Guest Author: Lisa Scottoline

April 8, 2014

I am delighted to offer this Q&A with Lisa Scottoline as her new book arrives in stores. And read through to the end to find out how you can win your own copy!

About KEEP QUIET–

Jake Whitmore has been trying to mend an ongoing rift with his sixteen year old son, Ryan.  Just as they’re enjoying a rare bonding moment, when he’s not competing with the multitude of distractions that vie for Ryan’s attention, disaster strikes.  A tragic car accident with Ryan at the wheel threatens to derail not only Ryan’s chances at college, but his entire future.  Jake makes a split-second decision that saves his son from formal punishment, but plunges them both into a world of guilt, lies, and secrecy.

Making matters even worse, Jake’s wife Pam is up for a federal judgeship, with all the attendant background checks and interviews with the FBI.  Ryan is devastated by the accident, and Jake fears he may not hold up under the scrutiny.  Just when Jake thinks he has everything under control, Scottoline throws yet another curve ball their way, pushing them towards their limits.

Powerful and gut-wrenching, KEEP QUIET is the tale of the unraveling—and the ultimate redemption—of a family.

keep quiet

1. Where did the idea for Keep Quiet come from?

The idea for this novel was a classic what-if, which occurred to me as I was driving down a street similar to the one in the book, which is near my house. Every time I round the curve of this particular street, which has a dangerous blind curve, I think, what if somebody was here and I hit them? What if my kid were driving and my kid hit them? What would I do? What should I do? What I love about this novel is that it concerns a decision that a parent could make at any time, which raises a predicament that they never would have anticipated.

2. There is a big theme of choices throughout the book, why did you feel it was important to choose to take on such an moral topic of right & wrong?

I love to write about choices, because I feel that every day life contains so many of them, which turned out to be no-win. This novel’s a perfect example of that, because Jake has to make an emergency decision and he is damned if he doing damned if he doesn’t. The choice he makes can be looked at in so many ways, from a moral, legal, or ethical point of view, and that’s what makes this book and so many of my standalones perfect for book clubs, because those are the choices and topics that engender the most discussion and there are no right answers.

3. Which character do you relate to the most in this book? Why?

I relate to all of the characters, and I think every novelist has to be able to channel each of the characters to make their position believable. That is particularly true in this novel, because Jake’s position is diametrically opposed to his wife’s position. The son has a different perspective, as well. This novel is really the anatomy of a decision and its aftereffects, in addition to being a family story and a crime thriller.

4. Were there aspects of the story that were inspired by real news stories or personal stories?

Except for the experience above, no. I never base any of my novels on news stories were actual facts, because I think that is so derivative, and like to be original.

5. Do you have any special rituals or traditions when you begin writing a new novel?

I have tons of rituals most of which unfortunately concern food, which is why am on a perpetual diet areas I’m always nibbling on something while I write, when there is something supposedly good for me like pistachios and almonds, where the stuff I really love, like M&Ms. I must have Dunkin’ Donuts coffee every day, extra large, and I keep the TV on all day in my office, so I have a steady stream of Hoda & Kathy Lee, the View, the Chew, Dr. Oz, Queen Latifah, and my favorite of all time, Dr. Phil.

As far as writing rituals per se, I write 2000 words a day, and I think this is really important to stick to. I like it because it gives me a goal every day, but the best thing about it is that also gives me a limit. When I hit 2000 words I get to stop working, ride a pony, or walk the dogs. Writers, like everybody else, need a way to turn work off and for some reason, I need help to give myself permission to do that, so the word count really works. I am writing two novels in year, and the 3rd book every year, which is a memoir I write with my daughter Francesa Serritella, and I have to be very disciplined to keep up that pace. But it’s important to say that I don’t regard this as a bad thing, or onerous in the least. On the contrary, I’m living my life’s dream. I’ve been writing whatever stories both fictional and nonfiction, I want to tell for the past 20 some years, and all of them are bestsellers. How lucky am I?

6. What advice do you have for other writers?

I have a lot of advice for writers, like any blowhard, and much of it is on my website in little videos that I made. But the bottom line is that they should just do it. I stole that from Nike and it’s really true. I find that there is a behavioral way to finish a novel and that begins with routine, a word count, and a set time that you work. Even if you still work a day job, as I did for several years when I was 1st published, a new writer needs to set time aside each day to write, even if it’s only 15 min.

