Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Melissa Schroeder | The Attraction of Opposites
Author Guest / March 22, 2016

With over sixty books to my name, I have written quite a few different kinds of couples, but my favorite is always the “opposites attract” couple. Part of it is because I like the banter that usually goes on between the hero and heroine. The other part of it is that in my own marriage, my husband and I fit this category. He is laid back and hates plans. I think that plans don’t fail; you fail to plan. He is even tempered and loves to be around people. I am an Italian with a creative bent and a temper. Also, people are good in small—very small—doses. But, since we are about to hit our twenty-four-year wedding anniversary, I say we figured out a way to work through those things. We do have a few things in common—our love of the absurd and a totally immature sense of humor among other things. In my March Entangled release, SNOWBOUND SEDUCTION, I have another pair of opposites. First we have Trevor MacMillan, English bad boy chef with a title and has a privileged background. He has always had family support and is the darling of the tabloids. On top of it, he…

Mia Hopkins | A City Girl’s Guide to Rodeo
Author Guest / March 22, 2016

Howdy, Fresh Fiction fans! In my latest release, the erotic romance COWBOY RESURRECTION, Monica Kaur is a marketing executive who’s tasked with planning and promoting a rodeo. She’s also a city slicker who has no idea what a rodeo is. She enlists the help of a local rancher’s son, Dean MacKinnon, who’s a professional bullfighter. Together, they get the show up and running…and spend some private meetings getting to know each other one-on-one. So what is a rodeo anyway? I attended my first rodeo in my twenties, so I can understand a newbie’s confusion. You drive up to the arena, not knowing what to expect. You park your Prius among all the giant dusty pickup trucks. You pay for your ticket, find a seat in the stands, look around and think, “What happens now?” And maybe, “What am I doing here?” And also, “Who are all these cowboys?” No worries—I’ve got you. Here’s a quick and dirty city girl’s guide to rodeo. HISTORY In the 1800s, Mexican vaqueros and American cowboys worked the vast cattle herds in the west. A couple times a year, they rounded up the herds and drove them hundreds of miles to stockyards, where the cattle…

Candy Sloane | High School Reunions…the good…the bad
Author Guest / March 22, 2016

My debut novel with Entangled Publishing’s Brazen Books imprint–BEST FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS–takes place at a high school reunion. Those might be the scariest words in the English language, after We Need to Talk. But they don’t have to be. High school reunions can be fun, entertaining, or downright steamy. Some of my favorite movies feature high school reunions: In Romy & Michelle’s High School Reunion two best friends tell crazy lies about their lives now, and hilarity ensues. In Grosse Point Blank an assassin attends his high school reunion and renews an old romance. In Peggy Sue Got Married a woman attending her high school reunion passes out and goes back to high school knowing what she knows now. Something we’ve all wished for. In the case of my book, BEST FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS two best friends get to rekindle an out of control flame 14 years in the making. Maybe you have a crazy or fun story about your high school reunion, or something so embarrassing it would make an audience laugh. Comment below with the best or worst thing that happened at your high school reunion to be entered to win a $10 Amazon gift card. It’s the…

Carmen Falcone | Traveling Through Books: Yes, Please!
Author Guest / March 21, 2016

Ladies and gentlemen, we are ready for takeoff… Even though we don’t actually read this line every time we read a romance novel, it’s safe to say that a lot of times we hear that in the back of our minds. Or perhaps I do, anyway. Hey, stranger things have happened in my life. But now, let’s talk about traveling—through books! As a reader, I love to go places I haven’t been. As a writer, I love to feature some of my favorite destinations in books. Today, I’ll be taking you to Brazil, where BRAZILIAN REVENGE is set. Of course, it helps that Brazil is also where I’m from originally, even though I’ve lived in Austin, Texas for the last thirteen years. Brazil is such a resourceful, diverse country. There’s something for everyone in Brazil. To give you one example, BRAZILIAN REVENGE starts in glamorous and internationally known Rio, filled with breathtaking views and gorgeous beaches. (It’s also one of my favorite cities in the world.) But then we go to Northeast Brazil, which is a completely different area. In another book, KIDNAPPING THE BRAZILIAN TYCOON, I’ve even taken readers to the land of a Brazilian Indian tribe. Yes. That…

Kait Carson | There’s History to Mystery for Cozy Writers
Author Guest / March 21, 2016

As a writer, I keep my fingers firmly on the pulse of the business. Novels, themes, and genres have an ebb and flow. The writer’s job is to keep up with, and hopefully ahead of, changes in taste. Agatha Christie is widely, if arguably, credited with inventing the cozy format. Her Miss Marple series introduced readers to an amateur sleuth, a closed set of suspects, a body, and of course, knitting. Actually, the knitting was a stroke of genius. Something about repetitive movement frees the brain to do other things, like figure out who the killer is. Christie found a formula that worked. In reality, Miss Marple came along late in the day. Christie had dabbled in various forms of locked room style mysteries well before she appeared. Tommy and Tuppence, amateurs and ne’er do wells, morphed into sleuths out of necessity. Poirot’s introduction came the next year. He was no amateur, but the feel and story lines were similar. Miss Marple, arriving seven years after the Belgian detective, was a definite beneficiary of Poirot’s literary legacy. Christie, Allingham, Marsh, and Sayers were more or less contemporaries in content and style. Lighthearted mysteries perked along quite nicely, but the tone…

