Category Archives: Book Tour

Scattershot Virtual Book Tour

Scattershot banner

Scattershot cover

My Journey from the Projects to Paris to Rodeo Drive

Memoir

Date to Published: September 10, 2024

Publisher: Acorn Publishing

 

 

Larry Chrysler’s life takes a dramatic turn when a chance encounter
with a mysterious stranger disrupts his day. From that moment, the son of a
bipolar mom and a homophobic dad decides he must follow his heart and forge
his own path to success if he is to achieve his fashion design dreams. Armed
with only a high school diploma and “angels on his shoulders,”
Larry befriends wayward princesses, dresses A-list actors and rock music
royalty, and embarks on jet-setting adventures his younger self hardly could
have imagined.

Scattershot: My Journey from the Projects to Paris to Rodeo Drive tells the
unforgettable story of a Jewish gay boy who leaves the oppressiveness of the
Minneapolis projects to pursue a glamorous career in design among elite
fashion circles in America and Europe. At times funny, wise, and heartfelt,
this is a story of coming out during the repressive 1950s and of eventually
finding true love. In this wryly candid and inspirational memoir, Larry
proves that no dream is impossible with a little daring and
panache—and, of course, a fabulous wardrobe.

Scattershot tablet

EXCERPT

 

Each evening, when Norman and I retired to our bedrooms, Andrew would go down to the pool house, smoke a cigar, and read magazines. One day, there was a conversation about the Marrakesh Hotel Mamounia, where I had stayed a few times. I was describing the decor and beautiful gardens when Andrew blurted out, “Oh, I once loved the hotel but now nobody who is anybody goes there anymore. It just isn’t done.” 

As he spoke, I realized he was quoting an interview with Yves St Laurent’s partner Pierre Berge in a magazine I had left on the dining table the day before. His comment was another one of his supposed experiences — and an obvious lie. I felt certain he’d never been there. Another of his fantasies was when it was his turn to shop for groceries, and I complained that the price he’d paid for certain items was outrageous, he blithely claimed he never looked at the price of anything because in his “very rich” family there was no need. 

One evening, the three of us, along with our two houseguests, drove into nearby Nice to go to L’Ascenceur, a gay bar I frequented when in town. The moment we entered the bar, Andrew, in a booming voice, said, “Well, here we are fellas, the rich American guys from California.” It was mortifying. 

Happily, the rest of the month was uneventful, and Andrew continued his nightly time alone reading and smoking in the pool house. 

Norman and I belonged to a private international gay businessmen’s club called Gamma Mu. Twice each year the members gathered in a US city hosted by resident members where we spent four days going on special tours, participating in meetings, and networking and socializing with each other. At the requisite Friday luncheon, new members were introduced. Before the seated group, each person explained where he was from, who had sponsored his membership, and what their type of career was. This particular Fly-In (as they were called) was in Seattle, and Norman brought Andrew, who had recently become a new member. That Friday, the newbies stood before the crowd and rattled off the usual list: their sponsor, their hometown, and their career. Except for Andrew. When he stood on the stage, he said, “My name is Andrew da Silva. I am from La Jolla, California, and I don’t work. Norman Blachford, my sponsor, keeps me.” 

A collective gasp filled the room. The next morning, I saw Norman with his luggage in the lobby, where he was checking out of the hotel. He said he and Andrew were leaving early because there was an emergency and they had to return to California. I knew, however, that Norman was embarrassed and couldn’t stand the thought of saving face for the rest of the weekend. 

I rarely saw Andrew after that except for a dinner or two with Norman here in Los Angeles. Then, the shocking news came on the television about Andrew, whose real last name was Cunanan: he had been murdering men in Minneapolis and his whereabouts were unknown.

An FBI agent stationed in Minneapolis called me and informed me my name was found on a list of Andrew’s intended victims. He said to contact the authorities immediately if anything came up and promised to reach out to me should it be found that I was in any danger. After that call ended, I put the telephone down, poured myself a stiff drink, and began to shake all over.

Meanwhile, there were television interviews with purported “friends” of Andrew’s relishing their fifteen minutes of fame, telling untrue stories about him and their friendships just as Andrew had spread his false stories over the years. Each time I called Norman, he would repeatedly say, “Oh it couldn’t possibly be our Andrew.” His denial was the same as it had been when I had originally warned him about Andrew in Mexico City.  

