Friday, June 29, 2012

Giveaway: Project Moses by Robert B. Lowe


Thanks to BK Walker of Virtual Book Tour Cafe and the author, Robert B. Lowe, I am giving away one copy on Project Moses.
Book Description:

A thriller with an ideal fusion of wile and wit.”- Kirkus Reviews

Project Moses is a high-tech bioterrorism thriller in the Grisham mode that has been well received on Good Reads, Library Thing and Kindle (4.7 stars based on 28 reviews as of May 31). It has romance, suspense and humor.

Enzo Lee, 37, a burned out reporter, has forsaken investigative reporting on the East Coast to churn out feature fluff in San Francisco. He likes his North Beach apartment, steps away from his Chinatown roots. Running, tai chi, great food, women who are attracted to his exotic looks. Life is good.

Then, Lee’s comfortable life is shaken up when he is ordered to cover the unexplained deaths of a local judge and prosecutor. Intrigued by the connection, and the judge’s attractive niece, Sarah Armstrong, Lee begins to uncover a bioterrorism scandal whose perpetrators - including government officials and Silicon Valley titans - will kill to conceal.

When Lee and Sarah become targets, the question becomes whether the pair can evade their hunters and piece together the story before their time runs out. Project Moses is set in San Francisco, New York and Silicon Valley.

"Mystery readers should like this one, I know that I did." - J. Robert Ewbank

"…a highly imaginative, fast paced thriller" - Christina K. Ahn

Fantastic read…this novel is right up there with the best of them.” – Athenajewel

Genre - Mystery Thriller

Publisher: Enzo Publications

Release Date: January 23, 2012


Excerpt if Project Moses:

The juror was about Judge Gilbert’s age but the resemblance ended there. She wore a blue, vaguely nautical dress at least two sizes and 15 years too young for her. Her face was loose and malleable, shifting back and forth between fear and disdain as she looked at her fellow jurors.
             Raising her hand like a child in class, the woman fought her sobs as she spoke through lips painted blood red.

“I am not crazy!” she said. She took two deep breaths. “They kept yelling and yelling at me. And I am not going to change my mind.”
            “He is innocent! That one did not prove his case.” Her face trembling, the juror jabbed a lethal-looking fingernail at the prosecutor just beyond the jury box.

Orson Adams stared back at his accuser, removed his tortoise shell-rimmed glasses and frowned.
           The muscles around Judge Gilbert’s left eye twitched slightly. She didn’t mind so much that the hung jury was going to waste four days of trial time devoted to a minor case. That was par for the course. What bothered her was a headache that had started about the time the bailiff knocked on the door to Judge Gilbert’s chambers and said: “They want to come out. I think they’ve run out of names to call each other.”

The judge cleared her throat, a signal that the histrionics and squabbling that had emanated from the jury box for the past ten minutes were over. She stared at the empty notepad in front of her for a few seconds before looking up.
           “It is apparent to me that this jury will not reach a unanimous verdict,” she said. “They have deliberated for two days - as much time as it took for the state and the defense to present their cases. Therefore, I declare a mistrial.”

“The prosecution will inform the Court within one week whether the state intends to retry this case. I thank the jury for its efforts. I know it has taken much of your time to be here and that the last two days have not been easy.” Judge Gilbert made it a point to nod in the jury’s direction.
              Then, she looked over at the defendant, an almost emaciated young man with dirty blond hair tied in a ponytail. He sat beside his attorney, a corpulent man wearing dark-blue pinstripes, pink tie and a forced smile that looked more like a snarl.

“Mr. Warrington will remain free on bond,” she said.
              An hour later, the lawyers, jurors and courthouse staff had joined the evening traffic jam. With her black robe now hanging in the closet of her chambers, Judge Gilbert wore a long-sleeved white blouse and a pleated beige skirt as she settled behind her large desk stained yellow to bring out the wood grain through the heavily polished sheen. Behind her were volumes of California cases, bound in blue leather. A cup of Misty Mint tea sat on her right, hot and steaming. Next to it lay two capsules of Darvon painkiller. The headache was worse. It now seemed to fan outward from the center of her brain to her scalp.

Judge Gilbert looked over the assorted papers laying on her desk. She picked up a large envelope that she had opened in the morning. It was teal blue and embossed with a logo in darker blue along the left side that she had never seen before. It was a rising spiral with flowers and bunches of grapes hanging from it.
              Judge Gilbert reached into the envelope and pulled out a yellow rose that had been pressed flat. She held it to her nose, inhaled and was rewarded with the aroma of cinnamon. She was reminded of hot apple cider and sweet potato pie.

