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O Little Town of Bethlehem

Elizabeth Boyle. Elizabeth Boyle, $9.99 e-book (700p) ISBN 978-1-7336765-8-8

Bestselling romance author Boyle (Six Impossible Things) riffs on It’s a Wonderful Life in this enchanting tale of redemption and time travel. After TV star Madeline Drake finds her producer boyfriend in bed with another woman, she takes a ride from a rugged car service driver named Shandy. The pair get into a nasty wreck and she wakes up to find she’s traveled from present-day Los Angeles to 1907 Bethlehem, Wyo., the setting of her western series in which she plays a saloon keeper. When Madeline realizes she’s not on set, she starts drinking heavily. Shandy, the novel’s guardian angel character, chides her for getting drunk (“You’ll stay stuck forever if you can’t learn from your mistakes”) and explains that she and the other residents of Bethlehem have all been sent there to mend their lives. As Madeline finds a love interest in the town’s handsome sheriff and a friend in the lonely and secretive postmistress, she must choose whether to go back to her old life or stay in Bethlehem, where she’s found happiness. The plot requires an inordinate suspension of disbelief, but readers will fall in love with the colorful characters. This has charm to spare. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/18/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Post: The Essential Guide to Creating Your Postpartum Self-Care Plan in Pregnancy

Emilie Wilson. Selfpublishing.com, $23.99 (310p) ISBN 979-8-89109-664-6

This empowering debut manual from naturopathic doctor Wilson explores how women can stay healthy during and after pregnancy. The prenatal guidance includes consuming ginger to combat nausea, wearing compression stockings to reduce leg swelling, and spending at least 150 minutes per week walking, biking, or doing yoga to regulate hormone levels. Wilson bolsters the guidance with scientific research, as when she notes studies that found iron deficiency during pregnancy correlates with higher depression levels in the child through adolescence; she recommends taking 27-mg iron vitamins before birth and then dropping to 10 mg after. Throughout, Wilson emphasizes the benefits of naturopathic remedies while recognizing their limits, suggesting that while vitamin D and saffron supplements have shown promise in alleviating postpartum depression, there should be no shame in seeking out pharmaceutical antidepressants if symptoms don’t respond to other treatments. Elsewhere, Wilson urges pregnant and postpartum readers to stay connected with loved ones by combining socializing with practical activities (e.g., “a group exercise or cooking class”), and to reduce their exposure to toxins by avoiding sunscreens with avobenzone and nonstick pans made with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. Despite the title, the shrewd advice focuses on prenatal and postnatal health equally, and Wilson brings a compassionate outlook that views self-care as a crucial precondition for adequately showing up for a newborn. Expecting mothers will appreciate this. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/18/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Post Civ

Julianne Harvey. Ruby Finch, $7 e-book (296p) ISBN 978-0-9877978-5-8

Harvey (Jamesy Harper’s Big Break) imagines the chilling aftermath of political and climate upheaval in this powerful postapocalyptic thriller. Years of right-wing assaults on government have transformed Canada into a hellhole for minorities: after passing legislation that outlawed contraception and made women second-class citizens, reactionaries overthrew the government and began hunting down queer people and people of color. Iris, a therapist, has no hope of finding justice after being gang-raped in her home. Privileged Ainsley is left at a similar loss after a mob breaches her security system and murders her husband. With a new, deadly virus spreading across the country and global warming leading to parts of Canada’s west coast being submerged, Iris and Ainsley—along with 10 other characters, including a construction worker and a nonbinary teen activist—start their individual journeys toward possible haven on Vancouver Island. Harvey closely follows their odysseys, bringing her grim vision of the future to life through an array of sometimes conflicting perspectives. This unsettling adventure will appeal to fans of Claire Vaye Watkins’s Gold Fame Citrus. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/11/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Diver

