Category Archives: BOOKS

For Orphans, Lost Children, Youth, And Whom It May Concern Virtual Book Tour

Poetry

Publisher: Kuumba Books

 

Uplifting, motivational, and empowering, the poems in For Orphans, Lost
Children, Youth, and Whom It May Concern celebrate resilience, compassion,
spirituality and, above all, the power of dreams to spawn hope for the
future.

Rolly Lambert Fogoum’s second poetry collection clusters heartfelt
and passionate poems speaking to orphans, the deliberately silenced, and the
ignored. By turns lyrical, introspective, and epistolary, the
collection’s force builds as the poems appeal to our compassion. Often
directly addressing the forsaken, this collection takes us on a journey
through empathy, chronicling painful times, but also heralding hope for
better times to come.

EXCERPT

Introduction

She walked and reached out to a human:

Please help, I am starving, she said kindly

It was freezing as she spoke to the man

She looked both tired and sleepy.

 

She was trying but she couldn’t walk

She was in pain, with blisters on her feet

It was a miracle that this little girl could talk

She was exhausted and had nothing to eat.

 

She was pale, like a rat in a trap

Her journey must have been a long trial.

The man wore a coat, nice boots and a cap,

She had been waiting for him for a while.

 

Her clothes had holes, her shoes were gone

On her shaky little legs, she was standing.

The man drank coffee, giving her none

“Sir, please” looking at him, she was mumbling…

 

But he didn’t hear or he pretended

She muttered: “Please sir, can you help me?”

Then, the man looked annoyed and offended,

As if this little girl he didn’t want to see.

 

And before she sighed, the man walked away.

Bending on her knees, she fell on the floor

He was her last hope, it was her last day,

She died in the old clothes that she wore.

 

Oh lord, this is a sad and painful story

Was that man really a human or not?

For that little girl I feel so sorry,

I want to give her everything that I got.

 

This is why I write this little book

In the world, many children die every day

For some kids, mom is not there to cook

Others are abandoned on the way.

 

This book is for the lost children,

It’s for the orphans and kids who suffer

For the humans who treat children badly

For a parent wishing a child to be greater.

 

This book is for those who lost their brother(s),

You who have no one to laugh at your joke

This is a book for those who lost their sister(s),

For the little bro and sis who are hungry and broke.

 

This book is for the children who are crying,

Crying for being abandonment sadly;

It’s hard to have lost parent(s) or sibling(s)

And have no food, no shelter, no family.

 

This book is for all the children, everywhere

It is for them that these lyrics I feature

This book is for everyone, anywhere

Children are the hope of the future.

 

This book is for you who are now a widow

And for you who live alone as a widower

For men and women who live with sorrow

Your children are gone, their days over.

 

A man is not his words or his surface

A man is his heart, his deeds and actions

Same goes for women at any given place

We are defined by our social interactions.

 

This book is one of my actions indeed

And I encourage you, dear readers

To keep giving, and help those kids in need

The world will be better, children are future leaders.

About the Author

 Rolly Lambert Fogoum Tameza

Rolly Lambert Fogoum Tameza, mostly known as Rolly Lambert Fogoum, is a
professional boxer and a humanitarian. He graduated with a B.A. from the
Faculty of Law and Political Sciences at the University of Yaounde II, Soa
in 2013 and began a professional boxing career in 2014, with his first fight
in Dubai. During a hiatus from boxing, he competed as a fitness model,
winning awards in several categories.

He returned to boxing in 2018 and won several titles, including Universal
Boxing Organisation Africa Champion in Ghana in 2020, World Boxing
Organisation Africa Champion in Dubai in 2021, World Boxing Association Asia
Champion and World Boxing Council Asia Champion in Thailand in 2022. His
first book, Light Your Inner Spark for Days of Grace, was published in
2021.

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Instagram

Purchase Link

Amazon

African Books Collective

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on For Orphans, Lost Children, Youth, And Whom It May Concern Virtual Book Tour

Filed under BOOKS

A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli Blitz

A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli banner

 

A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli cover

Fantasy

Date Published: 4/15/2023

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Ricardo Montero is a painter of great repute, favored by the king of
Salandra and chosen by him to paint the ceiling of a temple dedicated to a
sea goddess. When he mysteriously goes missing, his friend Beatriz enters a
competition to paint the temple in his stead. But when the sea goddess
herself gets involved in Beatriz’s painting, and in her life, Beatriz finds
herself in over her head. Hopefully the woman she’s falling in love with can
help keep her afloat.

