FreshFiction...for today's reader

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

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Sara Reyes | Off to the Festivals

South byI'm not quite sure what I should use as the label for South by South West (SXSW) or "South by." It's a film festival, a music festival and now more than ever an "Interactive" conference / festival. It's the result of what's happening in the "real" world. You know, the convergence of our lives and the stuff we do. Like we listen to music which is now almost all electronically stored on files, played in little devices that make us laugh when we think back to the days of the Sony Walkman, or even, bless me, the LP. We get our movies and shows on our computers and even on our phones which have become handy devices to entertain while we're waiting or bored. We can see what's happening in our worlds, check the weather forecast, listen to music, watch a film and read a book. It's a wonderful gadget and almost every one has one type or another.

So this gathering in Austin, the SXSW experience is amazing. I've met all ages, types, sizes and nationalities of people. From the geeks for tech to the nerds for film, to the secret readers of "trash fiction" (that would be what I read I gathered) to evangelists for change (political, cultural, or other). It's an amazing time filled with much anticipation, energy and innovation.

Why do I go when all I do is "books?" Well, the experience over the years has given flight to my imagination to do things at Fresh Fiction. My doing things pays off for fellow readers and authors. It's all a big circle and it keeps getting larger with all the "new" stuff we can do.

And yeah, I'm seeing people standing in lines reading their Kindle, their Sony, their Nook. Oh, yes, and the old fashioned paper books. It's a people thing. Whatever floats your boat.

If you're curious I invite you to follow our Tweets (@freshfiction through next Saturday. We'll be 'rawking' Austin and the festival!

Sara ReyesAccidentally DemonicUntil next time...


Get out there and READ a book...

Sara Reyes

DFW Tea Readers Group

Join us at Readers 'n 'ritas November 12-14, 2010! with Sherrilyn Kenyon and more guests


See you on the Twitter (@FreshFiction)

PS comment and you could win signed books from Dakota Cassidy, sponsor of this weekend's blog contest. Two WINNERS!!!

Labels:

Fresh Pick | WOLF TRAP by Linda Thomas-Sundstrom

Wolf Trap

Wolf Moon

March 2010
On Sale: March 1, 2010
Featuring: Parker Madison; Chloe Tyler
288 pages
ISBN: 0373618301
EAN: 9780373618309
Mass Market Paperback
$5.25

Romance Paranormal

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Linda Thomas-SundstromWolf Trap
by Linda Thomas-Sundstrom

Sultry Miami nights are about to get even hotter as Linda Thomas-Sundstrom continues her Wolf Moons series.

A hunt for a rogue werewolf stirs passion in the hearts of two rebels….

When a full moon awakens the beast within Dr. Parker Madison, he is hell-bent on finding explanations for his new Otherworld form and his insatiable lust. On the prowl one night, he discovers a woman in trouble—one who stirs his darker desires and may hold the answers to all that he has searched for.

After a sexy stranger rescues her from a brutal attack, Chloe Tyler can't stop dreaming about him. Especially when something deep inside his electric-blue eyes calls to her, and his touch fills her with the most intense desire she's ever known. But her nightmares are all too real. A rogue werewolf's bite has changed her life forever, and the one who turned her hunts her still. Unless her dream man comes to her rescue yet again, the danger remains….

Excerpt

"Just what am I supposed to be looking at?" Matt Wilson asked, massaging his temples with both hands as he walked. Fairview Hospital was one of his least favorite spots on earth, even if this was just a courtesy visit. Psychiatrics wasn't his job anymore, and he was certainly glad he'd veered from that into regular police detective work, in spite of the similarities.

Hell, the silence in this one corridor alone could drive a person nuts. Although the soundproofing was necessary for the sanity of the staff, who had to contend with these security wards on a daily basis, he was pretty sure that a complete lack of sound could eventually tweak their sanity, as well.

"New case," Jenna James, the supervising doctor of the hospital, said over her shoulder. A shoulder Matt knew intimately well and wished he could be alone with Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Friday, March 12, 2010

FRAN SHAFF | It's Nothing Without the Conflict

FRAN SHAFFMONTANA MAGICConflict

What is conflict? How does it affect story?

