Thursday, June 11, 2020

Practicing Murder Blog Tour


About the Book


Book:  Practicing Murder
Author: Erin Unger
Genre:  Christian Romantic Suspense
Release Date: March 2019

Graduate student Maddie Clare is never talking to her ex-boyfriend Joze Evans or God again. Broken from her past and Joze’s betrayal, she must go home for her Aunt Lonna’s funeral. But after a run-in with a stalker, who insists Maddie knows the secret that had Aunt Lonna investigating him, she’s afraid for her life and must accept Joze’s protection.

As the stalker draws closer, how will Maddie and Joze face the past and their love that never died? And will Maddie stay out of the stalker’s grip long enough to figure out what secret he possesses?

Click here to get your copy!

My Review

There is a good bit of action and suspense in this novel. The character development for the lead female, Maddie, is good. The hero, Joze, I thought was way too emotional for a male character, especially an EMT. I also thought the dialogue could have been edited as some of it was a bit much. Unger's descriptions are sometimes unusual. A couple of the male characters “marched” to their next location, for example, rather than walking. I felt the plot was not so reasonable, especially the suspense near the end. The whole reason Maddie was harassed, followed, and attacked literally ceased to exist before the end.

This is a novel for readers who want to be entertained and are not too concerned about the finer points of character and plot development. There is a nice devotional moment included at the end of the book.

My rating: 3/5 stars.

About the Author


Erin Unger was raised in the hills of Virginia, exploring abandoned houses and reading the scariest books she could find. After marrying so young it would make a great romance novel, she has enjoyed an exciting life with her hubby. But her fast-paced life sometimes rivals the suspense in her books thanks to all her grown children and a couple grandkids.

More from Erin


Books are powerful. Whole other worlds can unfold in a few well-stated sentences. There’s nothing like that feeling a reader gets when the perfect book is open on their lap and it pulls them in on the first page. It’s like a gift. Sometimes they make us rethink long held ideas. At times they mirror what we’re going through. And sometimes they remind us of areas in our lives we haven’t worked on.
But not every book is for every person. Sometimes it’s not the best seller that struck the right cord, or the book everyone’s reading, it’s the one you stumbled upon on a special or heard of from a friend. It’s a God-ordained tool to show us His ways and plans.
As Christian writers, the power to transform is even more in our hands. We have the ability to show how great our God is and how he works in the most unusual ways at times. We use our gift to do more than only entertain, we want to make Him more real to our readers. We want to show them how to grow and change as our characters do. And it’s amazing that we can use fiction to do so.
Next time you pick up a book, see if you can find the message hidden in the character’s struggles. Maybe God used a writer to put it there just for you to learn.

Blog Stops

Wishful Endings, June 12 (Author Interview)
Blossoms and Blessings, June 16 (Author Interview)
Betti Mace, June 17
Artistic Nobody, June 20 (Guest Review from Kelsey Barela)
By The Book, June 21 (Author Interview)
CarpeDiem, June 22
Simple Harvest Reads, June 23 (Guest Review from Joni)

I received a complimentary digital copy of this book through Celebrate Lit. My comments are an independent and honest review. The rest of the copy in this post was provided by Celebrate Lit.

(My star ratings: 5-I love it, 4-I like it, 3-It's OK, 2-I don't like it, 1-I hate it.)

6 comments:

Erin Unger said...

Thanks for having me on your blog.

Rita Wray said...

Sounds like a good book.

Marisela Zuniga said...

I love suspense novels, this sounds great

Emma said...

This sounds quite intense!

Debbie P said...

This sounds like a great page turner.

Caryl Kane said...

Wonderful review! Sounds like a must read.