Monday, April 28, 2025

Interview with Margaret Izard, Author of Stone of Doubt (Giveaway)

 


Margaret Izard is an award-winning author of historical fantasy and paranormal romance novels. Her latest awards are 2024 Reader’s Favorite Honorable Mention for Stone of Love and 2024 Spring BookFest Silver Award for the same title. She spent her early years through college to adulthood dedicated to dance, theater, and performing. Over the years, she developed a love for great storytelling in different mediums. She does not waste a good story, be it movement, the spoken, or the written word. She discovered historical romance novels in middle school, which combined her desire for romance, drama, and fantasy. She writes exciting plot lines, steamy love scenes and always falls for a strong male with a soft heart. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband and adult triplets. 

http://www.margaretizardauthor.com

https://www.facebook.com/mizardauthor

https://linktr.ee/mizardauthor

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DSGBDMRL

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/223346303-stone-of-doubt

https://www.bookbub.com/books/stone-of-doubt-by-margaret-izard

Where did you grow up?

I was born in Lake Charles, LA, but raised in Houston, Texas.

When did you begin writing?

I started in my 30s, stopped, then picked it back up again in my 50s after tutoring my triplets through college.

Do you write during the day, at night, or whenever you can sneak a few moments?

I’m a 9-5 girl.

What is this book about?

Stone of Doubt, book 5.  Evie’s story. (Colin and Bree’s daughter) A human with Fae powers finds herself fulfilling an old magic stone prophecy as her lost dream boy, now a man, must rescue her from the cruel grip of an evil monster and save the realms. 

She’s a human with Fae powers—and two men who want her. One dark and devilish, the other her long-lost love. Which path will Evie choose? 

Evie MacDougall, you met in book 3, Stone of Hope. She’s Breille and Colin MacDougall’s daughter with Fae powers who accidentally opened the Eye of Ra portal, which sucked her, her brother Ewan and their uncle, Dominic DeVolt, into Egypt of the 1930s. In that story, she meets her mysterious Fae boy, whom she falls hard for. When we met with her again, she had graduated college and had not seen her Fae crush since. She meets the handsome, dark man, Manix, and they start a relationship, only to have her Fae crush, Aodhán, return, begging him to take her to his Fae realm. 

Aodhán, saved Evie and her family at the end of Stone of Hope, book 3 Stones of Iona, only to be punished for showing his true love forbidden Fae spells. Now freed from his captivity, he’s free to visit Evie, his love. But she’s torn between two men, one dark and dangerous, and him, a prophesied future King of the Tuatha Dé Danann. Aodhán will do all in his power to fight for their love, even risk his own destiny. 

Manix Skene Evie admired from afar since he transferred to her college three months prior. He’s a drama major who prefers goth like her and carries a darkness about him that all the girls find irresistible. When Manix invites her to his estate for a masked ball, she becomes curious about the dark and handsome man every college student dreams of dating. Some say he held a temper as if another lived inside him, but for Evie, he was everything a girl desired, or was he?


What inspired you to write it?
 

This is the fifth book in the series, and it shifts into the next generation of MacDougalls, who must search for missing magic Fae stones. Evie searches for the Stone of Doubt, so the book delves into individuals grappling with internal conflicts and external challenges, making their journeys deeply human.

 

What readers have said about this next release: The narrative keeps you guessing. Just when readers think they’ve figured it all out, unexpected turns will invite them to re-examine their assumptions—mirroring the book’s central theme of questioning certainty. Stone of Doubt isn’t just a story; it’s an exploration of how doubt and certainty shape our lives. As readers navigate the intertwined threads of romance, suspense, and self-discovery, they’ll find themselves reflecting on their own experiences and beliefs.

Was the road to publication smooth sailing or a bumpy ride?

For my first release, Stone of Love, book 1 Stones of Iona, I searched for an agent or publisher. I spent over two and a half years querying while trying to improve my writing before finding a home with The Wild Rose Press.

If you knew then what you know now, is there anything you would have done differently?

Hired a better freelance editor and had more patience.

Where can readers purchase a copy of your book?

Most all retailers for ebook and print books.

https://linktr.ee/mizardauthor

What is one piece of advice you would like to share with aspiring authors everywhere?

Read. Some of my best ideas came from inspiration from reading history or another story. It fires the creative spark and generates my mind to develop “what if?” and then answer it. 

Write. Even if it stinks, write. Get it on the page. You can always edit it after. You should edit and edit and edit. Writing is a practiced technique. Storytelling is a practiced art. They go hand in hand, but to learn, one must practice. 

