May 9th, 2025
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THE GREEK HOUSE
THE GREEK HOUSE

New Books This Week

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The books of May are here—fresh, fierce, and full of feels.

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Wedding season includes searching for a missing bride�and a killer . . .


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Sometimes the path forward begins with a step back.


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One island. Three generations. A summer that changes everything.


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A snapshot made them legends. What it didn�t show could tear them apart.


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This life coach will give you a lift!


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A twisty, "addictive," mystery about jealousy and bad intentions


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Trapped by magic, haunted by muses�she must master the cards before they�re lost to darkness.


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Masquerades, secrets, and a forbidden romance stitched into every seam.


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A vanished manuscript. A murdered expert. A castle full of secrets�and one sharp-witted sleuth.


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Two warrior angels. First friends, now lovers. Their future? A WILD UNKNOWN.


Excerpt of Faceless by Alexandra Ivy

Purchase


Pike, Wisconsin #2
Zebra
September 2021
On Sale: August 24, 2021
Featuring: Wynter Moore; Noah Hunter
352 pages
ISBN: 1420151444
EAN: 9781420151442
Kindle: B08P7Y3WQY
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Add to Wish List

Romance Suspense, Suspense

Also by Alexandra Ivy:

Eternal Magic, March 2025
Paperback / e-Book
Ancient Magic, July 2024
Paperback / e-Book
The Murder Club, February 2024
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Wild Magic, January 2024
Trade Paperback / e-Book
Peril, June 2023
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Desperate Acts, March 2023
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Sate The Darkness, February 2023
Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
Echoes From the Past, January 2023
e-Book
Stalk the Darkness, August 2022
e-Book
Unstable, May 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Afraid, March 2022
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Bewitch the Darkness, November 2021
e-Book
Guardians of Eternity, October 2021
e-Book
One Last Kiss, September 2021
e-Book
Faceless, September 2021
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Slayed by Darkness, July 2021
e-Book
Guardians of Eternity, July 2021
e-Book
Darkness Betrayed, June 2021
Trade Size / e-Book
Guardians of Eternity, April 2021
e-Book
Don't Look, December 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Shades of Darkness, December 2020
e-Book
Pivot, April 2020
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Intended Victim, January 2020
Paperback / e-Book
Conquer the Darkness, December 2019
Paperback / e-Book
Beware the Darkness, August 2019
e-Book
Darkness Returns, April 2019
e-Book
You Will Suffer, February 2019
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
What Are You Afraid Of?, April 2018
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Pretend You're Safe, September 2017
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Kill Without Shame, January 2017
Paperback / e-Book
Buried and Shadowed, July 2016
e-Book
Blood Lust, June 2016
Paperback / e-Book
Kill Without Mercy, January 2016
Paperback / e-Book
Abandoned and Unseen, September 2015
Paperback / e-Book
On The Hunt, September 2015
Paperback / e-Book
Burned by Darkness, July 2015
e-Book
Stolen And Forgiven, July 2015
Trade Size / e-Book
When Darkness Ends, May 2015
Paperback / e-Book
Darkness Eternal, April 2015
Paperback / e-Book (reprint)
Blood Assassin, January 2015
Paperback / e-Book
Out of Control, November 2014
e-Book
A Very Levet Christmas, October 2014
e-Book
Hunt the Darkness, May 2014
Paperback / e-Book
Born in Blood, December 2013
Paperback / e-Book
Darkness Avenged, June 2013
Paperback / e-Book
Predatory, May 2013
Paperback / e-Book
Bayon/Jean-Baptiste, April 2013
e-Book
Raphael/Parish, January 2013
e-Book
My Lord Immortality, January 2013
Paperback / e-Book
My Lord Eternity, December 2012
Paperback / e-Book
Fear The Darkness, September 2012
Paperback / e-Book
My Lord Vampire, March 2012
Paperback / e-Book
Bound By Darkness, December 2011
Paperback / e-Book
The Real Werewives Of Vampire County, December 2011
Trade Size / e-Book
Supernatural, September 2011
Paperback / e-Book
Devoured By Darkness, December 2010
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Yours For Eternity, September 2010
Paperback
Beyond The Darkness, April 2010
Paperback / e-Book
Darkness Unleashed, November 2009
Paperback / e-Book
When Darkness Comes, January 2007
Paperback / e-Book

Excerpt of Faceless by Alexandra Ivy

Chapter 1

The second week of April was a happy time for most citizens of Larkin, Iowa. The worst of the harsh winter weather had hopefully passed and the air would soon be scented with the promise of spring.

