Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Kristine Grayson | Following the Trend
Author Guest / October 19, 2011

It looks like I’m just following the crowd with my fairy tale books. As I write this, two network TV shows about fairy tales are about to premiere, Grimm (set in my home state of Oregon) and Once Upon A Time. There are two Snow White movies schedule for next year, and a small mountain of fairy tale books will surely follow. I want to say here and now, I got the ideas first. One of the things that happens in my career is that I’m usually about a decade ahead of the trend, and honestly, this is no different. Most of my novels come from short stories, and the award-winning short story that inspired UTTERLY CHARMING, got published in 1998.  I wrote the story, “The Strangeness of the Day,” under my real name, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, and the story is free on wwww.kristinekathrynrusch.com from Monday October 17 to Sunday October 23. (If you only care about Kristine Grayson, you can find all the Grayson news at www.kristinegrayson.com) “The Strangeness of the Day” came about because an editor friend asked me to contribute a story to an anthology called BATTLE MAGIC. So of course, I thought of Prince Charming defending…

DiAnn Mills | Jalapeños, Scorpions, and Snakes
Author Guest / October 18, 2011

What do jalapeños, horses, scorpions, snakes, and a man and woman under a star-studded sky all have in common? Texas. West Texas. The setting of my new romantic suspense novel ATTRACTED TO FIRE. Dust off your cowboy hat, tug on your boots, and grab a SIG to team up with Secret Service agents assigned to protect the daughter of the vice president of the United States. It’s hot in West Texas, and I did my best to raise the temperatures. One of the characters is a cook. She prepares the agents’ and protectee’s meals. The problem is she loves jalapeños and does her best to add them to the menu three times a day. She chopped those little peppers into scrambled eggs and grits. Every soup and sandwich had a jalapeño touch. Her specialty was Diablo chicken, and if she could whip up a jalapeño cake or pie, then it was on the dessert tray. That all adds up to heat and heartburn. What’s a West Texas setting without a ranch and a horse? Beautiful quarter horses promise a smooth ride. Nothing’s better than feeling a powerful animal lunging beneath you. Better than any truck or car, and oats are…

Fresh Pick | CLAIM OF INNOCENCE by Laura Caldwell
Fresh Pick / October 17, 2011

Izzy McNeil September 2011 On Sale: August 23, 2011 Featuring: Valerie Solara; Izzy McNeil 400 pages ISBN: 0778329321 EAN: 9780778329329 Kindle: B005DF0A4S Paperback $7.99  Add to Wish List Suspense, Romance Suspense Buy at Amazon.com Book club pick week continues, favorite for suspense lovers Claim Of Innocence by Laura Caldwell Forbidden relationships are the most tempting. And the most dangerous. It was a crime of passion—or so the police say. Valerie Solara has been charged with poisoning her best friend. The prosecution claims she’s always been secretly attracted to Amanda’s husband…and with Amanda gone, she planned to make her move. Attorney Izzy McNeil left the legal world a year ago, but a friend’s request pulls her into the murder trial. Izzy knows how passion can turn your life upside down. She thought she had it once with her ex-fiancé, Sam. Now she wonders if that’s all she has in common with her criminally gorgeous younger boyfriend, Theo. It’s Izzy’s job to present the facts that will exonerate her client—whether or not she’s innocent. But when she suspects Valerie is hiding something, she begins investigating—and uncovers a web of secret passions and dark motives, where seemingly innocent relationships can prove poisonous… From…

Kat Martin | Is There a Trick to Getting published? Win AGAINST THE STORM
Author Guest / October 17, 2011

Unfortunately, the biggest trick is finishing the book! This year marks the release of my 50th novel (or more, depending on how you count them).  AGAINST THE STORM, Houston cowboy Trace Rawlins’ story, hits bookshelves October 25th. But getting the first book sold wasn’t easy.  I’m sure every author has an interesting tale of how he or she got published.  In my case, my husband Larry had written an Historical novel titled SHADOW OF THE MAST, but he couldn’t get it sold.  I loved the book, which was extremely moving and very romantic. Since I was a voracious reader of bestselling fiction and adored the book, I couldn’t understand why publishers weren’t grabbing it.  (I still have no clue as to how New York publishers actually think.) I decided to see if maybe there was something I could do to polish it a little, maybe help it sell.  By the time I was finished, I was hooked on the idea of writing a book of my own. I chose a Western Romance because I had a western background and MAGNIFICENT PASSAGE was born.  Now both of us had a book to sell, which we tried to do by attending conferences,…

Heather Killough-Walden | A Journey from Failure to Angels …and stops along the way
Author Guest / October 16, 2011

I had no idea what I wanted to be when I grew up. Actually, that’s not 100% true. In my heart, I knew I had one gift, one love, and one hobby that were a three-in-one slam dunk of inner happiness. I nearly flunked out of high school because all I could do was sit there during Calculus class and pen short stories about romance and vampires (which I’d been obsessed with since I’d fallen in love with The Count on Sesame Street at the age of four) to my best friend. I didn’t even care if it irritated the teacher. All that mattered to me was getting to the next tooth-sinking, grip-tightening, desperation-filled moment of maddening lust and writing about it in vivid detail. Obviously, that one gift-given hobby that I loved was bad news; it almost deprived me of a high school diploma, it sure as hell wasn’t going to pay the rent one day. At least that’s what everyone and their poodle was very fond of telling me. So, when I want to college, I started with an empty slate, not really interested in anything. Because of this, I took classes in, basically, everything. I took classes…

