Pocket Star E-Nights Promotion

July 14, 2014

G42646-Star-E-Nights-Banner3rab your e-reader and enjoy APPREHENDED by Jan Burke and many more e-books this summer. Wherever you go, Pocket Star-E Nights are guaranteed to make your evenings shine!

 

Apprehended - coverAPPREHENDED by Jan Burke

SUMMARY: 

From the New York Times bestselling suspense author Jan Burke comes a brand-new e-short story with the added bonus of three short stories from the Eighteen anthology.

Apprehended is a mini-anthology containing a brand new short story from Jan Burke: “The Unacknowledged,” which features the fan-favorite investigative reporter Irene Kelly, back in her journalism school days. Also included are three short stories from the previously published Eighteen: “Why Tonight,” “A Fine Set of Teeth,” and “A Man of My Stature.”

Praise for Eighteen:
“Astonishing…wry…these stories are sure to delight.” —New York Times bestselling author Jeffrey Deaver

“A delightful collection of page-turners. At turns chilling, funny, poignant—and always insightful. With these stories, Jan Burke’s at the top of her game.” —New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman

EXCERPT:

 I made sure we were alone. That was actually the hardest part. After realizing that no restaurant in the city would be free of people who might know Donna, I ended up inviting her over for dinner on a night when I knew Lydia had an evening class. Until two months earlier, Lydia and I had shared the place with another roommate, but she had married over the summer. We had been putting off finding another renter, but tonight I was glad for the lack of a potential eavesdropper, enjoying the emptiness and quiet that usually had me thinking that I was going to have to move back home again.

Donna and I made small talk until after I cleared the dishes. She seemed a little down. All the same, she was an easy person to talk to. I was fighting some very cynical thinking about that as I pulled out some photocopies I had made.

I had thought of going all Perry Mason on her ass, cross-examining her until she wept and admitted her crimes. I couldn’t do it. The truth is, I liked her.

“I had a special assignment given to me this week,” I said. “Do you know who Jack Corrigan is?”

She shook her head. My tone must have hardened, or my look, or—somehow I tipped her off that the nature of our little dinner party was about to change.

“Well, I suppose that doesn’t matter. I have a feeling that you do know who Cassie Chadwick was.”

She, who blushed so easily, turned pale. She looked at me with such desperation that, for a full minute, I wasn’t sure if she was going to cry, run away, or punch me. But she just nodded yes and looked down at her hands.

“If she hadn’t harmed so many people,” I said, “I could almost admire her cunning, not to mention her nerve. After running a number of other scams, she marries a naive doctor from Cleveland, just happens to convince him that they should visit New York at the same time a man from home is there—a man who is a high-society gossip in Cleveland. She asks that man to give her a carriage ride, and has him wait for her outside the home of Andrew Carnegie, a wealthy, confirmed bachelor. She goes into the house, comes out thirty minutes later, and—this part really interested me—trips as she’s getting into the carriage. Drops a promissory note for two million dollars—a note that appears to be signed by Andrew Carnegie, whom she blushingly claims is her father.”

She stayed silent.

“Too bad promissory notes aren’t what they used to be. Planning to borrow millions based on phony documents, and cause a bank or two to fail?”

“No.”

“I didn’t think so.” I let the silence stretch for a time, then said, “Who told you about Cassie Chadwick?”

“Aunt Lou, my great aunt. She grew up hearing stories about her. Aunt Lou claimed to ‘admire her brass’ as she put it. Aunt Lou doesn’t think women ever get a fair shake in this world.”

“Is Donna Vynes your real name?”

“My married name, yes.” She was tracing patterns on the tablecloth with one of her perfect fingers, still not making eye contact.

“So you’re really a war widow?”

The finger stopped moving. She looked up at me. “Oh yes. And my mother is dead. John, my husband, sent home all of his pay—a little over a hundred and fifty dollars a month at first. It was up to about four hundred when he was killed. Just about everything he saved for us got spent on my mother’s medical needs. But John also bought some life insurance through the service. So I had ten thousand from that.”

“That’s where the seven thousand comes from?”

“Yes.” She sighed. “There was this neighbor of Aunt Lou’s in Cleveland. Her daughter was about my age. Despite all my other faults, I’m not like Eldon, so I won’t name her, if you don’t mind. Anyway, at the end of last semester, she dropped out of school here. Looking back on it now, I think she was just really homesick.

“But what she told me was . . . well, once we got to know each other, she said the reason she left was because Eldon Naff slept with her and then told the world about it. She said she had been working as an assistant for Mr. Langworthy, or rather to someone on his staff. She said it was Mr. Langworthy who fired her, mostly based on Eldon’s gossip. I don’t know if that’s true, but I learned a lot about Mr. Langworthy from her. Including the fact that in early September, he was going on a Mediterranean cruise.