In New York on my way to Europe shortly after the news first broke, things continued to remain tense and frightening with Andrew still on the loose, his whereabouts still unknown, and a lot of murmurs “on the street” that he might be in New York City. My greatest fear was he might be out to get me because of that evening at the restaurant in Nice when I called him out on his lies.

Norman phoned and said he would be in New York at the same time as me. When I asked him where he was staying, he named the same hotel he and Andrew usually stayed in, which was on a dark and quiet street near the Plaza Hotel. Incredulous, I asked, “Are you out of your mind staying there? You could be accosted by Andrew on that street. He knows exactly where you stay.” 

Again, Norman poo-pooed the danger he might be in and then invited me to a cocktail party he was throwing at the Regents bar. I couldn’t believe the level of denial, and yet there I was, somehow complicit in his denial as well, putting on my sports coat and hailing a taxi to the Regents bar. 

About thirty of us stood around the bar waiting for the oft-late Norman and all chatting about Andrew. What else was there to discuss, after all? We waited and waited until finally, about 45 minutes later, Norman arrived with a new boyfriend, in tow: Peter. We all immediately eyeballed each other knowingly, because Peter’s coloring and demeanor resembled Andrew’s to a T. 

Shortly after that, Gianni Versace was murdered in Miami,

 

About the Author

Larry Chrysler

Larry Chrysler was raised in the bi-racial projects of 1930s Minneapolis
before pursuing a career as a dress designer in New York and Los Angeles. He
eventually established himself as a distinguished menswear clothier on the
iconic Rodeo Drive. Currently, Larry lives in Beverly Hills with his husband
Matthew. Scattershot: My Journey from the Projects to Paris to Rodeo Drive
is his first book.

 

Contact Links

Facebook: Larry Chrysler 

 Goodreads

Purchase Links

 Amazon US

Amazon UK

B&N

Universal

a Rafflecopter giveaway

RABT Book Tours & PR

2 Comments

Filed under Book Tour

YAY… I Love to Learn Virtual Book Tour

YAY... I Love to Learn banner
YAY... I Love to Learn cover

Children’s Book

Date Published: July 23, 2024

 

 

Another wonderful rhyming Childrens story from Mr. B about the value of
learning at school, home or with family and friends…Yay. The thirteen
rhymes and and magical illustrations bring excitement and fun to the
importance of learning, listening, paying full attention and the importance
of asking questions with every learning experience. Like Mr. B’s first first
three books, Yay…It’s My First Day of School, Happy Makes Me Happy and
Twins With Love x2 your hearts will smile.

 

YAY... I Love to Learn standing book

 

YAY I Love to Learn excerpt

 

About the Author

Mr. B

Mr. B

Happy Makes Me Happy

Amazon Best Selling Children’s Book Author

Mike Barnes is a semi-retired new author whose passion for writing came to
fruition upon his retirement from 38 years of authentic servant
leadership.

As a father and grandfather, Mike was reading to his twin granddaughters
and decided to unleash his passion for writing children’s books with
rhyming stories about love, care, and kindness.

In addition to Happy Makes Me Happy, Mike has a second book Twins With Love
x2 and a third book, YAY… It’s My First Day of School coming
this year.

Mike also recently started Barnes Leadership and Strategy Coaching whereby
he has been a keynote speaker on Authentic Servant Leadership Hardwired to
the Heart.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Instagram

Twitter

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

B&N

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on YAY… I Love to Learn Virtual Book Tour

Filed under Book Tour

Whispers of the Past Virtual Book Tour

Whispers of the Past banner

 

Whispers of the Past cover

Paranormal with a little romance

Date Published : 09-07-2024

 

 

Gifts always come with strings… Just don’t get tangled in them. When Kat
Summers inherits a dilapidated house, she can’t wait to restore it. As she
breathes life into the house, something within her awakens. Shadows &
voices haunt the hallways & trigger her quest for answers. Jana Summers
has a spreadsheet for everything. So, when her wife quits her job &
begins restoring a money pit, she panics. There’s no spreadsheet on how to
handle a haunted house or a wife with the gift of sight.

