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Interview with Kenneth B. Andersen, author of The Angel of Evil

What can you tell us about your new release, The Angel of Evil?

The Angel of Evil is book 4 in The Great Devil War series. The series begins with “The Devil’s Apprentice”, in which Philip – a good boy – accidentally gets sent to Hell to become the Devil’s heir. The Devil, Lucifer, is dying and desperately in need of a successor, but there’s been a mistake and Philip is the wrong boy. Philip is terrible at being bad, but Lucifer has no other choice than to begin the difficult task of training him in the ways of evil. Even though the story (mostly) takes place in Hell, it’s also a humorous tale about good and evil seen from a different perspective. The story of Philip’s adventures in Hell continues in book 2 and 3 – “The Die of Death” and “The Wrongful Death” - where the reader also gets to visit Death’s domain, Paradise, Hades, and other underworlds. In book 4 – “The Angel of Evil” – the Great Devil War finally breaks out. This is where all hell breaks loose...

What books are currently on your nightstand?

I just finished “The Institute” by Stephen King. I’m a huge King fan and I always look forward to finding out what he’s up to this time. I’m also a big fan of his son Joe Hill and his new short story collection “Full Throttle” is my next read as well as book 2 in Patrick Ness’ Chaos Walking trilogy.

What advice would you give your teenage self?

Don’t think I would give any. Everyone knows that messing with time is a dangerous thing (I’ve even written a book about it, which will come out next year) and I wouldn’t want to risk screwing things up, risking not meeting my wife or something like that. The butterfly effect, no thanks.

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

Though I read every day, I would like to read more. There are so many good books out there, that deserves to be read.

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

My day job and my evening job: Writing and spending time with my family. Don’t need anything else.

What scene in The Angel of Evil was your favorite to write?

There is a scene where Philip – and the reader - witnesses what happened the time Lucifer declared war on God. Why he did it and what the consequences were. I like the scene a lot and when I wrote it, it felt like I was there, too. It would be a great scene for a movie.

Kenneth B. Andersen is the author of the new book The Angel of Evil.

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Interview with D.F. Jones, Author of Lee's Lesson

What can you tell us about your new release, Lee's Lesson?

Lee’s Lesson is the fourth full novel in the Ditch Lane Diaries.

Ruby’s Choice, Anna’s Way, and Sandy’s Story is a mystical tale about three best friends. They go spelunking in a cave and leave with gemstones that trigger supernatural powers.

Lee is Ruby’s mother.

It is only with Lee’s Lesson that the reader understands there is a much larger storyline afoot.

The prologue picks up an epic battle scene from Sandy’s Story. It is this scene that becomes the catalyst to the novel.

The first chapter sets up Sacred Heights Sanatorium, a place Luc and The Army of the Fallen control. Lee’s mother, Jenny, undergoes treatment for debilitating migraines at the facility. While her father signs Jenny’s release papers, Lee finds herself on the fourth floor, which is also a portal to hell. She runs into Luc whom she thinks is a physician. That meeting releases a sequence of events that will test her powers and threatens her soul.

On the day of her college graduation, Lee meets Erinelle, a warrior angel and her guardian. She reveals that Lee has extraordinary powers designed by The Creator to be a lethal weapon. Lee is dumbfounded. She has no clue who and what she was before the rebellion, before Luc, along with one-third of heaven’s angels, were thrown out of heaven.

Lee must train, and her powers must be realized to save someone she loves before Luc consumes their soul.

Side note. The reason I used a sanatorium: my mom in the mid-fifties was hospitalized after her mother died. She was also suffering from postpartum depression. In those days, they use ECT without sedation. It created lifelong nightmares for her, and I think may have contributed to her memory loss later in life. I did loads of research, and my findings would curl your toes.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I have a long line of storytellers in my family. My father was a master weaver. He inspired me to write.

The storytelling bug hit me in the fifth grade during an oral book report of The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe. I turned out the lights and relayed the story to my classmates using a flashlight and sound effects. I scared them to death. I wrote my first screenplay in middle school, an adaptation of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Tennessee is rich with folklore and storytellers.

After I graduated college, I landed a job at the ABC Affiliate in Nashville as a Broadcast Consultant, and from there I opened Jones Media. I love to create. In late 2014, I decided to downsize my agency to care for my parents. The day I resigned my largest client, I wrote the first page of Ruby’s Choice, and I fell in love with writing.

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

The Bible (The Book of Enoch recently blew my mind)
Outlander (series)
Harry Potter (series)
The Hunger Games (series)
All Souls Trilogy
Interview with a Vampire

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

Diana Gabaldon. What’s your favorite curse word? Ha! Okay, it’s a literary talk show. How do you develop character names?

