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Interview with Terence Gallagher, Author of Fujita 4

What can you tell us about your new release, Fujita 4?

The title of my book takes its name from a scale used to measure the power of a tornado. It tells the story of what happens when a high security prison in South Carolina is struck by this terrifying natural phenomenon.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

As a boy from a working-class background growing up in Dublin, my public library was my window to the outside world. Books took me to places and introduced me to characters I could never hope to meet in my real, very circumscribed, life. I thought authors were like magicians! I wanted to be one of them!

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

Germinal by Emile Zola, Riotous Assembly by Tom Sharpe, Dubliners by James Joyce, A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole, All quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque.

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

The Australian author Peter Carey. ‘How do you manage to populate your novels with such interesting and idiosyncratic characters. They seem to leap off the page !’

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I like to be able to escape into a world of my creation and interact with my characters who often take on a life of their own and end up doing things that I never had in mind for them initially!

What is a typical day like for you?

My day always starts with feeding and exercising my two Irish Setters. After that, my morning depends on whether I am in Dublin or Naples. In Dublin, the morning is taken up with gardening. In Naples, I generally run errands while I go for a bike ride. In the afternoon I write. In the evening I answer emails and likely watch a movie.

What scene in Fujita 4 was your favorite to write?

There is a scene where Rob Williams, the escaped death row convict, asks Andrew Burke, the College Professor who is helping him, why he is doing it. Describing that interaction between two of the most unlikely protagonists was a lot of fun.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

‘Life is made up of meetings and paintings. That is the way of it’- Kermit the Frog

Terence Gallagher is the author of the new book Fujita 4.

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Interview with Sarwah Creed, Author of Daily #teXXXt

What can you tell us about your new release, Daily #teXXXt?

I loved writing this book, because it was an idea that came to me and it grew into this hot, romantic sexy read, which I'm really proud of writing this year.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

Ever since I was a little girl I have written poetry and as I got older, I moved away from writing poetry to books.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

The Bitch by Jackie Collins

I know why the caged bird sings by Maya Angelou

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn

On Writing by Stephen King

If Tomorrow Comes by Sidney Sheldon

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

It would have to be Stephen King, my all-time favorite author. I would have to ask him, what motivates him to keep striving to be successful.

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I love having great reviews. There’s nothing more satisfying then reading reviews from readers who have read and enjoyed my books.

What is a typical day like for you?

I wake up, go for a run, then I take the kids to school (not at the moment!) and then I come home and read and write emails. Then, I write or at times I plot the next book. I break up the day, by eating and I love to go fitboxing - four times per week. I pick up the kids and I try not to get back on social media. Otherwise, it feels as if I’m working twenty-four hours per day. I try to do a couple of hours during the weekend, but no more than that. Weekends are usually spent reading, exercising and spending time with the kids.

What scene in Daily #teXXXt was your favorite to write?

The Prologue - I loved writing about Tessa and her Grandma. If you’ve read the book, then you’ll know that the scenes between her Grandma who’d stayed at the Playboy mansion and Tessa made me laugh writing and re-reading them.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

Nelson Mandela, It always seems impossible until it’s done.

I love to challenge myself which is why I raced in the Spartan race last year. It did take three years before I had the courage to compete it, but I loved every second of it.

Never think that you cannot do anything that you set your mind to. Nothing is impossible.

Sarwah Creed is the author of the new book Daily #teXXXt.

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Interview with Lacy Williams, Author of His Small-Town Girl

What can you tell us about your new release, His Small-Town Girl?

His Small-Town Girl is the first book in a new trilogy. In it, a heroine-on-the-run meets a rancher whose only goal is to sell grandma’s ranch and get out of town. He’s no protector, but when he discovers she’s in danger he can’t just walk away. Also, the heroine is named after one of my nieces.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I remember writing “books” as a child. I also wrote several issues of a newspaper that I handed out to my friends to read. My parents were always very supportive and one Christmas I received a typewriter so I could write. I’m sure they spent a lot of money on cartridges! I am so thankful that they have always supported my writing.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

My Foolish Heart by Susan May Warren
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Take a Chance of Me by Becky Wade
The Elemental series by Sherry Thomas
The Oak Leaves by Maureen Lang

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

I would love to chat with Jill Shalvis. How does she create such fabulous secondary characters? Her books make me feel like I’m right there in the small town with the crazy great-aunt and friends that feel like family. #authorgoals

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I love discovering the story along with the characters. I do some basic plotting before the story begins, but I only get to know the characters deeply as I write the story. My husband once asked me how I can be surprised by the characters when they are products of my own imagination. I didn’t have a good answer for him. I think there’s a tiny bit of magic in writing fiction and I love finding it as the story unfolds.

