Sunday, October 1, 2017

FEATURED AUTHOR: CYNTHIA HICKEY




ABOUT THE BOOK:


New mystery from Amazon, ECPA, and New York Times best-selling author!



Ditched at the altar, Shelby Hart tosses down her bouquet, quits her job, and accepts a position as gardener and event coordinator at an upscale retirement community. Her first day on the job results with a dead body in the greenhouse under the orchids and with her as the prime suspect!






Toss in a handsome handyman, quirky characters, and a flirtatious grandma and the fun never stops.





LOVE OR HATE INTERVIEW WITH CYNTHIA HICKEY:


Things you need in order to write:
I need quiet, a diet coke, and dark chocolate M&Ms. 😊
Things that hamper your writing:
Interruptions. Nothing worse than being pulled out of your story.


Things you love about writing:

Making up stories that people actually want to read.
Things you hate about writing:
Deadlines. Ugh. They’re the worst.

Things you love about where you live:
Right now I move back and forth between Arizona where I’ve lived the last 35 years and children and grandchildren live and Arkansas where I grew up. I do love the greenery of the Ozarks.
Things that make you want to move:
I’d like to pack up my entire family and move them all permanently to Arkansas.


Words that describe you:
Kind, persistent, A-personality, a list-maker, a go-getter.
Words that describe you but you wish they didn’t:
Stubborn.

Favorite song:

My favorite song is “I Can Only Imagine” by Mercy Me.
Music that make your ears bleed:
Screamo. I don’t consider it music.

Favorite beverage:
Celtic Breeze (it’s an Irish vodka drink).

Something that gives you a pickle face:
Seltzer water with quinine (don’t ask).

Something you wish you could do:
Play a musical instrument and sing.
Something you wish you’d never learned to do:
Keep my face expressionless when something goes on and on and on.

Things you’d walk a mile for:
My family.
Things that make you want to run screaming from the room:
My family. 😊

Things you always put in your books:
Humor.

Things you never put in your books:
Too-Stupid-to-Live heroines.

Things to say to an author:
I LOVED your book
.
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:
I’ve always wanted to write a book, but I need to make a living (uh, so write the book).

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:
Parasailing
.
Something you chickened out from doing:
Parasailing again.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Multi-published and Amazon and ECPA Best-Selling author Cynthia Hickey has sold over a million copies of her works since 2013. She has taught a Continuing Education class at the 2015 American Christian Fiction Writers conference, several small ACFW chapters and RWA chapters. You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads, and she is a contributor to Cozy Mystery Magazine blog and Suspense Sisters blog. She and her husband run the small press, Forget Me Not Romances, which includes some of the CBA’s best well-known authors. She lives in Arizona with her husband, one of their seven children, two dogs, one cat, and three box turtles. She has eight grandchildren who keep her busy and tell everyone they know that “Nana is a writer.”



Connect with Cynthia:

Website  | 
Facebook   |  Twitter 

Buy the book:
Amazon



Friday, September 29, 2017

FEATURED AUTHOR: GAELLE LEHRER KENNEDY




ABOUT THE BOOK

A bewitching love story that is also an extraordinary portrait of Jerusalem, its faith, spirituality, identity, and kaleidoscope of clashing beliefs, Night in Jerusalem is a novel of mystery, beauty, historical insight, and sexual passion.

David Bennett is invited to Jerusalem in 1967 by his cousin who, to the alarm of his aristocratic British family, has embraced Judaism. He introduces David to his mentor, Reb Eli, a revered sage in the orthodox community. Despite his resistance to religious teaching, David becomes enthralled by the rabbi’s wisdom and compassionate presence. When David discloses a sexual problem, Reb Eli unwittingly sets off a chain of events that transforms his life and the life of the mysterious prostitute, Tamar, who, in a reprise of an ancient biblical story, leads both men to an astonishing realization. As passions rise, the Six Day War erupts, reshaping the lives of everyone caught up in it.






LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT INTERVIEW WITH GAELLE LEHRER KENNEDY


A few of your favorite things: 
I especially enjoy a painting of a beautiful woman by Zivanna Gojanovic which hangs in my bedroom. It’s painted on reverse glass and it resembles the paintings of Gustav Klimt, only with a luminous glow given by the glass. She has a Madonna quality about her, and a red ribbon flowing around her neck with  “Love Conquers All” written on it in Latin.
Things you need to throw out: 
I don’t really need to throw out anything just now as I don’t keep anything I don’t need - that would add cement to my wings. I’m definitely at the minimalist end of the spectrum. I’m very affected by the space I am in. When I discovered feng shui it was like finding a language I had been speaking my whole life, but didn’t know anyone else spoke.


Things you love about writing:
I love creating my characters and their world, and getting to know them as they reveal themselves. I love living with them, and understanding what makes them do the things they do and seeing how their lives unfold.
Things you hate about writing:
Worrying if what I’m writing is any good; feeling stuck, and not knowing what to do about it, and being alone with it.

Things you love about where you live:
I live in Ojai, a small town set in a valley with mountains on three sides, opening to the ocean. I love its serenity and natural beauty, and the people who have gathered here – ranchers, new agers, writers, artists, Hollywood refugees - and the amazing schools. It has all the amenity of a small town, plus a vibrant community.
Things that make you want to move:
I am drawn to water! I’d love to live by the sea, or a large body of water. I love John O’Donahue’s notion of “landscape as presence”  and there are places where I feel especially alive. For example, I’m strongly attracted to Devon and Cornwall in England.

Words that describe you: 
Dances to her own drum.
Words that describe you but you wish they didn’t:
Impatient,  opinionated, temperamental, and too forthright for her own good.

Favorite music:
I love Leonard Cohen,  I never tire of his songs,  like "I’m Your Man," "In My Secret Life," "Suzanne," "I’ll Take Berlin . . . "  I also love opera, especially Puccini, and Bizet. The Pearl Fishers is my favorite. It tugs at my heart.
Music that make your ears bleed:
I’ve never been a fan of hard rock and banging rhythms, and I’m pretty much allergic to country music.

Something you’re really good at:

I’m really good at creating beautiful  spaces to live in – homes for the soul.
Something you’re really bad at:
Ironing.


Something you wish you could do:
Paint beautiful landscapes.
Something you wish you’d never learned to do:
Cook.

People you consider as heroes:
Mother Teresa, Anwar Sadat, Martin Luther King. 

People with a big L on their foreheads: 
Actually, not a L but a T. Blowhards and bullies.



Last best thing you ate:
Clam linguine.

Last thing you regret eating:
Too much Tiramisu.

Things to say to an author:
I loved your book!! Can’t wait for the next one.
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:
I didn’t understand what you were trying to say.

Favorite places you’ve been:
The English countryside, Luxor, Jerusalem, and Big Sur.

Places you never want to go to again:
Mumbai.

People you’d like to invite to dinner:
Barack and Michelle Obama
.
People you’d cancel dinner on:
Trump.

Best thing you’ve ever done:
Giving birth to my daughter.

Biggest mistake:
Not having her earlier in life, and not having another child.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:
Buying my first house while on unemployment.

Something you chickened out from doing:
Riding on a BMW motorcycle through Paris.

The last thing you did for the first time:
Change my mind after I was sure I had done the right thing.

Something you’ll never do again:
Spend time with anyone I don’t like.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Gaelle Lehrer Kennedy lived in Israel in the 1960s, a naive twenty-year-old, hoping to find herself and her place in the world. The possibility of war was remote to her. She imagined the tensions in the region would somehow be resolved peacefully. Then, the Six Day War erupted and she experienced it firsthand in Jerusalem.

She has drawn Night in Jerusalem from her experiences during that time. The historical events portrayed in the novel are accurate. The characters are based on people Gaelle knew in the city. Like her, they were struggling to make sense of their lives, responding to inherited challenges they could not escape that shaped their destiny in ways they and the entire Middle East could not have imagined.

Gaelle has always been intrigued by the miraculous. How and where the soul’s journey leads and how it reveals its destiny. How two people who are destined, even under the threat of war and extinction, can find one another.

Israel’s Six Day War is not a fiction; neither was the miracle of its victory. What better time to discover love through intrigue, passion, and the miraculous.

Writing this story was in part Gaelle's reliving her history in Israel, in part a mystical adventure. She is grateful that so many who have read Night In Jerusalem have experienced this as well.

