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Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse DouglasTime With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


Publisher:  Broadback (January 13, 2020)
Category: Time Travel, Historical Fiction, Time Slip, Women’s Fiction
Tour Dates March and April, 2020
ISBN: 978-1671646032
Available in Print and ebook, 258 pages
Time with Norma Jeane

Description Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


A young woman is hurled back to 1954 to spend a week with Marilyn Monroe.  Together, they embark on their own personal journeys — one a coming-of-age — the other, Marilyn’s journey, a struggle to reconcile with her past and perhaps change the future.

Praise Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


“A delightful and enthralling read! Elyse Douglas captured magic and put it on the page.”—Ambling Bookworm Reviews

“This is just an astonishing read that will have you hooked on page one and won’t let go till the last. I read it all in one sitting and could not put it down.”—Donadee’s Corner Reviews

Praise Lost Mata Hari Ring: A Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


“I am amazed by the research done into her characters, especially since with this book it is a known woman from the past – Mata Hari. From the moment Trace falls back in time, the descriptions of people and towns created a vision in my mind and I could imagine myself there observing the situations. This book captivated me to the end! If you like books that delve into past lives along with time travel, this is a book you should pick up and read!”-Storeybook Reviews

“I must say that the authors did a fantastic job in writing this book. I do not believe that time travel is possible nor do I believe in reincarnation. But while I was reading this book, I believed it was all possible. Part of me envied Trace Rutland for what she experienced, for the things she got to see. What an exciting thing! Well, except for the being thrown in prison part.  Once I was about halfway through the book, putting it down for any length of time proved to be impossible.”- Lisa’s Writopia

“This book has it all mystery, romance , history.  I really enjoyed it as I didn’t really know that much about Mata Hari.  I like historical fiction and this book was filled with history.  I am not a believer in past lives but I found myself being drawn into the story and holding my breath to see what would happen next.  A very well done story.  I would recommend it if you like historical fiction.”-Mindy, A Room Without Books Is Empty 

Excerpt Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas

I tumbled.  At the base of the hill, I crashed to a stop, blunted and dizzy.  As I was catching my breath, the sharp, piercing glow of car headlights stabbed my eyes, coming straight for me.  I gasped, glancing about, seeking escape.  I was lying on the narrow shoulder of a two-lane road.  Where did that come from?  The glaring headlights grew large, approaching fast.

Straining, I struggled to my feet, but a knifing pain seized my left ankle and dropped me hard to the ground.  I grabbed at it, pain grinding into me.  The headlights were close.  Frantic, I raised my arm, hand waving madly, hoping the driver would see me.  With my other hand, I clawed and dug at the ground, trying to get away.

The car closed in.  I shaded my eyes from the blinding headlights as it whizzed by, missing me by two or three feet.  I heard the brakes squealing, the tires skidding, seeking traction on the snow-covered surface, the car finally coming to rest at an angle in the middle of the road.  If another car had been behind it, they would have collided.  If a car raced by now, it would broadside the angled car.

I sat panting, cold and in pain, waiting.  Sonny was nowhere around, and I’d lost my camera when I’d fallen down the hill.

A car door opened.  Snow was boiling around me, little flakes flitting across the headlights, looking like insects.

Someone approached, footsteps crunching the snow.  I looked up into a young woman’s concerned face.  She wore a royal blue jacket with a fuzzy collar, and a red cap with ear flaps; one turned up and one down.  It was a pretty face, with big, startled eyes, glowing skin and a soft mouth, with no lipstick.

“Are you all right, honey?” she asked, in a concerned voice.

I blinked up at the woman, focusing.  A few wisps of blonde hair were visible under the turned-up ear flap.

I stared in dazed wonder at the woman, feeling a swelling knot of unease as I examined her face.  She was beautiful and entrancing; her voice familiar.  Even in my battered, confused state, I knew who this woman was.  I’d seen her countless times in photographs and movies.