But for Wynter Moore, the date was a painful reminder of her mother’s brutal murder.

Leaving her small apartment, Wynter walked down the narrow flight of stairs that led to the recently remodeled kitchen of her farm-to-table restaurant, Wynter Garden.

Usually the scent of warm bread and fresh herbs greeted her. This morning, however, the long room with the sleek stainless-steel appliances and green and white mosaic tiled floor was dark with a distinct chill in the air.

Wynter ignored the tiny shiver that raced through her. Next week the kitchen would be humming with activity. There would be two chefs and four waiters buzzing around, moving in a synchronized dance to produce the gourmet breakfast and lunch dishes that had made the restaurant a success in the past seven years.

For now, the windows and doors would stay shuttered. A silent tribute to her mother’s death. And the knowledge without the trust fund the older woman had left behind, the restaurant would have remained an impossible dream.

Using the side exit, Wynter stepped out of the three-story brick building that had once been the local mercantile store for the small farm community. It’d been abandoned decades ago, and it had taken Wynter several months and a shocking amount of money to transform it into a restaurant and a comfortable apartment for herself.

In the end, however, it had been worth every headache, and every penny.

Wynter shivered as a sharp breeze hit her with unexpected force, lifting her silvery blond hair to whip and dance until he covered her slender face. She clicked her tongue, impatiently grasping the long strands and tucking them beneath the collar of her puffy parka.

When she was working she kept her hair pulled into a ponytail. Today she wanted to make an effort with her appearance, not only leaving her hair down, but adding a layer of mascara to the long lashes that framed her hazel eyes and exchanging her faded jeans and casual smock top for wool slacks and yellow sweater.

Unfortunately, the promise of spring was more of a wish and a prayer than a reality today. The temperature hovered around freezing despite the morning sunlight, and the wind was cold enough to cut through her like a knife.

Hunching her shoulders, Wynter scurried across empty lot next to her building. Long ago it had been a bakery, but after a fire three years ago, the owners had walked away. Wynter had purchased the land and turned it into a parking lot. Eventually she planned to use a portion of the space to create an outdoor eating area surrounded by a garden. For now, however, she was happy to have plenty of space for parking.

There was no better place to have a business in Larkin than on the town square, but the place had been built when people’s transportation consisted of horses and buggies. During her Sunday morning brunches, her customers had been forced to park blocks away.

She was scurrying along the edge of her building in the futile hope it might block the wind when a van with a familiar logo painted on the side parked next to her battered black pickup.

Wynter watched in surprise as the woman jumped out of the vehicle and headed toward the back of the van. Tonya Knox was the owner of the gift shop that was on the other side of the parking lot and one of Wynter’s best friend despite the fact she was fifteen years her senior.

It’d been Tonya who’d walked her through the nightmare of business licenses, taxes and local zoning. She’d also had a shoulder for Wynter to cry on when the water line froze and busted, forcing her to close down the restaurant for over a week. And when a rival restaurant owner in town paid his staff to leave nasty online reviews.

Wynter halted to watch as Tonya pulled open the back of her van. The woman was several inches taller than Wynter and double her weight. Tonya wasn’t fat, just solid with the muscles she acquired in the pottery studio she’d built at the back of the gift shop. She could lift and carry the heavy blocks of clay without breaking a sweat. In contrast, Wynter was reed slender. Her grandfather told her that a strong puff of wind would blow her away.