But my real advice is softer and gentler, and it has to do with not getting in your way own way. I would tell new writers to just give it a shot and not doubt themselves, particularly women. There are no right answers in writing, as in life, and you really just have to give it a go and keep going, and not stop until you finish the novel and they publish it. Take time to nurture yourself and your dreams. I believe they really can come true, because that is the story of my life.

About the author:

lisa scottoline 0314Lisa Scottoline is a 20 time New York Times best-selling and an Edgar award-winning author with over 20 novels (in 20 years) under her belt, including her latest novel ACCUSED. Her stories have been translated into 25 different languages and her wildly popular, weekly non-fiction column, “Chick Wit,” appears in The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Over the years Lisa’s books have solidly landed on all the major bestseller lists including The New York Times, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, Publisher’s Weekly, Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times. Lisa has over 30 million copies of her books in print and is published in over 35 countries. Her book LOOK AGAIN was named “One of the Best Novels of the Year” by The Washington Post and honored as one of a select group of books chosen to be part of World Book Night 2013. It has also been optioned for a film adaptation.

Lisa, a Philadelphia native, graduated magna cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania, earned a B.A. in English in just three years and received a Juris Doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania Law School cum laude. Lisa worked as a trial attorney until the birth of her daughter, Francesca Serritella. She left the firm to raise Francesca and began a part-time career writing legal fiction. Francesca is now an honors graduate of Harvard, author and columnist. Lisa, as a single parent, considers her greatest achievement raising Francesca and now they co-write the “Chick Wit” column for The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Through her writing, Lisa’s contributions have been recognized by organizations throughout the country. Lisa is the recipient of the Fun Fearless Fiction Award by Cosmopolitan Magazine, was named a PW Innovator by Publisher’s Weekly and was honored with AudioFile’s Earphones Award.

Lisa has served as President of Mystery Writers of America and has taught a course she developed, “Justice and Fiction” at The University of Pennsylvania Law School, her alma mater for which she one an award for Best Adjunct Professor as voted on by the students.

Lisa believes in writing what you know and puts so much of herself into her books. As evidenced in the bond of sisterhood among her characters, family is profoundly important to Scottoline, she has stated, “I come from a very loving, close-knit Italian family.” Lisa says she need not look past her own family, “The Flying Scottolines” for inspiration. In her nonfiction books and columns, Lisa reflects in an honest and humorous way what it is like to be a middle-aged woman maneuvering through life and her relationships with her family (Daughter Francesca, Brother Frank, and her hilarious, opinionated, octogenarian, Italian, Mother Mary), men, and food.

Lisa is an incredibly generous person, (she opens her home to a fully inclusive book club party every year), an engaging and entertaining speaker, a die-hard Eagles fan and a good cook. Her iPod has everything from U2 to Sinatra to 50 Cent, she is proud to be a Philadelphian and American and nothing makes her happier than spending time with her daughter. She lives in the Philadelphia area with her array of disobedient pets, loves the coziness of her farmhouse and wouldn’t have her life any other way.

If you’d like to win a copy of KEEP QUIET –

Send an email to contest@gmail.com with “KEEP QUIET” as the subject. You must include your snail mail address in your email.

All entries must be received by April 23, 2014. One (1) name will be drawn from all qualified entries and notified via email. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age in the United States only. One entry per email address. Subscribers to the monthly newsletter earn an extra entry into every contest. Follow this blog to earn another entry into every contest. Winners may win only one time per year (365 days) for contests with prizes of more than one book. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone.


A MEASURE OF BLOOD by Kathleen George

April 7, 2014

Maggie Brown knew her affair with the much younger Nadal Brown was a mistake, and she broke it off but several years later she runs into him, and he is convinced her son Matt is his son.

That mistake is at the heart of this tragedy; Maggie is murdered, her son calls the police and he is moved into the foster care system. But Detective Richard Christie has a better idea; friends of his have been trying to adopt and he thinks the boy would be a good fit for them. The agency agrees, and the confused young boy finds himself in a new home. But Nadal is determined to get his son, and while Christie is working his department hard to find the killer, he also finds the boy’s biological father – a sperm donor.

There are a lot of players here but the story moves along rapidly, and while the child in jeopardy situation is a familiar one, the suspense keeps building as the fate of the boy hangs in the balance. Should appeal to fans of Mary Higgins Clark and Kate White.

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

2/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

A MEASURE OF BLOOD by Kathleen George. MysteriousPress.com/Open Road (January 14, 2014). ISBN 978-1480445604. 400p.


