godeena. Henry accepts this task and collects 17 prisoners, each with unique skills. Among them is Maria, who possesses enormous psychic powers and has a wicked second personality called Kir.
The unusual team of criminals, led by Broncon, travels to Godeena to discover what terrors await them there.
Stjepan Varesevac-Cobets was born on 12 September 1965 in Split, Croatia. He lives and works in Kastel Sucurac, where he finished his elementary and secondary schooling.
At a very young age, he started reading and loved it because, through books, he traveled to places he could never visit in person. As a child, he loved fairy tales and adventure but later discovered other genres. When he found a Jules Verne book in the library, he became fascinated by science fiction. He has been writing poetry for fifteen years and has started writing science fiction. Lately, he has also written children’s fairy tales and fables.
He has published, in Croatia, “An Opened Heart” in 2002, “The Sleepy Way” in 2005, and “Love” in 2006. On Amazon he has published the poetry collections “The Child of Happiness” in 2015, science fiction novel “Godeena” in 2015, the science fiction short story “Butterfly” in 2016, the poetry collection “When the moon takes over the dream: Love Poetry” in 2016, and in 2017 the poetry collection “The Flaming Horses: Collection of poetry”. He also translated his new Sci-Fi novel “The Dream of the Forest”.

Only a miracle had saved her and the four members of the exploring team. They wore the latest, state-of-
the-art military space suits when they entered the tunnels under the town of Absolute. The suits protected

them from all sorts of radiation and poisonous gasses. Although the suits could withstand temperatures
over 100 ̊C, they couldn’t stay in such extreme conditions for more than an hour. The helmets were plated
with solar cells that charged the storage cell pack. The cell packs, in turn, energized a system capable of
purifying and cooling the air in the suit. With the energy stored in the storage pack, Diana and her friends
could work all day before they were used up. Despite the innovative system, the cell pack was easy to use
and could be customized for each of its users.
With the other four members of the team, Diana explored underground for hours. They surveyed
only a small part of the complex. When they lost communication with the camp, they came back to check
on whether all was well. They were shocked to see that the camp was completely destroyed and all their
friends were dead. A bluish haze appeared to settle over everything, making parts of the butchered bodies
even more grotesque. Diana’s deputy, Aron Coller, took off his helmet and ran anxiously to his wife’s
tent at the other end of the camp, but he couldn’t find her. Diana and the rest of the team watched him
with pity. He was behaving like a madman, turning over the dead that lay around the tents. While they
watched, they noticed a boy appear from the haze like an apparition. Aron ran up to him, knelt, and gently
stroked the boy’s head, watching his large, terrified grey-black eyes.
“Where were you? Did you see what happened?”
The boy remained speechless, shaking his head left to right. Suddenly, he uttered a word in an icy
voice that made them all tremble. “Naughty!”
That’s when they saw behind Aron, a sight that frightened them out of their wits and froze them
on the spot. From the dense indigo haze, monsters from their worst nightmares materialized. Filled
with horror, they watched the black armored torsos that spurted forth sharp thorns dripping greenish

liquid. The monsters towered over Aron by more than two feet. Their heads were long, big-boned, almost-
predator like, with huge teeth. Like wings, they spread their armored, jointed limbs that ended with long,

sharp black edges and on which blazed greenish slime.
In what looked like the last moments of his life, Aron felt a presentiment of danger and hoped
someone could help him. The monster nearest to him swung and with a single stroke cut off his head.
Blood gushed out of his neck like a geyser. The head rolled on the ground towards Diana and her team.
She trembled to see his eyes, which showed the final moments of writhing pain.
The monsters jumped on the remnants of his body and started to butcher it. The little boy was
completely sprinkled with blood, but he didn’t move. He was looking at her team fixedly, muttering
something they couldn’t comprehend. Fear had gripped them, and not one moved despite the horrible
sight. The silence that followed seemed to last for an eternity.
Suddenly the boy waved his hand. The monsters disappeared and he was again wholly clean. Once more,
he looked towards Aron’s chopped-up body and in his voice, which was more like the hoarse grating and
raging growl of a prehistoric animal, he retorted angrily, “Very, very naughty,” then disappeared in the
haze just as he had appeared.
They couldn’t surmise up until then that they had been lucky because they hadn’t taken
off their helmets; otherwise, they’d have experienced a fate like Aron’s. Diana and rest of the team
lingered for some time, afraid to make any sudden moves.
After giving the incident sufficient time, Diana made a sign with her hand for the others to move.
“You saw what happened to Aron. Don’t take off your helmets, for there’s a good chance the boy can’t
see us while we’re in these space suits. Let me check what’s left of our transporter ships and see if they’re
in good shape. You’ll wait for me here.”
Nobody contradicted her decision, so Diana set off to the runway, knowing very well that the team
was as shaken as she was.
Walking through the haze, she thought about the boy a couple of times. He was floating like a
ghost above the butchered bodies. All her friends and colleagues were dead. Nobody had been spared.

What horrified her most was his satisfied smile and his rapture as he bowed and gently touched some of
the butchered bodies with his fingers. Above all, the craziest thing was that he was singing a bizarre song
the whole time:
“You’re very, very, very bad,
Now not worth what you wept,
It’s time to be refunded,
Let life come back to death.
You’re very, very, very bad…”

Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!