She set the rose on the desk and grabbed her letter opener, a gift from a former law clerk. She inserted it under the flap of another envelope and tore it open with a satisfying rip. She skimmed the letter inside. Then, Judge Gilbert turned to the next envelope sitting in the tray on the corner of her desk.
              The next morning the body of Judge Miriam Gilbert was still at her desk when her law clerk went into her chambers. Her head lay on the desktop, eyes staring at a blank wall. Her silver hair was stained brown where it lay in a puddle of cold tea.

About Robert B. Lowe:

Robert B. Lowe is a Pulitzer-prize winning author whose fiction is based in San Francisco, his adopted home. His past experiences – a 12-year career in investigative journalism and a Harvard Law School degree – enable him to write gripping mystery thrillers in both the legal and journalistic fields. Lowe draws his inspiration from John Grisham, Dick Francis and Lee Child and adds his own San Francisco twist. Readers will enjoy his references to the city’s landmarks such as Chinatown, North Beach and Pacific Heights and the Bay area’s foodie culture. When Lowe isn’t writing he enjoys a day at the golf course and spending time with his wife and daughters.

Note, there are two giveaways, so there are two Rafflecopters posted here.  One giveaway is for one copy of the book, the other is for 5 signed copies of the book.  The Giveaway I am hosting for one copy of the book in print or eBook if you live in the U.S. you can have either one, if international, then eBook.  It ends on July 13, 2012.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter both giveaways.  Be sure to read the Terms and Conditions on both giveaways.
a Rafflecopter giveaway



Thursday, June 28, 2012

Through Black Spruce by Joseph Boyden

I read Three Day Road by Joseph Boyden with my f2f book club back in 2007 and it really left an impression on me.  The characters were unforgettable and the story, haunting.  Joseph Boyden has done it again with Through Black Spruce.

Will Bird, a aging Cree bush pilot and is currently in the hospital in a coma.  He is accused of murdering Marius who had been stalking him.  Will's niece, Suzanne went missing and somehow had gotten mixed up with the wrong crowd.  Marius thought Will knew where she was.
Meanwhile, Anne Bird, went looking for her sister, Suzanne.  First she went looking in Toronto, then Montreal, and finally New York.  Suzanne was a fashion model and Anne hooked up with her friends who were also into taking ecstasy and partying hard.  Of course, Anne got swept up in the life style and since she couldn't find her sister, even took her place as a fashion models for a brief time.

Told from the alternating points of view of Will and Anne, Through Black Spruce takes the reader through the older Cree lifestyle of fishing and hunting, to the world of high fashion, and drugs.  It helps the reader see what the like of the Cree people is like.  Through Black Spruce is well written and has characters that will stick with you long after turning the last page.
4/5

I won this book from John of The Book Mine Set for a mini challenge during this year's Canadian Book Challenge.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Beatrice and Virgil by Yann Martel

Henry is a famous writer but it seems that his writing days may be over.  Nobody seems to get his latest book at his publishers and they reject it.  Meanwhile he still gets a lot of fan mail but one letter really intrigues him.  It is from an elderly taxidermist and he has written a play but needs help with it.  There is something about the request that transfixes  Henry and he goes to visit the taxidermist in person.

He goes there frequently to help the old man finish his play about a donkey and a howler monkey—named Beatrice and Virgil.  It is an allegory of the Holocaust.  One day Henry invited the man to lunch rather than meet as his shop and it becomes very evident that the neighborhood hates the old man but Henry seems oblivious to it. 
The book to me was written in a very disjointed way.  In fact in it Henry's publishers tell him his book is too disjointed.  Because of this, it took me a long time to get into the story.  I kept thinking, life's too short to waste time on this book, but there was something that made me keep reading.

It did pick up mid-way through and started haunting me when I would try to go to sleep.  The ending didn't help my sleep either, I felt haunted for days.  Would I recommend it?  Hm.. I'm not sure but I did find it worthwhile for myself.
3/5

I won this book from John of The Book Mine Set for a mini challenge during this year's Canadian Book Challenge.

