|
|
Meet Roxanne, who is good
with clues, and Bruce, who is usually clueless. Mix them together, and you have the
silliest supernatural sleuths Ive seen in a long, long time. Come along for the ride
will Bruce finally appreciate Roxannes good qualities? Will Roxanne keep
Bruce from losing more body parts? Yup its that kind of world. You gotta grin
or slap them senseless, and I vote for the grins!
-- Katharine Eliska Kimbriel, author of Wings of Morning It's
not to so much that Love is Blind in Rie Sheridan's delightful collection, Tales from the Home for Wayward Spirits and Bar-B-Que
Grill; it's more of a case of Love, in the person of Roxanne Rogers, knowing exactly
what she's getting into and going anyway. Where
her womanizing, none-too-bright heartthrob Bruce Vincent stumbles, Roxanne follows, which
is a good thing for Bruce as they battle ghosts, werewolves, zombies and a libidinous
medium. Great fun all the way through, the
perfect kick-back- and-laugh collection. Lee Martindale, author of Folly of Assumption, To Stand as Witness, and Hell Hath No Fury |