Category: books

  • Fooled Ya! by Jordan D. Brown

    Fooled Ya! by Jordan D. Brown

    How do you train your brain? By learning more about it, of course. I received a copy of Fooled Ya! by Jordan D. Brown for review. All thoughts are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I will be compensated if you click on and make a purchase through them. 

    Fooled Ya! Retrain your brain to see past illusions.

    Fooled Ya! How Your Brain Gets Tricked by Optical Illusions, Magicians, Hoaxes & More

    Discover the variety of ways our brains can trick us, from optical illusions to magicians’ masterful use of misdirection to strategies used by con artists. Learn why you can’t always trust your brain, so you’ll be less likely to be swindled, hoodwinked, or bamboozled. Along the way, Brian Z. Brain, an illustrated comic guide, will help explain how your mind works. 

    Sections include “Can You Trust Your Brain,” “Fool the Five Sense,” “How Magicians Mess with Your Mind,” and “Learn to Be Less Gullible.” Woven throughout are various articles that present interesting stories or facts from neuroscience, psychology, and history. 

    2 Thumbs Up for Fooled Ya! by Jordan D. Brown.

    Fooled Ya! Review

    Venice has been loving this book. I walked in the other night to do lights out and found her “writing a book report” on it. Our minds are an interesting thing. Fooled Ya! breaks it down and is an entertaining read for both the kids and adults. When talking to Venice about it, she told me “It makes my brain confused!” 

    Optical illusions, ventriloquism, and magic tricks can all be confusing! A quick browse through the book myself and I’m ready to put together a science fair project with my kids based on tricking the mind. I think it’s going to be a hit! 

    There’s a lot to learn from Fooled Ya! Including how to train your brain to not be fooled. However, one of Venice’s biggest take-away’s is “Our brains can sometimes be very bossy.

    Purchase Fooled Ya! on Amazon

     


  • The Football Fanbook Review and Giveaway

    The Football Fanbook Review and Giveaway

    Football season is in full swing, and I have no idea what I’m talking about. That’s why I’m so excited to share The Football Fanbook from Sports Illustrated Kids with you! I received a copy of the book in exchange for my honest thoughts. All opinions are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I will be compensated if you click on and purchase through these links.

    The Football Fanbook from Sports Illustrated Kids for your mini fan. ad

    I’ve always loved sports, and I’ve said it before – but really it’s just the social aspect for me. Getting together and feeling all that energy of the people around you is thrilling to me. However, I’ve never really understood Football. I watch it, I’ve been to a ton of games in person, and on TV. I still always find myself asking what happened, what does that mean, what did I miss?

    Related Post: The Best 7 Layer Bean Dip

    Now more than ever I feel like I need to figure this out, because I’ve got a little sports fanatic on my hands. I don’t know where it came from, but Venice has decided sports are her thing. I’ll walk into her room at night and find her curled up next to her radio listening to football and basketball games. A few weeks ago I even sent her with Mark to a football viewing party while I stayed home sick. 

    The Football Fanbook from Sports Illustrated Kids and Time Inc. has been the exact thing we both needed to understand the sport of football more. Inside The Fanbook you’ll find stats on players, fun game day essentials like food and what to wear, and of course a whole section teaching you how to talk the talk. 

    With the football Fanbook you and you’re little football fans will be ready to talk the talk the whole season! There are even a few tips for playing your own game of football, so when you’re not watching you can work on your passes. 

    Venice loved the instructions to fold your own paper football. She’s been making them nonstop and handing them out to all her friends and teachers. I can only imagine what kind of paper football games are happening at school. We’re still working on flipping our little footballs, but it has entertained the kids for hours to make these and then have play-offs. 

    Learn to make your own paper footballs in The Football Fanbook. ad

    It’s Giveaway Time! Tell me about your Football fans to win a copy of Time Inc’s and Sports Illustrated Kids The Football Fanbook. Enter on the rafflecopter. Open to US 18+. Ends 9/29/2017

     

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  • Enhance Children’s Literacy with BookRoo

    Enhance Children’s Literacy with BookRoo

    One of the best things you can do for your children from the age of 0 on is to read. Enhance children’s literacy skills by bringing new books into the home. I received a BookRoo subscription for review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.  