In fiction, conflict comes in two forms, internal and external.

Internal conflict happens due to struggles within a character’s heart and mind.

External conflict occurs due to the environment the character lives in or is exposed to.

An example of titanic conflict, both internal and external occurs in the movie The Patriot During the American Revolution Mel Gibson's character is faced with an impossible choice--should he fight for his beloved country’s freedom, or should he stay behind to protect his family?

In choosing to stay with his family, Gibson’s character illustrates massive internal conflict. His choice goes against his sense of patriotism and makes him look cowardly to peers.

External conflict occurs when one of Gibson’s sons, a soldier in the revolution, is captured by the British and another of his sons, a child, is killed by the enemy. This external conflict, which happens in his environment, causes him to leave his duties with his family to fight for his country.

How does a writer effectively incorporate conflict into her story? A key way to find the answer to this question is to ask another question or two while organizing the plot line.

What can go wrong next? Or How can things get worse?

Let’s look at an example of plotting conflict using my contemporary romance Stolen Son.

My idea for the book’s premise was this: suppose a scrupulously honest widower discovered that his five-year-old son was illegally adopted. Conflict: his honesty is challenged by a legal duty to correct the problem. Worsening of conflict: he discovers it was his beloved late wife who kidnapped the baby and set in motion the illegal adoption.

He decides he must try to make things right. He learns the identity of the birth mother and takes a job working for her. Before he reveals his secret, he must know she’s a good woman, not someone who would put his son in danger. Worsening of conflict: as he discovers how wonderful she is, he falls in love with her, and she’s in love with him. Can he tell her the truth? At this point, he has everything to lose.

Internal conflict is monumental in this story. Guilt haunts this honest man as he seems to be doing everything against his own nature. And things don’t get any easier from this point on. Plenty more "goes wrong" and "gets worse”" before the end of this book (which does manage to reach an uplifting conclusion. I promise.). Conflict abounds from the heroine’s point of view too, as I’m sure you can imagine.

In a romance novel internal conflict pulls the hero and heroine together while external conflict keeps them apart.

In a mystery novel, internal conflict would be the force driving the protagonist toward solving the mystery. External conflict comes from forces throwing the hero off course. Suspense and thrillers are similar to mysteries in this way.

The importance of conflict in stories is not limited to the plot line. It is vital to develop rich characters who are bound to rub each other the wrong way in order to heighten conflict.

The greater the conflict, the more monumental the challenge to the characters, the more compelling the story.

In other words, conflict is the essence of story. In fact, conflict is story.

Fran Shaff, Award-Winning Author
website

To comment on It's Nothing Without The Conflict please click here.

Labels:

Fresh Pick | LEGEND OF THE WHITE WOLF by Terry Spear

Legend Of The White Wolf

Wolf #4

February 2010
On Sale: February 1, 2010
Featuring: Faith O'Mallery; Cameron MacPherson
384 pages
ISBN: 1402219059
EAN: 9781402219054
Mass Market Paperback
$6.99

Fantasy Urban, Romance Paranormal, Romance Suspense

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Terry SpearLegend Of The White Wolf
by Terry Spear

In a world of a snow and ice, their passions blaze...

In this fourth in Spear's series, Private Eye Cameron MacPherson and Faith O'Mallery are both on quests that lead them into the world of magical wolves…

Cameron arrives in the Canadian Arctic to search for his partners in his P.I. business who are late returning from a hunting trip. Faith is there to discover what her father had seen in the same area years earlier that had made him lose touch with reality—man-wolves, he called them.

The two tumble into an icy world of enemies bent on destroying the lupus garou kind. As they turn into lupus garou themselves, and bond with the pack that only they can rescue from destruction, Cameron and Faith find their soul mates in each other.

Excerpt

Once she reached her room, she slid the key card in. Green light. She twisted the handle and pushed. The door didn’t budge. She tried again. Same thing. She hated key cards. Why couldn’t they just use regular old brass keys?

