Author Archives: Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

About Jennifer Reed/ bookjunkiez

My Niece and Nephew joke that I could open a used book store with all the books that I own. I love to read, that is my addiction. I can't go a week without going to a book store. I love crocheting. I love to write stories and poetry. I also love my family, even though they make me crazy at times. I am a huge Donald Duck Fan.

The Horn’s Hoax Blitz

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The Forbidden Instrument

MG & YA Fantasy

Published: December 7, 2021

 

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Only $.99 June 9th – 12th!!

It’s hard to tell when someone’s soul changes, especially when
dark energy has a price.

An unexpected adventure of two brothers who accidentally travel to another
world. Henry and Moris—just a few short months after their father
mysteriously goes missing—are playing their favorite make-believe game
when suddenly they are transported to a different universe, leaving behind
their mother and sister. When each brother is captured by warring wizarding
houses, the Veneficums and the Milaculums, they stand the chance of losing
each other forever.

The boys have too many unanswered questions, and they don’t know who
to trust, but in their attempt to find each other and return home, the
brothers discover truths about themselves––and their
father––they never could have imagined.

In a strange world where wizards fight each other and are not what they
seem, who can the brothers trust? More importantly, will they get home
together?

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Excerpt

Blue energy sparked through the black circle in the sky as a body fell,
smashing the ground with a thud. The portal vanished.

The brother rapidly stood up. “No, no, no, — Why? What the hell
have you done?” he howled to himself, searching for the portal. He
paced side to side, hands wringing. This can’t be happening. This
can’t be happening
, he kept thinking. A lump formed in his gut, and
his breath quickened. The more he thought about it, the more his heart
raced. The tension moved through his chest, up his throat, until he
unleashed a scream of fury.

It was partly his fault. He could’ve pulled his brother inside the
portal.

He hesitated. To his left, a swirl of dust. To his right, a rolling bush.
“Where am I?” he asked out loud. He was standing on a road,
alone in a desert, clutching a small, strange animal horn.

Damn it,” he yowled, staring at the horn. He raised his arm to
toss it away; then, a thought struck him. He ground his teeth in frustration
because he couldn’t get rid of it—it was the only way to get
back to the portal.

He clenched the horn, face reddened in anger, and yelled, “Itenelum,
Dantus.” He repeated, “Itenelum, Dantus.”

Nothing. The horn wasn’t activating.

He headed down the road. The radiant sun beat down. He hoped to return to
where he had suffered the strangest experience he’d ever had.

In the distance, metal clattered. He raised his burned face, eyes squinting
at the smudge on the horizon, and eyed a billboard. The advertisement
promised Coffee Cheer, Morning Cheers.

He gasped, widening his eyes. “The sign.”

He hastened to the billboard, looking for the dirt road. He stopped, and
his face dropped again. No dirt road, only bushes. He sprinted to the bushes
and yanked several from the ground. “Where is the road?”

Could he get back to the cabin? There was no dirt road to lead him.

He walked a few paces away from the bushes, his hands dirty and bleeding.
Now he thought of getting home. But had his family survived? He walked
toward his house, his weary feet dragging on the ground.

He recalled his experience and sensed ominous times ahead. As if the ones
he’d already lived through weren’t enough.

Soon, the hum of a motor approached as an old pickup drove towards him.
Finally. Covered in dust, he waved the vehicle down as he tucked the horn in
his jacket.

The driver squinted at him, then shrugged and slowed to a halt. He backed
up and addressed the brother. The driver was bald, with wrinkles on his
forehead and a long white beard.

At the obvious question he wanted to answer, I just waved my hand for no
reason. Instead, he said, “Yes, please. I have been walking for hours
and have no cell phone.”

“Where’re you headed?”

Anywhere out of here, the brother thought. “Near Austin,” he
said with a forced smile.

“Hop in. I’m going that way.”

“Thank you very much, sir.”

The clock on the dashboard flashed a useless twelve o’clock, and the
radio was off. The brother hesitated to ask about the date; a scruffy guy on
the side of the road asking that sounded normal, right? He remained
silent.

The driver held a one-sided conversation that the brother mostly ignored.
He stared out the window, his hand on the horn in his pocket and his mind on
the experience before the black hole. The driver kept chattering.

When they finally arrived at the outskirts of Austin, he asked the driver
to drop him off near his house. He stepped out and, embarrassedly, offered
only a thank-you. He had no money.

