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2015 ITW Thriller Awards Nominees

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award_home_multiple_croppedThrillerFest, is an annual event hosted by the International Thriller Writers organization, to recognize the best books published in this genre from the previous year. This year’s nominee’s are:

 

 

BEST HARDCOVER NOVEL

Megan Abbott – THE FEVER (Little, Brown and Company)
Lauren Beukes – BROKEN MONSTERS (Mulholland Books)
Joseph Finder – SUSPICION (Dutton)
Greg Iles – NATCHEZ BURNING (William Morrow)
Chevy Stevens – THAT NIGHT (St. Martin’s Press)

BEST FIRST NOVEL

Ray Celestin – THE AXEMAN’S JAZZ (Mantle)
Julia Dahl – INVISIBLE CITY (Minotaur Books)
Allen Eskens – THE LIFE WE BURY (Seventh Street Books)
Laura McHugh – THE WEIGHT OF BLOOD (Spiegel & Grau)
Andy Weir – THE MARTIAN (Crown)

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL NOVEL

Shelley Coriell – THE BURIED (Forever)
Robert Dugoni – MY SISTER’S GRAVE (Thomas & Mercer)
James R. Hannibal – SHADOW MAKER (Berkley)
Rick Mofina – WHIRLWIND (Harlequin MIRA)
Vincent Zandri – MOONLIGHT WEEPS (Down & Out Books)

BEST SHORT STORY

Richard Helms – “Busting Red Heads” (Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine)
Stephen Ross – “Pussycat, Pussycat” (Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine)
Gigi Vernon – “Show Stopper”, MYSTERY WRITERS OF AMERICA PRESENTS ICE COLD: TALES OF INTRIGUE FROM THE COLD WAR (Grand Central)
Bev Vincent – “The Honey Trap”, MYSTERY WRITERS OF AMERICA PRESENTS ICE COLD: TALES OF INTRIGUE FROM THE COLD WAR (Grand Central)
Tim L. Williams – “The Last Wrestling Bear in West Kentucky” (Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine)

BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL

Elle Cosimano – NEARLY GONE (Kathy Dawson Books)
Kristen Lippert-Martin – TABULA RASA (EgmontUSA)
Meredith McCardle – THE EIGHTH GUARDIAN (Skyscape)
Victoria Schwab – THE UNBOUND (Disney-Hyperion)
Kara Taylor – WICKED LITTLE SECRETS (St. Martin’s Griffin)

BEST E-BOOK ORIGINAL NOVEL

Sean Black – POST (Sean Black Digital)
Layton Green – THE METAXY PROJECT (Sixth Street Press)
Michael Logan – WANNABES (Michael Logan)
C.J. Lyons – HARD FALL (Legacy Books)
Gil Reavill – 13 HOLLYWOOD APES (Alibi)

Congratulations to all the finalists!

The 2015 ITW Thriller Award Winners will be announced at ThrillerFest X, July 11, 2015, at the Grand Hyatt (New York City.)

Reader’s Entertainment Radio Presents: Steven James

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Steven James joins me Thursday, April 2nd at 6pm EST. He is a national bestselling novelist whose award-winning, pulse-pounding novels continue to gain wide critical acclaim and a growing fan base.

Suspense Magazine, who named James’ book The Bishop their book of the year, says that he “sets the new standard in suspense writing.” Publishers Weekly calls him a “master storyteller at the peak of his game.” And RT Book Reviews promises, “the nail-biting suspense will rivet you.” With a Master’s Degree in Storytelling, James has taught writing and storytelling around the world and is one of the seven Master CraftFest instructors at ThrillerFest, North America’s premier training event for suspense writers. Respected by some of the top crime writers in the world, James deftly weaves intense stories of psychological suspense with deep philosophical insights.  Steven’s upcoming novel, Fury, is Book 2 in the Blur Trilogy, and available for Pre-Order on Amazon.com

 

 

Steven James FuryBook Blurb

The disturbing visions that helped Daniel Byers solve a deadly mystery have finally quieted, and the sixteen-year-old basketball star is looking forward to things settling back to normal. But when his father mysteriously disappears, Daniel realizes that the key to finding his dad rests in deciphering his chilling hallucinations.

Soon, long-buried secrets begin to surface, revealing clues that could help him locate his father. But as the past collides with the present and reality begins to blur around him, Daniel faces a race against time to save his dad before it’s too late.

 

 

 

 

Click on the image above for details on Steven James’ upcoming interview.

Steven James Small
Steven James

 

SNEAK PEEK: Here Lies a Wicked Man by bestselling author Chris Rogers

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HERE LIES A WICKED MAN v4 cover draft.frontHere Lies a Wicked Man by bestselling author Chris Rogers

When Booker Krane retired early from his career as a white collar corporate investigator, he was sure of only two things: he was done digging up buried secrets, and he loved being near water. After recovering from the bullet wound from his final case, he settles into a leisurely lifestyle at his new home on Turtle Lake—including his new part-time job as a freelance photographer. But the morning his dog drags a dead body onto the shore, Booker and his camera are commandeered by Sheriff Ringhoffer, and in less time than it takes the elusive perfect lighting to disappear, he’s deeply embroiled within the investigation. 
While the deceased, a prominent yet awfully wicked man, had many people who’d likely have motive and opportunity to kill him, Booker wants to believe it was simply an accident. An arrow would be an unusual murder weapon, and he can’t picture any of the suspects—the victim’s wife, sons, business partner, sexy mistress, or attractive lessee—as cold-hearted killers. But it turns out more than one of them knows how to draw a bowstring, and Booker’s curious mind can’t ignore the evidence against the victim falling on his own arrow—even when the sheriff rules the death an accident.

Putting his own life at risk, can Booker solve the case for the residents of Lakeside Estates? Or will magazine deadlines, his budding attraction for Roxanna Larkspur, or tension with his only son interfere with his search for the truth?

CHAPTER 1

The muddy bank sucked at Booker’s Nikes. He swiped at a mosquito buzzing near his ear. An instant later it tried to invade his new beard—barely half an inch of growth but filling in nicely without a hint of the gray that salted Booker’s coarse brown hair.

