Joan is doing a
virtual blurb blitz tour for these publications with Goddess Fish Promotions.
The tour will run from June 17th to July 19th. For this occasion, the author will be giving
away a $50 gift certificate for sunglasses at Sunglasses Shack (US/Canada only) to one randomly drawn commenter. So don’t
forget to visit as often as possible and leave your comments!
In addition to her critically
acclaimed novels, Joan Hall Hovey's articles and short stories have appeared in
such diverse publications as The Toronto Star, Atlantic Advocate, Seek, Home
Life Magazine, Mystery Scene, The New Brunswick Reader, Fredericton Gleaner,
New Freeman and Kings County Record. Her short story Dark Reunion was selected for the anthology Investigating Women, published
by Simon & Pierre.
Ms. Hovey has held workshops and
given talks at various schools and libraries in her area, including New
Brunswick Community College, and taught a course in creative writing at the
University of New Brunswick. For a number of years, she has been a tutor with
Winghill School, a distance education school in Ottawa for aspiring writers.
She is a member of the Writer's
Federation of New Brunswick, past regional Vice-President of Crime Writers of
Canada, Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime.
“…suspense
that puts her right up there with the likes of Sandford and
Patterson..."
Ingrid
Taylor for Small Press Review
"...Alfred
Hitchcock and Stephen King come to mind, but JOAN HALL HOVEY is in a Class by
herself!…"
J.D. Michael Phelps, Author of My Fugitive, David Janssen
"…CANADIAN MISTRESS OF SUSPENSE…The author has a remarkable ability to turn up the heat on the suspense… great characterizations and dialogue…"
James
Anderson, author of DeadlineJ.D. Michael Phelps, Author of My Fugitive, David Janssen
"…CANADIAN MISTRESS OF SUSPENSE…The author has a remarkable ability to turn up the heat on the suspense… great characterizations and dialogue…"
...a
gripping style that wrings emotions from everyday settings. Oh and by the way
...is your door locked?"
Linda
Hersey - Fredericton Gleaner
"...will
keep readers holding their breath until the very end..."
nthelibraryreview,
Melissa Parcel"This one is a chiller - you won't be able to put it down - guaranteed!"
Rendezvous Magazine
"If you are looking for the suspense thriller of the year-look no further…you will find it in Nowhere To Hide..."
Jewel Dartt Midnight Scribe Reviews
But I bet you’re looking forward to hearing more
about the books and read some excerpts! So here they are:
Blurb
for Nowhere To Hide
SHE DARED TO
CHALLENGE A MERCILESS KILLER
Raised in an
atmosphere of violence and unpredictability, Ellen and Gail Morgan have banded
together, survivors of a booze-fertilized battleground, forming a fierce united
front against an often cold and uncaring world. When their parents are killed
in a car crash, Ellen becomes the mother figure for Gail.
When fifteen
years later Gail is brutally raped and murdered in her shabby New York basement
apartment, practically on the eve of her big breakthrough as a singer, Ellen is
inconsolable. Rage at her younger sister's murder has nearly consumed her. So
when her work as a psychologist wins her an appearance on the evening news,
Ellen seizes the moment. Staring straight into the camera, she challenges the
killer to come out of hiding: "Why don't you come after me? I'll be
waiting for you."
Phone calls
flood the station, but all leads go nowhere. The police investigation seems
doomed to failure. Then it happens: a note, written in red ink, slipped under
the windshield wipers of her car, 'YOU'RE IT.' Ellen has stirred the monster in
his lair … and the hunter has become the hunted!
Blurb for Defective
Therapist Melanie Snow is driving to her office when her Honda is struck by a dark-colored van and sent spinning into a ditch, where it catches fire. The driver never stops. A passerby pulls Melanie from the car just seconds before it explodes.
Waking from the coma nine days later, she is devastated to find she is blind.
As Melanie struggles to cope with her new reality, life as a blind woman, her fragile state of mind is further threatened by a madman who is stalking and strangling disabled women. The first two victims were mentally challenged and Detective Matt O’Leary, who carries a torch for Melanie, (even though Melanie is engaged to someone else) tells himself she is not the killer’s targeted prey. But then a woman who lost a leg to cancer is murdered, and another physically disabled woman is stalked. Even with a whole town in terror, Melanie refuses to live her life in fear and reopens her practice in the basement of her home. She has a living to earn.
And Detective Matt O’Leary must find a way to keep Melanie safe until the monster is caught. But how? Her door is now open to the public and the killer can just walk through anytime he chooses.
And he does.
Exerpt from Defective
It was mid-afternoon, overcast, and The
East End Mall in Kingsdale was crowded with shoppers. The Eraser, as he liked
to think of himself, sat at one of the molded plastic tables by himself,
nursing a Pepsi and eating fries from a small cardboard plate, and people
watching. It was one of his favorite things to do, especially in nice weather
when the girls wore shorts or tight jeans, some with their tanned midriffs
bare, skimpy tops that showed off their boobs and skinny jeans that accentuated
their tight little butts. Why not? He was a normal guy, he told himself. He avoided looking at the ones with flab
hanging over their waistbands. He had
girlfriend once or twice, but it didn't last. The last one said he was weird
and just stopped returning his calls. Well, to hell with her. His eye strayed momentarily to the big screen monitor advertising Nike sneakers. Then it changed to a rent-a-car commercial and on to something else, but he'd already looked away. Idly dipping a French fry in the small pool of ketchup on his plate, he popped it in his mouth and went back to girl-watching. They did little for him today. His hand moved to cover the scratch that the retard left on his cheek, though it was fading now. That Polysporin ointment was good stuff.
