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Chautona Havig

Chautona Havig

Using story to connect YOU to the Master Storyteller

Loved, Hated, Laughed, and Cried, but Why?

by Chautona Havig · 2 Comments

Red Rover, Red Rover, send cool spies and code names right over! I suspect that's what Perry Kirkpatrick's "muse" cried out, and best of all, she listened! via @chautonahavig

I have a secret that I should probably confess. All my life, I’ve had this crazy, inexplicable love of mysteries.

Shocker, right?

Well, yeah. What can I say? It’s a thing. I blame my mother, and no… not because she used a Nancy Drew book to teach me to read—or so I’ve heard. Though I can remember a couple of events that happened when I wasn’t even two yet, I don’t remember learning to read. But, several people have mentioned that I asked and the nearest book was a Nancy Drew on a nearby shelf.

The Jolly Farmyard- little golden booksNow, look. I don’t think I actually read all the book and comprehended it. If I know mom, she just used it to point out words and teach me how to sound them out. The memory of sitting on our couch in Fillmore, my legs sticking straight out in front of me, and reading a “Little Golden Book” tells me this is so. I suspect it was The Jolly Barnyard. My childhood dream was to have that birthday cake that his wife makes him at the end of the book.

From there, I progressed to chapter books—don’t remember all of them, but there were lots. Then I got old enough for multi-chapters, and things changed.

I devoured books. Meg Mysteries, Bobbsey Twins (I didn’t care for them as much), The Boxcar Children, Trixie Belden, Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew. Later, I fell in love with Phyllis Whitney.

The older I got, the more genres I tried. However, mingled with everything was always a healthy mixture of mystery and suspense.

Don’t even get me started on the day I discovered Agatha Christie.

Speaking of Dame Agatha, did you know that I wrote a “What if” story about how she could have come up with Hercule Poirot? You can find that HERE.

Dad bought me a lot of the mysteries. Sometimes for Christmas, others “just because,” and birthdays. I think I must have always gotten a new one near or for my birthday.

Well… Saturday is my birthday. Dad won’t be buying me a book this year… he hasn’t bought me a birthday gift since I was… probably seventeen. But I saw a new series of books a while back that made me think of him. I thought, “You know, if Dad was going to buy me a gift and he saw those, he’d buy ‘em. I know it.”

the accidental cases of Emily Abbott

So, I got them for myself—all of them (and some are on Kindle Unlimited! Squee!). The Accidental Cases of Emily Abbott. Isn’t that the most fabulous series title ever? The covers are awesome, too. Seriously, I’m almost giddy.

What else was there to do but plan a week-long celebration of this new series. The plan was to read them over the last two weeks and then here we go!

Too bad the fault lines running under our ground didn’t catch that memo. With all the craziness that has happened in the last week and a half (including over 10K aftershocks, mind you), I didn’t read a word until last night.

To say I was a bit panicked is um… a huge understatement.

What if I hated the things? Eeep!

Okay, I have to admit that I didn’t think that was possible. First, I’ve chatted with Perry enough to know that she knows her business. And second, c’mon. Accidental detective… in Phoenix? Of course, I’m going to like it. Right?

Loved, Hated, Laughed, and Cried, but Why? Red Rover Review

Note: links are likely affiliate links that provide me with a small commission at no extra expense to you.

Loved, Hated, Laughed, and Cried, but Why?

People always say that reviews are hard to write, so a couple of years ago, I wrote a blog post. “The Quick and Dirty Guide to Easy Book Reviews.” I figured if it was such a hard thing for folks, let’s make it easy.

In that post, I said all you need are four things—five if you want to be amazing. Just write one sentence about each and boom, you’re done. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.

Of course, we all know I rarely do that.

Well, since this week is going to have FIVE reviews about one series (plus another review or two), I decided to just make myself use my own method. So here goes… (but then I get to write more after the last one. Deal?)

Here goes.

I loved the characters, quirkiness, and concept of this fast-paced and utterly delightful book, Red Rover, Red Rover—the first of the Accidental Cases of Emily Abbott.

Though the story was charming and engrossing in every way, I did hate that it ended and way too soon—that might be because it’s a short read of only 167 pages.

I laughed at Emily’s snappy dialogue and Brent’s ever-changing code names; although, what might be even better is that he is already known for it before the book opens, so it’s part of who he is!