“And I couldn’t help thinking about Mr. Carnegie and Mrs. Chadwick. Especially because I never knew my dad. My mother always said my father died while she was pregnant with me, but I think she was lying. Aunt Lou all but confirmed that my parents weren’t married. So I am illegitimate, just not the child of a rich man.”

After a long silence, she said, “God, I don’t know how you did it, but I’m glad you figured it out. It’s a relief.”

 Link continuing the excerpt to XOXOAfterDark:

http://xoxoafterdark.com/2014/07/08/pocket-star-e-nights-apprehended-jan-burke/?mcd=z_140714_Burke_PSEN

Tried - coverTRIED by Jan Burke

SUMMARY: 

With a brand-new short story featuring Tyler Hawthorne from The Messenger, plus three stories from Eighteen, this is the third of six e-short story collections from New York Times bestselling suspense author Jan Burke.

 EXCERPT:

 At this hour, although two other attendants roamed another part of the cemetery, Tyler and Shade were alone in this section of the hilly grounds. Suddenly Shade stiffened. His ears pitched forward and his hackles rose. He gave a low, soft growl.

Tyler came to a halt. Shade protected him, but the dog seldom growled at living beings.

In the next moment, the air was filled with what he at first took to be bats, then saw were small birds, of a type Tyler had never seen so far inland. “Mother Carey’s chickens,” he said, using the sailors’ name for them. Storm petrels. “What are they doing here?”

The birds fluttered above him, then a half dozen dropped to the ground before Shade in a small cluster. The scent of the sea rose strongly all about him, as if someone had transported him to the deck of a ship.

Shade stared hard at them as they cheeped frantically, then the dog relaxed into a sitting position.

The other petrels flew away. No sooner had they gone than the six before him were transformed into the ghostly figures of men.

They were forlorn creatures, gray-faced and looking exactly as what they must be, drowned men. Their uniforms proclaimed two as officers, the other four as sailors, all but one of the British navy.

Shade’s demeanor told him that these ghosts—unlike some others—would be no threat to him.

“May I be of help to you?” Tyler asked.

“Captain Hawthorne?” the senior officer asked.

“I believe the rank belongs more rightly to you,” Tyler said. “I was a captain in the British army many years ago, but I sold out after Waterloo.”

“Yes, sir,” the captain said, “I understand. If I may introduce myself to you, I am Captain Redding, formerly of the Royal Navy. Lost at sea in about your—your original time, sir.”

They exchanged bows.

“You are a Messenger?” Captain Redding asked.

“Yes.”

“We are all men who drowned at sea. Many of those in the flock you called ‘Mother Carey’s chickens’ are indeed just that. We come from many nations, taken by that sea witch Mother Carey, yet death has made us all birds of a feather. Little birds tell other little birds news of those such as yourself, and speak of Shade as well.”

The dog gave a slight wag of his tail in acknowledgment.

The captain went on. “The midshipman we bring to you is an American. Hails from here in Buffalo. We approach you on his behalf.” He turned to the man. “Step forward, Midshipman Bailey, and tell the captain your story, for we’ve not much time left.”

“Aye, sir.” The midshipman gave Tyler a small bow. “Thank you, sir. If you would be so kind to visit my sister, who lies dying not far from here. In the asylum, sir. The good one. We’ve all of us in her family done her a grave injustice.” He looked down at his feet. “Many injustices.”

“When were you lost at sea?” Tyler asked gently.

“Eight years ago, sir, in ’63. In the War Between the States. Would have done more for my country if Zeb Nador hadn’t pushed me overboard in a storm.”

“Do you ask me to seek justice for you?”

“Not necessary for me, Nador’s in the county jail here and will face trial for murdering someone else. He’ll hang as well for that one as for what he did to me.”

Tyler was about to try to say something to comfort him, unsure what that might be, when one of the other men whispered, “Hurry!”

Midshipman Bailey nodded, then said, “Will you go to her, sir? Her name is Susannah. She needs you tonight. And if you’d tell her Andrew sent you to her, and that she was always the best of his sisters, and that he sees things clearer now, and hopes to one day rest at her side—”

“Hurry!” the captain ordered.

“Well, sir, I’d take it as a great kindness.”

“I would be honored to do so, Midshipman Bailey.”

“Thank you!” he said, and had no sooner whispered these words than all six men again transformed into small birds and rose from the ground. They circled in the air above him, where they were joined again by the larger flock. He had thought they would begin their long journey back to the sea, but they surprised him by surrounding him and the dog.

Quite clearly, he heard hundreds of voices whisper to him at once, “Storm’s coming!”

And they were gone.

Shade immediately headed toward the nearest gate at a brisk trot. He glanced back at Tyler in impatience. Tyler hurried to catch up.

“There is more than one asylum, you know. The closest is still under construction, which leaves Providence Lunatic Asylum and the Erie County Almshouse—”

It wasn’t hard to read the next look he received.

