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url 2019-02-06 13:42
Cover Reveal: Lead The Way by Brittany Carter with Giveaway

Lead The Way
Brittany Carter
Published by: Swoon Romance
Publication date: May 14th 2019
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance

Fresh off the high of college graduation, Melody James is back in her Podunk town. She needs a job, but first, she’ll spend a lazy summer with no agenda at all.

But life’s got other plans for Melody, ones she’d sooner ignore. When the next-door neighbor passes away, his son returns home to take care of his affairs. Thane Cohen hasn’t been home in ten years. The last time he was, someone accused him of murdering Melody’s parents. Now, after major efforts to recover his self-worth and start a construction company, Thane wonders if enough time has passed for him to clear his once good name.

At the time of the murders, Melody was the only person who didn’t believe Thane was responsible. But how could she even suggest otherwise when just about everyone in town was convinced of Thane’s guilt? Her brothers would never allow it. With nothing to lose before, Thane packed up and left, leaving the town and Melody behind. Now that he’s back, rekindling an old flame in Melody and proving his innocence are critical.

When several car windshields get broken and fires start unexpectedly, the world inside their little town is tossed upside down. With Melody’s brother against her, and Thane fighting every attempt she makes at breaking down his walls, Melody’s push for answers leads her to a frightening conclusion. Thane may actually know more about her parents’ death than she was lead to believe. Can she trust him, or has everyone else been right about him all along? Only time will tell if she can let love lead the way.

*Author previously wrote under the name, Alla Kar
 
 
Author Bio
Brittany Booker Carter previously writing as Alla Kar. I'm a Christian, lover or romance, a wife and mother to a wild-child!

 
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url 2018-10-16 18:09
Fighting Erasure: Women SF Writers of the 1980s, Part III
The Manse - Lisa W. Cantrell
Watersong: Kore - Mary Caraker
Starbridge - A.C. Crispin
Sabazel - Lillian Stewart Carl
Final Frontier (Classic Star Trek ) - Diane Carey
Obernewtyn - Isobelle Carmody
Dreams Of The Raven - Carmen Carter
Up the Rainbow - Susan Casper
In the Garden of Dead Cars - Sybil Claiborne
Am I Free To Go? - Kathryn Cramer

I love these series of articles despite what they do to the TBR pile.

 

Lots of new and familiar authors.  Most I haven't tried.  I think these were when I was a very broke person just starting working for a living without a good book budget.

 

Ones that wouldn't fit the "big" pictures at top of post:

 

Overshoot - Mona Clee  Overshoot - Mona Clee 

The Stars as Seen from This Particular Angle of Night: An Anthology of Speculative Verse - Sandra Kasturi,John Rose,Phyllis Gotlieb,David Clink,Kathy Shaidle,R.G. Evans,Donna Farley,Patrick O'Leary,Kiel Stuart,Gemma Files,John Tranter,Charlee Jacob,Mark McLaughlin,Peter Crowther,Bruce Boston,Yves Meynard,Carolyn Clink,Tom Piccirilli,Heather Spe  The Stars as Seen from This Particular Angle of Night: An Anthology of Speculative Verse - ,Carolyn Clink, et. al.

How Like a God - Brenda W. Clough  How Like a God - Brenda W. Clough 

Legacy - Molly Cochran  Legacy - Molly Cochran  

The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks - Joanna Cole,Bruce Degen  The Magic School Bus at the Waterworks - Joanna Cole

Sunglasses After Dark - Nancy A. Collins  Sunglasses After Dark - Nancy A. Collins  

The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit - First Book of the Wraeththu - Storm Constantine  The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit - Storm Constantine  

Love and War - Margaret Weis,Tracy Hickman,Harold Bakst,Barbara Siegel,Scott Siegel,Nick O'Donohoe,Nancy Varian Berberick,Richard A. Knaak,Paul B. Thompson,Laura Hickman,Kate Novak,Kevin Randle,Michael Williams,Tonya C. Cook,Dezra Despain  Love and War - Tonya C. Cook, et. al.