Connect with Gaelle:
Website 
Facebook  |  Twitter 

Buy the book:
Amazon 

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

CHARACTER INTERVIEW WITH ELLEN BYRON'S MAGGIE CROZAT



ABOUT THE BOOK

Christmas in Cajun Country is magical. Elaborate decorations adorn homes and businesses, and Pelican residents come together for a raucous Christmas Eve festival featuring giant bonfires on the levee that light the way up the river for Papa Noël. But this year, there’s coal in the stockings at Crozat Plantation B&B. Someone is flooding travel websites with vicious negative reviews of the B&B. The culprit may be one of the Crozats’ own holiday guests, among which is Don Baxter, a nasty businessman who’s an innkeeper’s worst nightmare. When Baxter is found stabbed to death at Doucet Plantation, where heroine Maggie Crozat works part-time, she and her entire family are considered suspects. They establish alibis, but her boyfriend, Detective Bo Durand, also a suspect, remains under suspicion. With Bo sidelined during the investigation, Maggie finds herself with an unlikely ally, longtime family enemy Rufus Durand. Her sleuthing uncovers a viper’s nests of dysfunctional family dynamics, and puts her in the crosshairs of a murderer. She and Rufus must track down Don Baxter’s killer, or it will be the opposite of a Joyeux Noël for those at Crozat Plantation Bed & Breakfast.




ABOUT MAGGIE

Maggie Crozat is a thirty-two-year-old artist who’s moved home to tiny Pelican, Louisiana, after attending art school and living in New York City. She helps out at her family’s plantation-turned-B&B and also works as a tour guide at a plantation that belong to her mother’s family but is now run by a non-profit foundation and open to visitors. Her artist’s eye gives her a visual acuity that the average person doesn’t possess. She can spot clue and suspicious body language that even the local law enforcement professionals might miss.


INTERVIEW WITH MAGGIE CROZAT

Maggie, how did you first meet Ellen Byron?
I was enjoying a beer and some Cajun popcorn – that’s fried crawfish - at our favorite local hangout, Junie’s Oyster Bar and Dance Hall, when she appeared and said, hey, wanna be in a mystery series?

Cool! Want to dish about her?
She’s smart, but pushy. Sometimes we get into a tussle when she wants me to do something I don’t want to do. But guess what? I always win in the end.

Why do you think that your life has ended up being in a book?
Because I’ve discovered I have a unique talent for solving mysteries. I’m an artist, so I have a knack for spotting details other people don’t see. Plus, I have the great good fortune to live in a town my author likes to call “A Cajun Brigadoon,” so it’s a great setting for a mystery series. Our family B&B is a centuries old plantation that’s just beautiful. There’s a bayou in our backyard. And the food is amazing! That’s why the books I’m in include recipes – that my mother, Ninette, is famous for. I’m more of an expert microwaver.

Tell us about your favorite scene in the book.
I love when I go to New Orleans and have to spend time with an incredibly snobby family in the Garden District in order to pick up clues to help solve a murder. The prodigal son of the family hits on me because of my fancy Louisiana lineage. He’s horrible, but in a funny way.

Did you have a hard time convincing Ellen to write any particular scenes for you?
Yes – my author has a really hard time writing romantic scenes! She’s very squeamish about them. But hey, I’m dating the hottest guy in town, so there has to be at least a little romance. Between us, my author is kind of a prude.

What do you like to do when you are not being actively read somewhere?
I love to draw and paint, particularly the magical scenery that surrounds our family’s plantation. I also love spending time with Xander, the seven-year-old son of my boyfriend, Detective Bo Durand. Xander has Asperger’s Syndrome and didn’t talk for three years. I started giving him art lessons and discovered he’s phenomenally talented. In fact, this almost puts him in danger in my new book, A Cajun Christmas Killing.

If you could rewrite anything in your book, what would it be?

I’d force my author to stop being so squeamish and write some great love scenes. (See #5.)

Tell the truth. What do you think of your fellow characters?

I’m lucky to be surrounded by wonderful people. It’s what keeps me from moving back to New York. Except for Rufus Durand, my boyfriend’s cousin, who’s also the local police chief. He thinks that about a hundred and fifty years ago, my family put a curse on his family’s relationships. But guess what? Rufus has changed since he became a father to a baby girl with his ex-fiancé, Vanessa Fleer. (That’s a whole other story you can read about in my author’s last book, Body On The Bayou.)

