Showing posts with label Lone Star Book Blog Tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lone Star Book Blog Tours. Show all posts

30 July 2020

*Review & Giveaway!* LANDING IN MY PRESENT by Mary Walker Clark

LANDING IN MY PRESENT
by
Mary Clark 

  Biography / Aviation / Historical / WWII
Publisher: Hellgate Press 
Date of Publication: June 15, 2020
Number of Pages: 218

Scroll down for the giveaway!


Mary Walker Clark barely knew her father. When he died, he left not only the obvious void every teen would experience, but took with him scores of Indiana Jones-style tales about flying the Hump, a treacherous series of US missions that transported supplies over the Himalayas to China during World War II. 

It would take a chance interview with a pilot who had flown with her father in the war to launch a series of extraordinary journeysinto a shrouded past and halfway around the globe to India and Chinafor Clark to finally come to know the father whose absence had haunted her for decades. 

Landing in My Present chronicles the adventures of a daughter who chose to pry open a painful past while enlarging her view of an adventurous father long thought lost.





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When Kristine the Book Siren posted the sign-up for LANDING IN MY PRESENT by Mary Clark in our blogger group, I knew I had to jump at the chance to read and review this book.

You see, I’ve got a lot in common with this author.  No, we do not know each other, and, no, we are not even in the same generation (technically-kinda-sorta), but we do have a great deal in common.
I tell y’all all about it.

But first things first. Yeah, I might give one or two spoilers.

DON’T GET USED TO IT, THO, YO!

What immediately struck me about Clark’s story was her now almost desperate need to know her father. Not that she didn’t know him, but he’d died due to an accident at work when the author was at the pivotal age of 16. You know…those angsty years when we are more self-centered and interested in our friends and swooning over love interests.

That is the point at which my heart shattered. In fact, I will confess that I had to read this book in short segments, because of all the feels.

You see, I was a true Daddy’s Girl, the baby of the family, and I adored my Daddy like he hung the moon. Speaking of the moon … My Daddy, like Clark’s own father, was a work-a-holic, like most men in The Greatest Generation. So most of the time when my Daddy was just getting home from work, it was at the end of the graveyard shift, when the world was dark and quiet. When the only things awake were night creatures and the jewels and gems strewn across the sky, scattered around the moon.

He’d always awake me when he’d get in, still in his work clothes, and whisper, “Belle Buttons, wanna take a walk with Daddy?” I’d scramble out of bed, slip on shoes (still in my PJs), and Daddy and I would walk the woods and pasture without a flashlight, using only moon and starlight to guide our steps. He taught me the magic of the night. He’d stop and whisper, “Let’s listen to the nightlife for a while.” And we’d stand, hand-in-hand, listening to the creatures of the night singing their songs to the twinkling sky above.

I learned the constellations by name, Orion is still my favorite, the Little Dipper coming in second, and he taught me to appreciate how the silvery moonlight dripped from the edges of the tree leaves against the canvas of the velvety night sky.

Daddy was magic. At that young age, and even now at my not so young age, he was, and will always be, a giant in my eyes. Though he was relatively small in stature. Indeed, it had been such a shocking blow when he succumbed to a hospital infection at the young age of 81 that it truly nearly crushed me.

Seventeen years later, I still speak to him every day.

And I listen to the nightlife as it sings to the night sky every night.

Thank you, God, that I had my Daddy until I was 35 years old and that he'd lived long enough to teach that same magic to my daughter.

My heart ached for Clark as I read how she’d not had the time to truly know her father. But I was immediately swept up in intriguing the story of how she’d pieced together the giant mystery of her father’s past life in the military.

Clark’s search for the story of her father’s untold part in the Army Air Corp during WWII is so tangible that I felt as if I were right there with her, helping her put the evidence together.  Her style of toggling betwixt the present and her childhood pulls the reader deeper into the story until the reader feels personally invested in finding out the truth and getting to know her father.

Well, it hit me deeply in my heart, because, as I stated earlier. Clark and I have a lot in common, though we are (kinda-sorta) not in the same generation. You see, my Daddy had also been in the Army Air Corp during WWII doing armed reconnaissance in the South Pacific, stationed on New Guinea. My uncle, Daddy’s older brother, coincidentally served in Africa (where Clark discovers her father had also served) and later on the beaches of Normandy.

Daddy was also a photographer for the Army Air Corps, and we have many of his original photographs from the war. Many of the ones you see in books of the South Pacific were taken by him and his group.

Is Clark’s father in some of those photos? I have to wonder, I wish I knew!

This is my Daddy before the war. He'd enlisted at the age of 17, before Pearl Harbor.

