Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss

What is the title of your latest release?SUMMER AT THE FRENCH BAKERY What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?Set in Brittany in France. This book is about a crossroads in Juliet’s life, celebrating a fresh start after recovering from illness and following her dreams to turn an old water mill on the banks of a lake into a salon du thé, a tea rooms. But before she can do that, she must agree to help the Mayor out and reopen the o...

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Welcome back to Jen’s Jewels, your weekly guide to the best in new fiction. This week, I am thrilled to host New York Times bestselling author RaeAnne Thayne to talk about her latest novel, THE RAINY DAY BOOKSHOP – a warm, feel-good read that I think you are going to love. LIGHTNING ROUND What’s your favorite way to spend a slow summer afternoon?I love reading out in our covered pavilion in the backyard. It’s always cool with a lo...

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What is the title of your latest release?THE LOWE JOB What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?THE LOWE JOB follows a family of four sisters and their matriarchal mother, Lydia. When the eldest sister, Lili, gets caught in a sex scandal with a married politician, Lydia, a former talent manager, decides that the only way to protect Lili’s reputation, is to step into the spotlight and take control of the narrative. With brand deals and...

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What is the title of your latest release?VOYAGERS What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?Two six-year-olds, Alex and Ana, mysteriously vanish for two days in the late 1990s. The incident is interpreted as an alien abduction and makes the two kids a) famous and b) inseparable, until their divergent beliefs about the truth of their experience tear them apart as teenagers. Now adults, they reunite when the world seems to be on the verge...

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People invariably judge a book by its cover. And although I loved the original covers for the books in my Stoneslayer series, others did not. Book marketing experts told me that the previous covers did not adequately convey the books’ dark high fantasy genre. And some reviewers agreed. Several times, I have looked through Amazon at the covers for books in the same genre as Stoneslayer. Very in your face. They scream at you graphically and grab ...

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What is the title of your latest release?DHAMPIRA What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?A seemingly powerless halfling is thrust into a cruel and dangerous vampire court where she meets two wildly different men who claim they can help her even as they’re both interested in her…and each other. How did you decide where your book was going to take place?I based the world on the kinds of big, splashy (and mildly terrifying) worlds i...

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The period between the end of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th was a time of vast changes and great events.  The stories we’ll look at this month celebrate this diversity of character and place. We begin at the very beginning of the 1900s with ÉMILIENNE by Pamela Binnings Ewen, an historical novel featuring one of the brightest lights of the Belle Époque, Émilienne D’Alencon.  Born in poverty in Montmartre, then a villa...

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We turn to books for so many reasons, and sometimes that includes the desire to forget, if only for a while, about reality. That’s been my experience this past month (as I know it’s been for others), and I found mixed success in my title choices. Darn those talented writers who keep us reading/listening through their skillful wordcraft and then break our hearts with their actual stories. I’ll save those jaw-gritting titles for the end of th...

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I’m the kind of person who always has music playing (my Spotify wrapped numbers are truly unhinged), so I had many different playlists on rotation while writing THE LAKE CLUB. In fact, I had playlists for each individual character (this helped me get into their mindsets/energy) as well as for the book at large, and I’m excited to share a few songs with you now! “Sunshine” by AtmosphereThis song was in my head from the moment I started THE...

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Growing up in Ohio, my high school was bordered by rows of cornfields. I thought I knew a lot about the crop, but I had never heard of a “Corn Palace” until we reached South Dakota during our 2021 Go West trip across the USA. They were celebrating 100 years when we visited. The Corn Palace, commonly advertised as The World’s Only Corn Palace and the Mitchell Corn Palace, is a multi-purpose arena/facility located in Mitchell, Sou...

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Sandi Shilhanek | When Do You Read?
Sundays with Sandi / March 22, 2009

Are your real life friends like some of mine and amazed at how much you’re able to read? Do they look at you differently because you’re a reader? How often have they said how do you find time to read? Since you read this blog I’m going to make the assumption that you’re like me and consider yourself to be a dedicated reader. That means you make the time to read anywhere and everywhere! I’m hopeful that many of are like me and ...