Mask Of The Wizard - Catherine Cooke  Mask Of The Wizard - Catherine Cooke  

The Black Horn - Clare Cooper,Trevor Stubley  The Black Horn - Clare Cooper

 

Author of article also mentions (but not sure of works or where to start with them):

 

Source: www.tor.com/2018/10/10/fighting-erasure-women-sf-writers-of-the-1980s-part-3
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url 2017-03-03 08:04
Violet Bonham Carter

Helen Violet Bonham Carter, Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury, DBE (15 April 1887 – 19 February 1969), known until her marriage as Violet Asquith, was a British politician and diarist. She was the daughter of Herbert Asquith, Prime Minister from 1908–1916, and later became active in Liberal politics herself, being a leading opponent of appeasement, standing for Parliament and being made a life peer. She was also involved in arts and literature. Her illuminating diaries cover her father's premiership before and during World War I and continue until the 1960s.

 

She was Sir Winston Churchill's closest female friend, apart from his wife, and her grandchildren include the actress Helena Bonham Carter.

 

Early life

Violet Asquith grew up in a heavily political environment, living in 10 Downing Street, at the time her father occupied it, and socialising with the key political figures of her day. She did not go to school, but was educated at home by governesses, and later sent to Paris and Dresden to improve her languages. Her mother, Helen Kelsall Melland, died of typhoid fever when Violet was only four. Her stepmother was Margot Tennant. Her best friend when she was young was Venetia Stanley, who had an affair with her father. Violet quarreled constantly with her formidable stepmother Margot, much to her father's distress; in later life she admitted that despite their differences, she respected Margot for her absolute devotion to Asquith.

 

Violet Bonham Carter's father served a long and influential term as Prime Minister, especially during the peacetime portion of his premiership (1908–1914) when he presided over the People's Budget and the House of Lords limiting Parliament Act 1911. He was Prime Minister at the beginning of World War I and then headed a coalition with the Conservative Party beginning in May 1915 until his resignation in December 1916. The Liberal Party split thereafter between followers of Asquith and of David Lloyd George, who had replaced him as Prime Minister. As the Liberal Party fell on hard times in the 1920s, she became a tireless defender of her father and his reputation, beginning by campaigning for him at the 1920 Paisley by-election.

 

She was particularly close to Winston Churchill, a leading member of her father's (and later Lloyd George's) administration, and whom she (successfully) urged her father to promote to the Cabinet in 1908. She was dismayed at his engagement that year to Clementine Hozier, whom Violet thought “as stupid as an owl”. In late August, between his engagement and his marriage, Churchill spent a holiday with the Asquith family at New Slains Castle on the Scottish coast, and later admitted that he had “behaved badly” to Violet, as they were “almost engaged”. Some days after his departure, Violet went missing one evening, and she was discovered after a dangerous search by local people, lasting several hours. Journalists were told that she had slipped and fallen onto a ledge, hitting her head, but in fact she had been found lying uninjured near the coastal path. Michael Shelden suggests that Churchill’s holiday with Violet may have been the reason for Clementine’s last-minute threat to call off their wedding, and that Violet’s subsequent adventure on the cliffs may have been “an unhappy young woman’s cry for attention”.

 

Marriage and children

 

As well as having an illustrious father, she married her father's Principal Private Secretary, Sir Maurice "Bongie" Bonham Carter, in 1915. They had four children together:

 

- Hon. Helen Laura Cressida, Mrs Jasper Ridley, mother of the economist Adam Ridley

- Rt. Hon. Mark Bonham Carter, Baron Bonham Carter of Yarnbury, a Liberal Member of Parliament before going to the House of Lords and father of Jane, Baroness Bonham Carter

- Hon. Raymond Bonham Carter, father of the actress Helena Bonham Carter.

- Hon. Laura Bonham Carter, Lady Grimond, wife of the Liberal Party leader Joseph Grimond, Baron Grimond of Firth

 

Political career

Lady Violet lived in an age when women were uncommon in frontline British politics. She was nonetheless active as President of the Women's Liberal Federation (1923–25, 1939–45) and was the first woman to serve as President of the Liberal Party (1945–47).[2] In the 1945 general election she stood for Wells, coming third, while in 1951 she stood for the winnable seat of Colne Valley. In the 1953 Coronation Honours she was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE).[3]

 

As an old friend, Churchill arranged for the Conservatives to refrain from nominating a candidate for the constituency, giving her a clear run against Labour. She was nonetheless narrowly defeated. She continued to be a popular and charismatic speaker for Liberal candidates, including for her son-in-law Jo Grimond, her son Mark, and the then-rising star Jeremy Thorpe, and she was a frequent broadcaster on current affairs programmes on radio and television.