Don’t do this alone. While writing is solitary, crafting and creating great stories isn’t. Take a class, find a writing group, or join a critique group. Get feedback on what you write to make it better.
What is up next for you?

Is there anything you would like to add?

Next in the series: 

Highlander’s Holly and Ivy, a Christmas companion book coming November 2025. Features Alex MacDougall, Mary and Roderick from Thistle in the Mistletoe son. A forbidden love between a Highlander and an English lady intertwines with magic, betrayal, and the fate of a nation as they fight to unite their worlds and reclaim Scotland’s legacy.

Stone of Faith, book 6 Ewan’s Story. (Evie’s twin brother) A cursed pirate captain and an enslaved siren defy a power-hungry madman—and fate itself—to claim a love that spans centuries as they save the human and Fae realms.


Stone of Destiny, book 7. Katerine MacArthur, Evie’s BFF love story. A woman torn between fate and forbidden love must defy a Fae prophecy and battle dark forces to reclaim her future—and the heart of the Fae warrior she can’t forget.

Evergreen Evermore, a Christmas companion book coming in 2026.

This series leads into another connected series, Dragons of Tantallon, a dragon-shapeshifter series revolving around the magic Iona Stones.


Read an Excerpt: 

She breathed as Aodhán wrapped his arms around her, pulling her against his muscular chest. “Welcome to Broemere Castle, my home.” 

She turned as he held her in his arms. “Yer home? Ye mean the Fae realm?” 

Aodhán brushed his fingers over her cheek. “Aye.” He gazed at her momentarily with a grin spread over his face. “Come, I wish to show ye around the castle before we meet the others.” 

He pulled her hand, and she tugged back, stopping him. “The ball, it still calls ye?” 

He nodded as he turned, and she tugged again. “Ye mentioned punishment. What for?” 

He took her hand and kissed the back. “For showing ye spells I wasn’t allowed to.” 

Evie stood staring at him as the edges of his eyes crinkled. She looked down, her mind rolling over memories as the past connected with the present, then his statement. 

She gasped. “The Fae, they punished ye for helping me.” Her eyes connected with his. “Yer punishment was because of me. Ye didn’t leave me. They kept ye away.” 

Aodhán stepped to her, his hand on her cheek. “Aye, that’s true.” He bent and brushed a kiss. Tingles like before shot to her toes, electrifying her body. 

Aodhán’s whisper brushed her ear. “And I’d do it all over again.”


Margaret Izard will be awarding a
Stone of Doubt Book Swag Box
to a randomly drawn winner. 




It's Monday! What Are You Reading? and Mailbox Monday - April 28



It's Monday! What Are You Reading? is a place to meet up and share what you have been, are, and about to be reading over the week. It's a great post to organize yourself. It's an opportunity to visit and comment, and er... add to that ever-growing TBR pile! So welcome in everyone. This meme started with J Kaye's Blog and was then taken up by Sheila from Book Journey. Sheila then passed it on to Kathryn at the Book Date.   

Happy Monday! We are flying home from NC today, so I might not have time to visit blogs. I'll share pictures of the dance show, if I get any decent ones, next week. Reading while I'm away...



Enjoy your day!


Sunday, April 27, 2025

Book Review: While We're Young by K. L. Walther

 


Filled with fun adventures, romance, forgiveness, and that reckless abandon high school seniors are bound to embrace, While We're Young by K. L. Walther is a young adult romance that is certain to gain legions of fans.

Friends since childhood, Grace, Isa, and Everett were once inseparable. That was until freshman year, when Isa and Everett dated and then broke up. Since then, Grace, who is totally in love with Everett--unbeknownst to him, secretly helps Everett out wth babysitting while supporting her best friend Isa, who she is sure wouldn't understand Grace's commitment to Ev. Meanwhile, Isa and Grace's brother, James, have a secret of their own. Isa has been putting off telling Grace about their blossoming relationship because she's certain Grace won't like them dating. Feeling off-kilter since freshman year, Everett is struggling with demons he hasn't shared. 

Desperate to reunite their trio before they all head off to college, Grace coordinates a senior skip day of epic proportions. She thinks her careful planning is perfect, but when James figures something is afoot, he races to find his sister and uncover her dastardly plot.

