Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Adrienne Giordano | Damaged People and Why I Love Them
Author Guest / November 8, 2011

I have come to realize perfection is overrated. If the world became filled with beautiful people who never did anything wrong, managed their daily lives efficiently without stress and still managed to get everything done, how boring would that be? Actually, I think I would hate every one of those people. The nerve of them being so perfect when the rest of us are scrambling. Maybe that’s why I like when people screw up. Well, not so much the screwing up, but the part that comes immediately after. That’s when the good stuff happens. It’s sort of like peeking behind the curtain into their character. Will that person become humbled? Will they feverishly try to correct their mistake?  Will they apologize? For me, the person’s reaction to the mistake makes them interesting. As a reader, I gravitate to flawed characters. I like to imagine what event in the character’s history made them that way. What emotional wound do they have that hasn’t been healed over the years? What makes them act the way they do or fear the things they fear? As a child, I slept with a blanket. One night my father told me I had to try sleeping…

Joanne Kennedy | Starting Over
Author Guest / November 7, 2011

If I dropped you in the middle of nowhere with nothing but fifty dollars, a beat-up muscle car, and an ugly stray dog, would you able to build yourself a new life? That’s what happens to former trophy wife Lacey Bradford in TALL, DARK AND COWBOY. Lacey’s been raised to riches, but her privileged life is whipped out from under her when she discovers her ex-husband is a con man. She’s left with few survival skills and fewer resources when she swears off his ill-gotten gains and hits the road. Hundreds of miles and one hunky cowboy later, she has to  rebuild her life in a world that’s as foreign to her as another planet. My romances are almost always fish-out-of-water stories, where a hero or heroine finds herself in an unfamiliar world and has to make the best of it. And since I started writing that kind of story, I can’t pass through a small town in the West without looking around and wondering what I’d do if I had to live there. Could I get a job at that little café? How tough would it be to tend bar at that tough-looking whiskey joint on the edge of…

Laura Kaye | For the Love of a Greek God Hero
Author Guest / November 6, 2011

Owen is the kind of a man any one of us would love to call our own. He is everything that is wonderful: warm and giving with a mischievous sense of fun and an almost child-like sweet tooth. Here is a man who takes delight in Lucky Charms and ice cream, who is a tiger in the sack, and whose number one priority is not to hurt Megan. Truly, I could eat him up with a spoon. ~From the Book Wenches Review Given the awesome reception NORTH OF NEED‘s hero, Owen Winters, is receiving, I thought I’d share what I think makes him so lovable and compelling. As a basic description, Owen is a long-exiled snow god who is the adopted son and destined successor of the Boreas, the Supreme God of the North Wind and Winter. And here’s why I and the heroine Megan love him, and hopefully YOU will, too: Godly Handsome. What else would you expect in a Greek god? LOL Let’s just say that cover does Owen all kinds of justice. Here’s Megan’s first impression: Even asleep, unconscious, whatever, the guy was ruggedly handsome. Mop of shiny black hair, strong brow, square jaw, fair skin, full…

Spotlight on Debbie Kaufman
Author Spotlight / November 6, 2011

Advice…Take It?  Or Leave It? Have you ever ignored advice and later regretted that you did? What if it put you in the spotlight of men with machine guns? That’s exactly what happened to me once when I flippantly dismissed a crucial piece of advice received on an airplane. All I did was answer a question from a man in front of me about his customs form.  Later I walked to the back of the plane and a second passenger warned me that I shouldn’t speak to the first man.  He used a racial slur, so I dismissed that warning as bigotry and spoke briefly to the first man again.  When we disembarked later in Beijing, the airport was deserted except for visibly-armed Red Army guards.  I quickly found myself alone at the baggage carousel with the first man I’d spoken to earlier. Man: “How much for your services?” Me: “I’m sorry. What?” Man: “Your services.  For the night, your services.  HOW MUCH?” Even I got it then.  I, a lone woman with no male family member to oversee her care, had spoken to a very traditional-minded man from Saudi Arabia.  He assumed I was a prostitute. His agitation and…

Sharon Page | Engage in a Tortured Hero
Author Guest / November 5, 2011

Meet the hero, Devon Audley, Duke of March of my new release, ENGAGED IN SIN.  In this scene, Devon has just been woken from a nightmare by the heroine, Anne Beddington… “I mean what did you do to me that made me leap up and slam you onto the ground?” “I—I brushed your hair out of your eyes.” “Exactly.  It was an inconsequential touch, but it set me off like a flame reaching a keg of gunpowder.  I’m mad.  The war, the battles, the blindness, the killing and the grief—I wasn’t strong enough to let it all just glance off me.  I’m no war hero—all throughout the damned thing, I was filled with pain and fury and grief and doubts.  A hero is a man who is filled with confidence, who takes action and doesn’t waste time on remorse.  He doesn’t hide in the blasted dark.  He gets a damned grip on himself.  But I can’t.  I’ve gone out of my wits, and I’m going madder by the day.  I’m not getting better, I’m getting worse.  That’s why I have Treadwell to scare people away.” “You are drinking too much,” she said firmly.  “That is probably why you are getting…