Beard-growing hadn’t been his intention. He merely wanted to stop shaving. He hated shaving, and after twenty-odd years of being scraped shiny and stinging, his face demanded a respite.

Through the overhead canopy of oak branches, a shrieking blue jay darted, eliciting an answering shriek in the distance. Morning music. On the eastern horizon, where the tree line vanished at the lake’s edge, the sun emitted a pink glow.

Booker liked the early hours. Quiet. Peaceful. Easy to imagine being the only person on earth up and about. He’d set up the photo shoot an hour ago to wait for perfect light. Now he stroked his remote trigger as a sticky breeze lifted the longish hairs along the back of his neck. Going weeks between haircuts was another perk of taking early retirement, right up there with living in a serene environment far from the city. Being a city-dweller for his entire life until now, Booker had rarely encountered cows, pigs or horses but had met more than his share of horse’s asses.

A wink of light drew his attention to the horizon again, where a bright yellow sun peeked through the pink clouds. Folding his six-foot-four frame—easier now that he was getting more exercise—he peered through the camera’s viewfinder. The three-story house that lay directly across the lake and flanked by woods on both sides was his own. In another few minutes, the sun would melt the remaining shadows, and for a brief time the light would be perfect.

Pine sap prickled his nostrils. He savored the odor. A year ago he’d been breathing exhaust fumes in horn-blowing rush-hour traffic, along with a million other suits scrambling for a higher rung on the success ladder. At the time, Booker’s job seemed important—Hotshot Corporate Investigator Tracking Down Fraud and Embezzlement. He always thought of it like that, a headline in True Detective or some other old-time crime magazine. Never going to happen. The banks he audited kept such happenings under wraps, but in a single year, his last on the job, he’d caught three notable executives with their fingers in corporate or public tills.

Too bad the fourth one had a gun.

Wincing at the remembered pain, Booker rotated his stiff shoulder. He didn’t like thinking it was fear that cinched his decision to retire before his fiftieth birthday. The shooting had been a freaky one-time thing. A vengeful vice president, facing prison because of Booker’s investigation, pulled a .22 revolver from his desk and blam! The bullet’s rapacious path carved up more than Booker’s chest. It took a bloody chunk out of his self-respect and opened a hole in his confidence, a hole Booker had crawled into.

Across the narrow lake, Turtle Lake, the second-largest of five at Lakeside Estates, a ray of sunlight warmed the copper flange at the ridgepole of Booker’s roof. He checked the scene again through the viewfinder and found the picture cocked out of square. One tripod leg had buried itself in the damp ground. He straightened it, shimmied the leg up with a rock, and leveled the lens just as light descended the balcony, warming the brass-studded rails. Not much longer.

Then something red and blue flashed through the frame. He squinted, adjusting the focus.

The flash disappeared behind the house. Seconds later, it appeared on the other side, red tank top and blue shorts above a pair of shapely legs jogging along Turtle Lake Road. Equally shapely arms carried a fat brown paper bag. Auburn hair hung in a long braid. He couldn’t make out the woman’s face.

Panning as she moved, he caught the swing of her stern and remembered seeing the auburn hair worn loose, bouncing saucily above a gentle flare of hips. He recognized those hips. He’d spent a pleasant hour admiring them in the dining room of the Masonville Bed and Brunch while Roxanna Larkspur bent and stooped among the tables, serving her guests.

Wondering what had brought the innkeeper to Lakeside so early on a Friday morning, Booker couldn’t resist snapping a few frames of her retreating figure. Despite buzzing gnats and fickle sunlight, this photography business did have its exciting moments.

When the red and blue vision vanished into the brushy distance, he locked the camera back in place and refocused. Today was his last chance to finish a photo spread for Southern Affairs magazine. “Texas Lakeside Homes,” his most promising commission since starting his new vocation, had fallen into Booker’s lap when the editor’s favorite photographer quit. In the backwash, the editor phoned Booker, oohed and aahed over his online portfolio, and offered him a job, provided he could handle the tight deadline.

“No problem,” he assured the woman.

Then seven straight days of rain squeezed the timeline even tighter and one homeowner reneged. Now the due date was imminent. Booker’s new career in danger of crashing quicker than it started. With a half hour of good sunlight, though, and by including his own architectural oddity in the mix, he might still send the job off tonight—if fate didn’t whack him again.

He checked the viewfinder. Soon but not yet.

As he thumbed the remote trigger anyway, snapping a few digital frames, Pup scrambled from under a yaupon thicket and angled his one good eye up at Booker. A quiet woof escaped his scruffy muzzle.

“Told you to stay home and finish your breakfast.” Booker fished a granola bar from his jeans pocket, peeled off the foil wrapper, snapped the bar in half and tossed the larger piece for Pup to catch.

The dog gulped down his treat then sat back on his haunches. Ears drooping, he whined comically.

“Give it a rest, you hairy-faced beggar. This piece is mine.” Booker bit the morsel in half and, with his free hand, ruffled the mutt’s fur.

Across the lake, sunlight glinted off a first-story window and reflected off the water. Almost time but not quite. He snapped a few more frames anyway.

Munching the crunchy breakfast bar, Booker wiped sticky fingers down his pants leg. Then he plucked a small stone from the sodden lake bank and watched the light inch downward toward the pier. When it brightened a brass pelican at the foot of the steps, he lobbed the rock. It splashed through the water’s calm surface, spreading sun-washed ripples to lap the shore, adding movement to an otherwise static picture.

The perfect shot. The one Booker had set his alarm clock to catch. He triggered the remote—

Then three disasters struck like firecrackers on a string.

Pup barked and streaked toward the lake. In his eagerness to fetch, he sideswiped the tripod.

Booker grabbed for the camera. Mud-mired shoes threw him off balance. He landed on his butt, one knee wrenched painfully toward the rising sun.

The Nikon struck a rock, motor drive whirring like an angry wasp. The crunch of metal and glass made him wince.

