"Saving CeeCee Honeycutt" -- 12 year old CeeCee is alone and in trouble. But when she needs help the most, her long-lost great-aunt Tootie whisks CeeCee away in her classic Packard Victoria to her grand home in Savannah, Georgia. Soon CeeCee is living in a magical world of Southern charm that appears to be run entirely by women. A classic tale of love, family, and the ties that bind. "The Sentry" -- When two gang members lay into a sandwich shop across the street from Joe Pike, he;s caught up in more than just a demand for protection money. The victim won't press charges, and suddenly the FBI is involved and won't say why, When Pike himself becomes a target, its time to dig through the madness to find the truth lurking underneath.
Twelve days after Beth Hoffman’s first novel was published in 2010, she became a New York Times bestselling author with foreign rights selling to prestigious publishers in Italy, Germany, France, Poland, Norway, Hungary, Indonesia, Korea, Israel, and the United Kingdom.
Following an extensive national tour, Beth returned home to Kentucky and the solace of her writing studio. Drawing from vivid memories of childhood on her grandparents’ farm and her love of animals, nature, and antiques, a surprising story quickly took form. When asked about her second novel, which is titled Looking for Me, Beth says: “This book encompasses my deepest passions—it’s the story that woke me in the night and demanded to be told.”
Before beginning her writing career, Beth was the president and co-owner of an interior design studio. An artist as well as an award-winning designer, her paintings are displayed in private and corporate collections in the United States, Canada, and the UK.
Beth lives, along with her husband and two very smart cats, in a restored Queen Anne home in a quaint historic district in Northern Kentucky. Her interests include the rescue of abandoned and abused animals, nature conservancy, birding, historic preservation, and antiquing.