“I apologize. Yes, Sister Rosaline Brown’s would be the ‘good one.’ And of course you will know the way and of course you will be admitted, although large black dogs, as a rule . . .”

Shade wagged his tail.

Providence Lunatic Asylum was operated by the Sisters of Charity, who had previously established a hospital in Buffalo. They had arrived in the city just in time to deal with the early cholera epidemics and were considered heroes by many. In 1860, horrified by conditions in the Erie County Almshouse and Insane Asylum, Sister Rosaline Brown started the asylum, which attempted a more humane treatment of the insane.

The dog paused at the small building closest to the cemetery’s main gate. Tyler understood what he was meant to do. Hailing the man who was keeping watch, Tyler said, “A severe storm is coming. Please call the other men in.”

“Storm?” the man said, bewildered.

“Yes, it’s calm now, but I just saw a flock of storm petrels. Sea birds. The only reason they’d be this far inland is if a hurricane had blown them here.”

He bid the man a quick good night and wondered if he would heed the warning.

In the next moment the wind came up, and trees began to rustle and sway. Shade leaped into the gig Tyler had left tied at the gate. Tyler glanced over his shoulder and saw the watchman gather a large lantern, and soon heard him calling out to the others.

Link continuing the excerpt to XOXO After Dark:

 http://xoxoafterdark.com/2014/07/08/pocketstarenights-tried-jan-burke/?mcd=z_140714_Burke2_PSEN

Convicted - coverCONVICTED by Jan Burke

SUMMARY:

From New York Times bestselling suspense author Jan Burke comes the fourth of six e-short story collections.

Convicted is a mini-anthology containing a brand-new short story, “The Anchorwoman” featuring a young Irene Kelly, plus three stories from the highly acclaimed Eighteen print anthology: “Revised Endings, “Devotion,” and “The Muse.” Jeffery Deaver, #1New York Times bestselling author of The Kill Room, praised Eighteen as “Astonishing…wry…these stories are sure to delight.” AndNew York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman says, “A delightful collection of page-turners. At turns chilling, funny, poignant—and always insightful. With these stories, Jan Burke’s at the top of her game.”

EXCERPT:

“So at ten o’clock on Wednesday, five clowns—probably males—jumped out of a moving van parked in the alley behind your house and started singing ‘Oklahoma!’—do I have it right so far?”

“Yes.”

“Did they seem to be looking up at you, singing it to you?”

She hesitated, then said, “I’m not sure. They glanced in my direction every now and then, but they didn’t stand still and serenade me. They moved around, danced, and did high kicks and cartwheels.”

“Then what happened?”

“Nothing.”

“Nothing?”

“They climbed back into the van and drove off.”

“Were they all in the cab, or were some riding in the back?”

“Two in the back.”

Illegal and dangerous.

“Did you see anything in the van itself? Furniture?”

“I didn’t get a good look at the back. The angle was wrong.”

I looked at my notes. What hadn’t I asked?

“What about the van itself—Bekins? Allied? North American?—what moving company?”

She was shaking her head before I finished. “Not a moving company. It was a rented van. Las Piernas Rentals.”

“Well—that’s a lucky break.”

“Why?”

“Local rental company with three locations, all within town. If it had been one of the nationals, the truck could have come from anywhere. License-plate number?”

“No, again, I couldn’t see it from that angle.”

“How big was the van?”

“Big. I don’t know.”

I tried to come up with vehicles to compare it with, which didn’t work with her, but when I got her to say how much of the Mickelsons’ house the van had blocked, I had a reasonable idea. Another idea struck me.

“Did you see a number on it? Most rental companies paint numbers on their trucks, to keep track of which ones they’re renting, I suppose.”

“I looked for one, but it had a big piece of paper taped over it—like butcher paper, maybe?”

I hesitated, telling myself that I needed to separate latenineteenth- century fiction from the present problem. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get it out of my mind.

“Cokie, are there any banks or businesses on the other side of the alley?”

“There’s a row of homes, that’s all.”

“Anybody doing any kind of business out of a house that you know of?”

“No.”

“I mean any kind of business. Any pot growers? Drug dealers?”

“No! We did have a problem when Auggie and Andrea Sands lived at the end of the cul-de-sac, but their mom kicked them out. That was about three years ago.”

“She kicked them out for selling drugs?” Lydia asked.

We had known the Sands twins in high school. Always in trouble.

“Kicked Auggie out for selling drugs, and Andrea for banging her boyfriend in the living room. Their mom came home early with a friend from work. Guess that was the last straw.”

“How did their mom find out that Auggie was dealing?”

“One of the neighbors told her.”

“You?”

“No. I didn’t want to mess with those people.”

“Do Andrea and Auggie know you weren’t the one?”

She frowned. “They should. They have no reason to think I would tell on them.”

