In my exhaustive search for the best southern name ever for a continuing character I plan to introduce in my next thriller, I ran across an article called “Namestorming”… Continue
Added by Amanda Stevens on June 1, 2007 at 2:02pm —
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Robert Ellis' latest thriller packs a powerful punch. Don't read City of Fire late at night, particularly if you're in the house alone.
LAPD Detective Lena Gamble is 29, and alone in the world. Her brother, David, had been murdered five years earlier. Lena has the time and willingness to work on the latest horrific crime investigation. She… Continue
Added by Lesa Holstine on June 1, 2007 at 1:59pm —
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Added by Angela Wilson on June 1, 2007 at 12:20pm —
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I will take the hot seat for my first every interview, on Friday, June 1st. I hope everyone will drop by BlogWriters Network and say Hi. Click here to visit my page. The interview will be conducted in the forum section. If you haven't set up a profile page - please do so, it will only take a few minutes.
Saturday Morning - First time novelist, Cheryl…
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Added by RJ on May 31, 2007 at 2:30pm —
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My new Amazon Short A Grave Error is now available! I invite you to check it out. ~ CKT
A Grave Error
©2007 Cheryl Kaye…
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Added by Cheryl Kaye Tardif on May 31, 2007 at 1:09pm —
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Title: THE COLOUR OF BLOOD
Author: Declan Hughes
Publisher: Hachette Livre
Edition released: May 2007
ISBN: 978-0-7195-6841-1
346 pages
Review by: Karen Chisholm
THE COLOUR OF BLOOD is the second Ed Loy novel by Declan Hughes, the first being The Wrong Kind of Blood, published in 2006.
Ed Loy is a Private Investigator in current day Dublin, Ireland - a place that's part gritty, poor, desperate and part rich, privileged, twisted. Shane Howard is a Dublin…
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Added by Karen from AustCrime on May 31, 2007 at 12:41pm —
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I've always considered authors and readers to be two sides of the same coin and felt that a book should be a form of interaction between them. I sincerely hope when you read one of my books I make it clear that I am in fact talking to you. We may never have met, but I firmly believe that the fact that a reader has chosen to pick up and read a writer's work establishes a definite bond between…
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Added by Dorien Grey on May 31, 2007 at 5:28am —
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Well, it's been a month since the release of
Invisible Shield
and it has received great reviews from reviewers, authors and most of
all--my readers! The book is available to order through
bookstores and on Amazon.com.
I've scheduled a promotional events and I can't wait to get out and
meet readers both familiar and new. Meanwhile, I've finished the
second book in the Frost sisters series and have written the first 100
pages of a stand-alone suspense…
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Added by Scarlett Dean on May 31, 2007 at 5:20am —
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It’s not only writers who suffer creative blocks.
Recently I visited friends in the mountains of Maryland, an artists’ mecca. My host was a sculptor who works in wood. Ordinarily ideas come to him while he’s working or listening to music. But lately
he’s hit a dry patch, following some success, and was telling me about
the various words of wisdom he’s been offered by artists about courting
the muse.…
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Added by Lois Karlin on May 31, 2007 at 3:47am —
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My new blog post today is at http://acmeauthorslink.blogspot.com
where you'll find observations from my vast experience at playing slot machines. (G)
(I also have an RSS feed on my profile page, bottom left column)
Morgan Mandel
Added by Morgan Mandel on May 31, 2007 at 1:37am —
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Angling for some info about mystery writer Victoria Houston...
Check
here for an interview with Houston.
Added by Bethany K. Warner on May 31, 2007 at 1:13am —
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#4 in the Gemma Lincoln series. Superintendent of Police at Manly, Bryson Finn and his sister-in-law Bettina are killed by an unknown gunman when she opens the front door of her house. His 9 year old son Donny, also shot, saw the killer and may die. Gemma Lincoln, private investigator, becomes involved when she helps her friend DS Angie McDonald. The investigation affects a third friend Senior Constable Jaki Hunter, a ballistics expert, in a number of ways. Work has been a bit slow for Gemma…
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Added by Kerrie on May 30, 2007 at 11:04pm —
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Tonight my face 2 face group here in Adelaide have participated in a photoshoot which is part of the launch of the June selection for the South Australian Big Book Club. The novel for June is Michael Robotham's THE NIGHT FERRY. Tonight 6 of our group were photographed in a local cafe with the book and we will be featured in the Adelaide Advertiser this Saturday. Great fun, and the book is very much worth reading too - see my mini-review on this page.
Added by Kerrie on May 30, 2007 at 10:58pm —
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Like a bad penny, I am back.
First, let me tell you, Mayhem in
the Midlands was AWESOME! I learned so much from the panels I attended.
Some were funny (sorry, but with titles like "Vampires have feelings
too: making fantasy characters work in a realistic world" how could
they not be?) and some were just plain informative (like "Central
Casting: Where do characters come from?"). I took probably fifteen or
twenty pages of notes in the two days.
I met…
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Added by Nichole R. Bennett on May 30, 2007 at 2:21pm —
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I received the cover artwork for my next book, Paying the Piper, so here it is:
I would like to make one thing clear. No teddy bears were harmed in the making of this cover. I would never that. A stunt bear was used.
Added by Simon Wood on May 30, 2007 at 7:14am —
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The latest Monday Interview at my blog, Things I'd Rather Be Doing, is with Chicago author
Sean Chercover, who talks with me about his debut thriller,
Big City, Bad Blood. It's a great book, and Sean is an open, engaging interviewee. We discuss the way he approached the book knowing it would the first in a series, his love of Chicago and the way his background affected his writing.
Added by John Kenyon on May 30, 2007 at 7:10am —
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DARK CARNIVAL
Tuesday June 5th, 2007 - 7 p.m.…
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Added by LJ Roberts on May 30, 2007 at 5:30am —
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It's been awhile since my last post (if anyone cares) and I've gotten in a number of books. First up, Lee Child's latest Jack Reacher novel,
Bad Luck and Trouble. I can remember the first Reacher I read, not that long ago,
Persuader. I actively hated that book, but I stuck with Child and I've loved all the books since (still have to go back some time and read the first 4-5 in the series) and this one is just as good. Followed this up with the latest Dortmunder novel, Donald E.…
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Added by Craig Larson on May 30, 2007 at 1:41am —
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Being a book reviewer is tough work.
At least for me.
Not only am I an avid reader, but I also write fiction. When I go into a story, I’m searching for not only what works as a reader, but what works as a writer. And when dealing with authors, I’m thinking as a reviewer as well as a writer.
Writers are notoriously sensitive, so when I have to give a harsh review, it’s not easy. But it has to be done. Writers must have thick skins in this business. After all, the biz is…
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Added by Angela Wilson on May 30, 2007 at 12:18am —
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So you spot a book that looks good, but you're not sure. You'd like to get someone else's opinion of the story before you invest the time reading those first 50 pages and it turns out to be a dud. Let me introduce you to the literary salon known as The Complete Review -
http://www.complete-review.com/main/main.html. They offer a selectively comprehensive, objectively opinionated survey of books old and new, trying to meet all your book…
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Added by Austin S. Camacho on May 29, 2007 at 10:50pm —
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