Special Guest Blogger today: Lilly Carlson.
Lilly is the protagonist of a new novel exploding onto the world’s book shelves this week:
THE WORST NOEL:
THE JUNIPER JUNCTION
HOLIDAY MYSTERY SERIES,
Book One,
from cozy-mystery maven, author Amy M. Reade. Here is what Lilly had to say about the story. Enjoy.
When I married Beau Carlsen, I certainly never expected to be a single mom. But life happens, as they say, and I’ve been a single mom for fifteen years now.
After Beau disappeared leaving me with two little ones, I had no idea where he went, who went with him, or whether I’d ever hear from him again. He didn’t contact me or the kids in all those fifteen years. And I was okay with that.
So imagine my surprise when he wound up back in Juniper Junction right after Thanksgiving. It put me in a pickle—I had never really talked about him that much, so the kids knew practically nothing about him. I suppose I’ll have to break the news to them eventually, but I’m not ready for that. How dare he waltz back into our lives after all this time?
Anyway, he sure picked the wrong time to come back.
As if the holidays weren’t stressful enough this year with Beau’s reappearance, I went into work on Black Friday and found the body of Eden Barclay, one of the other Main Street business owners, dead on the floor of my jewelry shop. Terrifying, I know. For the life of me, I don’t know what she was doing in there.
But here’s the worst part: since she was found on the floor of my shop, I’m a person of interest in the murder investigation. That’s putting a damper on my holiday spirit, to say the least.
There’s one ray of light—unfortunately, Eden wasn’t well-liked among the Juniper Junction merchants, and it appears she wasn’t even very well-liked by her own husband. Or her ex-husband, for that matter. So at least I’m not the only suspect.
But wait, there’s more! On top of everything else, my mother is beginning to show signs of dementia. She’s easily confused and she forgets things. Big things, like the reason I divorced Beau. Thank goodness the kids are able to help me with her. My brother, Bill, also shares the responsibility for her care. And my mom thinks he walks on water, so I guess that’s a good thing…for him.
If you get to Juniper Junction this Christmas, stop in the jewelry shop on Main Street and say hello. If I’m not there, it’ll be because I’m in jail. Keep your fingers crossed that doesn’t happen!
It’s me again, Iris. Thank you, Lilly, for taking the time to share on our blog today. Before I tell you more about The Worst Noel and its clever author, Amy M. Reade, I have BREAKING NEWS:
THE WORST NOEL, book one in The Juniper Junction Holiday Mystery Series, debuts Tuesday, November 13, on AMAZON and at these OTHER BOOKSELLERS.
Returning to our regularly scheduled blogging, here is the tantalizing summary Amy Reade shared with us about The Worst Noel.
Christmas is supposed to be a time of peace, love, and joy, but for Lilly Carlsen, this Christmas is murder.
As a single mom, small business owner, and president of the local Chamber of Commerce, the last thing she needs is to find a dead body on the floor of her jewelry shop on the busiest shopping day of the year. And as if that isn’t enough, Lilly has to deal with a deadbeat ex-husband, a mother with declining mental health, and two teenagers.
But when a second body turns up, Lilly finds herself squarely in the crosshairs of suspicion. Can she figure out who killed the victims before she becomes one herself? And will her family’s Christmas be merry…or scary?
About the Author
Amy M. Reade is a cook, chauffeur, household CEO, doctor, laundress, maid, psychiatrist, warden, seer, teacher, and pet whisperer. In other words, a wife, mother, community volunteer, and recovering attorney.
She’s also a writer. She is the author of The Worst Noel, The Malice Series (The House on Candlewick Lane, Highland Peril, and Murder in Thistlecross), and three standalone books, Secrets of Hallstead House, The Ghosts of Peppernell Manor, and House of the Hanging Jade. She lives in southern New Jersey, but loves to travel. Her favorite places to visit are Scotland and Hawaii and when she can’t travel she loves to read books set in far-flung locations.
You can contact Amy M. Reade in many easy ways, and she would be happy to interact with her reading fans. (How could you not be an Amy Reade fan? I know, right!) Find the links below, following this wowza excerpt from THE WORST NOEL.
excerpt:
Lilly awoke hours before dawn to the sound of her alarm clock going off. She flung her hand in the general direction of the nightstand to find the snooze button and stop the incessant ringing, but only succeeded in knocking the clock to the floor.
