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Archive for October, 2016

her-halloween-treat

HER HALLOWEEN TREAT

by Tiffany Reisz

Blurb

Trick…or wicked treat!

It was a devastating dirty trick—Joey Silvia just found out her boyfriend of two years is married. What. A. Dick. Joey knows her best chance to get over one guy is to get under another. Of course, heading home to her family’s remote cabin in Oregon poses some challenges in the “available men” department…until she discovers this cabin comes with its own hot handyman!

Holy crap, Chris Steffensen. When did her brother’s best friend turn into a hard-bodied pile of blond-bearded hotness? He’s the perfect Halloween treat—and a surprisingly dirty rebound guy. For a couple of weeks, anyway. Except that Chris has other ideas.

 

Tiffany’s Super Easy Shortbread Cookies

I have way too many fillings to eat a lot of candy around Halloween but that doesn’t mean I don’t indulge in seasonal sweets. I love making this super easy shortbread cookies and putting orange and black frosting on top to make them Halloweenie. By the way, Halloweenie is the correct adjective form of Halloween. Don’t even start with Halloweenish. That is absolutely incorrect and you will be denied a cookie if you use that silly word.

Tiffany’s Super Easy Shortbread Cookies

2 cups flour

½ cup powdered sugar

½ lb butter (gotta be butter, don’t use butter substitutes)

Vanilla frosting with orange and black food coloring

Step one – cream butter and sugar

Step two – add flour, mix really well

Step three – roll out and cut into shapes (pumpkin shapes are easy for these cookies)

Step four – Bake at 350 until light gold

Step five – Let cool

Step six – Smooth on the frosting and serve!

 

 

 

Tiffany Reisz

ABOUT TIFFANY REISZ

Tiffany Reisz is the author of the highly acclaimed series The Original Sinners. Slightly shameless, Tiffany dropped out of a conservative Southern seminary in order to pursue a career as a writer. This move, while possibly putting her eternal salvation in peril, has worked out better than she anticipated. She has five piercings, one tattoo and has been arrested only twice. When not under arrest, Tiffany writes erotica and erotic romance and is diligent in doing all her own research, and lives and writes by the erotica writer’s creed: it’s not erotica until someone gets hurt.
Follow Tiffany on Twitter or email her.

 

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The Blacksheep’s Secret Child

by Cat Schield

Blurb

A second chance with her son’s secret father!

Widow Savannah Caldwell faces the challenge of her life: begging Trent Caldwell—her former fling and late husband’s brother—to save the family’s ailing music business. That she’s still attracted to Trent makes things hard; that Trent is her son’s secret father makes things impossible!

Trent is fiercely proud of making his own fortune, despite his controlling father. And he’s always believed his brother got the girl who should have been Trent’s. Now he’ll have the family business, and his brother’s widow in the bargain. But will their romantic reunion be waylaid by Savannah’s shocking baby secret?

Available at all fine booksellers and at Harlequin online: http://www.harlequin.com/storeitem.html?iid=67446

 

A Special Drink Inspired by Her Book’s Club T

I love going out for happy hour with my friends and it seems each place we go has some sort of specialty drink. So naturally a Las Vegas nightclub like Club T’s is going to have a signature cocktail. Introducing the Teasetini. A delicious twist on an old favorite. Vodka, St. Germain, white cranberry and lime juice. Shaken with ice and strained into a martini glass. And enjoy.

cat_schield

ABOUT CAT SCHIELD

Cat Schield lives in Minnesota with her daughter and 2 Burmese cats and a Doberman. Winner of the Romance Writers of America 2010 Golden Heart® for series contemporary romance, when she’s not writing sexy, romantic stories for Harlequin Desire, she can be found sailing with friends on the St. Croix River or more exotic locales like the Caribbean and Europe. Contact her at http://catschield.net

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return-of-the-di-sione-wife

The Return of the Di Sione Wife

by Caitlin Crews

Blurb

“I’ll have the earrings now. Or are there more hoops to jump through?”