    BookRoo  subscription helps enhance children's literacy. ad

    I love books! Children’s books are especially a favorite of mine. I believe having a home filled with books is key to children growing up with a love and yearning for learning. It’s proven that kids who grow up with books in their home, reach a higher level than those who do not – source

    When I heard of BookRoo I was pretty excited. New kids books delivered to my doorstep seems the perfect way to grow that home library, and enhance my children’s literacy skills. 

    BookRoo arrived in a slim package perfect for the 2 picture books it held. Wrapped in a beautiful high-quality paper we found 2 new picture books I had never heard of. Their pricing is pretty fair for brand new books too. 

    Enhance children's literacy with BookRoo. ad

    A Dog Is A Dog by Stephen Shaskan. This adorable book was so fun to read the first time as we flipped the pages to find surprise animals. As we read it the second time through the kids caught on to the rhyming through the book. It’s one of those books I could see the literacy skills being used subconsciously as each time we read it, we find new animals to rhyme with.  

    Enhance children's literacy with a BookRoo subscription. ad

    Mother Goose’s Pajama Party by Danna Smith. This is by far my favorite children’s book I’ve ever read! After reading it the first time I had to call my mom to tell her about it. She’s a kindergarten teacher, and I couldn’t think of a better book to introduce kids to Mother Goose’s nursery rhymes than this one. See Mother Goose invites all her characters to a pajama party, and then she reads them her rhymes as they all arrive in their pajamas.

    Are you ready to help your children’s literacy skills improve? Sign up for a BookRoo Subscription today. 

  • 50 Wacky Inventions Throughout History Book Review

    50 Wacky Inventions Throughout History Book Review

    Everything we have came because someone thought it up. Some inventions are thriving today, while others were not as successful. Some are just plain wacky. I received a copy of 50 Wacky Inventions Throughout History in exchange for an honest review. This post contains affiliate links and I will be compensated if you click through and purchase. 

    50 Wacky Inventions Throughout History. 50 Wacky Inventions Throughout History

    Have you ever heard of a bike TV? Or a bird diaper? 50 wacky Inventions Throughout History describes 50 Inventions that seem too crazy to be true – but are! Whether useful, entertaining, or just plain silly, these mind -boggling inventions and gadgets from yesterday, today, and tomorrow will surprise and delight fun-fact lovers of all ages. 

    An amphicar exists! 50 Wacky Inventions throughout History. What a fun book to peruse! I remember watching old movies and thinking how cool it would be if they actually made a car that turns into a boat. I had no idea that they had actually made one! Thanks to this book I learned that not only did they exist for awhile, but President Johnson owned one and loved fooling people into thinking his brakes didn’t work. 

    Then there was the Steam Man who could travel a mile a minute – maybe – and pull a carriage. It’s what led to a lot of science fiction books about robots. 

    There are 48 other wacky inventions like the cat licker, trike ‘n’ mow, chicken glasses, and wearable submarine. 50 Wacky Inventions is a fun book to sit and peruse, and even dig further into some of the inventions and how they influenced what we have – or don’t have – today.  

    I love how many inventions they included that didn’t go beyond a month or two, or never even saw production. Life is about learning, exploring, and dreaming. So if anything this book taught me besides the facts of some truly crazy inventions, it’s that I can dream up something that might sound crazy, but may just lead to something wicked awesome.  

  • Time For Kids: 50 States Our America Review

    Time For Kids: 50 States Our America Review

    Take 50 States Our America from Time for Kids on your summer road trip. I received 50 States Our America for review. All opinions are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I will be compensated if you click through and purchase. 

    50 States Our America Review. Download the Curriculum Guide

    About 50 States Our America

    Through the pages of this book you can travel to all 50 states, from Alabama to Wyoming, to discover the history, geography, and culture that make each one great. With more than 100 kid-friendly maps by illustrator Aaron Meshon, full-color photographs, and fun facts galore, this state-by-state guide is perfect for exploring your own state, uncovering new places, and digging into the history of the United States of America.

    A great resource for school reports and general curiosity, kids will learn the story of the people who lived on the land before European settlement; how each state joined the Union; the natural resources and people that make it unique; and the industry and agriculture that drive it today. 50 States supports cross-discipline learning in U.S. history, geography, natural history, and cultural studies. 
     
