Showing posts with label Brakenhoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brakenhoff. Show all posts

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Can I Borrow a Snowblower? - A Dead of Winter Break Guest Post & Giveaway

I'm happy to welcome Cassandra Sato to Cozy Up With Kathy today. You can find Cassandra on the pages of the Cassnbdra Soto Mystery series. DEAD OF WINTER BREAK is the third book in the series and was released last week.

Can I Borrow a Snowblower? by Cassandra Sato


What was I thinking?

I’m young and adventurous. Moving from Waipahu on the island of Oahu, Hawai’i, to Carson, Nebraska, sounded like a great opportunity to further my career. When I arrived in July, the flowers bloomed, the temperatures were only a little higher than I was used to at home, and I had big dreams for the first semester in my new college administrator job.

Aloha everyone, I’m Cassandra Sato, writing to you from the sunroom of my Craftsman style bungalow, where I’m currently snowed in by a blizzard. Less than a week before Christmas, and up and down my street it looks like a Hollywood studio constructed a fairytale holiday set overnight complete with a foot of realistic snow. Don’t get me wrong—the snowy tree branches are beautiful, but how am I ever going to get to work?

I’ve seen snow before in my travels.

I researched the climate differences between my tropical paradise and the Midwest before accepting the position at Morton College. My friend Meg O’Brien took me shopping a couple of months ago for heavy duty snow gear. But this . . . this, whatever you call this snowy nightmare is worse than I ever imagined.

Like my mother always says, whining never makes anything better.

But if I’m completely honest with you, this semester has not gone as planned. Everything started off great. I bought my first house, reunited with my bestie Meg, and made a few new friends while settling into small town life. The men my age here are surprisingly good looking and down to earth, but who knows when I’ll be ready for a relationship again.

I’m big on making a life plan and sticking to it.

Whoever this Kelly Brakenhoff person is, once she got involved in October things quickly went downhill. A student died, some creeper stalked me, students protested the campus administration building, and my boss retired. His replacement was difficult on a good day and now she’s gone too. I’ve never owned a pet before—not even a goldfish— but now there’s a foster dog named Murphy staying at my house. No one told me Murphy wasn’t housebroken when I agreed to watch him.

Growing up the third of four children with an annoying big brother and two sisters, determination is my middle child thing. It takes a lot to move me from my goals.

To top it off, I really want to get to the office today because something strange is going on. Last Saturday, the college celebrated Fall Commencement in the gorgeous Performing Arts Center. Just when I was enjoying the pomp and circumstance of the moment, soaking in the joy on the graduates’ faces, I saw my former boss in the audience. Considering he retired in November, that was a big shocker. Worse, when I tried talking to him after the ceremony, he dodged me for a few hours then showed up later at my house looking upset.

I thought during winter break I’d take it easy, organize my closets, bond with my new dog, and catch up on Netflix.

Mother Nature had other plans for me this week.

First, I’m breaking out my brand-new snow shovel. I won’t be able to relax until I meet with Dr. Nielson and get the full story about why he came back to town. Hmmm… I wonder why the sheriff’s car just pulled into my driveway.

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Dead of Winter Break (A Cassandra Sato Mystery) by Kelly Brakenhoff

About Dead of Winter Break

Dead of Winter Break (A Cassandra Sato Mystery)
Cozy Mystery 3rd in Series
Publisher: Emerald Prairie Press (November 17, 2020)
~340 Pages Digital

It's beginning to look a lot like murder . . . And Cassandra is knee deep in . . .

Suspects. Her boss is dead, and the police are calling it burglary gone wrong. But when the killer comes after her, it's going to take more than a pair of furry boots to keep the smart, witty Morton College administrator, Cassandra Sato, out of the deep. . .

Snow. Her first Christmas in Nebraska could be her last unless her friends help unravel the mystery and housebreak her dog.

Buy now for a fast-paced, holiday themed whodunit.

Dead of Winter Break is the third book in Kelly Brakenhoff's popular Cassandra Sato Mystery Series. Death by Dissertation was a 2020 RONE Award Finalist. Publishers Weekly called Dead Week, "a diverting whodunit."

About Kelly Brakenhoff

 
KELLY BRAKENHOFF writes the Cassandra Sato Mystery series including DEATH BY DISSERTATION, a 2020 RONE Award Mystery Finalist, DEAD WEEK, "a diverting whodunit," (Publishers Weekly), and DEAD OF WINTER BREAK available in November 2020.   Kelly is an American Sign Language Interpreter whose motivation for learning ASL began in high school when she wanted to converse with her deaf friends. NEVER MIND and FARTS MAKE NOISE, her children’s picture books featuring Duke the Deaf Dog and illustrated by her sister, Theresa Murray, have quickly become popular with children, parents, and educators for promoting inclusive conversations about children with differences.   The mother of four young adults and a German Wirehair Pointer, Kelly and her husband call Nebraska home.  
 