What is a typical day like for you?

On weekdays, I get up between 5:00 and 5:30 am and get in two good hours of writing or author work before my kids come downstairs. When the bigger kids are in school and the little one naps, I sneak in another hour or two in the afternoons. I will occasionally be known to stay up into the wee hours to finish a book if I’m on a tight deadline. Marketing stuff and answering emails happens in small snatches throughout the day.

What scene in His Small-Town Girl was your favorite to write?

No matter what book I’m working on, my favorite scenes to write are the kissing scenes. There’s something about the tension, the will-they or won’t-they, the touch of a hand on a face… There’s so much magic that can be made in a kissing scene.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

No regrets.

Lacy Williams is the author of the new book His Small-Town Girl.

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Interview with Andrew Ceroni, Author of Special Means

What can you tell us about your new release, Special Means?

Given my training with the FBI, BNDD/DEA, and CIA coupled with my career as a special agent focused in Title 18 U.S.C. Chapter 37 espionage investigations, counterespionage and anti-terrorism operations, I am most comfortable using that experience to write thrillers. For Special Means, it was the climate in the United States today that stirred me to write this novel. First, the street gangs in our larger cities…black gangs, Hispanic gangs, Asian Triads, Albanians and Russians–are growing out of hand. They have become nearly too much for local, state and federal law enforcement to keep in check. American citizens are victimized every day across this country. Rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness appear to many citizens to be dwindling. Second, the political climate in the nation today between political parties is as toxic and venomous as I have seen in my lifetime. The plot of Special Means presents what turns out to be a wrong-headed solution to the problem of gangs that like a cancer, grows to threaten the security and constitutional stability of the nation itself.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I was a voracious reader as a youth. I found the works of James Fenimore Cooper, Kenneth Roberts, Rudyard Kipling, Isaac Asimov, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, and Edgar Rice Burroughs thrilling. I myself actually began writing short stories and some poetry as early as 12 years old. I had a portable Smith Corona typewriter I had purchased from a Montgomery Ward catalogue with money I earned working at a series of large fruit stands in the Mid-Hudson Valley of New York. By the fifth grade, teachers were encouraging my writing and this inspiration from teachers and professors continued through high school and college. Years later, a suspect in an espionage investigation I was conducting in Europe had such a tragic family background that afterward, I told myself if I ever wrote a book, his character would be in it. That book was my first, Meridian. I had to have the manuscript reviewed and approved for publication by the Department of Defense Public Affairs. After I left both the federal investigation and corporate worlds, I decided I would endeavor to write novels.

What's on your top 5 list for the best books you've ever read?

1.) James Fenimore Cooper’s Last of the Mohicans

2.) Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls

3.) John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath

4.) Thornton Wilder’s The Bridge of San Luis Rey

5.) Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’ The Yearling.

Say you're the host of a literary talk show. Who would be your first guest? What would you want to ask?

David Baldacci would be my first guest. I would ask him, “Mr. Baldacci, how did you come to decide that you wanted several separate, diverse series of novels led by different protagonists? What drove you in that direction…building different lead characters with dissimilar backgrounds and distinctive skill sets? Is there one series, one protagonist that you are drawn to most? If so, why do you think that is?”

What's your favorite thing about writing?

Eleanor Roosevelt once wrote, “The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.”

Writing is like that – a quiet, enriching activity where one can script a narrative, a tale, a story from their nighttime and waking dreams into a living, breathing reality. I have found in the process of creating the major characters of a novel with distinctive traits that fairly soon, I have to struggle too keep up with them. I don’t have to decide what their response is to a question, they are actually speaking and I am the recorder of their discourse. It’s sometimes a surreal yet also pleasant, fulfilling experience.

What is a typical day like for you?

I’m an early riser. First thing, it’s checking emails on the computer. Then off to Starbucks for coffee and chit-chat with the people there, the regulars. They’re a diverse bunch and I’m a people-watcher. I suppose that comes from my investigative background. Then back home. No writing early in the day. It takes hours for the creative juices to begin to flow, and an occasional day, it never happens. Lunch. Talking with a neighbor. Writing. More writing. After dinner and kissing the wife who heads up to the sanctuary of our bedroom, it’s usually a movie for me and most often an action or adventure movie. Then, a sip of cognac, and…writing again.

What scene in Special Means was your favorite to write?