Do have any secret aspirations that Ellen doesn’t know about?
My dream is have a major museum purchase one of my paintings for their collection.

If you had a free day with no responsibilities and your only mission was to enjoy yourself, what would you do?
Eat tons of my mother’s great Cajun cooking, paint or draw for a few hours, and spend the rest of the day – and night! – with my boyfriend, Bo.



Tell us about your best friend.

I have some wonderful friends, but I’d have to say my best friend is my grand-mere. She’s witty, sharp as a tack, and has a great sense of humor about herself. She’s also gracious and elegant in a way I can only dream of being, and so incredibly wise.



What’s the best trait Ellen has given you?
Passion.

What’s the worst?
Impatience.



What’s Ellen’s worst habit?
Spending too much time on Facebook!



If your story were a movie, who would play you?

Anne Hathaway.

Describe the town where you live.
Pelican is a small town nestled between the Mississippi River and Bayou Beurre. Its beautiful 19th century building are adorned with intricate wrought iron balconies and surround a grassy town square with a bandstand and giant, ancient oak trees.

Describe an average day in your life.
I help entertain our B&B guests at Crozat Plantation, then go off to put on an antebellum costume and give tours at Doucet Plantation. I come home, help out some more, paint or draw, then meet Bo at Junie’s Oyster Bar and Dance Hall to try and puzzle out a solution to the latest murder. For a tiny town, Pelican has a ridiculously high murder rate.

Will you encourage Ellen to write a sequel?
Absolutely! I know she’s already written a fourth book, Mardi Gras Murder. She and I both have our fingers crossed that her publisher will ask for more books in the Cajun Country Mystery series.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Body on the Bayou
, the second book in Ellen’s Cajun Country Mystery Series, recently won the Left Coast Crime Lefty Award for Best Humorous Mystery, and was nominated for an Agatha Award in the category of Best Contemporary Novel. Ellen's debut novel in the series, Plantation Shudders, was nominated for Agatha, Lefty, and Daphne awards, and made the USA Today Bestseller list. Book three, A Cajun Christmas Killing, launches October 10th. TV credits include Wings, Just Shoot Me, Fairly OddParents, and many pilots. She’s also an award-winning playwright and journalist. Ellen lives in Studio City with her husband, daughter, and two spoiled rescue dogs.




Connect with Ellen:
Website  |  Blog  |  Facebook  |  Twitter Goodreads

Buy the book:
Amazon  |   Barnes & Noble 



Monday, September 25, 2017

FEATURED AUTHOR: R. FRANKLIN JAMES





ABOUT THE BOOK

In his will, blackmailer Matthias Bell let his victims off the hook, and probate attorney Hollis must track them down to return the damaging goods he had on them. But Bell was murdered, making these victims suspects. Hollis steps in, and finds out quickly that sins do follow after the grave. Meanwhile, all is not calm in the rest of her life. Her estranged mother needs her kidney, her fiancé is on a dangerous mission, and she’s hard-pressed to help a dying client find peace of mind. 






LOVE OR HATE INTERVIEW WITH R. FRANKLIN JAMES


A few of your favorite things: 
A good Malbec, Hydrangea, anything by Alicia Keyes, a river view, a painting by Monet.
Things you need to throw out:
Book research papers, back sales receipts, clothes I no longer wear, Christmas boxes
.

Things you need in order to write:
Computer, thesaurus, quiet, glass of water, daylight, blocks of time.
Things that hamper your writing:
Phone calls, household errands, family interruptions
.

Things you love about writing:
Spinning a story, finding the right words, “seeing” my characters.
Things you hate about writing: 
Publisher deadlines, marketing, promotional events.

Hardest thing about being a writer:
Publisher deadlines, marketing, promotional events
.
Easiest thing about being a writer: 
Using my imagination, generating plot ideas
.

Things you love about where you live:
No earthquakes, natural beauty, night sky, good neighbors.
Things that make you want to move:
Rural accommodations (wells, septic, propane, etc.); excessive crime, lack of cultural access.

Things you never want to run out of:
Books, food, curiosity, problem-solving, love, good health.
Things you wish you’d never bought: 
Purchases under time  pressure
.