Guest Author, David LeRoy, Author of The Siren of Paris



On June 22, 2012 I posted a Feature and giveaway of The Siren of Paris. Be sure to go there to enter the international giveaway!  Now I would like to welcome the author, David LeRoy to So Many Precious Books. Welcome David!
Your Siren’s Calling    
 
          You were wearing the smart pumps on June 3rd, 1940. When those terrible sirens sounded at noon, and the bombs started to fall in Paris, they were quick to get out of and grab, as you ran across the street to the metro station underground shelter. Later that night you called your sister and brother back in England. Even though they pleaded for you to leave, you decided it was safer to stay.
           On June 10th, sitting in that special prayer service at Notre Dam, you admired Ambassador Bullitt as he knelt before the Priest. Your heart went out to the man as he sobbed underneath the blessing of the priest, now bestowing upon him the duties of Mayor of Paris. The government left for the south of France. Maybe now America will soon join the war you secretly prayed that morning.
          The all night air raids and bombs on the night of June 11th rattled you to the core. You had already accepted the worse that could happen, but you didn’t honestly think it would be that bad. As the shockwaves hit the metro station, doubt returned to your soul. It has been ten years now since you move to Paris from London, and maybe now is the best time to return home you think to yourself amid the frightened women and children. In the morning, you tried to phone home to your sister, but the phone lines leaving Paris had now been cut.     
          It seemed things turned around when your friend from the Church Army encouraged you to come with them on a train to the coast of Saint-Nazaire. Ships are waiting to take the soldiers home and civilians can tag along. You surprised yourself when you had to climb on top of the train the morning of June 12thwith the other fleeing refugees of Paris. It is not easy being over 60 years old. It was good to know that in a pinch you could do whatever you needed to do. The train left the cover of the station revealing the clear bright morning sky and as you accepted that the peaceful retirement you hoped for was but a dream.
          In Saint-Nazaire on June 17th, a fishing boat took you out to the refugee ship in the bay. When you clip the heel off of your right pump, as you board the ship, it does not get you down. You just clipped the other one off to make some flats. At least you are now almost home, where it will be safer than France. Waiting for the ship to leave, you visit with some other civilian refugees in the lounge, watching some children from Belgium play with some of the soldiers.
          When the bombs fall on the ship, and your lifeboat over turned into the water below, you faced another test of your will. You swam with everything you had for the other lifeboat rowing away from the sinking ship.
          “Known unto god,” was not your choice for a marker. The letters for you have gone unanswered back in Paris. None of them suspected or guessed you made it this far. You were sixty at the time, and could never ride on top of train, or walk for miles upon miles to a port on the west coast of France. Your sister and brother in London dismissed any idea that you had even left Paris. It was desperate and foolish to board a troop ship, but it was the only choice you had. At the time, it seemed like a good one, so you made the best of it.
          The polite young man, who helped you on top of the train, he is the same young man who you saw that morning at Norte Dam Cathedral with the Ambassador. You enjoyed chatting with him while walking towards Saint-Nazaire when your train broke down, mussing how much your family would worry if they could only see you then. He got on the same ship as you did, but swam just a little bit faster.
For you, the war is now over, but for him, it has just begun. The ship is now resting on the bottom of the harbor of Saint-Nazaire with 6,000 or more other forsaken souls. The helpful young man has been conscripted by the Germans to dig your grave. Because you were a civilian with no identity disk, your grave is marked “Known unto God.” Your siren’s calling was the RMS. Lancastria, Britain’s worse maritime disaster ever, but your family will never know it, because the British government suppressed the news from being broadcasted over the D-System. That young gentleman Marc, who helped you on top of the train, siren’s calling is back in Paris. You will need to read in The Siren of Paris to know his fate. May the Lord be with you my Known unto God. Your brother and sister would be proud of just how far you made it even at 60 with a heart condition and gout.

David LeRoy.
@studioleroy

David Leroy did extensive research on the German occupation of France for his debut novel The Siren of Paris. This historical novel follows the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War Two. Rich in historical detail, full of suspense, and offering a bit of romance, this novel is definitely a page turner.

You can purchase The Siren of Paris in Kindle e-book format from Amazon -- http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098 and learn more about this author and novel
at http://www.thesirenofparis.com/

For more information about this virtual book tour, please visit -- http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/







Monday, June 25, 2012

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Monday now has it's very own blog, Mailbox Monday. It is also on tour and is being hosted by Burton Book Review in June. This week link ups will take place at the Mailbox Monday Blog.