     

    Our thoughts

    50 States Our America is the perfect book to take on a road trip with your kids. It’s not one you want to just sit down and read together. This is more of an informational book, but one that is also fun for kids. We’re leaving this week on a cross-country road trip with 5 kids. We’ll be heading through approximately 8 different states. My plan is to stop near the border of each one. We’ll get out stretch our legs and check out the information about the new state we’re heading into. It beats trying to read historical markers with kids running around. 50 States gets the kids interested in learning and helps break up the trip. 

    50 States Our America by Time for Kids.

    Check out our review of Time for Kids Presidents of the United States

  • Sweet Spot: An Ice Cream Binge Across America by Amy Ettinger Review

    Sweet Spot: An Ice Cream Binge Across America by Amy Ettinger Review

    I received Sweet Spot by Amy Ettinger for review. All thoughts and opinions are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I will receive compensation if you click through and make a purchase. 

    Sweet Spot: An Ice Cream Binge Across America by Amy Ettinger. Review.

    About Sweet Spot

    For Amy Ettinger, ice cream is not just a delicious snack but a circumstance and a time of year – frozen forever in memory. As the youngest child and only girl, ice cream embodied unstructured summers, freedom from the tyranny of her classmates, and a comforting escape from her chaotic, demanding family.

    Now as an adult and journalist, her love of ice cream has led to a fascinating journey to understand ice cream’s evolution and enduring power, complete with insight into the surprising history behind America’s early obsession with ice cream and her experience in an immersive ice-cream boot camp to learn from the masters. From a visit to the one place in the United States that makes real frozen custard in a mammoth machine known as the Iron Lung, to the vicious competition among small ice-cream makers and the turf wars among ice-cream trucks, to extreme flavors like foie gras and oyster, Ettinger encounters larger-than-life characters and uncovers what’s really behind America’s favorite frozen treats.

    Sweet Spot is a fun and spirited exploration of a treat Americans can’t get enough of – one that transports us back to our childhoods and will have you walking to the nearest shop for a cone. 

    My Thoughts on Sweet Spot

    Mm, the sweet sweet taste of ice cream. I eat it year round, but summer lends a hand in justifying a bowl or cone of the cool treat any time of day. I went into reading Sweet Spot thinking I’d discover some new ice cream parlor nearby to try out. Instead, I learned to get really good ice cream, custard, or even gelato I may need to travel outside my home state! Not what I was hoping to learn.

    However, Amy kindly left a few ice cream recipe’s sprinkled throughout the book. I love making ice cream, especially my Peanut Butter Ice Cream, but now I’ll have to try Amy’s recipes as she uses a bit more science to create her recipes than my “let’s toss some ingredients together and hope it works” method. 

    I loved reading about what makes ice cream, ice cream, and how it differs from gelato more so in name than the actual product. I had always wondered what the difference was. When Amy took a master class to learn how to make ice cream, I was intrigued and pondered taking it myself – decided I was good with my non-scientific ice cream instead, and the store bought that always fills my need for a sweet treat. 

  • New Animal Planet Animal Bites Books: Baby Animals and Animals on the Move + 6 Book Set Giveaway

    New Animal Planet Animal Bites Books: Baby Animals and Animals on the Move + 6 Book Set Giveaway

    *I received Animal Planet Animal Bites books for review. All opinions are my honest thoughts. 

    We love books! My kids especially love books about animals. The Animal Planet Animal Bites books are the perfect size for learning bits of information without overwhelming the kids. Animal Planet came out with 2 new books this past spring that we were thrilled to add to our collection. This post contains affiliate links and I will receive compensation when you click on and purchase through them. 

    Animal Bites: Animals On the Move

    In Animals on the Move kids learn about both fast and slow animals. They see the animals in gorgeous photography hanging in their natural habit. My always on the go child, Chloe, loves this book. I asked her one morning while she was perusing it waiting for the bus what animal was her favorite. She claimed the Banana Slugs as her choice. When I asked why she said it was because they recycle things just like she does.