Favorite foods: 
Gumbo, Lasagne, Shrimp or Crab Louie.
Things that make you want to throw up: 
Ignorant people, mean people, lima beans.

Favorite music or song:
Too many and too varied. From “Happy” by Pharell Williams to “Clair de Lune” by Debussy.
Music that make your ears bleed:
Hard Rock and Heavy Metal.

Favorite beverage:
Wine
.
Something that gives you a pickle face:  
Aloe Juice.

Favorite smell:
Fresh mowed grass.

Something that makes you hold your nose:
Urine.

Something you’re really good at:
Organizing anything
.
Something you’re really bad at:
Selling anything
.

Something you like to do: 
Read and write, travel
.
Something you wish you’d never done: 
Worked for an employer I hated
.

Last best thing you ate:
Grilled lamb in the north of France.
Last thing you regret eating: 
A cheese omelet on an plane trip – I was sick for days.

Things you’d walk a mile for:
A good dinner with the best wine.
Things that make you want to run screaming from the room: 
An unsanitary kitchen/cook.

Things you always put in your books:
Character quirks.

Things you never put in your books:
Senseless cruelty.

Favorite places you’ve been:
Paris, Rome, Barcelona, Montreal, New York, San Francisco, Yosemite and Martinique.  
Places you never want to go to again:
Idaho.

Things that make you happy: 
Lazy fall days listening to good music near a river bed.
Things that drive you crazy:
People who whine over circumstances rather than fixing the circumstances.

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: 
Took a river raft trip down the rapids.

Something you chickened out from doing:
Sky diving.

The last thing you did for the first time:
Chaired an international writers’ convention
.
Something you’ll never do again:
Sing out loud in public




ABOUT THE AUTHOR


R. Franklin James, a University of California Berkeley grad, followed a career of political advocacy with writing mysteries. In 2013 her debut novel, The Fallen Angels Book Club, was published by Camel Press. This was her first book in the Hollis Morgan Mystery Series followed by Sticks & Stones, The Return of the Fallen Angels Book Club, and book four, The Trade List. Her fifth book, The Bell Tolls was released in June 2017. James resides in northern California.

Connect with the author:
Website  |    Facebook  |  Twitter  

Buy the book:
Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble




Saturday, September 23, 2017

GUEST POST BY JULIE CHASE



ABOUT THE BOOK

Lacy Marie Crocker has settled into a comfortable groove back home in New Orleans, and with Valentine’s Day right around the corner, she’s busier than ever running a thriving pet boutique, helping her mother organize the upcoming National Pet Pageant, and untangling her complicated love life. But when delivering a king-sized order of dreidel-shaped doggy biscuits for a Saint Berdoodle’s bark-mitzvah, Lacy stumbles into yet another murder scene—and the last person to see the victim alive was her own father.

It’s up to Lacy to clear her dad’s name from the suspect list before Detective Jack Oliver has to cage him for good. But just when she starts pawing at the truth, she receives a threatening letter from a mysterious blackmailer bent on silencing her with her own secrets. And Lacy’s not the only one with bones in her closet.





GUEST POST BY JULIE CHASE



Inside the Mind of an Author

The mind of an author is a vast and busy place. There are innumerable stories floating in pieces and strips, collaged with memories, ponderings and opinions waiting to be said.


Many of us are introverts, meaning that we gain energy from being alone and give our energy to others when we are not. So, sometimes we’re smiling silently and dreaming of valiantly slaying a dragon. An hour later, we are probably just thinking of our beds.


When you hear writers complain of “writer’s block,” don’t be mistaken. There’s never a dull moment in a writer’s mind. It’s just that, occasionally, we’re in need of a story idea that will stand up to the industry’s scrutinizing glare. It doesn’t mean our minds are idle. Our minds are never idle. It may simply be that the things spinning round in there aren’t up to publication standards. Interesting? Absolutely. Salable? Not so much.


I probably speak for myself here, but I’m also usually thinking about my next cup of coffee, wine or snack.



Finally, in every author’s mind is the dream of one day “making it.” Feeling validated for our efforts, our lost sleep, neglected families and housework. One day, we all want to be that writer whose book is tucked under the arm of someone passing on the street or in the hands of a reader, whose attention is far too rapt in our words to know that we are standing obnoxiously in front of them taking a selfie to share with our friends because THAT is my book and I created it from nothing but my harried thoughts.