Dario Di Sione should be feeling triumphant—he’s about to fulfill his grandfather’s wish and retrieve the precious earrings, but all he feels is fury. The beautiful lawyer handling the sale is the woman who betrayed him six years ago…his wife!

Discovering Anais has kept their child a secret makes Dario determined to be the father he never had. But Anais’s return to his side casts a new light on past events, and now it’s not just the child he wants to claim!

Book 3 of The Billionaire’s Legacy

Available at all fine bookstores and at Harlequin online: http://www.harlequin.com/storeitem.html?iid=67354

 

Recipe

Part of The Return of the Di Sione Wife takes place on the island of Maui in beautiful Hawaii. I’m lucky enough to have been to Hawaii a few times, and one of the (many) things I love about it is the food! I’ve had to-die-for garlic shrimp and rice from food trucks pulled up near the ocean. I’ve had amazing ramen in tucked-away local spots in out-of-the-way places. I’ve eaten manapuas from 7-11s while driving around islands. I love loco moco, a traditional Hawaiian comfort food, and my husband and I have experimented with making our own version many, many times.

But my favorite Hawaiian food is undoubtedly pork. Slow-roasted, so-tender-you-might-cry pork. I can’t exactly roast a pig in my backyard (I wish!) so I’ve spent a long time looking for the right way to reproduce it here at home. And I finally found it!

Nom Nom Paleo’s slow cooker recipe is genius. Three or four ingredients, a slow cooker, and time. It might be the best pork I’ve ever eaten outside of Hawaii! http://nomnompaleo.com/post/10031990774/slow-cooker-kalua-pig

I can’t recommend it highly enough!

 

How-to Tips for Aspiring Writers: Tips for those looking to get their work published/break into the industry.

  1. Write your book.
  2. Finish it.

That’s actually the best advice I can give anyone. We live in a world of instant gratification. We are often frustrated that the moment we have an idea it doesn’t come to fruition. But books are not fast food. They take thought and time. And the thing about writing books is that there’s only one way to get better at it, and that’s writing more books. You actually don’t know if you can write a book until you do. And you learn things when you finish a book. You learn the difference between your vision and your abilities. You get comfortable with the distance between the two. You see the ways you could have gone further, or deeper, or the things you hit just right when you didn’t think you could. You surprise yourself. You learn and learn, because every book is a different mountain to climb. You can’t predict the climb, but the more mountains you get under your belt, the better you get at climbing, and the more confident you feel that you’ll make it to the top. This is important when you’re neck deep in a new book and are certain you’ll never finish.

Write and write and write. And finish. Then do it again.

What about once you finish?

The great news is that these days, the publishing industry is more wide open and accessible than ever before. If you wanted, you could upload your manuscript right this minute and boom, your book would be out there in the world. So the question aspiring authors should ask themselves is: what kind of publishing career do I want?

Study the alternatives. Look at what books you read and how the authors went about publishing them. Did they self-publish or traditionally publish? Do they have long careers? Do they have an agent? Are they still publishing in the same way as they were when they started? Why or why not? These days, you can not only look at the books, you can usually find the authors online, where many people speak quite freely about their publishing experiences. That can be helpful in making a determination about which path is best for you.

Know this: no one can tell your stories but you. There are no gatekeepers. If you want an instant audience and you don’t want to wait, go indie. If you want an agent and a New York print deal, pursue it and understand it might take some time to find the right combination of people who believe in you and your work and who think they can sell it. Learn as much as you can about the different markets and the kind of things you’ll be expected to do to succeed in each. Do you prefer to spend all your time writing while others take care of the details? Then indie is likely not for you. Do you chafe at the notion that others might make decisions that you might not love? Then traditional publishing is likely not a good fit.

Whatever you choose, remember this: publishing is a business. I know it feels personal because the thing you’re selling once lived in your head, but it’s not. Especially when it feels the most personal, in my experience. Remember that the market doesn’t owe you anything and that readers want one thing: a great read. If you can deliver that, I promise, you’ll find your audience.

Good luck!

