Spotlight: Boy With Wings by Mark Mustian

Johnny Cruel is born with wing-like appendages. Is it a miracle, or is he cursed? Is he an angel or a horror? Struggling to find his place in the world, Johnny ends up in a freak show traveling the 1930s South, where he bares his back to onlookers who come to gape, laugh, recoil and fawn. While looking for a place to call home, Johnny notices a strange man who pursues him. What does this man want, and can he be trusted? In his signature fashion, Mark Mustian pens a thrilling and emotional story of self-discovery perfect for book clubs and fans of historical fiction.

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About the Author

Mark Mustian is the author of the novels “The Return” and “The Gendarme,” the latter an international bestseller that has been published in eleven languages. He was a finalist for the Dayton International Literary Peace Prize, shortlisted for the Saroyan International Award for Writing, and the winner of the Florida Gold Book Award for fiction. He is the founder and president of the Word of South Festival of Literature and Music in Tallahassee, Florida, now in its tenth year. A former elected official and an attorney, he lives in Florida and Michigan with his wife and elderly dog. Learn more at: www.markmustian.com

Connect with Mark on social media:

Facebook: @MarkMustianAuthor

Twitter: @MarkMustian

Spotlight: Double Crossed by Eliot Parker

Thriller

Date Published: September 10, 2024

Recovering from the emotional and physical damage of his last case, Ronan McCullough is trying to put his life back together. But when a federal agent's charred remains surface, linked to a professor's encrypted money laundering scheme, Ronan becomes embroiled in a high-stakes game of life and death with someone who is willing to kill everyone that knows anything about the encryption codes.

Ronan soon uncovers several dark secrets and learns that nobody is being honest with him, including the people he trusts the most. When the encryption codes are stolen and Ronan learns their real purpose, he finds himself in a race to stop a plan that will make it nearly impossible to stop the funding of dangerous crimes.

As the body count rises and secrets are unearthed, Ronan must navigate a web of deceit to uncover the truth. How will Ronan succeed when the main suspect is a set of numbers?

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About the Author

Eliot Parker is the author of five thriller novels and two collections of short stories. His latest thriller, DOUBLE CROSSED, won the American Writing Awards award for best mystery/thriller in 2024. His thriller A FINAL CALL was named a "Best Book to Discover of 2022" by Kirkus Magazine and a finalist for the Hawthorne Prize in Fiction. Eliot has won the West Virginia Literary Merit Award as well as the PenCraft and Feathered Quill Book Awards for his works and been a finalist for the SIBA Book Prize in 2016. He hosts the podcast program "Now, Appalachia," on the Authors on the Air Global radio network that profiles authors and publishers from the Appalachian region. He teaches writing at the University of Mississippi.

Connect:

Website: https://www.eliotparker.com/

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/eliot.parker.98

Twitter/X: https://x.com/E4419

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eliot.parker

BookBuzz: https://bookbuzz.net/thriller-double-crossed-by-eliot-parker/

Spotlight: Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder by Brandi Bradley

Brimming with quick wit and juicy gossip, the latest novel from Brandi Bradley, “Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder,” reveals the hidden dark side of picture-perfect Southern charm.

When a young entrepreneur is killed, everyone in town points fingers at his New Age, neo-hippie, miracle-manifesting, smokeshow of an ex-girlfriend, Gabbi – including the victim’s best friend, Jenna. As detective Lindy D’Arnaud and her partner Boggs search for a motive, they begin to wonder if this is a case of jealous violence or shady business dealings gone sour.

In Lindy’s personal life, things aren’t much clearer. When Lindy’s wife’s ex-boyfriend–and sperm donor to their baby–decides to move back to town, she finds herself competing for her wife’s affection. Can they be postmodern in Western Kentucky where living as a queer person is tenuous enough already?

Told through the shifting perspectives of Lindy, Gabbi, and Jenna, “Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder” is a twisty page-turner for fans of Southern noir and NBC’s “Dateline.”

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About the Author

Brandi Bradley is an indie author and educator who lives in the great city of Atlanta, Georgia. She writes short stories and novels about crime, family drama, flea markets, cowboys, rowdy girls, and gossip. She has had short stories and essays published in Juked, Louisiana Literature, Carve, and Nashville Review. She teaches writing at Kennesaw State University. “Mothers of the Missing Mermaid” (2023) is her debut novel of secrets by the sea in Destin, Florida. Bradley’s second book, “Pretty Girls Get Away With Murder” will be released in March 2025. Learn more about her life and work at: www.brandibradley.com 

Connect:

