Dying mother’s last request sends orphaned farm boy on a quest.


Deb’s Dozen:12-Word Summary-Dying mother’s last request sends orphaned farm boy on a quest – Emissary!

Fantasy has always been one of my favorite genres, although, until recently, I’d not read much of note. The Emissary, by Thomas Locke, has shot to the top of my list of favorites. Clean, crisp writing paired with descriptions that pull you into the environment make this a very enjoyable novel.

Hyam’s dying mother had one last request—tell your father that I am gone. Hyam’s father had left them years ago to reside in the Three Valley’s Long Hall, residence of what remained of wizardry and magic. Hyam himself had spent five long years there and had no fond memory of the experience. But obey his mother’s wish as he had promised, he would do—Hyam was honorable if nothing else.

When he arrives, he’s told his father’s been dead for four years—and wasn’t his father, nor his mother his mother. The Mistress of the Hall sends him to another hall to seek the mage, Trace. And so begins Hyam’s epic journey of danger and disbelief and destiny.

The story so enthralled me that I dreamt about Hyam’s adventures and woke myself up—only to read to the wee hours until I had finished. As I loved Hyam and Trace and Joelle, I am delighted to tell you this is merely the start of the adventures. The Emissary stands by itself, though, with a beginning and a conclusion—unlike many series that leave you hanging.

If you love a rollicking adventure, with romance and danger involved, you’ll love The Emissary as I do. Although a fantasy story, Locke writes with such assurance that you’ll almost believe in a new reality. Five stars – be sure to pick up a copy and enjoy!

I received a complimentary copy of this book from Revell in exchange for my honest review.

Out of the Frying Pan and Into the Deep!


Deb’s Dozen: Ex-Ranger, lovely expat, war on island, intrigue, suspense, flight, justice.

Meeting Anita K. Greene at the New England Writers’ Conference in October 2014 was happenstance. I was especially convinced of the serendipity of the connection when I discovered this past week (December 2014), after I was halfway through a book that was terribly familiar, that I’d read her novel, Out of the Wilderness, after the novel was first released last year.

Anita gave me copies of both of her novels. I must admit I loved them both equally and devoured them in one sitting each. The second book, Into the Deep, involves another member of the SeaMount Agency. Ex-Army Ranger Jack “Preach” Conroy had ribbed Grayson Kerr unmercifully in Book 1. Into the Deep is Preach’s adventure.

Sent by SeaMount to rescue Lucinda Lavalle and bring her home to her grandmother, Preach has no idea this routine mission has dropped him into the middle of a civil war.

Lucinda, or Lulubelle, as Preach insists on calling her, has no idea what is in store for her. While she is changing out of an outfit on which she’d spilled beer, Preach appears and “kidnaps” her along with her pure white Maltese puppy, Finny. When she resists, Jack tosses her over his shoulder and takes off—right into the middle of the insurrection.

The adventures they have on the way back to Kansas rival and surpass those of Dorothy’s adventures in Oz. You will keep turning the pages into the wee hours in glee and anticipation. I will be waiting for the next book in the SeaMount series. 4+ stars out of 5.

Anita lives in Rhode Island with her husband, son, and spoiled Belgian Malinois. She enjoys reading, gardening, needlework, and making cards – one day she hopes to get all her photos into a scrapbook. I met Anita at the New England Writers’ Conference last October. She gave me a copy of Into the Deep for my candid review. The novel is published by Cedar Lake Studio and is the second book in the SeaMount Series

Come sail the Winds of Change on the schooner, Shenandoah…


Deb’s Dozen: Twelve-word Summary – Summer school sail joys; the schooner, Shenandoah; Revolutionary War? Love through time.

Little did I know when I attended the New England Writers’ Conference in October, 2014, that I’d meet so many authors who had written so many excellent books. As a blogger, I’m always on the lookout for interesting books to review.

When Lisa Belcastro, who lives on Martha’s Vineyard, heard that I live in Plymouth, MA, and write reviews, she gave me all three novels in her Winds of Change series. After all, we are practically neighbors and both have a love for the ocean.

