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Evita and Me by Erika RummelEvita and Me by Erika Rummel

Publisher:  DX Varos Publishing (May 24, 2022)
Category: Historical Fiction, Crime, Women’s Literature
Tour Dates June 21-July 22, 2022
ISBN: 978-1955065320
Available in Print and ebook, 384 pages

Evita and Me

Description Evita and Me by Erika Rummel


Evita Peron’s jewels are missing. Only three people know that they are in a vault in the Swiss Alps; Evita’s corrupt and brutal brother Juan, her bodyguard Pierre, and a teenaged girl Mona, her newest protegee. What happens if two of them team up?

Like Eva herself, Mona comes from a broken family and has to make her own way. Perhaps that’s why the two women feel close. Evita is at the pinnacle of success but already in the grip of a fatal illness. We see her life through the eyes of Mona and Pierre, two people she trusts — and who betray her in the end. Or can theft and murder be justified?

A story of love, adventure, and murder.

Praise For Erika Rummel


“This is a fast paced page turner.  A suspenseful, thrilling roller coaster ride with lots of twisty, loopy sections.  Head Games is an apt title for this enthralling read. “- Joy Renee, Joy Story

“Identity’s a big theme in this work, so if you’ve ever felt you were someone other than yourself, if you thought you might like to try living in someone else’s skin, if you’ve wondered whether your friends and loved ones were not exactly who they claimed to be, then this psychological labyrinth might just be your winding road to a good read”.- Carole Giangrande, Words to Go

“This was a book that grabbed me from the start. It’s a period in history that offered much to the world but also had some of man’s darkest moments.  Due to that it does provide rich material for a novelist and Ms. Rummel does an excellent job of taking her reader on a dangerous journey through the twists and turns of what many faced during the time. The characters are well developed and defined. The scenes are well described and I found myself feeling like I was actually walking the streets with the characters of the book.”-Patty, Books Cooks Looks

“To live during such tumultuous times would be horrible. You would have to be careful of every word that came out of your mouth. That might be easy when you are alert, but what about when you are so tired that you can’t even think? This book made me thankful that I was born in America in the 20th century. Any fan of riveting historical fiction will get lost in this book from page one.”-Lisa, Lisa’s Writopia

Guest Post by Erika Rummel

I’ve written history books. Why I love writing historical fiction.

Writing a history book is a mental exercise, the reconstruction of a distant era based on documents. But documents can tell you only so much. Writing historical fiction is an exercise in imagination, and imagination has no limits.  Take my new novel, EVITA AND ME. Historical fact: Evita’s jewels have gone missing, and we don’t know where they are now. No problem for the omniscient fiction writer! Let me tell you: Those jewels are in a bank vault in the Swiss Alps.

“The road ends at a metal-studded entrance carved right into the mountainside. The wind feels barbed when we get out of the car, as if the season had changed overnight, and we had skipped the spring and summer.

We walk through the gate, which has opened at our approach – some technical alert and response. Inside the mountain, there is a reception area with another steel door at the far side, flanked by a pair of guards. They are armed with machine guns.

Behrle is waiting for us. He receives us with a deferential bow. He seems out of place in this mafioso setting, a banker in a pinstriped suit. He should be sitting behind a large polished desk in an office in Zurich. His cheeks are the kind of rosy that doesn’t tan. His neck bulges a little above the immaculate white shirt collar. He isn’t fat, but substantial, a man with a good digestion and easy conscience…

He leads on, through the door, along a passage carved into the rock. The air is stale. Wall sconce with caged bulbs cast a yellow light on the concrete floor. A pipe runs along the wall. I can hear water trickling through it – that and our footsteps are the only sound.

Duarte and I each carry one of the steel boxes with Evita’s jewels. We come to a round steel portal looking like the door of a giant washing machine. Behrle spins the wheel mounted on the portal, using the bulk of his body to shield his exact movements from our eyes. One of the guards steps forward and helps him pull open the door. Behrle waves us through.”

 Historical fact: We will never know for sure whether Duarte, Evita’s thuggish brother, committed suicide or was murdered. But fiction writers need not stick to forensics. I can tell you that Juan Duarte was murdered, with his own gun.

“It’s an army-issue Ballester-Molina, the same I trained on when I was in Security. I pull it out. It is loaded and lies in my hand heavy and solid, beautifully crafted by a company that also builds trucks. I tuck it into the inside pocket of my jacket, then change my mind. Too awkward to reach. Too obvious.  I change it to my right outside pocket. The gun forms a visible bulge but that can’t be helped. I step into the living room.