“Hellfire, Pup!” He snatched at a clump of weeds to pull himself erect. “When I catch you, I’m going to roast you alive!”

Pup was busy paddling toward the pier, toward the wonderful THING Master had tossed for him to fetch. The weeds tore loose in Booker’s hand.

Scrub brush rustled behind him, then a voice like a foghorn bellowed, “Booker Krane! Is that you?”

“Yes, Emaline, it’s me. I’d appreciate a hand up.”

Emaline Peters, stringy, fifty-odd years old and tough as pigskin, crashed through the yaupon. She drew up short, her quick brown eyes taking in Booker’s predicament. As she offered a hand to heave him out of the mud, her ample mouth stretched in a smirk, but at least she had the grace not to laugh.

“Wish I had my own camera,” she yelled. Emaline always spoke as if listeners were stone deaf. “This’d be one hoot of a picture for The Lakesider front page. How the devil can one man create such misery for himself before breakfast?”

“Chasing the sun, Emaline. If I don’t grab this shot in the next three minutes, it’s gone.” He lifted the tripod and shook his head at the damage to his favorite lens.

“I was on my way to rattle my no-account greens keeper out of bed. Heard you over here cursing Pup.” A PGA instructor, Emaline managed the Lakeside Pro Shop and, every morning except Monday, gave golf lessons to property owners.

“Damn fool dog! May’ve cost me a choice commission.” Booker gave the 35-80 zoom lens a cursory examination before laying it in the camera bag. Maybe only the filter had shattered, but he couldn’t risk it. He snapped on an 80-200 zoom and checked the sun, which had cleared the lower balcony. The pink haze would burn off fast. He slid the zoom to find the best composition.

“Pup! Get out of the dang picture!”

The dog was churning up silt from the lake bottom as he tugged on something he’d found  beneath the pier.

“Looks like he’s bringing you a present, Booker.”

“Another piece of refuse from one of our overnight campers, no doubt. You’d think my yard was the Lakeside dump the way that dog drags every scrap of trash in the Estates to my doorstep.” But the quicker Pup hauled ashore whatever he’d found, the quicker he’d clear the frame and Booker could finish shooting. “Come on, boy! That’s it, bring it on.”

Pup lost his purchase and turned to grapple the booty into his mouth again.

“Looks like a rotted tree limb hung with old clothes,” Emaline yelled. “Scorpio moon last night. Betcha a nickel some skinny dippers went home without a stitch.”

The shape of the thing looks wrong for a tree limb. Booker slid the zoom to maximum magnification. What at first appeared to be a branch now looked more like an arm. Surely not a human arm. Not flesh-colored at all. Gray. Mottled.

Straightening, he limped to the water’s edge, wrenched knee protesting fiercely.

“Good dog, Pup. Haul it on in.” The sun climbed higher, casting shadows from overhanging trees.

“That’s Chuck Fowler’s ugly yellow shirt,” Emaline said behind him. “Baby-poop yellow, with that big black stripe. I asked Chuck if he was practicing to be a road sign. I’d’ve thought he was too old for skinny dipping.”

Booker stared uneasily at what might’ve been yellow before spending time in the lake. His stomach did a slow roll, stirring the granola bar into the coffee and biscuits he’d eaten earlier.

“Emaline, when was the last time you saw Chuck Fowler?”

“Last Sunday. Day of the Capricorn new moon. Brought his son to the golf course for an early round.” Emaline hooted. “That boy’ll never make much of a golfer, his daddy yelling at him all eighteen holes.”

“Was Fowler wearing his yellow shirt?”

Pup paddled fiercely about ten yards away now, dragging his heavy load. Extending from a pair of dun-colored trousers trailing in the water was what looked to be a shoe.

“Yep, yellow shirt, khakis…” Loud enough to reach the next county, Emaline moved closer, choosing her steps on the mushy ground. “You don’t suppose…?”

“Excuse me,” Booker edged past her. “The sun’s about to go. It’s now or never.”

Scooping up a rock, he limped back to the tripod. Through the viewfinder, he saw that Pup’s paddling had stirred up plenty of ripples. He tossed the rock aside, swiped at sweat trickling down his neck and pushed the trigger. The motor drive whirred, snapping off frames.

When Booker glanced back at the water’s edge, Pup had dragged his prize up the bank and Emaline had turned as pale as skim milk.

About the Author:
chrisA lover of art and storytelling since grade school, I opened one of my favorite books one day and wondered if I could ever write half as well as Dean Koontz or Minette Walters or Steven King. How did they create such intricate plots? I started with children’s books – after all – I was a mother … I should understand kids, right?

Well, not so much. So I wrote a romance novel – I’d been married, so I should know a little about romance.

A little was about it. A very nice rejection letter told me there was more mystery in my story than romance. So I owned up to my true calling and, when my suspense thriller Bitch Factor was published, Romantic Times magazine gave it four-and-a-half stars. Rage Factor and Chill Factor also earned high marks for the romantic thread.

The truth is, mystery and suspense novels have always intrigued me, but I also enjoy romance, science-fiction, horror and fantasy, as well as the occasional mainstream novel by such wonderful authors as E. Annie Proulx.

My literary niche, it turns out, is dark and gritty with an occasional humorous twist. If you like that sort of story, you’ll find my books and short stories thoroughly engaging.

http://www.chrisrogers.com/

2015 RITA & Golden Heart Finalists Announced

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rwa-logoThese awards are the “Oscars” of the romance writing word, and to be nominated is almost, almost as good as winning. Presented by the Romance Writers of America  – The RITA — the highest award of distinction in romance fiction — recognizes excellence in published romance novels and novellas. The Golden Heart recognizes excellence in unpublished romance manuscripts.

The 2015 winners will be announced at a black-tie awards ceremony on July 25 at the 2015 RWA Annual Conference in New York.