This is what I received last week:

Thanks to Sourcebooks and Net Galley for this eBook.  It is an ARC and the cover art is still to be determined.  I love Elizabeth Chadwick so couldn't resist.




I received this unsolicited from William Morrow/Harper Collins.  I don't read chick lit type books but I will find a good home for this book.











Sunday, June 24, 2012

Giveaway: Big Sky Country by Linda Lael Miller

Thanks to Kate Traynor of Meryl L. Moss Media Relations, Inc., I am giving away one copy of Big Sky Country.

Book Description:
“With engaging characters and lovable animals, this second story in the Creed Cowboys trilogy is a sure hit for the legions of cowboy fans out there.”
RT Book Reviews onCreed’s Honor

Two hostile half brothers—one legitimate and one not—are each left half of their deceased father’s prosperous ranch, but even this sprawling estate isn’t big enough for these two feuding cowboys. They’re headed for one big final showdown—winner takes all. BIG SKY COUNTRY (Harlequin HQN, June 2012,.),is the first book in the new series from #1New York Times bestselling author Linda Lael Miller, set in Parable, Montana—where rugged cowboys and feisty cowgirls abound.

It’s the secret that’s not much of a secret in the small rural town of Parable, Montana—that County Sheriff Slade Barlow is the illegitimate son of wealthy rancher John Carmody. But Slade’s existence has never once been acknowledged by his father, who lavished all his resources and attention on his legitimate son, Hutch Carmody, while Slade grew up barely scraping by with his mother in a small trailer attached to her hair salon, the Curly Burly. With the town’s whispers fueling their hatred, Slade and Hutch have spent their whole lives brawling with each other.

So when the half brothers are notified upon their father’s passing that according to his wishes the very profitable Whisper Creek Ranch and the fortune that goes with it is to be divided equally between them, both are left stunned.

But Hutch has no plans of sharing anything with his half brother. After all, he’s the golden boy who’s been groomed since birth to become master of Whisper Creek and he’s determined to get his way. He makes Slade a whopper of an offer for his share of the ranch, but Slade is in no hurry to give in to Hutch, who’s always had everything handed to him on a silver platter, including the attention of the beautiful Joslyn Kirk, former town prom queen and spoiled brat who slunk out of Parable years ago in disgrace but now is back….

Parable is the one place Joslyn Kirk swore she’d never set foot in again. She was a self-centered little rich girl back then until her stepfather cheated everyone in town out of their savings and she and her mom were forced to slink out of Parable in the middle of the night like criminals. But Joslyn spent years working to secretly pay back—out of her own hard-earned money—everyone her stepfather had bamboozled. Now Joslyn is home to face the people she ran away from years ago. But people in Parable haven’t forgotten the past and aren’t so accepting.
Slade wants to convince Joslyn that she’s not responsible for her stepfather’s mistakes. She has nothing in her past to apologize for. But Slade isn’t so comfortable with his own family issues.

Why doesn’t he sell the ranch to Hutch? Is it because he wants to claim his birthright, or is he just making things difficult for his half brother? Either way, Hutch is going to force Slade’s hand. These cowboy brothers are heading for a final Wild West showdown in front of the whole town with everything riding on the outcome.
About Linda Lael Miller:

Linda Lael Miller is a #1New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author of more than one hundred historical and contemporary novels, most of which reflect her love of the West. Raised in Northport, Washington, the self-confessed barn goddess now lives in Spokane, Washington. Linda hit a career high in 2011 when all three of her Creed Cowboys books—A Creed in Stone Creek, Creed’s Honor andThe Creed Legacy—debuted at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list. To learn more about Linda, visitwww.LindaLaelMiller.com.

This giveaway is for Canada and the U.S. and ends on July 8th.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.



Saturday, June 23, 2012

Giveaway Winners Galore

Thanks to everyone who entered the following giveaways! Winners, please reply to the email I sent you today within 48 hours to claim your books. After 2 days you will be disqualified and a new winner will be picked. Rafflecopter picks all winners using Random.org.

Thanks again to the author, Vasant Davé for making this giveaway possible.

The winner for the eBook is:
bm100







Thanks again to Jillian Sanders of Forever Romance for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Nancye D.