Author Links: 
 
Purchase Link - Amazon  
 

Sunday, January 26, 2020

A Dead Week Guest Post & Giveaway

I'm happy to let Kelly Brakenhoff take over Cozy Up With Kathy today. Kelly writes the Cassandra Soto Mystery series. Dead Week is the second book in the series.


When was the last time you wrote a book review? 


Before I became an author, occasionally I posted book reviews on Amazon or Goodreads if I especially loved the book. Otherwise, I didn’t really think about them.

Except I’m a huge online shopper.

When I’m shopping for gifts, clothes, or gear, I always check reviews. I want to know about quality, fit, and overall satisfaction. Say I’m deciding between two dresses. One of them has good reviews, and the other option has few or bad reviews. I will always choose the dress with better reviews.

Your opinion matters.

Most importantly, your reviews help fellow readers. For example, I’m short and my feet are kind of wide. I love it when fellow shoppers tell me that a dress is long, or that shoes fit smaller than expected.

In your review, write one or two things about you and why the book was a good fit. The next person who’s considering that book can read your review and decide if it will fit them, too. You’re saving other readers time. If you comment about why you connected to the book, someone coming along after you might buy the book because they’re looking for exactly the same experience you had.

I like to know what’s trendy.

I like to read the latest best sellers or see the movies and TV shows everyone is talking about at work. Bookstore algorithms promote books with more reviews. Media outlets are on the lookout for new trends and best sellers. Once a book has caught enough attention from readers, momentum takes over. Your opinion can influence someone else’s next “must read.”

Do you have favorite authors?

Book reviews affect more than you might guess. Has this happened to you before? A new restaurant comes to town and you’re excited to eat there the first time. There’s great food, a fun atmosphere, and you feel like your town is lucky to have a place like that. Months go by and one day you drive by and notice a closed sign in the window. I’m horrible about this myself. My family doesn’t eat out very often. I always feel bad when a place that seemed promising closes within the first year because of a lack of loyal customers.

Publishers decide whether to offer contracts to authors with large fan bases over unknown authors with few followers. Large numbers of reviews and fans can help authors get interviewed on podcasts, TV news shows, or online book clubs. If we want our favorite authors to continue writing stories year after year, we have to show our support, by buying their books, borrowing them from the library, and interacting with them on social media.

What can you do?

Professional editorial reviews can be several paragraphs long. They might include a brief summary of the book, analysis of the best features, and finish it off with an enthusiastic flourish about what kind of reader would love it, too.

Your review doesn’t have to be a master’s thesis. Just write one or two sentences from the heart about one thing that connected with you. Then write what kind of reader might like the book, too.

I keep track of books I’ve read on Goodreads.

The last review I left was for a Lynette Eason romantic suspense novel called Oath of Honor. Here’s what I wrote. “This was my first Lynette Eason book, but it certainly won't be my last! An action-packed mystery with great characters, a romantic sub-plot, and a healthy dose of suspense hooked me all the way. Can’t wait to read more about the families introduced in this series.” Short, sweet and enthusiastic. If you haven’t read her before, you should!

My favorite part of posting my library on Goodreads is that it automatically reminds me to rate and review a book once I’ve finished reading. I like thinking that I’m helping other readers and writers find their next great match. Happy reading and reviewing in 2020!

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Dead Week (A Cassandra Sato Mystery) by Kelly Brakenhoff

About Dead Week

 
Cozy Mystery 2nd in Series  
Setting - Nebraska  
Publisher: Emerald Prairie Press (December 7, 2019)  
Paperback: 322 pages

Will Dead Week kill Cassandra’s career?
VP of Student Affairs Cassandra Sato has a desk full of problems and it’s not even Thanksgiving break.
A student’s injury and a deaf advocacy project brings national media attention to underfunded Morton College.
Cassandra's new boss talks to her dead husband. Cassandra’s mentor thinks he’s a superhero in a senior citizen’s body. And Cassandra, recently moved from Hawai'i, can't crack the code of what to wear during November in Nebraska.
Is there more to the Vietnam-era story of a student's death? Cassandra's search for the long-buried truth stirs up the wrath of those who want to keep the past forgotten.

About the Author

KELLY BRAKENHOFF is an American Sign Language Interpreter whose motivation for learning ASL began in high school when she wanted to converse with her deaf friends. Her first novel, Death by Dissertation, kicked off the Cassandra Sato Mystery Series. She also wrote Never Mind, first in a children’s picture book series featuring Duke the Deaf Dog. She serves on the Board of Editors for the Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf publication, VIEWs. The mother of four young adults and two dogs, Kelly and her husband call Nebraska home.
Her first mystery, Death by Dissertation, released April 22, 2019.