 

caitlin-crews

ABOUT CAITLIN CREWS

Caitlin Crews discovered her first romance novel at the age of twelve and has since conducted a life-long love affair with romance novels, many of which she insists on keeping near her at all times. She currently lives in California, with her animator/comic book artist husband and their menagerie of ridiculous animals.

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alan-blacks-book

 

METAL BOXES AT THE EDGE

by Alan Black

Blurb

Metal Boxes–At the Edge is the fourth book in Alan Black’s sci-fi series.

Ensign Stone’s goals were to make his way in the empire’s navy, make his family proud of him, and make love to his fiancée. No matter which way he turned, someone was conspiring against him. Disgraced and humiliated, he is court-martialed, discharged, and abandoned.

Accepting what he thinks is a lowly busy-work position on a beat up old family business space freighter travelling At the Edge of human space, he hopes to earn back the trust and respect he lost. The Empire’s political powers and his family have different goals. Stone faces humanity’s enemies in a do-or-die operation.

FREE sample chapter one at http://www.alanblackauthor.com

Amazon Author Page http://tinyurl.com/z9zkql3

 

 

alan-black

ABOUT ALAN BLACK

ALAN BLACK is an independently published author of multiple genres. He is an award winning author with three #1 Amazon best selling SciFi novels. He says he has never met a good story he didn’t want to tell.

Black says of his work, “We want our readers amazed they missed sleep because they could not put down one of our books. We want our readers amazed we made them laugh on one page and cry on the next. We want to give our readers a pleasurable respite from the cares of the world for a few hours.”

“I have been writing novels since 1997 when I started ‘Eye on The Prize’. My writing tastes are as eclectic as my reading preferences. I admit that I love writing much more than editing and the whole publishing process. Marketing of my novels leaves me as baffled as the whole string theory thing.

I was born in central Kansas, but grew up in Gladstone, Missouri, graduating from Oak Park Senior High School and eventually earning a degree from Longview Community College. I spent most of my adult life in the Kansas City area (with the exception of a few years in the U.S. Air Force), but my wife and I now live in sunny Arizona. The dry desert air stimulates my creativity more than the juicy air in Missouri (pronounced here as ‘misery’).

I am pretty sure my desire to write started in the second grade. I was given an assignment to write a short story about Greek mythology. My teacher took the time to call my parents. Although neither Dad or Mom remember the incident, it had an impact on me eventually leading me to finally write (and most importantly finish) my first manuscript. It took two years to complete ‘Eye on The Prize.’ I have gotten faster since then, completing the last manuscript in three weeks.”

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circle-of-trust

CIRCLE OF TRUST

by Jacqueline Simon Gunn

Why does love turn to murder? Jacqueline Simon Gunn is not your average thriller writer. Simon Gunn received her Doctorate of Psychology in Clinical Psychology backed by years of working firsthand with the criminally insane at Bellevue hospital.

Simon Gunn explores catathymia, or passionate homicide, one of the most paradoxical crimes, in Circle of Trust, book two in the Close Enough to Kill Series.

Simon Gunn provides an unflinching look into the mind of a murderer, bringing her expertise in the field of psychology to the mix. Simon Gunn’s interest in the intricacies of the mind and how people unravel makes Circle of Trust a torrid and terrifying thriller.

Radio psychologist Jacob Temple is found murdered in a most gruesome manner.  Soon after, the story of Jacob’s life unfolds as told by those closest to him, particularly his ex-girlfriend Jane Light, who has been stalking Jacob since the day he left her, 19 years ago.

Detectives Poole and Gibbs are assigned to Temple’s murder case with Kadee Carlisle, who happens to be mourning the murder of her boyfriend. As Kadee gets deeper into the case, she struggles with conflicted feelings about her past and present and the disturbing parallels to the Temple case begin to surface.

As the hunt for the killer ensues, a tragic love story and a plan for vengeance unfold. As the fine line between facts and deception and passion and obsession blur, an important lesson is made clear: Sometimes the closer you are to the truth, the harder it is to see.

Available from all fine bookstores including Amazon.com.

 

Q&A with Jacqueline Simon Gunn, author of CIRCLE OF TRUST

Can you explain what the psychology term “catathymia” means and why you chose 
to focus on this in your Close Enough to Kill series?