Duarte is still sitting on the couch, but his feet are up on the coffee table now. His head is resting on the back of the sofa, his mouth open. I listen to his breath coming regularly, with a slight rasp in his throat. He looks peaceful. The drink has put him to sleep. I walk up to him and put the gun to his head, as close to his right temple as I can without touching it. I pull the trigger. The gun makes a sharp barking noise. The force of the impact kicks Duarte’s head sideways. His eyes snap open and look at me for a moment with wonder, then close again, but a brilliant, angry eye opens up in the side of his head, welling with red hot fury. I wipe the grip of the gun with my jacket and put it into his right hand.”

Historical fact: Evita died of cancer at the age of 33. We have photos of her last public appearance on the balcony of the presidential palace: frail, full of heroic dignity. But what happened after she left the balcony? Did she collapse sobbing? Was she afraid to die? A scene in EVITA AND ME answers that unanswerable question.

“The year is 1947. Evita and her young companion, Mona, are on a flight from Buenos Aires to Madrid. It’s Mona’s first flight. She is terrified.

Evita was sitting at the table in the cabin, writing. When she looked up, I saw panic in her eyes. I couldn’t believe it. Was she afraid of flying too? Perhaps she just put on a brave face for me. But in her position, she must be used to flying! I sat down on the seat across from her. She looked up and said “No, come over here and sit beside me, querida.” The usual force had gone out of her voice.

When I slipped into the seat beside her, she held on to my arm with her left hand, while she kept writing. I saw that it was a letter to Juan. That anxious grip was unexpected. It was almost as if we had reversed roles, and I was supposed to look out for her and protect her. I couldn’t see myself helping anyone in that way. I didn’t have it in me. I didn’t feel protective. That was her role!

It wasn’t until many years later that she understood what Evita was afraid of: death. Pierre, Evita’s bodyguard, recognized the signs at once:

They are there for all to see. She has lost weight. She is starting to look gaunt. Her energy is flagging. You can’t camouflage cancer in the long run. Death is written in her eyes, at least for those who can read the message, who have seen death before.”

I love writing historical novels. Historical documents are often just teasers: dates, facts, figures. I fill in the gaps and add the third dimension. Evita was an idol and, some say, a saint. But she was also human, and that’s how she appears in EVITA AND ME – true to life.

About Erika RummelEvita and Me by Erika Rummel

Award winning author, Erika Rummel is the author of more than a dozen non-fiction books and seven novels. Her seventh novel, ‘Evita and Me’ is being published on May 24, 2022.

She won the Random House Creative Writing Award (2011) for a chapter from ‘The Effects of Isolation on the Brain’ and The Colorado Independent Publishers’ Association’ Award for Best Historical Novel, in 2018. She is the recipient of a Getty Fellowship and the Killam Award.

Erika grew up in Vienna, emigrated to Canada and obtained a PhD from the University of Toronto. She taught at Wilfrid Laurier and U of Toronto.  She divides her time between Toronto and Los Angeles and has lived in Argentina, Romania, and Bulgaria.

Erika’s Website: http://www.erikarummel.com/
Erika’s Blog: http://rummelsincrediblestories.blogspot.ca/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/historycracks


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Evita and Me by Erika Rummel

Medellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain Book 3) by Bill FortinMedellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain Book 3) by Bill Fortin

Publisher:  Cold War Publications (May, 2019)
Category: Action/Adventure, Cold War, Military, Crime, Historical Fiction
Tour dates: July/August, 2019
ISBN: 978-0996478670
Available in Print and ebook, 356 pages
 Medellin Acapulco Cold

Description Medellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain 3) by Bill Fortin


In March 1987, the CIA’s Operation Acapulco Cold took on the Medellín cartel. The journey would be dangerous. The alternative for not recovering the nuke would be too horrible to imagine.  

A theft occurs as a result of President Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev’s treaty agreement in January 1986. Russian SS-20 medium-range missiles were removed from Eastern Europe and their nuclear MIRV packages removed. A shadow group inside the failing Russian government steals three of the nose-cone assembles.

A Russian named Geonov is charged with selling one of these devices to the Medellin cartel. The asking price was $40 million dollars in cash. Pablo Escobar did not even blink when he was offered one.  Operation Acapulco Cold is the detailed action taken by the CIA to address this life-altering situation.

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Medellin: Acapulco Cold from Bill Fortin on Vimeo.

Excerpt Medellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain 3) by Bill Fortin

In 1953, at the age of 25, Geonov was posted to Mexico City where he learned Spanish and met Raúl Castro. It was onboard a ship while he was returning from a European youth festival. When he arrived in Mexico, he was given an assignment to a minor post in the Soviet Embassy.