I exchanged a glance with Lydia and moved on.

“Anyone in the neighborhood angry with you?”

“You think singing clowns is a sign of aggression?”

“A possibility, anyway.”

She smiled. “I’m so glad you see it that way. My parents think it was something fun, as if I have a secret admirer. But it doesn’t feel that way to me. It seemed to me that someone wanted . . . well, to ridicule me.”

I bent my head over my notes and hoped my hair hid my blush. I certainly felt ashamed of my meaner thoughts about her.

“It seems crazy to think that,” she went on, “but . . . it didn’t make me happy, it made me feel as if I had been targeted, and someone went to a lot of trouble to do it. I’m a little scared by that. But I can’t think of anyone who would feel that mad at me. I get along with my neighbors. I’m one of the last young people still living on our street, and I try to help my older neighbors. I visit them. I run errands for them.”

A passage in “The Red-Headed League” came to mind:

“As a rule,” said Holmes, “the more bizarre a thing is the less mysterious

it proves to be. It is your commonplace, featureless crimes which are

really puzzling, just as a commonplace face is the most difficult to

identify.”

Easy for him to say. But was there some commonplace crime hiding beneath all that clown makeup?

“Cokie, what would you normally be doing on a Wednesday morning at about that time?”

“Normally, I’d be playing canasta with the widows.”

“I hate to admit it, but I don’t understand.”

“You know, the card game.”

“Yes, I even know how to play it. Who are the widows?”

“Oh. Three of my neighbors. One day Mrs. Redmond—she’s across the street and one house down—mentioned to me how much she loved the canasta parties that used to be held on the

street. I talked to a couple of people about it, and long story short, we started playing canasta at her house on Wednesday mornings.”

“Who are the other players?”

“Just two, Mrs. Harding and Mrs. Lumfort.”

“Who knows that you do this?”

“Everyone on our street.”

“So because of the clowns, you arrived late?”

“No, we didn’t have a game that day. Mrs. Harding was . . . out of town. Mrs. Lumfort had a doctor’s appointment. Mrs. Redmond’s beautician had asked her to move her hair appointment to that morning, so because it was just going to be the two of us, she asked me if I’d mind just canceling. I told her it wasn’t a problem.”

“You hesitated about Mrs. Harding. What was going on with her?”

“Nothing. She went to a lawyer’s appointment with one of her granddaughters. Kayla just moved in with her.”

That name was vaguely familiar. Why did I know it?

“Kayla Harding?” Lydia asked. “My brother Gio used to date her.”

Gio was five years older than Lydia, and the list of girls he dated in high school was only slightly shorter than the list of female students in his graduating class. The fact that he hadn’t been burned in effigy years ago spoke to his abundant charm. Lydia claimed he genuinely cared about all of them, which seemed unlikely.

“Kayla ended up in prison, didn’t she?” Lydia went on. “Stole a car.”

“Yes,” Cokie said, “but she’s been out for a couple of weeks now.”

“Friend of yours?” I asked.

“No. I know her sister better than I know her.”

“Mindy,” Lydia said. “She’s our age.”

“Yes. I’m not close friends with Mindy, either. I just see her when she visits her grandmother.”

“Kind of a Goody-Two-Shoes, isn’t she?” I said.

“That can happen when you’re trying to show the world you aren’t like your troublemaking sister, right?” Lydia said.

Cokie and I shrugged.

“Think of your sister, Barbara,” Lydia said to me.

“I’d rather not,” I said.

“Mindy is Kayla’s half sister,” the ever-informative Cokie said. “Their father is on his third marriage. Widowed once, divorced once, and the third seems to be the charm. So Mindy just claims that she’s ‘only’ a half sister when she gets annoyed at Kayla.”

“Told you she was a bitch,” I said.

“Not exactly,” Lydia said.

“Yeah, well . . .” I glanced at my watch. “We’ve got a couple of hours to try to find the Las Piernas Rentals location that rented out the van.”

I used the Yellow Pages in the phone book to get the three addresses and phone numbers of the rental places, then opened theThomas Guide, a book of detailed maps of Los Angeles County that only a fool would try to live without. A lost fool.

Cokie readily agreed to come along with me, but Lydia, thinking of the discomfort associated with being the third person in a Karmann Ghia, opted out.

Link continuing the excerpt to XOXO After Dark:

http://xoxoafterdark.com/2014/07/08/pocket-star-e-nights-convicted-jan-burke/?mcd=z_140714_Burke3_PSEN


THE QUEEN OF THE TEARLING by Erika Johansen

July 13, 2014

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A #1 Indie Next Pick and LibraryReads Selection

 Book 1

Kelsea Raleigh Glynn has been living in anonymity for nineteen years. She is the heir to the Tearling monarchy and keeping her safe until she can claim her throne has been of the utmost importance. In that time Kelsea has been trained for her role as queen, but nothing can truly prepare her for the realities of Tearling.