All three of the novels are set on the schooner, Shenandoah. So come aboard and let’s go sailing!

Rebecca O’Neill is enjoying the last week of her summer vacation before her job as a sixth-grade teacher resumes. The last thing she wants to do is chaperone 25 kids on a sailing trip on the Shenandoah. But her principal is persuasive, and Rebecca finds herself on onboard despite all her objections. And to top of everything, the ship is rumored to be haunted.

Five years earlier, another teacher, Melissa Smith, had complained about hearing voices and seeing visions, and then disappeared from the very cabin where Rebecca will be bunking. However, the Sunday she boards everything seems normal. The kids are all excited and so, in spite of herself, is Rebecca.

That night she drifts off to sleep, but awakens in the morning with memories of a hushed conversation about a battle with Britain. Monday night, after an exhausting day of sailing, swimming, crafts, and overseeing students, Rebecca crawls into her bunk and is instantly asleep. She’s startled awake when a man grabs her arm and yells, “Stowaway!” Nothing is familiar about the ship she’s now on—the people, the clothing, the language—as she’s dragged before Captain Benjamin Reed—and is lost!

You’ll read this adventure quickly and then dive into the next one. I was totally entranced by the story. I couldn’t wait to start reading…

Tess Roberts, daughter of the Shenandoah’s captain, wants nothing more than to be able to crew on the ship with her father. But father is cautious and not at all amenable to having a female crew member—there are too many temptation for the rest of the crew. Tess is fed up with the rules, her life, lousy dates, a dead ex who was a liar and philanderer, and the Vineyard, idyllic place though the island might be.

But Tess knows the history of the ship—and knows that the Shenandoah has mystical powers. Her best friend, Rebecca O’Neill, had stayed in Cabin 8—the same cabin that Melissa Smith had disappeared from five years before—and discovered a time portal that took her back to 1775. Tess decides to see if she, too, can go back in time—she REALLY needs to talk with Rebecca. She wants to get away from Hawk, the first mate on the Shenandoah, whom she’d fallen for years before and who studiously avoids the Captain’s daughter.

Does she make the trip? Does she find Rebecca? Is Hawk as aloof as he seems? Will life take a better turn for Tess? Read on to find out—you’ll devour this book, too, and then sail on to…

Shenandoah Dreams recounts the story of Melissa Smith—the teacher who’d disappeared from the ship mysteriously five years ago. She knows, “It’s just a dream,” as she stares into the handsome eyes of a man dressed in Colonial clothes just like those worth by the actors at Plimoth Plantation. But she’s not at the Plantation—or the Boston Tea Party Museum—she’s onboard the schooner Shenandoah sailing the waters around Martha’s Vineyard. But this man claims to be Isaiah Reed, the first captain of the Shenandoah in the eighteenth century!

Can a dream last for weeks on end? How will she find her way home…to the 21st century? Can she bear to leave Isaiah with whom she has an almost electric connection? Romance, history, and adventure—the sweeping excitement of the Winds of Change series.

The Winds of Change series is published by OakTara Publishers. I am grateful to them for publishing these three books and to Lisa Belcastro for giving them to me for my candid review.

Lisa actually got the idea for these books while she was chaperoning to summer sails on the Shenandoah with her daughter, Kayla. Besides these three books, Lisa writes a cuisine column for the Vineyard Style magazine. She’s written articles for numerous publications including USA Today and her books have won or been nominated for a number of awards. Shenandoah Nights won Romance Book of the Year from the Christian Small Publishers Association and the Reader’s Choice Award in Speculative Fiction from the New England Chapter of Romance Writers of America. Shenandoah Nights and Shenandoah Crossings are up for the SELAH Award, The Carolyn Readers Choice Award, and the Golden Quill Award.

When she’s not writing, Lisa says she lives in Paradise, enjoys gardening and volunteering at her daughter’s school. She has recently completed her goal to run a marathon in all 50 states! You’re right – keeping pace with Lisa is tough.