FreshFiction...for today's reader

Authors and Readers Blog their thoughts about books and reading at Fresh Fiction journals.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Sara ReyesI've been a reader for half a century. There you go, guys, you get to do the numbers and calculate my age, but it's true, I've been reading FOREVER since dirt was new! And it never ever gets old. What? Well meeting my favorite authors. I'm very fortunate that I'm able to meet some of the goddesses (and gods) who channel muses and create wonderful and imaginative worlds for me to enjoy. And this week is like reaching a stage of nirvana or whatever is really a special place. It's the annual conference of Romance Writers of America. So many authors in one space. Wow!

So, if you've been following on our Twitter or on Facebook you know a wee bit about what we've been doing, who we're meeting, and books we're getting. But I wanted to talk about what it means to me as a reader, an addict to books if you will. It's like being surrounded by friends I've known for years, creators of worlds with characters who have aided my education, stories that gave me a few hours away from stress and sadness to keep going, examples to follow that inspired me to success and sometimes just to "hang in there." So when I meet Jayne Ann Krentz in the restaurant, or Susan Elizabeth Phillips in the hall, it's a real thrill. To see Jim Butcher with his wife, Shannon Butcher passing in a corridor is like an early Christmas present. Or being hailed by Cherry Adair is always a memorable moment (she coordinates from head to toe!

Getting a hug from Elizabeth Hoyt or a wave from Celeste Bradley brings a smile to my face and an extra beat to my heart. And to finally meet the amazing Anne Gracie and Joanna Bourne in person, well, words honestly failed me! (Ladies, write faster for pity sakes and put me out of my misery.) And spying the master Brenda Jackson across a restaurant at breakfast, we could always say ate together, no? is priceless!

So, to share with you we've got a couple of special things...first pictures from the Fresh Fiction team adventures at RWA and signed books for this weekend plus many many more in August for our fifth anniversary. And we tried very hard to get photos of Peaches our Fresh Fiction Desert Fox/Vixen mascot with some of YOUR favorite authors as well. So please check them out and let us know how we did!

Until next time...

Get out there and READ a book...

Sara Reyes

DFW Tea Readers Group

Join us at Readers 'n 'ritas November 13-15, 2009!

Friday, July 17, 2009

Maxine Paetro | Collaboration

When I was the creative department manager of several top ad agencies, the part of my job that I found most rewarding was hiring creative talent.

Among the 25,000 copywriters and art directors I interviewed was a talented junior copywriter with a portfolio that I critiqued.

Over time, this junior writer became the Worldwide Creative Director of J. Walter Thompson, a huge advertising agency that was winning awards for Kodak, Burger King, Ford and other first-class clients.

His name was James Patterson.

In addition to supervising two hundred creative people and writing much of Thompson's award-winning work, Jim Patterson wrote killer-thrillers in his spare time and developed an adrenaline-charged style that really connected with the reading public. His novels rocketed to the top of the best sellers lists every time.

Years passed.

Click here to read the rest of Maxine's blog, leave a comment and enter her contest.

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

Allie Pleiter | Cry me a keeper...

So, why is it we love to see our characters go to the brink of misery? Follow them to the loss of their most treasured people, dreams, and possessions? The answer is because it makes for the best reading. Drama is the stuff of great books, and drama is built on loss, conflict, stress, and any number of other nasty elements. Let’s face it; make up kisses are always the sweetest. We cheer for the couple that falls scarred and wounded into each other’s arms because deep down, we know the redemptive power of love. When a romance restores a soul, it affirms our deeply held belief that love really can conquer all. That it transforms, redeems, and changes lives.

You could comb the Bible and find scores of verses that talk about love’s power. It’s the stories, though, that stick with us. The books where all seems lost and you can’t imagine how the hero and heroine are going to make it back to each other--those are the best ones. Because it means that anything can get better!

Cameron and Dinah go through their share of misery in Bluegrass Blessings. They learn things, down in that dark hole, that they can’t learn anywhere else. Things that push them to new strengths and new capacities. As a writer, I know a book is good when I cry writing it, just like you know the “keepers” on your shelf made you cry. I hope I made you laugh as much as cry, because I believe laughter has powers all its own.

Click here to read the rest of Allie's blog and to leave a comment.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Karen Kelley l Remembering the Hippie Days

Headbands, bell-bottoms, love beads, and Janis Joplin. Don’t worry about tomorrow, enjoy today. Getting back to nature, organic food….

