Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
SANDI SHILHANEK | TRYING TO UNRAVEL THE KEEPING AND RE-READING PHENOMENON
Guests / August 16, 2009

I think it’s time to share a deep dark secret about me. I don’t as a general rule keep books, and I don’t re-read. I do have a fairly healthy collection of autographed books, and therefore have developed “keepers”. If I have read that book which is autographed it gets noted in my list of read books, but it doesn’t get re-read. To be truthful I don’t see the appeal of keeping books, and re-reading. I have an embarrassingly large TBR pile because I’m not like many of my friends who can read a book or two a day. Therefore I’m not really in danger of running out of books. Then let us consider the fact that while many authors are retiring, or losing contracts there are still new books being published that yell out read me on a regular basis. Why would I re-read something I’ve read, when there is something new to be discovered. To read more about Sandi Shilhanek’s deep dark secret and for a chance to enter our weekend only contest click here Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Jeff Abbott | THE FIVE THINGS THEY NEVER TELL YOU WHEN YOUR BOOK IS ON THE SHELF
Guests / August 14, 2009

I’ve written eleven novels, and each one has been both joy and challenge. My latest thriller, Trust Me, was no different in that regard. I have found, though, that many readers and new or aspiring authors don’t know about the Five Things that happen once the book is done and on the shelves. These are the time-tested elements that you must brace yourself (and possibly your loved ones and your readers for) when you reach out and pluck down the finished book off the shelf: You will remember some tiny bit of obscure research that you forgot to include. Oh, the hours you spent tracking down the correct serial numbers for a Belgian sniper rifle, or Ivan the Terrible’s underwear size, or the exact farm-to- market road your heroine would drive to reach Blooming Grove, Texas. And scanning over your scene, you realize that the tidbit is NOT THERE. How could this be? It must be the copyeditor struck it out and you didn’t notice. Or maybe you realized you didn’t need said tidbit because it slowed down the story and so like a reasonable person you took it out. But you don’t remember making that edit. Don’t worry. You…

SIMON BECKETT | THE PERFECT PUBLICITY PHOTO OPPORTUNITY
Guests / August 12, 2009

Well, it’s been an interesting week. Work on my new David Hunter novel was temporarily suspended for a sudden flurry of publicity. Which makes a welcome break, to be honest, and gets me away from my desk. But I’ve discovered that one of the side effects of writing about a forensic anthropologist – someone who spends much of his working life with the not-so recently dead – is that you do get some unusual requests. Which was how I came to be in an abandoned cemetery at dusk one evening, posing for photographs in the pouring rain for a German newspaper. Want to know more about Simon Beckett’s photo experiences click here Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Julie Ann Long | SINCE THE SURRENDER… AN EXCERPT
Guests / August 10, 2009

Captain Chase Eversea and Rosalind March employ a street urchin, Liam Plum, to help with their search for Lucy, Rosalind’s missing sister—but when the boy’s sister and only surviving relative disappears, too, the mystery thickens, sizzling attraction deepens, and they’re forced to admit how much the boy matters to them. Chase is recruited to give the filthy boy a bath (with lavender soap, no less), and this scene starts after Chase carries a sleeping Liam to bed and Chase and Rosalind are tantalizingly alone again… “He weighs nothing at all.” He said it nearly tonelessly. They sat in silence. Knowing they’d both just irretrievably given up the safety of ambivalence toward the boy. They’d allowed him to mean something. Neither of them were pleased about it, but neither would they give him up for the world now. The fire popped loudly. Rosalind jumped. For more in Julie Anne Long’s exciting excerpt click here Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Sara Reyes | How I Attended a Sherrilyn Kenyon Signing Event…or New Friends, New Experiences
Guests / August 8, 2009

Books Included: This week I seemed to spend half my time buying books, getting a ticket for a book signing and then standing in line and waiting for a signing. It probably was only a couple of hours but I’m sure you know what it’s like to try to mesh your schedule with a family’s schedule especially when there is car pooling involved! So, here’s how it worked out — I got up before dawn and showered and dressed to leave at 6:30am to go to downtown Dallas on Tuesday, August 4th, the day BAD MOON RISING was officially released. Now in the old days with a “real job” that was my usual routine but it’s been a couple of years and I only get up that early to work in my “work clothes” aka pajamas, so to be actually showered and dressed is a shocker, but I managed. Then I drove downtown barely missing the rush hour traffic and just avoiding a few of the angry drivers. Oh, yes, and the sun rose. It may have been beautiful but I was too busy trying to keep my eyes open and avoiding other motorists without the help of coffee. Sigh….