2015 RITA Finalists

Best First Book

A Bollywood Affair
by Sonali Dev
Kensington Publishing
Martin Biro, editor

The Dress Thief
by Natalie Meg Evans
Quercus Publishing
Kathryn Taussig, editor

Fake
by Beck Nicholas
Harlequin, TEEN
Annabel Blay, editor

For Such a Time
by Kate Breslin
Baker Publishing, Bethany House
Raela Schoenherr, editor

Mind Sweeper
by AE Jones
Self-published
Faith Freewoman, editor

Purely Professional
by Elia Winters
Harlequin, Carina Press
Kerri Buckley, editor

Run to You
by Clara Kensie
Harlequin, TEEN
Natashya Wilson, editor

The Smuggler Wore Silk
by Alyssa Alexander
Penguin Group USA, Berkley
Julie Mianecki, editor

To Scotland with Love
by Patience Griffin
New American Library, Signet
Tracy Bernstein, editor

 

Contemporary Romance: Long

Baby, It’s You
by Jane Graves
Grand Central Publishing, Forever
Michele Bidelshach, editor

The Best Medicine
by Tracy Brogan
Amazon Publishing, Montlake Romance
Kelli Martin, editor

Fever Pitch
by Heidi Cullinan
Samhain Publishing, Ltd.
Sasha Knight, editor

It’s in His Kiss
by Jill Shalvis
Grand Central Publishing
Leah Hultenschmidt and Alex Logan, editors

The Place I Belong
by Nancy Herkness
Amazon Publishing, Montlake Romance
JoVon Sotak, editor

Slow Tango with a Prince
by Nicole Burnham
Self-published
Valerie Susan Hayward, editor

Somebody Like You
by Beth Vogt
Simon & Schuster, Howard Books
Jessica Wong, editor

The Sweetest September
by Liz Talley
Harlequin, Superromance
Megan Long and Wanda Ottewell, editors

To Scotland with Love
by Patience Griffin
New American Library, Signet
Tracy Bernstein, editor

The Vixen and the Vet
by Kate Regnery
Self-published
Chris Belden and Melissa Demeo, editors

 

Contemporary Romance: Mid-Length

Carolina Man
by Virginia Kantra
Penguin Publishing Group USA, Berkley Sensation
Cindy Hwang, editor

Her Cowboy Hero
by Tanya Michaels
Harlequin, American Romance
Johanna Raisanen, editor

Her Kind of Trouble
by Sarah Mayberry
Harlequin, Superromance
Wanda Ottewell, editor

Her Temporary Hero
by Jennifer Apodaca
Entangled Publishing, Indulgence
Kate Fall and Alethea Spiridon Hopson, editors

Love with a Perfect Cowboy
by Lori Wilde
HarperCollins Publishers, Avon Books
Lucia Macro, editor

Once a Family
by Tara Taylor Quinn
Harlequin, Superromance
Paula Eykelhof, editor

One in a Million
by Jill Shalvis
Grand Central Publishing
Leah Hultenschmidt and Alex Logan, editors

Reforming the Playboy
by Inara Scott
Entangled Publishing, Indulgence
Alethea Spiridon Hopson, editor

Starting with June
by Emilie Rose
Harlequin, Superromance
Wanda Ottewell and Karen Reid, editors

Worth the Fall
by Caitie Quinn
Self-published
Jenn Harris, editor

 

Contemporary Romance: Short

The Bachelor Doctor’s Bride
by Caro Carson
Harlequin, Special Edition
Gail Chasan, editor

Bad Girl
by Julie Miller
Harlequin, Intrigue NOIR
Allison Lyons, editor

Blueprint for a Kiss
by Nancy Warren
Self-published
Trish Milburn, editor

A Bride for the Blacksheep Brother
by Emily McKay
Harlequin, Desire
Charles Griemsman, editor

Enemies with Benefits
by Louisa George
Harlequin Mills & Boon, Modern Tempted/KISS
Flo Nicoll, editor

The Headmaster
by Tiffany Reisz
Harlequin, E-Shivers
Danielle Padula, editor

Her Unforgettable Royal Lover
by Merline Lovelace
Harlequin, Desire
Gail Chasan, editor

A Texas Rescue Christmas
by Caro Carson
Harlequin, Special Edition
Gail Chasan, editor

What the Greek Can’t Resist
by Maya Blake
Harlequin Mills & Boon, Presents
Suzanne Clarke, editor

Yours Forever
by Farrah Rochon
Harlequin, Kimani Romance
Tara Gavin, editor

 

Erotic Romance

Bonds of Denial
by Lynda Aicher
Harlequin, Carina Press
Rhonda Helms, editor

Call Me Saffron
by Talia Surova
Self-published

Purely Professional
by Elia Winters
Harlequin, Carina Press
Kerri Buckley, editor

The Saint
by Tiffany Reisz
Harlequin, Mira
Susan Swinwood, editor

Wanted
by J. Kenner
Random House, Ballantine Bantam Dell
Shauna Summers, editor

 

Historical Romance: Long

Douglas: Lord of Heartache
by Grace Burrowes
Sourcebooks, Casablanca
Deb Werksman, editor

Fool Me Twice
by Meredith Duran
Simon & Schuster, Pocket Books
Lauren McKenna, editor

A Place Called Harmony
by Jodi Thomas
Penguin Group USA, Berkley
Wendy McCurdy, editor

Where the Horses Run
by Kaki Warner
Penguin Group USA, Berkley Sensation
Wendy McCurdy, editor

Worth: Lord of Reckoning
by Grace Burrowes
Self-published

 

Historical Romance: Short

The Bells of Times Square
by Amy Lane
Riptide Publishing
Sarah Frantz Lyons, editor

The Cowboy’s Reluctant Bride
by Debra Cowan
Harlequin, Historical
Rachel Burkot, editor

Darling Beast
by Elizabeth Hoyt
Grand Central Publishing
Leah Hultenschmidt, editor

The Gentleman Rogue
by Margaret McPhee
Harlequin Mills & Boon, Historical
Pippa Roscoe, editor

In Bed with a Rogue
by Samantha Grace
Sourcebooks
Cat Clyne, editor

Romancing the Duke
by Tessa Dare
HarperCollins Publishers, Avon Books
Tessa Woodward, editor

