Author: Linda Laughlin (Page 9 of 11)

Linda Laughlin spent her early childhood in Eastern Oklahoma and most of her adult life in historical Fort Smith, Arkansas. Her first career consisted of raising two fantastic children and her second was in banking. In addition to having published two novels to date, she recently started writing a biweekly column on regional authors for the Fort Smith, Arkansas newspaper, the Times Record. She loves hearing from her readers.

Review for The Naked Eye by Iris Johansen and Roy Johansen

The Naked Eye - Iris and Roy JohansenIris Johansen has been writing fantastic stories for years and now she writes with her son, Roy Johansen. The two continue to create hard hitting mysteries that will keep you entertained. This is part of the Kendra Michaels series. If you have never read one of her mysteries, she was blind and with a new surgery regained her sight. Kendra learned to notice things that most people overlook, and as a result has been used by different law enforcement agencies to solve cases. She helped put serial killer Eric Colby behind bars. He was suppose to be executed, but Kendra knows that somehow he is still alive, even though no one believes her.

If you like a good mystery, you will love this one. The police finally believe Kendra when one of their own is captured by Eric Colby, then tortured and killed. Kendra almost loses a good friend to the cold blooded killer. They think they have lost him again but he has a compulsion and that is to kill Kendra. Don’t miss this one, a very outstanding story.

Happy Reading, Linda

 

Cold Betrayal by J.A. Jance (Ali Reynolds Series)

J.A. Jance - Cold BetrayalNo one writes a better mystery than J.A. Jance and this one certainly keeps you on the edge of your seat. Jance is one of the few authors that can give you two story lines in one book and allow you to easily keep up with both.

Ali’s daughter-in law Athena contacts her because her grandmother, Betsy,  is receiving anonymous threats. The local police think that it is just old age catching up with Betsy. Ali promises to get to the bottom of things and meanwhile Ali’s long time friend Sister Anselm asks for her help.

With the help of her husband’s security firm, Ali soon has Betsy’s problem solved. It is a complicated matter that takes a lot of finesse on Athena’s part.

Sister Anselm is involved in a case that has brought to her attention a family of dangerous polygamists. Ali and the Sister uncover a cult that is responsible for the death of several women. The two are fighting against time to expose the Family before someone else is harmed or killed.

This is full of fast action and is a great read. Just be prepared to be glued to your seat and your reading lamp until you turn the last page. If you like an exciting mystery, then I highly recommend “Cold Betrayal”.

Happy reading, Linda

 

Review of Last One Home by Debbie Macomber

Last One Home - Debbie Macomber Debbie Macomber writes outstanding stories of family life. Cassie ran away from home to marry Mr. Wrong and broke her family’s heart. When she finally breaks away from an abusive marriage, the unexpected death of her father has left her family in a bad emotional situation. Sorrow and hurt pride keep Cassie from telling them just how impossible her life has become.

Working two jobs and taking care of her young daughter, Cassie has worked her way through school and is now a hair stylist.  Because she has been there, she is drawn to help other women who are in abusive situations. When Habitat For Humanity offers Cassie and her daughter a chance to own their own home, she is excited. She is required to work on her home, as well as other houses, to earn the privilege of having a home of her own. It’s called sweat equity, and on a job site she meets contractor Steve Brody. Steve is impossible to work with and Cassie wonders if she can tolerate the man long enough to fulfill her hours. It takes time, but Cassie finally makes friends with Steve and builds a close relationship. This story reveals the complicated dynamics between family members and shows how misunderstandings can test the bond between sisters.

A Good story and a look into the fantastic job Habitat for Humanity does for people down on their luck.

Happy Reading, Linda

Five Star review for “New Leaf” by Catherine Anderson

New Leaf - Catherine AndersonTaffeta Brown grew up in the foster care system. She had been sick as a baby and by the time her medical problems allowed her to be adopted, she was an older child. She married the only son of a prominent attorney and for awhile she thought her life was perfect. True, her husband was spoiled and his parents gave him everything, but he had graduated with a law degree and was going to work for his father’s firm, and she was sure in time he would grow up.  Taffeta was happy when she found out she was expecting a child, until her husband informed her he wasn’t ready to be a father so she had to have a abortion.  She refused, informing Phillip that wasn’t going to happen.

When Sarah was born, Phillip’s parents fell completely in love with her. Phillip pretended to love her too, whenever his parents were around. During the pregnancy he had stopped bothering to hide his infidelities, but if Taffeta wanted to provide a stable life for her daughter, she had to look the other way. One night when Sarah was three she got up late at night, managed to unlock the safety gate on the stairs and fell. This was what Phillip had been waiting for! He accused Taffeta of abusing the child, divorced her and got sole custody of Sarah. Since a child wasn’t in his plans, he immediately gave Sarah to her grandparents.

