Blog Archives

We Meet Again in Summer

Lily Prescott, a romance novelist, is stunningly lovely, single, and lonely. She wants love but doesn’t know where to look or who to trust. Her breakup a year earlier with Mitch Jaymison, a handsome, divorced doctor with whom she fell hopelessly in love, has left her feeling vulnerable and heartbroken.

When a chance meeting at a fundraising dinner brings Lily and Mitch together again, they embark on a deepening emotional relationship as they work to overcome their previous problems, and Lily struggles to put the emotional hurts of the past behind her. But this is difficult, not only because of Lily’s deep-seated fears that Mitch will leave her again, but also because of interference from Lily’s billionaire ex-fiance and nefarious happenings at the hospital and at the lake Mitch lives on.

Through elegant social occasions in town, sailing dates, and romantic beach walks at the lake, Lily and Mitch pursue their love again amidst an overshadowing uncertainty and increasing physical peril as they progress toward a final, challenging reckoning of themselves as a couple.

Locked-Room Mysteries

Liane Mahugh Author Interview

Pioneering Secrets follows a high school teacher, a reporter, and a detective from a small town who are trying to find the person responsible for killing a teen girl. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

When I was a kid, I loved locked-room mysteries. The murder method in this story is based on a reverse version of my favourite locked room story. I can’t give any more details than that, as it would give it away.

There was a lot of time spent crafting the character traits in this novel. What was the most important factor for you to get right in your characters?

All the characters in the book are based on real people in my life. I’ve tried to give them character and personality traits similar to each of those people.

How did the mystery develop for this story? Did you plan it before writing, or did it develop organically?

It began with a vision of the opening murder scene, then grew from there. I planned out each murder scene ahead of time, as well as the characters and suspects. Other than the opening chapter, I didn’t write any parts of the book until I had the pivotal scenes fleshed out ahead of time.

Is this the first book in the series? If so, when is the next book coming out, and what can your fans expect in the next story?

This is the first book in the Rolling Brook Falls series. I have a few new stories already planned, with the next two fleshed out. I hope to have the 2nd book published by the end of December 2025. The next story will delve deeper into Andie’s past, as well as continue to develop the budding romance between her and Detective Sayers. Readers can expect the same sass from Andie and C.J. that was showcased in the first book.

Author Links: GoodReads | BlueSky | Facebook | Website | Amazon

The perfect girl, loved by everyone, or so they all thought. Someone wanted her dead.

Rolling Brook Falls is a sleepy little town where summer tourism is high, everyone knows their neighbour, and no one locks their doors. That all changes when a teen is murdered leaving everyone baffled as to why.

When Andie, a local high school teacher, decides to investigate the death of her favourite student, she clashes with the town’s new no-nonsense police detective. Determined to find out how her peaceful community could become stained with murder, she sets out on her own to search for answers. But after the killer strikes again, the mystery deepens, and Andie wonders if she’s in over her head.

Ignoring the detective’s warnings to stay out of the investigation, Andie and her reporter friend C.J. soon discover more is going on in their quiet little town than they ever could have imagined. As the bodies pile up, the two women race to solve the mystery before another of their friends is murdered, and before the killer sets their sights on them.

Sweet Secrets On Mackinac Island

When Lucy Winters inherits her great-aunt’s fudge shop on charming Mackinac Island, she expects a quiet summer of candy-making and tourist watching. What she doesn’t expect is a double murder, a judgmental orange cat named Felix, and two very different men vying for her attention.

Fresh from a corporate marketing job and a messy breakup in Chicago, Lucy is determined to prove she can run Mabel’s Marvelous Fudge—even if she can barely tell a candy thermometer from a tire gauge. With help from her quirky teenage employees and the island’s self-appointed Fudgeamentals committee (a group of elderly confectionery enthusiasts with strong opinions about everything), Lucy slowly finds her footing in her sweet new life.

But when the island’s wealthy power couple turns up dead under suspicious circumstances, Lucy discovers that paradise has a dark side. Between dodging the Fudgeamentals’ amateur detective theories, navigating romantic tension with rugged bike shop owner Jake Miller and polished lawyer Ethan Hayes, and earning the approval of Felix—the island’s most discerning feline critic—Lucy has her hands full.

