Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Song Girl by Keith HirshlandSong Girl: A Mystery in Two Verses by Keith Hirshland

Publisher:  Beacon Publishing Group (January 21, 2022)
Categories: Mystery Thriller, Detective/Police Procedural
Tour Dates April and May, 2022
ISBN: 978-1949472400
Available in Print and ebook, 388 pages
Song Girl

Description Song Girl by Keith Hirshland


Detective Marc Allen is ready to leave the Raleigh, North Carolina, Police Department. Two murders that happened on his watch have apparently been solved thanks to a suicide note confession written by a distraught father. But Allen isn’t buying it. He’s convinced that the man’s adopted daughter, Teri Hickox, is the one responsible for the heinous crimes. With his personal life a muddle and his professional career unsettled he decides the best thing for him is a change of scenery.

The detective, now in Colorado Springs, is working new cases and making new friends. One of those friends is Hannah Hunt who, after suffering a freak accident, finds herself only able to speak in song titles. Another is a mysterious drifter who lives out of an old Dodge van and goes by “the champ”. But as Allen builds a new future, events unfold showing him that he can’t escape his past.

Song Girl is…

Part sequel to The Flower Girl Murder

Part stand-alone mystery

All entertaining

Praise for Song Girl by Keith Hirshland

”A well-written mystery”-The Hollywood Digest

“Highly enjoyable! Engaging from start to finish.”-The Entrepreneur Magazine

Praise for Flower Girl Murder by Keith Hirshland


“I had to dig my teeth in the first pages but once I did, I was on a twisty turning ride. This one turned out to be worth the ride.  A fast-paced story with great characters. The plot had some twists making it entertaining.  As the bodies begin piling up it’s a race to solve the mystery.  I enjoyed reading ‘The Flower Girl Murder’. and look forward to reading more from this author. “-My Reading Journeys

The Flower Girl Murder is an exciting police procedural/crime mystery story that has realistic characters; witty dialogue and interactions; rich descriptions of the setting that transports the reader to Raleigh, NC, Reno, NV, and Aspen, CO; a fascinating behind the scenes intertwining of police procedural and investigative techniques and the news station on-air news stories and CTA (call to action) segments; and a multi-layered storyline that draws the reader into the interconnection between the main characters as the pieces of the murder investigations puzzle comes together and is solved.
The Flower Girl Murder is the kind of mystery that easily keeps the reader captivated, guessing, on their toes, and wanting more!”-Kathleen, Jersey Girl Book Reviews

“This is a great story and one that after I got into it I couldn’t put it down. I like how the deaths were linked. There were lots of twists and turns that kept me guessing along the way. This is one mystery I would recommend checking out”- JBronder Book Reviews

“There was a lot of action, intrigue, and suspense to keep me entertained. The who done it kept echoing in my mind…guessing happened a lot. Keith Hirshland is a talented writer. He made it impossible to stop reading his book. The detective is a determined fellow who gives his all into solving his investigations. I really liked this character. Overall, this was a great read. I recommend it to all.”-Urban Book Reviews

Awards and Recognition for Keith Hirshland


Book Talk Radio Club Book of the Year 2020 (Murphy Murphy and the Case of Serious Crisis)

Top Shelf Award First Place (mystery) for Murphy Murphy and the Case of Serious Crisis

New Apple Awards Solo Medalist True Crime Category (Big Flies)

Shelf Abound Award Winner Indie Book Competition (Big Flies)

Interview Keith Hirshland

Hi Keith, welcome to Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus

TR: Please tell us something about ‘Song Girl’ that is not in the book.

KH: My original idea for Song Girl was for the Hannah Hunt character to be able only to speak in song lyrics and not song titles. To that end I did hours and hours of research, bought several books about song lyrics including The Beatles Lyrics, Paul Simon Lyrics 1964-2008, The 100 Greatest Songs of All Time, Country Music’s Greatest Song Lyrics, and more. I highlighted lyrics which I thought would work as lines of dialogue and then went about giving them to Hannah. More than halfway through the process I decided I better check and see the proper way to give credit to the publishers and lyricists at the end of the book. I spoke to an entertainment lawyer (who happens to be my older brother) who stopped me in my tracks telling me using song lyrics, unless they are in the public domain, in my book (or any book) is strictly forbidden and could be the cause of numerous and expensive lawsuits. I was beside myself and thought I might have to scrap the entire project until he went on to say song titles are fair game. So back to work I went changing Hannah’s dialogue from lyrics to titles.