    Check out the newest Animal Bites books from Animal Planet - Animals on the Move. ad

    Animal Bites: Baby Animals

     


    In Baby Animals kids learn all about different animals and their young. Everyone loves babies! As I’ve come to learn in a very personal way, my children especially love babies. Rosalina is obsessed with her new baby brother, so when she needs some baby loving but he’s busy either napping or eating, I can hand her this book to enjoy. I asked her which baby animal was her favorite, and she immediately pulled it open to the baby sloth. AWE! They really are adorable. 

    Check out the new Animal Bites books from Animal Planet. Baby Animals and Animals on the Move. ad There are so many fun things to learn about animals! For more bite-sized fun you can download these Animal Bites cards with facts from each of the 6 Animals Bites books. Print them out on cardstock and turn them into a memory game or for learning on the go this summer. 

    Animal Bites Giveaway

    One lucky winner will win all 6 Animal Planet Animal Bites Books! Enter on the Rafflecopter below. Open to US 18+ Ends 5/19/2017

    Animal Planet Animal Bites Books for Giveaway. ad

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  • In Winter’s Kitchen by Beth Dooley

    In Winter’s Kitchen by Beth Dooley

    *I received a copy of In Winter’s Kitchen by Beth Dooley for review. Opinions are my honest thoughts. This post contains affiliate links – purchasing items through them gives back to me at no extra cost to you*

    In Winter's Kitchen by Beth Dooley review.

    About In Winter’s Kitchen:

    Beth Dooley arrived in Minnesota from her native New Jersey with deep curiosity, a lifelong love of food, and a few negative preconceptions about her new home in “America’s breadbasket”. And her impressions upon arrival were unpromising: “Do people here really eat swampy broccoli, iceberg lettuce, and fried chicken for lunch every day?” This land of casserole, major agribusiness, and endless fields seemed to be the polar opposite of her upbringing in her grandmother’s kitchen. 

    But assumptions about her new neighbors quickly faded as she discovered a local food movement strong enough to survive the toughest Midwest winter. 

    When I first picked up In Winter’s Kitchen, I didn’t really know what I was expecting. Certainly what I thought I was going to read, is not what I found myself in. Originally I assumed I’d be reading another memoir based around food. While it could be classified as that, it was also so much more. 

    Beth Dooley has created a meal out of her book, and top it off, she has included simple recipes at the end to extend her meal beyond the book and into our home. I don’t have to pretend I’m smelling the bread she bakes because I can bake it myself. Along with other treats using my local ingredients. My absolute favorite quote comes from her chapter on Wheat.

    We have the intelligence, if not the wisdom, to grow beautiful, bountiful wheat. How do we teach people the value of this reality? Make them good bread.

    -Beth Dooley, In Winter’s Kitchen

    The smell of bread baking takes me back to my own mother’s kitchen and with it many other memories of baking, cooking, canning and experimenting with ingredients.  

    In Winter's Kitchen by Beth Dooley review.

    Each chapter of Dooley’s work had me pondering deeper the state of our food. I don’t feel guilty when I buy GMO non-organic produce, but I also don’t search out the local vendors perhaps as thoroughly as I should. There is something about our food and knowing it’s origins that create much more than a pretty tablescape. When we become connected to the process through the stories Beth tells and those we can find at our own local Farmer Markets, I believe our relationship with food will change – and for the better.

  • Day/Week/Year of No Clutter: Are you In? + Giveaway

    Day/Week/Year of No Clutter: Are you In? + Giveaway

    I received a copy of Year of No Clutter. All opinions expressed here are my own. Affiliate link are included – this means when you purchase something through a link clicked here, I may received a small compensation.

    I hate clutter. With a passion. Yet it always seems to creep up on me, pushing what I want to be a fun day aside to instead focus on the cleaning, organizing, and decluttering. It seems a never ending chore, similar to the laundry. 

    Year of No Clutter by Eve Schaub.

    Just this morning, Mark asked who was going to have a fantastic day. The kids all kind of mumbled, but I enthusiastically jumped in with a “ME! I am!”

    The kids stared at me kind of weirdly, and then finally asked “What are you doing today mom?”

    So I told them I had two different plans. Plan 1 was to head to their aunt’s house, where I would walk with her around her neighborhood and attempt to induce labor. Plan 2 was to clean and organize their bedrooms while they were at school. 

    “Go to Aunt Renee’s!!!” They all shouted. “Please go to Aunt Renee’s!”