Meanwhile, Ricardo has been kidnapped by one of the king’s enemies, a woman
who claims the kidnapping is purely to spite the king but who seems obsessed
with Ricardo himself. Under pressure and learning secrets he never wanted to
know, Ricardo fights to maintain his loyalty to the king and control over
his feelings and his life.

Excerpt

He’d blacked out in a stable the stranger had led him to, as near as
he could remember. The night was all a bit of a blur. The next thing he
knew, he was waking up to the jolting rhythm of wagon wheels, unkind to a
pounding headache. Where… what…

And something scratched at his wrists and ankles when he moved, trying to
stretch out. He groaned, trying to find a comfortable position. The only
bright side was a dark side—there was a blanket over his body,
including his head, and from what he could tell it was blocking out a lot of
sunlight which would not have been kind to his hangover.

“Juan?” he muttered.

No one responded.

Still dizzy and not entirely sober, he’d fallen back into a light
sleep, waking now and then at being jostled against other items in the cart.
There was a chest of some sort, that was the biggest thing, but also a
couple of smaller boxes, and a length of rope. Half-asleep, he felt the
oddest thing about his situation to be a lack of hay. When he was young, he
used to sneak into hay wagons and hide under the stacks. You could catch a
ride that way, at least until the farmer caught you. He felt that he was
hiding from someone now but couldn’t remember who or why. And there
wasn’t any hay, no hay at all.

It was only after a good long while—maybe half an hour or maybe a
couple hours even, hard to tell half asleep—after a thousand bumps in
the road and a few muffled overheard conversations and a whole lot of
confused pondering about the lack of hay—that Ricardo realized the
source of discomfort on his wrists and ankles was rope. He’d been
bound hand and foot, and he was in a strange cart with no memory of how he
got there. This realization demanded some action.

“Hello,” he called out. “Excuse me. Who’s out
there? What are you doing? What-what is this?” He kicked at the bottom
of the cart too, though he doubted that would be heard over the rattling of
the wagon. His voice was a bit raspy too, as his throat was almost as sore
as his head, and he wondered if that would be heard either. After a couple
minutes, however, the wagon slowed to a stop, and the blanket was lifted off
his head, exposing his eyes to sunlight. He winced, groaned, and then slowly
processed the face he was seeing, the face of the stranger who’d been
drinking with him at the bar last night. What had been the man’s
name… It had started with a D. Oh, right, Diego.

“Diego,” he said, “What the hell is this? Get me out of
these ropes and this damn wagon. Gods, what time is it?”

“Almost noon,” the man said. “And I’d prefer you
call me Captain Alban. Not that I didn’t enjoy drinking with you, but
I wouldn’t say we’re on first-name terms, Montero.”

“I really don’t care,” Ricardo said. “Fine,
Captain. Am I under arrest, then? This is a fine way to go about it. If the
king hears…”

“You’re not under arrest. I’m kidnapping you,”
Captain Alban said far too calmly. “As for the king, I don’t
really care what he’d have to say about it. I’m part of the
guard of the countess of Suelta. As you mentioned last night, we don’t
get along well with the king.”

 

About the Author

Melody Wiklund

Melody Wiklund is a writer of fantasy and occasionally romance, including
the YA novel Eleven Dancing Sisters, published in 2017. In her free time,
she loves knitting and watching Chinese dramas. Sometimes she draws, more
rarely paints. She is a big fan of baroque art, particularly that of Diego
Velasquez.

 

Contact Links

Website

Twitter

Instagram

Goodreads

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

Kobo

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on A Wound Like Lapis Lazuli Blitz

Filed under BOOKS

The Marsh Keeper Blitz

The Marsh Keeper banner

 

Young Adult / YA Fantasy / Mystery

Date Published: March 2023

Publisher: Fire & Ice Young Adult Books

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Some secrets aren’t meant to be shared…

 

Sixteen-year-old Calvin Hughes can see human energy and in that revealing
light learns the best and worst of the people around him.

He tells no one what he sees, until a young girl vanishes beneath the marsh
and the truth behind her tragedy is too disturbing to hide.

But when enchantments lure Cal toward the haunted waters and his sole
confidante betrays him, Cal discovers the danger of knowing too much and the
price for sharing secrets, especially one that could change the world.