Author Links:  
Website – http://kellybrakenhoff.com/  
Amazon – Https://amazon.com/author/kellybrakenhoff  
Twitter- https://twitter.com/inBrakenVille  
Instagram – @kellybrak  
BookBub - https://www.bookbub.com/authors/kelly-brakenhoff  
GoodReads - https://www.goodreads.com/kellybrak

Purchase Link – Amazon


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Sunday, June 30, 2019

Death by Dissertation - An Interview & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Kelly Brakenhoff to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Kelly writes the  Cassandra Sato Mystery series. Death by Dissertation is the first book in the series and was released earlier this year.


Kathy: In Death by Dissertation Cassandra Sato makes a major move to accept her dream job, which turns into a nightmare. Have you ever made an important change which led to some horrors?

KB: Two months after the birth of our second son, my husband’s company relocated us from Oahu, Hawai’i to Seattle, Washington. Yes, you read that correctly. We moved over two thousand miles away with a two-month old baby and a 19-month old toddler. Living in a long-term hotel for a month, we managed with two suitcases of clothes and one bag of toddler toys until our car and possessions arrived by cargo ship. Then we moved into a rental house for three months. Once we were completely settled, my husband was offered a new job in Nebraska where both of our families lived. He accepted the job, and we moved again.

If you’ve lost count, we lived in 5 different homes the first six months of #2 son’s life! I was sleep-deprived, exhausted, and numb by the end of the process! We’ve been happy to be back near the grandparents and our families ever since. But honestly, I barely remember any details about him when he was a tiny baby. The photos from that time are proof that he was fed, changed and taken care of. Must have been his guardian angel looking out for him, because I was seriously overwhelmed.


Kathy: Having worked on a college campus for many years, I know the intrigue and drama that can be found there. Have you had similar experiences and did they influence Death by Dissertation?

KB: As an American Sign Language Interpreter with more than twenty years of experience, I've worked in college classrooms for fifteen different majors. I actually attend classes with the deaf students and overhear both the most inspiring and the most inane professors you could imagine. At faculty meetings, I’ve seen the jockeying for position that happens on a daily basis. The jaw-dropping dialogue in my books are often exact quotes I’ve overheard people say in real life.

I think we all struggle to fit in somewhere, whether it’s a new job, with classmates, or who we want to be when we grow up. This story touches on all of those emotions, while also making you laugh. Because when I’m overwhelmed by life, laughter is the best way for me to deal with difficulties and move on.


Kathy: Cassandra expected the Midwestern church casseroles when she moved to Nebraska. Does she have a favorite? Do you?

KB: The most foreign meal Cassandra has been introduced to is bierocks, which are German hand pies with a yeast bread dough stuffed with cooked hamburger and cabbage then baked. They’re so popular in this region, that at church potlucks you often see an adapted sheet pan version using layers of crescent rolls, meat, cabbage and cheese topped by another layer of crescent rolls. Cassandra is still a bit iffy about bierocks, but trust me they taste delicious.

My in-laws were all raised on Nebraska farms. They grew up cooking with a stick of butter and cream of mushroom soup as the basis for a multitude of casseroles. I’m more of a salad girl, so I love the one where you throw in a couple bags of coleslaw mix, broken raw ramen noodles, slivered almonds and green onions mixed with a sesame oil flavored vinaigrette. Yum! I don’t make it at home because I would eat the whole bowl myself.


Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries?

KB: I write what I love to read, and I’m a huge fan of Janet Evanovich, Sue Grafton, Mary Higgins Clark, and of course, Nancy Drew. I like complex books that challenge me to figure out the ending, teach me about a topic I might not know about already, and let me escape from everyday life. I also love the cozies that include recipes like Diane Mott Davidson’s catering series.


Kathy: Do you write in any other genres?

KB: Coming this fall, I’ll publish a new children’s picture book series featuring Duke the deaf dog. The first is called Never Mind and it’s about the experience that many hard of hearing and deaf people have of being told, “Oh. . . never mind,” when they ask someone to repeat something they missed in conversation. Spoiler alert: that’s a big pet peeve!


Kathy: Tell us about your series.

KB: Like you mentioned earlier, the academic world involves drama and intrigue that even a talented fiction writer could not make up. It’s the perfect setting for a mystery series. I want readers to fall in love with Cassandra and root for her personal growth, as well as laugh along with the hilarious students and their escapades.


Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why?