Facebook: @brandibradleysboots | Twitter: @bebebradley

Instagram: @thebrandibradley | TikTok: @thebrandibradley

Spotlight: Wages of Empire by Michael J. Cooper

Historical Fiction

Date Published: November 30, 2023

In the summer of 1914, 16-year-old Evan Sinclair leaves home to join the Great War for Civilization. Little does he know that, despite the war raging in Europe, the true source of conflict will emerge in Ottoman Palestine, since it's from Jerusalem where the German Kaiser dreams to rule as Holy Roman Emperor. Filled with such historical figures as Gertrude Bell, T.E. Lawrence, Winston Churchill, Faisal bin Hussein, Chaim Weizmann, and Achad Ha’am, “Wages of Empire” follows Evan through the killing fields of the Western Front where he will help turn the tide of a war that is just beginning, and become part of a story still being written.

Readers who enjoy Wages of Empire should know that the story continues with the sequel, Crossroads of Empire, the second book in this series. 

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About the Author

Michael J. Cooper emigrated to Israel in 1966 and lived in Jerusalem during the last year the city was divided between Israel and Jordan. He graduated from Tel Aviv University Medical School, and after a forty-year career as a pediatric cardiologist in Northern California, he continues to do volunteer missions serving Palestinian children who lack access to care.

His historical fiction novels include Foxes in the Vineyard, set in 1948 Jerusalem, which won the 2011 Indie Publishing Contest grand prize and The Rabbi’s Knight, set in the Holy Land in 1290. Wages of Empire won the 2022 CIBA Rossetti Award for YA fiction along with first-place honors for the 2022 CIBA Hemingway award for wartime historical fiction.

He lives in Northern California with his wife and a spoiled-rotten cat. Three adult children occasionally drop by.

Connect:

Website: https://michaeljcooper.net

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/michael.cooper.568089/

"X": https://x.com/mjcoopmd

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mjcoopmd/

BookBuzz: https://bookbuzz.net/historical-fiction-wages-of-empire-by-michael-j-cooper/

Spotlight: The Martian Contingency by Mary Robinette Kowal

Years after a meteorite strike obliterated Washington, D.C.—triggering an extinction-level global warming event—Earth’s survivors have started an international effort to establish homes on space stations and the Moon.

The next step – Mars.

Elma York, the Lady Astronaut, lands on the Red Planet, optimistic about preparing for the first true wave of inhabitants. The mission objective is more than just building the infrastructure of a habitat – they are trying to preserve the many cultures and nuances of life on Earth without importing the hate.

But from the moment she arrives, something is off.

Disturbing signs hint at a hidden disaster during the First Mars Expedition that never made it into the official transcript. As Elma and her crew try to investigate, they face a wall of silence and obfuscation. Their attempts to build a thriving Martian community grind to a halt.

What you don’t know CAN harm you. And if the truth doesn’t come to light, the ripple effects could leave humanity stranded on a dying Earth…

Excerpt

A NEW ELLINGTON SCORE MARKING THE RETURN TO MARS

Special to The National Times

KANSAS CITY, February 5, 1970—Duke Ellington has been commissioned to compose and perform an original score to celebrate man’s return to Mars. The Ellington composition takes about ten minutes to perform: It includes vocal music entitled “Mars Maid,” to be sung by Ella Fitzgerald.

President Wargin and Ellington watched together as the Marswalkers left their spacecraft this morning. “This is a tremendous day,” the president said, “as we take our next step to establishing a permanent presence on Mars to create a new safe haven for humanity.”

The performance will be staged in the New White House in Kansas City in mid-August when the second dome at Bradbury Base will be opened and the colonists now in orbit descend to their new home on Mars. The performance will be transmitted to the Red Planet for the enjoyment of the one hundred men and women living there.

Fem 50, Mars Year 5, Frisol, 1900 hours—Landing + 0 sols

Do you remember where you were when the stars came out? I was with my husband, on Mars.

So many pivotal moments in my life had involved stargazing before the Meteor. I hadn’t seen a clear night sky from the surface of a planet since it struck Washington, D.C., on March 3, 1952. Twenty-six million dead. Numbers have shape and texture in my head, and this one was dense and pitted and worn smooth from seventeen years of grief.

Seventeen years since the Meteor and here we were on Mars. Above the undulating horizon of Gale Crater, the Martian night twinkled. The stars did not blaze in crystalline perfection the way they did in space. They sparkled through the atmosphere. Blue and red, silver and gold, danced against a deep purple.

The stars that had been our navigational aids on the voyage here drew my eye like old friends.

I wanted to linger on the surface of Mars and stargaze with Nathaniel, not knowing when I’d be suited up and outside at night again. But it was a selfish waste of consumables.

I needed to head into Bradbury Base, where the rest of the team was, but as soon as I did… as soon as I finished that last item on my checklist, I would stop being a pilot and switch to my other role as second-in-command on the mission.