Oh, my gosh! I loved everything about While We're Young. Inspired by Ferris Bueller's Day Off, this young adult romance is much deeper and richer than the movie. Freshman year changed the three-way friendship among Grace, Isa, and Everett. Since that time, Grace has felt that she has to pretend to keep Ev at arm's length to support Isa, whose parents are determined only top Ivy League colleges will help her be successful in life. Neither Grace nor Isa realizes how much a family tragedy impacted Everett, and he certainly doesn't grasp the impact it had on his besties. 

James, meanwhile, used to be so close to his sister, but Grace and he are on different roads. She is the senior class president, beloved by the staff, faculty, and the student body, but the only thing James will be known for is detentions. And he really doesn't much care. In a desperate hunt to expose what Grace and her friends are up to, he unfolds one of his infamous plots, bringing humor and antics to an otherwise emotionally tense storyline.

Walther was wise in how she plotted out While We're Young. There are so many intense feelings in what happened in high school for these three friends, that if it wasn't lightened by this unofficial senior skip day and James's pursuit, the novel would have been draining. This story ends on such an amazing note for all four characters that the reader is totally satisfied with the conclusion, even though so much of their lives is left unwritten. 

Funny and romantic, I highly recommend While We're Young

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D22KPSG2
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Delacorte Romance (March 4, 2025)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ March 4, 2025
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2.5 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 376 pages
I received a free digital copy of this novel from the publisher through NetGalley. This review contains my honest opinions, which I have not been compensated for in any way.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Book Blast and Giveaway: Only in September by Cynthia Flowers

 


When Jacqueline follows her trusty Labrador Bailey down a hidden path to the beach, she's unaware that her vacation plans on a small island off the New England coast has already taken her life in a new direction. Running into an unassuming local beach comber stirs new thoughts, desires, and a self-determination she never knew she possessed. Jacqueline will need to trust her instincts and make the most of what fate has in store if she wants the future that, until now, she has only dared to dream of. 

Read an Excerpt: 

During their return trip on the trail, they happened upon a series of small cottages. One of them was having exterior repairs done. The sudden screech of a buzz saw gave them a startle. Bailey was off leash and ran over to investigate. Stephen called after her.

The buzz saw suddenly stopped. Then someone from behind the cottage exclaimed, “Hey, I know you.”

The person behind the voice rushed out from behind the cottage and came into view. It was Michael. He looked at Jacqueline. Their eyes locked. She was happy to see him, and he seemed equally pleased to see her. Bailey jumped up on Michael like she had when they first met earlier in the week at the beach.

“Hey, there.” Michael motioned to Jacqueline. His smile was unavoidable.

Jacqueline slowly walked toward him. She didn’t want to seem too eager in front of Stephen.

“Do you two know each other?” Stephen inquired.

“Well, sort of,” Michael said with a chuckle. “We met at the beach the other day. Or, I should say, our dogs met at the beach. We just happened to be tagging along.”

Jacqueline broke her silence and elaborated further about how the pooches got along famously. “I meant to make it to the beach again before setting sail, but the week got away from us.”

“Don’t need to apologize to me. It’s Serendipity you need to square with. But unfortunately, she’s not with me today. Maybe another time,” Michael suggested.

“Considering we’re on the early afternoon ferry tomorrow, I don’t think that’s possible,” Stephen said deliberately and looked at Jacqueline to finish what he started. Instead, she looked down at Bailey to avoid Stephen’s gaze.

“Oh, well, I suspect you’ll be back," Michael shot back. “It’s seldom that someone visits this island only once.”

As they started off, she lingered behind Stephen for a moment to clip Bailey’s collar to the leash and took the opportunity to mouth at Michael, “See you in the morning.”

He acknowledged her invitation with a wink.



Cynthia Flowers, a recently retired advertising professional, now grant writer, resides with her husband and four-year old Labrador named Eddie, at their “sanctuary” in Upstate New York, Although previously published, this is Cynthia's first book of fiction. Early on in grade school, Cynthia looked forward to creative writing class and enjoyed reading her stories aloud to her eager classmates. 

Cynthia Flowers will be awarding a 
$10 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner. 




Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Three Things I Wish More Books Talked About

 


The Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge is hosted by Long and Short Reviews. They offer this blog hop as a weekly prompt to help you gain new friends and visitors. You don't have to participate every week, but if you decide to post and join the blog hop for a week, Long and Short Reviews asks that you share your link on their weekly post on their website (it will be the top post on the home page each Wednesday morning). The link list remains open for new links for 48 hours. Visit the other bloggers participating to see what they are talking about that week. Comments are appreciated. 

What a great topic! I'm sure we all have opinions on this. Here are the...