 

About the Author

E. L. Werbitsky

E. L. Werbitsky is a freelance writer and former news journalist whose work
has been published in print and online publications, podcasts and literary
journals. She resides in Buffalo, NY where she enjoys lake effect snow and,
of course, the Bills. In 2022, she founded Buffalo Books & Brews, an
organization that brings local readers and writers together.

 

Contact Links

Website

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

B&N

Kobo

Smashwords

Google Play

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on The Marsh Keeper Blitz

Filed under BOOKS

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: Ten Steps from Baker Street Virtual Book Tour

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: Ten Steps from Baker Street banner

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: Ten Steps from Baker Street cover

Mystery

Date Published: 03-01-2023

Publisher: Tekrighter, LLC

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Return to the streets and alleys of Victorian London, where the game is
afoot once again! The Great Detective, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, and his
steadfast companion Dr. Watson are back for ten new cases, spanning the
length of the quintessential detective’s illustrious career. Beginning while
Holmes was still a green investigator in Montague Street, this collection
encompasses the 1880s and the 1890s, up to the dawn of the new
century.  Walk with Holmes as he puzzles over the problem of a drunken
teetotaler, celebrates an old English Christmas at the Red Lion, tracks down
the Camberwell poisoner, and experiences the horror in King Street. If
you’ve been pining for new traditional, canonical Sherlock Holmes tales, Ten
Steps from Baker Street is the collection you’ve been waiting for.

 

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: Ten Steps from Baker Street tablet

EXCERPT

The Adventure of the Persistant Pugilist

After the singular and baffling affair at Lauriston Gardens, I had an occasion to reconsider my association with Sherlock Holmes, of whom I had learned was employed as a consulting detective and assistant to Scotland Yard. Holmes was gracious enough to allow me to participate in the investigation and observe his methods, and he brought the perpetrator to heel in our very sitting room at 221b Baker Street. Whilst the investigation was in progress, I experienced a thrilling reintroduction to an active lifestyle, which I had eschewed since my return as a convalescent from Afghanistan, and I must say that I found it most invigorating. However, I had not reckoned with the subsequent sequalae that such exertions would bring.

Thus, it was on Monday, March 7 of 1881, I awoke in a bed of pain in the wee hours of the morning, my wounded shoulder throbbing as if that Jezail bullet I received at Maiwand was still in place, with aches in every joint, and a debilitating headache as well. I tried to roll over and retreat once more to the blissful solace of sleep, but that simply was not to be. I dragged myself into the sitting room. It was a mild night, so the windows overlooking Baker Street were thrown open wide. Of course, Holmes was not presentdoubtless he was snug in his bed. I went to the sideboard and poured myself a stiff whisky, followed by a splash of soda from the gasogene. Then I sank into a comfortable chair to sip my drink and reflect on the probable reason for my sudden infirmity.

I have told elsewhere of my misadventures as an Army surgeon in Afghanistan and India. I had first-hand knowledge of the damage that enteric fever could do to a body, but during the thrills of last week’s chase, I had forgotten that my Army doctors had informed me that my recovery was apt to be protracted, and that I should refrain from sustained physical activity and mental strain for many months. But I had been feeling so much better of late that I neglected the doctors’ prescriptions. Now, I was likely paying for my recent lack of attention to my health.

The whisky worked its magic however, and in a little while I was feeling nearly human again, when suddenly there arose a commotion at the downstairs door.

I struggled out of the soft chair and went to the window, where I beheld a street Arab, pounding on our door.

‘I say!’ I shouted from the window. ‘What is the meaning of this?’

‘Doctor Watson?’, the lad yelled. ‘Mr. ‘Olmes wants youse to meet ‘im at Davies Street and Brooks Mews!’

I was incredulous. ‘What? At this infernal hour?’

‘ ‘E sez ‘e needs youse, Doctor. He told me to say to youse, “Come at once!”’

The unbridled cheek of the fellow! Come at once? Really? It was an open question whether I would even be able to dress myself, never mind hieing off all over London to satisfy Holmes’ peremptory demand.

The boy was lingering at the door, so I tossed him a tanner for his trouble. My earlier pains had ameliorated somewhat, but I was still by no means in the pink. The thought of struggling into my clothes and venturing into the street to find a cab at this hour was disagreeable, to say the least. I flopped back into my chair.

