Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss

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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Welcome to Where Everybody Knows Your… Alibi – where we get to know thefictional towns we’d happily move to… if they didn’t have such a suspicious body count.(but does that really matter?) I’m thrilled to welcome Rosalie Spielman this month. Whether you’ve met her through her delightful Hometown Mysteries series, her contributions to the Aloha Lagoon Mysteries, or one of her many appearances in the cozy mystery community...

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Excerpt from THE SHROUDED QUEEN by Ashley Tropea: My rescuer stood in front of me protectively, possessively, and snarled. Bain glared but obediently ambled off, disappearing back into the dark. Leaving me alone with my rescuer. This bear was somehow larger than the first, its shoulders reaching much higher than my head. It turned slowly, yellow eyes locking on my still-shaking form, the fur on its neck blue. Without breaking eye contact, it rose...

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Music made me a writer – the wordplay, the explosion of feelings, the pure artistry of it all. Songs do so much in so little time, and as a creator myself, I’m forever indebted to music that inspires my work, my characters, and how I think about the world. My new novel, TROPESICK, is a multi-layered love story about the power of storytelling and the magic of forgiveness. Here are five songs that’ll forever remind me of Katie and Tyler�...

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Linda Wisdom | Jazz Is Back and In Need of a Good Night’s Sleep
Uncategorized / October 16, 2008

I was barely halfway through writing 50 Ways to Hex Your Lover when I knew a second book had to follow and I could see her haunted by horrific nightmares, Fluff and Puff, her mischievous bunny slippers would be in big time trouble and while she and Nick are making things work between them, there were still some outside forces threatening their peace. Oh, did I mention that Irma was demanding an updated wardrobe? No? Well, that too. Just...

Amanda McIntyre | Time Keeps on Tickin
Uncategorized / October 15, 2008

Is there ever enough of it? It seems our lives fairly leap from one moment to the next, barely allowing the time to savor the moment, sometimes even “taste” it! Parenthood, careers, schedules, social lives, volunteer work—it wraps us up so tight sometimes that we long to stand alone on a mountaintop and scream to release the stress! (Okay, that may be “my” vision and yours may be different.) REALITY ALERT: (not for the faint o...

Tessa Radley | O for a beaker full of the warm South…
Romance / October 14, 2008

I wasn’t thinking about Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale when I first started to write MISTAKEN MISTRESS. But when I conceive of a story one of the first things that I have to decide is where to set the book. For me, the atmosphere of the setting will permeate the entire story. The Saxon Brides is about a family who run a vineyard, Saxon’s Folly. So I knew I wanted the homestead to have a sense of family history and go back...

Carly Phillips | Luck
Uncategorized / October 13, 2008

I don’t have my own good luck charm, per se, but I do operate on the presumption of superstition in some ways. And sometimes, thankfully, luck pays off for me! I definitely don’t like to presume good things will happen, I like to hope. I’m afraid of jinxing something. Can you really do that? I rarely tempt fate. But it’s an interesting concept, isn’t it? Luck? LUCK is fickle. And yet many of us believe. When I ask myself why, ...

Sandi Shilhanek | Reviewing
Sundays with Sandi / October 12, 2008

This past weekend I did something I can only remember doing one other time. I started a book and did not finish it. Worse yet, was the fact it was a review book. I always feel the need to finish a book I guess I have what might be considered an optimistic outlook that the book surely has to get better, thus my continued need to read. The book I was reading for review was a bound and printed ARC (Advanced Reader’s Copy) and full of typ...

Sharon Ashwood | Making Paranormal Sandwiches
Romance / October 10, 2008

There’s a lot to be said for the submarine sandwich. There can be as much bread, cheese, veggies and cold cuts as the maker desires. If you want two kinds of cheese, go ahead. Mayo and mustard? Why not? The only limit is appetite. Which is all good until your boss points to a sandwich box made for the usual peanut butter and jelly sized affair. That moment of “hmm, how am I going to get this sucker in there?” sums up my experience...

Stephanie Bond | Writing a Letter to Yourself
Uncategorized / October 9, 2008

In this day of faxes, e-mails, instant messages, and texting, what a treat it is to receive an old-fashioned hand-written letter! The pleasure of unfolding crisp pages of stationery..ahhh. But what if you received a letter one day, and it was a letter you’d written to yourself ten years ago! My husband had a high school instructor who asked his students to write a letter to themselves about the things they wanted out of life and w...

Laura Griffin | A Romantic Thriller and a Chance to Win
Uncategorized / October 8, 2008

People often ask me where I get story ideas. With my latest romantic suspense novel, THREAD OF FEAR, the idea took shape as I watched a news broadcast about a kidnapped girl. It wasn’t the kidnapping itself that caught my attention, but the forensic artist who helped solve the case. How does a person interview a traumatized victim, and come away with a life-like picture of a criminal? This is the job of a forensic artist. They listen ...

Jessica Inclan | Changes
Uncategorized / October 7, 2008

Hello! I’m so glad to be blogging here, and as I was thinking about what to write about today, I thought about change. Writers need to change, even if we think we shouldn’t have to or don’t want to. I went from writing women’s fiction to writing romance to writing nonfiction. As my latest romance INTIMATE BEINGS comes out, I find that I’m writing personal essays. We must adjust to new editors or changes in publishers. We have ...

Cindy Gerard | Writing as a Living
Uncategorized / October 6, 2008

It is GREAT to be here at Fresh Fiction. Frankly it’s just great being! I’m riding a major high because why, you might ask? Well, because I recently found out that SHOW NO MERCY, book 1 of my new Black Ops., Inc. series hit #15 on the New York Times. Yowser! I’m still in shock. And it got me to thinking … how did it come to this? I wasn’t always a writer. I was a lot of other things, all things, that at the time, represented w...