I cried—okay, I didn’t cry, but I did sweat bullets for the characters a time or two, and that’s sort of close to crying (said in my best Jane Andrews voice).

Absolutely recommended for anyone who loves a fun “mystery,” a bit of suspense, and a whole lot of spyness going on. Extra bonus if you love snappy dialogue and someone eager to have an adventure rather than someone scared and freaking out every other second.

Stay tuned for news about the next one… tomorrow! 

(Sorry, folks on the newsletter. I hope you’ll hang tight through this week’s deluge of posts!)

Red Rover, Red Rover reviewTitle: Red Rover, Red Rover

Author: Perry Kirkpatrick

Synopsis:  He’s a spy, and he needs her help…

Emily Abbott is working hard as a coffee barista in downtown Phoenix, keeping one eye on her tiny college fund and the other on the mysterious new guy with his profound lack of coffee-making skills. Just when she thinks they might be getting the hang of working together, she’s abruptly thrust into his world of espionage and danger.

Brent Peterson needs her help to keep Red Rover safe and the information he carries out of the wrong hands. But she’s just a barista—what can she do?
Much more than she thinks.

“The Accidental Cases of Emily Abbott” is a series of clean spy-comedies set in Phoenix, Arizona.

1. Red Rover, Red Rover
2. Plan to Fail – (Review HERE) 
3. Bad Things, Small Packages – (Review HERE)
4. Tutor, Nanny, Spit-up, Spy – (Review HERE)
5. A-Spying We Will Go – (Review HERE)
6. Once Upon a Dime – August 26, 2019  (Review coming)

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Comments

  1. Andrea Stoeckel says

    July 15, 2019 at 8:07 am

    Have “listed” the whole series…you have yet to steer me wrong my friend. Hope the world has stoped shaking for you.

    Reply
    • Chautona Havig says

      July 15, 2019 at 2:44 pm

      I read this just after a 3.5… lol

      Reply

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The Because Fiction Podcast

The Because Fiction Podcast
The Because Fiction Podcast

Taking the pulse of Christian fiction

Episode 549: A Chat with Laura DeNooyer
byChautona Havig

I’ve been anxious to read this one since the moment I saw it. I mean, come on! Secrets are always cool but then Frank L. Baum? And The Pilgrim’s Progress? WHAT? Listen in as Laura DeNooyer and I chat about A Hundred Magical Reasons.

note: links may be affiliate links that provide me with a small commission at no extra expense to you.

The L. Frank Baum connection was a draw, but then she brought in The Pilgrim’s Progress, and it took the whole story idea to a new level!

I had a blast chatting with Laura and I’m excited to read this one. It’ll probably be my flight read tomorrow. EEEP!

A Hundred Magical Reasons by Laura DeNooyer

Some fairy tales don’t end when the story is over…they begin when the truth is finally told.

At eighty-eight, Charlotte Rose Gordon has spent a lifetime guarding secrets—burdens that have turned her into the town’s most notorious recluse. But before her story ends, she has one final quest: to set the past right and clear her husband’s name.

Even if it means facing the dragons she’s spent decades avoiding.

Carrie Kruisselbrink is fighting dragons of her own. Fresh out of college and desperate to escape the weight of her parents’ expectations, she risks everything to chase a dream that feels just out of reach.

An unlikely job with the reclusive Mrs. Gordon seems like a temporary solution. Until it becomes something much more.

As Charlotte begins to unravel her past—from a stifling childhood to an extraordinary friendship with author L. Frank Baum—Carrie is drawn into a story filled with imagination, loss, and long-buried truth.

But the deeper Carrie digs, the more she’s forced to confront her own fears, her own choices… and the cost of living someone else’s life.

Because some stories were never meant to stay hidden.

Spanning generations and woven with echoes of a beloved literary legacy, A Hundred Magical Reasons is a moving tale of courage, identity, and the kind of hope that only comes when truth, grace, and imagination collide.

Can two women from different generations find the strength to rewrite their stories—before time runs out?

Step into a story of secrets, second chances, and the courage to believe again.

Learn more on Laura’s WEBSITE and follow on GoodReads and BookBub.

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Episode 549: A Chat with Laura DeNooyer
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