Kelsea never knew her mother but couldn’t imagine the state in which she left the kingdom at the time of her death. One of her few accomplishments was a treaty with the nearby kingdom of Mortmesne. And while the treaty protected Tearling as a whole from the Red Queen’s wrath, the terms of the treaty were unimaginably horrific. What’s more, Kelsea’s uncle has allowed corruption to seep into every corner of the kingdom while enjoying a base and luxurious existence as ruler in her stead, a position he has no intention of giving up to the rightful queen.

I loved this debut! What at first seems like a medieval based fantasy quickly becomes something much more unique. The world the Tearling exists in is much like our own but was settled during an event called the Crossing when travelers from America, England, and Europe left their land behind to create a new life for themselves.

The specifics of the Crossing are still to be revealed and while I find this part of the tale incredibly intriguing, it is just one piece of what I thought was pretty fantastic world building all around.

The Queen of the Tearling is the first installment in a new series and already set to become a movie. (Rumor has it Emma Watson has been tapped to star.)

7/14 Becky Lejeune

THE QUEEN OF THE TEARLING by Erika Johansen. Harper (July 8, 2014). ISBN 978-0062290366. 448p.


THE MOUNTAIN PLACE OF KNOWLEDGE by Marshall Chamberlain

July 12, 2014

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The Ancestor Series of Adventure-thrillers, Book 1

I recently read the second book in this series and was fascinated by the theme, the descriptions and the plot.  I, therefore, accepted this book from the publisher and was as fascinated as with the other.  The theme is actually one that should be Science Fiction, which it incorporates very well with logical action and motives.

The opening depicts a young Mayan girl living in what is now Belize about 1100 years ago coming upon a cache within a tree when fleeing a Jaguar hunting her.  She climbs the tree finding a control panel which in desperation she operates and enters a passage which opens into a chamber containing marvels unknown to the world.  She uses the tools found that she masters and becomes a priestess to her people, and sets up a diary of her actions and discoveries.

Shifting to present day, the diary is translated and gives enough information to direct a team of UN investigators to go to the area and attempt to open the chamber.  The problems encountered by the team consisting of Mary Ellen Rollins and Dr John Morgan are logical and don’t depend on any super human abilities of the two.  They find a way into the chamber discovering marvels placed there by aliens that visited the earth about 180,000 years ago.  Interludes in the story indicate that these aliens are still monitoring our planet, and it is unclear if they are benevolent or enemies.

Representatives from China become aware of the tree and the material within it. They decide that they must be the ones to acquire it, and attempt to steal it using advanced cloaking technology and weapons.

The book is engrossing, a fast read and is notable in that it uses “normal” situations stretched only with materials that are currently being developed in the world as well as the devices left by the aliens.

I will certainly read the other books in the series, and recommend this as an interesting and well written book.

7/14 Paul Lane

THE MOUNTAIN PLACE OF KNOWLEDGE by Marshall Chamberlain. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform; 2 edition (November 26, 2013). ISBN 978-1493554355. 458p.


Guest Blogger: Glenn Cooper

July 11, 2014

I am delighted to introduce today’s guest blogger, author Glenn Cooper!

About My Books
by Glenn Cooper

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A few years ago Publisher’s Weekly Magazine ran a piece on me titled, Glenn Cooper: An American Writer Only Europeans Can Love? While the article was factually correct, the title stung a bit (though I was glad they included a question mark). The gist of it was that while my debut and first few thrillers were big bestsellers throughout Europe, they hardly registered on the Richter scale in the US. European authors are used to this state of affairs and grumble about the difficulty breaking into the American market, but hey—I was born in New York City, I grew up in White Plains, I went to school in Boston, I live in New Hampshire (okay, I’m married to a Brit). What gives?

Fast forward to today. If the article were written now, what title would the magazine use? Let me think…the same one. I’ve had seven thrillers published and all of them have been on the top-ten bestseller lists throughout Europe and I can’t get arrested in this country. Again I ask, what gives?

In fact, it’s the most-asked question I get when I’m on tour in Europe—why is it that your books are big here and not at home? I have a number of stock answers: Most of my books are based in Europe and are populated by European characters. I write about historical and religious themes that resonate with European readers. Europeans are intelligent and good-looking and their children are all above average. But the truth is, I’m not really sure. However, I suspect the real reason lies with the way I’ve been published here vs. abroad.

Most of my European publishers have chosen, right from the start, to publish my books in hard cover. Now, I’ve got nothing against trade paperbacks or mass market paperbacks, or e-books, or any books. But there’s something solid about a good old hard cover book. It got all that built-in tradition, gravitas. And most importantly, hard backs get the attention of a species now almost as rare as the ivory-billed woodpecker, the newspaper book reviewer. So, when my first book, Library of the Dead, came out in Italy, the esteemed literary critic, Antonio D’Orrico who writes for the newspaper, Corriere della Sera picked it up and, gulp, liked it, I mean he really liked it. Here’s what he said, and I quote:  Library of the Dead is “one of the best-constructed novels I’ve read in my over-14-years as a book critic.” Guess what? The next week the book was number three on the bestseller lists.