For a few startled and impossible seconds, I thought I’d been knocked silly.  Surely, I was hallucinating or dreaming; some mad dream that comes with a fever.  I recalled Eddie and what he’d said about the date and year—that it was December 1954—but I refused to take it in.  I was too spacy and lost, and my ankle throbbed.  That was real if nothing else was.  Pain is real.

The woman stooped toward me.  “Honey, what are you doing out here on a night like this?  Can I help you?”

 “I’m so cold,” I said.  “I hurt my foot… my ankle.”

She reached for my hand.  “Take my hand.  I’ll help you up.”

I took her gloved hand, and with the help of her firm grasp, I managed to stand, favoring my left foot.

The woman glanced around.  “Are you alone?”

I nodded, again searching the woman’s face, confirming again her unmistakable identity.  My grip on reality seemed to have slipped away.  And then I remembered Sonny, and I turned, searching the night.

“My dog ran away.  I have to find him.”

“Honey, we have to get you inside.  You’re freezing, and you’ve probably sprained your ankle.”

“But I can’t leave Sonny out here.  He’ll freeze to death.”

“I’ll take you to the house and you can call your family from there.  Someone will search for him and then come by and pick you up.”

She supported me as we started for the car.  That’s when I caught a glimpse of the rear license plate.  It was illuminated by the taillights:  bold black letters on a silver background.  A8081N.  Beneath that was a red square, 54, and CONN.

I was teetering on the edge of reality.  What reality, I wasn’t sure.  My world, my Earth, had suddenly gone spinning off its axis, and I was hanging on for dear life.

It was a sleek, black sports car, with two seats and a red and cream interior.  She helped me ease down into the passenger seat, closing the door gently.  Feeling the warm breath of heat, I leaned back and shut my eyes, exhausted.

I heard the woman slide in behind the wheel, close her door and drop the car into gear.  The car lurched ahead and gathered speed—a lot of speed.  Why was she driving so fast on this snowy road?

I had to have confirmation.  I had to know, once and for all, where I was.  I had to know who this woman was.  I had to know if Eddie was right.  Was it 1954?  Had I flipped out?  Had I slipped back in time?

I opened my eyes and summoned courage.  Calmly, I said, “You’re Marilyn Monroe, aren’t you?”

She threw her head back and laughed.  It was a girlish laugh, just like I’d heard in the movie Some Like It Hot, one of my favorite Marilyn movies.

“Oh, honey, not tonight I’m not.  I won’t be Marilyn Monroe again until after the New Year.  For now, just call me Norma Jeane.”


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About Elyse DouglasTime With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas


Elyse Douglas is the pen name for the married writing team Elyse Parmentier and Douglas Pennington. Elyse grew up near the sea, roaming the beaches, reading and writing stories and poetry, receiving a master’s degree in English Literature.  She has enjoyed careers as an English teacher, an actress and a speech-language pathologist.

Douglas has worked as a graphic designer, a corporate manager and an equities trader.  He attended the Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music and played the piano professionally for many years.

Website: www.elysedouglas.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/douglaselyse
Facebook: www.facebook.com/elyse.authorsdouglas

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This giveaway is for the winner’s choice of print or ebook however, print is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ebook is available worldwide. There will be 3 winners. This giveaway ends April 22, 2020,midnight pacific time.

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Time With Norma Jeane: Time Travel Novel by Elyse Douglas

And They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie ThorntonAnd They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton


Thanks to Danielle Keir of Berkley, Penguin Random House, I am giving away one print copy of ‘And They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton.

Description And They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton


An intimate portrait of the life of Jackie O…

Few of us can claim to be the authors of our fate. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy knows no other choice. With the eyes of the world watching, Jackie uses her effortless charm and keen intelligence to carve a place for herself among the men of history and weave a fairy tale for the American people, embodying a senator’s wife, a devoted mother, a First Lady—a queen in her own right.

But all reigns must come to an end. Once JFK travels to Dallas and the clock ticks down those thousand days of magic in Camelot, Jackie is forced to pick up the ruined fragments of her life and forge herself into a new identity that is all her own, that of an American legend.