History ReFreshed: God Love Ireland
History / March 18, 2016

In honor of St. Patrick’s Day, this month we’ll give a nod to the wearin’ of the green with a series of stories featuring Irish characters and settings. For as the old Irish saying goes: “Always remember to forget The friends who proved untrue But never forget to remember The ones who stuck by you.” And what friend is better than a great book? So raise a glass of green beer to your current favorites, and may you find new ones in the list that follows! Although all of the books touch on The Great Hunger, the Irish potato blight that began in 1845 and was responsible for the death of over a million Irish men, women and children and the migration of two million more, we’ll begin with the stand-alone by Michael Grant, IN THE TIME OF FAMINE. Featuring an upstairs-downstairs interaction between the families of the landlord, Lord Somerville, and one of his tenant farmers, Grant’s book unveils the struggles from two very different social perspectives. Michael Ranahan, the tenant’s son, dreams of a new life in America and escape from being yoked to the land. But when the blight strikes, his family needs his strong arm—and the…

Fresh Pick | FROM BAGS TO RICHES by Sandra D. Bricker
Fresh Pick / March 18, 2016

Fresh Pick for Friday, March 18th, 2016 is FROM BAGS TO RICHES by Sandra D. Bricker #InspirationalFriday About FROM BAGS TO RICHES A Jessie Stanton Novel Jessie Hart worked so hard to put her Louisiana roots in the rear view mirror and her Adornments boutique on the map. So when renegade “husband” Jack turns up again, the new and improved Jessie catches his attention. As he fights through his residual legal battles, he makes every effort to win her back and marry her for real this time… before Danny gets the chance. When a celebrity stylist with her own reality show makes Adornments a hot spot, Jessie’s hard work is finally paying off. But amid award shows and photo shoots, Jessie’s beloved grandfather is diagnosed with cancer and she’s nudged back to the Louisiana roots she worked so hard to escape. Now, in her quest to find the success, true love, and faith that has always eluded her, will God really lead her right back home? Buy FROM BAGS TO RICHES: Amazon.com | Kindle| BN.com| iTunes/iBooks | Kobo | Google Play | Powell’s Books | Books-A-Million | Indiebound | Amazon CA | Amazon UK | Amazon DE | Amazon FR…

Gail Ingis | Amelia Island: A Hidden Gem
Author Guest / March 18, 2016

A hidden gem, right near the beach, boutique shopping and four centuries of history, why not go there? If you are fortunate enough to find out about Amelia Island . . . it’s worth a visit. Last year, we found it by accident on our way home from Florida. Read the rest on Ingis About Gail Ingis Gail Ingis writes historical romance, loves history and romance of course, has taught history, and her weekly blog frequently covers historical content. A native of Brooklyn, New York, Ingis’s early days began and ended with writing, drawing and music. Her inspiration to write came from books gifted to her by an aunt. But life had other ideas. After graduating from the New York School of Interior Design with a BFA in Interior Architecture and Design and masters’ studies in Architecture and Design Criticism at The New School (Parsons). Her career in interior design and architecture led her to the other arts. Ingis founded the Interior Design Institute, a school of interior design, that she eventually sold, but during her tenure, she was twice asked by publishers to write a textbook, her efforts were thwarted by a heavy schedule. Ingis resides in Connecticut with…

Magnolia Smith | Wine Country Vacations…for an Alpha Male!
Author Guest / March 18, 2016

When you think of wine country vacations, lazy days of wine tastings, Michelin-starred meals and gatherings at art bars might come to mind. This is what my U.S. Marine husband thought and why he distinctly did not want to go – at first. After I promised to create an itinerary designed to please his Alpha male temperament, he relented and decided to look forward to a vacation sans children. And I eagerly went about researching the various ways a man, who does not like wine, loves comfort food, has a fetish for log cabins, and would rather join a pickup game of basketball than rub shoulders with elegantly dressed aficionados of the grape, could have a good time. Check out my findings below! Winecation: The Alpha Male’s Guide to Napa – Where to Stay Winecation: The Alpha Male’s Guide to Napa – Where to Eat Winecation: The Alpha Male’s Guide to Napa – What to Do About Magnolia Smith With a father who was a former member of the Vietnam-era 82nd Airborne, a cousin who was a Green Beret in the eighties and nineties, another cousin who currently works for the CIA (albeit in an administrative role) and a brother…

Tina Ann Forkner | Saddling Up Anyway: A Romantic Twist on Women’s Fiction
Author Guest / March 18, 2016

A few years back I was writing a women’s fiction novel with a strong romantic twist. My only problem was that the guy my protagonist loved was boring. He was dependable, handsome, and said all the right things, but he lacked charisma. I was brainstorming with an author friend about my lackluster story when she asked me something like, “What if he is this totally hot guy that exudes masculinity?” I laughed. The man she was describing was straight out of a romance novel, and I didn’t write straight romance. My women’s fiction always has a romantic thread, but I admit that I’m a pretty straight-laced girl. My books have never been considered hot or steamy. Writing about anything hot would make me blush, so at first I didn’t think I’d be able to write the kind of man into my novel that my author friend was talking about. I didn’t even know if a man like that would interest readers of women’s fiction, even they do tend to like romantic threads in their stories. Around the same time that I was trying to enliven that novel with a stronger love interest, my husband and I attended a Professional Bull…