Nathaniel leaned his helmet against mine. “What’s going on?”

“Hm?” I blinked and turned my head to smile brightly at him. We were on Mars! After years of working to get off Earth, we were here as part of the Second Mars Expedition. We were the next step in creating a new permanent home for humanity. I should be happy. I was happy. “Just enjoying the stars.”

“Uh-huh… For the record, how long have we been married?” He raised an eyebrow.

“Twenty years.”

“Twenty years! And none of this gear hides your fretting face.”

“Fretting face?” I rolled my eyes, but I could feel the line between my brows relax. “Fine. I’m fretting because I’m about to have to go inside and be in charge. Why did I let Nicole talk me into this?”

“Well, I mean, she is the president of the United States.” He gave a rueful chuckle. “And very persuasive.”

The bean counters back on Earth had wanted me—no, they’d wanted the famous Lady Astronaut of Mars in a visible command position to lend credibility to the mission. That should have come from the actual mission commander, but Leonard Flannery was Black. He was also eminently more qualified to be mission commander than I was. He’d landed on the planet on the first mission. I hadn’t. But I was very good at being a pretty face for publicity.

Thank God we were past the days where we had to avoid mentioning that I was Jewish. Mostly past.

“All right. Let me finish this checklist and we’ll go in.”

I walked around our landing craft, the Esther, one last time to check the tie-down straps. The landing pad was the same familiar shape as the one on the Moon, but a soft salmon instead of lunar gray. Everything felt different from training. I’d experienced spacesuits and Moon suits, both were stiffer than a Mars suit. Training on Earth, it was heavier. Training on the centrifugal ring of the Goddard, we always fought the Coriolis effect. Training on the Moon, you couldn’t hear the whisper of wind outside your helmet.

Wind. Just wind. Not the sound of a spacesuit failing.

The hours after landing had been a focused series of checklists and supervising the off-loading while other members of the team got the habitat up and running. Then I’d turned to making sure that the Esther was locked down since it would be a month, at best, before I launched again. And Martian months were fifty-five sols long, so beyond the checklists, I wanted to make sure my ship was tucked in snug and secure.

And she was. There was nothing left to do. The last box was checked on my list.

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About the Author

Mary Robinette Kowal is the author of the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Award-winning alternate history novel, The Calculating Stars, the first book in the Lady Astronaut series. She is also the author of The Glamourist Histories series and Ghost Talkers and has received the Astounding Award for Best New Writer, four Hugo Awards, the Nebula, and Locus Awards. Her stories appear in Asimov’sUncanny, and several Year’s Best anthologies. Mary Robinette has also worked as a professional puppeteer, is a member of the Award-winning podcast Writing Excuses, and performs as a voice actor (SAG/AFTRA), recording fiction for authors including Seanan McGuire, Cory Doctorow, and Neal Stephenson. She lives in Tennessee with her husband Rob and over a dozen manual typewriters.

Spotlight: Chasing Shadows by Cat Jameson

Published by: The Wild Rose Press

Publication date: March 3rd 2025

Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance, Suspense

Synopsis:

Annie O’Toole is St. Louis Public Defender, passionate about fighting for the underdog and determined to prove herself as the badass trial lawyer she knows she can be. Getting assigned to defend the kid charged with shooting billionaire businessman, Michael Grayson, is a big step up for her career. At least until the hot guy she seduced at the Justice for All Ball shows up at her office in response to her deposition subpoena. Turns out the sexy stranger who introduced himself only as ‘Mick’, the guy she’s been fantasizing about since slipping away while he slept — is none other than the billionaire himself, Michael Grayson.

She’s horrified. He’s furious. He thinks she set him up. She thinks he’s an arrogant ass in a Savile Row suit. Sparks, intrigue, and bullets fly in a mix of swoon and suspense as the two battle each other, the bad guys, and an off-limits attraction neither can ignore. When the evidence leads back into Michael’s inner corporate circle, the two are plunged into a world of international intrigue, corporate espionage, and murder — with a side dish of unresolved family drama as Annie is forced to turn to the only expert in corporate intrigue she knows, her own uber-wealthy, estranged grandmother. Now all she has to do is solve the case, escape her grandmother’s plans to take over her life (again), and save her client, her career, and the man whose lifestyle she despises . . . and whose touch she can’t forget.

Excerpt

“You had me investigated?” Annie swung her legs around and pushed herself off his lap. “What, do you have a file on me in your office somewhere?” 

He was silent. 

“Oh, my God, you do. You have a file on me? So, what’d you do?” she prodded. “Have me followed? Interview my neighbors? Talk to my co-workers? Dig into my transcripts?” 