In 1955, Geonov met Che Guevara through Raúl Castro in Mexico City. If you have studied the works of WEB Griffin, you can clearly see that this happenstance was not going to benefit the United States. Geonov proceeded to violate embassy procedures by befriending Guevara who was fascinated with the Soviet way of life. Guevara’s questions prompted Geonov to provide him with a variety of Soviet books, magazines, and pamphlets. Both men promised to keep in touch, and so they did.

Recalled to Moscow in November 1956, Geonov was discharged from the Foreign Service. He went to work as a Spanish translator for the state-run Soviet Spanish-language publishing company, Editorial Progreso. Two years later, in the late summer of 1958, he was drafted into the KGB. In that same year, on 1 September, Valentin Geonov, began a two-year training course as an intelligence officer. This was interrupted by the Cuban Revolution. In October 1959, his training was halted. He was ordered by the newly appointed Soviet deputy premier, Anastas Mikoyan, to accompany him to Mexico.

In February 1960, Mikoyan took Geonov on an arranged visit to Havana, Cuba. Geonov made a gift of a handgun to his old friend Che Guevara on behalf of Mother Russia. Geonov return to Mexico City the next month as a senior KGB officer with a rank of major. During the October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, he coordinated the intelligence reporting from his agents in Florida.

All information-gathering on American military preparations during the saga of missiles in Cuba was his responsibility. Geonov noted in his written assessment of the crisis in Cuba that at no time would there be any danger of war. He stated on more than one occasion that a nuclear confrontation was not very likely. Also, just as an aside, it is unclear whether or not he befriended a man named Lee Harvey Oswald during his time in Mexico . . . and the moon is made entirely of blue cheese!

Geonov did provide his services as an interpreter to Fidel Castro on the dictators’ visit to the Soviet Union in 1963. In 1968, as I was making my way through the missile ranges of White Sands and Fort Bliss, Geonov was recalled to Moscow, where he again was promoted to senior analyst on Caribbean, Central, South, and North America policy.

A report he compiled in 1975 recognized the growing peril to the power of the Soviet Union in geopolitical terms. Citing the example of the British Empire, he warned that the Soviet commitments should be tailored to a few key areas. This recommendation would allow Soviet influence to be able to operate in a more efficient fashion and with a higher success rate. One section of the report suggested the establishment of a Soviet foot- hold on the Arabian Peninsula, the most Marxist country at the time in this region. Of course we have all been exposed to how unimportant the ports, coastline, and airfields in South Yemen are viewed in today’s world.


Praise Stinger: Operation Cyclone (Rick Fontain 2) by Bill Fortin


“Maryland author Bill Fortin served in the US Army 3rd Armor Division from 1968 to 1970 he understands and has witness the horrors of war and its aftermath on soldiers. He places the facts of the Cold War before us in a manner that will prevent us from forgetting that period in history and its impact on global politics today. Not only is he a very fine writer, but he also is a standard bearer who reminds the reader of the atrocities of the Cold War and the manner in which we as a country dealt with it. Very highly recommended.- Grady Harp, Amazon Hall of Fame & Top 100 Reviewer

“Stinger Operation Cyclone was a page turner from page 1. I was swept in and ended up on a fast paced ride to the end. Bill Fontin knows how to weave a story with the details, descriptions of people and places to intrigue the reader and keep you engaged.  Fontin writes expertly about the Middle East and military topics in a way that your drawn in and unable to put the book down.  A cast of characters from each location of the story is provided at the end that helps keep the reader involved in this fast paced story. I look forward to reading more in the series.”-Sherry, My Reading Journeys

“I really like this Book 2 in the Rick Fontain series by Bill Fortin. Bill Fortin is a US Army veteran himself, and has chosen to write some excellent “cold war” fiction, describing the day-to-day implementation of “Charlie Wilson’s War” which described the US assistance to the Afghan mujahideen. I agree with other readers who reported that this book felt like reading history. The first person narrative is as lively and engaging as the depiction of the Battle of Gettysburg in KILLER ANGELS by Michael Shaara. There is excellent dialogue and interesting interplay between CIA operative Rick, along with US Army Special Forces, Delta Force, and the Afghan mujahideen fighting the invading Soviet goliath. It was fascinating for me to read the ground-level description of how this new technology allowed the Afghans, most often fighting from horseback, to level the playing-field with the Soviets. I served in Afghanistan 2002-2003, and really appreciated his word pictures of the terrain. Strong work, Bill Fortin. I look forward to the third in the series.”- Robert Enzenauer, Amazon Review

Praise Redeye Fulda Cold: (Rick Fontain 1) by Bill Fortin


“With a smooth, wry touch, Bill Fortin spins a page-turning Cold War tale capturing both the great bravery and the occasional comic moments — some intentional, some classic SNAFUs — of U.S. military intelligence saving the world from Russia invasion.”- W.E.B. Griffin & William E. Butterworth IV, #1 New York Times and Wall Street Journal Bestselling Authors