 

Perhaps her greatest contribution, however, was as a much-esteemed orator and perceptive thinker on politics and policy issues, dedicated to classic Liberal politics in the mould of her father. She spoke on many platforms throughout the 1920s and 1930s, and along with Winston Churchill (and others), she very early on saw the dangers of European fascism. In seeking to awaken Britain and the world to the fascist peril, she joined and animated a number of anti-fascist groups (such as The Focus Group), often in concert with Churchill, and spoke at many of their gatherings. In a 1938 speech she mocked Neville Chamberlain's dealings with Nazi Germany as the policy of 'peace at any price that others can be forced to pay'.[2] In the postwar years she was an active supporter of the United Nations and the cause of European Unity, advocating for Britain's entry into the Common Market.

 

In the non-political sphere, she was also active in the arts, including serving as a Governor of the BBC from 1941–46, and a Governor of the Old Vic (1945–69). Her active political life was combined with air raid warden duties during the Second World War.

 

Additionally, she was an avid keeper of diaries, which now form an important original source for historians of early 20th century Britain and contain many perceptive character sketches, as well as insights into contemporary events. Indeed, it was Lady Violet who in her book Winston Churchill As I Knew Him (1965), published in the U.S. as Winston Churchill: An Intimate Portrait, supplied one of the most famous – and telling – anecdotes about Winston Churchill, one apparently not recorded in her diaries or contemporaneous letters: this recounted how during the course of a deep conversation at the dinner party at which they first met, Churchill concluded a thought with words to the effect that "Of course, we are all worms, but I do believe that I am a glow worm."

 

On 21 December 1964, she was created a life peer as Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury in the County of Wiltshire,[5] one of the first new Liberal peers in several decades. She continued to be extremely active in the House of Lords.

 

Her previous title, Lady Violet, was a courtesy title from her father's elevation to the peerage as Earl of Oxford and Asquith in 1925, and her husband was a knight of the realm. She and her husband were one of the few couples who both held titles in their own right.

 

Death

She died of a heart attack, aged 81, and was interred at St Andrew's Church, Mells, Somerset.

 

Titles from birth

- 15 April 1887 – 30 November 1915: Miss Violet Asquith

- 30 November 1915 – 1916:[7] Mrs Maurice Bonham Carter

- 1916 – 9 February 1925: Lady Bonham Carter

- 9 February 1925 – 1953:[8] Lady Violet Bonham Carter

- 1953 – 21 December 1964: Lady Violet Bonham Carter, DBE

- 21 December 1964 – 19 February 1969: The Right Honourable. The Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury, DBE

 

Writings

- "Winston Churchill As I Know Him" by Violet Bonham Carter, in Winston Spencer Churchill Servant of Crown and Commonwealth, ed Sir James Marchant, London: Cassell, 1954.

- Winston Churchill as I Knew Him, Violet Bonham Carter (Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1965), published in the USA as Winston Churchill - An Intimate Portrait

- Lantern Slides - The Diaries and Letters of Violet Bonham Carter, 1904–1914, eds. Mark Bonham Carter and Mark Pottle (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1996)

- Champion Redoubtable - The Diaries and Letters of Violet Bonham Carter, 1914–1945, ed. Mark Pottle (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1998)

- Daring to Hope - The Diaries and Letters of Violet Bonham Carter, 1945–1969, ed. Mark Pottle (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2000)

 

References

- Shelden 2013, p180-91

- Pottle, Mark (May 2007). "Carter, (Helen) Violet Bonham, Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury (1887–1969)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online edn. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 15 April 2014.

- The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 39863. p. 2953. 1 June 1953.

- Violet Bonham Carter, Winston Churchill as I Knew Him (London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1965; published in the USA as Winston Churchill: An Intimate Portrait), p. 16

- The London Gazette: no. 43522. p. 10933. 22 December 1964.

- "Died". Time magazine. 28 February 1969. Retrieved 2011-01-03. Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury, 81, grande dame of British politics and symbol of the Liberal Party's intellectual-humanist tradition; in London. The daughter of Liberal Prime Minister Herbert Asquith (1908–16), Lady Asquith became her party's most eloquent spokesman in the 1930s. She was twice defeated for the House of Commons, but in 1964 was granted a lifetime peerage and thus a seat in the House of Lords — from which she berated Prime Minister Wilson for his failure to cope with Britain's economic woes.

- "Sir Maurice Bonham Carter". The Peerage. 6 July 2010.

- "Lady Helen Violet Asquith, Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury". The Peerage. 6 July 2010.; the date of her appointment to the DBE is before 10 November based on "British Democracy Today and Yesterday" (see Sources).