Vonda Sinclair | Strong and Unusual Heroines
Author Guest / October 14, 2011

I confess, I love creating heroines in my Scottish historical romances who are extraordinarily tough, resilient, and a bit outside the norm for historical romance. My heroines need to be strong in order to stand up to my Highland warrior heroes. These women have lived through difficult times or traumatic events before the opening of the story and are stronger for it. Though Gwyneth, the heroine of MY FIERCE HIGHLANDER, is only twenty-three, she’s well beyond the school-girl stage. Caught in a horrible scandal, she’s forced to leave her home in England and journey to the Highlands of Scotland. There she has a child out of wedlock and marries a man she wishes she’d never seen. Now a widow, a mother and a healer, she’s become a survivor and a resourceful woman any of us might admire… all for the sake of her young son, so that he might have a better life one day. But when she saves the wounded chief of an enemy clan, she risks her life for the first time. To her, this man is worth the risk because she knows he wants peace as she does, and there’s something about him she can’t turn away…

Fresh Pick | PLAYING FOR KEEPS by LuAnn McLane
Fresh Pick / October 13, 2011

Cricket Creek #1 March 2011 On Sale: March 1, 2011 Featuring: Noah Falcon; Olivia Lawson 304 pages ISBN: 0451232763 EAN: 9780451232762 Kindle: B004H4XDAY Mass Market Paperback $6.99  Add to Wish List Romance Contemporary Buy at Amazon.com Small town, baseball and love… Playing For Keeps by LuAnn McLane Olivia Lawson is peeved when ex-ace pitcher turned soap opera star Noah Falcon roars back into Cricket Creek, Kentucky, after all these years, to take the lead opposite her in the community theater\’s summer play. Noah\’s beloved hometown is having major financial woes and needs his status to turn this small-town play into a big-time hit. But Noah has bigger plans for this small town. And this time he\’s determined to show Olivia he\’s not just playing around-he\’s playing for keeps. You’ll be cheering for these characters just like Cricket Creek cheers for its baseball team. Excerpt CHAPTER ONE Sweet Southern Comfort “Welcome to Cricket Creek, Kentucky, birthplace of Noah Falcon,” Noah read as he drove his red Corvette convertible past the city limits sign. He had won several awards as a major league relief pitcher but this little bit of hometown pride never failed to bring a smile to his face. Of…

L.J. McDonald | The Best Villains Turn Into Heroes
Author Guest / October 13, 2011

In writing fantasy, you always need to have a villain. If there isn’t one, who does the hero or heroine have to struggle against? If they don’t have anything to make their life interesting, then nothing happens and the reader has no investment in the characters or what happens to them. You can have just about anything as a foil to your heroes; a corrupt government or religious system, a spreading fungus that consumes all it infects, a stampeding herd of polka-dotted dragons. Whatever works. However, the traditional enemy for the fantasy hero has always been the good old villain. The bad guy. Some villains are just utter right bastards. I read one book recently that had a villain in that I loathed. He was evil, he was sadistic, he was vindictive. I’ve rarely written anyone that blatantly nasty.  I wanted to see that guy go down so badly that I couldn’t stop reading the book until I was finished (check out THE KINSHIELD LEGACY by K.C. May). I hated him, but he still had depth to his character. Even villains need more than their villainy to give them shape. I find that the best villains are as deeply complex…

Fresh Pick | SLOW HEAT by Jill Shalvis
Fresh Pick / October 12, 2011

HEAT #3 February 2010 On Sale: February 2, 2010 Featuring: Wade O’Riley; Samantha McNead 336 pages ISBN: 0425233669 EAN: 9780425233665 Kindle: B0030CHFNK Paperback $7.99  Add to Wish List Romance Contemporary Buy at Amazon.com We’re rooting for the play-offs, so why not hunker down with a “hunk?” Slow Heat by Jill Shalvis A great catch-from the USA Today bestselling author of Double Play Baseball player Wade O’Riley’s bad-boy image is about to be cleaned up by publicist Samantha McNead. But the sexual tension between them is about to drive Wade to his knees. The third book about the HEAT baseball team is sexy fun with heartfelt excitement. Excerpt Chapter 1 Confucious say: “Baseball wrong – man with four balls cannot walk.” ~Author Unknown She’d read somewhere that the way to a man’s heart was through his stomach, but Samantha McNead knew better than that – in certain men the stomach was aiming just a bit too high. Wade O’Riley was one of them. The best defensive catcher in major league baseball, he had women lining up to meet him wherever he went. And it wasn’t home-cooking that they wanted to give him either. Not that Wade seemed to mind. Nope, even…

Susanna Kearsley | Friends And Relations
Author Guest / October 12, 2011

My characters tend to be inter-connected with all kinds of people, because in my own life I’m rarely alone. I have friends, old and new–some live just round the corner, and some miles away, but there aren’t many days that I don’t talk to one of them, seeking advice or a laugh or some company. I have my parents, whom I don’t see nearly enough, though we talk on the phone every day. And I have scattered family–my aunt and my cousins and my cousins’ children, my brother-in-law and my nephews, and all the assorted new people they bring to the party, including the pets. And I’m not even counting my own crew at home here, my kids and my husband and dog. I don’t spend my days in bubble of solitude. So when it comes to creating my characters, I try to make sure they’re not alone, either. I give them each family and friends, whether we ever meet them or not, because people can still have a very strong presence when they’re off the page. And the family and friends of my hero and heroine sometimes can tell me a lot about those two main characters. Often in…