She tried a third time and this time she twisted the handle harder and shoved the door more firmly. And was rewarded. Lights were on in the room and the place was already toasty warm as if the welcoming mat had been set out for her. Perfect. She walked into the room and glanced at the two queen-sized beds, the chartreuse covers pulled back from the pillow of one, a chocolate wrapped in gold foil sitting on the center of it. She smiled and pulled off her parka, peeled off her boots, and reached for the phone to call room service when she saw Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Thursday, March 11, 2010

ELIZABETH CHADWICK | The Soundtrack and the Story

ELIZABETH CHADWICKTHE SCARLETT LIONEver since writing my first novel (unpublished!) at the age of fifteen, I have had soundtracks to accompany the writing. The music tells the story in song and it evolves alongside the book, sometimes preceding the first draft, sometimes joining in along the way as the work progresses, but always presenting me at the finish with a fully formed musical score precisely fitted to the emotional resonances, major scenes and dramatic moments in the novel.

I don’t listen to music in the background as I write, that would be far too distracting. Instead, I select likely tracks from my extensive PC music library and listen to them while I’m doing mundane tasks around the house, or while I’m cooking and baking, or at the gym. At these times my mind is free to wander and mull. I’ll know a suitable song when I hear it because I will get an immediate rush of adrenalin - a gut feeling that makes me know it’s perfect for a particular scene, moment or character in the novel. I will listen to the song over and over again while it becomes absorbed into my subconscious. When I come to write the scene to which it has relevance, the lyrics and the feel will be there and ready in my head to draw on as part of my creative process.

When I send in the finished manuscript to my agent and editor, they always expect me to send them the soundtrack listings too. I managed to turn my agent into a rabid Meat Loaf fan after she heard the track For Crying Out Loud. It’s the grand finale to my novel Lords of the White Castle. Before that she had never listened to Meat Loaf because she had a preconceived idea that it wasn’t her sort of thing. Instead, it was a life changing moment. She rushed out and bought everything he had ever recorded and even dragged me to one of his concerts at Wembley Stadium - and all because of hearing that song on my novel soundtrack!

As you will have guessed from the above mention, I don’t write to medieval music (or not very often) even though I enjoy it. My tastes are eclectic but generally run towards rock in all its incarnations, edgy pop, and some Folk music. I believe that while mindsets change with the centuries, emotions don’t. If I could go back in time physically with a CD player, I don’t know what William Marshal, his wife and the other characters would think of modern music, but I’d love them to be able to hear it!

Talking about The Scarlet Lion, it’s main story arc is represented by "Holding Out For a Hero" by Bonnie Tyler - which is fairly obvious giving the larger than life man that William Marshal was! The grand finale is shared by two songs which are from the heroine Isabelle’s viewpoint: "Sand and Water" by Beth Nielsen Chapman and "The Miracle of Love" by the Eurythmics. With the novel in full flow, such tracks as "A Matter of Trust" by Billy Joel, and "Avalon" by Brian Ferry and Roxy Music, cover the bond between William and Isabelle. A fabulous guitar track by Thin Lizzy" by the Foo Fighters is a track about the personality of King John. "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" by Green Day covers a difficult time in the life of William’s eldest son. "I Hope You Dance" by Ronan Keating encapsulates the relationship between William and his daughter, Mahelt.

Selecting songs for the soundtrack is one of my favourite peripheral parts of the writing process. You will find the full soundtrack at my website as well as soundtracks for the other novels here. www.elizabethchadwick.com

Does anyone else have "soundtrack" songs to aspects of their life?

THE SCARLET LION BY ELIZABETH CHADWICK-IN STORES MARCH 2010

A page-turning novel of honor, intrigue, treachery, and love, continuing the story of England's greatest knight of the Middle Ages, William Marshal. Bestselling author Elizabeth Chadwick, "an author who makes historical fiction come gloriously alive" (The Times of London), is known as a writer of uncommon historical integrity and accuracy.