FIRST MURDER IN ADVENT by Sharon Wildwind

April 6, 2014

The protagonists, Elizabeth Pepperhawk and Avivah Rosen, are women who have served in Vietnam, as Wildwind herself did.

In Wildwind’s second mystery, First Murder in Advent (set in 1972), Army nurse Pepperhawk is between assignments when she receives a call from Benny Kirkpatrick, ex-Special Forces first sergeant. Their friend Avivah is in trouble, and with Benny and Avivah’s friend, has sought refuge in a convent in the mountains of North Carolina.

When Pepper goes to help, she finds military intelligence officer Darby Baxter, her on-again, off-again love interest, with three other men. What follows are days without electricity in a mostly empty convent, in a snowstorm.

Avivah, Pepper, Darby and Benny, along with a few nuns and some members of a paramilitary think tank, struggle to survive the cold amidst murder, secret passageways and lost wills–delicious reading with tangling sub-plots. Too bad this series didn’t get more attention as the stories are quite good.

4/14 Jack Quick

FIRST MURDER IN ADVENT by Sharon Wildwind. Five Star (ME) (October 2006). ISBN 978-1594145278. 323p.


THE DISAPPEARED by Kristina Ohlsson

April 5, 2014

This is the follow up to Silenced and the third entry of the terrific Frederika Bergman crime series by Swedish bestselling author Kristina Ohlsson.

Detective Alex Rechte remembers well the case he had of a missing girl a couple of years earlier, so when a dismembered young woman’s body is found, he realizes right away who it is. As the site is excavated, another body is unearthed; this one a man that has been buried for a much longer time, decades in fact, and then another body is unearthed.

Investigative Analyst Fredrika Bergman is assigned the task of looking into the young woman’s life and finds that she has been researching a children’s author, Thea Aldrin, who was convicted of murdering her partner and suspected of foul play with her missing teenage son. Aldrin seems to have some sort of association to all of the bodies, but she is mute and cannot help. Bergman disturbingly also finds her own partner’s name among the young woman’s effects, but things have been strained between them so she is reluctant to pursue it.

Rechte is a recent widow, and work is his salvation as he becomes obsessed with the case. The third member of the team, Detective Peter Rydh, recently reconciled with his wife, and has her support as he delves into the murders that threaten to consume them all. This is a complicated yet fast moving story, and the detectives all find themselves with personal connections to the case that eventually involve an internal investigation.

Ohlsson excels at creating multi-layered stories with three dimensional, substantive characters, and she does it brilliantly here; the intertwining storylines culminate with a shocking ending. Scandinavian crime fiction fans should be enthralled.

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

4/14 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE DISAPPEARED by Kristina Ohlsson. Atria/Emily Bestler Books (March 4, 2014). ISBN 978-1476734002. 416p.


Guest Blogger: M.J. Rose

April 4, 2014

collector of dying breathsI am delighted to offer this Q&A with M.J. Rose for you to read. Her latest book, THE COLLECTOR OF DYING BREATHS comes out April 8th.

Q & A with M.J. Rose, International Bestselling Author of “The Collector of Dying Breaths:”

1. What attracted you to France and to researching the world and history of French perfumes which are a focus in your new book, “The Collector of Dying Breaths” and also in your novels, “The Book of Lost Fragrances and Seduction?”

When I worked in Mad Men land I had the opportunity to work a new  fragrance from the very first days of naming it through to full up TV commercials we shot in Hong Kong and edited at the Lucas Ranch. It was a 40 million dollar launch that culminated with the spots running on the Oscars. During all that, I became intrigued and besotted with everything about the 8th art, as fragrance is called, and it’s a passion that’s never left. But I didn’t know about the history of fragrance before and found it fascinating. As for France – my great grandmother was French and my heritage has always been important to me. Besides, as Audrey Hepburn says “Paris is always a good idea,” and I completely agree.

2. Since scent has been called the most powerful memory trigger, how do fragrances tie in to your books?

I am fascinated with how the past influences the present. From a psychological point of view, a historical, and even mystical one.  So since the memory center of the brain sits next to the olfactory center of the brain, scent stimulates memories of the past as nothing else can. From there it was just a jump to thinking scent might stimulate even older memories… past life memories.

3. Jac L’Etoile, your main character takes “trips” into the past that are triggered by scents—which makes sense for her character since she was trained during childhood in formulating perfumes. Did you find accounts of people who had similar olfactory experiences or did your imagination produce this persuasive story telling device?