Three Things I Wish More Books 

Talked About

  1. The impact of grief on the family unit. This is a topic that, in my opinion, can't be discussed often enough. Whether it is in nonfiction or fiction, when a loved one dies, it impacts everyone. Grief is a personal experience. Everyone's journey looks different. The Santa Letters by Stacy Gooch-Anderson is one of my favorite novels that centers around a woman's grief after she loses her husband. Bear with me, since I haven't read it since 2008, but I'm fairly certain it focused mainly on the widow. However, the arrival of the Santa Letters had a positive impact on the family as a whole. This was a novel that allowed the reader to witness the family's healing. 
  2. Women transitioning from parenting to becoming empty-nesters. This is a very personal topic for me, considering I am almost there. Amazingly, there is only one page of books on Amazon about becoming an empty nester (using my search criteria). There are 45 choices--fiction and nonfiction--on Goodreads. Gosh, that really doesn't sound like a lot when women have been going from being parents to being empty nesters for generations.
  3.  Starting a new relationship later in life. Again, this could be tackled from a nonfiction or fiction perspective. I know hen lit exists, but I don't think romance always has to be part of it. Starting new relationships--whether they are friendships or romances--is tough. Alongside this topic runs romances filled with real people who look like real people instead of models. 

What are some things you wish more books talked about? 

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Books that Surprised Me (in a good or bad way)



Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.    

It's Tuesday again. It's expected to be a bit dreary today. That makes it a great day to work. At least if it rains, I don't have to water the garden. 

Today's Top Ten Tuesday topic is books that surprised me (in a good or bad way). At first blush, I'm not sure if there are ten of those. Of course, after close to two decades of blogging, there must be. I'm going to give it a whirl and see how it goes. 

Top Ten Books that Surprised Me
(in a good or bad way)


This book grabbed me from the first page, and I quickly read eight chapters. The author compiled stories from dozens of women that encourage you to embrace a sweeter life while traveling rocky roads. This Christian self-help book provides readers with a different perspective, allows them time to reflect, and shares the reward of quick and easy recipes. 



I added this to my Laura Ingalls Wilder collection in 2011, when the author contacted me for a review of her new release. I'm glad I read it, but I was surprised I couldn't love a book about a person who decides to go on a personal journey to many of the Laura Ingalls Wilder sites. Having gone on a scaled-down version of my own Laura Ingalls Wilder adventure, I thought I would connect better with the story. While having a strong beginning, as the author proceeded, she poked fun at Laura fans, which wasn't enjoyable either.


Have you ever come across a book that makes you laugh so hard your sides hurt? This is the one that did it to me. I picked this up at the Target in Wilmington while visiting our daughter. The title and cover are hilarious enough, but I couldn't get past the first couple of pages without tears streaming down my face. I have never had a book tickle my funny bone as much as this one. 


Because watching the mini-series is what persuaded me to read the novel, I was disappointed that Ralph's looks in the book were very different from Richard Chamberlain's Ralph. The Thorn Birds mini-series also put together a more compelling conclusion for Meggie and Ralph's storyline than the book did because it changed the sequence of a few events. 


I am always pleasantly surprised when I guess who the murderer is before it is revealed. With this book, I was fairly certain who that would be, but some of the details eluded me. 


The author told this romance from three points of view: the female lead, the male lead, and the daughter of the female lead. This was a neat surprise, and that decision added significant depth to the plot. 


After reading the final book in The Hunger Games series, it surprised me that it seemed like Haymitch was the only character who truly changed in the books. As a result of being with Peeta and Katniss, the reader watches him evolve and become more engaged in the fight against the Capitol. 


This book was not what I expected. As I wrote in my review, "...we end up with a bride, but it's many years in the making." These books were so well written, I really need to finish the series. 


When you get into a series and the author never finishes it, that can be an awful surprise. Such was the case with the Sam's Quest series by Ben Furman. I read both of these books and loved them. The third and final book of the trilogy never made it to print. 


Not being a huge lover of fantasy or science fiction, when I find a book in either of these genres that I enjoy, it's a bit of a surprise. This book was so funny, quirky, and unique that I couldn't help but love it. 

Looking forward to seeing which books made your list this week. 