When someone vandalizes her shop and leaves threatening messages, Lucy realizes the killer isn’t finished. With Felix as her unlikely sidekick and the Fudgeamentals as her enthusiastic backup, she’ll need all her marketing skills and newfound island connections to solve the mystery before she becomes the next victim.

A deliciously entertaining cozy mystery filled with small-town charm, romantic entanglements, and one very opinionated cat who might just be the best detective on the island.

Greed and Treachery

Chris Flanders Author Interview

The Image Maker follows three men chasing opportunity, legacy, and identity in the Pennsylvania oil fields during the Civil War era, whose lives intersect during this pivotal time in history. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The inspiration for the setup for the story told in The Image Maker was a conversation with a friend a couple of summers ago. Her family has a rich archive of information about their great-grandfather, who was an integral part of the processing of crude oil shortly after it was first pumped from the ground by Drake in 1859. Before this, oil was a commodity that the Indians used for salves, war paint, and to caulk their canoes. The early settlers found it a nuisance, contaminating their well water and always floating on the shallow oil creek waters.

I met, through the first family, another whose great-grandfather was a roustabout, doing all jobs required to get oil out of the ground. He became an oil scout, a spy for an oil company who hid behind bushes to find out whether the competitor’s well was a gusher or if it was a bust, often in peril of his life. He became the editor of the international oil newspaper, the Oil City Derrick, a resource for all oil people on current production, a breakdown of what was happening and where, and new tools invented on the spot to make oil production easier. Papers, photographs, and family tales from these two sources gave me the impetus to tell their stories. I added a photographer who became as famous, and Brady, who photographed the Civil War atrocities at about this same period. John Mather, glass negative by glass negative, taken in the fields, and often in danger from the gushing oil, documented the complete history of the infancy of the petroleum industry.

What intrigues you about this time period enough to write such an interesting and engaging period piece?

This time is within that of my grandparents and great grandparents, who were all alive when I was growing up, across the PA border from where this happened. Around 1880, oil was being found in the southern half of our county. So much of the background information needed to write about another period didn’t come from books or the internet, but from my 101-year-old father, a historian, who read the chapters, one by one, and helped my accuracy and added the smells and tastes of that time. His sharp mind and his love for history molded my writing career. My other books include the Book of Fretz, a 1750 historical novel on Kindle about one of my relatives coming at great risk to his life to America. I’ve also written a history book called The Bemus Point-Stow Ferry: A History about the early history of the Chautauqua Lake region. This Ferry started as a raft in 1811, crossing the narrows of the lake, and over the years became a barge carrying cars and people across the lake. It was fun showing how the whole history of our region was centered by this small ferry, now in her 114th year of continuous service. I gave the proceeds of the book to the Ferry to help with the maintenance of this aging piece of history.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

The themes of this book included the prevailing greed and treachery of the early days of oil coming out of the ground in a very rural farming area, an area where the only export was wood from their hilly farms. The sudden wealth was mind-altering, making some folks very rich while others lost everything. The towns of only several hundred people were suddenly cities full of hotels, barrooms, brothels, and churches. Factories for processing the oil were along the shallow oil creek, while the barrels of oil, carried on barges, could only get to the deep flowing Allegany River by flooding the creek from the oil logging ponds along the way. Railroads were built, and when the independent drillers were at their best, along came Standard Oil and the underhanded buying up of all transportation, processing, and drilling businesses. You joined them, or you were doomed. The story is told from the three main characters and their families and friends. It gives the story an ability to relate to their feelings of hope, of despair, and of the importance of family. All three characters have flaws, but don’t we all?

What is the next book that you’re working on, and when can your fans expect it out?

