Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
J. Lincoln Fenn | Conversations in Character with Dr. Lydia Greer
Author Guest / October 31, 2024

Book Title: The Nightmarchers Character Name: Dr. Lydia Greer How would you describe your family or your childhood? What a dull question. Surely my work in epigenetics would be of more interest. But perhaps that’s just a deflection because my father landed on the wrong side of history, although, ironically enough, we are fast approaching a time when parents will be able to have a say in the genes of their offspring. Designer babies and all that. I do fondly remember the first time I was invited into my father’s laboratory to dissect a piglet. The thrill of cutting into soft flesh preserved by formaldehyde, peering into the secrets of the liver, the intestines, the heart. I was six I believe. What was your greatest talent? Ruthlessness. A quality I share with my father but which skipped entirely over my sisters and great-niece, Julia. I don’t know why our species took this odd detour into sentimentality, but you must be ruthlessly clinical when it comes to research, particularly in regard to “Mother Nature.” Did you know that after copulation, it’s common for the female praying mantis to decapitate her partner and then eat him? And yet we anthropomorphize nature into…

Allyson McCollum | Conversations in Character with Flit
Author Guest / October 31, 2024

Book Title: Mors Obliviscens Character Name: Flit How would you describe your family or your childhood? I don’t remember anything specific since I…died. I can almost picture their faces, I can see certain rooms in my house, things like that, but it’s like there’s a curtain between me and those memories and I can’t quite pull it back to see more clearly. What was your greatest talent? Currently, it’s talking to the people Grim is sending to the afterlife. He’s not the most extroverted person in the world, so having me there seems to help make things less awkward and scary. Significant other? I don’t think I ever dated anyone while I was alive. My parents may not have allowed it, since I’m only 15. Biggest challenge in relationships? It’s kinda hard to trust anyone when you can’t trust your own memories. It’s not that I don’t want to, but there’s a little voice in the back of my mind that’s constantly trying to warn me not to get too close. Where do you live? I’m haunting a cabin beside a beautiful lake in the mountains somewhere. Nobody’s been here in a long time, from what we can tell, and…

Benedict Jacka | Exclusive Excerpt AN INSTRUCTION IN SHADOW
Author Guest / October 31, 2024

Excerpt from AN INSTRUCTION IN SHADOW by Benedict Jacka I shut my front door behind me and walked out into the London evening. Hobbes bounded away across the street, disappearing behind the cars of Foxden Road. Hunting for Wells is both simple and difficult. Simple, because all you have to do is wander around until you find somewhere with a lot of essentia; difficult, because to detect a Well’s essentia, you have to get close. The finder’s stones that most locators use have to get within twenty feet or so to reliably pick up a Well (more than that for the really powerful ones, but find a really powerful one in London, it’s probably taken already). Which means quartering the city in painstaking detail. It’s a pretty crude method when you think about it—you’d have thought that with all the centuries drucrafters have had to work on the problem, they’d have come up with a better way. Colin had asked me if there was some way to sense Wells at longer ranges, something like radar or sonar, but I hadn’t been able to think of one. Radar and sonar work by sending out waves that hit something and bounce back,…

Suzanne Woods Fisher | Exclusive Excerpt A HEALING TOUCH
Author Guest / October 30, 2024

Dok walked into the house and smelled something wonderful cooking. Simmering tomato sauce, she guessed, hoping Matt had made his famous marinara and meatballs. Her favorite. She set her purse down and breathed in the comforting aroma of a home-cooked meal. He was a great cook. But normally, Matt cooked only on his days off. It was unusual for him to have the time or inclination to cook on a workday. He took cooking very seriously. Dok teased him that he used up every single dish and utensil when he cooked, and she wasn’t entirely teasing. His cooking was worth the mess. Matt was in the kitchen, apron around his waist, stirring a pot. She wrapped her arms around him from behind and peered at the marinara sauce. “Just what I was in the mood for.” “How was your day?” “Long. Long but good. I stopped by Bee’s on the way home. She’s got that third-day postsurgery hit-by-a-Mack-truck feeling.” “Hopefully, Damon can lighten the load for her until she’s back on her feet. He’s determined to help her, whether she wants it or not. On the morning she had surgery, he even called me to make sure she had a…

Liz Johnson | Title Challenge: MEDDLING WITH MISTLETOE
Author Guest / October 30, 2024

Join me on a visit to the fabled north short of Prince Edward Island during the most wonderful time of the year! It’s Christmas on the island, and two battered hearts are about to discover hope and healing at the Red Door Inn. M is for Merriment. Of the Christmas variety. E is for Entertaining. Marie and Seth Sloan have opened their inn to entertain two guests this off-season. D is for Daniel. Our hero, who would rather skip the Christmas season altogether. D is for December. When the year is up, so is Daniel’s visit. L is for Love. The thing Aunt Aretha most wants Daniel to find. I is for Island. Prince Edward Island, that is. N is for No Relation to the Singer. Aretha Franklin’s famous greeting. G is for Grumpy. Daniel’s go-to mood—at first. W is for Whitney. Our heroine, who bakes mouth-watering pies but is struggling to find her life’s dream. I is for Inn. The Red Door Inn on PEI’s north shore where Daniel is staying. T is for Turkey Hat. A knitted treasure that begins to show Daniel’s hidden humor. H is for Holiday Spirit. Which Whitney has in spades. M is for…