Allyson Roy | COULD YOU WRITE A BOOK WITH YOUR SPOUSE? A QUIZ!
Guests / August 4, 2009

Whenever people find out that Allyson Roy translates into a husband and wife team named Alice and Roy we get reactions from other couples as varied as: “We just luuv doing things together.” — to — “We’d be divorced if we tried that!” Well, we not only made it through our second book — BABYDOLL comes out today! — but the first in our Saylor Oz series won a Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense. To celebrate, we thought it would be fun to have a little quiz aimed at assisting those of you who choose to test the waters of writing together as a couple. Want to take the quiz? Then click here Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Sandi Shilhanek | Did the economy change your library
Guests / August 2, 2009

This week one of my Yahoo groups was discussing the newest Suzanne Brockmann book, Hot Pursuit. One of the ladies in the group was planning on buying a copy, but the store she went to wasn’t offering a discount, so she did some calling, and found a store with a discount and placed the book on hold. In her doing this she found that the store wasn’t getting as many copies of a book as they might have before the economic downturn, and it led several people to say they either didn’t read Brockmann any longer or they would be getting her book from the library. This takes me to the next lady, who said she checked her library and they did not have any of Hot Pursuit on order. I found this interesting as I believed her to have been a very popular author, and even with funding dwindling I would have thought they would have ordered at least one copy. Read the rest of the story click here Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Daniel Silva signing THE DEFECTOR
Guests / July 29, 2009

Daniel Silva signing THE DEFECTOROriginally uploaded by freshfiction Photo collection from the Daniel Silva signing in Dallas. Check them out and watch for a special contest in August to win the copy of THE DEFECTOR Daniel signed to a “Fresh Fiction Fan!” Visit FreshFiction.com to learn more about books and authors.

Sandi Shilhanek | Daydreaming…If I Were An Author I’d Have the Perfect Office!
Guests / July 19, 2009

This week while I was driving and trying to entertain myself I decided that if I were to be a writer I’d want to have a wonderful place to write in. What would it look like? I know it certainly wouldn’t be an old-fashioned typewriter setting atop a doghouse ala Snoopy in the Peanuts cartoons. It would probably have a nice state of the art computer that I could never learn to fully use, and lots of shelves to hold all the research books, whose soul purpose would be to sit there and make me look scholarly and to collect dust. Of course I’d have to have a nice polished desk, and plenty of office supplies; reams of paper, highlighters in all colors, pens, pencils, and a rainbow of sticky notes in all shapes and sizes! Now, I’d be officially a writer wouldn’t I? What, you mean in order to be a writer I have to have a story idea and the talent to extend it into several hundred pages that are written coherently and would attract the attention of some great literary agent or publisher and actually get my story to you my overeager fans. So now you know…

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Guests / July 18, 2009

I’ve been a reader for half a century. There you go, guys, you get to do the numbers and calculate my age, but it’s true, I’ve been reading FOREVER since dirt was new! And it never ever gets old. What? Well meeting my favorite authors. I’m very fortunate that I’m able to meet some of the goddesses (and gods) who channel muses and create wonderful and imaginative worlds for me to enjoy. And this week is like reaching a stage of nirvana or whatever is really a special place. It’s the annual conference of Romance Writers of America. So many authors in one space. Wow! So, if you’ve been following on our Twitter or on Facebook you know a wee bit about what we’ve been doing, who we’re meeting, and books we’re getting. But I wanted to talk about what it means to me as a reader, an addict to books if you will. It’s like being surrounded by friends I’ve known for years, creators of worlds with characters who have aided my education, stories that gave me a few hours away from stress and sadness to keep going, examples to follow that inspired me to success and sometimes just…