TR: Are any of your characters based on real-life friends or acquaintances in ‘Song Girl’?

KH: I am extremely fortunate to have friends who have been generous is the fact that they have allowed me to use their names in my books. I don’t think any of my characters are in Song Girl are “based on” those folks but they certainly take on characteristics of each person. The Teri Hickox character is based on the real-life tenant my wife and I had in our North Carolina home but only to the extent that she, through her father, rented the home from us. The embellishment is fiction.

TR: When writing fiction, what comes first, the character’s name or their personality/faults, etc?

KH: The latter. I seem to work on developing what type of character each person in my book will be. Once I have a general idea then I find myself applying certain qualities, quirks, emotions, and actions. I have found one of the hardest things for me in writing fiction is coming up with character names. That’s why I am so very thankful when I make a request of a friend or colleague and the answer comes back as “yes”.

TR: Which character do you love to hate in ‘Song Girl’?

KH: Personally, I can’t love to hate Teri Hickox enough. The girl just doesn’t seem to have any redeeming qualities. Except, maybe, for the fact that at one point in the book she is reluctant about hurting a puppy.

TR: What is your favorite scene in the book? Why?

KH: Wow. I hate to use a cliché but that’s sort of like asking me to tell you which of my children is my favorite (insert smiley face emoji). But since you’re asking me to pick one, I think I’ll go with the scene in the book in which Lucas Haynes tells his son how they came about naming him Rampart. But if you ask me the same question tomorrow, I’ll probably give you a different answer.

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

KH: I did not. The creative folks at Beacon Publishing Group came up with the cover design for Song Girl and, while I know I’m prejudice, I think it’s beautiful. I did (with help from my mother-in-law) design the cover for my previous book, Murphy Murphy and the Case of Serious Crisis and the artists at Beacon used that design. I tried the same thing for Song Girl featuring music notes and using a gun for the “r” in Girl but thankfully they decided to go in a different, and better, direction.

TR: What are you currently working on?

KH: Right now, I’d say I’m about 2/3rds of the way through the first draft of the sequel to Murphy Murphy. This one is tentatively titled, Murphy Murphy and the Case of the Commission on Cliches. In “Serious Crisis” I attempted to include as many redundancies and redundant phrases in the manuscript and, as you can guess, this one is chalk full of cliches. But I’m already thinking about the next Marc Allen book and eventually I will write the third installment of the Murphy Murphy trilogy in which our intrepid detective aligns himself in some way, shape, or fashion, with the Pun Police.

TR: Is there a question that you would have liked me or another blogger to ask but didn’t?

KH: I can’t think of one but I would like to acknowledge all the people who help in this endeavor. I mentioned Beacon Publishing Group and the entire team there headed by Bobby Collins. My editor, the beta readers, and most of all my wife whose full-throated support of my work has been phenomenal. Thank you, Teddy for your thoughtful questions and your support of writers in general and my work specifically. You’re a peach.


About Keith HirshlandSong Girl by Keith Hirshland


Keith Hirshland is an Emmy Award–winning sports television producer with more than three decades of experience producing live and pre-recorded programs that aired on ESPN and ESPN2. Among the first forty people to be hired by the Golf Channel in 1994, Hirshland was in the middle of the action when that network debuted in 1995. He provided his talents for Golf Channel, as its live tournament producer, for two decades.

Cover Me Boys, I’m Going In: Tales of the Tube from a Broadcast Brat is a memoir about his experiences in the television industry. Published by Beacon Publishing Group, Cover Me Boys was recognized as the Book Talk Radio Club Memoir of the Year. Hirshland’s second book, and first work of fiction, Big Flies, was published in 2016 and is the recipient of the New Apple Awards “Solo Medalist” in the True Crime Category. Hirshland followed that success with his third book, The Flower Girl Murder. In 2020 Beacon Publishing Group released Murphy Murphy and the Case of Serious Crisis, Hirshland’s third mystery novel. It was a Top Shelf Magazine First Place award winner and was named the Book Talk Radio Club Book of the Year for 2020.