Olivia Blacke | Title Challenge: A NEW LEASE ON DEATH
Author Guest / October 30, 2024

A is for Apparition. A NEW LEASE ON DEATH introduces Ruby Young, a woman who moves to Boston only to find that her new apartment is haunted by a ghostly apparition named Cordelia Graves. N is for Neighbors. When the across-the-hall neighbor is murdered, recently deceased Cordelia Graves enlists Ruby’s help to solve the mystery and bring his killer to justice. E is for Ethereal. Cordelia was never described as light or delicate while she was alive, but now that she’s dead and can pass through solid objects, she’s the very definition of ethereal. W is for Weird. Long before A NEW LEASE ON DEATH was a book, it was my “weird little ghost story” that I couldn’t wait to tell. And now, I can’t wait for you to read it! L is for Lazy Landlords. The building super didn’t want the hassle of cleaning out Cordelia’s apartment after she died in the bathtub, so the lazy landlord rented it out to Ruby fully furnished. It was a stroke of luck for a woman who moved to Boston with nothing but a few suitcases of silly T-shirts and didn’t have money to buy coffee, much less a couch. E is…

Jaime Jo Wright | An alluring and terrifying butterfly house set at a Wisconsin manor
Author Guest / October 29, 2024

1–What is the title of your latest release? Specters in the Glass House 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? Most writers are awful at elevator pitches! LOL But I’ll try. Specters in the Glass House is a dual time novel set in 1921 Prohibition Era and present day. It encapsulates the unsolved and ghostly murder mystery of the “Butterfly Butcher”, and the alluring and terrifying butterfly house set at a Wisconsin manor just outside of Milwaukee. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? Because I wanted to set a book in the Prohibition era as well as look at it from a different angle, I set it just outside of Milwaukee, which was a region hit very hard during Prohibition. 4–Would you hang out with your protagonist in real life? Oh, I absolutely would! I think both protagonists—Marian from 1921 and Remy from Present Day—would have a lot to teach me. 5–What are three words that describe your protagonist? Because I have two protagonists, it’s only fair to answer for both. Marian, who is from 1921 would be described as: haunted, unsure, and lost. Remy, from present day, would be described as: solitary,…

Tee O’Fallon | Tracking down a cult targeting youths
Author Guest / October 29, 2024

1–What is the title of your latest release? Ultimate Justice 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? An FBI agent, his K-9, and a woman who is not all she appears to be, team up to track down a cult targeting youths. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? The entire K-9 Special Ops series takes place in Colorado, where I lived and worked for five years. Many of the places and houses in the books of this series are places I’ve been to or actually lived in! 4–Would you hang out with your protagonist in real life? Absolutely! Who wouldn’t want to hang out with Evan, a seriously hot, hunky, alpha-male with a soft side for dogs and children. And Marlie is one of the most likeable, gentle, big-hearted heroines I’ve ever met! 5–What are three words that describe your protagonist? Well, in addition to “hot” and “hunky” I’d definitely say, courageous, protective, and loyal to a fault. 6–What’s something you learned while writing this book? There’s a fun little component mingled in between the suspense pages of this story that I didn’t plan on: butterflies, specifically, monarch butterflies. I can’t recall the…

Daryl Wood Gerber | Classic books and delicious food
Author Guest / October 29, 2024

1–What is the title of your latest release? MURDER ON THE PAGE, the first Literary Dining Mystery. 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? Featuring twin hooks that cozy readers can’t get enough of—classic books and delicious food—this delectably intriguing new series features a caterer who crafts literary-themed dinner parties, and must ensure that a killer gets their just desserts. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? I wanted to set it in a mountain town. My nephew lives in Asheville, NC, so I decided to visit him and see if that area would work. It’s perfect. I also spent nine years in Charlotte, NC, so I was pretty familiar with the state. 4–Would you hang out with your protagonist in real life? A bibliophile caterer? You bet. We’d talk mysteries and eat treats. Yum. Plus, Allie is funny, and I adore people who can make me laugh. 5–What are three words that describe your protagonist? Witty book-loving foodie. 6–What’s something you learned while writing this book? The themed book in Murder on the Page is Pride and Prejudice, so I did a deep dive into the story and then researched Jane Austen, the…

Laura Buchwald | Conversations in Character with Josie Gray
Author Guest / October 28, 2024

Book Title: THE COAT CHECK GIRL Character Name: Josie Gray What’s your full name? Josephine Olivia Gray. Yep, it spells JOG, which is the epitome of irony. What is your hometown? I was born in Vermont and grew up in the booming metropolis of Keene, New Hampshire. How would you describe your childhood? Confusing. There were ghosts involved. And lonely—my parents split when I was really young, hence the move. My dad left my mom for the hot neighborhood widow, who is now my step-monster. Nearly twenty-five years later, in 1999, my mom’s still bitter—you can imagine how much fun she was in the 70’s and 80’s. Thank God for my grandmother, Nanette, who is the source of every single warm memory I have from those years. What is your current state of mind? Compartmentalized. I’m grieving Nanette, whom we lost quite recently. It seems impossible the world still spins without her. And yet it does, so I’m also trying to stay focused at work—I’m a hostess at Bistrot in the West Village and we’re having a busy season, a lot of changes. I’m learning those stages of grief don’t care that you’re in the middle of something, they’ll come at you…