I am currently writing a story, quite unlike The Image Maker. A friend read it and came to me saying her Great Grandmother was “something else, quite a character.” I was intrigued right away. She provided hours of family stories that I recorded, papers, short pieces written by Lila, and thousands of slides to plow through. Lila was born in 1906 in North Dakota. She got off the farm to live with her older sister in Chicago in 1930, working at Cook County Hospital in the typing pool. She was assistant to the CEO within 2 years. From there, after being jilted by her pilot boyfriend as WWII started, she joined the WACS. She went directly to Italy, where she was an administrative assistant to Patton as he took Italy and marched on to Germany. After the war, she took a job as an administrative assistant to the Army Corps of Engineers in Alaska, where she worked summers, spending her winters in San Diego. There she started going on trips, wherever the vessel went, on trawlers and freighter ships. She eventually circumnavigated the globe several times in her lifetime. She was never married but was seldom alone. What a setup! This should be out late 2027.

Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | LinkedIn | Amazon

In 1860, just a year after Drake’s historic first oil well, photographer John Mather arrived in Titusville, Pennsylvania, determined to capture the burgeoning oilfields, one glass negative at a time. From his makeshift darkrooms – one on a creek barge, another strapped to his wagon – he risked life and limb to preserve the history of the nascent petroleum industry. General Charles Miller, alongside his wife, Adelaide, tirelessly cultivated relationships with the titans of this new era, becoming a major player himself. Even Andrew Carnegie took notice, only to withdraw when Miller’s personal indiscretions threatened his reputation. Former cavalryman Patrick Boyle, a natural storyteller, chronicled the region’s explosive growth as editor of the Oil City Derrick. His experience as a roustabout in the oil fields and later as a daring oil scout after the Civil War made him uniquely suited to report on this worldwide source of oil production statistics and news. Through the eyes of John, Patrick, and Charles – their families and their stories – a vivid portrait emerges of the oil boom and life in late 19th-century America. This is the story of how a rough-and-tumble stretch of Oil Creek in rural Pennsylvania fueled the world’s oil lamps, machinery, trains, and, eventually, automobiles.



The Excruciating Assignment

Carolyn Summer Quinn Author Interview

In Fate Can Toss a Boomerang, a detective faces his own teenage trauma when he investigates the murder of a loathed gym teacher with a dark past. What was the idea, or spark, that first set off the need to write this book?

I attended several different schools growing up. Decades later, I began to hear horror stories from other former students, and they revealed that not one, not two, but three of the female teachers I had known in two different schools had targeted children for perverted purposes.

All of these women were surly, unpleasant, and seemed to deliberately try to make themselves look like “plain Janes.” Two of them had flown completely under the radar, and you couldn’t have picked them out of a crowd for any reason. The third one, on the other hand, had body language that would have been more suitable for an actress playing a stripper in the musical Gypsy, and she behaved seductively around everybody, kids, adults, boys, girls, just whoever was standing in front of her at the moment. This was a sight to behold, let me tell you! She was constantly, ahem, “shaking her maracas” right in everyone’s faces. I thought she was “crazy,” but I was just a child and couldn’t really add all of this up. Nobody was cognizant of child molesters back then, in the early 1970s, and somehow this bizarre situation never got addressed. I’ve always wondered, though, if I could see there was something extremely wrong with this pathetic excuse for a human being when I was just a kid, where were the adults who worked at that school? Were they blind as bats, or what? So when I heard it was even stranger than I had thought back then, and this creature had been trying to seduce little boys, that, and the stories I’d been hearing about the other two teachers as well, was what gave me the idea for writing this book. Everything I’d picked up on about all three of these creepy gals went into the story.

What were some of the emotional and moral guidelines you followed when developing your characters?

It’s a story of a contrast in opposites. I created the main character of Detective Knox Wanamaker as a guy with a very strong moral fiber who always tries to do the right thing. He fought off Petra the child molester when he was a boy, and she didn’t get her way with him. Naturally, she hated him for it. Now he’s stuck with the job of solving her murder, and even though he thinks his town is better off without Petra in it, he goes about fulfilling the excruciating assignment. In contrast, there’s Petra, who couldn’t care less about doing what’s right, and probably doesn’t even know the definition of the word. She’s all about taking whatever she wants for herself, and that includes children’s innocence. She made a mess of her life, and several other people’s lives besides, and now she’s the victim in a whopper of a murder case that falls in Knox’s lap. Some people think their job assignments are bad, but get a load of his!

How did you decide on the title of this novel?

