Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Elisabeth Naughton | Damsel in Distress…or not
Author Guest / September 15, 2011

Thanks so much to the crew here at Fresh Fiction for inviting me to stop by during my TEMPTED blog tour! TEMPTED is the third book in the Eternal Guardians series, and I’m thrilled readers are enjoying it so much. If you’re new to the series, don’t worry. You can easily pick up TEMPTED without reading the first two books and figure out what’s going on. The Eternal Guardians are seven warriors descended from the seven greatest heroes in all of ancient Greece who defend the mortal realm from threats of the Underworld. Tempted is Demetrius’s book. He’s the biggest of the Guardians, a descendant of the famed hero Jason, and he harbors a dark and deadly secret. One that could destroy the world. But when the princess of Argolea goes missing, he’s suddenly the only Guardian who can save her. Fairy tales are packed with heroines who need rescuing. Most girls grow up fantasizing about the hunky prince who’ll ride in on a white horse and save the damsel locked away in the tower. In the eyes of many, Isadora, the heroine in TEMPTED, is that heroine. She’s timid, she’s shy, no one thinks she’s strong enough to rule,…

Jeannie Lin | She’s Got the Look – Costuming Your Characters
Author Guest / September 14, 2011

You know you’ve got one of these. The power suit that you feel you can take on the world in. That dress that always gets you compliments. We take on a different attitude and persona when we wear certain outfits and our characters are the same. Clothing was especially important in the Tang Dynasty. Though the 8th century is often considered ancient or medieval, but in China this period was a Golden Age and the height of Silk Road trade—which meant it was also the height of fashion. Elegant ladies wore flowing robes and experimented with gravity-defying hair styles. Bodices were elaborately embroidered and court ladies showed of a scandalous amount of skin. They wore lip stains and face powder and polished their nails. Women weren’t the only clothes hounds. Men also wore embroidered robes and it was fashionable to don vibrant colors as a show of wealth. There were even ordinances passed to regulate the length of sleeves  when fashion started favoring excessively long ones. At times, merchants, who were considered lower class, were prohibited from wearing colors as it seemed they were imitating the noble classes by doing so. Yet the wily businessmen continued to do so, wearing…

NYT bestseller speaks at National WWI Museum 9/20 –LIVE online
News / September 13, 2011

New York Times bestselling writing duo, Charles Todd, will be speak at the National World War I Museum on Tuesday, September 20th at 7 PM. The event will be broadcasted online live from the museum. Charles Todd will discuss how investing in research has made possible two outstanding series with two individually unique characters. Both Ian Rutledge, a Scotland Yard Inspector who has returned from fighting and suffers from shellshock, and Bess Crawford, a young nurse serving in The Great War, offer readers a chance to revisit a pivotal event of the Twentieth Century. Sometimes it is fiction that makes a period more accessible to the casual reader and yet offers a student of the era a new perspective. The New York Times Book Review wrote, “the tragic sweep of Charles Todd’s historical mysteries grows more expansive with each successive novel in his stunning series.” Through complex characterization and writing that is “…graceful and evocative of bygone times and places,” (Miami Herald) Todd skillfully examines the human psyche and “raises disturbing issues of war and peace that still confront us today” (Orlando Sentinel). Reviews for their most recent novel, A BITTER TRUTH, are just as stellar: ASSOCIATED PRESS: “A Bitter…

Fresh Pick | IT HAD TO BE YOU by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Fresh Pick / September 13, 2011

Chicago Star/Bonner Brothers series – book #1 March 2002 On Sale: March 5, 2002 Featuring: Dan Celebow; Phoebe Somerville 384 pages ISBN: 0380776839 EAN: 9780380776832 Paperback (reprint) $7.99  Add to Wish List Romance Contemporary Buy at Amazon.com Everyone reads about the Chicago Stars at the start of football season, so, here’s number 1 It Had to Be You by Susan Elizabeth Phillips The Chicago Stars are about to take the field…and they’re not the only ones playing for keeps. The Windy City isn’t quite ready for Phoebe Somerville—the outrageous, curvaceous New York knockout who has just inherited the Chicago Stars football team. And Phoebe is definitely not ready for the Stars’ head coach, former gridiron legend Dan Calebow, a sexist jock taskmaster with a one-track mind. Calebow is everything Phoebe abhors. And the sexy new boss is everything Dan despises—a meddling bimbo who doesn’t know a pigskin from a pitcher’s mound. So why is Dan drawn to the shameless sexpot like a heat-seeking missile? And why does the coach’s good ol’ boy charm leave cosmopolitan Phoebe feeling awkward, tongue-tied…and ready to fight? The sexy, heartwarming, and hilarious “prequel” to This Heart of Mine—Susan Elizabeth Phillips’s New York Times bestselling blockbuster—It…

Spotlight on Cleo Coyle
Author Spotlight / September 13, 2011

Cleo Coyle Murder By Mocha Buy at Coffee House Mystery #10 Berkley August 2011 On Sale: August 2, 2011 Featuring: Clare Cosi 384 pages ISBN: 0425241432 EAN: 9780425241431 Hardcover Add to Wish List Read An Excerpt Dying for Chocolate For over twenty years, my husband and I have been living and working in New York City. Our bestselling Coffeehouse Mysteries—a unique blend of crime, romance, humor, and action—are set here, too, around a landmark Greenwich Village coffee shop called the Village Blend. The newest title, MURDER BY MOCHA, was actually inspired by a true crime (a true culinary crime). At the start of the story, coffeehouse manager Clare Cosi is providing freshly roasted beans for a lucrative new product: Mocha Magic Coffee. Laced with herbal aphrodisiacs, this coffee is supposed to put the “magic moments” back into your love life. “Supposed to” is the operative phrase. Clare is skeptical about the drink’s potency—although she does plan to test it on her boyfriend, NYPD Detective Mike Quinn (when he’s off duty, of course). Before she gets that chance, a corpse shows up in the hotel room of the product’s creator, and then disappears without a trace of evidence that a crime…