He hesitated a second in trepidation after the pickup left him, then rushed
toward home.

There were no cars in the house.

“Oh, no,” he wailed. He feared death had visited his
family.

The brother approached the door and rang the bell. No one answered. He
searched for the hidden key below the flowerpot—it was still
there—and went inside.

“Mom? Maya? Are you here?”

No one answered. He glanced around and sighed, smiling. He saw a picture of
them. They still lived in the house.

He needed to figure out the date. He hurried to a laptop, opened it, and
waited for it to boot up.

About the Author

Hector Cantu Kalifa

Hector Cantu Kalifa (it’s weird talking about myself in the 3rd person) was
born in 1986 in Monterrey, Mexico. He lived with his family and…

Ok, I’m done talking in 3rd person.

I try to meditate every day; I also enjoy sports, so I exercise at least
four times a week.

 The book The Horn’s Hoax: The Forbidden Instrument is my debut novel, and
it has a special meaning because the idea came from how I play with my
children.

 The writing of this book has been an unexpected pleasure for me, as I would
never imagine myself writing a book. It all began in September 2019. It was
intended to be a ten-page brief story. But as I wrote, my imagination and my
taste for writing kept me working. I realized on a blank page I can create
amazing things and let my imagination fly.

Words kept coming, and I discovered the hard work of building a story. With
the help of many people, I gave my heart to create my first
“Art”.

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The Way of the Tracker Virtual Book Tour

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Natural Health / Self Development / Kinesiology / Healing / Holistic Health
/ Wellbeing / Fulfillment

Releasing April 2022

Publisher: Serapis Bey Publishing

 

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This book takes you on an adventure of personal development through the
detective work of Creative Kinesiology.  Muscle testing gives us the
powerful tool we need to delve into any problem. It allows the body to show
us what is going on physically, emotionally and in our feelings, with the
mind and the spiritual self. Using maps of the body, subtle energies and
clues to the problem gives the tracker the direction of healing.
Working creatively with the person and their intent for healing gives us all
we need for healing and inner work to begin and continue. We look at the way
the latest discoveries from the scientific world add new perspectives on the
way the body systems work – or don’t.  Plumbing the depths
of our being takes us to the reasons for our stress and anxiety – the
traumas, large and small that can create problems in any part of us,
including the digestive system, the brain and the nervous system. We may
have lost our ability to look forward and reach for our visions and dreams.
Help is there for us; in the exercises and techniques we can use for
ourselves; some are introduced in the book.  Increasing our awareness
of the body’s messages can give us the healing impetus to help
ourselves and can take us to practitioners, both in the natural health world
and in the medical profession.

Discover this gentle and powerful approach to healing and health for
yourself as you read the book – a healing journey in itself.

The Way of the Tracker tablet

  About the Author

Carrie Jost
Carrie Jost started her working life as a town planner and after having two
beautiful daughters she moved on to become a community worker. When this
work was coming to an end, she changed direction to work in the field of
natural health and wellbeing and has continued ever since. Carrie has been a
practitioner and teacher since 1987. She describes herself as a
kinesiologist and has also trained as a psychotherapist and shamanic healer,
as well as studying many other bodywork and energy work methods. Bringing
these different approaches to health and wellbeing together has been her
life’s work and vocation for more than thirty years.

She established the UK’s School of Creative Kinesiology in 1990 and
was involved in setting up the Kinesiology Federation in the UK in
1991.

Carrie has worked with hundreds of people during the years; has trained
many practitioners and teachers; and thoroughly enjoyed the entire process.
Even though she is now an elder, she still sees clients and teaches. She
also plays a part in the continuing journey of Creative Kinesiology.

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Ruby Roy and the Murder in the Falls Blitz

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Ruby Roy Mysteries, Book 1

 

Mystery / Thriller

Date Published: May 3, 2022

Publisher: BMB Publishing

 

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Meet Dr. Ruby Roy. She is a twenty-nine-year-old, goofy, warm, and
absent-minded professor in her third year at Baron University, located a few
miles from the Falls. A plus-size woman of mixed Indian and Canadian roots,
and cursed with an overactive imagination stemming from watching too many
Bollywood and Disney films, Ruby is struggling to make her mark and stay out
of trouble.