Catathymia is a psychodynamic process first explained by Frederic Wertham in 1937 to describe 
otherwise unexplainable explosions of violence, where there is a buildup of psychological tension 
prior to the murder. Instead of understanding the distress as internal, the individual blames 
another person. After a period of holding in seething emotions, the individual decides that their 
only resolve is to eliminate this other person. The tension becomes uncontainable, violent 
fantasies and obsessions consume him/her; the violent act becomes the only means of reducing 
the psychic distress. The tension abates following the explosive outburst (murder) and 
perpetrators report feeling relief.

The theory was later expanded upon by other forensic theorists. One of the leaders in forensic 
psychology, J. Reid Meloy, used the cycle of catathymia to explain obsession, stalking and 
murderous acts toward someone the person has an attachment to. From this perspective, 
catathymia is a violent act resulting from some sort of rupture (real or perceived) within the 
relationship, and the victim is someone the perpetrator knows and feels attached to. In many 
cases, it is someone with whom the perpetrator had an intimate relationship with.

Criminality is a nebulous area. When trying to understand criminal acts, such as stalking and 
homicide, we need to look at underlying motivations. Murder is an act, nothing more. That is, the
action itself really explains nothing psychologically speaking. If we want to understand why 
people commit murderers, we need to look at motivations. Catathymia explains motivation for 
intimate kills, murders committed against someone who is Close Enough to Kill, I have 
been researching this for over twenty years, and remain fascinated. I decided to explore this 
through fiction to see what I could learn. And learn I did.

Who are some of your favorite thriller writers?


Gillian Flynn and Alison Gaylin are my two favorite thriller writers. They both focus on 
characterization. Although their plots are taut, the characters are multi-dimensional and drive the 
story. I love that! I also love Stephen King, although he crosses genres. His characterizations are brilliant. I feel like I know each one of them intimately.

You’ve said that you allowed the characters in this series to drive the story. What was 
that experience like? 





Wanting to better understand motivations for intimate murders, I created characters, got into their
respective heads, allowed them to drive the narrative. As I shift character point of view, I hear a 
different voice, my mannerisms change, and my emotions shift to match what’s going on in their 
story. In this way, I am often unsure what’s going to happen. As the characters develop and I go 
deeper into their hearts and minds, their motivations, the story unfolds, surprising me, and 
sometimes, disturbing me, too. It helps me get to the answers I want about motivations: who the 
killer is, and who the next victim will be feels like a decision made by the characters, not me. 
This way, I have an intimate experience with a passion-driven killer and a privy look at 
motivations for murder.

Can you tell us more about your psychology background?

I have master’s degrees in forensic psychology and existential/phenomenological psychology, and 
my doctorate in clinical psychology with a specialization in forensics. I have over twenty years of
 clinical experience. I have worked in correctional facilities and have interviewed some high 
profile criminals, evaluated insanity plea acquittals and worked with inmates in individual therapy 
and group therapy. But I also work outside of the criminal justice system with psychotherapy 
patients. I was at the Karen Horney Clinic for ten years. Now I’m in private practice and spend 
the rest of my time writing, both fiction and non-fiction.

What advice would you give to someone who wants to start writing fiction?

My advice is not that original, but it is the truth: sit down and write every day, even if it’s only a 
page. A book will not write itself, and the practice of sitting down and writing every day is one 
that not only gets the words down, but also helps someone become a better writer. The second 
part of this is to not judge the first draft, just write like no one will ever read it.

Who is the most psychologically misunderstood character in literature?


Willy Loman. He is the epitome of the shattered American Dream. But there is a Willy Loman in 
all of us. The struggle to balance societal expectations of success versus one’s own, similar to 
Willy, is something I hear all the time from people. Willy embodies this dilemma, albeit, an 
extreme example. His inability to reconcile the two, results in a sad deterioration in his sense of 
self. Most people struggle with this to some degree, in my opinion, not because of individual 
psychology, but rather because of impositions of a society that values money and status above 
personal growth and meaning. Willy wasn’t psychologically disturbed, in the traditional sense. 
Instead, his decline is better understood as symptomatic of problems existing within the larger 
societal context.