On cue, a gusty breeze tugged at Wynter’s hair, urging her to head to her truck and get the engine revving. It was not only too cold to be standing outside, but time was ticking. She wanted to get on the road.

“Hey, Tonya. What are you doing up at this hour?” she called out. “I thought you said that you needed your beauty sleep?”

Wynter Garden opened at six in the morning and served until two in the afternoon. That meant that Wynter was up by four to start prepping for the day. In contrast, Tonya slept until midmorning and opened her gift shop at noon. Of course, she also gave pottery lessons in the evening so it was often midnight before she was locking up.

It made them perfect neighbors.

Tonya turned, revealing the numerous piercing that studded her nose, her lip, and her ears. She had short black hair and pale eyes that she framed with black liner. Beneath her leather coat her body was covered in a tats that represented her love for art.

She didn’t try to look Goth. She just was Goth.

Until her father had passed when she was twenty-one she’d intended to become a famous artist in Paris. Instead, she’d come home from art school to take over the gift shop and care for her mother.

“I’ve decided beauty is highly overrated,” Tonya told her. “At my age I’m lucky to remember to put my pants on before I leave the house.”

“That has nothing to do with age. I forgot my bra yesterday.” Wynter shoved her hands in the pockets of her parka. “Are you working in your studio this morning?”

“Nope. I wanted to catch you before you take off for Pike.”

“Me? Do you need something?”

“Here.” Tonya reached into the back of her delivery van and pulled out a small urn with flowers and tiny berries etched into the clay and a shimmering ivory glaze.

“It’s lovely.” Wynter sent her friend a puzzled gaze. “Is it a new piece for your shop?”

“No. I made the urn for you mother’s grave.”

Gratitude raced through Wynter, warming her chilled blood. Living in a small town meant she was constantly surrounded by family and friends, but she was also alone. Her mother had been violently killed in a senseless crime. That made her different from her neighbors. Tonya was one of the few people who understood how hard this day was for Wynter. “You didn’t have to do this. You already made an urn.”

Tonya shrugged. “It’s been a few years. I thought you might want a change.”

“That’s—” The words caught in Wynter’s throat.

Her friend shifted in obvious discomfort. Tonya might create amazing art, but she kept her emotions hidden beneath her brash personality.

“Yeah, yeah.”

“I mean it, Tonya,” Wynter insisted. “Not only the urn, which is gorgeous, but for remembering. That means a lot to me.”

Tonya waved her hand in an impatient motion. “Get going. It’s too cold to stand out here yapping.”

“I’ll come by the shop tomorrow and we can chat without threat of frostbite,” Wynter murmured.

Cradling the urn carefully in her arms, she headed to her truck and started the engine. Her heart felt lighter than usual as she began her yearly pilgrimage.

Precisely three hours later she reached Pike and pulled through the line of cedar trees that marked the edge of the cemetery. She parked the truck and walked to her mother’s grave that was in a section reserved for the Hurst family.

Once they’d been a prominent family in town that had earned them impressive marble mausoleum and large trees throwing shade over the entire area. Wynter wasn’t sure when the Hursts had lost their fortune, but you the downward spiral was visible in the size and elegance of the various tombs scattered around the lot.

Over the years she determined that it had been her great grandparents that had drained the last of the wealth. Their graves were marked with large marble angels that had been hand-carved, but there was no standing vault and no wrought-iron fence to protect it from vandals. Just two graves in the ground. Her grandparents’ graves were lacking even the angels. Just plain marble headstones, and her mother’s even more plain. If it wasn’t the lovely urn she carefully placed on the white slab and filled with fresh flowers, the grave would appear barren. As if the person beneath the ground wasn’t worth the time or expense of remembering.

When she was young, she’d asked her father why he’d chosen to bury her mother in Pike instead of Larkin where she could easily visit. He’d told her that her grandmother had insisted Laurel be placed with her family, but his words had that tight edge that revealed he wasn’t telling her the truth. At least not the full truth.

 

Excerpt from Faceless by Alexandra Ivy
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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