Song Girl Hirshland’s fifth book is the sequel to The Flower Girl Murder and was released in January of 2022.  All five books are available at www.keithhirshland.com,  Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other bookstores.

Keith Hirshland lives in Colorado with his wife and their Pyredoodle Mac.

Website: https://www.keithhirshland.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/khhauthor
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KeithHirshlandAuthor/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/khhauthor/?hl=en

Buy Song Girl by Keith Hirshland


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Giveaway Song Girl by Keith Hirshland


This giveaway is for 3 print copies One for each of 3 winners. This giveaway is open to Canada and the U.S. only and ends on June 1, 2022 midnight, pacific time.  Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Song Girl by Keith Hirshland

Dark River by Avery JenkinsDark River by Avery Jenkins


Publisher:  Black Rose Writing, (October 15, 2020)
Category: Mystery Thriller, Amateur Sleuth
Tour dates: Oct-Nov, 2020
ISBN: 978-168433-6111
Available in Print and ebook, 268 pages
Dark River

Description Dark River by Avery Jenkins


When your only path to survival is to die..

An old man loses all that he loves for a secret he doesn’t know he knows and a past he can’t remember while he searches for a girl’s killer.

Review Dark River by Avery Jenkins


Guest Review by Mark S.

“You know a little about everything, forget nothing anyone has said to you, can look at a piece of jade and know it’s age, where it was carved, by whom, and what the artist’s second child was named.”

What an interesting and enveloping novel! I felt like I was brought into to the author’s universe right from the first page and I kept wanting more.  Avery Jenkins really has a talent for not only crafting a mystery, but creating a perfect small-town atmosphere that reminds me of an Agatha Christie novel, with metaphysical elements to make it even more gripping!

The story is about Asa Cire, a man who runs a very specialized antique shop that leans toward items that are difficult—and sometimes illegal—to obtain. Asa lives a fairly quiet life in a small town and he seems to have a working knowledge of everything in the universe, from dead languages to eastern wisdom to healing plants.  But, at the beginning of the novel, Asa is faced with a problem even he can’t solve when he finds himself having a strange vision of a dead teenage girl during a round of meditation in his home.

Disturbed by the vision, Asa soon discovers that the teenage girl is real and was murdered in the town twenty years earlier. Her killer was never caught and the case was never solved. Asa takes it upon himself to unravel the mystery behind the brutal killing and get justice for the girl, but first he must find out how all of the pieces of the case come together, including a strange woman who showed up at his house and an ancient indecipherable manuscript.

This book is one that you will definitely want to check out. I love a good mystery and I was fascinated with the way this one played out. ‘Dark River’ is unmissable! I give it five stars.

About Avery JenkinsDark River by Avery Jenkins


Dr. Avery Jenkins is a former award-winning journalist and essayist who took a 25-year break from the writing world to become a chiropractor and acupuncturist. He holds a 2nd degree black belt in the martial art of aikido and is in his final year of training to become a Daoist priest.

Dr. Jenkins lives in northwest Connecticut with his wife and two dogs of uncertain temperament.  Dark River is his first novel.

Website: www.averyjenkinsauthor.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/averyjenkinsdc
Facebook Fan:https://www.facebook.com/DarkRiver06759

Twitter: https://twitter.com/avery_writer
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/averyauthor

Buy Dark River by Avery Jenkins


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This giveaway is open to Canada and the U.S. only. This giveaway ends November 26, 2020,midnight pacific time. Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Oct 19 Kickoff & Interview

Sal The Pulp and Mystery Shelf Oct 20 Guest Review & Excerpt

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Dark River by Avery Jenkins

Dark River by Avery JenkinsDark River by Avery Jenkins


Publisher:  Black Rose Writing, (October 15, 2020)
Category: Mystery Thriller, Amateur Sleuth
Tour dates: Oct-Nov, 2020
ISBN: 978-168433-6111
Available in Print and ebook, 268 pages
Dark River

Description Dark River by Avery Jenkins


When your only path to survival is to die..

An old man loses all that he loves for a secret he doesn’t know he knows and a past he can’t remember while he searches for a girl’s killer.