Isn’t it odd that I, a GenXer has so much in common with a Baby Boomer? Actually, I’m kinda in a gen all my own, since Daddy was 21 years older than my mother. *Le Gasp*!  (Yes, it was both of their first and only marriage.) Indeed, I have so much in common with Clark that I wasn't even surprised to discover that she had majored in History just like moi!

But I, once again, digress…

Clark has taken me on a long drive into her past, and in doing so has turned my gaze backwards, too. The difference betwixt mine and Clarks’ stories is that Daddy told us all about the war. It was ingrained in us. In fact, I frequently did school reports about Daddy’s war service and took his pictures to school for presentations. It truly struck me in my heart that Clark had to really work to search for clues about her father’s personality, military service, and what he’d been like in his younger years.

Y’all, I can see this book being turned into a Netflix original movie. There are so many bits and pieces of the puzzle that Clark unearths, and along that way, she gets to know her father who’d died all those years ago. I'm pretty sure she may have used a bit of magic of her own!

And that’s why I grant

LANDING IN MY PRESENT
By
Mary Clark
5 Fabulous Flying Brooms!


Mary Walker Clark is a retired attorney turned travel writer who loves taking readers with her to worldwide destinations. She has been traveling independently and internationally for over fifty years. Her essays may be found in the Paris News, at her blog, "Mary Clark, Traveler," and her podcasts at KETR 88.9, an NPR affiliate. Clark is an award-winning member of the North American Travel Journalists Association and a contributor to Still Me, … After All These Years, 24 Writers Reflect on Aging. 
In 2016, Clark traveled to India and China to follow her father's WWII footsteps when he was a Hump pilot flying over the Himalayas. Her journey to connect with him fifty years after his death is told in her book, Landing in My Present
Clark is a fifth generation Texan living in Paris, Texas.
Website ║ Facebook  Blog
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THREE WINNERS 
FIRST WINNER: $25 Amazon card  SECOND WINNER: Signed copy of Landing in My Present THIRD WINNER: $15 Amazon card.
 July 21-July 31, 2020
CLICK TO VISIT THE LONE STAR LITERARY LIFE TOUR PAGE FOR DIRECT LINKS TO EACH POST ON THIS TOUR, UPDATED DAILY.  Or, visit the blogs directly:

7/21/20
BONUS Post
7/21/20
Review
7/22/20
Review
7/22/20
Review
7/23/20
Review
7/24/20
Review
7/24/20
Review
7/25/20
Review
7/26/20
Review
7/27/20
Review
7/27/20
Review
7/28/20
BONUS Post
7/28/20
Review
7/29/20
Review
7/29/20
Review
7/30/20
Review
7/30/20
Review


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03 July 2020

*READ MY REVIEW & ENTER TO WIN!* GATES OF MARS by McFall & Hays


GATES OF MARS
The Halo Trilogy #1
by
CLARK HAYS AND KATHLEEN McFALL

Genre: Science Fiction / Detective (hard-boiled) 
Publisher:  Pumpjack Press on Facebook
Date of Publication: June 16, 2020
Number of Pages: 336 

  Scroll down for the giveaway!



IN THE AGE OF SURVEILLANCE, HOW CAN A PERSON GO MISSING? 


The year is 2187. Crucial Larsen, a veteran of the brutal Consolidation Wars, is working as a labor cop on Earth. The planet is a toxic dump and billions of people are miserable, but so what? It’s none of his business. He’s finally living a good life, or good enough. But then Essential, his beloved kid sister, disappears on Mars. When Halo—the all-powerful artificial-intelligence overseeing Earth and Mars on behalf of the ruling Five Families—can’t (or won’t) locate his sister, Crucial races up-universe to find her. 

In the Choke, the frigid, airless expanse outside the luxury domes, Crucial uncovers a deadly secret from Essential’s past that threatens to shatter his apathetic existence … and both planets. Blending science fiction with the classic, hard-boiled detective story, Gates of Mars is a page-turning, futuristic thrill-ride featuring a gritty, irreverent anti-hero, Crucial Larsen. The first book of the Halo Trilogy, Gates of Mars is the eighth novel by award-winning authors, Clark Hays and Kathleen McFall.