Thanks again to Kaitlyn McCrystal of Touchstone Publicity, Simon & Schuster, Inc for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Jeanne






Thanks again to Debby Tobias of Joan Schulhafer Publishing & Media Consulting for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
 Brenda




Thanks again to Ava Kavyani, Freelance Publicist and the author, Emylia Hall for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Sanda






Thanks again to the author, John A Heidt for making this giveaway possible.

The winner of the eBook is:
Nancye D.






Thanks again to Justina Batchelor, Publicist for Touchstone / Simon & Schuster for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Jeanne





Thanks again to Samantha Lien of |JKS Communications for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Julia

Thanks again to Jessica Butler of Berkley/Penguin for making this giveaway possible.

The winner is:
Julia












Guest Author: Susan Higginbotham, Auther of Her Highness, the Traitor

Yesterday I posted my review of Her Highness, the Traitor by Susan Higginbotham.  Be sure to check it out to enter the giveaway!  I am a big fan of Susan's and always so excited when I hear she has a new book out.  She has never disappointed me.
Today it is my honor to welcome Susan as my guest at So Many Precious books!  Welcome Susan!
When researching Her Highness, the Traitor, I was shocked at the sheer number of “facts” about the people in my novel which, on further investigation, turned out not to be true. Here are a few of them:

Myth: Edward VI was a sickly child. Fact: Until the last months of his life, Edward VI was a healthy boy who had no more than routine childhood illnesses.

Myth: Anne Seymour, Duchess of Somerset, physically shoved Katherine Parr out of her way and fumed, “If master admiral [Katherine’s husband Thomas Seymour] teach his wife no better manners, I am she that will.” Fact: The story about Anne shoving Katherine comes from the extremely unreliable Spanish Chronicle, which among other howlers has Thomas Cromwell (beheaded in 1540) investigating the allegations against Katherine Howard that arose in 1541. As for the quote about Katherine Parr being taught some manners, Anne Seymour never made such a statement. Rather, Peter Heylyn, writing in the seventeenth century, merely claimed that Anne thought this—something that Heylyn was hardly in a position to know.

Myth: Jane Grey’s parents were only interested in gambling and hunting. Fact: Nothing is known about the interests of Frances Grey, despite the prevailing notion of her as a predatory huntress. Henry Grey, however, was a patron of scholars who was also said to be “somewhat learned himself” and to speak elegant Latin. He spent the night before his own execution reading the works of Heinrich Bullinger, with whom his daughter Jane had corresponded. For a New Year’s gift, Jane translated a treatise on marriage from Latin into Greek for her father.

Myth: While visiting the manor of Sheen, Jane Grey and her parents were frightened by a bloody, axe-wielding hand that came from behind a wall. Fact: As far as I can tell, there is no contemporary source for this story. It seems to have arisen in the Victorian period.

Myth: Jane’s parents viciously beat her in order to force her to marry Guildford Dudley. Fact: This allegation, which has become a staple of novels and movies about Lady Jane, occurs only in a pirated Italian account. Significantly, Jane herself in her letter to Mary said nothing about being physically forced to wed Guildford, though it would have served her purpose to portray herself as a reluctant bride.

Myth: Edward VI was poisoned and his body switched with that of a youth of the same age. Fact: While it was widely rumored that John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, poisoned Edward, there is absolutely no evidence to support this, and Northumberland was never charged with regicide. As for the story of the body-switching, this tale originated with a cloth-merchant living in Strasbourg, who did not name his source. Edward VI had not yet been buried when Mary I took control of the government; had there been any doubts about the identity of the royal corpse, it would have been an easy matter to ascertain the truth.

Myth: Mary I executed Jane Grey in order to please Philip of Spain, who otherwise would have refused to go through with his marriage to the queen. Fact: While Mary had been under pressure from the imperial ambassador and some of her councilors to execute Jane and her husband Guildford, executing Jane was never a precondition to Mary’s marriage to Philip.

Myth: Guildford Dudley sniveled his way to the scaffold, in contrast to his self-possessed wife. Fact: the contemporary account of Guildford’s execution says simply that he shook hands with some well-wishers, prayed at length before his death, and made a short speech before his death. Nothing suggests that Guildford made anything other than a manly, dignified end.

Myth: Upon hearing of Frances’s marriage to her second husband, Adrian Stokes, Elizabeth I remarked, “What? Has she married her horse-keeper?” to which William Cecil replied, “Yes, madam, and she says your majesty would like to do so too.” Fact: Snappy as this repartee is, it is chronologically impossible. Elizabeth was not queen when Frances married, but was being held in custody by her sister Mary I.