 

Inspirational Romance

Deceived
by Irene Hannon
Baker Publishing Group, Revell
Jennifer Leep, editor

For Such a Time
by Kate Breslin
Baker Publishing Group, Bethany House
Raela Schoenherr, editor

Hope at Dawn
by Stacy Henrie
Grand Central Publishing, Forever
Lauren Plude, editor

Huckleberry Summer
by Jennifer Beckstrand
Kensington Publishing
John Scognamiglio, editor

The Widow’s Suitor
by Rose Ross Zediker
Harlequin, Heartsong Presents
Kathy Davis, editor

 

Paranormal Romance

Be Careful What You Kiss For
by Jane Lynne Daniels
Boroughs Publishing Group
Jill Limber, editor

Bitter Spirits
by Jenn Bennett
Penguin Group USA, Berkley Sensation
Leis Pedersen, editor

Burn for Me
by Cynthia Eden
Kensington Publishing, Brava
Esi Sogah, editor

The Darkest Touch
by Gena Showalter
Harlequin, HQN
Emily Ohanjanians, editor

Evernight
by Kristen Callihan
Grand Central Publishing, Forever
Alex Logan, editor

Forged By Desire
by Bec McMaster
Sourcebooks, Casablanca
Mary Altman, editor

Mind Sweeper
by AE Jones
Self-published
Faith Freewoman, editor

My Lady, My Lord
by Katharine Ashe
Self-published
Martha Trachtenberg, editor

 

Romance Novella

10 Rules to Sex Up a Blind Date
by Heidi Rice
Harlequin, Cosmo Red-Hot Reads
Bryony Green, editor

“A Game of Brides”
by Megan Crane
in Love Me True
Tule Publishing Group, LLC
Sinclair Sawhney, editor

Her Best Laid Plans
by Cara McKenna
Harlequin, Cosmo Red-Hot Reads
Malle Vallik, editor

His Road Home
by Anna Richland
Harlequin, Carina Press
Rhonda Helms, editor

Kiss and Tell
by Grace Burrowes
Self-published

The Last Wicked Scoundrel
by Lorraine Heath
HarperCollins Publishers, Avon Impulse
May Chen, editor

“A Love Letter to the Editor”
by Robin Lee Hatcher
in Four Weddings & a Kiss
Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Traci Depree and Ami McConnell, editors

Pushing the Line
by Kimberly Kincaid
Self-published
Curtis Brown Digital, editor

“Will You Be My Wi-Fi?”
by Caroline Linden
in At the Billionaire’s Wedding
Self-published, The Lady Authors
Martha Trachtenberg, editor

“A Yorkshire Christmas”
by Kate Hewitt
in All I Want For Christmas
Tule Publishing Group, LLC
Sinclair Sawhney, editor

 

Romantic Suspense

Concealed in Death
by J. D. Robb
Penguin Group USA, G.P. Putnam’s Sons
Leslie Gelbman, editor

Forged in Ash
by Trish McCallan
Amazon Publishing, Montlake Romance
Charlotte Hersher and JoVon Sotak, editors

Grave Danger
by Katy Lee
Harlequin, Love Inspired Suspense
Emily Rodmell, editor

Honor Reclaimed
by Tonya Burrows
Entangled Publishing, Select
Heather Howland, editor

Into the Shadows
by Carolyn Crane
Self-published
Deb Nemeth and my fabulous critique partners, editors

Lock and Load
by Kimberley Troutte
Self-published
Kimberley Troutte, editor

Midnight Action
by Elle Kennedy
New American Library, Signet
Laura Fazio, editor

You’re Not Safe
by Mary Burton
Kensington Publishing, Zebra
John Scognamiglio, editor

 

Young Adult Romance

Boys Like You
by Juliana Stone
Sourcebooks, Fire
Leah Hultenschmidt and Aubrey Poole, editors

Plus One
by Elizabeth Fama
Macmillan, Farrar, Straus and Giroux BYR
Simon Boughton, editor

Run to You
by Clara Kensie
Harlequin, TEEN
Natashya Wilson, editor

Some Boys
by Patty Blount
Sourcebooks, Fire
Aubrey Poole, editor

 

2015 Golden Heart Finalists

Contemporary Romance

“Call Me Mrs. Whitlock”
by Kimberly Buckner

“Caught on Film”
by Arianna James

“Chasing Crazy”
by Kelly Siskind

“Good Girl’s Guide to Talking Dirty”
by Alice Faris

“His Perfect Partner”
by Priscilla Kissinger

“Homecoming”
by Jo Anne Banker

“The House of D’Innocenzi”
by Susan J. Bickford

“Mace, Men, and Margaritas”
by Jennifer Brodie

“Port Fairlight Summer”
by Jen Gilroy

“Puppy Love”
by Kelly Farmer

 

Erotic Romance

“A Deal for Love”
by Michele Arris

“Indulge My Fantasy”
by Caroline Bradley

“Sorting Out the Kinks”
by Elle Mason

 

Historical Romance

“A Convenient Engagement”
by Kimberly Bell

“A Dangerous Chemistry”
by Marnee Blake

“Dragon’s Lair”
by Lori Sanders Foley

“Never Dare a Wicked Earl”
by Renee Ann Miller

“A Proper Scandal”
by Laurie Benson

“A Question of Loyalty”
by Ellen Lindseth

“Rescuing Mr. Gracey”
by E K Barnes

“The Reunion”
by Sara Leyton

“Sawyer’s Rose”
by Kim Turner

 

Paranormal Romance

“Better Dead”
by Pamela Kopfler

“Coyote Walks”
by Maria Powers

“Demons Don’t”
by Jeanne Oates Estridge

“Howlin Hearts”
by Kristal Hollis

“Magic City”
by Heather Leonard

“The Magical Librarian of Tulsa, Oklahoma”
by Nancy Coiner

“Mapping Fate”
by Kimberly MacCarron

“Stone Hunter”
by Tara Sheets

“Undercover Enchanter”
by Melanie McCarthy

 