KB: Of course, I love Cassandra’s boldness in striking out on a new career far from home and chasing her dreams. Cassandra’s interpreter friend, Meg, gives me a way to write about things I can’t usually say out loud at work without being fired. I also love the student office workers because they say and do things that real-life students say if you take the time to pay attention.


Kathy: Did you have a specific inspiration for your series?

KB: Cassandra Sato is a fish out of water. I used my memories of feeling like an outsider when I lived in Hawai’i for five years. The culture and everyday life is so drastically different than living in the Midwest, it was a huge adjustment. Those things are all reversed in Cassandra’s story, but the feelings are the same.


Kathy: What made you decide to publish your work?

KB: From the time in elementary school when my younger sister and I wrote and illustrated homemade comic books about a dog and a cat, I’ve always wanted to be an author. Once my children grew up enough to be independent, I got serious about pursuing my own bucket list. I’m thrilled that after more than four years of hard work, Death by Dissertation is a real thing!


Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite?

KB: What a great question! I have so many favorites. Mark Twain, Janet Evanovich, Erma Bombeck, and Robert Parker all come to mind. I imagine I’d spend the entire night drinking vast amounts of wine and laughing until I cried.


Kathy: What are you currently reading?

KB: I read several books at the same time. For non-fiction, I’m reading The Second Greatest Story Ever Told about St John Paul II. In fiction, I’m on John Grisham’s latest legal thriller, The Reckoning, and on audio book, I just finished Whistling Past the Graveyard by Susan Crandall. I’d recommend all three to readers!


Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us?

KB: I began running about seven years ago when a work Wellness Program challenged me to register for a Couch-to-5K event. I’ve participated in many sports but hated running because it made my side ache and I’m short, therefore I’m slow. To my surprise, I found I could run long distances without dying. Now I run 10K races and half-marathons. The training runs give me plenty of time to think about my books and how to plot the next murder. Plus, I can eat chocolate cake without the guilt.


Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.

KB: Pre-packaged salad kits. Eggs. Irish Breakfast Tea. Nutella.


Kathy: Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series?

KB: The next Cassandra Sato mystery, Dead Week, is due out later this summer. After that, I have at least three more planned. At some point, Cassandra needs to lead a group of Nebraska students on a study abroad trip to Hawai’i so we can see the reverse culture shock that Cassandra has experienced in Death by Dissertation.


Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?

KB: While many authors are introverts who hide in their writing lairs, I’m very extroverted. I’ve been pleasantly surprised by receiving photos of readers enjoying my book while lounging at the beach or watching their child’s softball games. This is all so new to me! I love getting messages about what readers’ favorite scenes were, or how they couldn’t put the book down. Please feel free to comment or contact me if you want to chat. I’m really enjoying getting to know my readers.

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About the Book


Death by Dissertation (Cassandra Sato)
Cozy Mystery
1st in Series
Setting – Nebraska
Emerald Prairie Press (April 17, 2019)
Paperback: 355 pages
Ambitious Cassandra Sato traded her life in Hawai’i for a dream position as Student Affairs VP at Morton College in tiny Carson, Nebraska. She expected the Midwestern church casseroles, land-locked cornfields, and face-freezing winters would be her biggest challenges, but it’s her job that’s rapidly becoming a nightmare.
A deaf student is dead and the investigation reveals a complicated trail of connections between campus food service, a local farmer’s beef, and the science lab’s cancer research. Together with her few allies, Cassandra must protect the students caught up in the entanglement.
Dealing with homesickness, vandalism, and a stalker, Cassandra is trapped in a public relations disaster that could cost her job, or more. No one said college was easy.

About the Author




Kelly Brakenhoff is an American Sign Language Interpreter whose motivation for learning ASL began in high school when she wanted to converse with her deaf friends. As an American Sign Language Interpreter with more than twenty years of experience, Kelly’s worked in college classrooms for fifteen different majors. From traipsing across muddy farm fields to stomach-churning medical procedures, and stage interpreting for famous figures, Kelly’s community interpreting interactions number in the thousands. Unfortunately, once she’s stepped away from the job, she usually forgets 90% of what happened. Which helps her keep confidential information safe, but also makes it really hard to grocery shop for more than 5 items without a written list.

Kelly wants to live in a world filled with peace, love, and joy, where people who can hear learn enough sign language to include deaf people in everyday conversations and work. Where every deaf child has early access to language and books with characters like them, and dark chocolate is cheap and plentiful.

When she’s not interpreting or writing, you can find Kelly cheering for her favorite Husker teams or training for half-marathons because she really likes dessert.

Her first mystery, Death by Dissertation, released April 22, 2019.

Author Links:
Website – http://kellybrakenhoff.com/
Amazon – Https://amazon.com/author/kellybrakenhoff
Twitter-  https://twitter.com/inBrakenVille
Instagram –  @kellybrak


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