By 1197 William Marshal's prowess with a sword and loyalty with his heart have been rewarded by the hand in marriage of Isabelle de Clare-heiress to great estates- and their brood is growing. But their contentment and security is shattered when King Richard dies. Forced down a precarious path by the royal injustices of the vindictive King John, the Marshals teeter on a razor-thin line of honor that threatens to tear apart the very heart of their family.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elizabeth Chadwick (UK) is the author of 17 historical novels, including The Greatest Knight, Lords of the White Castle, Shadows and Strongholds, A Place Beyond Courage, The Winter Mantle, and the Falcons of Montabard, four of which have been shortlisted for the Romantic Novelists’ Awards. She won a Betty Trask Award for The Wild Hunt, her first novel. For more information please visit http://www.elizabethchadwick.com/,http://livingthehistoryelizabethchadwick.blogspot.com/ and follower her on Twitter



To comment for a chance to win The Scarlet Lion please click here.

Labels:

Fresh Pick | WEREWOLF SMACKDOWN by Mario Acevedo

Werewolf Smackdown

Felix Gomez #5

March 2010
On Sale: March 9, 2010
Featuring: Felix Gomez
416 pages
ISBN: 0061567183
EAN: 9780061567186
Trade Size
$14.99

Fantasy Urban, Thriller Paranormal - Supernatural

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Mario Acevedo Werewolf Smackdown
by Mario Acevedo

Felix Gomez, Latino vampire detective extraordinaire, tackles a dangerous werewolf cabal in the fifth installment in Mario Acevedo's satirical supernatural series

A sure-to-be-bloody civil war is brewing between rival werewolf factions, and P.I . Felix Gomez will do anything he can to make sure it doesn't explode into a vicious battle that engulfs all creatures, living and dead.

Between that, the sudden reappearance of an ex-girlfriend, and a gang of other vampires trying to take off his head, this is one rumble even a fanged detective extraordinaire may not be able to handle.

Twists, turns and double-dealing turn this fast-paced vampire mystery into an excellent adventure.

Excerpt

Chapter One

“Felix, I want him dead.” Eric Bourbon held up a severed head. The head belonged to a Caucasian man in his early thirties. By the musky taint of the cadaver reek, the victim had been more than a man--he was a werewolf in human form. A were.

The eyelids were hooded, the cleanly shaven jaw slack, the pale lips opened slightly, the waxy complexion bleached from the loss of blood. The neck was a ragged stump that had been gnawed off the shoulders. A diamond earring glittered in the left ear lobe.

I said, “He looks pretty dead to me.”

“Not him.” Bourbon dropped the head into a large Tupperware bowl on his desk and wiped his hand with a kerchief. He shuffled photos from a manila file folder and pointed to the top photo. “Him. His Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Fresh Pick | PLEASURE OF A DARK PRINCE by Kresley Cole

Pleasure Of A Dark Prince

Immortals After Dark #7

February 2010
On Sale: February 16, 2010
Featuring: Lucia; Garreth MacRieve
448 pages
ISBN: 1416580956
EAN: 9781416580959
Mass Market Paperback
$7.99

Romance Paranormal

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Kresley ColePleasure Of A Dark Prince
by Kresley Cole

Can the beast seduce a beauty and make her love him...?

#1 New York Times bestselling author Kresley Cole enraptures again with this seductive tale of a fierce werewolf prince who will stop at nothing to protect the lovely archer he covets from afar.

A DANGEROUS BEAUTY...
Lucia the Huntress: as mysterious as she is exquisite, she harbors secrets that threaten to destroy her -- and those she loves.
AN UNCONTROLLABLE NEED...
Garreth MacRieve, Prince of the Lykae: the brutal Highland warrior who burns to finally claim this maddeningly sensual creature as his own.
THAT LEAD TO A PLEASURE SO WICKED....
From the shadows, Garreth has long watched over Lucia. Now, the only way to keep the proud huntress safe from harm is to convince her to accept him as her guardian. To do this, Garreth will ruthlessly exploit Lucia's greatest weakness -- her wanton desire for him.

Excerpt

Prologue

Thrymheim Hold, the Northlands
Home of Skathi, goddess of the hunt
In ages long past . .
.

Lucia the Maiden cracked open her eyes and found herself atop an altar, staring up at a furious goddess. Somehow her younger sister, Regin the Radiant, had found Skathi's temple and had brought Lucia here.