Silence again.

“Holy shit. You did!”

“I didn’t know who you were or what you were up to. Whether this whole anonymous one-night-stand thing”—Michael made a vaguely circular motion— “was real or some kind of set-up.” His tone was wary, defensive. 

She narrowed her eyes. “When?”

“When what?”

“When did you have me investigated?”

“Well, an investigation spans time. It’s a little here and a little there as things are uncovered.”

Now he had the audacity to mansplain to her? 

“Defense lawyer here, remember? I investigate cases all the time. My question is when did you start investigating me?” She bit off the ‘asshole’ that ended that sentence in her brain. 

He ran one hand through his hair. “When I found out you were representing the kid who shot me.” 

She supposed that was fair, though it still rankled. And why the hell hadn’t he told her about it? “When did you end it?” 

“End?”

“Yes, end as in stop, quit, finish investigating me?” 

Silence again.

“You haven’t ended it?” She stared at him, incredulous. “He’s still investigating me?”

“In my defense—”

“There is no defense,” she snapped. “You invited me to Johannson’s fundraiser, flirted with me, kissed me, all while you were having me investigated? Was someone in the bushes taking pictures of us so you’d have your own little stash of blackmail with which to destroy my career just in case?” 

“If you will recall”—his words were now clipped, formal, and frustrated—“I found out all of yesterday that you were Eleanor Barlow’s granddaughter. A not- insignificant fact, by the way, and not a discovery likely to motivate me or anyone with half a brain to pull the plug on an investigation of your involvement in her merger scheme. Within hours of that lovely discovery, I learned that my company is the target of Russian espionage, and someone is very likely trying to kill me, so forgive me if I haven’t stopped to send Jacobson a memo on the appropriate time to wind down this particular assignment.” 

She kind of had to give him that. But she sure as hell wasn’t ready to let him off the hook. Not by a long shot. “When was his last report?” 

“What do you mean?” 

“You know exactly what I mean. I work with investigators all the time, remember? They do investigations and then prepare reports about the results of those investigations. When was the last time you got a report from Streeter about me?” 

Michael took a slow breath, closed those beautiful grey eyes, and said, “Last night.” 

For a nanosecond, there was silence. 

Then Annie breathed, “You son of a bitch.” 

Her mind raced and she began pacing the room. “That’s why Streeter drove to Chicago instead of flying up with you, isn’t it? He wasn’t up there on some ‘organization- wide investigation’ you weren’t up to speed on. He followed Carter and me up there, didn’t he?” 

Michael sat silent.

“Didn’t he?” She practically screamed the words. 

“Yes.” He cleared his throat. “When he ran the plates on Carter’s car, it came back registered to Barlow Industries. I had just been invited to come discuss a business deal with Barlow Industries, so yes, finding out you had an unexpected connection there was worthy of follow-up in Streeter’s mind.” 

“So, he was sitting outside my house just watching me? He had to have been, to be there when Carter arrived.” 

Michael didn’t say a word.

“For how long? How long has that man been following me around and spying on my every movement?” 

Michael didn’t reply quickly enough.

“Answer me!”

He ran his hands over his face. “I don’t know. I leave the details of Streeter’s investigations to him. I just asked him to find out what he could so I could figure out if you were who and what you said you were or if there was some kind of subterfuge at play.” 

She flashed to Michael lifting her chin to meet his kiss in her bedroom at Barlow House. 

‘I may not know fully who you are, Counselor, but I will figure it out. It’s what we princes do.’ 

Oh, God. She’d thought it so romantic, so sweet, the beacon of hope that they might have a future after all. But he was just waiting on his goddamn investigation results! 

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

Cat Jameson is a writer of contemporary romance novels packed with equal parts suspense, snark, and spice. A native Missourian, she moved to St. Louis to attend law school, sure only that she didn’t want to practice criminal law or be a trial lawyer. So of course, she became a career criminal defense lawyer who spent decades teaching trial techniques to other criminal lawyers around the country. (“We make plans. The gods laugh.”) 

Cat spent most of her legal career in St. Louis and the city features prominently in her books, as does her experience in criminal law. Today, she resides in Columbia, Missouri — ‘the middle of the middle of flyover country’ — where she is deep into her second act as co-owner of a metaphysical bookstore. 

When not writing, shopkeeping, or playing with grandkids, Jameson is most likely to be road-tripping with her best friend and business partner in a ten-year-old van named Woo — stopping at every bookstore and thrift shop along the way, loading up on things they do not need and have no room for. 

Connect:

https://catjameson.com/

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100086856907862

https://www.instagram.com/catjameson3/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/54263700.Cat_Jameson