My VIV Moment in the catacombs in Rome is up on VIV magazine! Check it out: http://vivmag.com/viv-extras/viv-moments/jina-bacarr/
I talk about how this adventure inspired my character, Breezy Malone, in Spies, Lies & Naked Thighs.
Ciao, ciao,
Jina
Lusinda Havershaw has a secret - she has inherited the ability to become invisible in the moonlight. Unfortunately, this means that she cannot take part in the normal enjoyments of a young woman of the ton. She cannot attend the balls and house parties hosted by influential people for fear that her secret will be discovered.
This is the third installment in Willig's spy series and it is just as entertaining as the first two if a bit darker and more serious. Kate Reading reads this one as she did the others and does a great job. Eloise Kelly is once again the anchor in the present day while she searches for more information for her thesis and hopes for a romance of her own with Colin Selwick.
The fun continues in this follow-up book to The Secret History of the Pink Carnation. We find the Purple Gentian and his wife have retired to the English countryside and are running a school for spies. This book belongs to Henrietta (Hen) Selwick (sister of the Purple Gentian) and Miles Dorrington (best friend of the Purple Gentian and employee of the war office.)
Who would ever confuse schoolteacher Holly Smith with being an international spy?
This was my favorite of the Flower books so far. Mary’s sister married her beau in the last book. Now Mary has to deal with either living off of their charity or finding a husband. Vaughn offers her an opportunity, he will give her money to help him find the Black Tulip. The two work t
My VIV Moment in the catacombs in Rome is up on VIV magazine! Check it out: http://vivmag.com/viv-extras/viv-moments/jina-bacarr/
I talk about how this adventure inspired my character, Breezy Malone, in Spies, Lies & Naked Thighs.
Ciao, ciao,
Jina
What can you say about a book whose heroine’s code name is 36DD? Hmmm…XD
From the back cover:
A Christmas anthology of novellas by three contemporary authors. The only one I really liked was the one by Jennifer Crusie (whom I adore), and even it was not up to her usual good work.
From the back cover:
“Red-hot kisses. Secret wishes. A gift too scandalous to share…
Celeste Bradley, The Spy, third in the "Liar's Club" series. It features a spy with angst (my favorite kind) and the daughter of a codebreaker who has disguised herself as a man (props to Bradley for having several people spot her deception).