I don’t want to give the farm away here. However, a well-known developmental editor in New York who also worked in Hollywood as a screen script editor on Driving Miss Daisy and Mystic Pizza once told me that I write ‘action’ scenes very well. There are several action scenes in Special Means…New Mexico, Denver and Washington DC, including at The White House. It is the action scenes I most enjoy scripting.

Do you have a motto, quote, or philosophy you live by?

Fleet Admiral William F. “Bull” Halsey, Jr., the commander of the U.S. Navy 3rd Fleet in WWII, once said, “There are no great men. There are only great challenges which ordinary men, by force of circumstance, must rise to meet.” I have always liked this quote and have taken it to heart. Great challenges, not great men. It keeps me humble.

Andrew Ceroni is the author of the new book Special Means.

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The Story Behind No White Knight by Nicole Snow

By Nicole Snow

There's nothing quite like a fiery love with teeth. Anyone who's followed my books for a while knows I'm a little obsessed with the enemies-to-lovers theme. Oh, but I promise you—it's never been done like it has in No White Knight.

Libby Potter is at the end of her rope. She's poured everything into the family ranch and a home for her horses, the place she promised her recently deceased father she'd rebuild. But trouble's on the horizon with a scheming sister and her shady-as-heck boyfriend, a bank after back taxes, and a spine-chilling secret her dad left behind on the Potter ranch.

Even so, she's the last woman on earth who'd ever go looking for a white knight—and Holt Silverton so ain't that. It's hate at first sight the day he walks up with a cocky offer to fix her woes and make a big deal for his construction business that just so happens to involve her precious land.

Hate, and so much more.

It's banter. It's hearts in knots. It's a screaming hot, off-limits attraction they both try so hard to deny.

Coming home to small-town Heart's Edge after having his big city dreams crushed has landed Holt face-to-face with the ghosts of his own past and one smart-mouthed, stubborn cowgirl. When the stakes get higher, Holt's after more than playing games. He just might be the dark knight Libby needs.

The dragon they're facing down together isn't what it seems, either. Not just the group of schemers after Libby's place, but an insane mystery wrapped up in her dad's legacy that will change their small town forever.

I love everything about this emotional powder keg of a book. It features a different kind of star-crossed lovers hauling around two beat up hearts. Emphasis on stars. What falls from the sky plays a very important role in this book's mystery arc, and it's central to the wonderfully weird, unlikely bond Holt forges with Libby.

Turns out, reconciling hearts is almost as hard as making sense of dreams.

But if the Happily Ever After weren't battle scarred, singed, and truly worthwhile, it wouldn't be a slow-burn love story by yours truly. This standalone ride into the full spectrum of feels might be my best Heroes of Heart's Edge book ever. You decide.

Nicole Snow is the author of the new book No White Knight.

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Interview with Barbara Monier, author of The Rocky Orchard

What can you tell us about your new release, The Rocky Orchard?

All books, fiction and non-fiction alike, have to start somewhere. The starting point can be as skeletal as the broad outlines of a character, or as fleshed-out as a detailed story. The Rocky Orchard is a bit unusual in that the book started out with a place. The idea came to me when I was recovering from surgery, and I realized that recovery period may have been the first time in my life when I was completely free of responsibility. I wanted to write a story about the existence of such a place – a place where the main character felt that sense of peace. I quickly had the sense that the character would be a young woman. I wanted to put her in this setting, a setting that was nearly magical for her – and find out what would happen there. It’s a pretty difficult book to summarize or describe. Reviewers have had a heck of a time.

What books are currently on your nightstand?

I admit it; my night stand is entirely electronic. I was among the folks who declared we would never choose to forego the great pleasure of holding a book in our hands, running our finger along the paper pages, etc., and now I read everything on my Kindle. I’m actually toggling among three excellent books right now : The Understory, Euphoria, and The Water Dancer. Each of them is exceptionally well-written, with a strong story that weaves seamlessly through lyrical passages.

What advice would you give your teenage self?

There are actually a few ways in which I’ve spent my life trying to regain some of my teenage attributes! Circumstances engendered a kind of confidence in me that was well beyond my years. That said, I was in a big hurry. I went to college without finishing high school and graduated college in three years. I’ve spent a long time learning how to slow down, and that’s the advice I would give to my teenage self – slow down. Take time to notice as much as you can, savor moments, relish in small pleasures. [Before the pandemic], being crazy busy was becoming an ever-increasing status symbol. I think we should be striving for just the opposite.

If you had an extra hour each day, how would you spend it?