Myth: Adrian Stokes was an uneducated stable hand half Frances’s age. Fact: Adrian was only two years younger than Frances. In the 1540’s, he served as marshal of Newhaven, an English post in occupied France, where he had command of ten men. Stokes was certainly literate in English, as letters written in his own hand show, and if he composed the epitaph on his wife’s tomb, he knew Latin as well. Stokes served in Parliament twice and on a number of local commissions. Fun Fact: Adrian’s stepdaughter by his second marriage, Elizabeth “Bess” Throckmorton, married Sir Walter Ralegh.
About Susan Higginbotham:
I am the author of two historical novels set in fourteenth-century England: The Traitor's Wife: A Novel of the Reign of Edward II and Hugh and Bess. Both were reissued in 2009 by Sourcebooks.

My third novel, The Stolen Crown, is set during the Wars of the Roses. It features Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, and his wife, Katherine Woodville, as narrators. My fourth novel, The Queen of Last Hopes, features Margaret of Anjou, queen to Henry VI, and is set mainly in the earlier years of the Wars of the Roses. It was released in January 2011. My latest novel, Her Highness, the Traitor, will be released in June 2012. Its heroines are Jane Dudley, Duchess of Northumberland, and Frances Grey, Duchess of Suffolk, who respectively were the mother-in-law and the mother of Lady Jane Grey.

My website is
http://www.susanhigginbotham.com. I blog at http://susandhigginbotham.blogspot.com








Friday, June 22, 2012

Giveaway & Review: Her Highness, the Traitor by Susan Higginbotham

Told in alternating points of view, Her Highness, the Traitor tells what happened leading up to and after the death of King Henry VIII.  His son Edward VI became king after his death however, if he died, Henry’s daughter Mary was to become queen and if she died, the Kingdom would go to Elizabeth.  Sounds simple but it was not.

There were others vying for the Kingdom, claiming that both Mary and Elizabeth were bastards and not entitled to the throne.   Many had their sights on little Lady Jane Grey for Queen and fought to make it happen.  She was queen for all of nine days and Her Highness, the Traitor is her story and the story of the ones who made her Queen. 
It is no secret that I am a fan of Susan Higginbotham and this novel has not changed my mind on that.  I like the way this novel is laid out, telling it in alternating points of views work really well.  The reader is able to get the story from all sides, not just one point of view.  Higginbotham doe an outstanding job of trying to get to the truth of what really might have happened.  The writing is clear and beautifully descriptive and the characters jump out of the page to greet the reader and welcome him or her into the past.

I felt as if I was brought back in time and experienced everything first hand.  This is another winning historical fiction novel by Susan Higginbotham!  I can hardly wait to see what she comes up with next!
4.5/5

Thanks to Sourcebooks and Net Galley for the eBook version for advance review.  Also, thanks to Beth Pehlke of Sourcebooks, I am giving away one copy of Her Highness, the Traitor.
This giveaway is for Canada and the U.S. and ends on July 6, 2012.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.
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Giveaway: The Siren of Paris by David LeRoy

Thanks to Stephanie Ward of Book Promo Services, I am giving away one Kindle eBook of The Siren of Paris.

Book Description:
Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the "Fog and the Night" of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

About David LeRoy:

A Native of California, David received a BA in Philosophy and Religion at Point Loma Nazarene College in San Diego. The degree served him well while selling women’s shoes, waiting tables, or working odd jobs after college until settling in the field of telecommunications, where he has worked for the past 18 years. Early on, he demonstrated artistic abilities. For many years, David marketed a line of fine art photographic prints through various galleries and retail outlets.
In the past few years, his focus has shifted to painting and drawing, which included the development of a children’s e-book in the Apple Itunes store under “David Tribble” title “Lord of the Scribes.”

After returning from a European arts study program, he became interested in the history behind the French Resistance during World War Two. Writing fiction has become his latest way to explore philosophical, moral and emotional issues of life. The Siren of Paris is his first novel.
Link to Author's Site: http://www.thesirenofparis.com/

Link to Purchase the E-Book: http://www.amazon.com/The-Siren-of-Paris-ebook/dp/B0088CA098/ref=cm_sw_em_r_dp_07mZpb00VP7AE_tt


This giveaway is international (for anyone who can read a Kindle eBook) and ends on July 6, 2012.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.
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