 

Further reading

- Shelden, Michael (2013). Young Titan. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 1-471-11322-1. (A biography of the young Winston Churchill)

- Lady Violet Bonham Carter, DBE, "British Democracy Today and Yesterday, the Challenge to the Individual". The Falconer Lectures, University of Toronto, 10/11 November 1953.

- Violet Asquith at Spartacus Educational, includes quotations. Accessed June 2008

- Catalogue of the correspondence and papers of Lady Violet Bonham Carter, 1892–1969, University of Oxford, Elizabeth Turner 2003

- Lady Violet Bonham-Carter has also been cited many times in Lynne Olson's 2007 history, Troublesome Young Men: The Rebels Who Brought Churchill to Power and Helped Save England (Farrar Straus Giroux, Publ.)

 

External links

- "Archival material relating to Violet Bonham Carter". UK National Archives.

- Violet Bonham Carter discussing the women's suffrage movement

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review 2016-06-01 03:11
The Audubon Park Mystery
The Audubon Park Murder (A Sleepy Carter Mystery Book 1) - Brian W. Smith

Title: The Audubon Park Murder
Author: Brian W. Smith
Series: Sleepy Carter Mystery Book 1
Reviewed By: Arlena Dean
Rating: 5
Review:

"The Audubon Park Murder" by Brian W. Smith

My Thoughts....

I must say I loved this thriller mystery by this author. I read the second novel first and now that I have read this first of the 'Sleepy Carter Series' it makes a lots of sense to what all had gone on earlier in the first novel. I found the read quite entertaining as well as one of those reads that will certainly keep your attention as one finds 'Sleepy Carter quite a unique and mysterious character. This was definitely one of those read that will keep you guessing till the very end. Now, that I have read the first two of these mystery reads I will be looking forward to the third series to see will will become of Sleepy Carter with his well kept secret, Lizzy Silverman and let's not forget that Farrington partner. Well done to the author!

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review 2016-01-31 01:50
Sizzle in the Snow
Sizzle in the Snow: A Soul Mate Christmas Collection - Beth Carter,Amy Deason,Cyrstal Firsdon,C.D. Hersh,Kim Hotzon,Ryan Jo Summers,Tina Susedik,Cheryl Yeko,Char Chaffin

Title: Sizzle in the Snow
Authors: Beth Carter(Author), Amy Deason (Author), Cyrstal Firsdon (Author), C.D. Hersh (Author), Kim Hotzon (Author), Ryan Jo Summers(Author), Tina Susedik (Author), & Cheryl Yeko(Author)
Publisher: Soul Mate Publishing
Reviewed By: Arlena Dean
Rating: Five
Review:

"Sizzle in the Snow" by Beth Carter(Author), Amy Deason (Author), Cyrstal Firsdon (Author), C.D. Hersh (Author), Kim Hotzon (Author), Ryan Jo Summers(Author), Tina Susedik (Author), & Cheryl Yeko(Author)

My Thoughts....

Be ready for '8 sizzling Christmas novellas' that are so beautifully written for the holiday season that
will keep you turning the pages till the end.

1. Santa Baby by Beth Carter
We find Brooke Woods in quite a situation..how will this all come out?

2. Seconds Chances: A Christmas Story by Amy Deason
What will happen when Grace Sellers returns to her hometown and encounters her'
her HS crush?

3. 'Twas The Crazy Night Before Christmas by Crystal Firsdon
What will come of this story as Clara and Drew meet?

4. Kissing Santa by D.D. Hersh
What is up with Anna Noel's holiday bucket list? Will there be magic here?

5. The Snow Bird by Kim Hotzon
What happens when a property developer offers Lauren help?

6. Tamed by Christmas by Ryan Ann Summers
What happens when Paige and Shane come together for a second time especially
after getting over a tragedy?

7. Operation Santa by Tina Susedik
What happens as David tries to save his marriage?

8. Christmas Eve Surprise by Cheryl Yeko
Will Steve be able to get Amy and the baby she carries back after
he screw up?

To get the answers and much more you will have to pick up 'Sizzle in the Snow' to see how well these authors have presented them to the readers. These anthologies/novellas were very interesting collection of holiday reads that are just right for the season. The reader will find all of these reads are a little different and you will not know what to expect until the end. Be ready for some sweet true love stories with some hot erotic spice added, suspense, humor, surprise and in the end a happy endings! I would definitely recommend this novel for a Christmas holiday read.

I received a copy through NOR in exchange for an honest review.

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