$5 Friday: March 28, 2014
It’s $5 Friday! How well do you know movies based on books?
It’s $5 Friday! How well do you know movies based on books?
There are actually three different mysteries presented in The Sound of Broken Glass, but they all blend together seamlessly. The main one, of course, is the case of a respected barrister who is found naked, bound and apparently strangled in a basement hotel room. Was it murder or an accident? Detective Inspector Gemma James and her team must follow some seemingly unrelated leads to discover what really happened that night. Our second mystery revolves around thirteen year old Andy and his next door neighbor Nadine…
It’s $5 Friday! Today we’re going to test your knowledge of the world’s most valuable books.
We haven’t done $5 Friday in a while, but it’s time to restart our weekly trivia contest! You have until 8p Monday to tell us your answer. Winner will receive a $5 Barnes & Noble gift card.
I’m happy today to showcase CONFESSION, a psychological thriller by Carey Baldwin. I’m excited to start reading it myself and will post my review in April. In the meantime, here is more information about the book and a great giveaway to win your own copy! We even have an excerpt for you to preview 🙂
I’m pleased today to participate in the Partners in Crime book tour for Jon Land’s THE TENTH CIRCLE. Keep reading for an excerpt from THE TENTH CIRCLE as well as instructions to enter to win a SIGNED hardcover edition of the book!
1590: An entire colony of British settlers vanishes from their settlement on Roanoke Island, seemingly into thin air.
1872: The freighter Marie Celeste is found drifting at sea off Gibraltar, its entire crew and passengers gone missing without a trace.
Want a chance to win a $5 gift card to Barnes & Noble? It’s easy! Just click the link and tell us what you’re reading this week!
Today we’re excited to feature a guest post from Ian Sansom, author of The Norfolk Mystery.
You’ll probably want to know some background and stuff, yes? Who I am, where I’m from. That sort of thing?
Really?
Well, it’s just the usual. Birth. School. Work. And … Well. Not yet. Not quite.
Where am I from? By county, and by country: out of London, through Essex, into Gloucestershire, Cambridgeshire, County Antrim, France, Switzerland, back to London, Oxfordshire, back to London, County Down, Warwickshire. So, in summary: England-Ireland-France-Switzerland-England-Ireland-England. Does that help?