 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Julie Chase is a mystery-loving pet enthusiast who hopes to make readers smile. She lives in rural Ohio with her husband and three spunky children. Julie is a member of the International Thriller Writers (ITW), Romance Writers of America (RWA), and Sisters in Crime (SinC). She is represented by Jill Marsal of Marsal Lyon Literary Agency. Julie also writes as Julie Anne Lindsey.



Connect with Julie:
Webpage  |  Facebook  |  Twitter   |   Goodreads   

Buy the book:
Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble  |   IndieBound    



Tuesday, September 19, 2017

FEATURED AUTHOR: J.A. HENNRIKUS



ABOUT THE BOOK

When Sully Sullivan’s life imploded she left behind her job on the police force and her unfaithful husband to plunge herself into her new life as the General Manager of her hometown theater, the Cliffside Theater Company. For five years she’s balanced budgets instead of the scales of justice, and kept the Cliffside running alongside its mercurial Artistic Director. But when her best friend is arrested for killing his father, the very powerful Peter Whitehall, no one is looking for another suspect. So, in between keeping A Christmas Carol on budget and Scrooge sober, Sully dusts off her investigative skills to find a killer. Sully’s lives officially collide when her ex-husband may be on the list of potential suspects, and she is forced to finally confront her past in order to save her present, and protect her future.










LOVE OR HATE INTERVIEW WITH J.A. HENNRIKUS


Things you need in order to write:
Background noise (currently, Midsomer Murders), laptop computer, pillows on the couch.
Things that hamper your writing:
Lack of time to either write, or to create
.


Things you love about writing:
Allowing characters to come to life, creating a puzzle, getting in the zone of creating.
Things you hate about writing: Getting that first draft done is like slogging hip deep through Jell-O.

Things you love about where you live:
I live in a city, and I love being able to get anywhere and get anything walking.
Things that make you want to move:
Crowded trains on my commute.

Favorite foods: 
Cheese, wine, chocolate, good bread.
Things that make you want to throw up: 
Cilantro.

Favorite smell:
The ocean at high tide.

Something that makes you hold your nose:
The ocean at low tide.

Something you’re really good at:
Knitting.

Something you’re really bad at:
Running
.

Last best thing you ate:
A German Pfannkuchen (pancake).

Last thing you regret eating:
Really spicy salsa with onions.

Things you always put in your books:
Romance, lots of puzzles
.
Things you never put in your books:
A hurt animal.

Things to say to an author:
Congratulations on your book! (Works even if you didn’t like it).

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:
You should have XYZ.

Favorite places you’ve been:
Egypt, Cape Cod, Vienna, the Grand Canyon
.
Places you never want to go to again:
Any airport where I’ve missed my connection.

Favorite things to do:
Writing, walking, knitting.
Things you’d run through a fire wearing gasoline pants to get out of doing:
Vacuuming .

Most daring thing you’ve ever done:
A half marathon.
Something you chickened out from doing:
Climbing into the Great Pyramid (though I did go into a few tombs).



ABOUT THE AUTHOR

J.A. Hennrikus writes the Theater Cop series for Midnight Ink. The debut of the series, A Christmas Peril, will be released on September 8. As Julianne Holmes, she writes the Agatha nominated Clock Shop Mysteries for Berkley Prime Crime. The third in the series, Chime and Punishment was released on August 1, 2017. She has short stories in three Level Best anthologies, Thin Ice, Dead Calm and Blood Moon. She is on the board of Sisters in Crime, and is a member of MWA and Sisters in Crime New England. She blogs with the Wicked Cozy Authors and Killer Characters.

