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 in our back yard.

Note: I’m still mentioning The 4th Annual Thursday Doors Writing Challenge (TDWC) which officially ended in May. I do this because some of you might still be saying, “I should read a few of those stories.” And you should, if you haven’t. Actually, I’ve reread a few and that’s been fun, too.

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.

4 responses to “Thursday Doors Recap – Sept 5th”

  1. Bunny seems very intent on woodsy foraging…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. He might have a great imagination. The “woods” are the base of one our lilac bushes. But it’s near one of the birdbaths, so all kinds of green stuff grows well there.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. […] Dan’s door challenge, some doors of Daylesford, Victoria. Most are from Hotel Frangos, a mid-1800s […]

    Like

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