Ginny Baird’s ‘Last Bride Standing’ May Be Her Best Book Yet [COVER REVEAL]

Pink rose with pearls
Ginny Baird has one more wedding up her sleeve. (Photo courtesy Canva)

I still remember our wedding day like it was yesterday. There I was, standing in front of our congregation, watching Heather walk toward me in the stunning wedding dress her grandma made for her. She took my breath away and I’ve been a sucker for a wedding ever since. Apparently, author Ginny Baird feels the same way, because her forthcoming third installment in her Majestic, Maine series introduces us to one more bride with plenty of “wow factor!”

Continue reading “Ginny Baird’s ‘Last Bride Standing’ May Be Her Best Book Yet [COVER REVEAL]”

Romance, Magic, and Enlightenment Await You at ‘The Paris Wedding’ [REVIEW]

Paris
Is Paris ever a bad idea, even when it is to go see your first love marry someone you’ve never met? (Photo by George Estreich, Flickr)

Shortly after receiving a devastating blow that shakes her carefully constructed world, a young woman receives an unexpected invitation to Paris. Even as she tries to sort through a bevy of emotions, her family encourages her to make the journey. But is she up for watching her first love get married? Find out in Charlotte Nash’s gorgeous new novel, The Paris Wedding.  Continue reading “Romance, Magic, and Enlightenment Await You at ‘The Paris Wedding’ [REVIEW]”

Learn to Handle ‘Husbands and Other Sharp Objects’ with Courage and Humor [REVIEW]

Woman laughing
Laughter helps Marcy Hammer navigate everything from divorce and new love to sticky-fingered in-laws in Marilyn Simon Rothstein’s Husbands and Other Sharp Objects. (Photo courtesy Pexels)

Family can drive a woman crazy if she doesn’t have good humor and great friends to support her through each new episode of life’s little dramas. Thankfully, the heroine of Marilyn Simon Rothstein’s Husbands and Other Sharp Objects, Marcy Hammer, has no shortage of either.  Continue reading “Learn to Handle ‘Husbands and Other Sharp Objects’ with Courage and Humor [REVIEW]”