First Chapter Fun with Hank, Hannah, and Linda

I am so so excited about my friend Linda Hurtado Bond’s new release All the Broken Girls. I had the pleasure of reading an ARC of this book and it was fabulous! All the Broken Girls was “Atmospheric, edgy, and exciting, Bond delivers a complex story filled with engaging characters and unexpected twists and turns. A great page-turner that I highly recommend.” LOL, do I have to use quotes if I said it? Seriously, check it out and also visit with my friend Hank Philippi Ryan and Hannah Mary McKinnon at 12:30 today for a reading of Linda’s first chapter at the First Chapter Fun Facebook Group.

Also, please take a moment to check out Hank’s latest release Her Perfect Life. Her Perfect Life is a Publisher’s Weekly Pick of the Week and Hank is an absolutely fabulous writer! I’ve got my copy on the TBR pile, do you? And because my TBR pile can never be big enough, I can’t wait to read Hannah’s Never Coming Home, a May release from MIRA books. If you’re into psychological suspense, this one is for you!

Teaser All the Broken Girls


When one falls

Crime reporter Mari Alvarez was never able to solve her mother’s murder ten years ago. But when a woman is gunned down on the doorstep of her West Tampa neighborhood, Mari can’t shake the eerie sense of connection.

The others will break

Now there have been two murders in two days. Each crime scene awash with arcane clues–and without a trace of DNA from the killer. And for each victim, a doll. The first is missing an eye. The second is missing a heart. But are these clues leading to the killer…or messages for Mari?

Unless she plays the game…

Caught up in a maelstrom of Old-World superstition, secrets, and ties to her own past, Mari has only one option. Put the puzzle together before someone else dies–even if it destroys her career. But there’s no escaping the hungry spider’s web when it’s been made just for you…


hank philippi ryan caridad romantic suspense
linda hurtado bond

Hispanic Heritage Month and Lost in Little Havana

A murdered detective who might be dirty. Friends becoming lovers during a dangerous assignment. Missing co-eds who may be forced into a human trafficking ring. The importance of family and service to others. Did I get your attention? LOL! If you love a story with all that and lots of action and romance, you might enjoy Lost in Little Havana. It’s the first book in the South Beach Security series and releases on November 29! Look for the next two books in December and January and then we’ll let the dogs out for the spinoff in the SBS K-9 series in 2023. Here’s a teaser for Lost in Little Havana and I hope you’ll check it out or maybe even pre-order your copy to help celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month. By the way, this is how I pictured Trey, the hero in the book. Trey is his nickname since he is the third Ramon Gonzalez in the family.

Teaser

Each brush with death…
…makes their shared desire harder to ignore

Detective Roni Lopez has been keeping a secret from Detective Trey Gonzalez her whole life. When his partner is gunned down in a Miami Beach nightclub, she has a new secret to keep. Trey can’t know that she’s working for Internal Affairs—just like he can’t know that she’s always loved him. But when their lives are on the line, she has to make some tough choices about what really matters…

Order

Amazon Kindle: https://amzn.to/36KrDcR
Amazon Paperback: https://amzn.to/3L6Svlt
Apple: https://books.apple.com/us/book/lost-in-little-havana/id1617070775
BN E-book: https://bit.ly/3wS0AqN
Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/lost-in-little-havana
Additional Retailers: https://books2read.com/LostLittleHavana

Happy Birthday, Mom!

It was my mom’s birthday on the 10th which combined with 9-11 makes this a tough time of year for me. My mom left me life way too early and I miss her every day and with every special occasion that goes by. She didn’t get to see my sister graduate college or me graduate law school. She didn’t get to see us get married or know her grandchildren and her great-grandchildren. But in the short time that she was in my life, she taught me so so much and made me the person I am today. I love you, mom. Thank you for your wisdom and love and all that you did for our family. This is one of my fav photos of my mom as a young child.
Caridad mother

Book Signing with Amazing Friends & My Wonderful Daughter

As a parent, there are so many things that bring you joy. A first step or smile. Watching your child graduate and then marry a wonderful man. Seeing them happy and building their own life. I’ve been lucky to experience all those things and now another milestone: My first book signing with my daughter. I am so proud of how she is reaching for her dream to write and hope I had some small part in her having that passion. I’m also excited to be signing with some amazing friends. So please join my daughter Samantha Ann, Linda Parisi, Eileen Watkins, Stacey Wilk, and me on Saturday, September 17th at the Barnes & Noble in Brick Plaza, Brick, NJ. I look forward to seeing you there!