Sara Reyes | What I learned at SXSW
Guests / March 21, 2009

Broken Lizzard and GwenOriginally uploaded by freshfiction First off, SXSW to the uninitiated is South By Southwest, referred to as “SXSW” or “South By“. It is a HUGE (with hundreds of thousands of people, maybe a million or two, who knows) festival in Austin. Texas over spring break. It started 23 years ago with music, expanded to film and then a few years ago added interactive. So, you’ve got the music ge...

Kate Collins | GRAB THE BAR AND HANG ON FOR THE RIDE
Uncategorized / March 20, 2009

What I love about roller coasters is that rush of exhilaration that comes after a long climb up a hill and a breathtaking few seconds of hovering at the top of a towering peak. Then whoosh! It sweeps sharply downward, taking its passengers with it, completely at the mercy of forces beyond their control. As many before me have said, life is like that, except that the ride downhill is no fun at all. This hit home three years ago, when a n...

Tara Taylor Quinn | A Ninth and a First
Uncategorized / March 19, 2009

The first, first. Last week delivered to my door, in five boxes, were my copies of my first, first printing hardcover. It’s not wholly mine. It’s an anthology of work by five authors. But my name is on the cover. My story is inside. I’ve had two other books in hardcover. One was a foreign edition. The other was a subsidiary sale to Thorndike Press who prints mostly for libraries. Both were cool. This is cooler. The boo...

Linda Thomas-Sundstrom | Loving the Supernatural… and Barbie.
Uncategorized / March 18, 2009

Whether spooky, creepy, fangy, funny, or just plain whacked-out, I love the supernatural. And I’m a “paranormal” writer, through and through. No matter how hard I try to write a straight novel or romance, it turns south toward that big “P.” It’s just something in my blood, I guess. Thing is, though, I have both dark and light sides to my supernatural-loving personality. So after writing a dark histori...

David Rollins | I, prescient.
Uncategorized / March 17, 2009

Hi there, What can I tell you about my latest book, A Knife Edge, that you won’t get from reading it? When I was writing the book in 2004-05, the conflict in Afghanistan was well and truly on the back burner. The US military was heavily engaged in Iraq and the ‘gan had receded from the public consciousness. There were a few hot battles, like the one at Tora Bora, after which everyone seemed to pack up and go home. History told me th...

Kimberly Frost | When In the World Would You Go?
Uncategorized / March 16, 2009

I’d imagine that I’m like a lot of readers in that I love the way that fiction transports me to different times and places…to different worlds where the laws of physics and nature need not apply or where the laws of “good society” do. Regency England and the Scottish Highlands. Sunnydale and Salem. Hogwarts, Narnia, and Middle Earth… When I began the Southern Witch series, I knew that I wanted a small town setting with eccen...

Sandi Shilhanek | To Finish or Not Finish?
Sundays with Sandi / March 15, 2009

Last year I did something I haven’t done in about 20 years. I set aside a book unfinished. This week I have been attempting to read another book by a different author, and am not very far into it, and am finding myself looking for chores that need doing rather than be lazing the day away reading. While I feel guilty if I don’t finish this book I also feel horrid about all the books waiting so patiently for me to finally read my way ...

Dianne Emley | Ten Commandments of Fiction Writing
Uncategorized / March 13, 2009

Thank you, Fresh Fiction for inviting me to blog today! I’m Dianne Emley, author of the L.A. Times bestselling Detective Nan Vining “thrillogy”: THE FIRST CUT, CUT TO THE QUICK, and, just out, THE DEEPEST CUT. These three are a thrillogy because they have an overarching storyline in which Nan Vining obsessively pursues the man who attacked her and left her for dead, the creep who Vining and her teenage daughter call T.B. Mann—Th...

Jessica Inclan | A Window Seat of Light
Uncategorized / March 12, 2009

When I was in college, I found myself sitting in the grove of trees by the classroom building with a friend.  We’d just left our class on Ibsen, Strindberg, and Mann, and we weren’t very happy.  How could we have been?  In Ibsen’s Ghosts, Oswald was just crying out for “the sun,” and so were we.  The sun hadn’t been out for a month, the dank Tulle fog all around us like, well, dank Tulle fog. It w...