About the
Book:
Title:
Moon Over Alcatraz
Author: Patricia Yager Delagrange
Publisher: Ravenswood Publishing/Black Hawk
Pages: 308
Genre: Romantic Women’s Fiction
Author: Patricia Yager Delagrange
Publisher: Ravenswood Publishing/Black Hawk
Pages: 308
Genre: Romantic Women’s Fiction
Brandy Chambers was looking forward to
the birth of her first child. She and Weston move from San Francisco
to the small town of Alameda to start a family, she’s writing her
second book, and Weston has a fantastic job working on the
Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge project. Having this baby would make
her already-wonderful life perfect.
But when the baby dies after a
difficult birth, Brandy’s perfect life blows up in her face.
Stricken with grief, she and Weston pull apart. This new distance
leads them both to disaster. Not until a chance encounter with her
high school friend, Edward Barnes, does Brandy pull herself together.
Brandy and Weston agree to recommit to each other, striving to
forgive infidelity and recreate their previous existence.
Everything is once again going
according to plan—until Brandy discovers she’s pregnant. While
she struggles to cope with this new obstacle, Edward Barnes returns
to town and discovers she’s having a baby, while Weston is torn
between his love for his wife and his anger at her betrayal. Can
Brandy manage to keep her marriage to Weston together? Will Edward be
a part of Brandy’s life if she and Weston separate?
For More Information
- Moon Over Alcatraz is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Book Excerpt:
While sipping my coffee, a gentleman
dressed in an impeccable dark grey suit, red tie and baby-blue shirt
approached my table.
“This is the only unoccupied
chair. Do you mind?”
I looked over at the empty seat and
nodded. “Go ahead,” I mumbled then continued reading. I turned
the page and noticed his hand reach across the small round table,
handing me my keys.
“Oh, my God! I must have dropped
them. Thank — ” I looked up at his face. “Edward? Edward
Barnes?” My eyes widened. “Is that really you?”
He pulled out the chair and sat
down, his blue eyes snagging me with an intense stare. “Brandy
Donovan?”
“Brandy Chambers now. I don’t
think I’ve seen you since high school graduation.”
“I left for NYU two days later and
— ”
“Law school, right?”
“You remembered.” He smiled,
revealing beautiful straight teeth. “Then I came back here and I’ve
been practicing law ever since.”
“What type of law?”
“Criminal. What about you, Mrs.
Chambers?” he teased.
“Well, I married Weston after I
graduated from Cal. He works as a structural engineer on the San
Francisco Bay Bridge project.”
“And you? A mom? Two point five
kids?”
I looked down into my paper coffee
cup, fiddled with the top. “No, no kids yet.” Feeling too raw to
discuss it now, I changed the subject. “Do you work here in
Alameda?”
“Yeah, I do.” He glanced down at
his wrist watch. “I’d love to continue our discussion but I’ve
got a meeting in ten minutes. How about lunch soon? Remember how I
was planning on becoming a chef some day?”
I laughed, recalling his regaling me
with the list of applications he’d received for culinary institutes
all over the world. “I remember all right. And you were always
demanding I taste your latest creation, asking if I thought it needed
more spice or a little less olive oil.”
He stood, pushing the chair back
toward the table. “I’ll have to cook for you one of these days.
Sometimes I think I’m a better chef than I am a lawyer.”
“Well, most of the time you were a
fantastic chef.”
He grinned mischievously. “And you
were always a bad liar. Some of the dishes I served you should never
have made it onto the plate.”
I laughed again. He’d always been
nice looking but now he was older, he’d matured, no longer a gangly
teenager. He’d filled out but was still slender with long legs and
he appeared to be at least six foot five inches tall. He turned to
leave.
“Wait!” Grabbing the corner of
his sleeve, I smiled up at him. “It was nice seeing you again,
Edward.”
He looked right through me with that
blue-eyed stare. “It certainly was, Brandy. You take care now.”
He tipped his head once in acknowledgement then wended his way
through the crowd toward the door.
“Edward Barnes,” I whispered to
myself. “I’ll be darned.”
I threw my cup in the recycling can
and speed-walked out of Peet’s, jogging home in less than ten
minutes. What a surprise, meeting Edward after so many years. I
plopped down on the front room couch and gazed up at the ceiling.
