ONLINE: Amy E. Reichert, Ann Garvin
May 5, 2021 7:00 PM
You had us at journalist who can see ghosts. That s one plot point of
The Kindred Spirits Supper Club, the new novel from
Amy E. Reichert about a writer whose current circumstances lead to a return home to Wisconsin Dells. Reichert will be in conversation with another Wisconsin-based writer,
I Thought You Said This Would Work. It s a humor-laced road trip tale of former friends brought back together on a mission for another friend with cancer.
Register here for the Crowdcast livestream, hosted by Mystery to Me.
press release: Join Mystery to Me for a lively (and we re betting HILARIOUS) evening with Amy E. Reichert and Ann Garvin as they discuss their latest novels, THE KINDRED SPIRITS SUPPER CLUB and I THOUGHT YOU SAID THIS WOULD WORK.
Waukesha County writer Amy E. Reichert s The Kindred Spirits Supper Club has a shaker full of ingredients for quality romantic comedy: a self-conscious heroine, a handsome available man, a bucolic setting and a fizzy ghost who doubles as a yenta.
In Kindred Spirits, unemployed journalist Sabrina (please excuse my involuntary shudder) is back home with family in Wisconsin Dells as she heals from some wounds. The Monroes have a secret: The women can see and communicate with ghosts of the recently (and occasionally not-so-recently) deceased, helping them move on to the next world. As with corporeal forms of human entanglement, Sabrina would prefer not to get involved, but over time the perky ghost Molly has become a combination of BFF, imaginary friend and romantic guardian angel for her.
Kindred Spirits Supper Club Book
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7. HAPPY READING Wisconsin author Amy E. Reichert is all about stories that end well. And who couldn t use that right now? Her latest (out in April),
The Kindred Spirits Supper Club, follows Sabrina Monroe as she moves back to the Dells to confront ghosts, fall in love and make a difference (Berkley Publishing, $16). Travel
Image zoom | Credit: Sarah Super
8. A SPACE TO HEAL A survivor herself, Sarah Super has experienced the lingering feelings of powerlessness and betrayal that come from sexual violence. Working with the city of Minneapolis to open the nation s first permanent Memorial to Survivors of Sexual Violence, she aimed to create a place of support for other survivors and to spur her own healing. The thousands of people who supported its creation helped rebuild my sense o