The Thursday Doors recap for the two and one half day period beginning on the above date is ready to be viewed. Click here if you’re interested. There are some wonderful doors out there this week! I hope you like the bunny. This one is a new photo in our back yard.

Reminder: There will be no Thursday Doors on August 8th.

Note: The 4th Annual Thursday Doors Writing Challenge (TDWC) ended recently, with 54 entries. All of them are worth reading.

in primo piano – photos
TDWC 2024 Badge
TDWC 2024 Badge

Bridge to Nowhere paperback

Bridge to Nowhere Kindle

Also available on Kindle Unlimited

Pittsburgh reporter Rachael Todd has a hard deadline — and it’s personal. Her friend is a murder suspect. He knew the victim. He has a strong motive and a weak alibi. Rachael’s certain he is being framed, and she’ll have to live up to her nickname “Rascal” to clear him. Rascal sees a connection to an earlier crime. The clock is ticking as she digs through multiple layers of legal and bureaucratic misdeeds, crimes, and evidence that the police ignored.

Is a crime solved when the criminals are identified, or only after they are brought to justice? This is a mystery born from that question. The story includes many twists and turns, even after the crime is solved. It features characters, including the bad guys, that grow in ways that might surprise you, and well-researched circumstances that will take you from delight to frustration while moving you close to the edge of your seat—sound interesting? If it does, this book is for you.

7 responses to “Thursday Doors Recap – Aug 1st”

  1. A most excellent morning bunny.
    👍

    Liked by 2 people

  2. Let’s hear it for the bunnies!!!

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Those bunnies show up everywhere, don’t they? Yours looks a lot healthier than the one we saw on the lawn yesterday. We had seen him jumping around, and Goldie ripped the leash away from me to give him the chase. He was way too fast. Unfortunately, he wasn’t fast enough to avoid Wily Coyote. You got a lot of entries on the writing challenge – congratulations! Wow! I’m heading off to take a look.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Our yard is a safe harbor for bunnies. I think we have about 6 living in the yard (under porches.

      The writing challenge drew a lot of participants this year. The writing and poetry is all very good.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I love the picture with all the tails in the air. :)

        Liked by 1 person

  4. […] No Facilities “I like this story. I’ve gathered that it’s part of something larger and I would be interested in reading more. There are a couple places where I stumbled, nothing big but since there were a couple, maybe something to look for. “I noticed what he was wearing” was followed by a detailed description. I think the description could stand on its own, or you could have left out some of the details to emphasize that she noticed. I don’t know which is more important, but I prefer the later. Similarly, but picky, a large coffee with room for milk doesn’t need to be described as ‘black’. A large coffee, hazelnut with room for milk might be different. Then again, in a larger context, if black coffee is not normal for her, it would matter. I hate being picky, especially with short sections. Admittedly, those are nits. One that I don’t understand though is at the end: “if I were writing, I wouldn’t be able to concentrate. Editing was harder than writing for me.” If editing is harder I don’t understand how she could do that as opposed to writing. Maybe editing is more tedious or something like that. I realize these aren’t substantive, but they interrupted the flow for me (because I had to stop and think about them). The character descriptions you’ve painted make me want to know more about both the main character and the man.” […]

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