Connect with the author:

Website  |  Blog  |  Twitter  |  Pinterest   |  Instagram  

Buy the book:

Amazon  |   
Barnes & Noble






Sunday, September 17, 2017

FEATURED AUTHOR: CATE HOLAHAN




ABOUT THE BOOK 


Sometimes the truth is darker than fiction. Liza Cole has thirty days to write the thriller that could put her back on the bestseller list. Her tight deadline is further complicated by fertility treatments and a distracted husband that is struggling to keep his firm afloat after the unexplained disappearance of his law partner and friend, Nick. Stressed both professionally and personally, Liza escapes into writing her latest heroine, Beth—a new mother who suspects her husband of cheating. Angry and betrayed, Beth sets out to catch him in the act and ends up tossing the body of her husband’s mistress into the East River. Then the lines between fiction and reality begin to blur. Nick’s body is dragged from the same river and Liza’s husband is arrested for his murder. Before her deadline is up, Liza will have to face up to the truths about those closest to her, including herself. If she doesn’t, the final page of her heroine’s story could be the end of her own. 







LOVE OR HATE INTERVIEW CATE HOLAHAN



A few of your favorite things:
Suspense novels, Spotify, my piano, and my pooch.
Things you need to throw out:
Nearly every first draft.

Things you need in order to write:
An Internet-connected laptop with Word. Also, coffee. 
Things that hamper your writing:
Email. Trump tweets. 


Things you love about writing:
Creating characters, imagining, plotting, inventing, forming pretty sentences. Rediscovering words. Pretty much everything. I even enjoy rewriting.
Things you hate about writing: 

Copyediting.

Hardest thing about being a writer: 
Preserving my writing time. 
Easiest thing about being a writer:
No commute. 


Things you love about where you live:
My family is close, my neighbors are awesome, and I love my house.
Things that make you want to move:
General restlessness. Cold weather.

Things you never want to run out of: 
Love. Compassion. Soap.
Things you wish you’d never bought:
A knock-off designer dress from an online company. Serves me right. 


Words that describe you:
Creative, empathetic, driven, fun-loving, talkative, inquisitive.
Words that describe you but you wish they didn’t:
Impatient, impulsive, quick-tempered.

Favorite foods:
Salmon, swordfish, halibut . . .  I can’t visit aquariums without getting hungry.
Things that make you want to throw up: 
Natto, Okra.

Favorite music or song:
Fiona Apple Extraordinary Machine. Whole album.
Music that make your ears bleed:
I think Kidz bop is a genius concept, but there’s only so much an adult can stand.

Favorite beverage:
It’s a tie: water with lemon and Educated Guess Cabernet. 
Something that gives you a pickle face:
Anything with carbonation.

Favorite smell:
My husband’s skin. (The man has good BO)
Something that makes you hold your nose:
Dog poop.

Something you wish you could do:
Speak fluent French or Spanish. 
Something you wish you’d never learned to do: 
Nag.


Last best thing you ate:
Black cod.
Last thing you regret eating:
Red meat.

Things you’d walk a mile for:
Any cause that helps people. It’s only a mile.
Things that make you want to run screaming from the room:
Arachnida. The entire invertebrate class. 

Things you always put in your books:
Couples. 

Things you never put in your books:
Vampires.

Things to say to an author:
I liked (insert anything here) about your book. 

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book:
I meant to read your book, but I’ve been really into this reality television show.

Favorite or genre:
Suspense with magical realism a close second and Russian literature third. 

Books you would ban:
NEVER ban a book.

People you’d like to invite to dinner:
Stephen King, Gillian Flynn, Karen Slaughter
.
People you’d cancel dinner on:
Ted Cruz.

Favorite things to do:
Write, sing, play piano, hang out with my kids and husband.

Things you’d run through a fire wearing gasoline pants to get out of doing:
Ghostwriting any prominent business person’s business book/memoir—with a few key exceptions.

Things that make you happy: 
My family, which includes my dog. Writing. Singing. Playing Piano. Dancing. 

Things that drive you crazy:
Elementary school drop off and pick up lanes.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Cate Holahan is the acclaimed author of thrillers The Widower's Wife (Crooked Lane Books, Aug. 2016) and Dark Turns (Crooked Lane Books, Nov. 2015). The former was named one of Kirkus' Best Books of 2016. Her third novel, Lies She Told, was published by Crooked Lane Books on September 12. In her former life, she was an award-winning print journalist. She has written for BusinessWeek, The Boston Globe, and The Record Newspaper, among other outlets. She was also the lead singer of an original rock band that she regularly threatens to reunite. She lives in New Jersey with her husband, two daughters, ages 7 and 5, and dog.



Connect with Cate:

Website
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Buy the book:

Amazon  |  Barnes & Noble