Sunday, February 10, 2013

'Before There Were Angels' Book Tour & Review



Book Blurb:
She was the ex-wife who wouldn't go away

When Luke leaves his wife, Rafaella, divorces her, moves to the US, meets Belle, falls in love with her, and then marries her and her two young sons, they all settle down to live happily ever after.

Until Belle spots an ad for a classic San Franciscan Victorian in which four murders have just taken place. It's ideal: it's a Victorian, it is probably haunted and it is unbelievably cheap to rent.

However, they could probably have done without the terror, torment and tragedy that pursued them in their new house.

Should they have stayed in their cozy mid-city apartment and spared themselves the anguish of what was to come? Possibly, but Rafaella was not the kind of woman who was ever going to leave them alone.


Read the first chapter:
Chapter 1

There was a time when everything was perfect, when there was pure love, and pure hope, and pure dreams – pure ecstasy.

We had it all.

But that was in the time before there were angels. Avenging angels.

And some angels will avenge anything.

When I saw her for the first time, that was it. Pure love even pure thoughts, for a second or two.

She was tall, lithe-limbed, with knowing eyes and Scandinavian white hair that invited me to dive my fingers into it to make her tense and preen. Yes, those pure thoughts really did only last a few seconds.

Astonishingly, my immediate reaction to her was reciprocated. She wanted to rake her hands through my hair too (dark and tangled) and to run them down me as we kissed, as she told me afterwards many times when we reminisced about that first meeting.

We were a human taste explosion that neither of us had ever experienced with anyone else, and it wasn’t as if either of us was inexperienced.

Nothing had ever happened to us like this and nothing could again, or so we thought.

We were magic together from that first moment of that impossible soul fusion.

And already our best moments were behind us, and not for want of trying.

Before she became an avenging angel.

**My thoughts**

This was one of the strangest books I have read in a long time. Told in the first person, it reads like a memoir of a family's terror at the hands of ghosts and astral projections within their new home. Fact and fiction from Luke's point-of-view seems to blend together, making you wonder what is really happening at times to this family, just like the police and others are also wondering. Are they telling the truth? Is someone actually just hallucinating or beginning an eerie descent into madness? The reader is able to see the truth in some situations much faster than the characters. I found myself almost yelling at the book at times. "Pay attention! Can't you see what is really happening here?"

At first, I wasn't sure how I felt about it. Yet, I felt compelled to finish it as quickly as possible, liking it more and more as I was pulled into the story. I was left aching for the sequel! There was a preview of the first chapter of the follow-up at the end, but it only whet my appetite for more!

   Buy links: Taylor Street \ Amazon

About the author:

Sarah Mathews lives in San Francisco and has written her first book set in an architectural symbol of the city - a 'Victorian'.

There is the slight problem that while there are reputedly several ghosts who march around the city, there are very few murders that take place there, however Sarah seems to have corrected that.


Want to win an ecopy of this book? Leave your email in a comment below. Get a bonus entry by sharing a ghost story of your own!

Contest is open internationally and ends 2/17.

4 comments:

  1. Just had my hair cut in the kitchen of a friend's house (she's the only one who can get the bangs right). At one point, I thought she had cut off a huge chunk of hair because I felt something fall on the top of my leg before sliding off. I freaked out and asked "what are you doing?!" and she asked what I was talking about. I looked down and there was nothing on the floor around the chair. I told her I felt pressure and she then began telling me the ghost stories of her 1912 home. Needless to say, most interesting hair cut ever!

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