Tag Archives: Halloween reads

FOR THE HAUNTING SEASON:

Special price reduction on Timeless Tulips, Dark Diamonds- A Ghost Story (.99 ebook)!!

Yes, it’s a ghost story but there’s plenty of history behind that story. I have personal connections to the area of NY state where Annika and Lydia’s tale plays out. And then there are the European connections and research that went into the book.

Several years ago, I got caught up in the story of the tulip. Way back in 1554, an ambassador to Turkey sent some bulbs and seeds back home. These found their way into Vienna and then into the Low Counties. It took the careful work of Carolus Clusius (a botanist at the University of Leiden) to cultivate and catalog those bulbs that would tolerate the local conditions and soon tulips were popular. Newly independent Holland had a unique flower, and it soon became a luxury item. (Slideshow below shows me at the Hortus Bontanicus in Leiden where Clusius once worked his magic.)

More and more fantastic species were developed. The most sought-after tulips actually suffered from a virus that broke the colors into streaks. Eventually, a whole speculative trade came into existence in which people who bought the bulbs never saw them and never possessed them. Tulip fever reached its height in the winter of 1636 when a single bulb might be traded as many as ten times in a day. Then abruptly in February, there came a day when traders just stayed home. The bubble had burst. Fortunes had been made and lost.

Special price reduction on Timeless Tulips, Dark Diamonds- A Ghost Story (.99 ebook)!!

In this chilling ghost story, an act from the distant past is reawakened and afflicts the life of a modern teenage girl.

When Lydia travels to Amsterdam with her parents, bizarre things start to happen. Curtains flutter and unexplained shadows move unnerving her. With Dad interviewing for a job, Lydia is content to dismiss the oddities blaming them on jet lag and her migraine disease. But upon returning home to New York, the experiences intensify.

This is the haunting tale of two girls separated by four hundred years. Lydia is confused and in danger because the ghost of a little Dutch girl, Annika, wants revenge. When Lydia’s life is threatened, she is forced to solve a centuries’ old mystery to uncover the truth about Annika, her story, and how their past and present connect them. Can Lydia learn the truth in time to save herself and help Annika?

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Using AI for Books:

I’ve been experimenting with several free, AI image generators over the last month or so. I know there are some powerful applications out there if you pay for them and are good at technology. Alas, not me. But I did have some success with Microsoft’s Designer’s Image Creator. Take a look at the images in the video below. Typing in ever more specific details over a period of time did result in usable images. ArtGuru also produced good images for fantasy but was awful for historical themes. Others to try: Runway, Craiyon, Adobe Firefly, Dream Studio, Night Cafe, DeepAI. All in the future, when I get the time. What works for you?

When fourteen-year-old Lydia travels to Amsterdam with her parents, the last thing she expects is the weird incidents that plague her stay. Curtains flutter mysteriously, and unexplained shadows move through the kitchen unnerving her. But Lydia is more concerned with the potential move to upstate New York. She dismisses the odd occurrences blaming them on jet lag and the various symptoms of her migraine disease.

When Lydia’s father lands a new job and the family moves to an area first settled by the Dutch, the bizarre happenings continue. Suffering from migraines has never been easy, but now Lydia has to contend with what she may have inadvertently brought home with her.

BUY E- book here: https://bit.ly/4elCeZE

WHAT READERS ARE SAYING:

5-Star Rating Amazon:

“Timeless Tulips Dark Diamonds is a ghost story for a family read. The story narrates the relationship between two young girls who meet in a place where eternity is now; Annika is living in the seventeenth century and Lydia in the twenty-first. They are connected by place as Lydia unknowingly traces Annika’s passage from Europe to America, discovering at the end of her journey the house in which Annika was murdered.

The book is crammed with real information that’s guaranteed to stimulate the imagination. The writer provides a wealth of background in art, American history and the inside story of the great Tulip crash of 1637. It’s exactly the kind of book I used to read to my children back when they were still children and I recommend it to all parents or caregivers for reading to the children in their care.”

SIGNED COPIES AVAILABLE: Contact himalayaspencerellis@yahoo.com for more info!

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THE HOSTESS WITH THE GHOSTESS

By EJ Cooperman

(Book 9 of the Haunted Guesthouse Series)

I read this book a while ago because I liked the premise. As a writer I was also interested in how to pull off a book where a ghost helps solve a crime. How can a ghost effectively take an active role in a plot?

The basic idea of the series is that Alison Kerby has opened a guesthouse and actively markets the place as haunted. Visitors flock to have the experience of ghostly phenomena which her resident ghosts help provide since they are all friendly types. Alison herself can see, hear, and interact with all these beings but her guests witness only the results of their daily shows.

In this particular installment, a new ghost arrives who happens to be the brother of one of her ghostly residents. Richard is disoriented having been recently killed while trying to solve a murder case in which he was representing the state’s number one suspect. Alison is drawn into the case and with help from the other side, she attempts to solve the murder.

This is a bestselling series so there is no doubt some people love it. I found nothing spectacular here. None of the characters stood out in any way. There is a kind of humor in the writing that over explains things and leaves nothing to the reader’s imagination. The tone is lighthearted and spoofy. There’s nothing really creepy here even though violent murder is the subject of the farce. I also had the feeling that the author is far older than the Alison character she is trying to portray. This happens a lot. For some reason, mainstream literature insists on having characters in their 40s, even though they read more like they are in their late 60s or 70s. This isn’t a horrible book, it’s just a very predictable cozy mystery like so many others.   

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PRE-ORDER: Down the Treacle Well (releasing Nov. 7, 2023):

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