Meanwhile. Back at the ranch, the same book was published as a mass market paperback with I title I hated but couldn’t change:The Secret of the Seventh Son. A major publisher was behind it, but without publicity or reviews it faded fast. I might add that in the stone-age era of 2009 there weren’t many bloggers so there wasn’t much chance for me to get out there myself and pitch.

So here we are in 2014 and here are my stats: I’ve had over 6 million books sold worldwide, the vast majority outside the United States.

Rather than spend all my time moaning about how miserably my books have been published in America I’ve decided to join the revolution and self-publish in the States through my own imprint, Lascaux Media. Now the only one I’ll be able to moan about is myself, which will serve me right. I’ve got four thrillers which haven’t been published yet in the US and I’ll be releasing them over the coming year, one every three months, in e-book and trade paperback formats. (I know, I know, I was just singing the praise of hard backs, but in the self-publishing world, they don’t make sense economically).

So, as I introduce myself anew to US readers, I’d like to say a few words about my background, the kinds of books I write and why I write them.

I have a degree from Harvard in archaeology and decided at the last minute, after taking the bare-minimum pre-med requirements, to go into medicine. I graduated from Tufts Medical School then trained in Internal Medicine at the Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital and in Infectious Diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital. After practicing medicine for a while and doing some tropical medicine in Thailand and Haiti I went into medical research. For almost twenty years I was the Chairman and CEO of a successful biotech company in Massachusetts. All the while I had a rather unremarkable sideline of writing unproduced screenplays before trying my hand at novels.

So, you might think that my books were medically-themed thrillers but you’d be wrong. I always found that subject matter too much like my day job and hence too much like work. However, I do like thrillers very much, particularly high-minded ones by my personal faves like John Le Carré, Michael Crichton, Graham Greene, and Umberto Eco. I also enjoy thinking and writing about philosophical and religious ideas and my books tackle a number of juicy topics. The trilogy which has already been published in the US, Library of the Dead, Book of Souls, and Keepers of the Library is about fate and predestination. My first US self-published title, The Tenth Chamber, is about the possibilities of longevity.The Devil Will Come, is an exploration on the nature of evil. Near Death is about near death experiences and the afterlife. The Resurrection Maker is about the intersection of science and faith.

Conspiracy is a common thread running through my books, particularly the notion of a past event, profound in nature, that ripples through time to impact a modern protagonist. I’m not the first writer to employ shifting time frames, but I’ve tried to make the technique very much my own and tell my stories by interlacing two or more historical time frames with the present to give an immediacy to the past. So in The Tenth Chamber, a modern story based in France and England intertwines with stories of medieval and prehistorical intrigue. The world as we know it today stands on the shoulders of the past and my books try to pay homage to that.

In a year I’m going to do a post-mortem on my initial self-publishing experience. I’d very much like the title of a future article on my books to be, Glenn Cooper: An American Writer Who Finally Came Home.

About The Tenth Chamber

From the thriller writer, Glenn Cooper, whose books have sold six million copies and have been top-ten bestsellers, comes a novel which draws on the author’s background in medicine and archaeology to create a riveting page-turner.

Abbey of Ruac, rural France – A medieval script is discovered hidden behind an antique bookcase. Badly damaged, it is sent to Paris for restoration, and there literary historian Hugo Pineau begins to read the startling fourteenth-century text. Within its pages lies a fanciful tale of a painted cave and the secrets it contains – and a rudimentary map showing its position close to the abbey. Intrigued, Hugo enlists the help of archaeologist Luc Simard and the two men go exploring.

Glenn Cooper PhotoWhen they discover a vast network of prehistoric caves, buried deep within the cliffs, they realize that they’ve stumbled across something extraordinary. And at the very core of the labyrinth lies the most astonishing chamber of all, just as the manuscript chronicled. Aware of the significance of their discovery, they set up camp with a team of experts, determined to bring their find to the world. But as they begin to unlock the ancient secrets the cavern holds, they find themselves at the centre of a dangerous game. One ‘accidental’ death leads to another. And it seems that someone will stop at nothing to protect the enigma of the tenth chamber.

About the author:

Glenn Cooper has a degree in archaeology from Harvard and practiced medicine as an infectious diseases specialist. He was the CEO of a biotechnology company for almost twenty years, has written numerous screenplays and has produced three independent feature films. His novels have sold six million copies in thirty-one languages. He lives in Gilford, New Hampshire.