What is the best writing advice that you’ve ever received?





The best advice would have to be to keep writing even when the draft is crappy, which it will be. 
Changes are made during rewriting once the story is down. This helped me finish my first novel.

Can you tell us about the panel you were on at ThrillerFest this year?


The Thrillerfest panel was called, Caffeine, Chocolate or Wine? Writers’ tricks to keep you motivated. 
 The discussion focused on the various techniques we use to keep ourselves motivated throughout the writing process. Writing book is not easy. Perseverance is vital. As I said before, 
the book isn’t going to write itself. So we all have to find ways that work of us.

All of us shared the importance of preserving our writers’ time and space, keeping to a schedule. 
Alcohol seemed to be the ‘flavor’ of choice when dealing with the inner voice of doubt that all 
writers have. Writing is exposing. Our inner selves are left open for inspection and judgment. 
This can slow down the process if we think about it too much. When in doubt, have a cocktail to 
quell the inner voice of uncertainty, it seems.

I actually use running to help me at all stages of the process. The commitment I learned from 
training for marathons taught me how to sit down every morning and write, no matter what. And 
when I feel discouraged, doubtful – wondering if I have a right to write, or anxious about the 
reviews that are coming, I run. Personally, I found the panel helpful. Hearing other writers, 
particularly those who have been at it longer than me, talk about the same dilemmas I struggle 
with, reassured me.

What is the most unexpected thing that you’ve learned after researching passionate 
homicide?


The most unexpected is also perhaps the most disturbing: When it comes to murders driven by 
passion, the ability to predict criminality is poor. Meaning, many of these crimes are committed 
by individuals who have no history of abuse, no history of previous criminal activity, no 
substance abuse history. When we look for something, anything to make the motivation to kill 
make sense, it turns out to be complex and internal psychological reasons – things that aren’t 
obvious or quantifiable, rather than concrete environmental predictors. This begs the question 
Kadee, my protagonist, asks her professor in Circle of Trust: “Is anyone capable of murder?” His
 answer is “Yes.”

What are you working on next?

The third book in my Close Enough to Kill series is being edited. When it’s returned to me, I will
 do a final pass. I’m currently writing a series of novellas. Each one focuses on a character from 
the series. The first one is a story about Jacob Temple, the murder victim in Circle of Trust, who I
 fell in love with while writing the second two books in the series. The story takes place before his 
murder. It’s his side of the story, the story he couldn’t tell in the book because he was already 
dead – a tragic love story not for the faint of heart. The draft is done and I’ve sent it off for 
editing. The next one, which I have just started, is about Noah and Belle Donovan. Noah is the 
murder victim in the first book of the series, Circle of Betrayal. He has a complex and somewhat disturbing relationship with his mother, Belle. Readers have asked to hear more. So this novella 
will be a sort of prequel, exploring their relationship. The third one is a spinoff from the third 
book, Circle of Truth, and will be an extension on the murderer’s story. After that, I will return to 
a book I had started and then set aside to finish the series, another psychological thriller with love
 triangles and all kinds of twists. I’m more than halfway through, so the draft shouldn’t take too 
long to finish once I go back to it.

 

 

jacqueline-simon-gunn

JACQUELINE SIMON GUNN is an esteemed clinical psychologist in Manhattan and a freelance writer. She received her M.A. in Phenomenological Psychology, another M.A. in Forensic Psychology and her Doctorate of Psychology in Clinical Psychology. She is the author of four non-fiction books, including co-authored, Bare: Psychotherapy Stripped, as well as many articles, both scholarly and mainstream. Circle of Trust is Gunn’s second work of fiction, and book two in her Close Enough to Kill trilogy. In addition to her clinical work and writing, she is an avid runner. Gunn is currently working on multiple writing projects, including the third book in her trilogy.

 

 

 

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CIRCLE OF TRUST

by Jacqueline Simon Gunn

376 pages; $14.95

978-153325918-9

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