Happy hallowe’en! If you fancy getting into the spirit of hallowe’en but there’s not a ghost of a chance or you reading a really scary book, or you just don’t know witch to choose, then you might enjoy my collections of slightly spooky stories.

Happy hallowe’en! If you fancy getting into the spirit of hallowe’en but there’s not a ghost of a chance or you reading a really scary book, or you just don’t know witch to choose, then you might enjoy my collections of slightly spooky stories.
Specious means either misleadingly attractive or superficially plausible, but actually wrong.
Custard made with salt instead of sugar would add speciosity to your trifle. An example of speciousness is the specious claim that as chocolate is dervived from plants, a family sized bar of Aero counts as one of your five a day. That’s only true if you choose the orange flavoured one (she adds speciously*)
*mint’s a plant, so green centred Aeros are healthy too.
The cover of my romantic murder mystery, Acting Like A Killer, has had a tweak. Do you like the new look?
A monticule is a small hill. Sounds rather friendly, doesn’t it? The sort of place you’d walk up to enjoy a picnic involving ginger beer and home made cake. A monticule can also be a mini mound caused by a volcano.
Here’s the view from a hill (quite a big one) I climbed up one summer. Recognise it?
Clue … instead of climbing up, you could just swan about down the bottom.
Here’s another opportunity to sign up to author newsletters, and download a free book from each of them.
Fatalism can mean either a submissive attitude to events as being inevitable, or the belief that everything is predetermined and that we have no influence over anything which may happen. A fatalist is a person who thinks fatalistically.
I’m not a fatalist. Some things are out of our control, and luck plays a part, but I believe that it’s generally possible for us to influence the future.
What about you?
I’m taking part in a few author / book promotions. This one and this one both offer free reads from authors of crime, thriller and mystery books. To claim these you must subscribe to the authors’ newsletters, but you can opt out any time if you decide you don’t want to keep receiving them.
There’s also this one which has mystery and thriller books for sale. Finally this one has cosy mystery books which are for sale, or can all be read via kindle unlimited.
Hopefully you’ll find something of interest in one of those!
I haven’t had a story in Take a Break’s Fiction Feast in a while, so I’m very pleased to have two in the current (October) issue.
The titles they’ve been given might make it tricky to guess what they’re about. Does it help at all if I mention werewolves?