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Thursday, July 6, 2023

Spotlight and Giveaway: Hello Stranger

Today we are pleased to feature Katherine Center's latest rom com, Hello Stranger. Melissa has already added it to her 2023 Top Picks. Check out her review. Thanks to St. Martin's Press, we have one copy to give away!

Later this month, Katherine's novel Happiness for Beginners will be on Netflix. Check out the trailer.

Love isn’t blind, it’s just a little blurry.

Sadie Montgomery never saw what was coming . . . Literally! One minute she’s celebrating the biggest achievement of her life―placing as a finalist in the North American Portrait Society competition―the next, she’s lying in a hospital bed diagnosed with a “probably temporary” condition known as face blindness. She can see, but every face she looks at is now a jumbled puzzle of disconnected features. Imagine trying to read a book upside down and in another language. This is Sadie’s new reality with every face she sees.

But, as she struggles to cope, hang on to her artistic dream, work through major family issues, and take care of her beloved dog, Peanut, she falls into―love? Lust? A temporary obsession to distract from the real problems in her life?―with not one man but two very different ones. The timing couldn’t be worse.

If only her life were a little more in focus, Sadie might be able to find her way. But perceiving anything clearly right now seems impossible. Even though there are things we can only find when we aren’t looking. And there are people who show up when we least expect them. And there are always, always other ways of seeing. (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)

Photo by Skylar Reeves
BookPage calls Katherine Center “the reigning queen of comfort reads.” She’s the New York Times bestselling author of nine novels, including How to Walk Away, Things You Save in a Fire, and The Bodyguard. Katherine writes laugh-and-cry books about how life knocks us down—and how we get back up. She’s been compared to both Jane Austen and Nora Ephron, and the Dallas Morning News calls her stories “satisfying in the most soul-nourishing way.” Her books have made countless Best-Of lists, including Real Simple’s Best Books of 2020, Amazon’s Top 100 Books of 2019, Goodreads’ Best Books of the Year. The movie adaptation of Katherine’s novel The Lost Husband (starring Josh Duhamel) hit #1 on Netflix, and her novel Happiness for Beginners will release this summer as a Netflix original starring Ellie Kemper. Katherine’s summer 2022 book, The Bodyguard, was an instant New York Times bestseller, a People Best New Books pick, and was nominated for Book of the Year by Book of the Month Club. Bestselling author Emily Henry calls The Bodyguard “a shot of pure joy,” and bestselling author Helen Hoang calls it “a perfect feel-good rom-com.” Katherine lives in her hometown of Houston, Texas, with her husband, two kids, and their fluffy-but-fierce dog.

Visit Katherine online:
Website * Facebook * Twitter * Instagram

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends July 11th at midnight EST.

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Listen to this book on Speechify!

17 comments:

  1. I haven't had that happen but perhaps if I haven't seen someone for 50 or more years it could happen.

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  2. Yes, I've had it happen before. It's very embarrassing and troubling when you don't recognize someone who supposedly knows you.

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  3. All of the relatives that think you should remember them by saying "you were just so little the last time I saw you!" I think that counts.

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  4. No, unfortunately I recognize everyone - it's usually them that doesn't recognize me! LOL

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  5. No. I have a pretty good memory. I recognize most people I meet.

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  6. No, I don't think so.

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  7. sometimes, if someone changed something significant with their appearance, but that's usually momentarily

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  8. I have a good memory and I'm usually pretty on the ball so I've never not recognized someone I should already know.

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  9. Absolutely - not recognising people happens to me all the time.

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  10. I don't forget a face! A name maybe...lol.

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  11. I haven't, but I could see it happening if it had been a really long time since I last saw the person.

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  12. Yes, it happens to me all the time particularly when I see someone I know in someplace other than where I usually see them. Like seeing my postal carrier at the grocery, or a co-worker on the weekend at a museum, etc.

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