PRAISE FOR GATES OF MARS: 

"An indelible introduction to an interplanetary saga and its sublime characters." 
Kirkus Reviews

"The authors' imaginations again run wild, this time a science fiction/detective series looking at what our lives may hold in the not too distant future if everything that can go wrong does go wrong. And they've done it with their trademark undercurrent of humor that lifts an otherwise dreary future into something resembling—do I dare say?—hope. Their best work to date. And the giraffes? You'll have to read Gates of Mars to find out. I'm already wishing they could write faster." —Renee Struthers, East Oregonian newspaper 

"With twists and turns true to some of the best noir detective pieces—but with an other-world setting and futuristic society—along with psychological insights and connections, Gates of Mars is a riveting, unexpected story, filled with intrigue and change. Sci-fi and detective story readers alike with find Gates of Mars one of a kind, worthy of avid pursuit." —Midwest Book Review

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Howdy, y’all!  I hope all’s well with ya’ll.  Yesterday, the Govnah of the Great Republic of Texas released an Executive Order that all Texans must wear “face coverings” at all times in public.  (Rest assured that my rebellious self has been wearing a mask since day one. So calm down!)  While I know this is probably wise in the scheme of things, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, it’s a weird thing to be thrust upon the residents of The Lone Star State. We’re an independent, rebellious lot … well those of us who have true roots here are.  Transplants from other states … not so much.  So there’s lots of tension in the air.

And that’s one of the things that connected me to some of the themes in GATES OF MARS by Kathleen McFall & Clark Hays.

I know … I know … y’all are shocked that I’m not bogging y’all down with a bunch of my usual rambling.  Well, I’m just too dadblasted excited to give y’all a run-down on some sci-fi deliciousness.  So wipe that shocked look of y’all’s faces, and listen up!

It’s no surprise, surely by now, that I lurve me some sci-fi.  I mean … it’s what I write!  So when the confounded book siren … y’all know of whom I speak … posted up the call for reviewers in the blogger group, well, I signed up lickety split for this here book.




And I’m glad I did.

The authors of this book must have some sort of pre-knowledge, or something, because there’s a feel to this book that’s timely for our current events. Are they time travelers or fortune telling writerly folks with a magic deck of sci fi Tarot cards? I know not.
All I know is, they are darn good writers.

This story begins at 10:20 A.M. on August 31, in the Year of Our Lord 2187. (I have a sneaky hunch that McFall & Hays hopped into a time machine and visited this very date. Just sayin’)



Well, I lurve me some futuristic, sci fi, time traveling, post-apocalyptic stories in which AI is reigning supreme, so tumbled right on down the rabbit hole and landed smack dab into the middle of an inquest in which an all-knowing AI system robot thingie is interviewing the main character, a man named Crucial Larsen.

That name spoke volumes to me. It whispered to me that this dude was born to do something important … something, well, crucial.  And the hook dug right on into my jib and reeled me in.



NOPE!  I ain’t telling y’all any more spoilers or hints.  Y’all keep on trying to drag ‘em outa me.  You’re gonna have to score a copy of this book to find out all the deets y’all’s-selves.
However, there are some things I will tell y’all about GATES OF MARS.  *Le Gasp*

The feeling of this story is engrossing.  To me, it’s Terminator (think Skynet) + Blade Runner + AI + Altered Carbon + Matrix + The 5th Element + Dune (the books, not that wacko movie) + some others I’m too lazy to name.  

The world building in GATES OF MARS is immediate and tangible.  I was actually there while reading this book and suffered a bit of book hang-over when I finally put it down.  The shift from the story to reality was a mind trick. I think the authors may have done that on purpose, yo!

In fact, I was truly impressed with the crisp, intelligent prose in this book.  Some hard sci fi books are flat out boring and bog the reader down in too many unnecessary deets as an attempted mode to trick the reader into thinking the writer knows what he/she is talking about.  But that’s not a necessity when writing fiction.  And it’s also why I choose to write soft sci fi, myself, because who wants to purposely read something that’s going to bore them out of their minds?  (Now y’all might be surprised to hear me ask that question, seeing as how I’m working toward a PhD in History.  Hush up!  History is fascinating I tells ya!)




This book is the first installment in The Halo Trilogy, and I cannot wait to get my grabby hands on the next two books!  (If you wanna know what “Halo” is, well, you’re just gonna have to read the book! I promise, you’ll love it!)

McFall and Hays successfully spun science fiction elements into their prose in such a way that the reader experiences them instead of just reading about them.  That’s what makes GATES OF MARS deliciously engrossing.

And that’s why I’m granting
GATES OF MARS
By
Kathleen McFall + Clark Hays
5 Trillingly Sci Fi Brooms




Clark and Kathleen wrote their first book together in 1999 as a test for marriage. They passed. Gates of Mars is their eighth co-authored book.
Connect with Kathleen
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FOR DIRECT LINKS TO EACH POST ON THIS TOUR, UPDATED DAILY. 


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6/29/20
Excerpt
6/29/20
Review
6/29/20
BONUS Post
6/30/20
Review
6/30/20
Review
7/1/20
Author Interview
7/1/20
Review
7/2/20
Excerpt
7/2/20
Review
7/3/20
Review
7/3/20
Review


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