At this point in my life (age 64), I don’t feel that lack of time continues to be The Issue, even though I still work nearly full-time and am writing my fifth novel. For me, it’s more a question of trying to live each day so that when I lay my head down on my pillow at night, I have the thought: this was a good day. Often that feeling comes when my writing is going well, but it can come from lots of other places as well. I’m a big fan of trying to exercise my mind, my body, and my spirit every day. Then there’s love. I try to love the important people in my life well. More time can always go there.

What makes your world go round? Why does it bring you joy?

I feel really lucky that I’m genuinely tickled by small pleasures. I lie in bed at night and get excited about my morning coffee! And, like many writers (and introverts in general), I’m highly observant. The ability to look carefully and to find joy in small things work together really nicely. There’s a lot of joy to be found if you’re open to it and looking, and God knows, those small joys are a much-needed counter to a lot of ugliness and suffering that exist as well.

When I feel like I have written something well – when I’ve found the words that capture what I wanted to express when I set out– it brings a sense of joy that is different than anything else. But lest I sound like I am 100% intentional and such, let me assure my readers that I can binge watch Netflix and play Candy Crush with the best of them.

What scene in The Rocky Orchard was your favorite to write?

There was a scene that came to me in a dream—literally -- which was pretty crazy and amazing. I awakened one morning fresh out of a dream about something that actually happened with the dog my family had when I was growing up – we’re talking about more than fifty years ago. I couldn’t imagine why I would dream about my dog killing a baby bunny, and then it hit me: that incident was the perfect way to illustrate a situation I was struggling with in The Rocky Orchard. The scene I wrote was brief and straightforward and relatively free of embellishment. As I was writing it, I knew it would work beautifully and make the eloquent, compelling point I needed to make.

Barbara Monier is the author of the new book The Rocky Orchard.

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Interview with Nowick Gray, Author of FutureCon

What can you tell us about your new release, FutureCon?

The concept for the story, just like the story itself, began with a dream. The difference between dream and reality becomes blurred in the age of virtual reality, neuroprogramming technologies, and brain-machine interfaces. On a deeper level the story asks us to examine our choices, recognize where they come from, and reclaim our own power to live the life we dream of.

What books are currently on your nightstand?

That would be the top of the queue on my Kindle:
• The Wilds, by Julia Elliott
• The Reality Revolution, by Brian Scott
• Circle in the Darkness, by Diana Johnstone
• The Reality Bubble, by Ziya Tong
• All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr

What advice would you give your teenage self?

Have confidence in yourself and believe in the paths you choose. Don’t overthink it; or when you do, step back and let intuition be your guide. Know and remember, love is your birthright.

If you had an extra hour each day, how would you spend it?

Much as I already do: choosing what most needs attending to on each given day. That means not only work and necessary tasks, but time to read, play music, enjoy nature, share companionship with my partner and friends. The one thing that gets neglected most often is reading actual books, since I already spend so much time in a day reading for my editing work and to keep up with news and social media.

What makes your world go round? Why does it bring you joy?

Nature and love make the world go round, so they give me joy. And to express that joy in music, or writing, or personal interaction is the natural result, which deepens my experience of it and shares it around.

What scene in FutureCon was your favorite to write?

The chapter called “Desertia” was my favorite, since it played out the sci-fi trope of offworld travel in semi-comic fashion, with a confrontation between Joe Norton and his friend Harrison. In this scene Harry, sipping gin and tonic on a sandy wasteland of a virtual planetoid, is suspected of being Norton’s target, before showing him evidence, onboard their getaway ship, of the real bug in the machine.

Nowick Gray is the author of the new book FutureCon.

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New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | May 12

Hold on to the edge of your seat as we hunt for clues and solve the case with these exciting new mystery and thriller books for the week! There are so many bestselling authors with new novels for you to dive into this week including Andrew Ceroni, Terence Gallagher, Jeffrey Deaver, and many more. Enjoy your new mystery, thriller, and suspense novels. Happy reading!



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New Romance Books to Read | May 12

Looking to fall in love with some new romance reads? You’ll adore these exciting new novels! This week you can get your hands on books by bestselling authors Willow Winters, Lacy Williams, Nicole Snow, Sarwah Creed, and more. Enjoy your new romance books and happy reading!



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New Books to Read in Literary Fiction | May 12

Literary fiction readers are in for a treat. This week’s latest releases list is full of intriguing reads you won’t want to miss! The new releases list includes so many bestselling authors like Barbara Monier, Louise Fein, Kelly Harms, and many more. Enjoy your new literary fiction books. Happy reading!



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