The Singular Adventures of Jefferson Ball Book Tour & Giveaway

The Singular Adventures of Jefferson Ball
by David Perlmutter
Genre: YA SciFi Fantasy
There never was a heroine like Jefferson Ball. And, thankfully, there may never be.
She is, simply, the most powerful humanized female dog in a universe full of them. Faster, stronger, more attractive to boys. Unbeatable as a lover. Unfortunately, her brains are not up to this quality, but don’t tell her that.
About the only one who can is Major Hamilton Pomeranian, the diminutive ex-soldier who is Jeff’s best friend and conscience. When she gets too big for her limited clothing, Hamilton tells her what for. And it’s usually only after that point that they are able to escape from whatever convoluted situation they find themselves in.
This potential collection will have readers both laughing and awestruck at the events that happen. And, hopefully, you will be one of them.
David Perlmutter is a freelance writer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is the author of America Toons In: A History of Television Animation (McFarland and Co.), The Singular Adventures Of Jefferson Ball (Amazon Kindle), The Pups (Booklocker.com), Certain Private Conversations and Other Stories (Aurora Publishing), Honey and Salt (Scarlet Leaf Publishing), The Encyclopedia of American Animated Cartoon Series (Rowman and Littlefield, forthcoming) and Orthicon; or, the History of a Bad Idea (Linkville Press, forthcoming).

Jefferson Ball was drunk.
She was also, for good measure, scotched, tipsy, pickled, loaded, smashed, lit, hammered, jonesed,
stoned, tippled, bashed, pixilated, looped, high as a Georgia pine, gassed, Harvey-wallbangered, flipped,
up-set, just drinkin’, salted, hard-boiled, fried and [insert your own term for inebriation here. There are
many to choose from.]
The most obvious evidence was that she, the most powerful human-shaped female dog in a universe

chock full of them, was lying face down on the floor of the bar she was in- one of many ignominiously-
styled establishments in her home town of Hugopolis. Clad only in her trademark monogrammed black

bikini and black boots, she seemed much more like a typical skid row derelict barfly, someone who had
long ago abandoned herself to the winds of fate, chance and alcohol, than the larger than life heroic- or,
as her enemies saw her, anti-heroic figure she truly was.
Jefferson Ball possessed many virtues, chiefly of the physical variety, that she was wont to exploit in
her favour, manipulative creature that she was. Fortunately for herself and the universe around her, she
used most of them in the service of her kind. Centuries of breeding and body conditioning among her
ancestors, coupled with some shady DNA and genetic manipulation at one point, had created, in
Jefferson, a creature possessed of astonishing physical abilities, among them the ability to run a four
minute mile in less than two, and powerful physical strength, enough to balance hundreds of thousands
of pounds on her fingertip alone. Not surprisingly, these abilities, plus a deadly accuracy with the whip
she always kept at hand, made her a very formidable opponent of the forces of evil, particularly all aliens,
robots, and other supernatural beings who thought they could outfox her in the speed and muscle
department, and especially those who employed those beings in a futile attempt to destroy her.
But, like most heroic types, she had an Achilles heel. Two, in fact- both of which she bore the scars of,
though less than you might think given her remarkable resiliency.
The first of these was the more obvious and the more hurtful to her reputation. Boys of her race- and
the males of any alien race she encountered- and plenty of them! In both the actual evidence known, and
her own personal Munchausian exaggeration of her abilities, she was, indeed, a formidable lover. Mata
Hari and Mae West had nothing on her! But, rather than experienced lovers, she preferred to initiate
virgins- especially fine young things- into the ways of the world. It was common for her, during her
adventures, to regularly slip out of a young male’s boudoir, having blown his genitals to smithereens

(metaphorically) with her own, more powerful ones, and to leave him permanently longing for her touch-
and/or cursing her to the heavens for tricking him into giving up his cherry for good.

As powerful and influential she was as a hero or lover, however, Jefferson had an equally colorful
reputation as a drinker- or, more accurately, a lush. When boys were not available, she drank, and, even
when they were, she drank. Socially and professionally, she drank as well, and this damaged her social
status as much as her being a lover of renown. For this reason, most beings of her gender, despite her
heroism, were reluctant to establish lasting friendships with her on two counts. She would, it was said,
either steal your “man” from you with her charms, good looks, and muscular, pneumatic physique, or she
would do so in a duplicitous way- by drinking you under the table!
It was at this point, almost on cue, that Jefferson’s sole female friend- indeed, the only friend of either
gender she truly had in the whole universe- entered the bar-room, spotted Jefferson sprawled on the
floor, put her paws on her hips, and exclaimed:
“So there you are!”

Follow the tour HERE for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!

Down The Rabbit Hole Book Tour & Giveaway


Down the Rabbit Hole
by Kristen Collins
Genre: Fantasy 

When Nyssa escapes to the Happy Ending Resort with her sister, Siri, after her disaster wedding from her abusive Ex-Fiancé’, she yearns for the love and freedom she’s never known in this world.

Heartbroken, she is surprised to meet the handsome Maddox, but things aren’t always what they seem at the Happy Ending Resort either.




I’m a Native Texan, born and raised close to the heart of the state. Also I’m a part-time working mother/housewife, as well as a Lupus Warrior. 
Thanks to the encouragement of friends and family, I found a passion in writing paranormal romance books. Anything fantasy usually suits me and my novels tend to be able to reach anyone in multiple genres. 
I like to explore to new types of characters such as Sandmen and Boogeymen for example. I really wanted to give them their own world. Such as A Sandman’s Forbidden Love. “This book plagued my dreams every night till I got it all out.”
Now Angels are also a part of my obsession, I will sit on the computer doing extensive research on both Sandmen and Angels trying to get my facts straight.
Then, I also create Art Journals that can be cross generational from thirteen to sixty years younger, My goal with these types of books are to reach people who need that extra feel good in their lives.




Follow the tour HERE for exclusive content and a giveaway!