Romantic Suspense

“Deception Island”
by Bronwyn McEvoy

“Every Unworthy Thing”
by Sharon Wray

“Hope Craves an Execution”
by Sharon Wray

“Murder, Curlers, and Cream”
by Arlene McFarlane

“Scandal”
by Jessica Darago

“A Shot Worth Taking”
by Tracy Poole

 

Short Contemporary Romance

“At Her Service”
by Mia Sosa

“A Night at the Rosemont”
by Mary Oldham

“Waiting for Meggie”
by Debra Moser

“Welcome Home, Katie Gallagher”
by Seana Kelly

“Winning Her Over”
by Alexa Rowan

 

Young Adult Romance

“The Culloden Immortals”
by T L Sumner

“The Jade Quest”
by Mary Sullivan

“Mind Traveler”
by Diana Munoz Stewart

“Our Souls to Keep”
by Stephanie Winkelhake

“Sharing Hunter”
by Julie Glover

“When I Wake”
by Stephanie Winkelhake

 

Cookbooks Pulled from Shelves

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download (12)The Whole Pantry Cookbook by Belle Gibson, published by Penguin, and the Bubba Yum Yum Cookbook for Children by Pete Evans from Pan Macmillian, both Australian authors, will not be released.

Citing “concerns from health experts”, both books are being scrutinized for the ‘safety of the recipes.”

Belle Gibson author of the Whole Pantry Cookbook, has made claims the her recipes are responsible for treating a variety if illnesses including malignant brain cancer. The book advocate a healthy lifestyle, while rejecting modern medicine. Gibson stated she treated her own cancer through the diet. Not the validity of her claims are being challenged, and publisher Penguin admitted they had not checked her story. Gibson has been given the opportunity to submit documentation, with Penguin announcing: “Despite our best endeavours, Penguin Books has not received sufficient explanation from Ms Gibson in response to recent allegations. As such, we have been left with no other option but to stop supplying the book in Australia. We remain hopeful that we will receive the formal assurances we have requested in the coming days.”

Gibson has not given a statement regarding the allegations, and her Facebook page has been deleted.

The Bubba Yum Yum cookbook, from celebrity chef Pete Evans, blogger Charlotte Carr and naturopath Helen Padarin, has been pre-empted before even reaching bookstores.

President of the Public Health Association of Australia Heather Yeatman, stated that on examining the recipes, the “DIY baby milk formula, made from liver and bone broth, contained 10 times the maximum safe daily intake of vitamin A for babies.  In my view, there’s a very real possibility that a baby may die if this book goes ahead.”

Investigations are also now being undertaken by the Australian Federal Health Department.

In light of these issues, Pan Macmillian has delayed launching the book. The authors however said they will release a digital version. “The authors of ‘Bubba Yum Yum – The Paleo Way – for new mums, babies and toddlers’ have decided to release a digital version of the book very shortly, and will, therefore, no longer publish the book, in any format, with Pan Macmillan Australia.”

Goodreads Makes Not So Welcome Changes

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good1Goodreads, the premier site for readers, books and authors, recently made significant changes in how it defines authors. These changes however, are causing confusion, problems, and a bit of anger. Users have previously been able to not only become a “friend” of authors, they could also become a “fan”. The recently implimented changes “offers readers three ways to choose to engage with author pages on Goodreads: Friend, follow or favorite.”

As benign as these options sound they don’t necessarily mean what they sound like. Previously, readers connected with authors via connections, now it becomes ‘engage with authors.” Authors are no longer members of Goodreads, they have merely become ‘pages’. According to Goodreads these changes were made to enable them to set up profiles for authors that are not on Goodreads – ie, dead authors.

Complaints from readers have spilled into multiple social media streams. What was a ‘friend’ on Goodreads has become a ‘friend/follow engagement’. In other words, if you were a friend of an author, you will now become ‘both a friend and a follower’ of those authors. If you choose to ‘unfollow’ an author you will also ‘unfriend’ them. It seems Goodreads did not take into consideration that many people on their site are indeed ‘friends’ and not necessarily a ‘fan or follower’ of an author. 

Members of Goodreads will find this out when they log into their account. There was no notice sent to members regarding these changes. Comments on the site range from confusion to outright anger over the changes from not only readers, but authors. Many authors site the fact that they are ‘friends’ with many people who do not read their books and therefore their author page is reserved for readers. With these changes, everyone will see and be connected to their author page. If you ‘unfriend’ you also now ‘unfollow’ and vice-versa.

Here are details from the Goodreads press release:

Surveys with our members tell us that one of the things people like the most about Goodreads is being able to keep up to date with authors whose books they love. To help support this better, we’ve made a change today to clarify how those relationships work and to make them clearer for all of our members. Instead of “Become a Fan,” you’ll now see “Follow Author” on author pages and elsewhere throughout the site. Following an author will opt you into receiving updates from them, including reviews, shelvings, Ask the Author answers, and blog posts.

Here’s a quick breakdown of the three ways you can choose to engage with author pages on Goodreads and why you might want to choose each option:

Follow
This is the option to choose if you want to get updates from an author. Following an author opts you into receiving updates from the author, including reviews, shelvings, blog posts, Ask the Author answers, and more. It will also generate a newsfeed item for all your friends and followers to see.

Favorite
If you just want to say that you love an author’s books, this is the option for you. Favoriting an author adds the author to your list of Favorite Authors, which you can curate and show off on your profile. You won’t get updates from authors you favorite, and it won’t generate a newsfeed item either. If you want to add an author to your list of favorites, you can do so from the dropdown menu next to the “Follow Author” button on author profiles.

Friend
This is the option if you want to not only follow the author, but also have the author follow you. Friends can also send each other private messages, which followers cannot necessarily do. Keep in mind that this option may not work for all of your Favorite Authors. For one thing, Goodreads has a limit of 5,000 friends – beyond that limit things get very weird on our site (portals are open, reality reverses itself, etc.). For another, if Veronica Roth actually tried to approve every Goodreads Friend request she gets, she’d never get around to writing that next book. So while you may really want to be Friends with a specific author, please remember that Following the author will get you 99% of what you get from being Friends with them. That being said, if you want to ask an author to be a Friend, you can do so from the dropdown menu next to the “Follow Author” button on the author profile page. The author then has the choice on whether to accept a Friend request.

