Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Melissa Bourbon | Red Hats, Aprons, and the Bonds of Women
Author Guest / January 19, 2015

Writing about women, their relationships with each other, with the other women in their families, and the growth they experience through it all inspires me. Relationships are complicated, and when they’re authentic… and when they’re strained, I find them really interesting. I just love the relationships women have with each other. I love the idea of women’s organizations, too. The Red Hat Society, for example. Their motto is: fun, friendship, freedom, fulfillment and fitness Right now I’d be a Pink Hatter, and I haven’t made that commitment to fun, friendship, freedom, fulfillment and fitness with the group, but when I hit 50 (in about 12 years), I think I will. Red Hats. Purple clothes. Spunky women on a mission to have fun, stay young, and live large. That sounds like a great way to stay young at heart and I definitely have the philosophy that you are as young (or old) as you feel. I’m all about staying and feeling young for as long as possible! That philosophy definitely represents many of the supporting characters in A SEAMLESS MURDER, book 6 in A Magical Dressmaking Mystery Series. They are the Bliss chapter of the Red Hat Society… and one of…

Hy Conrad | Mr. Monk Leaves the Game
Author Guest / January 19, 2015

When a ballplayer retires, that’s the time to make a final review of his stats, adding up his career runs, his strikeouts, his RBI’s and analyzing his more controversial plays.  So that’s what I find myself doing with my old friend Adrian Monk.  After 125 episodes, and nineteen novels, it looks like the man’s fabled career is coming to an end.  After this last novel, there will be no more Mr. Monk mysteries.  And I feel enormously lucky to have been part of it from beginning to end. Monk’s first “on-base” happened in the late 1990s, when producer David Hoberman saw the movie As Good as It Gets and thought, “Hmm, could that annoying guy with OCD (Jack Nicholson) be a police detective?  Would that make good TV?”  He took his questions to comedy giant Andy Breckman who answered yes and yes and wrote the pilot. After several years in development hell, Monk came to bat in 2002 and made an immediate hit, one of the first basic cable series to have any real impact.  It was so successful that ABC, then in a ratings slump, showed our reruns in prime time.  The following year, NBC did the same, filling…

Christi Caldwell | Taking Imperfect Heroes and Heroines and Crafting them a Happily Ever After!
Author Guest / January 14, 2015

My Regency series: The Scandalous Seasons series and The Heart of a Duke series. My Latest Release: MORE THAN A DUKE just debuted January 3rd, 2015 and it is the latest release in my Heart of a Duke series. A Little Bit About Me: I’ve always considered myself a writer. I’ve loved to write since I was a girl of 13 and knew when I picked up my first Judith McNaught book that I’d someday write Happily Ever Afters. I divide my writing into two parts: before I was a mother, and after I was a mother. When my son was born, I discovered he had Down syndrome, and it redefined my life as a writer, mother, and as a person in general. He opened my eyes to the beauty of imperfection. From then on, I began to create Happily Ever Afters for oftentimes broken, imperfect heroes and heroines deserving of a happy ending. Readers, authors, and reviewers also frequently call me prolific. I have the ability to craft stories rather quickly and I love to share them with my readers! Therefore, I tend to release a new book/novella every 6 weeks or so! What You Will Find in My Books:…

Vanessa Kelly | When You Need a Friend
Author Guest / January 14, 2015

Although every romance novel naturally focuses on the relationship between the hero and heroine, any writer worth her salt will spend quite a bit of time on the secondary characters, too. In HOW TO PLAN A WEDDING FOR A ROYAL SPY, my new Renegade Royals historical romance, I experimented a bit with secondary characters. For one thing, my heroine, Evie Whitney, is an identical twin. She and her sister are best friends and as close as siblings can be, even though they’re quite different in personality. I had a lot of fun playing with the twin relationship and developing Evie’s character in contrast to her sister, Eden. But Evie isn’t the only character in the book with a “sidekick.” My hero also has a best friend who figures prominently in his life. In fact, you might even say he’s involved in a bromance—that classic, male bonding relationship between two buddies who are almost inseparable. Until, that is, they find their soulmates! My hero, Captain Will Endicott, is a tough-guy military spy for the Duke of Wellington, commander of the British Army. Will’s fellow agent is Captain Alasdair Gilbride, a charming rogue who, like Will, is the illegitimate son of a…

Robbie Terman | A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned
Author Guest / January 14, 2015

Thanks for having me at Fresh Fiction! In my latest release, SOME LIKE IT SIZZLING, the heroine Jenna has been hit by a string of bad luck. Really bad luck! She’s been left nearly penniless and will do almost anything to get back on her feet – including selling all her designer clothes and working as a process server (just to name a few). It got me thinking, what are other ways to save a few bucks? And here is what I came up with: 1) Turn down the heat – Instead, just get a picture of Sam Heughan, who plays Jamie Fraser on the TV series Outlander. Seriously, even in the polar vortex you’ll be taking a cold shower. 2) Eat more chocolate – Small chocolate bars are around one dollar. A head of lettuce is nearly two. Really, it’s just economical. 3) Put a dollar in a jar every time Thomas on Downton Abbey does something horrible but ends up weaseling his way out of the situation – Okay, so not really cutting costs, but it is forced savings. And as anyone who watches the show knows, that money will add up fast! 4) Become a Fan Girl…

