Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Today it is my pleasure to kick off  the Dancing Backward in Paradise Tour.

Book Description:

Winner: Eric Hoffer Award for publishing excellence and the Indie Excellence Award for notable new fiction!  5 Star Clarion ForeWord Review!

Publisher: Musa  (November 16, 2012)
Category: Contemporary Fiction/ Women’s Fiction/ Southern Fiction
Tour Date: April/May, 2014
Available in: Print & ebook,  347 Pages

Life for Grace Place is all about sucking on “meat jerkys” and Lenny Bean, her handsome lover. Grace’s mother has loftier plans for her daughter. She insists that Grace save her money and move to New York City so she can find fame and fortune as an actress.

Grace works as a cleaning lady for wealthy Betty Ann Houseman so she can pool her pennies for the trip north. Betty Ann has a passion for men more pronounced than her overbite, and it isn’t long before she’s parting the sheets for Lenny Bean. But just before Grace leaves Hixson for New York City, she uncovers an insidious plot: the Bean family is trying to steal Betty Ann’s estate.

Grace flees to New York, where she faces her darkest hours. In a world of surprises, Grace truly discovers paradise.

My Thoughts:

Grace lives in the south with her father, brother, mother, and grandfather in a trailer park called, Paradise.  We Grace is old enough all her mother wants her to do is get a job and save enough money to move to New York and find stardom.  Her mother had the chance when she was Grace’s age but ended up getting married.

Grace isn’t sure what she wants.  She has a boyfriend, Lenny Bean and a pretty good job cleaning hose and taking care of a baby.  However, it later becomes crystal clear to her that she has to at least go to New York and see what happens.

Dancing Backward in Paradise is the third book I have read by Vera Jane Cook.  Cook is amazing at drawing out her characters and the landscape in which they live.  Her books are not for the easily offended.  There is some described sexual acts and profanity.  However, to me, these things are real life.  I dare someone to go out into the real work and not hear profanity.  It would be pretty difficult.  LOL!

Out of the three books by Vera Jane Cook, my favorite is ‘The Story of Sassy Sweetwater’ however, ‘Dancing Backward in Paradise is a very close second, almost a tie.  If you haven’t read anything by Vera Jane Cook, I suggest your run to you computer and order an ebook or two.  You have to give this immensely talented author a try!  Don’t miss out on the Vera Jane Cook Experience!

5/5

I received the ebook for my honest opinion.

About Vera Jane Cook: 

Vera Jane Cook, writer of Award Winning Women’s Fiction, is the author of The Story of Sassy Sweetwater, Lies a River Deep, Where the Wildflowers Grow, Dancing Backward in Paradise and Annabel Horton, Lost Witch of Salem.

Jane, as she is known to family and friends, was born in New York City and grew up amid the eccentricity of her southern and glamorous mother on the Upper West and Upper East Side of Manhattan.

An only child, Jane turned to reading novels at an early age and was deeply influenced by an eclectic group of authors. Some of her favorite authors today are Nelson DeMille, Calib Carr, Wally Lamb, Anne Rice, Sue Monk Kidd, Anita Shreve, Jodi Picoult, Alice Walker and Toni Morrison. Her favorite novels are too long to list but include The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, Cheri and The Last of Cheri, The Picture of Dorian Grey, Wuthering Heights, Look at Me, Dogs of Babel, The Bluest Eye, The Art of Racing in the Rain, Body Surfing, Lolita, The Brothers Karamazov, She’s Come Undone, Tale of Two Cities, etc., etc., etc.,

Vera Jane Cook’s Website: http://www.verajanecook.com/

Vera Jane Cook on Twitter: https://twitter.com/verajanecook
Vera Jane Cook on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/vera.j.cook

Buy Dancing Backward in Paradise:

Amazon
Barnes and Noble

Thanks to Vera Jane Cook, I am giving away one ebook copy of ‘Dancing in Paradise.’  This giveaway is open internationally and ends on May 27, 2014.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Follow the Tour:

Indie Reviews Behind the Scenes Mar 29 Interview- Listen to the Recording
T
eddy Rose Book Reviews Apr 14 Review & Giveaway
Open Book Society Apr 15 Review
Wall to Wall Books Apr 16 Review
Sapphyria’s Book Reviews Apr 17 Guest Post  & Giveaway
Manic Mama of 2 Apr 18 Review
Rantin’ Ravin’ and Reading April 21 Review
Rantin’ Ravin’ and Reading April 22 Interview  & Giveaway
Vicky Deal Sharing Aunt Apr  23 Interview & Giveaway
Being Tillys Mummy Apr 25 Review & Guest Post
Rebecca’s Writing Svcs  Apr 28 Guest Post
Networking Witches May 1 Review
From Isi May 5 Review & Giveaway
Romance & Inspiration May 6 Review
Room With Books May 8 Review & Giveaway
Margay Leah Justice May 9 Guest Post & Giveaway
Carole’s Book Corner May 14 Guest Post
Bound 4 Escape May 26 Review

Thanks to Amanda Harkness of Meryl L. Moss Media Relations, Inc., I am giving away one print copy of Collector of Dying Breaths.

