Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss

Hi! I’m Elle Marr, author of five thrillers, and I’m excited to share a little about my latest psychological thriller THE ALONE TIME. Two sisters, Fiona and Violet, survived a plane crash that killed their parents twenty-five years ago. Now, when a true crime documentary filmmaker begins digging into the past, they must face the secrets they left buried in the woods. This story has twist after twist, with an antagonist that will surprise eve...

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Hi Fresh Fiction Readers! I hope you enjoy this exclusive sneak peek at THE SALOON GIRL’S ONLY SHOT. It’s Denver, 1859. After a brawl in the saloon, Temperance has been fired (again!) and told to leave the shack she shares with two other saloon girls. It’s a cold night and she has nowhere to go—unless a good Samaritan takes her in? Owen is the hero, an aspiring saloonkeeper, and Clarence is his dog.   Temperance’s hands were shakin...

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H is for…Heroine. Phee, the last of the Templeton sisters to get her happily-ever-after is at the heart of this story, finally gets her chance in the spotlight. E is for…Eloquent. James begins to see Phee in a new light after she eloquently scolds him for his poor treatment of Lord Gilbert. It’s the first time he truly sees her, and it leads them down the path of love. R is for…Romance. What else? E is for…Entranced. James doesn’t exp...

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I’ve spent a lot of time on the French Riviera, starting when I was chosen for a special writers’ residency, and I returned again and again, often as a scriptwriter attending various film festivals and television conferences. It gave me time to immerse myself in the history, culture and cuisine of the South of France.     I simply fell in love with the Cote d’Azur, and I got to know the fine people who ran a Grand Hote...

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1–What is the title of your latest release? THE FUNERAL CRYER 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? The Funeral Cryer tells the story of an unnamed woman in a remote village in China who cries at funerals for a living. Her fellow villagers shun her as they believe she carries a deadly atmosphere. She leads a mundane and isolated life and her jobless husband does not appreciated her hard work. She goes to the barbersho...

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In SPRING HARVEST, my latest thriller, a group of friends travel to a remote farm town to attend a music festival only to discover the town has been overrun by vampires. Music isn’t just a backdrop in the book; it’s a vibrant, living character that embodies the chaotic beauty of the novel’s setting. The music festival the characters attend—called the Garlic Groove Food and Music Festival—mirrors the likes of well-known festivals like th...

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1–What is the title of your latest release? THE KISS COUNTDOWN 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? When a struggling event planner and a sinfully hot astronaut strike a deal to fake date for three months, they must decide if a real relationship is worth a shot at happily-ever-after. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? While NASA has quite a few space centers in the US, Houston with it...

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Book Title: HAPPY MEDIUM Character Name: Everett   How would you describe your family or your childhood? Borrrrring. It was just farm work, sun up to sun down. Only time I had any fun was when I got to go to the pictures in town.   What was your greatest talent? Besides charming ladies? Acting, of course! I was born for the silver screen.   Significant other? I wasn’t one for going steady.   Biggest challenge in relationship...

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1–What is the title of your latest release? WOOING THE DEVIL. It is book 3 in the Noble Norsemen series. 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? When two free spirits meet one wild night, sparks fly. But Rune and Eowyn will soon get to see that what is between them could be much more than a fling. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? It takes place in the same village as the other books in...

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1–What is the title of your latest release? UNDER THE PAPER MOON 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? Set in Los Angeles in 1948, the story follows two spies, Evelyn and Nick, who fell in love while working behind enemy lines.  When the war ended, Nick betrayed Evelyn and broke her heart.  Now they’re both back in Los Angeles working as private investigators.   When the husband Evelyn is following is murder...

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Jennifer Probst | A Knock Out Ending
Author Guest / June 15, 2012

I’ve been thinking about some shared elements of a really great book and movie. Some are easy to spot: great characters, chemistry, sexual tension, decent plot. But one of the unnamed ingredients in a book that makes a reader sigh, cry, and hug the book to her chest in pure love is the knock–out ending. In the romance novel, happily ever after is a given. Most readers insist on a wonderful satisfying journey to get to the ha...