My Thoughts And They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton


I have been fascinated with the Kennedys for as long as I can remember.  I was born just 13 days before the assassination of JFK.  My mother always claimed that I watched the funeral on television with my bottle.  Perhaps that is what started my fascination, LOL!

I can’t remember how I first heard about this book but as soon I heard about it, I looked to see if the ebook was available on Net Galley for review.  It was and I was approved to download it.

I am so glad I did.  I have read a lot of fiction and non-fiction about the Kennedys.  Some are better than other but ‘And They Called It Camelot’ is now at the top of my list of fiction favorites.

Stephanie Marie Thornton really captured the persona of Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis.  I always knew that she stayed with Jack because she really had no choice while he was president. However, I think it was more complicated than that.  Of course, there were the children but perhaps there was love between them despite Jack’s countless affairs.  Thornton hints at this.

Thornton must have done a lot of research to dive into Jackie’s persona so deeply.  It felt like I was reading Jackie’s diary.  I kept having this guilty feeling for reading it.  I’m sorry Jackie, I couldn’t help myself!

Thornton really captured Jackie’s thoughts and emotions as well as the events she had been through.  I know how much Jackie valued her privacy so I can only guess she would not have approved of the publication of this book however; I do think it was written in a respectful manner. I rarely read a book more than once but I am certain I will revisit ‘And They Called It Camelot’ again!  I cannot recommend it highly enough!

I give it 5/5.

Thanks to Berkley and Net Galley for the advance ebook! Scroll down further for your chance to win a print copy!

About Stephanie Marie ThorntonAnd They Called It Camelot by Stephanie Marie Thornton


Stephanie Marie Thornton is the USA Today bestselling author of American Princess and a high school history teacher. She lives in Alaska with her husband and daughter.

Website: http://www.stephaniethorntonauthor.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/StephMThornton


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This giveaway is open to the U.S. only and ends on March 20, 2020 midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. GarrettPlace Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett


Publisher:  Rock Yard Books (February 26,  2019)
Category: Historical Fiction, Suspense
Tour dates: March, 2020
ISBN: 978-0578471235
Available in Print and ebook, 247 pages

Place Called Jubilee

Description Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett


Deception, witchcraft, and the secrets of a long-dead former slave churn the life of ambitious young clergyman Coleman Hightower – even as fear, bombings, and riots rock the nation.

Historical novel A PLACE CALLED JUBILEE tells Coleman’s story as he leaves his mountain home and arrives in Washington D.C. in 1961 as the Civil Rights movement explodes across America. Coleman’s plans for a prestigious life are torn apart by his forbidden longing for beautiful and fiery activist Rosalee.

His search for meaning turns into a desperate journey that takes him and the woman of his dreams all the way to Jubilee, Alabama – a place where intrigue, betrayal, and murder combine to make Coleman wonder if he will win Rosalee’s love or even leave the tiny town alive.

Praise Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett


Notable Indie #1 in the Shelf Unbound Magazine 2019 Best Indie Book Awards.

“A very dark time in our history.  Not my usual type of read but could not put it down when I got started. Felt like I was right there in the story. Great read.”-Janice, Goodreads

“Highly Recommend.  Loved this book. I feel I really got to know the characters. Waiting for a sequel.”-LM, Amazon

“I couldn’t put this book down.  I love historical fiction and suspense. This book gave me both. The characters were well developed, the vocabulary was challenging and the descriptive language drew me in.”-CH, Amazon

Interview Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett

TG: Teddy, I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to talk to you and your readers today. I did not anticipate the thrill that would come in talking to people about things that for so many years were simply ideas in my own mind. That has been one of the coolest parts of writing and publishing a novel.

TR: Please tell us something about ‘A Place Called Jubilee’ that is not in the summary. 

TG:  The kernel that grew into ‘A Place Called Jubilee’ was first planted when I was driving alone down a country road in Georgia after some early morning deer hunting. (For those of you who are appalled that I would hunt deer, please be aware of a couple of things. First, it is a very Southern thing to do and I wouldn’t be able to keep my Southern man credentials without occasionally hunting. Second, I would never ruin a perfectly good hunting trip by actually shooting anything.)