Music
played over the sound system, competing with the jabbering of shoppers, nothing
he recognized. Probably supposed to keep people shopping, buying junk they
didn't need. His gaze narrowed ever so
slightly as a young girl with a silver ring in her lower lip and wearing black
eyeliner got up from a table not far from him and limped heavily to the waste
bin and dumped in the remainder of her meal, a half-eaten hamburger, fries. She
sat the tray on top of the stack. Behind her, someone called out, "Hey,
Lana," and the girl turned in his direction and took a step forward so he
could see her full-length; she looked past his shoulder and waved. He felt his
heartbeat rev up, his throat go dry.
She had short dark hair, and was wearing a khaki skirt and cream-colored blouse. Her dimpled smile, the gleam of white, even teeth barely registered on him. He didn't even glance behind him at the woman who had called out to her. He had no interest. As he had no genuine interest in the woman who returned the wave, really.
No. It was her foot in its big brown shoe that drew and held his attention. Not brown exactly, but like tea when you put milk in it. Taupe. Yes, that was what his mother called that color. It was all he could see when he looked at her: that big clunking shoe. So ugly it offended him, as deformities of any kind offended him. Even horrified him. A chill had crept down his back. He had to work extra hard to keep the disgust and pity from his face. She was a mistake. A blight, a tragic spawn. She must be erased. Like when you're a kid and you draw a picture of something and it doesn't come out right. You just erase it. Or rip out the page, and start again.
He
was the eraser of mistakes. The good Lord had chosen him to do this work. Not
that he was blaming God. No, there was no blame to be handed out here. Some
small voice told him his reasoning was flawed, that that wasn't why they had to
die. But he wasn't listening. As people were born of sin, women carried the
faulty limbs, twisted features and minds within them. Carriers. As his mother
had been a carrier, her womb spewing forth a defective, barely human—thing. Not
the defective's fault either. But since the flaw couldn't be repaired, the
whole issue had to be erased. The burden lifted. The Eraser held that kind of
power; he could end suffering, change lives for the better. He remembered well
the very moment he had changed his own life
but no time for that now. She was heading for the exit doors. He rose
casually from his chair, tossing the remainder of his own fries and drink into
the trash, dropped his tray on top of hers, and followed. He was really
following the 'shoe'. His eyes were riveted on the shoe. It filled his vision,
his consciousness. That big, ugly shoe that rose and fell, rose and fell, her
left hip dipping in sync, the shoe dragging it downward, seeming an entity in
itself. When she stepped through the automatic doors into the grey, drizzly day,
he was right behind her. Close enough to touch her. He buried his hands deep in
his pockets to stifle the urge.
The
bus pulled up with a hiss of air brakes and a belch of exhaust, and she hitched
herself up onto the step. He followed, paid his fare. His bike was chained and
locked in the parking lot; it would be fine. She took a side seat near the
driver, and he sat himself two seats behind her and pretended to look out the
window.
In
the grayness of the day, his reflection in the glass was faint, but almost at
once he could see his reflection begin to morph into that of another, as she
had once been. A raindrop ran down the window and caught one corner of her
mouth like the drool he remembered, couldn't forget, and he could not tear his
eyes away. The small voice in his head spoke to him, sending the familiar chill
through him, as if his heart had just received an infusion of ice water. The
voice could form words now, where once it was capable only of mindless
gibberish. "You know it's me in there, don't you. I'm watching you. I've
come back. I'll always come back. I'll never leave you."
"No!
No!"
Fearing
he had cried out, he jerked his head around in sudden panic, but no one on the
bus was looking at him. One man was reading a newspaper. A woman was talking
and smiling at her little boy. Relief swept through him, but he was trembling
just the same. A Chinese man seated across from him turned the page in his
paperback, paying him no mind.
The
girl had put earphones in her ears and her lips were moving to a song only she
could hear. Her legs were crossed, the shoe swinging in time, mocking him.
Some useful links:
Joan’s website: www.joanhallhovey.com
Defective
on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Defective-A-Novella-ebook/dp/B00CO81XAW/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1367880554&sr=1-1&keywords=Defective
Nowhere to
Hide on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Nowhere-to-Hide-ebook/dp/B0045Y2F4G/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1335885750&sr=1-1
Thank you for hosting
ReplyDeleteHi Ms. Hovey. You're a new-to-me author. Is Nowhere to Hide being re-released? It won an Eppie in 1992? Is Defective a new title? The title (Defective) is intriguing and the blurb is frightening, with the excerpt being pretty disturbing. Love it!
ReplyDeletecatherinelee100 at gmail dot com
Looks like a great book!
ReplyDeleteVery spooky covers.
ReplyDeleteI agree, the covers are very eerie. But I like a good scare so it doesn't chase me away!
ReplyDeleteandralynn7 AT gmail DOT com
I loved reading Nowhere to Hide, I look forward to reading Defective.
ReplyDelete