Praise For Dark River by Avery Jenkins


“A Taoist Jack Reacher”-Beta Reader

“This is a fine and lively read. The perfect way to get my mind off the damn pandemic. I read it in 2 glorious evenings. Tightly written. Fast-moving. Well-drawn, interesting and multi-dimensional characters. All the action and escapism I have come to expect from a Tom Clancy or Lee Child novel, but far more interesting, and much more spiritually satisfying. The author kept teaching me things as he entertained the hell out of me. I hope he’s busy writing the next book in the series now, because I’m hooked.”-Bob Corlett, Amazon

“This book is incredible. There were twists and turns constantly; I couldn’t put it down! I can’t recommend it highly enough for a non stop story lockdown page turner.”-Lina Holopainen, Goodreads

Interview with Avery Jenkins

Hi Avery, thanks for joining me for this interview. 

TR: Please tell us something about ‘Dark River’ that is not in the summary.  (About the book, character you particularly enjoyed writing etc.)

AJ: Dark River is more than a suspense/mystery novel. It embodies quite a bit of Daoist and Buddhist concepts, though for the most part all of that is hidden in the walls with the plumbing. The foundation of Dark River, in fact, came from a question my sifu asked me early in my Daoist training.

“Who would you be, Avery,” he said, “if you had no memory?”

If you sit down to think about it, that’s an enormously difficult question to answer, especially for a man in his sixties with a lifetime of memories. In questing about for an answer, the essential narrative of Dark River emerged.

Themes aside Neveah Arias was the character that was the most fun to write. She is really a delightful person. She’s funny, brilliant, a courageous fighter, and takes absolutely no BS from Asa while at the same time being intensely loyal to him. And while looking out for Asa, she also looks out for herself as well. She never takes her eye off the brass ring.

Nev was the first character to come alive for me, and she dragged the rest of the characters along with her to start clamouring in my head. It hasn’t been quiet here since.

TR: What is your favorite scene in ‘Dark River’? Why?

AJ: I have two.

The last scene before the epilogue is my favorite because it is why I wrote the book. It is the point of the journey.

The prologue is my favorite in an entirely different way. It was the most difficult scene for me as an author, as I had to put my head in a truly awful space to write it. I was literally sick for two days after writing that scene. But I have a strange sense of accomplishment that I was able to write it. Without that scene being what it is, none of the rest of the book makes sense.

TR: I always enjoy looking at the names that authors choose to give their characters. Where do you derive the names of your characters?  Are they based on real people you knew or now know in real life? How do you create names for your characters?

AJ: The characters in my book are drawn from a multiplicity of ethnicities and I chose names that would reflect their broader heritage while at the same time exhibiting something of their personal past. Neveah Arias hails from the Dominican Republic, while Tanya Ito is a Japanese-American woman. Charlie Glass is a European-American mutt. Asa Cire is…well, let’s just say that the man is as obscure as the origins of his name. But it, too, has meaning.

All of these characters are amalgams of people I’ve known. I’ve dipped my pen in a variety of inks to create the color that is theirs.

TR: What draws you to this genre? 

AJ: I think I can really only write what I read. I love reading mysteries and suspense, and I also love reading contemporary, or metaphysical fantasy. What brings me to them as a reader is manifold. Noir detectives have always interested me in that they are so often riddled with their own fractured morality, making their path to a just conclusion painful and sometimes enlightening. They somehow manage to do the right thing, even though they don’t feel like they are. In my main character Asa Cire, I tried to create that moral ambiguity as well as the sense that there is growth occurring as his problems pile up.

I am fascinated by the way good and evil are intertwined, and books that expose the intimate dance of the two create a compelling tension. Good guys aren’t wholly good and bad guys aren’t always Satan incarnate, though we might see them that way. For me, though, it’s not so much sympathy for the devil as it is compassion for us half-broken humans staggering our way through lives we can only barely comprehend as we live them – and influenced by forces we only weakly perceive.

TR: You have said that you have drawn inspiration from Ernest Hemingway and Robert B. Parker, how does that manifest in your writing?

AJ: It means I try to put the big ideas in the verbs and nouns, not the adjectives. When writing, I constantly pare down my message into what the characters are doing and saying. There is always a need for some exposition – if for no other reason than to give your readers some space to breathe – but in trying to describe a place or a person, I try to use as few brush strokes as possible. Hemingway could describe the fullness of a man’s life in one short sentence, and that is something I strive for as well.

This also means your dialogue has to be on point, something Parker excelled at. The characters in his books have powerfully individual voices such that you don’t need to be told who is speaking. You just hear their voices in your head.