Then the pangs of guilt began to assail me. Perhaps Holmes was in trouble, and had no one else to turn to for aid. One of the things that had attracted us as to share the same abode was that neither of us had family in the City. And Holmes had told me how much he appreciated my assistance with the murders of Drebber and Stangerson, even though I thought my contribution to the solution was minimal, if not non-existent.

The long and the short of it was that, fifteen minutes later, I found myself walking toward Marylebone Road, a major thoroughfare, where I would be much more likely to find a cab at this hour than in Baker Street. Brooks Mews off Davies Street was only about a mile away towards the centre city, but walking such a distance in my present condition was out of the question. I was in luck—I found a cabbie in Marylebone Road who was either starving or an incontrovertible optimist, who agreed to take me to Holmes.

The ride was a rapid one, clattering through London’s empty thoroughfares. Davies Street was just off Grosvenor Square, one of the toniest areas in all of London. As I exited the hansom in the yellow glow of the gas lamps, I noticed a group of men huddled just inside the mews, seemingly studying the pavement with rapt attention. Two of them were constables, recognisable by their tall helmets, and one was shining a bullseye lantern into the mews. I also thought I recognized that ferret-like fellow Inspector Lestrade, who had visited Holmes several times at 221b. I handed the cabbie one and six and approached the group, then I saw that another man kneeling on the cobblestones a little way beyond them. It was Sherlock Holmes, intensively examining the prostrate form of a man.

‘Here now!’ exclaimed Lestrade as I neared, moving to block my access to the scene. Holmes turned his head and saw me.

‘Watson!’ he cried, springing to his feet, ‘How very good of you to come, old fellow!’

Lestrade moved aside to allow me to pass.

Holmes’ obvious delectation at my presence went a long way towards expunging my earlier rancour about his peremptory summons. ‘What has happened here?’ I inquired.

‘That is what I trust you can help me to ascertain,’ said Holmes.

I looked down at the unfortunate chap splayed out on the pavement, obviously dead. He was a man in his prime, about Holmes’ size, and his frock coat, waistcoat and ascot identified him as a gentleman, as did the crumpled Bowler hat lying just a few feet away from him. The dishevelled state of his clothing, coupled with the bruises and dried blood on his face, indicated that he had taken a terrific beating.

‘What would you like me to do?’ I asked Holmes.

‘Please examine this gentleman, and tell me what you think was the cause of his demise.’

I began to kneel, then asked, ‘I should have thought you had already done so.’

‘I have, but I am not a medical man. I want to see if your deductions agree with those of mine.’

I sank to the pavement and began my examination with the chap’s face. ‘He was battered while alive,’ I said, ‘as indicated by the extensive bruising.’ I tried to close his staring eyes with my thumb and met some resistance. ‘He seems to be in the early stages of rigor mortis, which would indicate that he died approximately two hours ago.’ I wiggled his jaw to be certain. Noticing the dried blood in his blond hair, I raised his head from the cobblestones, and found a considerable depression in the back of his skull. ‘This head trauma likely killed him, but I don’t understand how he could have suffered such a deeply depressed fracture like this by hitting his head on level pavement.’ I saw that Holmes was smiling at me now. ‘I really cannot tell you any more without a proper autopsy.’

‘That’s very good, Watson, and it agrees with my observations and deductions perfectly. Constable, would you be so good as to hand me your lantern?’ Holmes played the beam around in the mews, then out toward Davies Street. He continued, ‘In addition to the excellent reason that Watson stated, it is obvious that the fellow did not fall here, as indicated by the position of his hat off to one side. Also, the hat would not be in such a disreputable state if it had simply fallen from his head. Someone picked it up, crushed it, and threw it where it now lies. And consider his jacket, bunched up behind him, as it would be if he was dragged by his feet.’ Looking directly at Lestrade, he accused, ‘Had you and your army not rushed into the mews before inspecting the pavement, we could doubtless follow the marks left when the victim was dragged to his present location, to ascertain the place at which the beating actually occurred. However, that should not prove to be an insurmountable difficulty.’ Holmes moved back towards Davies Street, the beam of the lantern dancing before him as a herald. He held out his arm when the rest of us attempted to follow. ‘Hold, gentlemen. Let us not make the same mistake twice.’ Holmes walked a little way toward Brook Street whilst scanning the ground. ‘Ha! Here is where our unfortunate pugilist met his doom! Watson, come forth!’ He shined the lantern on a crimson splash on the kerbstone, then handed it to me. ‘Stand fast, all of you. The fight took place in the street. Watson, follow me with your light!’