Edward Barnes in the flesh, I
reflected. He looked so different than when we’d known each other
in high school. He’d become a strikingly handsome man, a perfectly
shaped nose widened a bit at the bottom, a dark mustache hovered over
his now-straightened teeth, an impressively square jaw,
crescent-shaped eyebrows, and the bluest eyes I’d ever seen without
contact lenses.
He reminded me of the guy who played
a private detective in Magnum, P.I. — Tom Selleck — in his
younger days! And he’d always had a fantastic personality, funnier
than hell, joked around a lot. I’d enjoyed hanging around him in
the classes we shared at St. Joseph’s Notre Dame High School. It
would be fun to catch up on old times, along with playing guinea pig
to one of his homemade meals.
Excerpt First Chapter
“Breathe,
Brandy, breathe.”
Weston’s
voice came from the side of the hospital bed where I lay propped up,
knees bent to accommodate Dr. Farney checking to see how far my
cervix had dilated.
Gritting
my teeth, eyes shut, I inhaled through my nose. The pungent odor of
sweat wafted through my nostrils. I imagined the crest of a deep-blue
wave curling over, white foam churning, crashing down, wave after
wave speeding toward the edge of a sandy beach.
But
I couldn’t take in a full breath. I opened my mouth, tried sucking
in air, lungs on fire, the pain like a serrated knife to my belly,
hands flailing, slapping the sides of the bed to get Weston’s
attention.
“She
can’t breathe.” I could hear the panic in his voice. He was
scared. So was I. Is this how a first delivery is supposed to go?
Dr.
Farney’s voice tore through the delivery room. “The baby’s
heart rate is slowing.”
A
plastic mask lowered over my mouth and nose, and a steady flow of
oxygen began pouring through. I shifted my gaze to the right.
Weston’s eyes were riveted on my lower body, his brows dipped down,
mouth set in a tight line.
“What’s
wrong?” I shouted, my voice muffled beneath the mask.
Weston
leaned down, his body blocking the glare of the overhead lights.
“Take deep breaths. They’re using forceps to get the baby out.”
He gripped my hand and squeezed then edged toward the foot of the
bed. “Doctor, is the baby okay?”
“Umbilical
cord’s wrapped around her neck. She’s twisted in the birth
canal.” Dr. Farney’s voice sounded achingly calm.
Wrapped
around her neck...Twisted in the birth canal... My baby girl had been
due in early June, but she was being born three weeks early. However,
Dr. Farney had urged us not to worry.
The
pain was beyond bad. It was excruciating. Suddenly the pressure in my
groin subsided. I inhaled one deep breath, then another, and my lower
body deflated like a leaky tire.
“The
baby’s not…she’s not breathing,” Weston whispered.
A
deafening silence splintered through the room.
I
tugged on Weston’s hand. He twisted his head in my direction, tears
glistening along his lower lashes.
My
mind registered the screams, but my ears heard only the wild thumping
of my heart as flecks of black clouded my vision.
About the
Author
Born and raised in the San Francisco
Bay Area, Patricia attended St. Mary’s College, studied her junior
year at the University of Madrid, received a B.A. in Spanish at UC
Santa Barbara then went on to get a Master’s degree in Education at
Oregon State University. She lives with her husband and two teenage
children in Alameda, across the bay from San Francisco, along with
two very large chocolate labs, Annabella and Jack. Her Friesian horse
Maximus lives in the Oakland hills in a stall with a million dollar
view.
Her latest book
is the romantic women’s fiction, Moon Over Alcatraz.
For More
Information
My review;
"Moon Over Alcatraz" by Patracia Yager Delagrange is. in my opinion, not a happy story, but a sad one. Brandy was a normal soon to be mother with a nice husband. When her baby dies soon after it is born her world falls apart and her marriage goes down, too. She cannot look at her husband without thinking of their lost baby. In a spur of the moment decision her husband leaves to go to work out of town. Brandy never got to tell him how she really felt. They cannot find a way to communicate. They are unable to get together and when they try they will have to face a new obstacle standing in their way. Will their love be strong enough or are they done forever? I give this book a 4/5. I was given this book for a review, these are my opinions.
No comments:
Post a Comment