Check out the following FAQ, and if you still have questions, ask them in this thread.

Why are we making this change?
We want to make it easier for our members to get updates from and about the authors they read. Readers have overwhelmingly told us they want to stay in touch with authors to get news and updates about them and their books. “Follow” is the action we think most clearly accomplishes this.

What happens when I follow an author?
Following an author creates a newsfeed item that your Friends and Followers will see. You’ll start getting updates from the author — reviews, shelvings, blog posts, Ask the Author answers, and more — in your newsfeed. You’ll also appear on the author’s profile as “Following” the author, and the author will appear in your profile as an author you are Following.

Which authors can I Follow?
You can Follow any author, dead or alive, in the Author Program or not.

Why would I want to Follow an author who isn’t a member of Goodreads?
First, we’re working really hard to get every author to join the Author Program. When an author you’re Following joins, you’ll automatically start receiving their updates. Additionally, we want this to be the way you keep up with the latest from all the authors that matter to you, regardless of whether they are on Goodreads or not.

Why would I want to Follow a dead author? Isn’t that kind of morbid?
Well, it’s not likely that Mark Twain is going to claim his author profile and start writing pitch-perfect reviews of contemporary novels (though if he did, that would be pretty cool, right? OK, it’d also be a little creepy). The short answer here is that we want “Follow” to be a way for all our members to get updates about all of the authors that matter to them, living or dead, in the author program or not.

What happens when I add an author to my Favorite Authors list?
Adding an author to your Favorites simply shows off which authors you love the most; it does not create a newsfeed update and does not opt you into receiving updates from or about that author. You can edit the order of how you want the authors to appear in the Favorite Authors section of your profile.

How can I Unfollow an author?
When you hover over the follow button, you’ll see that the text changes to “Unfollow.” Clicking this will Unfollow the author.

Where can I see a list of authors I follow (as opposed to all the people I follow on Goodreads)?
You now have two lists on your profile – “People I Follow” and “Authors I Follow.” And before you say it, yes, we know authors are people, too. We just want to make it as clear as possible where you can find the authors you’re Following. You can see the list of authors you Follow just below your list of Friends on your profile.

I’m on an author profile for an author who is a Goodreads Author, but I don’t see “Compare Books” or “Send a Message.” Why not?
If an author hasn’t shelved any books, you’ll no longer see a Compare Books link (since there’s nothing to compare). Likewise, if an author has their messaging settings set to “Friends Only,” then you will only see the “Send Message” option if you’re already Friends with that author.

What happened to the authors I had previously “fanned?”
Those authors are now found in two places – the list of authors you follow and your favorite authors. If you want to remove them from one list or the other, you can do so either from the list itself or from the author’s profile.

LIVING THE EMPTY CARRIAGE WAY OF LIFE: CHILDLESS BY CHOICE BY MARIAN L. THOMAS

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LivingtheEmptyCarriagesmallAuthor Marian L. Thomas delivers a hilarious, yet candid discussion of why she made the life-long decision to remain childless. This chapbook has the perfect blend of non-fiction and fictional elements that make it the perfect recipe for a delightful read.

According to a recent article in the Huffington Post, “Millennial-focused media is just beginning to recognize this emerging mindset and celebrities are popularizing and glamorizing this path, too, with powerful women like Chelsea Handler, Zooey Deschanel and Cameron Diaz leading the charge.”

Thomas said it’s a myth that she just doesn’t like children. “It’s like saying, I don’t like ice cream. I don’t want to make it, but I certainly enjoy it on occasion. Similarly, I don’t want children, but I certainly do love children…I don’t want to babysit them either (just in case any of my friends are reading this book). I’m okay with being childless!”

Another article from the Huffington Post reported the happiest couples are those without children– at least, that’s according to research out of the United Kingdom’s Open University. The study titled “Enduring Love?” found that childless married and unmarried couples reported being more satisfied in life and feeling more valued by their partners than did pairs with kids. Unmarried parents were found to be slightly happier than married parents.”

Thomas was also quoted as stating: “Being childless, is not a revolution. Being childless can be a good decision for you. Your decision to remain childless doesn’t need validation from others.”

For more information on how to order the book, please visit the website:  http://www.theemptycarriagelife.com 

Order on Kindle:
http://www.amazon.com/Living-Empty-Carriage-Way-Life-ebook/dp/B00P16OFYA

Print Edition:
http://www.amazon.com/Living-Empty-Carriage-Life-Chapbook/dp/0984896783

REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM BLACK PEARLS BLOG. 

Brightly! Creating Readers

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download (10)Every parent needs help encouraging kids to read and Brightly in conjunction with Penquin Random House has launched an initiative to help. Details from their press release:

Brightly (www.readbrightly.com), a new online resource that encourages parents to raise lifelong readers, launches as a Penguin  Random House initiative.  Brightly aims to provide moms and dads with inspiration and guidance around creating a reading life for their families.  This lifestyle site dedicated to reading, shares book recommendations from across the children’s publishing world for every age and stage, as well as reading tips and insights, special author and illustrator content, seasonal activities, and more. Brightly makes this information accessible to today’s mobile, connected parents on the social channels they frequent, such as FacebookTwitterPinterest, andInstagram.

The program launch includes a site redesign, email newsletter, and expanded content offering informed by positive feedback from readers of the beta version of the site, which debuted in October 2014. Brightly is co-founded by book lovers and moms, Amanda Close andChristine McNamara , who, in the course of their book-publishing careers, discovered that there was an appetite for more lifestyle content for parents that offers sincere and relevant guidance about reading, books, and authors.

“As a lifelong book lover, I want to share my interest and passion with my family, especially with my son, but as a working mom, I’ve seen firsthand how our busy lifestyle can make this a challenge,” said Close, Senior Vice President, Consumer Marketing Development at Penguin Random House.