Throughout history shamans and mystics have burned hallucinogenic incenses as aides to help them visit other realms and experience past life memories.  The blue lotus – which can be found in ancient Egyptian tomb paintings – is just one such essence priests from that time used to enter into trances.

4. In “The Collector of Dying Breaths,” you explore how fragrance was brought to France in the 16th century. Who was responsible?

Catherine de Medici was a fascinating young Italian woman who came to France at fourteen years of age to marry one of the crown princes. She brought her perfumer and her astrologer with her.  René le Florentin was apprenticed at the Officina Profumo–Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella, one of the world’s oldest pharmacies which was founded in 1221 in Florence by the Dominican Friars who made herbal remedies and potions. He created scents and creams for the young Catherine de Medici. When the fourteen-year-old duchessina traveled to France to marry the prince, she took René with her. René and Catherine are credited with bringing perfume to their newly adopted country.

5. Is Catherine de Medici’s use of poison to rid herself of enemies based on historical fact?

Yes, although there are of course questions about how many people she had poisoned. For instance there are rumors she had her daughters’ mother in law poisoned. But we know for sure that Catherine had her perfumer, René Le Florentin create innovative and well disguised poisons for her to use on her enemies.

6. You write in both “The Collector of Dying Breaths,” “Seduction” and “The Book of Lost Fragrances” about the L’Etoile family of perfumers in France. Were the fictional L’Etoiles based on a real family of French perfumers or did they arise from your imagination?

The Guerlain family, which opened their doors to business in 1826, created many of my favorite perfumes, and so in a way they were a great inspiration, but the L’Etoile family’s loves, tragedies and triumphs are all pure invention.

7. Was collecting someone’s dying breath something people actually did in the past or was this idea something of your creation as a fiction author?

We don’t know where this concept originated or if anyone in the Renaissance suspected such a thing was possible. But it’s not a far stretch from the well- documented and centuries-old alchemical search for immortality through the breath concept.  We do know that in the twentieth century, automotive magnate Henry Ford and the great inventor Thomas Edison, who both believed in reincarnation, supported the idea that in death, the soul leaves the body with its last breath. In fact, Edison’s dying breath, collected by his son, Charles, is in fact on display at the Edison Winter Home in Fort Myers, Florida.

8. Why have a signature scent made? And do you think more people today are having signature fragrances designed for them?

To be memorable. To have a man lean across a table and say quietly, I love how you smell. To celebrate your uniqueness. To stand out. To revel in your creativity. In a world of sameness to not be the same as anyone else. There are so so many reasons. And yes I do think that the smaller the world gets, the more we tend to look for ways to express our individuality.

9. Your first Jac L’Etoile novel inspired a perfume, Âmes Soeurs, the Scent of Soul mates by Joya Studios. How did this partnership come to be?

When I was writing the first Jac  book – to keep in the world of scent – I burned a lot of candles. When I finished writing, I gave a copy of the book to the perfumer who’d created the candles that had inspired me the most. Frederick Bouchardy. (Joya Studios).

After he read the novel he contacted me and we met for tea in the Peninsula Hotel in NYC. He told me he loved the book and wanted to create his version of the fragrance at the heart of the novel. I was so astonished and honored, I actually started to cry.

Bouchardy even named the fragrance after one in the book: Âmes Sœurs the scent of soul mates. It has hints of Frankincense, Myrrh, Orange Blossom and Jasmine. I think it has a smoky uncommon finish that suggests the past and the future, and lost souls reunited.

10. What scents evoke memories for you?

Shalimar – it was the only perfume my mother wore – so just one whiff and she’s there – all around me. It makes me so happy and so sad at the same time.

Pine – I love to walk in the woods and the scent of pine inspires me. There is something fresh and yet ancient and primeval about it.

Popcorn- Whenever I smell it I remember the first  magical time I ever went to the circus with my dad when I was little.

Chocolate – makes me think of Paris. I don’t think I ever had great chocolate till I went to Paris.

Perfume with Lemon –makes me think of high school. We all wore Jean Nate or Love – both lemon based.

Coffee – when I smell coffee I think of New York – my hometown – the energy is the smell of fresh brewed, really really good coffee.

11. What are some of  your favorite perfumes and what tones (scents) do they contain?

Vol de Nuit by Guerlain but only vintage – Wood, Iris , Vanilla, Spices, Green notes

Orchidee Vanille Eau de Parfum by Van Cleef & Arpels – Vanilla, almond and chocolate, litchi, Bulgarian rose and violet.