Lewis Buzbee. Palmetto, $19.95 trade paper (316p) ISBN 979-8-8229-4684-2

A 12-year-old boy sifts through his memories of his late father in the nuanced latest from Buzbee (The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop). It’s 1970 when Robert Macoby’s father Elwell, known as Mac, dies of a heart attack. In nonlinear snapshots, Robert muses on the joyful moments they had together, like trips to a bar to hear Mac’s stories about making underwater repairs on Navy ships during WWII, sharing plates of Crab Louie, and watching Mac demonstrate his diving skills. Robert also wrestles with things he only partly understands at his young age, including Mac’s volatile relationship with his older son, who enlists to fight in Vietnam. A parallel narrative follows Mac’s life sequentially, from when his parents left him in an orphanage during the Depression through his early enlistment in the Army at 15, learning to weld, his career in the Navy, and his rocky civilian life, during which his self-worth is caught up in his ability to provide for his family. Buzbee effectively conveys the messy blend of adoration, fear, and affection a young boy feels for his father while making Mac a fully realized character with his own faults and charms. The author’s fans will be pleased. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/11/2025 | Details & Permalink

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The Earl Was Wrong

Britt Belle. Britt Belle, $12.99 trade paper (330p) ISBN 979-8-8579-1264-5

Belle (Fourth and Long) kicks off the Greydon series with this spirited Regency. Sebastian Grey, sixth Earl of Greydon, views marriage as purely a practical arrangement, hoping that his future wife will rein in the scandalous behavior of his sister and widowed mother. Emmeline Hart, a viscount’s sister who raised her younger siblings (proving she is practical and steady handed) and has expressed no interest in a love match, seems like the perfect candidate. Almost as soon as he and Emmeline are married, Sebastian sends all his female relations to his country estate where he hopes Emmeline will keep them in check while he stays in London. But when each letter she writes to him describes her blossoming friendship with his dashing brother, Sebastian is surprised to grow jealous. Emmeline, meanwhile, realizes that she wants more from their marriage than merely playing family peacemaker. Though the heroine’s arc is not quite as developed as the hero’s, there’s plenty of romantic tension between the two, and Belle adds depth to the marriage of convenience plot via the reality show–level antics of the extended Greydon clan. The result is a fun and fast-paced historical. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/11/2025 | Details & Permalink

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One Minute Past Midnight: A John Drake Mystery

Martin Crosbie. Martin Crosbie, $0.99 e-book (288p) ASIN B0D225DZ8M

A Canadian police officer tackles a complicated kidnapping case in Crosbie’s taut second mystery featuring RCMP corporal John Drake (after The Dead List). In 2004, Drake, who’s working for the General Investigative Service in British Columbia, is assigned the case of five-year-old Hailey Logan, who’s disappeared from her bedroom. Hours after the abduction, someone claiming to have Hailey calls the RCMP and in an electronically disguised voice asks for Drake and one of his colleagues to be present when they call back at 12:01 a.m. Drake is on hand when the next call comes through, and he soon realizes the case cuts close to home: in flashbacks that alternate between Northern Ireland in 1969 and British Columbia in the ’70s and ’80s, Crosbie gradually reveals why Hailey’s father, Bill—a farm supervisor with an Irish background—may have cooperated with the kidnappers, and how buried secrets from Drake’s past may come to light if he wants to bring the girl home safely. Crosbie throws a lot of balls in the air, but he juggles them with ease and brings everything to a satisfying conclusion. It’s a sly and suspenseful winner. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/04/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Starman After Midnight

Scott Semegran. Mutt, $14.99 trade paper (236p) ISBN 979-8-218-41594-5

An unlikely friendship is tested by zany events in this darkly funny if diffuse novel from Semegran (The Benevolent Lords of Sometimes Island). Seff, a writer, finds a drinking buddy in Big Dave, the conservative plumber who lives next door in their Austin, Tex., suburb. Big Dave’s belief in climate change (“Ranchers and farmers... know better than to deny what Mother Earth is telling us”) and generally compassionate nature perpetually upends Seff’s stereotypical assumptions about right-wingers. When other neighbors’ pets start disappearing and some come back mutilated, Big Dave insists they install cameras. The cameras capture another nuisance: a man walking naked in the middle of the night, and Big Dave becomes fixated on tracking down the “pervert,” putting a strain on his and Seff’s friendship. The novel’s numbered chapters are intercut with short stories devoted to side characters, such as the trio of brothers who try to outsmart a dachshund that chases them on the way to school in “The Kirby Boys Battle Cindy the Weiner Dog,” and the young girl who tends a magical garden in “Melon Girl.” Not all of it hangs together, but Semegran has a knack for drawing colorful characters. This waggish slice of life is worth a look. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 04/04/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Farewell Performance: A Ginger Barnes Cozy Mystery

