Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Fresh Pick | EMILY AND EINSTEIN by Linda Francis Lee
Fresh Pick / May 1, 2011

March 2011 On Sale: March 1, 2011 Featuring: Emily Partman; Sandy Portman 336 pages ISBN: 0312382189 EAN: 9780312382186 Hardcover $24.99  Add to Wish List Women’s Fiction Contemporary Buy at Amazon.com Best Friend can be a dog Emily And Einstein by Linda Francis Lee A novel about second chances He was a man who didn’t deserve a second chance…but he needed one Emily and her husband Sandy Portman seemed to live a gracious if busy life in an old-world, Upper West Side apartment in the famous Dakota building. But one night on the way to meet Emily, Sandy dies in a tragic accident. The funeral isn’t even over before Emily learns she is on the verge of being evicted from their apartment. But worse than the possibility of losing her home, Emily is stunned when she discovers that her marriage was made up of lies. Suddenly Emily is forced on a journey to find out who her husband really was…all the while feeling that somehow he isn’t really gone. And what if he isn’t? Angry, hurt, and sometimes betrayed by loving memories of the man she lost, Emily finds comfort in a scruffy dog named Einstein. But is Einstein’s seemingly odd…

Elizabeth Amber | The Truth About Vestal Virgins
Author Guest / May 1, 2011

Did Vestal Virgins exist? Yes. Chosen between ages six and ten, they served Vesta, the goddess of fire. BASTIAN, THE LORDS OF SATYR is a love story between Silvia (a former Vestal Virgin–now an immortal Ephemeral) and Bastian, who’s the lead archaeologist in the Roman Forum during the 1880s excavations. Crossing the centuries, Silvia now seeks to trick Bastian into helping her locate powerful, mysterious relics in the Forum ruins. Relics she herself lost during the destruction of the pagan temples (including Vesta’s) in the 4th century A.D. It’s historical fact that these relics existed and were guarded by the six Vestal Virgins. The relics were believed to protect the city of Rome from harm. Today, no one knows what the relics were or what became of them. So I was free to decide what form these relics would take and what power they hold. The Virgins were revered and privileged. They could own property, when other women could not. However, in times of strife, they were scapegoats. Accused of being unchaste, whether fairly or unfairly, some were buried alive in small underground enclosures in the “Evil Fields” near the Colline Gate. When Vesta’s temple was destroyed, Silvia and the…