From one altar to the next, she thought deliriously as her fever raged. Pain roiled inside her broken body. Her fractured limbs . . . never had she imagined such agony.

"You deliver this into my sacred place," Skathi the Huntress of the Great North said to Regin, "and desecrate my altar? You court my wrath, young Valkyrie."

Regin—all of twelve years old, with Lucia's blood covering her glowing Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Fresh Pick | TAMING THE MOON by Sherrill Quinn

Taming The Moon

Moon #3

March 2010
On Sale: March 1, 2010
Featuring: Rory Sullivan; Olivia Felan
320 pages
ISBN: 0758231911
EAN: 9780758231918
Paperback
$14.00

Romance Paranormal

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Sherrill Quinn Taming The Moon
by Sherrill Quinn

An instinct that won't be denied...

Olivia Felan has a wild side, all right. Even ignoring the fact that she turns furry and feral once a month, her natural style is take-no-prisoners, full-speed-ahead, come-what-may. But when it comes to her little girl, she doesn't take chances.

So when a big bad werewolf alpha steals her daughter, Olivia will do whatever it takes to get her baby back. And in this case, that means killing Rory Sullivan. The trouble is, killing him would mean wasting one sexy beast.

Sully is all man, all cop, and as of late, half wolf. When he meets Olivia, Sully's a little glad he stuck his nose into his friends' business and came out with animal senses - until he gets a whiff of the chaos following her around. Now he has to decide whether he can't take his eyes off Olivia because she's too beautiful - or because she's too dangerous.

Excerpt

Olivia Felan held her daughter close, breathing in the sweet scent of little girl and bubblegum, and tried not to cry. She wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing her tears.

Through the open window she could hear the sounds of New York—horns blaring, tires screeching, sirens. Cool April wind blew into the room.

A shiver rolled down her spine, but it wasn’t the coldness of the air that made her shudder. Thanks to her werewolf metabolism, her internal thermostat ran hot. No, what made her shiver was the thought that she could lose her daughter, that he would take the little girl from her forever. Fear coiled deep in her belly. The sounds of the City That Never Sleeps faded as she let the feel of Zoe in her arms soothe her.

"All right. That’s enough." Brawny hands pulled Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Miranda Neville | I Wish I Were An Orphan

MIRANDA NEVILLETHE WILD MARQUISIn the book I just finished writing, the heroine has two living parents who are loving and functional. Not that she doesn't have her issues with them, but they haven't (a) died and left her in poverty (b) sold her into sexual slavery, or (c) forced her into marriage with a pox-ridden octogenarian to save the family fortune.

It occurred to me how rare it is in romance for a character not to have parent issues of some kind. To have both hero and heroine in possession of two good, living parents is almost unheard of. Off the top of my head, the only one I can think of is Loretta Chase's Not Quite a Lady. (And one of them is a stepmother though not a wicked one). Julia Quinn'sBridgertons are a famous example of a really loving family - I want Violet to be my mom - but even with them, the father is dead and all the Bridgertons fall in love with people who have difficult family backgrounds.

The characters in my current release come from the more common unhappy families. The heroine of The Wild Marquis isn’t even sure who her parents were. The hero had a cruel father (dead) and a neglectful mother (alive). Although they come from very different backgrounds, their lack of family draws them together. In this excerpt Cain has told Juliana how his father tossed him out of the house when he was sixteen.


"My mother is no more anxious for my company than my sire was. I live a life of blissful self-indulgence and ease in the family’s London mansion and she keeps Markley Chase as her province."

He didn’t ask for her compassion but he had it. She knew the pain and loneliness of being exiled from the only home she’d ever known.

"So you haven’t been home in how many years?"

"Three."

"You are only twenty-four years old then, just a year more than me. I thought you older." Not that Cain’s dissipations had marred his looks, but there was a world-weariness, a certain cynicism in his face when in repose that communicated a wealth of hard experience.

"Thank you for the compliment. My debauchery must be affecting my features. I shall have to speak to my valet about a skin tonic."