I drove by a church and wondered about the congregants there. I knew that the community I was passing through was made up of predominantly African-African residents. My mind went to a recent report of a church having been burned in Texas.

Into my mind popped the key questions that led to the entire story. What if the church I just passed was being threatened by a gang bent on burning it? What if the congregants stood firm? What if the surrounding community – composed of people with all colors of skin – came out to defend the church?

That scene, after lots of edits with some important changes, was incorporated into part of the story and led to the entire book.

TR: How completely do you develop your characters before beginning to write?

TG:  Teddy, many of your readers are likely familiar with two main styles of writing – the planner and the pantser. The planner carefully maps out the plot, creates character grids to keep track of all the attributes of his characters, charts all the relationships between characters, etc. The pantser flies by the seat of her pants, lets the story and the characters take her anywhere they want to go – the writer’s just along for the ride.

I am a blend of these two styles – a plantser. Thus, I typically start like a pantser, getting an idea for a character or a single scene and writing freeform to see what happens. After a short while – maybe even before the scene is complete – I pause to see what I’ve written. I then write out a draft skeleton of a plot, maybe with some setting or character descriptions. After that, I dive back in to the pantser phase and let the story take me where it wants. I go back and forth between these styles until I am finished.

TR: All your characters came to life in ‘A Place Called Jubilee’. Are any of them based on real-life friends or acquaintances? Dr. Browning was an especially complex character, how did he come to you?

TG: My mother was born and raised in the mountains of northern Georgia and thus the main character, Coleman – also coming from the mountains – was familiar to me. I was able to draw on memories of my own family to fill out Coleman’s personality and backstory. For example, just like Coleman’s grandmother, my great grandmother was a “conjurer” – someone who heals ailments with folk remedies.

The other characters were greatly influenced by the individuals who peopled my upbringing in the South. If you could travel back to Gainesville, Georgia (my hometown) in the 1960s and 70s, you would find some of the same kinds of people who walk down the street in fictional Jubilee, Alabama. For example, I knew a number of scamps like Jubilee residents Roscoe and Shot – in fact, the name Shot was taken from an old former professional baseball player I knew in my childhood.

In the first few drafts of the beginning of Jubilee, the Rev. Dr. Browning began as a kind grandfatherly guide for Coleman. As the editing progressed, Dr. Browning became darker and darker – still with a sheen of propriety and respectability but rotten inside.

I am a Christian and by no means is Dr. Browning meant to be an indictment of Christianity or faith in general. However, as Coleman’s awareness grows that his desire to be a man of the cloth is not solely rooted in noble intentions, the revealing of Dr. Browning’s true heart serves to show that a pious exterior can cover up an interior that is anything but virtuous.

TR: Tell us about your cover. Did you design it yourself?

TG: Yes, the cover was my own design, done using the applications InkScape, Paintbrush, and PowerPoint for Mac. The design and the color are meant to complement the story.

Among the symbolism in ‘A Place Called Jubilee’ is the frequent mention of the sky. In the opening scene, Coleman looks to the sky as he waits to hear President Kennedy’s inaugural speech. The sky recalls the promise that day brought. Later, rainbows appear to Coleman, again pointing toward promises and actions to be taken.

On the cover is an important symbol of the sky that is seen in the town of Jubilee. It is only as the secrets of the town are revealed to Coleman that the full meaning of the symbol becomes clear – rebirth, washing away of former evils, the promise of a new day.

The stark black and white color scheme is not only meant to catch the reader’s eye from the shelf but also calls to mind the racial tension and the questions of right and wrong that are explored in the book.

TR: Without giving away any spoilers, what is your favorite scene in ‘A Place Called Jubilee’? Why?

TG:  One of the most satisfying parts of the book for me to write was what I came to call the Train Chapter (chapter 10). In that chapter, we see Coleman and Dr. Browning each taking a train ride, each of them going in an opposite direction. Coleman experiences something of an epiphany on his ride and, though Dr. Browning does not have any change in his thinking, the reader becomes more aware of the depth of Dr. Browning’s self-delusion.