It doesn’t help matters that she keeps stumbling into a series of
embarrassing incidents, even as she desperately tries to keep her superiors
in the College happy. Unfortunately for Ruby, things take a turn for the
worse when she discovers her Chair’s dead body in his office. But who could
have killed him? And why? And why does the Detective investigating the case
look like a famous Hollywood actor?

Suddenly all the Poirot, Marple, Sherlock Holmes, and Father Brown books
she loves reading seem to have come to life as she finds herself in the
middle of a real-life murder mystery. And with the murderer on the loose, no
one is safe. With the help of her husband, Cleo, her very own Watson, Ruby
tries to solve the mystery before she is next on the killer’s list!

Praise for Ruby Roy and the Murder in the Falls

“The mystery builds to an exciting climax, and there’s an unexpected
final twist…An amusingly quirky read…”

-Kirkus Reviews

 

“Ray succeeds in creating an entertaining and suspenseful
mystery

with an interesting sleuth. A promising debut, Ruby Roy is a quick read
that should delight cozy
 mystery fans.”

-BlueInk Review

 

“Ruby Roy is a quirky, amusing woman who often allows her imagination
to run away with her. Readers will find this delightful character
entertaining and will be eager to see what her next venture will
entail.”

-Carol Hoenig, Award-Winning Author

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Harley James and the Mystery of the Mayan Kings Virtual Book Tour

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Children’s Middle-Grade Fiction

Date Published 05-11-2022

Publisher: Vision Forty Press

 

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Will Harley Find the Missing Mayan Statue & Save the World?

Amateur cryptologist Harley James has just landed in the sticky jungle of
Tikal, Guatemala—home to the famous Mayan ruins. She’s made a
few friends, a few mistakes…and a ground-breaking discovery.

The legendary statue of the long-lost Mayan King.

Just as she is about to impress her father with her discovery, the statue
is stolen. Right from her own room!

And what’s worse? The legend says if the statues of the three kings
are reunited, they’ll bring back an army from the dead to rule the
world.

Follow along with Harley as she tracks down the missing Mayan statue,
solves a few riddles and stumbles upon a secret society that will change her
life forever!

 

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 EXCERPT

Chapter One: The Glowing Statue

 

Tikal, Guatemala, Present Day

You know how you just know something in your “knower”? As if you had a crystal ball built into your brain?

Well, today I had a feeling. This was going to be my year.

I, Harley Rebecca James, am going to win the Junior International Cryptography Competition.

What is that, you ask?

JICC is an online competition that follows the story of two explorers as they embark on a cryptographic adventure. Solving riddles and clues are my favorite things to do, so naturally, I love cryptography. Each week for twelve weeks, a new chapter is released, with a new code to break. Thousands of kids enter to win. And I was about to solve the clue for week two.

Thirty-nine characters. A famous phrase… got it!

I scribbled the answer down in my journal and smiled.

“Where there is ruin, there is hope for treasure,” I whispered to myself.

A quote from the ancient philosopher Rumi. Of course, I’ve heard Dad say this a hundred times.

The code itself had been easy to crack. The technique used was a simple Caesar shift. The hard part had been finding the key to unlock the cipher.

I couldn’t wait to get back to my room so I could log on and enter the answer.

“Harley? Have you finished your report on Mayan glyphs yet?” A voice suddenly broke through my thoughts.

Report?

Right, I was supposed to be finishing my homework, not cracking codes.

“Almost,” I replied, tucking a piece of unruly blonde hair out of my face. I was with my tutor Jessica Rodríguez and her dog, Daisy, sitting under the shade of the famous temples of Tikal, an ancient Mayan site nestled in the dense Guatemalan forest.

“Are you solving riddles again?”

I smiled in response, shrugging my shoulders.

“You need to finish your history assignment.”

Jessica frowned at me and readjusted her long legs, shifting in her chair. She was pretty when she smiled, but most of the time, I felt like she was scowling at me. I sat upright and grabbed my notebook.

She hated when I got distracted during homework time.

Upon hearing my voice, Daisy rose up from her spot next to Jessica and walked over to me. She licked my face, and I patted her on the head.

I was currently sweating through another afternoon of sixth-grade homework, my books scattered over a large blanket. I scribbled in the last few lines on my report and shoved them back into my history binder.

“Done!”

Daisy was tugging at my backpack, begging for a walk. I smiled at her. I’ve always wanted a dog, but it was one of the many things I had to give up as a famous world traveler.