I don’t know, maybe it’s the economy or something, but Karl and I planted a garden this year. We planted plenty of squash, peppers, and tomatoes because we figured some of the plants would die. They didn’t. Our freezer is almost full of squash (we have a small chest size freezer), but the tomatoes are getting ripe now. I’ve put squash in stir-fry, soups, spaghetti, and pizza. I’m going to need some more squash recipes. I’ve been wondering about squash wine. What do y’all think?

The strangest thing has happened, though. I’m losing weight. By “bulking” up my food with lots of veggies, I don’t get hungry nearly as often. Crazy, isn’t it? Okay, now I have something to control my appetite, I wondered what would happen if I started exercising, just a short workout on the treadmill. I started out at 15 minutes, and that was pushing it. I’m a writer, and I sit on my butt every day so I have no exertion level. Zilch, none. I’ve lost 15 pounds! I’m empowered, look out world!

Click here to read the rest of Karen's blog, leave a comment or enter her blog contest.

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Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Louisa Burton | Confessions of a Research Slut

When I first set out to write stories about incubi, succubi, and vampires, all I really knew about them was that they were mythological beings known for ravishing humans—a good premise, I thought, for a series of scalding erotic romances. Being an obsessive-compulsive researcher, I read everything I could find on the subject in order to build a world for my characters: a Babylonian succubus, a brooding djinni, a cheerfully lusty satyr, a tall, babe-alicious Nordic elf, and the occasional bothersome bloodsucker. It turns out that, until fairly recently, most people, no matter how learned, regarded “sexual demons” as real (in fact, a surprising number still do).

St. Augustine (354-430) wrote that “...sylvans and fauns, who are commonly called ‘incubi,’ had often made wicked assaults upon women, and satisfied their lust upon them.” Nine hundred years later, St. Thomas Aquinas explained that incubi could actually beget human beings, “not from the seed of such demons... but from the seed of men taken for the purpose; as when the demon assumes first the form of a woman, and afterwards of a man.” Hmm... Digging deeper, I found a 17th century treatise by Father Ludovicus Maria Sinistrari de Ameno, in which he described in salacious detail how an incubus, having morphed into a female succubus, will ravish “ardent, robust men” for the purpose of capturing their high-test seed. (Nice work if you can get it.) After turning back into a male, he targets “women of a like constitution, with whom the incubus copulates, taking care that both shall enjoy a more than normal orgasm...”

I am not making this up.

Click here to read the rest of Louisa's blog and to leave a comment.

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Monday, July 13, 2009

Betty Hechtman | Crafts and Murder

Writing a craft mystery series is the best. I get to mix my love of making things with my love of mysteries. Like lots of other people, I got hooked on mysteries by reading Nancy Drew books - the originals. Who didn’t want to be her with all the adventures and cool little car? I was thrilled to find out I do have one thing in common with her - we both drive roadsters.

My love of mystery grew as I read Agatha Christie’s books. I guess I ended up with a little something in common with her, too. Her Miss Marple knits and my character, Molly Pink, crochets. And just like you don’t have to know how to knit to enjoy Miss Marple’s stories, you don’t have to know how to crochet to read my series. Though I have heard from people who were inspired to pick up the hook after reading my books.

Actually mixing in crochet grew out of my own desire to learn the craft. I have a degree in Fine Arts and have always sewed and done different crafts, but always wanted to learn how to make granny squares. I ended up using a children’s kit to learn how. I was so excited about crocheting, I thought it would be fun to put it in a mystery and all that time I spent with my hooks and yarn would be considered research.

Click here to read the rest of Betty's blog, comment or enter her blog contest.

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Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sandi Shilhanek | Wow...Everyone Was SO Right! This book is terrific!

sandi shilhanek
Mr. Perfect


BURN
Last week we talked about books that we had heard a lot of hype about and that disappointed us, so I thought this week we'd discuss the books that got a lot of hype and we loved!

A few years back I was seeing a lot of stuff about Mr. Perfect by Linda Howard. Everyone was just raving about it, and it was in my TBR so I decided to go for it.

Well, I absolutely loved it! If I were a keeper I would have kept Mr. Perfect. All these years later I can't tell you anything specific about Mr. Perfect, but I do remember thinking it had the perfect combination of suspense, romance, and humor.

There are of course other books I've read because of the hype and loved but Mr. Perfect is the one that sticks in my mind because it’s one of the rare books that the DFW Readers all agree on.

So what book did you read and enjoy because of the hype?

Until next week happy page turning!

Sandi Shilhanek

DFW Tea Readers
Readers 'n 'ritas... celebrating literary obsessions

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