Book Description:

“Mysterious, magical, and mythical, this book is as heady as the fragrances, potions and elixirs that saturate the pages…Twists and turns abound…It had me guessing until the very end. What a joy to read!”—Sara Gruen, New York Times bestselling author of Water for Elephants

“History, mystery, ambition, lust, love, death and the timeless quest for immortality—a riveting tale of suspense.”—B. A. Shapiro, New York Times bestselling author of The Art Forger

“Rose is an unusually skillful storyteller. Her polished prose and intricate plot will grip even the most sceptical reader. “-The Washington Post

In 1533, an Italian orphan with an uncanny knack for creating fragrance is plucked from poverty to become Catherine de Medici’s perfumer. To repay his debt, over the years René le Florentine is occasionally called upon for a darker purpose: the creation of deadly poisons used to dispatch the Queen’s rivals. But it’s René’s other passion—a desire to reanimate a human breath, to bring back the lives of the two people whose deaths have devastated him—that incites a dangerous treasure hunt five centuries later.

That’s when Jac L’Etoile—suffering in modern day France from a heartache of her own—becomes obsessed with the possibility of unlocking René’s secret to immortality. Soon Jac’s search reconnects her with Griffin North, a man she’s loved her entire life. Together they confront an eccentric heiress whose art collection rivals many museums and who is determined to keep her treasures close at hand, in both this life and the next.

Set alternately in the sixteenth century and modern day France, THE COLLECTOR OF DYING BREATHS is a transporting gothic novel—perfect for readers of Anne Rice, Deborah Harkness, and Diana Gabaldon— about finding the courage to confront fate’s fickle whims and is a powerful reminder that our souls live on in those we leave behind.  

About M.J. Rose:

M.J. Rose is the international bestselling author of fourteen novels and two nonfiction books. She is a founding board member of International Thriller Writers and founded the first marketing company for authors: AuthorBuzz.com. Rose lives in Connecticut with composer Doug Scofield, and their very spoiled dog, Winka. To learn more about M.J. Rose and her work, visit her website at: www.mjrose.com.

This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on April 26, 2014.  Please use Rafflecopter to enter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Lloyd Lofthouse, a former U.S. Marine and Vietnam veteran, served in Vietnam as a field radio operator in 1966. Back home, Lloyd was a heavy drinker until 1981, never talked about the war and suffered from PTSD. In the early 1980s, he confronted his demons by writing about his war experiences in an MFA program.

Running with the Enemy started as a memoir and then evolved into fiction.

His short story, A Night at the “Well of Purity”, named a finalist of the 2007 Chicago Literary Awards, was based on an event Lloyd experienced in Vietnam.

His novel My Splendid Concubine has earned ten honorable mentions in general fiction—a few examples: the 2008 London Book Festival; 2009 San Francisco Book Festival; 2009 Los Angeles Book Festival, and the 2012 New York Book Festival, etc.

In 1999, his wife, Anchee Min, the author of the memoir Red Azalea, a book that was named a New York Times Notable Book of the Year in 1994, introduced Lloyd to Robert Hart, the real-life character of My Splendid Concubine.

After an honorable discharge from the U.S. Marines in 1968, Lloyd went to college on the GI Bill to earn a BA in journalism, and then worked days as a public school teacher for thirty years (1975 – 2005) in addition to nights and weekends as a maître d’ in a Southern California nightclub called the Red Onion (1980-1982).

Please welcome Lloyd Lofthouse to Teddy Rose Book Reviews today!

The Vietnam War and Public Opinion

Unlike many Vietnam Veterans who formed opinions for or against the war, it took me years to develop mine. I’m slow when it comes to political issues, and I usually do a lot of reading and fact checking before forming an opinion.  Even in December 1966 when I returned from Vietnam when more than half of America supported the war, I still hadn’t formed an opinion.

One of my first steps to educate myself started a few months before my discharge from the Marines in 1968. I drove to Los Angeles with a friend, who wasn’t in the military, to witness an organized mass Vietnam War protest. We parked in a paid lot where we sat in the car watching hundreds of angry protesters flowing like a human river down the street.

Because of the anti-war protests, that area was off limits to Marines on liberty, but there I was sitting in my car in that parking lot a block from all that boiling emotion.

My sense of safety sitting in a paid parking lot was quickly shattered when several Los Angeles police offers appeared without warning and surrounded the car. One of the officers said I had to leave the area. I replied that I’d paid to park in the lot and wasn’t doing anything illegal. The police yanked the car doors open and dragged us out on the pavement and were getting ready to club us when I loudly agreed to leave.

The police let us go.