Coromandel by Chanel  – a true oriental with Amber tones.

Galconda by JAR – the perfumer has never revealed what the tones are but I smell cinnamon, jasmine and carnation and heaven.

12. Besides being an international bestselling author, you are also recognized as a pioneer in the publishing world? What breakthroughs have you made in this area?

Getting published has been an adventure. I self-published “Lip Service” late in 1998 after several traditional publishers turned it down. Editors had loved it, but didn’t know how to position it or market it since it didn’t fit into any one genre. Frustrated, but curious and convinced that there was a way to market it, I set up a web site where readers could download her book for $9.95 and began to seriously market the novel on the Internet. After selling over 2500 copies (in both electronic and trade paper format) “Lip Service” became the first e-book and the first self-published novel chosen by the LiteraryGuild/Doubleday Book Club as well as being the first e-book to go on to be published by a mainstream New York publishing house. I was also the first person to create the concept of virtual book tours – or blog tours as they are known now – doing one in 1999. As well I was the first author to create a book trailer, in 2000 and the first to have group blog in 2001.

13. You are a founding board member of International Thriller Writers and are its current co-president with Lee Child. How does the organization and its annual event “Thrillerfest” which is conducted in New York City differ from any other organizations and events?

We have a mantra at ITW – when we imitate we fail, when we innovate we succeed. So our goals have been to keep making our efforts and  events unique. We have the largest “craft fest” where authors can come to learn the craft from masters like David Morrell, Doug Preston, Steve Berry, Joseph Finder, Lisa Gardner, and more. We also have the largest “agent fest” in the world. Over 60 agents come to Thrillerfest to hear pitches from authors. For fans, we offer a $10 gift certificate to get them into the book room buying books and unlike most events every single registered author has his or her books for sale.


FOREST GHOST by Graham Masterton

April 3, 2014

Masterton spins a tale of horror that moves from the U.S. to Poland, and probably begins in ancient times. His style to deliver the proper atmosphere is to understate the events and feelings.

The narrative opens when a troop of Boy Scouts and their leaders commit suicide in a forest area and leave no clue as to what motivated them to take their own lives. Jack Wallace’s son Sparky was friends with one of the boys that did away with himself and he wants to travel to the scene to come to grips with what happened.

Sparky is stricken with a degree of autism, but has a knack for forecasting the future by reading the alignments of the stars and planets. His appeals to his father draws Jack into an investigation of the reasons for the mass suicides and causes both to undertake a journey to Poland.

It was in a forest during the second world war that Jack’s grandfather killed himself while fighting the Nazis and is believed to be due to the same cause that occurred with the Boy Scouts. While in Poland Jack and Sparky believe they actually see the evil that caused the suicides of both their grandfather and the Boy Scout troop. They return to the states and begin a full investigation finding that contact with the evil that is the cause of the suicides may be a worldwide phenomenon and have been present in the world since the beginning of time.

For those readers that enjoy a well done horror story they have one with Forest Ghost that will not be forgotten in a long time.

4/14 Paul Lane

FOREST GHOST by Graham Masterton. Severn House Publishers; First World Publication edition (April 1, 2014). ISBN 978-0727883445. 256p.


MISSING YOU by Harlan Coben

April 2, 2014

Harlan Coben has the knack of constantly coming out with books incorporating different and varied plots. Missing You is certainly one such book.

The plot involves setting up victims for extortion of large sums of money and than murdering them via the use of an online dating site. Kat Donovan is a New York City police officer. She is the third in a line after both her grandfather and father. After a love affair that went sour 18 years earlier, she has not been able to connect romantically with another man that would appeal to her for marriage.

A good friend of hers convinces her to go onto a dating website. By chance she comes across the photo and data of her former boyfriend and attempts to resurrect the affair. An attempt to recontact her former lover coupled with the plea of a young boy to help find his mother who he believes was kidnapped while going away for a weekend with a man she met on the same website Kat is on pulls Kat into a plot involving large scale kidnapping and murder for money.

Coben is a master at pulling together many seemingly unrelated events in a logical and fascinating way. Missing You is no exception and becomes his usual all nighter. Character development of all principal protagonists is excellent and the reader is left with complete understanding of motivations – both good and evil. Personal flaws are not hidden but utilized real and acting as they would in these situations in real life. Another Coben winner and leaving the reader anxiously awaiting his next book.