Okay, not quite famous, but the world traveler part was spot on. You see, I’m a bit of a nomad. The only daughter of world-renowned archeologist and engineer, Russell James. Global traveler, student of the world.

Sounds great, doesn’t it?

I’ll admit it, some parts are great. Exploring remote sections of the world, making new friends, learning new languages.

But then there are the other parts of world travel: staying in hotels with no air conditioning and traveling to remote areas with big—I mean BIG—spiders isn’t always fun. There was one time in Peru when we spotted a Giant Huntsman spider the size of a dinner plate. I had nightmares about it for weeks.

And Dad? Let’s just say he’s overprotective. I’m never allowed to explore anywhere on my own. I can barely get alone time in my room without him checking on me every fifteen minutes. I love him dearly, but I’d just like a little more freedom.

Daisy placed her tiny furry chin on my outstretched leg, breaking me from my thoughts.

“You ready for a walk, girl?” I scratched her head. “I’m ready for a break, too.”

Daisy stood up, twirled around in a circle, and nudged at her leash.

“Jessica? Would you mind if I take Daisy for a walk?”

Jessica barely looked up. “Hmm?” Her eyes lingered on the pages of her book.

“I could use a break.”

She raised her eyes to me and Daisy, who was now shaking with anticipation. “Okay. Just remember, stay close—”

“I know, I know. Don’t talk to strangers and don’t go into the jungle.”

Jessica gave me a thin smile. “And be careful.”

“Of course.” I gave her my most confident grin. “Let’s go, Daisy!”

I swung my favorite purple backpack over my shoulders. This wasn’t just any backpack, mind you. It was decorated with patches from all over the world. Mom had given it to me, along with my first traveler’s patch from France. I kept all the necessities inside; cell phone, colored pencils, a leather notebook, gum, and a headlamp—just in case.

Daisy fell in step with me as we started out across the edge of the jungle. Tikal, Guatemala, was a huge archeological site full of Mayan temples, statues, and monuments. Some of the temples extended above the tops of the trees, like lighthouses in the forest. The Mayans built one of the largest ancient cities in the world… made with no bulldozers, no cranes, and no construction equipment of any kind.

I stared out over the city. How did they do it?

Everything was going great—I was being completely safe—until Daisy suddenly tugged me away from the path around the Temple of the Jaguar toward a dense spot in the jungle.

“No, Daisy,” I said, pulling back on her leash. “We have to stay on the path.”

If I left this path, I’d never be allowed out of Dad’s or Jessica’s sight again.

But Daisy wasn’t giving up. She pulled me into the brush and out of the sunlight. Not good. Snakes and spiders loved hanging out in the shade. I looked around nervously.

“What is it, girl?”

As my eyes adjusted to the shade, I saw a figure standing in the trees about fifteen feet away.

“Hello?” I said, my voice cracking. Daisy continued to pull me forward like a sled dog. “Daisy, will you stop?”

But she was not giving up, and I couldn’t hold on any longer. The leash slipped from my hand, and she bolted into the jungle.

“Daisy!” I cried, dashing after her.

Branches and leaves whipped past me as I followed her deeper into the forest. I wasn’t about to lose Daisy in the jungle, rules, or no rules.

Just as I was about to run out of breath, Daisy stopped ahead of me with an excited, yip!

Apparently, she had found something.

I caught up to her in a few long strides and peered into the jungle. Nestled behind a bramble of jungle leaves was a wall made of stone. After I grabbed Daisy’s leash, I took a step closer.

“What did you find, girl?”

Six nooks were carved into the side of the wall, about the size of my outstretched hand. Five of the nooks had carved stones placed inside. I recognized the carvings. They were Mayan.

In fact, I had just been studying them for my history lesson. 

Now I was intrigued. Maybe that report would come in handy. Dad was always going on and on about using our great knowledge of history in the field.

The first five symbols stood for Jaguar, Sun, Snake, Rain, and Skull. But the sixth nook was empty. I touched the soft grooves of the granite. My code-finding mind went to work. There must be a stone that fits into the final slot. It must follow a logical pattern.

What do the glyphs for Jaguar, Sun, Snake, Rain, and Skull have in common? I bit the edge of my lip. I tried to think of something useful from my report. I had taken a particular interest in the Mayan glyphs, given my love of codes and symbols.

I knew that Kinich Ahau, the god of the sun, was often depicted as a jaguar. And Chaac, the god of rain, was drawn with the body of a snake. And the skull? Well, the god of earth, and the underworld, was Cizin. He was often shown as a skull.

