Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Tweets on 2010-07-15
Guests / July 15, 2010

Fresh Pick is UNSPEAKABLE by Laura Griffin http://bit.ly/12OIV Enough twists to keep you glued to the page # Susan C. Shea talks about THE APPEAL OF THE BAD BOY http://bit.ly/dx77PK Wow, what to say? and prizes if you do SAY # Have you seen the Old Spice guy's videos responses on his YouTube channel? @dakotacassidy I went 4 library spot & stayed to giggle # Powered by Twitter Tools

Fresh Pick | DEATH ECHO by Elizabeth Lowell
Fresh Pick / July 15, 2010

June 2010 On Sale: June 1, 2010 Featuring: MacKenzie Durand; Emma Cross 384 pages ISBN: 0061629758 EAN: 9780061629754 Hardcover $24.95 Add to Wish List Romance Suspense Buy at Amazon.com Death Echo by Elizabeth Lowell Former CIA agent Emma Cross thought she got out of dangerous work when she took a job with St. Kilda’s consulting. A little PI work and troubleshooting is certainly less stressful than Tribal Wars. At least it was until she found herself caught in the middle of an international incident. Until five years ago, MacKenzie Durand and his Special Ops team were deployed into some of the world’s nastiest places. On the last op, he was the only survivor. After a rumor started circulating that the CIA hung his team out to dry with bad intel, he quit and never looked back. Thrown together by an organization of bad guys with international ties more dangerous than either realizes, Mac and Emma must put aside their distrust for each other in order to save more than just their own lives. Previous Picks

EMILIE RICHARDS | Where Everybody Knows Your Name
Author Guest / July 15, 2010

Look back on your life for a moment, okay? Just close your eyes and remember the people who were most influential in helping you become the person you are. Your parents, who may or may not have been role models you could follow. That special third grade teacher who realized you needed a little extra help learning to spell. The librarian who led you to novels you still remember with a catch in your throat. And the friends. With sixty-something books to my credit, one day I realized that I’d never really written about friendship. Sure, there were lots of friendships in my novels. That person a main character tells her life story to. That person who insists a main character get his act together. The walk-ons who serve a limited purpose before they stroll into the sunset. Lots of friends, but never a novel about friendship. Enter the women of Happiness Key, a shabby beachfront community on Florida’s Gulf Coast who don’t know they need friends, don’t recognize each other’s potential, and are reluctant to spend more than a moment in each other’s presence. Ah, a writer’s dream scenario. Happiness Key, the resulting novel, explored the ways women come…