Holmes whipped out a glass from his pocket and dropped to his knees, crawling about on the cobblestones like a child at play. I could see nothing special about the areas he scrutinized, but given the plethora of grunts, groans and ejaculations he uttered, he must have been learning much. Finally, he rose to his feet again. ‘All right, Lestrade. You and your men may approach.’ When the policemen arrived, Holmes clasped his hands behind his back and began lecturing them as if in a university hall.

‘This was no common robbery, gentlemen, even though no valuables were found on the victim. My examination of the street revealed that two men engaged in fisticuffs there, and it is no difficult deduction that our man in the alley lost the match, likely when he was struck and fell to be mortally wounded by yon kerbstone.’

‘Then the assailant drug his lordship into the mews to get the body out of sight,’ offered Lestrade.

‘His lordship?’ I asked. ‘Then you know who he is?’

‘Yes,’ said Holmes. ‘The miscreants did an exceedingly poor job of searching the body. They left his calling cards in the inside pocket of his frock coat. He was Sir Aubrey Strongheart, Lord Redthorne, a sitting member of the House of Lords.’

 

About the Author

Thomas A. Burns, Jr.

 is the author of the Natalie McMasters Mysteries. He
was born and grew up in New Jersey, attended Xavier High School in
Manhattan, earned B.S degrees in Zoology and Microbiology at Michigan State
University and a M.S. in Microbiology at North Carolina State University. He
currently resides in Wendell, North Carolina with his wife and son, four
cats and a Cardigan Welsh Corgi. As a kid, Tom started reading mysteries
with the Hardy Boys, Ken Holt and Rick Brant, and graduated to the classic
stories by authors such as A. Conan Doyle, Dorothy Sayers, John Dickson
Carr, Erle Stanley Gardner and Rex Stout, to name a few. Tom has written
fiction as a hobby all of his life, starting with Man from U.N.C.L.E.
stories in marble-backed copybooks in grade school. He built a career as
technical, science and medical writer and editor for nearly thirty years in
industry and government. Now that he’s retired to become a full-time a
novelist, he’s excited to publish his own mystery series, as well as to
contribute stories about his second-most favorite detective to the MX Book
of New Sherlock Holmes Stories.

Contact Links

Website

Facebook Group

Twitter

Blog

Goodreads

Instagram

Tumblr

Bookbub

Purchase Now

Amazon

B&N

Kobo

Smashwords 

Apple Books 

Tolino

 


RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: Ten Steps from Baker Street Virtual Book Tour

Filed under BOOKS

Hemingway’s Daughter Blitz

Hemingway's Daughter banner

 

Hemingway's Daughter cover

Historical Fiction

Date Published: July 2, 2021

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Finn Hemingway knows for a fact that she’s been born at the wrong time into
the wrong family with the wrong talents, making her three dreams for the
future almost impossible to attain. She burns to be a trial lawyer in an era
when Ruth Bader Ginsburg is being told to type and when a man who is 500th
in his law school class is hired over a woman who is first in hers. She
yearns to find true love when the family curse dictates that love always
ends for the Hemingways, and usually, it ends badly. And finally, she’d give
up the first two dreams if she were able to triumph on the third. She longs
to have an impact on the only thing that matters to her father: his writing.
To accomplish that would require a miracle. All three dreams are almost
impossible, but it’s the “almost” that keeps Finn going. Ernest
Hemingway had three sons and ached to have a daughter. This is her
story.

 

 

About the Author

Christine M. Whitehead,

I get my best ideas in the barn as I groom my horse, Nifty. The dogs keep a
careful distance as I lift a hoof, scrape it out, then move on to the next
one. The repetition soothes me. I begin to dream about women like me, women
on the edge, restless women who still want to trust that there is love out
there, and that being sentimental is not always contemptible, and that good
men are not so hard to find if you keep slogging along, seeking a melody to
fit your words. So that’s who and what I write about: restless women
searching.

 

Contact Links

Website

Goodreads

Facebook

Twitter

Linkedin

Blog

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Hemingway’s Daughter Blitz

Filed under BOOKS