I felt a little chill run up my spine. Creepy.

But back to the glyphs.

Jaguar, Sun, Snake, Rain, Skull… Earth?

It was worth a shot.

There were stones scattered about the jungle floor and I quickly shifted through them, looking for earth symbol. A few were broken, some had parts of a carving. They represented everything from rain drops to mountains.

Then I stumbled over a sharp object jutting out of the jungle floor. I got down on my knees. I could see a stone half-buried in the mud. I dug my fingers into the ground and began to dig. When I was done, I stared at the stone. 

It had the symbol for earth. Bingo!

I ran back to the center of the wall and placed it in the sixth nook. To my surprise, it fit perfectly in place.

Then something weird happened. The ground beneath began to rumble.

Was this an earthquake?

It wasn’t that unusual for an earthquake to happen in Central America. But right after I placed the sixth symbol? That was a little odd.

The stones in front of me suddenly began to move, and I pulled Daisy back as several rocks began to fall. We huddled together near the ground. I placed my hands over my head and squeezed my eyes shut. A few seconds later, the shaking stopped.

I looked up. The center of the wall that held the carved stones had crumbled into a pile at my feet.

So much for solving that riddle.

“Come on, Daisy, we better get back,” I said, pulling on her leash.

If my overprotective dad knew I was by myself in the jungle during an earthquake?

I shuddered at the thought.

But just as I was about to leave, my eyes caught on a peculiar green glow coming from the pile of stones.

Daisy must have noticed it too, because she walked back over to the spot. As she sniffed the ground, I saw she was standing over a small object that appeared to be lit from within. I squatted down and took a closer look.

It was a little statue, about as big as an eggplant. I reached down and touched it, feeling the cool surface on my skin. Perhaps it was made of jade?

I could hear Dad’s voice in my head shouting, You should be wearing gloves!

Well, he wasn’t here, so I picked it up.

It had to be a real Mayan artifact. What else would it be doing here in the jungle?

Then I got that weird feeling you get when someone’s watching you. I spun around and looked every which way I could. Leaves were moving off toward the temple as if someone had just parted them.

I figured I had a few choices. I could run the piece back to Dad and share my discovery. That would be the obvious thing to do.

Or I could do some research of my own, find out who this little guy was. Maybe if I found out enough, I could convince Dad that I was old enough to explore on my own.

What should I do?

One thing I did know was I had to get out of there. The waving tree limbs gave me the heebie-jeebies.

And then, the answer hit me.

I’d pay a visit to my friend, Aly, whose parents managed one of the museums here in Tikal. She could help me figure out what it was.

“What do you think, Daisy girl? Should we get out of here? Check this one out ourselves?”

Daisy yipped back, obviously agreeing with me.

I stashed the statue in my backpack and set off towards our rental house in the village. First, I had to stop at home and enter this week’s answer for the cryptography competition. After that, we’d head over to the museum.

I didn’t know it at the time, but that little statue I had stuffed in my backpack?

It was about to get me into a whole world of trouble.

 

 

About the Author

Leah Cupps

Leah Cupps is an author, designer and entrepreneur. She came up with the
idea for Harley James with her oldest daughter Savannah. Savannah had taken
an interest in Mayan history and so the two of them worked together to come
up with the idea for the first Harley James book; the Mystery of the Mayan
Kings.

Leah lives in Indiana with her husband and three children. She is also the
cofounder of Vision Forty Press, a small family owned publishing
company.

 

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From Shades of Blue Blitz

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Poetry

Date Published: June 9, 2022

 

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Each and every person is a subject with a range of emotions; through
experiences, people’s  perception of thoughts vary. Every emotion
has a different purpose and the acknowledgement of the feeling affects the
impact on the victim. My lucid ideas about similar emotions blended with
other people’s exposure, serves as a fine contrast and an intriguing
viewpoint. To further understand this outlook, I watch, listen, and
interpret these emotions through other people’s experiences in an
effort to articulate them, in hopes that I will be able to find the places
where these different shades of blue originate and lie within.

About the Author

Thanvi Voruganti

Thanvi Voruganti is the international best-selling author of the book, From
the Inside on Amazon. She is 12 years old and lives in Chandler, Arizona
with her parents. Often the contemplative thinker, Thanvi continues to
showcase her resume through poetry and other award-winning works.

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