Links:

http://www.glenncooperbooks.com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenn_Cooper
https://www.facebook.com/GlennCooperUSA
https://twitter.com/GlennCooper
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/2902232.Glenn_Cooper
http://instagram.com/glenn_cooper


HOW TO LOSE A DUKE IN TEN DAYS by Laura Lee Guhrke

July 10, 2014

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Laura Lee Guhrke is the latest author in my quest for good romance writers, but I haven’t decided whether or not to continue reading her. Guess it will depend on what the next book is about.

This book had an interesting premise; an American heiress engages in a marriage of convenience to an English Duke. Edie’s loaded, but her reputation has been besmirched back in New York, so if she doesn’t marry in England she’ll have to go home a spinster. Stuart, the Duke of Margave, has inherited his title and his family’s enormous debt. Properties are going to have to be sold unless he can marry money.

These two come together with the understanding that this is strictly a business proposition. Edie willingly offers to pay off the debt and take care of the family and their property – all she asks in return is that Stuart leave England, go back to Africa and never return.

They agree and he goes off, until he is mauled by a lion and almost loses his life. He realizes then that there is more to life than adventure and he returns home. Edie is not happy to see him, to say the least, but women have no rights to speak of in Victorian England, so she makes him a deal; if he can get her to kiss him in 10 days, than he can stay. He has a few demands of his own, including that she spends at least 2 hours a day in his company, and take meals with him.

This is all well and good, but it turns out her baggage from New York is quite a bit heavier than her husband anticipated. Not all of this story rang true for me, especially the sex scene and the revenge story, which is the downside here. I did like seeing a strong, smart woman running this massive estate, and a Duke who was more concerned with his wife than with convention. I would think this would be good for fans of Downton Abbey.

7/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

HOW TO LOSE A DUKE IN TEN DAYS by Laura Lee Guhrke. Avon (April 29, 2014). ISBN 978-0062118196. 384p.


CRIME ALWAYS PAYS by Declan Burke

July 9, 2014

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Madge’s husband Frank has her kidnapped in hopes of collecting on an insurance policy, but she finds out, shoots him in the knees, and takes off with the $200,000. She plans on taking a Greek cruise with her best friend Karen, but Karen’s crazy one-eyed wolf-dog bites the ear off a man, so she takes the dog on the lam. Several characters, including Madge’s ex-husband, the kidnapper, a cop on suspension, a narcoleptic driver and more are following the money from Ireland to Greece.

This is screwball comedy at its most complicated, with super short chapters told from the viewpoints of myriad characters. These characters would be right at home in a comic book, but none are very sympathetic or believable, so it’s hard to find one to root for. The book is dialogue heavy, which helps move it along at a frantic pace. It’s not dark enough to be considered noir, but should appeal to Tim Dorsey fans and readers who like comic capers.

This is the sequel to The Big O and picks up right where that book left off, so it’s probably better to start there.

Copyright ©2014 Booklist, a division of the American Library Association.

7/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

CRIME ALWAYS PAYS by Declan Burke. Severn House Publishers; Sew edition (July 1, 2014). ISBN 978-0727883759. 256p.


THE SWEET SPOT by Stephanie Evanovich

July 8, 2014

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This is the sequel to Big Girl Panties, which I really enjoyed. In the grand tradition of the romance genre, the sequel doesn’t follow the happily ever after of the first book, but rather is the back story of two of the minor but definitely interesting characters in that book. So really it is more of a prequel, with the possible setup of two more characters spinning off into their own book as well.

Amanda owns a very successful suburban restaurant. She comes from a politically influential and wealthy family, and her parents are very supportive. When baseball superstar Chase Walker’s nasty, supercilious agent makes a dinner reservation, she is prepared to hate Chase on sight. Instead, he falls for her and she finds him intriguing, but won’t admit to it.

He becomes a regular at the restaurant, always kind to his fans, and hanging around every night just watching Amanda. He finagles a meeting with her parents, who like him. And after a few weeks, her staff finally convinces her to give him a chance.

Their relationship sizzles from the first date, but Chase has a secret he is hesitant to reveal. He likes spanking women, but Amanda never gives him any indication that she is also into it and he finds himself in a dilemma until the night she mouths off at him. One thing leads to another, and she finds that she does like it but is afraid to admit it to herself.

This is another great romance from Evanovich, with a little humor and a lot of kinky sex. Fans of the 50 Shades of Gray trilogy should enjoy this – the writing is far superior.

7/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE SWEET SPOT by Stephanie Evanovich. William Morrow (July 8, 2014). ISBN 978-0062234810. 272p.


THE TRUTH IS A CAVE IN THE BLACK MOUNTAINS by Neil Gaiman

July 7, 2014

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A Tale of Travel and Darkness with Pictures of All Kinds

Illustrated by Eddie Campbell

It is said that on the Misty Isle there is a cave. Within this cave lies a fortune in gold ready for the taking. Some say this gold is cursed but others will not believe it. Calum MacInnes has been hired to guide a small man to the cave. But this man hasn’t been entirely truthful about what he seeks on his journey. For it is not gold the man wishes to come away with, but something else entirely.

