The Last Gasp

The Last Gasp

The Last Gasp

 

About the Book The Last Gasp

 

The Last Gasp

 

Book:  The Last Gasp

Author: Chautona Havig

Genre: Christian Historical Mystery, Fairytale retelling

Release date: July 6, 2021

At the pinnacle of his Hollywood career, Garrison Prince’s reign ends tonight.

As plain old Gary Prinz, he can pursue his Bible education, buy a bungalow in Pasadena, acquire a few chickens, and marry the girl of his dreams. He just never imagined trading the silver screen for a pulpit would wreak such havoc.

A cigarillo girl, Lucinda Ashton spends her days with her boyfriend, Gary, and her evenings selling candy and “gaspers” to the Hollywood elite at the Taj Mahal Theater.

However, when gunshots ring out just as intermission begins, Lucinda finds herself smack-dab in the middle of a brouhaha that leaves three dead, and no one has a clue why.

All the police know is that the evidence points to Lucinda as the killer and Gary as the intended target.

Four new friends, one young orphan, and a potluck of clues that don’t seem to fit anywhere leave the police baffled, Lucinda in fear for her freedom, and Gary ready to trade in his acting shoes for gumshoes if it’ll save his “Cinda.”

The first book in the Ever After Mysteries combines beloved fairy tales and mysteries, The Last Gasp. This Cinderella retelling blends murder with enough crime and story clues to keep you on the edge of your seat.

 

Click here to get your copy!

 

My Thoughts on The Last Gasp

The Last Gasp is a fun fairy tale turned murder mystery.  In this book, you meet a prince, or rather Gary Prinz who you might call a prince.   He’s an actor and a starry one at that who keeps the girls glued to the screen.  Throw in a cigarillo girl who doesn’t really know who he is other than her boyfriend and you’ve already got a fun time. 

I mean think about it.  His “cinda”, Lucinda thinks he’s just a plain old guy named Gary.  She doesn’t know who he really is.  To her he’s a man studying the Bible and ministry and they’re planning their own happily ever after on that life.  Not on the life of a movie star.  But he wants out of that.

And then. . . BOOM.  Literally.  Someone dies and things start going crazy.  

Can Gary and Lucinda find out who is behind all the killings and prove her innocence before they lose their lives or end up in jail for good?  And can Gary get out of his contract and start leading the life he really wants to live?

This is an expertly written book that kept me reading from the opening lines.  I love the little boy as well.  He’s cute and cocky and just plain fun.  

I have voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book which I received from Celebrate Lit. All views expressed are only my honest opinion. I was not required to write a positive review nor was I compensated in any other way. All opinions expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC regulations.

 

About the Author of The Last Gasp

 

 

The Last Gasp

 

 

 

Author of the bestselling Aggie and Past Forward Series, Chautona Havig lives in an oxymoron, escapes into imaginary worlds that look startlingly similar to ours and writes the stories that emerge. An irrepressible optimist, Chautona sees everything through a kaleidoscope of It’s a Wonderful Life sprinkled with fairy tales. Find her at chautona.com and say howdy—if you can remember how to spell her name.

 

More from Chautona

What Beautiful, Unexpected Parallel Did I Find Writing this Mystery?

I bought it at Pic-n-Save when I was eleven—an 8.5×11 paperback book of traditional fairy tales. I learned another side of the age-old stories that you don’t see from Disney. Rapunzel? Yeah. That was the story about the queen who was craving rampion (a salad vegetable) so much that she promised to give up her child for it. Rampion—Rapunzel. It’s a thing.

It’s also where I learned Cinderella’s name as “Aschenputtel.” Look, those Brothers Grimm were… well, they were German and that should explain everything. “Puttel” just sings of German, doesn’t it?

That tale was also a bit gruesome. The one sister cut off her big toe to make the shoe fit because her mother said, “You won’t have to walk anywhere if you’re a queen. Who needs it!” So the idiotic girl did. Same for the other sister and her heel. Seriously, didn’t she learn from her older sister?

Oh, and it’s the one where mother and stepsisters get their eyes picked out by birds. It reminded me of Proverbs 30:17. “The eye that mocks a father and scorns a mother, the ravens of the valley will pick it out, and the young eagles will eat it.”

Talk about bringing Scripture to life for kids there.

*Gulp*

True confession, our kids used to sing that verse to the tune of “All Hail the Pow’r of Jesus’ Name.” You should have heard the lusty voices of our children in our Grand Marquis station wagon (may the wonderful beast rest in peace) singing, “The ravens shall pick out his eyes and eeee-agles eeee-eeaat the saaaammmme!”

I digress.

Cinderella—I mean, Aschenputtel—really wasn’t my favorite story, though. I liked other stories from other books. Like the Ten Brothers—a Chinese folk tale. You know. Fairy tale.

Know which fairy tale I liked even less than Cinderella?

The Little Mermaid. 

Seriously, I didn’t like the original (Sorry Mr Andersen… I just didn’t), and I can’t stand Disney’s. But when we first began planning the Ever After Mysteries, I knew which one I wanted to do. The Little Mermaid had everything going for it.

Houdini and a water tank.

Can’t you just see it?

It would have been great. But a friend asked who was writing about the “cigarillo girl” (as I mentioned in THIS post), and well… the rest is history.

Or at least, it’s set back in history.

But there’s one truth I discovered as I wrote this mystery.

Mystery… that’s a good word for this truth, actually. Cinderella is a beautiful picture of Jesus as our prince. We can be His bride and put on the shoe He has fashioned only to fit us, or we can try to snatch it up and make it suit our wills and hold our overgrown egos (work with me here). He takes us out of our ragged, dirty lives and brings us home… to Him. To His Father.

Is there anything more beautiful? I don’t think so.

In The Last Gasp, Gary knows Cinda long before she knows him—truly knows him. He loves her just as she is. Is it a perfect retelling of the beauty of Christ’s love for his church? Not hardly. It wasn’t intended to demonstrate that relationship at all. But there are tiny nuances that do. And that’s pretty cool.

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10 Comments

  1. Bea LaRocca

    Thank you for sharing your wonderful review of The Last Gasp, it sounds like an exciting story and I am looking forward to reading it

    1. Erin S.

      Thank you for visiting my blog today!

  2. Marisela Zuniga

    This sounds like an interesting book!

    1. Erin S.

      Thank you for visiting my blog today!

  3. Caryl Kane

    Erin, Thank you for sharing your wonderful review! Sounds like a must read.

    1. Erin S.

      Thank you for visiting my blog today!

  4. Caryl Kane

    Erin, Thank you for sharing your excellent review! The Last Gasp sounds like one not to miss.

    1. Erin S.

      Thank you for visiting my blog today!

  5. Antoinette M

    Thank you for the review. This book sounds interesting!

    1. Erin S.

      Thank you for visiting my blog today!

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