Brightly’s editorial direction is led by Liz Kotin , formerly of DisneyBaby.com.  Kotin brings together some of the best voices covering reading and parenting on the Web to create a dedicated resource for families that offers inspiration and ideas around reading, in a space that heretofore has been largely academic in scope. Parents can expect to find age-specific content, news about books and authors, and articles on broader topics like reading aloud to big kidsdiverse booksquestions to ask librarians, understanding theCommon Core, and book recommendations for grown-ups.

“Brightly is like your fun, friendly, and well-informed kid-lit pal. Our focus is on celebrating and embracing different kinds of readers, kids, and interests. Brightly gives parents insights into which books and authors their children might get excited about and what activities might enhance a family’s experience of reading,” said Kotin.

Christine McNamara , Penguin Random House’s Vice President and Director of Partnerships added, “We estimate that there aremore than a quarter of a million children’s books on the market, so finding the right book for the right child at the right time can be challenging.  Unfortunately, not everyone is blessed with a fantastic local bookstore or librarian to guide them. I wanted help navigating those stacks and we’re finding that other parents do, too. Hopefully, Brightly will help provide that for us.”

About Brightly
At Brightly (http://readbrightly.com), we believe reading has the power to illuminate kids’ lives. But we also know how hard it can be to connect kids with the right books at the right time and keep them engaged with reading as they grow. We want to make it a little easier, and a lot more fun, for parents to raise children who love to read. That’s why we started Brightly. Founded in 2014 by a small team of passionate bookworms and parents, Brightly is a resource to help moms and dads raise lifelong readers. Launched as a project at Penguin Random House, Brightly features book recommendations from all book publishers for every age and stage, reading tips and insights, seasonal inspirations, author essays, contests, gift guides, and more.

About Penguin Random House

Penguin Random House (http://global.penguinrandomhouse.com) is the world’s largest and first truly global trade book publisher. The company is made up of 250 editorially and creatively independent imprints and publishing houses that collectively publish more than 15,000 new titles annually worldwide, along with the works of more than 70 Nobel Prize laureates and hundreds of the world’s most widely read bestselling authors. It employs more than 11,500 people across the adult and children’s fiction and nonfiction print, audio, and digital trade book publishing businesses of Penguin and Random House in the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, India and South Africa; Penguin’s trade publishing activity in Asia; DK Worldwide; and Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial’s companies in Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia, Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Paraguay, Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, and Central America, and its Portuguese-language company in Portugal. Penguin Random House was formed on July 1, 2013 and is jointly owned by Bertelsmann (53%) and Pearson (47%).

 

Reader’s Entertainment Radio Presents: Heather Graham

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It’s always nice to sit down and chat with NY Times and USA Today Bestselling Author, Heather Graham. She is a bevy of wonderful, fun stories, and sage advice. She is also passionate about her family, her work, and the causes to which  she lends her name, time and efforts.  With over one hundred and fifty books and novellas to her credit, Heather is a bonafide literary titan. Her latest novel, The Dead Play On, continues the tradition of excellence for which Heather Graham is well known.  What I’ve noticed through the years is that Heather never loses her humbleness, gift of helping others, or her appreciation for her readers. She is genuinely pleased to have been published in approximately twenty-five languages, and to have over seventy-five million books in print.  Heather’s talents shine through in all her endeavors, and her latest Cafferty and Quinn Novel, The Dead Play On, is no exception!

The dead play onBook Blurb:

Play a song for me…  

Musicians are being murdered in New Orleans. But Arnie Watson apparently died by his own hand. When Tyler Anderson plays the saxophone he inherited from Arnie, a soldier and musician who died soon after his return, he believes he sees visions of his friend’s life—and death. He becomes convinced Arnie was murdered and that the instrument had something to do with whatever happened, and with whatever’s happening all over the city…

Tyler knows his theory sounds crazy to the police, so he approaches Danni Cafferty, hoping she and Michael Quinn will find out what the cops couldn’t. Or wouldn’t. After all, Cafferty and Quinn have become famous for solving unusual crimes.

They’re partners in their personal lives, too. Quinn’s a private investigator and Danni works with him. When they look into the case, they discover a secret lover of Arnie’s and a history of jealousies and old hatreds that leads them back to the band Arnie once played with—and Tyler plays with now.

They discover that sometimes, for some people, the line between passion and obsession is hard to draw. Only in uncovering the truth can they hope to save others—and themselves—from the deadly hands of a killer.

Click on the image above to listen to Heather Graham’s podcast!

Heather Graham
Heather Graham

 

Connect with Heather Graham on Social Media:

www.theoriginalheathergraham.com

www.facebook.com/HeatherGrahamAuthor

https://www.youtube.com/user/heatherpozz/featured

 

 

 

 

Great Thriller Fiction!

 

 

Cleaning Up Book Language

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headerfinaliconresizedIf you’d rather not read profanity in your books, well, there’s an app for that. The Clean Reader app from Page Foundry will block curse words in your eBooks. Created by Jared and Kirsten Maughan, the app zeroes in on “the F-word, the S-word, the names of divine beings and racial insults.”

The app actually comes with ‘clean settings’ so the reader can determine how much language they want blocked. Here are details from the developers website:

“The “Clean” setting only blocks major swear words from display.  This includes all uses of the F-word we could find.  The “Cleaner” setting blocks everything that “Clean” blocks plus more.  “Squeaky Clean” is the most restrictive setting and will block the most profanity from a book including some hurtful racial terms.  We recommend readers start reading a book with one of the settings and see what they think?  If they’re on the “Clean” setting and there’s still too many swear words being displayed on the screen in your opinion, then change to the “Cleaner” or “Squeaky Clean” setting and see which one works best for you.”

Many readers claim however, that this app is censorship and violates copyright, or at least undermines the authors intentions. According to their website, they have no violated and copyrights and are just offering readers, particularly those with younger readers the opportunity to have a ‘cleaner language’ read.

The Clean Reader app is available for free in both Apple and Droid/Google formats.