“Ugh,” she groaned. She leaned over the side of the bed and clawed the floor, trying to reach the clock. When she found it, she turned it off and sat up groggily, wiping sleep from her eyes and yawning. Barney, the family’s Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier, lifted his shaggy, brindle-hued head and stretched across the foot of the bed.
“I hate Black Friday,” she said to Barney. The biggest shopping day of the year brought a level of anxiety that gave her nightmares the other three hundred sixty-four days. She peered into the bathroom mirror before heading downstairs. Her brown hair was tangled from sleep and her eyes, normally bright hazel, were hooded and sported bags.
She needed coffee and lots of it. She went downstairs to find that the kids had left the kitchen light on all night again.”Good,” she muttered to herself. “I was hoping to give the electric company a nice fat check for Christmas.” She switched off all the lights but one and started the coffeemaker. Before long the kitchen was filled with the aroma of ground Arabica beans and Lilly’s senses started coming alive.
After showering, dressing, and grabbing a quick breakfast, Lilly poured herself a travel mug of coffee and slipped out the side door without making a sound. Normally Barney followed her downstairs for breakfast, but it was too early for him.
The car didn’t even have time to warm up during the short drive to Juniper Junction Jewels. Lilly drove along Main Street, smiling at the Christmas lights that hung from the shop fronts and the street lamps. She loved this festive time of year. And since this was Colorado, there were several inches of freshly-fallen snow on the ground to make the lights seem even prettier. At the end of the block, she swung her car around the back of the row of shops and pulled into one of the parking spots allocated for her jewelry store. Each store got two parking spots so employees wouldn’t have to go searching for spots when Main Street got really busy, as was often the case in the upscale Rocky Mountain resort town.
It was so early the plows hadn’t even been out yet, so Lilly stepped carefully when she got out of the car. Shifting her shoulder bag from one arm to the other and holding her coffee, she reached for the doorknob at the back of the shop.
It was unlocked.
Lilly’s stomach lurched; her body stiffened. This was a shop owner’s worst nightmare, made even more horrible when the shop sold precious stones, expensive gems, and custom jewelry. Lilly turned the knob slowly and pushed the door open, peering around it to make sure there was no one waiting for her in the back room.
She didn’t see anyone, so she closed the door softly behind her and set her bag and coffee down on her desk. She had been the last one to leave Wednesday afternoon and the shop had been closed for Thanksgiving Day; she shuddered to think that the shop had been unlocked for thirty-six hours. She wracked her brain trying to remember locking the door behind her on Wednesday, but she couldn’t. She couldn’t remember setting the alarm, either, but that obviously hadn’t gone off because the alarm company had her home number and her cell number.
Quickly walking over to the vault where she kept her inventory when the store was closed, she stopped short when she saw that the door to the vault was slightly ajar. She put out one finger to push the door open a bit farther; wave after wave of nausea swept over her when she saw that one of the sliding shelves that held the jewelry had been moved. She stepped into the vault and pulled the shelf out a bit further–there was a necklace missing.
A pearl necklace. She frantically pulled out all the other shelves in turn, not daring to breathe until she satisfied herself that nothing else had been taken. She backed out of the vault and strode to her desk, where she leafed quickly through the papers littering the top. Nothing else seemed to be missing.
She pushed open the sliding barn door that led to the interior of the shop.
Lilly prided herself on making Juniper Junction Jewels a homey, rustic place that looked like someone’s living room. As such, the lighting inside the store was provided mostly by lamps set strategically around the shop rather than cold, sterile fluorescent lights.
She turned on the lamp closest to the office. She didn’t notice the body lying on the floor behind one of the glass cases until she tripped over it.
LINKS
Website: www.amymreade.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/amreadeauthor
Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/AmyMReadesGothicFictionFans
Twitter: www.twitter.com/readeandwrite
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/amreade
Instagram: www.instagram.com/amymreade
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Amy-M.-Reade/e/B00LX6ASF2/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
Goodreads Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8189243.Amy_M_Reade
Thanks for hosting Lilly here today, Iris! It’s an exciting time for us. I hope your readers take a look at The Worst Noel and enjoy it! Blessings to you.
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