caridad book signing

The Boys of Summer are Still Going Strong

I love baseball so it was a lot of fun for me to write some stories revolving around a fictional New Jersey baseball team. Yes, it’s about time that us Jersey Girls had our own baseball team! I loved writing Winning Season because it was a story about a second chance at love between a baseball player facing the end of his career and his ex-wife who is just at the start of her flourishing career as a basketball player. Today I’m teasing you with the cover for the book which I plan on re-releasing in October, just in time for the playoffs. But in the meantime, you can read the first three chapters for free on Kindle Vella at https://amzn.to/3v5nVEl. I hope you’ll drop by and check it out as well as my other baseball romance Rookie of the Year.

Blurb

Eric Mendoza knew that he’d blown it years earlier when he let his desire to play baseball drive a wedge into his marriage to Yvonne Lopez. But when Fate throws Eric and Yvonne together again, Eric’s career is almost over while Yvonne’s dream of a basketball career is only just beginning. Will Eric and Yvonne learn to balance life and their careers to find happiness or will their push for success doom their love once again?

Excerpt

Eric Mendoza passed his fingers over the cold glossy paper of the photo, imagining instead that it was the warm silken feel of Yvonne’s skin. He closed his eyes, pictured the creaminess of it. The pale milky smoothness of her breasts and the taste of her against his lips. The soft sounds of her passion as he brought her to the edge.

He cursed beneath his breath and opened his eyes. He had almost crumpled the paper in his hands with his musings. He smoothed it out on the surface of his table and examined it yet again, almost as if to torture himself.

Yvonne was wearing nothing but the pants of her team’s basketball uniform, riding low on her shapely hips. The curve of her waist was clear, as was her navel and the small beauty mark beside it. The view of her lean, sculpted midsection was interrupted by her arms, which cradled a bright orange basketball that also hid her breasts, but just barely. The full globes of them were visible behind the basketball.

Her hands hung loosely before her. Beautiful hands with long fingers which sported only one ring – the small gold pinky ring given to her by her abuelita for her fifteenth birthday. The only sign of her wedding ring was a barely discernable line on her ring finger, but that would fade with time, or maybe it was only him imagining that he saw some visible remnant of their marriage. After all, they had been divorced for nearly two years now.

In fact, he hadn’t seen Yvonne in over a year, since shortly after their divorce. The last time they had run into one another had only been in passing in the corridor of one of the local television stations. She had been headed out, apparently after doing an interview and he had been on his way in.

Yvonne had given him a curt smile, nodded and kept on walking. He’d had too much pride to chase after her, just like he’d had too much pride to acknowledge that maybe the reason for the end of their marriage had been his mistakes. His failure to keep his promises to his young wife.

Eric sighed heavily and leaned into the hard-backed chair, wondering how something that had started so right could have ended so wrong.

They had been attracted to each other from the moment they had first met. Yvonne had been too young, just eighteen and on her way to college.

He had been twenty-four and a hotshot Rookie of the Year who had been invited back to speak at his old high school’s annual sports award dinner. After giving his speech, he had presented the trophies to the top male and female athletes, never expecting to be immediately intrigued by the attractive young girl who had won.

Yvonne had excelled at a number of sports, but her prowess at basketball had earned her multiple awards as well as a full scholarship to college. As impressive as that was on paper, it had hadn’t been nearly as inspiring as the sight of her and the calm, elegant poise she exhibited as she came up to accept the honor.

Eric had stepped behind her and admired the sleek lines of her strong body. The very feminine voice that wrapped itself around him and drew him in as she gave her acceptance speech.

After the dinner, people mingled in the school gym, and flocked around the various recipients. No one had to tell him where Yvonne was. She’d had the largest crowd gathered around her, including a number of reporters from the local papers and sports shows.

He’d always scoffed at those scenes in the movies where couples spot each other across a crowded room and everything else around them blurred into nothingness. He’d thought them the whimsical stylings of the cinema . . . until it had happened to him with Yvonne.

In that crowded gym, with dozens of people talking and milling about, she’d looked up and caught his eye and the world had dropped away until it was just the two of them.

Eric had walked up to her, excusing himself as he brushed past her many admirers and the well-wishers waiting to congratulate her. Smiling as he realized she had finished with the reporter interviewing her and taken a step toward him.

“Hola,” she had said and with that one word he knew she was the one meant for him.