She suspected something in his tale affected him far more deeply than he liked to reveal, that his habitual glibness disguised a sorrow she felt the urge to comfort.
Then his expression shuttered for a brief but perceptible instant and he regarded her with a careless grin, the blue eyes as mocking and dangerously suggestive as ever. He’d erected a barrier against trespassers.
.

Our heroes and heroines need obstacles that must be addressed in the course of the novel. Problematic parents are a great source of angst. No parents at all can be even better. When orphans face difficulties they lack the support we draw from our families. It’s easy for historical writers to kill people off (disease, childbirth, carriage accidents...) but even in contemporaries we see a high rate of parental mortality.

As a child I remember loving books about orphans. I have two parents and four siblings and I found the notion of being alone in the world exciting. Of course I didn’t really want my family to disappear, but it was an appealing fantasy. In the same way, I believe, many kids dream that they are really changeling children of royalty or fairies.

Can you think of examples of books where the heroine and hero have four nice parents between them? What so you think makes orphans appealing?

And if you are interested in finding out more about Juliana and Cain and how they handle their parental issues, The Wild Marquis appears in stores March 9.

To comment on I Wish I were an Orphan please click here.

Monday, March 08, 2010

Susan Wilson | The Challenge of Writing a Compelling Dog!

Susan WilsonFirst let me say what a pleasure it is to be invited to guest blog on Freshfiction.  As I have discovered, the blogosphere is a warm and inviting, if curious, place to be.  In my own blog, www.susanwilsonwrites.com, I recently observed what a difference a few years make in how books are publicized and marketed.  Where once an author had to buy new clothes, now she can sit, as I am, at her kitchen counter in her pjs and communicate with fans and future fans.

ONE GOOD DOGONE GOOD DOG is my sixth novel and a departure from my usual focus.  All of my books:  BEAUTY, HAWKE’S COVE, CAMEO LAKE, THE FORTUNE-TELLER’S DAUGHTER, and  SUMMER HARBOR have, as the central theme, the relationship between women and men.  In ONE GOOD DOG, I explored the relationship between two very disparate species:  man and dog.  And yet, there were some real similarities to a romance in Adam and Chance’s relationship.  They meet ‘cute’ (sort of); they each have to learn to trust the other; they eventually develop a bond that transcends any prior experience of love. 

My challenge was to write a compelling, engaging and believable story with a dog as a central character.  Good books—and some not so good—have done this before, but I think this may be the first time a dog and a man share the narrative.  By playing with POV and tense, I was able to give Chance and Adam distinct voices.  Chance, I have to say, actually felt as if he was dictating his story to me, so easily did I slip into the head of a dog.  I wonder if that’s a good thing?  Woof.

My other challenge was to take a man who is, at the outset, rather despicable, and turn him into a character that readers can cheer on.  This was also a fun exercise, and I really got to flex my anti-hero writing skills.  But, at the same time, I needed to know what made Adam the way he was.  In other words, define him against a backdrop of influences; but, also hold him responsible for his actions. 

Not all children who go through the foster system end up as damaged as Adam.  Many do.  Not all pit bulls end up fighting.  Many do.  Given a chance, maybe both can be redeemed.  I hope that fans of Freshfiction enjoy ONE GOOD DOG

Leave comments on THE CHALLENGE OF WRITING A COMPLELLING DOG!

Labels:

Fresh Pick | BRIDE OF THE WOLF by Susan Krinard

Bride Of The Wolf


March 2010
On Sale: February 23, 2010
Featuring: Heath Renier; Rachel Lyndon
384 pages
ISBN: 037377477X
EAN: 9780373774777
Mass Market Paperback
$7.99

Romance Historical, Romance Paranormal

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Susan Krinard Bride Of The Wolf
by Susan Krinard

For better or for beast

Rachel Lyndon yearns to escape her scandalous past, but her dreams for a better life seem ruined after she buries her fiancé on the Texas plains.
Heath Renier has been evading the law by the skin of his teeth for years. Now he's found a new identity as Holden Renshaw, foreman of Dog Creek Ranch. But the arrival of his boss's mail-order bride, now a widow, upsets his fragile peace and threatens to expose his deadly secrets.
Rachel knows that the mysterious and savagely handsome Holden is the last man she should trust—especially once she's seen glimpses of his true nature. When he's suspected of killing his employer, she has a terrible choice to make. But the heat of his gaze ignites something seductive and irresistible within her. No matter how dangerous the road ahead, she's determined to give him the one thing he's never truly believed he deserves: her undying love.