 

My Secret Obsession Podcast banner

Listen to Whispers of the Past for free on the My Secret Obsession
Podcast

https://mysecretobsession.alitu.com/

 

 

Whispers of the Past paperback

EXCERPT

“I’m sorry, what?” Jana replied. A slew of emotions and thoughts assaulted her as she processed Kat’s words. No way did Kat just say the house was theirs. 

Kat beamed with excitement. She felt like Elsa looked while dancing in her ice castle. She would rebuild Haynes Manor to its original glory. “This place is ours. We own it.” Kat spread her arms and twirled in a circle. “All of this is ours.” She came to an abrupt stop with her arms out wide. “Isn’t this incredible!” 

Jana remained speechless. Was this a joke? 

“What do you think?” Kat asked. She knew this would be a hard sell for Jana, but she also knew that she’d get Jana to see the wisdom behind restoring this place.

“Wait, what do you mean? How is that possible?”

Kat took in a deep breath and unloaded, “When my aunt passed, the trust said that the house had to be owned by someone related to the original Haynes family. No one else wanted it. I was last in line, and the house was finally offered to me. I took it. This is all ours. The land, everything. Isn’t this incredible!” 

The fact that Jana just stared blankly at her with an occasional blink worried her. She stepped closer and took Jana’s hand. “I know this is a lot to take in. I wanted it to be a surprise. What do you think?”

The acid in Jana’s stomach churned, threatened to burst through her flesh and dissolve any dead insect that lay on the dirty, poop-covered, water-damaged floor. Her heart raced as she replayed Kat’s words. Was it possible that this dump, this decrepit, poor excuse for a house was actually theirs? 

Kat had never seen Jana so quiet before. She was near catatonic. Kat gave Jana’s hand a little squeeze, hoping it would wake Jana up from whatever nightmare was swirling through her head. “Please say something.” 

Jana shook her head and blinked quickly as she awoke from her stupor. “You bought this house? Without talking to me?” She couldn’t believe it. Would never have believed that Kat would buy a house without consulting her.

“That’s the beauty of this. We didn’t have to pay a thing. This place was free. It’s ours, free and clear. We paid nothing.” 

“You can’t actually believe that.”

“What? That it was free? Yes, it was free. F. R. E. E,” she spelled out. Why was this so difficult to understand?

Jana licked her lips and gazed around at the disaster that was now officially hers to restore. “This place is the exact opposite of free. It’s going to cost us millions. I can’t believe you made a decision like this without talking to me. 

Que panic attack. Kat listened as Jana unloaded.

“What are the taxes? How much land do we own? We will owe taxes on that land. We’re close to the river. Do we need flood insurance? That’s going to be expensive. Insurance alone could be more than you make a year. Then, even if we go cheap and just make this place barely livable, I don’t see how that doesn’t cost us a million dollars. Will the plumbing need to be updated? The air conditioning? The units out there now are dead. This place is huge. Will we need two or three air conditioning units? Will the vents that run throughout the house need to be updated? The roof needs to be replaced. The window casings are crap. The floors are in terrible shape. Is the electrical actually up to code? My god, the list of things wrong with this place is never ending. 

Kat nodded and tilted her head to show that she heard Jana. “I agree, this house will be expensive in the beginning. But this is a once in a lifetime chance to own a piece of history. This is a gift that we will cherish for our lifetimes and pass on to our children.”

Jana closed her eyes and inhaled. She focused on the breath raising her ribcage and filling her lungs. She shook her head in disagreement. “No, this is not a good gift. I bought you a pair of five-hundred-dollar sunglasses. That’s an acceptable luxury gift. We have a rule, right?” Jana pointed between herself and Kat. “We don’t spend more than five hundred dollars without consulting the other.” She motioned around the room, “This way exceeds our five-hundred-dollar limit. I can’t believe you didn’t talk to me about this. What happens if all of this fails? If we go into debt?”

“I know. And I usually agree, but this is different. I don’t expect a single penny, dime, quarter or nickel from you. I will pay for everything with my inheritance.”

“Okay, let’s say that I don’t pay for anything. We are married. I am legally responsible for your debts, whether you want me to be or not. I should have had a place at the table when you were making this decision.”