TR: How did you go from being an award-winning journalist to being a chiropractor/acupuncturist to training to become a Daoist priest? How do those experiences reflect in your writing?

AJ: Oy, that’s a whole other book, Teddy. I wrote for my dinner for 12 years, and at some point, I got tired of it. I felt like I had written or edited the same feature article hundreds of times. I wanted to do something new, but I didn’t know what, so I looked back at what had drawn me to journalism in the first place. As a teen, I had been inspired by Woodward and Bernstein’s coverage of the Watergate story, and how they had changed the course of lives – the course of a nation – through their writing. And as a journalist, I wanted to change people’s lives, to help them live better.

Once I realized that was my organizing principle, changing careers became easy. A great way to impact people’s lives directly is as a doctor, especially as a chiropractor and acupuncturist, because our relationship with our patients is more intimate. I touch my patients, I hold them, I listen to them.

As I’ve aged as a doctor, I began to realize that I was changing how I do what I do.  I was not just listening to patients’ stories, but telling them stories as well, stories to help them understand their disorder or the best path through it. Writing – fiction, this time – became an extension of that practice. The best fiction always helps us to know ourselves better. It gives us hope and helps us understand our demons.

Becoming a priest is also a function of aging for me. Old men aren’t usually out on the front lines fighting – though that’s certainly where I threw my character Asa – but we are more often teaching and advising. What better way to do that than to learn what you need to know to become a priest, particularly a Daoist one?

TR: What are you currently working on?

AJ: The sequel to Dark River, titled Burning Buddha. Though Dark River stands alone as a novel, it does leave some lingering questions. Truthfully, I have a series of five books in mind to complete the story arcs of Asa and his friends. In Burning Buddha, the world gets much bigger than the small town that is Dark River’s setting, and the problems more complex. And Asa still doesn’t really know what the hell he’s doing.


About Avery JenkinsDark River by Avery Jenkins


Dr. Avery Jenkins is a former award-winning journalist and essayist who took a 25-year break from the writing world to become a chiropractor and acupuncturist. He holds a 2nd degree black belt in the martial art of aikido and is in his final year of training to become a Daoist priest.

Dr. Jenkins lives in northwest Connecticut with his wife and two dogs of uncertain temperament.  Dark River is his first novel.

Website: www.averyjenkinsauthor.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/averyjenkinsdc
Facebook Fan:https://www.facebook.com/DarkRiver06759

Twitter: https://twitter.com/avery_writer
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/averyauthor

Buy Dark River by Avery Jenkins


Amazon
BarnesandNoble


Giveaway Dark River by Avery Jenkins


This giveaway is open to Canada and the U.S. only. This giveaway ends November 26, 2020,midnight pacific time. Entries accepted via Rafflecopter only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Follow Dark River by Avery Jenkins


Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Oct 19 Kickoff & Interview

Sal The Pulp and Mystery Shelf Oct 20 Guest Review & Excerpt

Sage N. Bound 4 Escape Oct 21 Guest Review

Mark S. Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus Oct 22 Guest Review

Gracie Goodreads Oct 23 Review

Laura Lee CelticLadys Reviews Oct 26 Guest Review

Betty Toots Book Reviews Oct 27 Review & Interview

Linda Lu Goodreads Oct 28 Review

Am Goodreads Oct 29 Review

Jody Amazon Oct 30 Review

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BookGirl Goodreads Nov 4 Review

Sol A. ReadingBifrost Nov 5 Guest Review

Lisa’s Writopia Nov 6 Review

Diane Book Meets Girl Nov 9 Review

Suzie M. eBook Addicts Nov 10 Guest Review

Meagan MLM Opinion’s Reviews Nov 11 Review

Brianna abookandalattee Nov 12 Review

Lisa’s Writopia Nov 13 Guest Post

Nora S. StoreyBook Reviews Nov 16 Guest Review & Excerpt

Gud Reader Goodreads Nov 17 Review

Aparna Amazon Nov 18 Review

Jas International Book Promotion Nov 19 Review

Bee Book Pleasures Nov 20 Review

Mindy Room Without Books is Empty Nov 23 Review

Denise D. Goodreads Nov 24 Review

Becky Amazon Nov 25

Dark River by Avery Jenkins