Sarah Gilman | Why do I write about angels?
Author Guest / September 13, 2011

Angels and similar creatures are my favorite paranormal characters. I’ve been fascinated with the idea of wings on the back of someone who otherwise appears human since I was a little girl. I remember being enthralled in school by Egyptian art that showed a woman with wings longer than her arms. On the Cartoon Network, I watched shows such as Bird Man (self explanatory) and The Centurions (one character could fly with mechanical wings). I often had, and still have, flying dreams. As a fledgling writer, I dabbled in vampires before I settled into angels. Vampires and romance is a fantastic combination, and I doubt I’ll ever grow tired of reading such stories. In college, I took Vampires in Literature, an English elective, and have been hooked since. The vampire myth has had sexual elements since the earliest tales, and the leap of vampires to romance heroes and heroines feels natural to me. Angels, on the other hand, are not inherently romance characters. Many consider them religious characters, and while that certainly can be true, popular culture and many romance authors have taken them far outside that box. For me, the inherent conflict between what an angel is supposed to…

Isabel Cooper | To Build A Proper World … Takes the SMALL things to work
Author Guest / September 12, 2011

World-building is one of the most difficult parts of writing a world that differs in any way from ours. It’s easy enough to figure out the main changes, like “magic works” or “dinosaurs are still around”—you probably have them in mind from the beginning, or odds are you wouldn’t be writing that particular world—but then you have to think about what smaller changes they’d cause. Do the people in your world have surgeons, or does magic solve all health issues. If not, why not? How does the freeway system adapt when people are riding stegosauruses? And so on. That’s hard. It’s also a lot of fun—like putting together a puzzle, but generally without that moment when you realize that the dog ate three of the pieces. When I was writing NO PROPER LADY, I got to do two separate and intertwined pieces of world-building. One was Simon’s world, which was 1888 as we knew it on the surface—only with all sorts of secret knowledge and magic underneath. (I drew a great deal on actual occult societies of the time, though I took considerable liberties in the service of fiction.) The other was Joan’s world: a world very different from either…

Jenn Bennett | Five Fine Moments in Urban Fantasy
Author Guest / September 10, 2011

Most writers are readers (I hope), and avid ones, at that. But I think we often read from a slightly different perspective than the general public. Sometimes it’s hard for me to turn off The Writer, even when I’m reading for pleasure, and I often find myself lingering on certain phrases or character choices. Sometimes it’s the small things that make the writer in me smile and nod my head when I’m reading. Just wee bits of genius–things that are deceptively simple, or fractions of world-building that dazzle me. I love finding these treasures in other people’s books. The following is a short list of five of those small moments in urban fantasy that moved me to raise a proverbial glass of champagne and say, “Well played!” 1) Charlaine Harris, Southern Vampire series: Sookie’s Word-a-Day Calendar It really bothers me when an author’s voice overrides the character’s voice in first person. Sookie is a small-town waitress, not very smart (but not dumb either), and her voice is fairly consistent throughout the series. But what does a writer do when she wants to use words that her character shouldn’t know? In Harris’s case, she gives Sookie access to a Word-a-Day calendar….

Caris Roane | Where Did WINGS OF FIRE Come From?
Author Guest / September 9, 2011

WINGS OF FIRE is the latest book in my Guardians of Ascension series.  It’s a great title, isn’t it?  I can say that, because I had nothing to do with it. The creation of the title was a collaboration between my agent and my editor, and a back and forth that took some time.  I interjected ideas now and then, but mainly the inspiration came from them.  However, the moment the title became official, my mind started shooting off fireworks about what I could do with those words:  wings…of…fire!  Wings on fire, wings erupting in flames, powerful wings, and on and on it went until one day an entire plotline emerged around that title. I can’t give too much away, though!  If I told you what I did with all that fire, then you’d know how the story develops and ultimately how it ends.  So, I’ll leave it there, fearing to spoil the fun. I love writing paranormal romance, more than I can say!  When the genre emerged, I thought I’d died and gone to heaven.  I’m sure many of you who read paranormal probably feel the same way.  I can remember reading the first book of Sherrilyn Kenyon’s Dark…

09/08 Shana Galen | Auditions Please! Casting LORD AND LADY SPY
Author Guest / September 8, 2011

One would think when one is writing a book where the premise comes from a movie, the casting would already be complete. Yes, well that would make sense if the author was someone who did things the easy way. That author is not me. I vividly remember the moment of inspiration for LORD AND LADY SPY. I was watching the Pitt-Jolie film Mr. and Mrs. Smith (yes, that one. Poor Jennifer Aniston). And I started thinking, what if this story took place during the Regency? What if the hero and heroine were not assassins but spies? Out of work spies… I was intrigued by the idea of writing about a married couple where not one, but both partners, had a secret identity. Could I write steamy scenes for a couple who’s been married five years. I found that yes. Yes, I could. When I started writing LORD AND LADY SPY, I didn’t have Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in mind for my characters. Well, I have to admit, Brad kind of sticks in a girl’s mind. But Adrian Galloway, Lord Smythe is a little more dangerous than Pitt and a little less pretty. I was thinking more Daniel Craig with…