Woo Hoo Lost in Little Havana Has Landed

It’s always exciting to get a box of your new releases! It never gets old. Today I’m sharing the unboxing for Lost in Little Havana, the first book in the South Beach Security series from Harlequin Intrigue. Here’s a little teaser for Lost in Little Havana which will be available on November 29, 2022.

Teaser

Each brush with death
Makes their shared desire harder to ignore

Detective Roni Lopez has been keeping a secret from Detective Trey Gonzalez her whole life. When his partner is gunned down in a Miami Beach nightclub, she has a new secret to keep. Trey can’t know that she’s working for Internal Affairs—just like he can’t know that she’s always loved him. But when their lives are on the line, she has to make some tough choices about what really matters…

You can pre-order Lost in Little Havana at these retailers:

Amazon Kindle: https://amzn.to/36KrDcR
Amazon Paperback: https://amzn.to/3L6Svlt
Apple: https://books.apple.com/us/book/lost-in-little-havana/id1617070775
BN E-book: https://bit.ly/3wS0AqN
Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/lost-in-little-havana
Additional Retailers: https://books2read.com/LostLittleHavana

Remembering 9-11 and Praying for America

Many years ago I wrote about my experience on 9-11 and how it influenced me. Now, twenty-one years later, it’s hard to believe that it’s been that long and that we’ve forgotten one very important thing: That when we stand united, we are stronger.

It’s time to remember that we won’t all agree on things but that doesn’t mean that the other person is evil. They just have a different opinion. It’s time to agree to disagree and respect each other because divided we will fail.

For now, I leave you with my thoughts from that long ago blog post.

A September 11, 2007 Remembrance

Nothing has ever been the same for me since that day in 2001. I’ve seen a number of articles in the papers recently about how the remembrance ceremonies are diminishing and the day is becoming more of a historical one.

Some say that people want to forget and get on with things and yet for me, six years have passed and the memories are as clear as if they had happened yesterday. I can still remember that morning, beautiful as it was. The sky was a clear blue and you could see for miles. The air was fresh and crisp but tinged with the hint of the scents of fall.

My husband and I used to call days like that Villanova Days. Why Villanova Days? Because they reminded us of those happy and beautiful fall days when we had just returned to school and our lives were filled with the promise of so much.

Whenever a day was as gorgeous as September 11, 2001, it was a Villanova Day and I remember thinking that as I walked to work that morning the way I walk to work almost every morning.

We don’t call them Villanova Days anymore. They don’t bring joy anymore either, only sorrow.

I was at my desk when my husband called to say something was wrong with one of the Towers. He had just come out of the Holland Tunnel and had heard a horrendous noise. Everyone was looking upward and he stopped his car to see what was happening.

That was when he got on the cell phone to tell me that he thought he saw a tail of a plane in one of the World Trade Center Towers. He asked me to turn on my television and find out what was going on and call him back when I knew. I did turn on the television only to find out that no one knew much except that people had said that a plane had hit the Tower.

My first reaction was, “What kind of idiot could hit the tower on such a clear day?” It must have been the reaction of most New Yorkers who weren’t actually close to the Tower.

I watched for another minute or so, but then thought that I would have a better view from my boss’s office. He was in the adjacent conference room in a meeting and going into his office was not an issue. Plus, his office had spectacular views of downtown. I always loved being there in the early morning or at dusk when you could see the lights of the bridges and downtown buildings.

As I began to walk to his office, someone asked me what was going on and when I replied that a plane had hit the World Trade Center, she followed me. By the time we got to the office, there was a group of about ten or so with me, staring out the windows at the very visible fire and smoke emanating from the first tower. The comments were much the same.

How could anyone hit it on such a clear day? Isn’t that a lot of fire and smoke for a small plane?

It didn’t seem like that many minutes passed when the young woman next to me said, “Look at that plane? Where is it going?”

It was another plane, plowing through the canyons of the Manhattan buildings, looking small against the panorama of the taller skyscrapers.

And then the plane hit the second Tower. An explosion blasted from the side of the building and a shower of parts, papers and flames erupted into the bright blue sky. There was a collective hush in the room and then words I can’t even remember. Murmured voices in shock and horror. It was like I was seeing a Hollywood action movie, only it wasn’t a movie. It was real life.

My boss ran into the room to turn on his television and I said, “We’re being attacked. This is an attack.”

I thought of my husband, barely blocks away from the Towers. When someone called out from their desk that the Pentagon had been hit and that there were several unaccounted for planes, it occurred to me that other landmark buildings might be next.

That we might be next.