Convicted of child abuse, Taffeta relocates to different town. Not wanting to draw attention, she dresses in dowdy clothes and spends all her time building her business. One day she will get the money to hire a lawyer and gain custody of Sarah, until then she has to fly below the radar and build a reputation as a model citizen.  Enter Barney Sterling, a local lawman who finds himself drawn to Taffeta. When Taffeta finds out that Phillip has removed Sarah from his parents home and is leaving her in the care of strippers and drug addicts, she turns to Barney. Barney is a Deputy Sheriff and every criminal he has known claimed to be innocent, but once he starts thinking about the story Taffeta tells him, he decides that if Taffeta is lying she would surely concoct a better story.

The book tells of Barney and Taffeta’s fight to get her little girl back, and their growing attraction to one another. By the time they get the child back, they find she acts like a 20 year old stripper with a language to match.

This is an excellent read.

As always I wish you happy reading,   Linda

 

Kiss Me While I Sleep by Linda Howard

Kiss Me While I Sleep - Linda HowardLinda Howard is a superb mystery writer and she kept me guessing until the last page. I couldn’t put this book down because the surprises kept coming!

“Kiss Me While I Sleep” is about a contract killer for the CIA.  Lily Mansfield has never known another life, and it isn’t until she goes against the CIA and eliminates a crime boss that she finds out what it is like to be really alone.

Salvatore Nervi had Lily’s friends and adopted daughter killed, and she is determined to make him pay. She disguises herself and gains access to Salvatore, playing up to his desire for beautiful women. She has what she thinks of as a foolproof plan; poison a bottle of rare and expensive wine and wait for him to drink it. She has set the stage by refusing to ever drink wine, to her it taste like vinegar, but Salvatore insists that she at least taste this special bottle. Lily puts it to her lips and gives the glass back to Salvatore, but that small touch to her lips is enough to make her ill.

When Salvatore dies of the poison, his son Rodrigo has Lily brought to his home. She is so sick that instead of getting away, they find her passed out in her apartment. At first Rodrigo does not suspect her, after all she had been poisoned too. It isn’t until after she has gotten away that Rodrigo realizes his mistake. Now Lily has the mob after her and she still hasn’t found out why her friends were killed. Enter Lucas Swain the CIA’s best agent, with orders to bring Lily in or eliminate the problem.

The job Swain is sent to do becomes harder as he gets to know Lily. She is smart and resourceful, and maybe she was right to kill Salvatore. Swain and Lily lead you through the streets of Paris as they try to find out why a lab developing a flu vaccine is being protected by the mob, and what it had to do with her friends’ murder.The surprises keep coming while Lily and Swain grow closer as they work together to block the threat.

This book takes you on a roller coaster ride and doesn’t let you off until the last page..

If you like a good mystery give this book a try.

Happy reading, Linda Laughlin

 

Scattered by Joan Johnston

Joan Johnston - ShatteredJoan Johnston writes novels with a western theme. I went to a used book sale and found one of her older books that I hadn’t read; “Shattered“, one of the her Bitter Creek novels. I had forgotten what a truly gifted storyteller this lady is.

Nine years ago Kate Grayhawk Pendleton walked into a hotel room she shared with her husband to find him in bed with another woman. Kate walks out of the room and into the bar downstairs, where she picks out a stranger and asks him to go upstairs with her. He checks them into the penthouse suite and a few weeks later she learns she is pregnant.

Fast forward nine years and she has buried her husband with military honers and become involved with a Texas Ranger, but all is not what it seems. She had been shot a few months before and while she is unconscious one of her twin sons had an accident, requiring a blood transfusion. Her mother-in-law, who is a prominent politician, has found out the twins are not her son’s biological children, but that doesn’t concern her as much as what the news, should it come out, will do to her political future.

As if Kate doesn’t have enough to deal with, her husband comes back from the dead and the biological father turns out to be a mob boss’ illegitimate son. Now I admit when you write this all out it sound a little hokey, but Kate and Wyatt Shaw have found the kind of chemistry that happens once in a lifetime. It also turns out Shaw is one of the good guys who has had a hard time living down the circumstances of his birth. While he is angry with Kate for keeping his sons from him, he is so pleased to be a father that he can’t hold on to his anger. He also finds out he is still as attracted to Kate as he was on that long ago night. Kate on the other hand is fighting her attraction to Shaw. She keeps telling herself that she is in love with the Texas Ranger, but she just can’t seem to make herself believe it.

This is really a fun read with plenty of mystery to keep you turning the pages.