““Bill Fortin’s, Redeye Fulda Cold, is a historically accurate, yet humorous account of one soldier’s mission during the Cold War.
Although written as fiction, the novel is an exercise in authenticity, with stretches illuminating the technical expertise required for a unit to accommodate seemingly never-ending revisions to Cold War objectives. Fortin cloaks the technical military facts and technology in character moments, using them to highlight Fontain’s sarcasm and tongue-in-cheek humor. Can’t wait to read the next Rick Fontain novel!”-Lisa Wieman Meerdter, Amazon Review

About Bill FortinMedellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain Book 3) by Bill Fortin


Bill Fortin served in the United States Army, 3rd Armored Division, from 1968 to 1970.  He retired from AT&T/Lucent Bell Labs in 2001 and is currently the CEO of Cold War Publications. Bill earned a Bachelor and Master degrees in Management Sciences from the University of Baltimore.

A native of Westminster, Maryland Bill is an active member of Rotary and retains membership in the Association of the 3AD. He is married to Judy and is surrounded by a host of 4-legged children (Border Collies and cats) plus 2 very noisy feathered companions.

Website: www.coldwarpublications.com
Book Launch Website: https://booklaunch.io/704732506290559/medellin-acapulco-cold
Blog: http://billfortin.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bill.fortin.104
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BillFortin

Buy Medellin: Acapulco Cold (Rick Fontain 3) by Bill Fortin


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Giveaway Medellin: Acapulco Cold (Rick Fontain 3) by Bill Fortin


This giveaway is for 3 winners choice of one print or ebook copy of the book. Print is open to the U.S. only and ebook is available worldwide. This giveaway ends August 30, 2019, midnight pacific time. Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.
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Medellin: Acapulco Cold ( Rick Fontain Book 3) by Bill Fortin

Puzzle Of Death: Detective Mystery Thriller by Donahue B. SilvisPuzzle Of Death: Detective Mystery Thriller by Donahue B. Silvis


Publisher:  D. B. Silvis (December 2, 2013)
Category: Mystery Thriller, Detective, Crime
Tour dates: May/July, 2018
ASIN:B00CCRJS7K
Available in ebook only, 339 pages

Private Detective Jake Wayde doesn’t know why he received a letter containing a piece of a puzzle. However, he soon realizes that he’s in the middle of a deadly search for ten million dollars in cash and a world changing chemical formula. It’s now kill or be killed. “People are dropping like flies,” says Wayde, “who the hell is killing them?”

It now becomes his task to stop the killing spree caused by the late, vengeful chemist, Dr. Fredrick Rhineman. The renowned chemist had instructed his secretary, that upon his death, to mail prewritten letters containing a pieces of a handmade puzzle, to the twelve people he hated and the ambassadors of China, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Russia.  As the letters are received and opened, they instruct that when assembled, the puzzle pieces will reveal the whereabouts of a deadly world-changing chemical formula and ten million dollars in cash.

Guest Review Puzzle Of Death: Detective Mystery Thriller by Donahue B. Silvis


Review by Sal B.

I was a bit hesitant in deciding to read this book.  I was warned that it is quite violent in parts.  I don’t mind some violence but it sounded like it may be too much for me.  However, the book description really drew me in and I decided to give it a try.  I am so glad I did!

I won’t include the description because it is already posted above. I flew through this book as it is so hard to put down.  Just when I thought I was coming to a good place to stop reading for the night, another twist happened.  There are more twists in this book than in a sailor’s rope!  The characters are numerous but so engaging and believable. I do think the violence could have been toned down a bit but that is my personal taste, not a fault with the book.  The premise is unlike anything I have read before and I mean that in the best way possible.  Kudos to Donahue B. Silvis for his writing and fresh take on a detective novel. 

4.5/5

Thanks also to Teddy Rose for allowing me to review ‘Puzzle Of Death’ on Teddy Rose Book Reviews plus.  The views in this review are my own and do not reflect those of Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus.

About Donahue B. Silvis

Puzzle Of Death: Detective Mystery Thriller by D. B. Silvis

Donahue B. Silvis is an alumnus of the renowned Pasadena Playhouse. He graduated from Florida Atlantic University majoring in film study and creative writing.

As a member of Screen Actors Guild (SAG), he has worked in movies as an actor and screenwriter. Donahue has written six novels, three screenplays and one illustrated children’s book. Now retired, he continues writing and promoting his novels and screenplays, while residing in Naples, Florida with his wife, Katie.

Website: dbsilvisauthor.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/dbsilvis
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dbsilvis/
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.ca/dbsilvis5/


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Puzzle Of Death: Detective Mystery Thriller by Donahue B. Silvis