Kat was relieved that Jana was at least talking and not still catatonic, but she needed to allay Jana’s concerns. “I have three million as my inheritance in my trust. You’re right, this will be expensive, but I do have the money. There is nothing that you will be responsible for.”

“I can’t believe you’re still saying that,” Jana scoffed. “This affects me in every way possible. I assume that you think we’ll sell our house. We’ll pack up and move out of our home, away from our friends, and start this new life here, so we can live out the fairytale that’s in your head. How are you going to work on this place and teach? The drive is at least an hour each way. Do you really want to do that?”

Kat had hoped this wouldn’t come up right away. Jana wasn’t going to take this well either. She clenched her teeth in anxiety and then began, “I’m not going back to teaching. I quit.”

Jana squatted, resting her butt on her heels. “I need to sit down.” She held her face in disbelief. “Fuck, it’s so gross in here that I can’t even sit on the floor.” She stood again, both hands rubbed her forehead. After a few breaths, she moved her hands to her hips. “What do you mean you’re not going back to work?”

Kat put on her ‘everything is going to be fine’ face. Jana was teetering on completely losing it, and she just needed to keep her from going over the precipice. “You know about my family trust. I have three million dollars at my disposal. You and I, we’ve discussed how that money can help us retire early. You can quit your job in your fifties if you want. If we live wisely, we can live out our retirement in relative ease. And I want you to know that, even with this house, I have not veered from that goal.”

Jana made a sound that Kat wasn’t familiar with. She couldn’t decide if it was a show of frustration, anger, denial, or simply just the sound of a woman completely overwhelmed. But as Jana’s eyes locked on hers, she knew it was a blending of anger and disbelief. 

Kat continued, ‘When we got married, we promised that we wouldn’t be like the other marriages out there. We wouldn’t lose our independence to make decisions. I can’t go back to teaching. You know why.”

“Fuck,” Jana mumbled. “Not losing our independence doesn’t mean completely disregarding the other person. We should have talked about this. About all of this.” She paced in a circle like a gazelle surrounded by a pack of hyenas. 

 

About the Author

Karen lives in Georgia with her wonderful husband and twin daughters. She
loves traveling the world. Whether it’s to the heights of Yosemite,
the white sands of the Caribbean, or even Down Under, she’s always
ready to pack a bag in search of inspiration. She enjoys creating worlds
filled with unique characters that will delight and raise goose bumps on her
readers.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Twitter

Goodreads

Instagram

Alitu for podcast

 

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

RABT Book Tours & PR

1 Comment

Filed under Book Tour, BOOKS

The Missy Box Virtual Book Tour

The Missy Box banner

The Missy Box cover

Historical Fiction

Date Published: 08-24-2023

 

 

The Missy Box

In 1685 two ten-year-old girls cross the Atlantic, one in the hold of a
slave ship, and the other at the Captain’s table of a royal Danish
Ship. On St. Thomas their lives will become intertwined, along with that of
Mette, the brothel keeper, and Isaac and Pundi, two other wanderers who have
landed in this fomenting place at the dawn of its plantation history.

Eighty-five years later, in Copenhagen, this family story is uncovered by
Maria Suhm, the way many are, through treasures kept hidden. The Missy Box
gives up its secrets with tantalizing reluctance, against a backdrop in 1772
of historical scandal and conspiracy that will bring Denmark to a
crisis.

The Missy Box is an imagined story based on the young life of Maria Suhm
Wheelock, the wife of the second President of Dartmouth College and her
great grandmother, Maria Bourdoux Lasalle, a Huguenot refugee from
France.

Set in a time before the interior of American had been discovered by
Europeans, the Missy Box recreates a world connected by oceans, peopled by
refugees, and the kings who controlled their fates.
 

 

The Missy Box tablet

 EXCERPT

Chapter Two: Africa 1685

              Akila, ten years old, was leaning against a woman in the darkness with her eyes closed. Penned like an animal, she was wedged tightly in among some hundred standing bodies. She has travelled for three moons through jungle and desert to this place, harnessed to her fellow captives by leather straps around necks and ankles. New captives have been forcibly dragged or brought at gunpoint each evening to a stopping point on their route. Like a serpent, they have snaked through the jungle, the line growing longer with each passing day. Akila, one of the smallest, has strained to keep up.