Happy reading, Linda Laughlin

 

The Lost Key by Catherine Coulter

Catherine Coulter started her career writing novels set in Regency era England. Her heroines were strong women, who pushed the limits set by society in that period. They made you laugh and you cheered them on when they pushed the envelope of their time period; definitely a good read.

Next came a series of FBI Novels. These are fast paced and interesting, with a cutting edge computer named “MAX” and the husband and wife FBI team of Savich and Sherlock. With these three on their trail, the bad guys soon found themselves in custody. If you like a good mystery, be sure to check out this series.

The Lost Key

Her latest series is written with J.T. Ellison and have the series title of “A Brit in the FBI”. These books features Nicholas Drummond and his American FBI counterpart, Mike, short for Michaela, Caine. In number two of the series,”The Lost Key”, there is a race to identify, locate and stop a madman from finding the secret to a formula for making a bomb that is smaller and more powerful than anything man has ever seen before.

 This book takes you from the USA to Britain, with plenty of action along the way. You get the impression that Britain was glad to send Nicholas to us because he is quick to shoot from the hip. Mike is the perfect partner for Nicholas since she understands how things are done in the good old US of A, and she soon learns that there is no one better to watch her back. I am looking forward to many more novels in this series.

If you are looking for a good book, I don’t think you will be disappointed with Catherine Coulter. I loaned my series of Regency era England books to a friend and they got him through a long recovery from knee surgery.

As always “Happy Reading”,

Linda

 

 

Sitting around the table with Linda Laughlin

I have written a book and I use my grandmother’s maiden name, so some of the people I am acquainted with don’t know that I am an author. I know two ladies who just read biographies, so I would not expect them to rush out and buy my book. Some people don’t like to read, and while I don’t understand anyone in this category, I respect their right to feel this way. On the whole, I don’t bring the book up when I am in a group. I love hearing how much fun you had, and that you couldn’t put it down until you had turned the last page, but if you haven’t read “Run For Your Life!”, I don’t want to make you uncomfortable.

Tonight I went to a Christmas Party; the first one of the year for me. I was at a table for 10 and someone said, “I just finished your book and I really liked it. Two or three others spoke up to say how much they enjoyed it. One lady ask when number two was due out and if it would be a sequel?

I am happy to report that I have finished the second draft of the next one, and I am going to start on the final draft the first of the week. Hopefully I will have book 2, “Fight For Your Life”, out sometime in January if my editor does’t have too long a list of rewrites. You will find out what happens in Steve and Leah’s life. Ted, the bartender has a new love interest and it isn’t what you or Leah expect. Come by the Ocean Front Bar and Grill and say “hello” to all your old friends.

If you have read “Run For Your Life!” drop me a note and tell me how you liked it? If you haven’t read it you are missing a good book.

Happy reading, Linda Laughlin

Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf

A friend of mine handed me this book and told me she thought anyone over a certain age would find it interesting. I found it disturbing and oddly very sad.

The story is about two lonely people who have lost their spouses. It is set in Holt, Colorado and tells the story of Addie and Louis, who live two doors down from one another. Addie pays Louis an unexpected visit. She tells him she is lonely, has trouble sleeping and she wants to ask if he would come and spend the nights with her. She is quick to explain that she isn’t interested in a sexual relationship, she just wants someone to talk to and share her empty bed.

They embark on a relationship that quickly turns into a special friendship. It is impossible to keep a secret in a small town and soon everyone is talking. When Addie’s son starts having financial and marital problems he brings his 6 year son Jamie, to visit Grandma. Addie and Louis discontinue their sleepovers until Jamie gets settled in. Louis and the boy soon bond and Louis is teaching Jamie to play ball and introducing him to a rescue dog. One night after Louis is back doing sleep overs, a storm comes up and Jamie ends up in bed with the older couple.

Of course the son finds out, although at this point I noticed the son seemed more worried about Louis trying to get Addie’s money, than Jamie. In the end the son separates the older couple by threatening to not let Addie see Jamie again. Addie gives in to pressure and moves out of town. A broken hip puts Addie in the hospital and Louis finds out about it and goes to see her. Of course the son is there and decrees that Louis can only have 5 minutes with his mother. The story ends with Addie getting out of the hospital and calling Louis on the phone. It leaves the reader with the impression that they may someday find their way back together or maybe that was my wishful thinking.

We are blessed with very few close friendships and it made me angry that Addie’s son would forbid her a loving relationship. Yes, there is a moral issue but who were they hurting? I think the story was set in the late 60’s and I don’t know if the son could make that work today. I have read about grandparents suing for visitation rights. I think I would have told my son that since money was his main concern, he should let me see my grandson or I would put every penny I had in trust so he couldn’t get anything.

Read the book and let me know your opinion!

Happy reading, Linda

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