This latest from Gaiman is actually an illustrated hardcover edition of a short story that previously appeared in the 2010 collection, Stories, edited by Neil Gaiman and Al Sarrantonio. The tale ultimately won both the Locus and Shirley Jackson awards for Best Novelette. That same year, Gaiman read the story aloud in a performance at the Sydney Opera House, accompanied by a string quartet and projected paintings by Eddie Campbell.

Since then, the short has been read aloud in a second performance and recorded on audio as well (and is offered in an enhanced multimedia edition read by Gaiman and featuring the original score).

The story is, per Gaiman’s style, a fairy tale of sorts for adults. It’s a dark tale of vengeance and secrets. While the Stories collection is one I highly recommend for short fiction fans, The Truth Is a Cave in the Black Mountains is fabulous on its own in this new edition. Eddie Campbell’s art is a wonderful complement to the tale, making this a must have for any Neil Gaiman fan’s collection.

7/14 Becky Lejeune

THE TRUTH IS A CAVE IN THE BLACK MOUNTAINS by Neil Gaiman. William Morrow; Ill edition (June 17, 2014). ISBN 978-0062282149. 80p.


HURRICANE FEVER by Tobias S. Buckell

July 6, 2014

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Buckell was raised in the Caribbean before he returned to the U.S. His novel provides an insight into the politics and problems of the islands that are currently mainly tourist areas. It is set a little into the future and brings the islands into a setting that has made them economically much different than they are today.

They have improved their infrastructures due to the finding and selling of large oil deposits in their offshore waters. Most important, an agency termed the Caribbean Intelligence Agency was formed by a consortium of the islands’ governments, trained by the CIA and British MI6. It consists of highly trained and capable agents fighting the enemies of the Caribbean.

Prudence (Roo) Jones was an agent of the Caribbean group until he built himself a personal fortune,retired and decided to dedicate his life to beach combing and traveling on his boat. Events that occurred prior to this novel’s opening made him the caretaker for his orphaned teenaged nephew. He is immersed in making sure that the boy goes to school and takes an interest in making sure that his nephew grows up to be a good citizen and adult.

A message is received from a former colleague marked, “You will get this if I am dead.” Roo had worked with that man while both were agents of the Caribbean Intelligence Agency and were firm friends. Roo goes after the package indicated in the message in the interest of following through on their friendship.

Shortly after the message arrives, a beautiful young lady knocks on his door announcing that she is his now deceased friend’s sister. While Roo knew that there was no sister he goes along with her to try and determine what she is after.

Buckell creates an atmosphere of constant action both with bad guys coming out, and several hurricanes starting up in a Caribbean whose weather patterns have greatly changed. The book retains the reader’s undivided attention and is definitely an all nighter as the various blanks are filled in including the young lady’s intentions and definitely setting up the next book in this series. Excellent read.

6/14 Paul Lane

HURRICANE FEVER by Tobias S. Buckell. Tor Books; First Edition edition (July 1, 2014). ISBN 978-0765319227. 272p.


DEADLY CURIOSITIES by Gail Z. Martin

July 5, 2014

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Charleston’s Trifles & Follies may look like your average antique shop, but in reality it’s so much more. Cassidy Kincaide is just the latest descendant to inherit the shop. They cater to the many antique hounds and interior decorators of the area but their prime focus is handling magical and supernatural items.

Cassidy has the ability to experience an item’s past, something that frequently opens her up to strange and even dangerous visions. But it seems Charleston has lately had an influx of items causing even the most psychically challenged locals to see and experience things that are beyond ordinary.

It soon becomes clear that there’s something strange at work in the historic city. It also seems the strange happenings may be connected to a recent spate of murders and could possibly trace back to the deaths of an underwater salvage team just six months ago. Cassidy and her partners, Sorren (a centuries-old vampire who helped start Trifles & Follies) and Teag (a man gifted with spell weaving) know they’re up against something big but just how big – and how dangerous – is the real question at hand.

Gail Z. Martin has made a name for herself with her epic fantasy series but now she turns an eye to urban fantasy as well. In actuality, the Deadly Curiosities series began with a number of short stories penned by the author. There are a few references to those adventures in the novel but no need to have read the shorts prior to Deadly Curiosities.

Charleston makes for the perfect setting here. The author plays off the city’s history and landmarks but has also cleverly invented people, places, and events unique to the story.

The premise of the series is quite fun but there are a few rocky moments in this first installment. Nonetheless, this is a series that I will be looking forward to more of in the future.

7/14 Becky Lejeune

DEADLY CURIOSITIES by Gail Z. Martin. Solaris (June 24, 2014). ISBN 978-1781082331. 464p.