    Sadly for them, it turned out to be a rainy day, so walking was out of the question. Instead, Aunt Renee came to our house to help me clean and organize. We started with a basic cleaning of the kitchen, then we walked through the kids’ rooms, and took notes and measurements of how to organize their clutter better. Finally, we hit up Target for some bins and command hooks. It was time to kick the clutter to the curb!

    I still have a long way to go with our No Clutter initiative, but we’ve started. Will you commit to a week of no clutter for your own sanity? 

    Sign up NOW for the Week of No Clutter, March 7-14th, where you will get tips, advice, and video from Eve Schaub herself to help you declutter.

    Week of No Clutter with Eve Schaub

    Are you ready? Maybe a week isn’t quite right for you, but you feel like me – overwhelmed and hemmed in by all the stuff accumulating around you. This giveaway is for you then. You could win 1 of 5 copies of Eve’s new book Year of No Clutter, just by entering on the Rafflecopter below. Good luck, and Happy Decluttering!

     

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  • Ashes by Steven Manchester Blog Tour + Giveaway

    Ashes by Steven Manchester Blog Tour + Giveaway

    Ashes
    by Steven Manchester
    on Tour February 19 – April 21, 2017

     

    Ashes by Steven Manchester

    Book Details for Ashes
    Genre: Fiction
    Published by: The Story Plant
    Publication Date: February 21st 2017
    Number of Pages: 260
    Purchase Links:

    About Ashes:

    Middle-aged brothers Jason and Tom Prendergast thought they were completely done with each other. Perceived betrayal had burned the bridge between them, tossing them into the icy river of estrangement. But life – and death – has a robust sense of irony, and when they learn that their cruel father has died and made his final request that they travel together across the country to spread his ashes, they have no choice but to spend a long, long car trip in each other’s company. It’s either that or lose out on the contents of the envelope he’s left with his lawyer. The trip will be as gut-wrenching as each expects it to be . . . and revealing in ways neither of them is prepared for.

    At turns humorous, biting, poignant, and surprisingly tender, Ashes puts a new spin on family and dysfunction with a story that is at once fresh and timelessly universal.

    Read an excerpt:

    Tom wheeled his late-model, platinum-colored BMW into Attorney Russell Norman’s freshly paved lot and parked between a brand new Lexus—sporting the license plate JUSTIS4U—and a custom pickup truck. Looks like I’m going after the hillbilly, he thought when he spotted the faded Massachusetts Department of Correction sticker in the rear window. His blood turned cold. “It must be Jason,” he thought aloud. I didn’t think he’d come.

    Tom took a few deep breaths, not because he was nervous about his father’s death or talking to any lawyer but because he hadn’t seen his Neanderthal brother—for fifteen years, I think. He paused for a moment to give it more thought. Although their relationship had essentially vaporized in their late teens—the result of a fall out that still haunted his dreams—they’d occasionally wound up in each other’s orbits; weddings, funerals, and the like, enough to remain familiar with each other’s career choices, wives, and children. But even that came to an end fifteen years ago, he confirmed in his aching head before opening the door. While his toothache-induced migraine threatened to blind him, he took one step into the oak-paneled waiting room. His and Jason’s eyes met for the briefest moment. As though they were complete strangers, they both looked away. And here he is, Tom thought, disappointed. This is just great.

    Through peripheral vision, Tom noticed that his older brother now wore a scar over his right eye, just above a bushy eyebrow that could have easily belonged to a homeless Scotsman. A jagged ear lobe, a piece clearly torn away, pointed to a crooked nose that sat sideways on his face—all of it rearranged since birth. What a big tub of shit he’s turned into, Tom thought, struggling to ignore his throbbing face and head. He’s as fat as a wood tick now, he thought, grinning, and he looks like he’s ready to pop. Jason looked straight at him, as if reading his mind. Tom immediately looked away, his rapid heartbeat starting to pound in his ears, intensifying his physical pain. Unbelievable, he thought. After all the years and all the distance, his elder brother—by only two years—still scared the hell out of him. He’s just a big asshole, that’s all, he told himself, but he still couldn’t bring himself to rejoin his brother’s penetrating gaze.

    The secretary answered her phone before calling out, “Mr. Prendergast . . .”

    Both brothers stood.

    “Attorney Norman will see you now.”

