Tag Archive | Rachels Random Resources

Her Last Summer by Emily Freud

Cover Reveal

Her Last Summer

A twenty-year-old cold case unearths dark secrets in the scorching-hot destination thriller from Emily Freud.

Twenty years ago, Mari vanished while backpacking through Thailand with her boyfriend, Luke. He was accused of murder, but has always insisted he’s innocent. Besides, her body was never found.

Now, he’s finally ready to talk. And filmmaker Cassidy Chambers wants to be the one to uncover what really happened, back then, in the dark of the jungle.

But as she delves deeper into the past, Cassidy begins to fear what lies ahead, and the secrets buried along the way.

Publication Date: 11th April 2024

Pre-order Link – https://amzn.eu/d/jkWr0DQ

Continue reading

A Cranberry For Christmas by Charlie Dean

Publication Promo Blitz

A Cranberry for Christmas

Alisha Jones, or Princess Christmas as she is affectionately known, is joint heir to her Grandpa Frost’s family fortune, but being third behind an older sister and brother means she has to work three times as hard to prove herself.

Marsha Underwood, her Grandpa’s PA and ever-present thorn in her side, is determined to undermine her at every turn and Alisha finds herself powerless to prevent this.

An encounter with a fortune teller at the Frost Christmas Ball leads to a bewildering dream of the future; and the added complication of Tom Walker, the son of Frost’s new business partner leads to a tumultuous year.

Continue reading

Finding Family At The Cornish Cove by Kim Nash

Acts Of Kindness

Finding Family At The Cornish Cove by Kim Nash is a beautiful contemporary novel that I thoroughly enjoyed. It is the second book in the Cornish Cove series but can be read as a stand-alone.

This is a book about love, friendship and family. We see there are many types of family, just as there are many types of love – sibling, new love, old love, family love. Each is similar but different requiring different responses.

Likewise, families come in all different shapes and sizes. Family is those who love us. When we find family, we find home.

We see the deep grief that the loss of a mother brings. “There was a time… that I never thought I’d laugh again… I just existed in a little bubble of sadness.” We need to move beyond our grief and learn to live again. We fear losing sight of our loved one but they live on in our heart.

There is also the damage created by an absentee wife and mother. A family learned to live without her but there were emotional consequences as we see a teen learning to find her way.

We witness a character trying to live her mother’s dream, for fear of losing a memory but “this is where your memories are. In your heart and in your mind.” Her mother’s dream is enlarged when the lead character owns her own dream.

Continue reading

Voices Of Cancer by Lynda Wolters

Inspiring & Very Wise

Voices Of Cancer by Lynda Wolters is a powerful, inspiring and very wise book. It is part memoir as the author writes of her own cancer journey and what she has learned along the way. She includes wisdom from the fellow cancer patients that she meets.

This book spoke to my heart as my husband embarked on his cancer journey in 2022. Much of what Lynda Wolters wrote resonated with me. I recognized myself in the author’s husband. As a spouse you feel totally helpless. This is not something you can fix or even do anything about. You are a passenger on the journey that neither of us signed up for. As Lynda Wolters says “It’s not your job to fix me.”

We learn that we all go through a process of grief when we hear the word ‘cancer.’ “Denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance… It is a process.” I spent a long time at the denial stage, believing (wrongly) that if I didn’t name it, it wasn’t happening.

Lynda Wolters tells us “No cancer is easy.” I got particularly upset when my brother dismissed my husband’s cancer as the one that everyone got and it was a good cancer to have as he knew many people who’d had it (prostate cancer). It was neither ‘good’ nor ‘easy’. The author says that we do not need people around us who give empty, positive platitudes. We need people around us who will be ‘real’ with us, who will walk beside us and who will offer support whatever that looks like to us. Everyone is unique.

The author says “everything changes with cancer” and “cancer can change your body… but it can’t have your spirit.” Taking possession of our spirit gives a semblance of control. Life does and will change. It’s inevitable. It can even change for the better. We drew even closer together as we realized that life is fragile.

There are those who step up and offer “little acts of kindness and love… are huge and perhaps lifesaving.” We meet human angels and fur angels along the way. You cannot put a price on the random acts of kindness.

Continue reading