The Witch of White Lady Hollow by C. David Belt

Thank you @inksmithpublish @KellyALacey @lovebookstours #Ad #LBTCrew #BookTwitter for letting me be part of this tour snd reviewing this book. The Witch of White Lady Hollow is Book 1 in the series and has a lovely front cover. This book is a great read for Halloween. This is an entertaining read which is about Tabitha and her Mum have moved to Blue Beech Ridge, but there's a lot more to this small town. It was great to see Tabitha develop through the book and is a very good fantasy and magical read . The Witch of White Lady Hollow is a book that will take you on a great adventure. The book is well written and has lots of action going through the book. You will finish this book and then want to read the second one straight well. I did enjoy reading this book, and it was easy to get into and was engrossed to the end. 5 stars. BFor letting me be part of this tour and reviewing this book. The Enlightenment Club is an uplifting read that is about aspiration, who you are as a person, mental health difficulties and Music. The Enlightenment Club is a very easy read and I finished it in a few hours, and it was very easy to get into, and I found it to be a moving story as well. The story about Stella and starts 1974 as a teenage and then as she gets older. I liked reading about Stella life and the culture side of her life to which was very fascinating and could sit there and read about that all day. The story is well written and deals with some challenging subjects and Chris West has dealt with them very well. This is a very different book to what I normally read and was glad to read something different and I will be looking for books by Chris West in the future. 4 stars.lurb Magnus, the masked, mysterious High Priest of the Circle, will stop at nothing to possess Tabitha Moonshadow and her Power... and Tabitha has no idea she's a witch. Tabitha Moonshadow and her mom, Molly, are running away. It's 1978, and seventeen-year-old Tabitha has just spent a disastrous summer with her dad, Molly's ex-husband. So mother and daughter flee to a small town in southeast Missouri. Once there, Tabitha experiences isolation and rejection at her Mormon church as well as vicious bigotry at school. However, Tabitha is befriended almost immediately by Beulah Martineau and the girls of the Circle. And in the Circle, Tabitha finds acceptance and a sense of belonging. But the Circle is more than the social club Tabitha thinks it to be. Led by the mysterious, masked figure known as Magnus, the Circle wields a marvelous Power, and together, Magnus and the Circle can perform great wonders. They can also perform great evil. Tabitha is a rarity, with more Power than the rest of the Circle combined. Recognizing her strength, she becomes a very valuable member of the Circle, and Magnus wants to possess her Power, and Tabitha, at any cost. But Tabitha is devoted to her religion and she struggles with her faith amidst the temptation of what the Power and the Circle are offering her. The Circle believes in the divine feminine, celebrating women and their Power; but as Tabitha finds herself pulled deeper into their practices, she finds that perhaps these girls have been led astray by their devoted leader. Without a man to channel their potential, the Circle members are powerless. Or are they? Author Bio: C. David Belt was born in the wilds of Evanston, WY. As a child, he lived and traveled extensively around the Far East. In Thailand, he once fed so many bananas to a monkey, the poor monkey swore off bananas for life. He served as a Latter-day Saint missionary in South Korea and southern California (Korean-speaking), and yes, he loves kimchi. He graduated from Brigham Young University with a BS in Computer Science and a minor in Aerospace Studies, but he managed to bypass all English or writing classes. He served as a B-52 pilot in the US Air Force and as an Air Weapons Controller in the Washington Air National Guard and was deployed to locations so secret, his family still does not know where he risked life and limb (other than in a 192′ wingspan aircraft flying 200′ off the ground in mountainous terrain). He sang as a baritone in the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square for fifteen years. When he is not writing, he works as a software engineer and collects and (obsessively) researches swords, spears, and axes (oh, my!), and other medieval weapons and armor. He and his wife have six children and live in Utah.

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