Monday, April 21, 2025

Book Blast & Giveaway: The Last Door, Ajar by Michael Holly Barrett

 


It is 1945. The infamous Max Smartz, superspy; Eva Braun, wife of Adolf Hitler; Joseph Goebbels, propaganda minister; and Otto Klugg, intelligence officer, do not die at the end of World War II, but trick the guards in the Fuhrerbunker tunnels, allowing them to make their escape. Their escape plan is to reach war-neutral Southern Ireland, where Maxwell Smartz has an established base and is familiar with rural south Kerry and its people. They evade capture and eventually reach France. Here, they meet with a good friend and colleague, an undercover agent called Maurice Le Blanc, who asks them to assist him in retrieving some stolen gold bars.

After finding the fortune, the friends attempt to retrieve it in an old Dutch van but are continually thwarted and risk losing everything. To complicate matters, they learn that Max's brother, Victor, has been incarcerated in the notorious Spandau prison and is being tried for Nazi war crimes. They hatch a plot to save him, but is it worth the danger of going back to Berlin and being caught?

Read an Excerpt:

Joseph Goebbels was a German Nazi politician who joined the Nazi party in 1933. He rose to the ranks of Propaganda Minister and Minister of Culture. He was not very tall and had a clubbed foot, which never stopped him thinking big and walking tall. Culture was fine by Goebbels as long as it was German culture, pure Aryan. His henchmen, the Nazis, would gladly kick the shit out of anyone with the slightest notion of foreign culture other than the ‘Only true German culture’. He was responsible for all publicity, films, art, books and newsreels that only showed the best of all that was German. Magda, his wife, was four years younger than him and was an avid supporter of Nazism, and a good friend of both Hitler and his wife, Eva. Eva was quoted as saying, ‘She, Magda, had no compunction about killing her six children, she feared for their safety if they continued to live’. Joseph Goebbels was a brilliant orator; his speeches were full of passion and fire for the Germany he so loved. Hitler loved his friend, Joseph, and his great enthusiasm for rousing the people into action. Now things had changed dramatically — they were losing the war, everything that could go wrong, went wrong The Yanks, English and Russians were all racing towards Berlin looking for scalps, and Joseph, Magda, Hitler and Eva made an unwritten pact not to allow that to happen. They would deny the intruders the pleasure of rolling heads, they were intent on spoiling the party for the allied army.

Purchase Links:

AMAZON.COM: https://amazon.com/dp/177962574X 

AMAZON.CA: https://amazon.ca/dp/177962574X 

BOOKTOPIA: https://www.booktopia.com.au/search.ep?keywords=9781779625748 

ABEBOOKS: https://www.abebooks.com/products/isbn/9781779625748 

BETTERWORLD BOOKS: https://www.betterworldbooks.com/product/detail/9781779625748 

 

My humble beginnings in a terrace house with an outdoor toilet and indoor rats. The drinking water was got from a public pump in the street. We were all sailing in the Titanic,Third

Class, but we were not aware of anything better. We had so much fun, swimming in the river. As kids we had wonderful imaginations.The only luxuries we ever saw were in the Cinema, usually

 American films, people smoking and drinking alcohol. 

Everyone in the town of County Cork, Ireland seemed to be in the same boat; we made the best of it until the swinging sixties came along and changed everything. In spite of our poverty, I managed to get a College education. But opportunities were as scarce as rich Uncles. The Christian Brothers were brutal, and handy with the cane, in National School. I was lucky like many fellows my own age to get an apprenticeship as a diesel mechanic. Soon developed a taste for Alcohol, and got into trouble pretty soon, was lucky again to find A.A. and get my act together in 1978. 

My hero died in 1977, Elvis Presley, the music stopped, the sixties was over, the Beatles were broken up, CCR, too. So getting sober was the best thing to do, under the miserable

 circumstances. I got a job as a Pipe Welder with ASME 1X certificate and began working around Europe, finally settling in warm Spain, Barcelona and met a Catalunya woman. Started writing for the first time, mostly comedies, Peter Sellers style, another hero of mine. 

This is my second published book, I also self published earlier works Like ,'Gorilla Days in Ireland' by Michael Barrett, on Amazon. The Frankie Stein Enigma, and others, I paint oil and acrylic pictures, write mountains of poetry, sing and play the guitar. 

'I do just about everything, that doesn't make any money for me.' But love doing what I do, writing poetry is mind stimulating, energising . 

My favourite actors are William Holden, Warren Oates, Gregory Peck, and favourite detective the great Peter Falk in Columbo, a genius and Clouseau, Peter Sellers, and Peter Ustinov. 

CONNECT WITH Michael Holly Barrett 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100045861996652   

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-barrett-78b686103/


Michael Holly Barrett will be awarding

a $10 Amazon/BN gift card 

to a randomly drawn winner.