I felt gratified that I was able to match the atmosphere of those scenes with the internal dialog of the two characters.

TR: How long did it take you to write this book from concept to fruition?  How much time and effort went into your research for the book?

TG: From when I first conceived of the idea of the story on that country road until I had a finished manuscript was around four years.

The actual content did not require much in the way of research, other than confirming some of the dates of actual historical events. I mostly wrote from my knowledge of the region.

However, I spent a considerable amount of time in learning how to best edit the book. I re-read Stephen King’s classic ‘On Writing’, allowing Mr. King to convince me that I could actually finish my novel and that it would not be unreadable. I also studied and applied two books by Donald Maass – ‘Writing 21st Century Fiction’ and ‘Writing the Breakout Novel’, both of them published by Writer’s Digest Books. Mr. Maass’s excellent guides gave me concrete things that I subsequently did to make my story better.

TR: What writers have you drawn inspiration from?

TG:  I am drawn to Southern Gothic writers – both the genre creators like Flannery O’Connor and William Faulkner and the modern ones like Cormac McCarthy. Though ‘A Place Called Jubilee’ only contains a hint of the gothic, I am working on another book that is much more immersed in the genre.

However, my primary influence for ‘A Place Called Jubilee’ is Anthony Doerr. One of my favorite books is his Pulitzer Prize winning ‘All The Light We Cannot See’. In fact, that book became my muse for ‘Jubilee’. I would play the audio version of ‘All The Light We Cannot See’ while I ran and then would come back and write. Doerr’s writing inspired me to be much more descriptive of the internal and external settings in which my characters found themselves. His writing also led me to introduce more magical realism into my novel, just as Mr. Doerr did in his Pulitzer Prize winner and his story collection ‘The Shell Collector’.

TR:  Describe the room you are sitting in as though it was a scene in one of your books.

He squints. Is it the computer or the window? He leans back, rubs his eyes, looks toward the window, scratches his head. Still haven’t fixed that shade. He looks away. Doesn’t matter. It’s the computer and these old glasses anyway.

He sinks into the chair, feels the soft support, the pain eases.

I can keep writing or I can just sit here, close my eyes…

Soft snores escape under the door.

TR: What words do you use over and over that drive your editor crazy?

TG: There were several that my editor told me to correct. One of the great things about writing in the last part of the 20th century and forward is that you can simply enter words in the “Find” function and fairly quickly go through the entire manuscript, replacing words and cutting entire sentences and paragraphs as you go.

Now that I think of it, “fairly” was one of the words that I had to cull.

TR: What do you do when you are not writing?

TG:  I spent 16 years as an emergency room physician and now work as a healthcare executive. I live with my wife Cynthia near Athens, Georgia, where I play bass guitar in my church and am active in several other community activities. I have a grown daughter and son.

TR: What are you currently working on?

TG:  My current book is a Southern Gothic-influenced story set in 1940s Georgia in which a group of German immigrant women struggle against religious and nationalist prejudice as they seek to save their communal farm after their husbands have gone to fight in the Pacific. The little group faces a staggering choice: fight their tormentors to save the farm or give up the farm to try to save the leaders of the free world – Roosevelt and Churchill.


About Timothy J. GarrettPlace Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett


Award winning author, Timothy J. Garrett lives with his wife Cynthia in his native northeast Georgia where he spent 16 years working as an E.R. physician and is now a healthcare executive. History and historical fiction are his writing passions though his influences include Southern gothic luminaries like Cormac McCarthy, William Faulkner, and Flannery O’Connor.

While Tim has written extensively for the healthcare industry, the award-winning A PLACE CALLED JUBILEE is his first published novel.

Website: http://timothyjgarrett.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drtimjgarrett
Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtimjgarrett

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Giveaway Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett


This giveaway is for the winner’s choice of print or ebook however, print is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ebook is available worldwide. There will be 3 winners. This giveaway ends April 22, 2020,midnight pacific time.

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Place Called Jubilee by Timothy J. Garrett