She was captured one evening back returning with her mother from the fields to her village, grabbed and tied like an animal by a gang of armed men.  Her mother fought back, trying to keep the men from her daughter, and in the struggle she had been hit hard in the head with the butt of a rifle. Akila had watched her fall, and seen her eyes open wide with a look of terror and rage. That vision of her mother’s face gripped her like the fangs of a lion for her entire lifetime. With the smallest thing—a smell or a sound—she would suddenly be in the gaping black hole of those jaws, devoured by gut-wrenching pain, taken to the depths of despair and darkness. Over the years she learned to tame the pain, to feel the lion about to pounce, so that she could turn away before it took her entirely into the darkness.   

      Akila had been the child of the village head, the beloved daughter of a much respected family. Her language was Soninke, a Mande language, but she had been raised a Muslim and spoke moderately good Arabic as well. Because of the status of her family she had also learned some of the related West African tribal languages. Her father had a Qu’ran and could read it. He had promised he would teach her to read one day. In the tradition of her people she had scars at her temples to indicate her tribal group, marks made soon after her birth. She followed her mother by day to the well where she would play games with the other children while her mother passed an hour in conversation with the village women. She helped her mother prepare the food and she worked with her in the fields, where they planted and harvested beans and melons and maize. She loved the butterflies, and the birds, whose calls she could imitate. The gecko that lived on the wall of her mud dwelling was her friend. Her mother taught her which plants could be useful for poultices, and she went with her to tend the sick of their village, and sometimes helped her catch a baby.

     Slave hunters and the wild beasts of the jungle were the ever-present dangers in West African village life. You could hear the drums beating from far away when disasters like this had struck a village in the area. But there had been no drums this time.

      Akila had travelled in a state of numbness, bey

 

 

About the Author

Anne Emerson

Anne Emerson is a writer and a painter in Jamaica Plain Massachusetts. Her
award winning first book, Letters from Erastus: Field Notes on Grace was
published by Levellers Press in Amherst MA. The Missy Box is an imagined
story based on the author’s 13th great grandmother, a Huguenot
refugee.

 

Contact Links

Website

Facebook

Goodreads

 

Purchase Link

Amazon

 

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on The Missy Box Virtual Book Tour

Filed under Book Tour

Songs for the Deaf Virtual Book Tour

Songs for the Deaf banner

 

Songs for the Deaf cover

 

Speculative Fiction

 

 

Songs for the Deaf is a wonderful story with the unforgettable presence of
Miles Curtin, the protagonist. Following his bombshell discovery, the
tug-of-war within his soul creates the kind of depth and literary richness
that is one of the hallmarks I look for in great writing. Mariel Hemingway,
Oscar-nominated actress, author, and granddaughter of Ernest Hemingway

 

 

 

 

 

Songs for the Deaf tablet

EXCERPTS

She sits with him while he bathes, fusses over him, towels him down, and helps him into his deluxe hotel bathrobe. It isn’t until then that she realizes what a terrible funk he is in. She inches closer, until her lips are close enough to his face for her to feel the static. “Look, darling, we’re way out there on a limb together. If you can’t talk to me now, when will you be ready to talk to me?” 

“Why don’t we table it? We’ve got the rest of our lives to discuss it,” he replies.

“Was that a proposal?!” She practically jumps out of her skin. 

“I’m not really sure, but it sure as hell sounded like one. Why don’t you ask me again in the morning?”

She is still a little giddy, but to bed it is.

 

About the Author

Ken Silver

Ken Silver discontinued his education for two years to pursue a career in
fashion design. He then worked his way through law school designing clothing
for a French fashion house and was ultimately admitted to the New York Bar,
but continued to work as a fashion designer, fabric designer, and
colorist.

He went on to design and build a chain of clothing stores in Canada that
featured his own exclusive designs. Following his return to the States, Mr.
Silver spearheaded the design and concept planning as an active partner in
large-scale mixed use real estate projects in and around NYC. While doing
so, he exhibited his photography in venues throughout the US, including solo
shows in the gallery districts of Manhattan, East Hampton, Beverly Hills,
and Carmel.

Visit His Website

 

RABT Book Tours & PR

Comments Off on Songs for the Deaf Virtual Book Tour

Filed under Book Tour