    Tom walked in first, letting the door close behind him—right in Jason’s face.

    “Still a weasel,” Jason muttered, loud enough for all to hear.

    “What was that?” Tom asked just inside the door.

    “Don’t even think about playing with me,” Jason warned as he reopened the door and entered the room, “’cause I have no problem throwing you over my knee and spanking you right in front of this guy.”

    I’m fifty years old, for God’s sake, Tom thought, and he thinks he’s going to spank me? I’m surprised the prison even let him out.

    The attorney—his hand extended for anyone willing to give it a shake—looked mortified by the childish exchange.

    Tom shook the man’s hand before settling into a soft leather wing chair. Jason followed suit.

    The room was framed in rich mahogany paneling. The desk could have belonged in the oval office. Beneath a green-glassed banker’s lamp, stacks of file folders took up most of the vast desktop. An American flag stood in one corner, while framed diplomas and certificates, bearing witness to the man’s intelligence and vast education, covered the brown walls.

    Attorney Norman wore a pinstriped shirt and pleated, charcoal-colored slacks held up by a pair of black suspenders. He had a bow tie, a receding hairline that begged to be shaved bald, and a pair of eyeglasses that John Lennon would have been proud to call his own. There’s no denying it, Tom thought, trying to ignore his brother’s wheezing beside him, he’s either a lawyer or a banker. He couldn’t be anything else.

    While Jason squirmed in his seat, visibly uncomfortable to be sitting in a lawyer’s office, his hands squeezed the arms of the chair. What a chicken shit, Tom thought, trying to make himself feel better. Peering sideways, he noticed that his brother’s knuckles were so swollen with scar tissue they could have belonged to a man who made his living as a bare-knuckle brawler. He’s still an animal too, he decided.

    Attorney Norman took a seat, grabbed a manila file from atop the deep stack and cleared his throat. “The reason you’re both here . . .”

    “. . . is to make sure the old man’s really dead,” Jason interrupted.

    In spite of himself and his harsh feelings for his brother, Tom chuckled—drawing looks from both men.

    “The reason we’re all here,” Attorney Norman repeated, “is to read Stuart Prendergast’s last will and testament.” He flipped open the folder.

    This ought to be good, Tom thought, while Jason took a deep breath and sighed heavily. Both brothers sat erect in their plush chairs, waiting to hear more.

    As if he were Stuart Prendergast sitting there in the flesh, the mouthpiece read, “My final wish is that my two sons, Jason and Thomas, bring my final remains to 1165 Milford Road in Seattle, Washington, where they will spread my ashes.”

    “Seattle?” Tom blurted, his wagging tongue catching his tooth, making him wince in pain. Quickly concealing his weakness, he slid to the edge of his seat. “Oh, I don’t think so,” he mumbled, careful not to touch the tooth again.

    Jason was shaking his head. “Hell no,” he said.

    The attorney read on. “I’ve always been afraid to fly, so I’m asking that I not be transported by airplane but driven by car.”

    “No way,” Tom instinctively sputtered.

    Jason laughed aloud. “This is just great. The old bastard’s dead and he’s still screwing with us.”

    The less-than-amused attorney revealed a sealed envelope and continued on. “As my final gift to my sons . . .”

    “Only gift,” Tom muttered, feeling a cauldron of bad feelings bubbling in his gut.

    “I’m leaving this sealed envelope for them to share, once and only once they’ve taken me to my final resting place.”

    “What the fuck!” Jason blurted.

    Every cell in Tom’s overloaded brain flashed red. Don’t do it, he thought. You don’t owe that old man a damned thing. But every cell in his body was flooded with curiosity. He looked at Jason, who was no longer shaking his fat head.

    “Maybe the bastard finally hit it big at the dog track?” Jason suggested.

    Tom nodded in agreement but secretly wondered, Could it be the deed to the land Pop bragged about owning in Maine? He stared at the envelope. For as long as I can remember, he claimed to own forty-plus acres with a brook running straight through it. He stared harder. Could it be? he wondered, wishing he had X-ray vision. A parcel of land in Maine sure would make a nice retirement . . .

    “How ’bout we travel separately and meet in Seattle to spread the ashes?” Jason said, interrupting his thoughts.

    “Great idea,” Tom said, hoping against all hope that the idea would fly with their father’s lawyer.