Mina Carter | So, What’s Rugby All About Then?
Author Guest / January 14, 2015

Rugby (Or Rugby Union) is a contact team game originating from England in the early 19th century. It is played by two teams of fifteen players, using an oval shaped ball on a rectangular field with H-shaped goal posts at either end. Okay…that’s the factual (and boring) description. Ladies, imagine thirty, well-built, muscular men in sports kit (no armor) on a muddy field with some wrestling thrown in and you have the visual from any rugby game. These men train hard to play a brutal game and believe me, they have the bodies to match! Way before I actually understood any of the rules, I was more than happy to watch the scenery, shall we say? 😉 If you haven’t checked out any rugby players, then get your google-fu on and check some names: Owen Williams, Lee Halfpenny, Adam Thompstone, Owen Farrell… I’ll wait (you can thank me later ;)) So… let’s talk a little more about the game (ogle later ;)). Rugby differs from football (or soccer if you’re not a brit) in a number of ways. Other than the fact the ball is a different shape (and seems to have a mind of it’s own), the players can…

Chelsea Fine | BEST KIND OF BROKEN Now Available in Paperback
Author Guest / January 13, 2015

Fresh Fiction is happily celebrating the trade paperback release of BEST KIND OF BROKEN by Chelsea Fine. For a taste of the first book in the steamy New Adult Finding Fate series, check out this excerpt, courtesy of Forever. Excerpt from BEST KIND OF BROKEN It’s late, and most of the inn guests are already asleep. I wait until I hear the TV click on in Levi’s room before I start plugging everything I own into the wall. We argued today. We avoided each other. And aside from the weird look we exchanged in the hallway this morning and our little spat in front of Zack, everything is back to normal. Which means I owe Levi for the cold shower I had to take. I turn everything on and the lights go out. I hear the TV die in the next room and crawl onto my bed with a smile. “Pixie!” Levi’s irritated voice rings through the walls and I’m feeling happier than a mature person should. I hear stomping, and then he opens my bedroom door. Just opens it. Like he has the right to just waltz into my room. I could be naked in here; he doesn’t know. “You’re…

Tamara Hughes | The Fascinating World of Pirates
Author Guest / January 13, 2015

In movies, books, and television, pirates are alpha personalities with a zest for adventure. They’re dangerous, highly skilled at fighting, and live by their own rules. And in many respects, these depictions are right. Hard to believe, but pirates typically did have their own code of honor. All who joined the crew were expected to “sign on the account,” as such agreeing to the laws of the ship. These laws were called the articles, and they included such things as mercy should be given to all who ask for it, that if the prisoners of a captured ship offered no resistance, they should be treated well, especially women. The articles also declared how all plunder would be distributed amongst the crew, because essentially the crew owned the ship. In fact, they elected their captain. Sounds reasonable, doesn’t it? Almost honorable. And yet, as I did research on pirates, I found that sometimes they had bizarre habits and beliefs too. Let’s start with what they drank. Some of the recipes sound rather good, such as bombo, a mixture of rum, water, sugar, and nutmeg. Others, well…others were more unpalatable to me, like drinking rum with gunpowder. I can’t imagine that tasting…

J.J. Cook | Sweet Pepper Festival
Author Guest / January 13, 2015

For three days during the month of October each year, the little town of Sweet Pepper, Tennessee hosts their Sweet Pepper Festival where the hot pepper is king! The weather is mild and the trees are glorious in their full fall foliage of gold, red, and green. The festival boasts pepper-eating contests that range from mild to some of the hottest peppers in the world. Competitors come from everywhere to participate. Just watching them is funny, even if you don’t want to join in!  Bushels of the hottest, sweetest peppers in the world grown by local farmers are available for sale, along with local, mountain-grown apples. There is even a water tower shaped like a hot pepper, and a parade that is led by the sweet Pepper queen and her court which winds down Main Street past some of the cutest shops you’ll ever see, The festival is held in the center of town. Vendors from across Tennessee come to visit to play their wares and show off their skills. There are dozens of contests, games, and music. You can also take your pick of every kind of food that can be made with hot peppers – chocolate-covered peppers, pickled…

Julia Tagan | A Fish out of Water in Regency-Era England
Author Guest / January 13, 2015

I’ve always loved characters who are out of their element and trying hard to fit in – think Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman or Reese Witherspoon in Wild. There’s something about having to force your way through a discomfort in order to grow, emotionally or spiritually or both, that appeals to me. So when it came to writing STAGES OF DESIRE, my historical romance, I couldn’t help but use the trope for my hero and heroine. William, Earl of Abingdon, reluctantly comes to the title when his brother is killed, after having trained as a physician and researcher.  Science is his first love, and he’s determined to find a cure for malaria to help his ailing sister. But he’s sent off to track down the flighty ward of the duchess whose daughter he’s been wooing, and finds himself penniless and on the road with a ragtag bunch of actors. It’s his worst nightmare, as he considers plays to be silly entertainment and actors untrustworthy. During the course of the book he is put through his paces, including having to appear onstage, and forced to reconsider his presumptions. Harriet Farley, on the other hand, was born into a family of strolling…