I left the office and ran to mine. Tried to call my husband and finally got through. All of the West Side of Manhattan had been closed down and they were about to start shutting down the entire island for security reasons.

I thought of my daughter in school in New Jersey. Alone with only friends and neighbors. I didn’t want her to be alone and my husband agreed. We had to get off Manhattan somehow.

He rushed to Midtown in his van and together with two other Jersey girls at the office, we began our trek home. My husband wanted to go through the Midtown Tunnel, but I couldn’t imagine going into a tunnel. The thought of an explosion in there terrified me.

So we headed to the Queensboro Bridge, all the time listening to the radio and the reports of what was going on downtown. We were on the bridge when we heard one of the Towers was falling. We saw the cloud billowing over downtown as we came onto the upper roadway of the bridge.

I remember thinking, it’s only been twenty minutes. Only twenty minutes. Our office at that time was on the 26th floor. We had to evacuate it twice via the stairs and it took us at least 30 minutes. Maybe even 40. I thought then that no one from above the 26th floor could have made it out. That thousands were possibly dead. We started crying.

When we reached Queens, the streets were clogged with people, watching the remaining tower and listening to news reports from their cars and buildings. We somehow crawled along the streets and made it to the expressway, and made it to roadways heading to New Jersey, stopping along the way for gas to be on the safe side.

At the gas station, a man was filling up his car. He had a gun tucked into his back waistband. I knew things had just gone from bad to worse if people were arming themselves.

On the highway once again, we were moved aside as a parade of emergency vehicles rushed toward Manhattan. At one point, all traffic was diverted off the highway to allow the emergency workers full access to the roads. Little did we know that we might have been seeing some of them for the last time.

We continued on through Brooklyn only to hear that the second Tower had come down and that the Pentagon was burning. Reports came of other missing planes.

My only thought was, “Let me get home for my daughter. If this is a war and we are going to die, I want her not to be alone.” We managed to reach a neighbor on the cell phone and tell them that we were okay and were headed home. That they should wait for our daughter at the bus stop and take her with them until we got there.

We made it to the Verrazano Narrows Bridge to Staten Island and the Jersey roadways. We were only one of a few cars that were up there. The spectacle that greeted us was one of a huge grey-white wave of smoke, so big it almost seemed like clouds, spreading all across lower Manhattan. The skyline was empty of the Towers and many of the other buildings were obscured by the large cloud drifting across Lower Manhattan.

In the waters below us, ferries and dozens of boats plowed through the Narrows, kicking up immense wakes as they rushed to and from Lower Manhattan to remove people from the area.

Ahead of us the roadways were clear and we made it home in time to meet my daughter at the bus stop. It was nearly 3. We had left Manhattan many hours earlier.

My daughter knew something was wrong that day even though the school had never told them what had happened. Parents had been coming to her school all day long to take their kids home. We explained about the Towers.

She was very upset because she had just been there a week earlier. A week earlier and she and her Dad might have been in the Towers during the attack. During the visit, she had met a lady in a nearby store while they were shopping. She and the lady had both been fashion lovers and had chatted.

She was worried about the lady and whether she had gotten out of the Tower. She refused to believe they could come down until like most Americans, we settled in front of the television to watch them fall again and again. To listen to the news and wonder why it had happened.

I went to work the next day, worried that our computer and phone systems would be affected by the electrical and communications issues that the collapse of the towers had created. Things were working. Maybe that wasn’t a good thing.

Fax after fax came in from overseas, expressing sympathy for what had happened. E-mail after e-mail. I worked with my boss to amass them, holding back tears as I did so. Wondering yet again, Why?

There are those who say we deserved it because of past actions and our affluence. That we are resented for all that we have and do not share. For all that we take and do not give. That for what we give, we ask for things in exchange.

Well, here’s something from someone who wasn’t born here. From someone who can say without reservation that this Nation shared its liberty with her. That this Nation gave her more than her own homeland did. That you cannot get something for nothing.

This Nation did not deserve 9/11 nor did those innocent people from all over the world who worked in that building and whose one bad action that morning was being responsible and going to work. People like my husband’s friend’s son who had just graduated from Villanova and taken a job at one of the financial firms destroyed by the attack. He’d been working there all of two weeks. Or like my niece’s softball coach, who never made it home.

So many didn’t make it home. When I went to the train station and parked my car on Sept. 12th, there were only a dozen cars there when the lot was usually full. Since there was no one on the train platform waiting with me and almost everyone was staying home that day, it occurred to me that the cars sitting in the lot belonged to people who might never come home to get them.