Liz Lipperman | What’s In A Name?
Author Guest / November 5, 2011

My grandkids are getting to the age where we feel comfortable taking them on excursions without their parents. In August, hubby and I decided we would pick up the two boys (ages 6 and 3) on a Thursday night and have them sleep and take them to a water park nearby. The boys sleep together at home, so naturally, they wanted to do that here…with me. Have you ever slept with a 3 and a 6 year old in one bed? Legs and arms go flying, bodies somehow get upside down, and both boys are jammed as close to me as they can get. I get about 8 inches on the edge of the bed, and even then, I usually have squatters. That’s a whole other story, though. Anyway, the six-year old (Grayson) fell asleep watching some cartoon, but the three year-old (Caden) was not about to give up without a fight. After all, he’s at Nana’s house, and all rules go out the window. What happens at Nana’s …stays at Nana’s. After the cartoon ended, I shut off the TV and of course, he fussed. Cuddling him close, I told him the story of Goldilocks. When I was finished,…

Carolyn Brown | What’s being whispered in Santa’s ear…you might be surprised!
Author Guest / November 4, 2011

Merry Christmas to everyone at Fresh Fiction! Okay, so Halloween is barely over and Thanksgiving is the next holiday but at the Brown house in Davis, Oklahoma it’s Christmas because my holiday cowboy book, DARN GOOD COWBOY CHRISTMAS is now on the bookshelves. The Spikes & Spurs series is surrounded by one big extended family down in Ringgold, Texas that takes in friends as well as family. This Christmas they’re all rooting for Raylen and Liz to get past all the speed bumps that life keeps throwing in their way and figure out what everyone else already knows. And that is that they belong together. Liz was raised in a traveling carnival that left the panhandle of Texas every March and didn’t return back until after Thanksgiving. She was home schooled by her mother and aunt in the carnival and traveling was her way of life. She had wings but she craved roots so every year she sat on Santa’s lap and asked for one thing—a house with no wheels. Then when she got older, she added one more item to her short list. She wanted a sexy cowboy of her very own. Her Uncle Haskell left her the house,…

Fresh Pick | NIGHT MANEUVERS by Jillian Burns
Fresh Pick / November 3, 2011

Uniformly Hot September 2011 On Sale: August 23, 2011 Featuring: Mitchell McCabe; Alexandria Hughes 224 pages ISBN: 0373796382 EAN: 9780373796380 Paperback $5.25  Add to Wish List Romance Erotica Sensual Buy at Amazon.com Another HOT man in uniform for Readers & ‘ritas! Night Maneuvers by Jillian Burns His mission. Seduction Subject: Mitchell McCabe, U.S. Air Force Captain (Call Sign: Casanova) Current Status: Celibate—because he lost a bet. Mission: Survive thirty days without sex. Obstacle: Captain Alexandria Hughes, who’s suddenly gone from hotshot pilot to just plain hot! Alex has had it bad for gorgeous Mitch ever since their academy days, but he’s only ever seen her as a wingman, never a woman. It’s time she made him take another long, hard look. After years as friends and comrades, Mitch is seeing Alex as the opposite of “one of the guys.” Has that smoking-hot body always been hiding under her flight suit? Is she just messing with him? Can he wait a month to discover what he’s been missing out on…or are some sizzling night maneuvers a sure bet? Excerpt If she ever got married in a place like this, her mother would weep and wail for a month of Sundays. Captain…

Eileen Dreyer | I’m Writing a Series. Help Me
Author Guest / November 3, 2011

It seemed like such a good idea at the time. I started with this concept of a historical romantic adventure trilogy, which would have taxed me enough. I mean, I’ve never written a series before. I’ve always thought I wasn’t organized enough. And mostly, I wasn’t. But I had tested my wings on my faery trilogy as Kathleen Korbel for Nocturne. I ended up having a great  time flinging characters around and intermixing story lines. I even realized that my muse was still working, because I would write something in the first book without knowing what it meant, and voila! In the third book it played out(I can’t tell you how comforting that was.) So, I thought. Easy peasy. I can do another trilogy. But then, as I was writing BARELY A LADY, all of these extra people started showing up. And most of them were manly spies. Okay, I thought. That’s fun. But focus on the trilogy. You have enough people you’re playing traffic cop for to get distracted. Nah. Right in the middle of NEVER A GENTLEMAN, the other men started to really separate themselves into different personalities; they each had a different task. They had backgrounds I…

Fresh Pick | MODEL MARINE by Candace Havens
Fresh Pick / November 2, 2011

Uniformly Hot November 2011 On Sale: October 18, 2011 Featuring: Will Hughes; Hannah Harrington 224 pages ISBN: 0373796501 EAN: 9780373796502 Paperback $5.25  Add to Wish List Romance, Romance Erotica Sensual Buy at Amazon.com The perfect model Model Marine by Candace Havens Simply the best… Subject: Captain Will Hughes, U.S. Marine Corps Current Status: On assignment in NYC— suddenly recruited to shed the uniform! Mission: Serve as model, muse and man-toy without running afoul of the general. Obstacle: Hannah Harrington, fashion world It girl. Hannah narrowly escapes Fashion Week disaster by hijacking gorgeous Will for her runway show—after all, rock-hard abs are the ultimate accessory. His good deed nearly lands him in the brig, but he’ll risk anything to get back into her bed…. Hannah can’t figure out how this model marine got under her skin—they’re complete opposites! But sexy Will not only ignites her senses, he fuels her creativity: an irresistible combination, even if it can’t last. Can two steamy weeks together satisfy their lust…or will they have to extend this mission? Excerpt “The male models are in jail.” Anne Marie whispered the words so Hannah wasn’t sure if she heard her correctly. They were backstage working with the stylists…