A Moment Forever
Liberty
Victory Series, #1
by Cat Gardiner
Publication
Date: May 28th 2016
Vanity
& Pride Press
Genre:
Historical Romance
In every footlocker, hope chest, and heart full of secrets there
is a story waiting to be discovered and told.
BLURB
In the summer of 1992, a young writer is bequeathed the abandoned
home of a great-uncle she never knew. The house has a romantic history and is
unlike any home she has ever seen. Juliana Martel felt as though she stepped
into a time capsule—a snapshot of 1942. The epic romance—and heartache—of the
former occupant unfold through reading his wartime letters found in the attic,
compelling her on a quest to construct the man. His life, as well as his
sweetheart’s, during the Second World War were as mysterious as his
disappearance in 1950.
Carrying her own pain inflicted by the abandonment of her mother
and unexpected death of her father, Juliana embarks on a journalist’s dream to
find her great-uncle and the woman he once loved. Enlisting the reluctant
assistance of a man whose family is closely related to the secrets, she
uncovers the carefully hidden events of her great-uncle's and others' lives -
and will ultimately change her own with their discovery.
This story of undying love, born amidst the darkest era in modern
history, unfolded on the breathtaking Gold Coast of Long Island in 1942. A
Jewish, Army Air Forces pilot and an enchanting society debutante—young
lovers—deception—and a moment in time that lasted forever.
A Moment Forever is an evocative journey that will resonate with
you long after you close the book. Romance, heartache, and the power of love,
atonement, and forgiveness transform lives long after the horrors and scars of
the Second World War have ended.
The
closed door to the attic appeared innocuous, but like the pleasant personas and
expressions many people conveyed, Juliana felt it was a dead giveaway that
something terrible hid behind it. She was, after all, an example of that. Her
deepest wounds, she believed, were cleverly masked behind her jovial
expressions and happy demeanor, but she didn’t realize that the signs were
evident in her near anorexic figure.
However,
on this late afternoon, she felt open and liberated after surviving the
luncheon with her mother. She had bared her inner feelings and animosity then
came home to clean the vintage kitchen. Feeling renewed, she went to the grocer
around the corner because her white Frigidaire looked as hollow as she had felt
these last eleven years. Strangely, she was in the mood to cook a cheeseburger.
From the
top of the staircase, Juliana could still hear the record player from the
parlor. Melancholy tunes by the Ink Spots and Ella Fitzgerald filled the entire
house. She hoped it would carry up into the attic, thinking the soulful music
would transport her back to the era and mindset of William when he had last
locked the garret.
Yes, it
was locked and after an hour of searching the house high and low, she finally
found the key inside a small box in one of the dresser drawers. Beside the
brass skeleton key sat a gold signet ring with engraving upon the face:
propellers and wings surrounded a small diamond at its center. The inscription
along the inside of the band read, “With Love, Mom and Dad.”
“Here it
goes,” Juliana said before holding her breath and nervously turning the key.
She felt on the verge of a full-blown panic attack.
The door
creaked like all the others in the house and her heart rate sped up as it had
time and again in the course of this home’s unveiling.
Once the
door was fully open, she pulled the slender cord hanging against the wall,
illuminating the narrow passage by the bare light bulb fixture.
Each step
up the steep staircase issued a groan from the hardened planks beneath every
footfall of her black Converse sneakers until she stood at the top, fiercely
gripping onto the simple banister. She looked around the large, dark room
before taking the final step into the unknown, mysterious, and
yet-to-be-discovered past of her great-uncle. After working herself up to it
for the last two days, Juliana had been expecting something ominous and
frightening in the attic, yet instead she felt a sense of peace coupled with
sadness. Her thoughts traveled to her father, and her emotions became even more
pronounced. Her eyes welled with tears at the morose tranquility the attic
emanated.
Essentially,
but for a couple of trunks and a few boxes neatly placed upon a shelf, the
attic was empty, having lain undisturbed and unfilled since its purchase in
December of 1942.
If these
walls could talk, they would tell her how William had slid his footlocker under
the eave after placing the last of its contents within and how he had waited
one full year before doing so. They would tell his grand-niece how he waited
until the very last minute to place the newspaper over the windows. Once beige
strips of masking tape were now an aged, burnished orange. The empty space
staring back at the modern-day interloper represented the very reason for
William’s departure.
Although
expecting the worst in the attic, she wasn’t prepared for the emptiness. She
had imagined cobwebs extending from box to box and odd pieces of furniture and
tools that had long outgrown their usefulness. She thought the attic would
surely be filled with scary dolls and broken strollers, perhaps a rocking chair
or an eerie mirror, maybe even some Dorian Gray-type painting and faded
photographs. Expecting an antique cemetery of sorts filled with memories,
stories, and voices of the past residents who had once lived at 300 Bradford
Road, she was surprised by the vacant space before her.
The
startling emptiness of the room confirmed to her that no happy memories had
ever been created in this house. The house never became a home, had never
filled with children’s laughter or generations of family dating back to its
initial construction. No household item ever had the luxury of being used
enough to justify its disregard, saving and eventual storing on the third
floor. It was clear to Juliana that Primrose Cottage was only a place where
William laid his head, not his heart. True life had never infused these walls.
The attic led her to believe he had been a bachelor—never married, never had
children, never sharing his life, let alone this house, with anyone. The
starkness of the attic revealed the loneliness of the man at the time of his
departure.
Author Info
Born and bred in New York City,
Cat Gardiner is a girl in love with the romance of an era once known as the
Silent Generation, now referred to as the Greatest Generation. A member of the
National League of American Pen Women, Romance Writers of America, and Tampa
Area Romance Authors, she and her husband adore exploring the 1940s Home Front
experience as living historians, wishing for a time machine to transport them
back seventy years.
She loves
to pull out her vintage frocks and attend U.S.O dances, swing clubs, and
re-enactment camps as part of her research, believing that everyone should have
an understanding of The 1940s Experience™.
Inspired
by those everyday young adults who changed the fate of the world, she writes
about them, taking the reader on a romantic journey. Cat’s WWII-era novels
always begin in her beloved Big Apple and surround you with the sights and
sounds of a generation.
She is
also the author of four Jane Austen-inspired contemporary novels, however, her
greatest love is writing 20th Century Historical Fiction, WWII-era Romance. A Moment Forever is her debut novel in that genre.
Author
Links:
Giveaway
To win an
eBook of A Moment Forever by Cat Gardiner please enter using the GLEAM form
below. Two eBooks are up for grabs!
Rules
– Giveaway ends at 11:59pm EST on
June 30th. You must be 18 or older to enter.
–
Giveaway is open INTERNATIONALLY.
– Only
one entry per household.
– All
giveaway entrants agree to be honest and not cheat the systems; any suspect of
fraud is decided upon by blog/site owner and the sponsor, and entrants may be
disqualified at our discretion.
– Winner
has 48 hours to claim prize or new winner is chosen.
Book
Blast Schedule
Wednesday, June 15
Thursday, June 16
Friday, June 17
Saturday, June 18
Monday, June 20
Tuesday, June 21
Wednesday, June 22
Thursday, June 23
Friday, June 24
Monday, June 27
Tuesday, June 28
Wednesday, June 29
Thursday, June 30
No comments:
Post a Comment