Donna Huston Murray. Ravenhill, $12.99 trade paper (248p) ISBN 979-8-3237698-7-2

Murray’s clever sixth clever case for Ginger Barnes (after A Score To Settle) finds the Pennsylvania gumshoe digging into the murder of an old friend. Hollywood actor Jan Fairchild—one of Ginger’s high school classmates—has returned to Ludwig, Pa., to film a movie. Jan and Ginger’s mutual acquaintance, Didi, hosts a pajama party with several of their other classmates to mark the occasion. Though the evening gets off to a low-key start, a comment during a game of truth or dare freaks Jan out, leading her to rush out the door. Ginger catches up with the film star and persuades her to return to the house, but when Jan is late to awaken the next morning, Ginger finds her dead on her bedroom floor with a shattered skull. The Ludwig police question the group, taking particular interest in Ginger. She sets out to identify Jan’s killer, drawing on their shared history to crack the case. Ginger’s charming everywoman qualities make her easy to root for, and Murray has the mechanics of closed-circle whodunits down. This satisfies. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 03/28/2025 | Details & Permalink

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Death and the Taxman

David Hankins. Lost Bard Enterprises, $29.99 (320p) ISBN 978-1-962740-01-2

Expanded from a Writers of the Future Award–winning short story, Hankins’s fast-paced supernatural adventure and Grimsworld series launch balances the mythic and the mundane. On a routine pickup, the Grim Reaper is tricked into exchanging bodies with IRS auditor Frank Totmann. Now trapped in Frank’s failing middle-aged body while Frank runs off with his identity and scythe, Grim must find a way to reverse the process before Hell’s Auditor becomes aware of the mishap and comes to punish him. Ignorant of the ways of flesh, Grim contends with a mortal body’s embarrassing needs (cue the poop jokes), fumbles his way through Frank’s job, and desperately tries to make contact with the demon who inadvertently made the switch possible. Meanwhile, infernal forces move forward on a fiendish plot eons in the making, people stop dying with no one to collect their souls, and Grim runs into the ex he hasn’t seen in millennia. Flashbacks hint at a much larger scope to the setting and Grim’s complicated past as, in the present, he learns the hard way what it means to be human. The humor feels somewhat sitcomy, but the premise and subsequent mistaken identity hijinks are good fun. This is sure to entertain. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 03/21/2025 | Details & Permalink

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The Great Gatsby Murder Case

David Finkle. Plum Bay, $17.99 trade paper (246p) ISBN 979-8-9858564-5-3

Finkle (Keys to an Empty House) offers a whimsical take on the locked-room mystery in this entertaining supernatural whodunit. New Yorker Daniel Freund, a writer who collects rare editions of The Great Gatsby, is delighted to find one he doesn’t own in a pile on a brownstone stoop. He brings it back to his apartment, where the book starts displaying magical qualities: certain words begin to glow, and an invisible presence guides Freund’s hand to phrases that seem to allude to an unsolved murder. Wondering if the paranormal activity is a beyond the grave message from F. Scott Fitzgerald, Freund visits the brownstone where he found the edition. There, he learns that his new Gatsby belonged to septuagenarian venture capitalist Fulton Cutler, who recently shot himself inside his locked apartment. Convinced that Cutler was murdered, Freund investigates who might have wanted him dead, and tries to deduce how they committed the seemingly impossible crime. Eventually, he teams up with a pair of retired detectives to crack the case. Finkle effectively suspends disbelief en route to a clever solution. It’s a gleeful good time. (Self-published)

Reviewed on 03/21/2025 | Details & Permalink

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