Ann Purser | Who is Ivy Beasley…Really?
Author Guest / June 14, 2012

Ivy Beasley has appeared in all three series of my novels. In the Round Ringford six books she was a miserable old tab, dominating her two friends, Ethel and Doris, and much of the traditions of village life in general. Then, in the first of the murder stories, she pops up in an old folks home in Suffolk in the East of England. This residential home, Springfields, is not to Ivy`s liking! She did, however, agree to move to be near her mu...

Sally Goldenbaum | Characters Welcome
Author Guest / June 12, 2012

Nell, Birdie, Izzy, and Cass. My cast of characters. My friends. My alter egos. I know how the women of Sea Harbor walk, what they eat, how much they weigh, where they went to school, and the first time they had sex. I even know what number they are on the Enneagram chart. They are my mainstays in the Seaside Knitters mystery series. My stars and my glue. But often, way too often, I haven’t a clue what they are going to do next. A...

Ruthie Webb | Exclusive Excerpt of ABOUT LAST NIGHT
Author Guest / June 12, 2012

City reached into his briefcase and brought out two bags of chips and three candy bars. “I came bearing gifts. Thought you might be hungry. Do you prefer”—he glanced at the bags—”prawn or salt-and-vinegar crisps? Or if you don’t fancy crisps, I also have these.” He fanned the candy bars out on one broad palm. “I don’t know what you like yet,” he explained, his tone apologetic. Cath cas...

Desiree Holt | A World Without Books
Author Guest / June 10, 2012

Or why reading and writing are vitamins for the brain I remember reading book from the earliest age. Books were a staple in our household. My mother and my sister read constantly. Mostly mysteries, I think. My first books were things like THE HOUSE AT POOH CORNER and THE JUNGLE BOOK. Books that took me to faraway and mysterious places. Books that stirred my imagination and made me create my own stories. As I grew into my teen years my r...

Tiffany Truitt | Why Dystopian? Why Now?
Author Guest / June 8, 2012

Yep. I’m an author. Yep. I have a novel coming out on June 12th. Yep. It’s a dystopian. Yep. Yet, another dystopian novel. Groan? Much like the plethora of vampire novels that appeared on the shelves after the wildly successful Twilight series, the publishing world is pushing out dystopian novel after dystopian novel Why are dystopian novels so popular right now? It would be easy to point to The Hunger Games as the reason be...

Shawn Dalton-Smith | To Forgive or Not? ~ Comment to win LIFE AFTER
Author Guest / June 8, 2012

Imagine you have everything you ever wanted. In twenty-four hours, the man of your dreams will make you his wife. Life is good. Then, in an instant, it’s all gone. You’re mowed down and your life is cut short thanks to a drunk driver. And your best friend was the one behind the wheel. Could you forgive her? What if after you died, your friend married the man you thought you would spend the rest of your life with? Could you f...

Tamara Hogan | Favorite Romantic Heroes
Author Guest / June 7, 2012

Today, I’d like to talk a little bit about my favorite romantic heroes. I read my first romance novel when I was ten years old. I was a very precocious reader, blasting through everything of interest in my library’s children’s section in record time. After finishing Little House, Nancy Drew, The Hardy Boys and Trixie Belden series, I took a 90′ turn into the adult stacks, and never looked back. (There was no such...

Joanne Kennedy | Men at Work
Author Guest / June 7, 2012

I love my job. Writing is a pleasure. Signing books and meeting readers is a rush. But the best part of writing contemporary Western romance is the research. Last summer, preparing to write COWBOY CRAZY took me behind the chutes at Cheyenne Frontier Days to watch cowboys in action, riding some of the rip-snortingest broncs and bulls in rodeo. Donning my Western shirt, boots and cowboy hat—requirements for everyone with a press pass—...

Mariah Stewart | Home for the Summer – Comment to Win
Author Guest / June 4, 2012

When I was a child, “home for the summer” meant that respite from school – June right on through to the week after Labor Day, that golden time of endless fun in the sun. Summer meant later lights out at night, reading in the shade of the back yard trees, and chasing fireflies at night with my friends in the neighborhood. There were the annual trips to visit my mother’s aunt in North Weymouth, Massachusetts, where...