By the end of 1968—after an honorable discharged from the U.S. Marines—when I was attending my first semester of college on the GI Bill, the war’s approval rating had tumbled to 37%. The turning point for most Americans was the Tet Offensive in January 1968, and then the My Lai massacre by U.S. Army troops where 504 Vietnamese civilians, ages 3 to 69, were raped, clubbed or stabbed to death.

While most Americans who’ve never experienced combat reacted in horror to the My Lai massacre, I understood the motivation behind the killings. Being in combat and seeing your fellow Marines and friends get wounded or killed builds a deep urge to get revenge against an often invisible enemy.

In my novel, Running with the Enemy, on the page before chapter one, there’s a quote from General William Tecumseh Sherman that may help explain this savage urge for revenge. He said, “There is many a body here today who looks on war as glory, but, boys, it is all hell.”

The next incident that brought me face to face with the mob’s anger took place in 1972 while I was attending CSU Fresno earning a BA in journalism. By then, more than 70% of Americans had turned against the war and the protests were ugly.

I wrote a short story about the war from a Marine’s point of view and was severely criticized in a creative writing class by the other students while the professor kept silent and observed. Instead of backing down, I attempted explaining the psychology of a solider in combat. The professor eventually had to step in and stop the students who continued to condemn me as if I were a war criminal.

That was the moment I lost respect for Americans who blamed the troops for what was happening in Vietnam.

In fact, in 1972, Jane Fonda visited North Vietnam as her way to protest the war. Many Vietnam veterans and their family members still harbor a bitter hatred for Jane Fonda but not me. Instead of blindly accepting the rumors about Fonda, I did my own research and discovered that many of the accusations against her—that persist to this day—are false. With more than 70% of Americans against the war, she was only expressing what most Americans already felt.

To understand why I took so long to form my own opinion of the Vietnam War, it helps to know that my parents were nonpolitical. I grew up in a family where no one voted and the only political opinion I ever heard my father say was that elected state or federal officials were all crooks and couldn’t be trusted. Even to this day, I find that hard to disagree with, but I do vote—for the lesser of two evils.

I place the blame for the millions killed and injured in Southeast Asia during and after the war on the Congress and the Presidents—Eisenhower, Kennedy, LBJ and Nixon—who served during the nineteen years the US fought in Vietnam. My opinions of war may be found on my Soulful Veteran’s Blog.

The troops were only doing what their presidents and Congress ordered them to do. Unlike civilians, in the military if you refuse to follow an order you face a court martial, a dishonorable discharge and might spend years in a federal prison.

In fact, receiving a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. military is generally considered a bad thing. You may lose certain rights to which a normal citizen is entitled. In some cases, soldiers that have received this punishment lose the right to vote and the right to possess a firearm. And for career soldiers, they could lose their retirement and medical benefits.

Thank you for joining us today Lloyd!

Description of Running With the Enemy:

Publisher: Three Clover Press (February 1, 2013)
Category: Vietnam War, Action/Adventure, Suspense/Thriller
Tour Dates: March 2014
Available in: Print and ebook 384 Pages

Awarded Runner Up in General Fiction at the 2013 Beach Book Festival. Awarded honorable mention general fiction 2013 New York Book Festival!

In this suspense thriller set during the Vietnam War, Victor Ortega is a rogue CIA agent, and he needs someone to blame for his crimes. Recon Marine Ethan Card is the perfect patsy. As a teen, Ethan ran with a Chicago street gang, and he has a criminal record. He also has a secret lover, Tuyen, who is half Vietnamese and half French.

Tuyen is a stunning, beautiful Viet Cong resistance fighter.

Since she was a young child, Tuyen has lived under the control of her brutal, older, sexually abusive half-brother, Giap, a ruthless and powerful Viet Cong leader, who has forced her to kill Americans in battle or die if she refuses.

When Ethan discovers he is going to be court marshaled for weapons he did not sell to the Viet Cong and Tuyen will be arrested and end up in an infamous South Vietnamese prison, where she will be tortured and raped, he hijacks a U.S. Army helicopter and flees with Tuyen across Southeast Asia while struggling to prove his innocence.

Victor Ortega and Giap—working together with the support of an unwitting American general—will stop at nothing to catch the two, and the hunt is on.

The star-crossed lovers travel across Laos to Cambodia’s Angkor Wat; to Bangkok, Thailand, and then to Burma’s Golden Triangle where Ethan and Tuyen face a ruthless drug lord and his gang.

In the rainforests of Burma, Ethan also discovers Ortega and Giap have set in motion a massive assault on his Marine unit’s remote base in South Vietnam with the goal of killing the man he admires most, Colonel Edward Price, who is the only one who believes Ethan is innocent.

Ethan must risk everything to save Price and his fellow Marines. Will he succeed?

Read Chapter One.

Read My Review: https://theteddyrosebookreviewsplusmore.com/?s=running+with+the+enemy