4/14 Paul Lane

MISSING YOU by Harlan Coben.  Dutton Adult; First Edition edition (March 18, 2014). ISBN 978-0525953494. 400p.


Celebrate Poetry, All Month Long

April 1, 2014

More on National Poetry Month – NaPoWriMo! Write a poem each day in April.

Cheri Lucas Rowlands's avatarWordPress.com News

NaPoWriMo , or National Poetry Writing Month, is back!

NaPoWriMo is an annual project in which participants write a poem each day in April. It unfolds in the tradition of NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month, held in November) and motivates, inspires, and engages poets of all levels, genres, and backgrounds.

While a poem a day is your ultimate goal, there’s really no “right” way to participate. Start today and keep at it, and experiment as you see fit. Focus entirely on sonnets, or experiment with free verse. Participate on your own, or collaborate with others. Publish on your blog, or experiment offline.

Ideas to get started

  • Publish poems each day, focusing on a different genre each week.
  • Handwrite poems in a journal, for your eyes only.
  • Start a collective with others, plan themes for April, and publish poems on your own blogs focused on these themes.
  • Create a new blog or group site specifically for this monthly challenge.

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April is National Poetry Month

April 1, 2014

best cigaretteI love poetry, so it is my pleasure to remind you that April is National Poetry Month. If you would like to join in the celebration, here are thirty ways to celebrate.

One of my favorite poets is the former Poet Laureate Billy Collins. He is funny and honest and often whimsical. He likes to read his own poems and has shared this album. Feel free to click on the picture to listen or download.

Penguin Classics offers a poetry app. Since its release in April 2013, Poems By Heart from Penguin Classics, the free app for iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch, has challenged players with classic poems from master wordsmiths (including Shakespeare, Walt Whitman,  and more) all carefully selected by the experts at Penguin Classics. Downloaded over 275,000 times since its launch, players have found that Poems By Heart makes memorizing and reciting poems fun, easy, and addictive, allowing them to enjoy poems at a deeper level, learn them for life, impress their friends, and improve their minds.

With recordings you can share online and email to your friends, Poems By Heart includes new and exclusive dramatic readings and specially commissioned original art for each poem.  Using brain-training techniques to make remembering poetry easy, the resulting fast and responsive game doubles as a tool to stay mentally fit in a fun way. “Poems By Heart makes it simple to memorize timeless verses while immersing yourself in a fun interactive game,” says Penguin Classics Editorial Director Elda Rotor. “This app combines beautiful design with an experience that expands your mind’s ability to retain language.”

For more information, to view images from within the app, and watch a video about the app, please visit: Poems By Heart

Every April, Knopf celebrates National Poetry Month by sending a poem every day throughout the month. To sign up for Poem-a-Day, go to Knopf Poem-a-Day, click Newsletters on the left sidebar, then add your email address and select Knopf Poetry. 

This April, Knopf invites poetry fans to submit a photo, drawing, or other visual representation of poems that inspire them. The contest will be held on the Knopf Facebook page. The five people whose submissions get the most votes at the end of April will each receive a package of new poetry books from Knopf. Feel free to choose more than one poem and submit up to one entry per day!

Enjoy National Poetry Month. I’d love to know who your favorite poets are!


April bookshelf

April 1, 2014

I updated the Win Books page for April and I’m really excited about these thrillers! This is a great collection of NY Times bestsellers, solid storytellers and some newbies.

Andrew Gross offers up his latest, Everything to Lose. If you’re not familiar with Gross, and you should be – his thriller training was with the master himself, James Patterson. I adore Lisa Scottoline and her newest, Keep Quiet, is up for grabs. M.J. Rose is back with another historical thriller with erotic overtones in The Collector of Dying Breaths. Whirlwind by Rick Mofina, Code Zero by Jonathan Maberry and Warriors by Ted Bell will delight thriller fans. Also on the bookshelf – The Johnstown Girls by Kathleen George, Stalk Me by Richard Parker, Say That to My Face by Bernard Maestas,  Courier by Terry Irving, and Hanging by a Hair by one of my favorites, Nancy J. Cohen.

If you are new to the site, each month I run a contest in conjunction with the International Thriller Writers group. We put together a list of books including bestsellers and debut authors, so you can win some of your favorites and find some new favorites.

What makes this contest really special is that all of the books (except ebooks) are signed by the author!

Don’t forget, if you subscribe to the newsletter or follow this blog, you get an extra entry into every contest you enter.

Thanks for reading, and good luck!

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