Excerpt

Pecos County, Texas, 1881

Jedediah McCarrick was dead.

Heath rode carefully around the body sprawled at the bottom of the draw, gentling Apache with a quiet word. The horse was right to be scared. Jed hadn't been dead more than a few days, and the scent of decay was overwhelming.

An accident. That was the way it looked, anyhow. Half Jed's skull was bashed in, and his legs stuck out at strange angles. The rocks were sharp around here, and plentiful.

But Jed was a damn good rider. You had to be, in the Pecos, so far from civilization. The old man had been on his way home, just as his letter had said. He would have let go the cowboys he'd hired for the drive once it was finished, and he didn't trust many people Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Fresh Pick | HOWLING AT THE MOON by Karen MacInerney

Howling at the Moon

Tales of an Urban Werewolf #1

March 2008
On Sale: February 26, 2008
Featuring: Sophie Garou
384 pages
ISBN: 0345496256
EAN: 9780345496256
Paperback
$6.99

Paranormal, Romance Paranormal, Fantasy Urban

Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day
Karen MacInerney Howling at the Moon
by Karen MacInerney

Romance is about to get a little hairy.

Sophie Garou seems to have it all: a great job at a prestigious accounting firm, a closet that rivals a Nordstrom showroom, and a terrific boyfriend who isn’t afraid to use the “M” word. There’s just one little itty- bitty problem: Sophie is a werewolf–and her time of month has a whole new meaning.

Needless to say, life among yummy flesh-and-blood humans is no piece of steak . . . er, cake!, but regular doses of wolfsbane tea and a mother who runs a magic shop have helped Sophie keep her paranormal pedigree under wraps. Still, when a sexy, golden-eyed werewolf prowls into town, Sophie finds herself struggling to keep her animal impulses in check–not to mention trying to keep things on track with her super hot (and super human) lawyer boyfriend. What’s more, someone is threatening to expose Sophie for what she really is. And when her mother is accused of selling a poison-laced potion, Sophie must sniff out a culprit before the fur hits the fan.

This hilarious werewolf tale will keep you laughing -- and begging for more!

Excerpt

I have a secret. A big, fat, hairy secret.

And I’m not talking minor-league stuff, like I once let Joseph Applebaum feel me up behind the seventh-grade stairwell or I got a Brazilian wax after work last Friday or I’m hiding a neon blue vibrator called the Electric Slide in my night table. Which I’m not, by the way. In case you were wondering.

No, this is completely different. And as far as I knew, only two—well, technically one, but we’ll call it two—people in the entire world knew about it.

Until this morning.

Usually, I waltz into my office at Withers and Young with my skinny latte, extra foam, and find nothing but a neat stack of manila folders waiting for me. Today, however, next to the manila folders—labeled with the new Read More...

Previous Picks

Labels:

SANDI SHILHANEK | Help With Category Recommendations

Sandi ShilhanekEvery week when I sit down to write I try to think of what has caught my attention for the week that might catch yours as well. This week I’m going to be a bit selfish and ask for happy thoughts for a close family member. She’s going to be having a major surgery on Tuesday and has a long recuperation period ahead of her.

Unfortunately I live too far away to be of much use during the recovery period, but I can provide her with plenty of material to read, and that’s where all of you come in. She loves category romances. Every month she’s at e-harlequin ordering the Harlequin Presents and the Harlequin Romances. Those are her two favorite series, but she will read other category romances.

My question this week is do you read category romances? If so do you have a favorite line? A favorite book? A favorite author? Remember they can be a bit old as I live in a fairly large metropolitan area and have plenty of used bookstores to scour.

Even if you don’t read category romances, but read shorter books say 300 pages or less I’d love your recommendations. What better thing could I do for mom long distance than to send her a great get well present?

To comment for a chance to win a great prize from Candace Havens please click here.

Blog Widget by LinkWithin