    Attorney Norman shook his head. “I’m sorry, gentlemen, but your father specifically requested that you travel together with his remains to Seattle. Any deviation from this can and will prohibit you from attaining the sealed envelope.”

    There was a long pause, the room blanketed in a heavy silence. Son of a bitch, Tom thought, this couldn’t have come at a worse time. He turned to Jason, who was already looking at him. “What do you say?” he asked, already cursing his inability to curb his curiosity.

    Jason shook his head in disgust. “The last thing I want to do is to go on some stupid road trip with you.”

    “Trust me, that’s a mutual feeling,” Tom shot back.

    “But I don’t think we have a choice,” Jason added. “Our fucked-up father wants to play one last game with us, so to hell with it—let’s play.”

    This is insane, but he’s right, Tom thought. With a single nod, Tom stood. “Okay, let’s have the ashes then,” he told the lawyer.

    The attorney shook his head. “I don’t have them. They’re currently at a funeral home in Salem.”

    “Salem?” Tom squeaked, unhappy that his tone betrayed his distress.

    “That’s right. You have to take custody of your father’s remains from the Buffington Funeral Home in Salem, Massachusetts.”

    “You must be shitting me.” Jason said.

    The attorney smirked. “I shit you not,” he said, throwing the letter onto his desk.

    Salem? Tom repeated in his head. Just when I thought Pop couldn’t be a bigger prick . . . The migraine knocked even harder from the inside of his skull, making him feel nauseous. Amid the pain, his synapses fired wildly, considering all this would mean: I’ll have to take bereavement leave from school and find someone to cover my classes. I should probably double my treatment with Dr. Baxter tomorrow. And what about Caleb and Caroline? he asked himself, quickly deciding, They’ll be fine without me for a few days. Then he pictured his wife’s face. And Carmen, she’ll be fine without me for a lot longer than that. The nausea increased. Screw her.

    “Are we done here?” Jason asked, obviously itching to leave.

    The lawyer nodded. “I’ll need proof in the form of a video or a series of photos that you’ve deposited your father’s remains where he wished. Once I have that, the letter’s all yours.”

    “How wonderful,” Jason said sarcastically. He stood, turned on his heels, and headed for the door.

    Tom also got to his feet. He looked at the lawyer and, trying to ignore his physical discomfort, he smiled. “Don’t mind him,” he said, shrugging. “That imbecile is exactly what our father trained him to be.”

     

    Author Bio:

    Steven Manchester Steven Manchester is the author of the #1 bestsellers Twelve Months, The Rockin’ Chair, Pressed Pennies, and Gooseberry Island as well as the novels Goodnight, Brian and The Changing Season. His work has appeared on NBC’s Today Show, CBS’s The Early Show, CNN’s American Morning, and BET’s Nightly News. Recently, three of Manchester’s short stories were selected “101 Best” for the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.

    Find Steven on his Website, on Twitter, & on Facebook!

     

    My Honest Review:

    I began reading Steven Manchester’s works a few years ago, and have truly loved his style of writing. He keeps things honest, and real. Each story is something someone can relate to. Ashes is no different. Although I had a good childhood, with good parents, and still talk to my siblings, I know that’s not the case for many people. Abusive parents, overbearing siblings, broken homes – whatever heartache you went through as a child, this books aims to talk to you. I have been drawn into Ashes and truly enjoy the story, and premise of family and what family should be. 

    What I did not like about this book, however, was the language. I understand why Mr Manchester used the language he did. It fits the circumstances, and the characters, but it is hard for me to read when a book becomes this prolific. There is also a few instances of adult content – dreams, fantasies. Nothing explicitly descriptive, but it is there. If language and/or adult content bothers you, I would not suggest reading this one. 

    Tour Host Participants:

    Don’t miss your chance to learn more about Steven Manchester & his book, Ashes! Visit the tour stops for interviews, guest posts, and lots of reviews!


    Don’t Miss Your Chance to WIN Ashes!

    This is a rafflecopter giveaway hosted by Providence Book Promotions for Steven Manchester and The Story Plant. There will be 5 US winners of one (1) PRINT copy of Ashes by Steven Manchester. The giveaway begins on February 18th and runs through April 23rd, 2017.

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