Oh, that one was so much fun to come up with! I was brainstorming a title and zeroed in on the whole idea of “what goes around comes around.” Murder may never be the right course of action to take, yet there is some sense of poetic justice at play with this one, given what Petra was doing to children. It finally caught up with her. So, “Fate Can Toss A Boomerang!”

Can you give readers a glimpse inside the next book you are working on?

I’ve got two more in the works at the moment. The one that should be finished soon involves an American family that inherits property in Argentina during the 1960s, but they don’t realize the lovely mansion they’ve been handed had an outrageous former purpose. That mystery starts up from there!

Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Website | Amazon

“Fate can toss a boomerang.” It’s a cryptic message scrawled on a scrap of paper-left at the scene of a brutal murder. The victim? Petra Turkett: beloved teacher, respected coach… and, as Detective Knox Wanamaker knows all too well, a predator who once tried to assault him when he was just a boy, although it didn’t work. He had the good sense to fight her off and send her flying.

Now Petra is dead, and Knox-older, wiser, and harboring long-buried truths-gets stuck with leading the investigation. As he tries to unravel the mystery behind her violent end, questions spiral. Who killed Petra, and why? Was it revenge? How could it not be? And can Knox finally expose the secrets Petra took to her grave, once and for all?

Literary Titan Gold Book Award: Fiction

The Literary Titan Book Award honors books that exhibit exceptional storytelling and creativity. This award celebrates novelists who craft compelling narratives, create memorable characters, and weave stories that captivate readers. The recipients are writers who excel in their ability to blend imagination with literary skill, creating worlds that enchant and narratives that linger long after the final page is turned.

Award Recipients

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Literary Titan Silver Book Award

Celebrating the brilliance of outstanding authors who have captivated us with their skillful prose, engaging narratives, and compelling real and imagined characters. We recognize books that stand out for their innovative storytelling and insightful exploration of truth and fiction. Join us in honoring the dedication and skill of these remarkable authors as we celebrate the diverse and rich worlds they’ve brought to life, whether through the realm of imagination or the lens of reality.

Award Recipients

The Adventures of Mrs. Hats: The Mayan Headdress by Christopher Corbett

Visit the Literary Titan Book Awards page to see award information.

Breath Play

Breath Play is a mystery-thriller that follows Dan Burnett, a retired NYPD detective turned private investigator, as he uncovers the chilling pattern of murdered young nurses whose bodies wash ashore along Long Island Sound. While juggling a budding romance with his girlfriend Mia and supporting his daughter Hannah in her new career, Dan finds himself unable to resist the pull of a developing serial killer case. As each victim’s backstory is revealed, and the investigation tightens around eerie patterns and disturbing truths, the book builds a slow, suspenseful momentum filled with quiet tension and emotional depth.

I enjoyed the way the book mixes the peaceful rhythm of Dan’s post-retirement life with the unsettling presence of violent crime. The writing is smooth and conversational. Like listening to someone recount an incredible story. The dialogue is natural, the pacing is just right, and the scenes between Dan and Mia are some of the most intimate I’ve read, not just physically, but emotionally. The sensual moments don’t feel forced; they feel like part of a very real, very lived-in relationship. That kind of emotional realism adds a weight to the story that goes beyond solving murders.

What I appreciated was how the story took its time, weaving in layers of Dan’s life beyond the central investigation. The car theft subplot, in particular, added depth and a welcome change of pace, giving us a fuller picture of Dan’s world and the kind of cases he handles. It might not have been directly tied to the serial killer thread, but that contrast made the darker moments hit even harder. The life of a PI isn’t just one mystery at a time, and Terhaar captures that beautifully. The suspense crept in slowly, building until I realized I was completely hooked. And those Elsa Nordstrom reports are absolute gut-punches. They brought the victims to life in a way that was deeply moving.

This book isn’t just for crime fiction fans, it’s for readers who love characters with heart, quiet moments that carry weight, and thrillers that don’t rely on explosions to keep your attention. If you’re someone who enjoys character-driven mysteries with a slow burn and a touch of romance, Breath Play will stick with you. It’s warm, dark, tender, and smart. I’d recommend it to anyone looking for a mystery that feels personal.

Pages: 229 | ASIN : B0FH7MLZGK

Buy Now From Amazon