What is a typical day like for you?

My husband and I own a family business, rental property, and we recently bought my parents farm that’s been in the family since 1802 situated on a ridge in the country. Which coincidentally is similar to the one in the Ditch Lane Diaries. After marking off my list of to-do’s, I come home and write for a couple hours, after hubs goes to sleep, I may write several hours. I am a night owl. I love to write in total silence while I develop a project. I may jam to music during the editing process. I will never live long enough to develop all of the concepts and ideas in my imaginative brain.

What's your favorite thing about writing?

Worldbuilding. It takes me to places that sometimes I wonder how I got there and how I returned, intact.

What scene in Lee's Lesson was your favorite to write?

Writing Lee’s Lesson took an emotional toll on me, yet the most fulfilling. My parents passed away last year within six months of each other. It’s not been quite a year since my dad died. Lee’s Lesson is a tribute to them. Lee and Harry have some of my parents' traits. The best scene was the hardest to write, the last one.

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

May love light the way. It is a salutation the angels say when greeting or departing. I use it frequently.

D.F. Jones is the author of the new book Lee's Lesson.

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Interview with JD Cary, Author of 4 Days

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

4 Days is set in Los Angeles and is about a serial killer that comes back for more after years of supposedly being dormant—but was he? John Testarossa and partner Alex Ortiz investigate the murder of a young woman, and the circumstances make no sense. As more young women turn up, the one thing it appears they have in common was that, as young children, they were kidnapped, held for four days, then released—alive. Is it the same person, or is there another explanation? You’ll have to read 4 Days to find out!

What books are currently on your nightstand?

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens.

Heart Shaped Box by Joe Hill

What advice would you give your teenage self?

Don’t be in such a hurry to grow up. You have more power than you think.

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

Sleeping

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

The love of my life, our kids, watching their success, my writing. In that order.

What scene in 4 Days was your favorite to write?

Wow, that’s hard. I’d say Chapter 15. Has nothing to do with the crime.

JD Cary is the author of the new book 4 Days.

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New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books For Your Reading List | Fall 2019

New Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books For Your Reading List | Fall 2019

Have you been searching for some new science fiction and fantasy books to add to your fall reading list? We've made a list of some of our favorites and think you'll love them too! Check out these great books from bestselling authors R.J. Parker, Crissi Langwell, Olivia Hardy Ray, Kenneth B. Andersen, Andrea Pearson, and Martin L. Shoemaker. Happy reading!



Requiem, Changing Times

by R.J. Parker

Release Date: September 26, 2019

Best friends Clint and Corbin are having a strange day. After they are followed by a man and later attacked by an imp, they retreat to the safety of home. But things get even weirder when strangers from another world, Banks and O'Neil, arrive with a medley of allies. Why are they here and what do they want?

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Numbered

by Crissi Langwell

Release Date: June 27, 2019

Like everyone else in the world, Noelle Edison knew the exact date and cause of her death. When she hits the 100 days left mark, she moves to a facility for the dying, River's End, and is ready to spend her final days being pampered. Then she meets Ryder. Noelle thought she was ready for the end. It turns out she is not.

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Annabel Horton and the Black Witch of Pau

by Olivia Hardy Ray

Release Date: October 1, 2019

Annabel's husband has been missing for years. He is finally found in the bowels of White Chapel England during the horrific time of Jack the Ripper. He has made a discovery that brings Annabel and her family to the turn of nineteenth-century England where he hopes to rescue Michele from the Black Witch's cage.

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The Angel of Evil

by Kenneth B. Andersen

Release Date: October 20, 2019

The fourth book in The Great Devil War series by Kenneth B. Andersen... Satina has been kidnapped by the enemy and nothing will ever be the same. Disobeying the orders of Lucifer, Philip sets out on a journey to find her in the deep darkness of Outer Reach. He could not have been prepared for the horror that awaits him or the demons he will encounter along the way.

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Shadow Prophet

by Andrea Pearson

Release Date: October 15, 2019

The first book in the new Midnight Chronicles series by Andrea Pearson... It has been at least seven years since Abel has seen Lizzie. His experiences have changed him significantly since the last time he saw her. He's sure he has moved on. He knows he will be immune to her bubbly and carefree personality. But then he sees her again and knows he's still in love. But there's a problem... he's being blackmailed into murdering her.

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The Last Dance

by Martin L. Shoemaker

Release Date: November 1, 2019

The first book in The Near-Earth Mysteries series by Martin L. Shoemaker... Mutiny means death when you are in space. That's why Inspector General Park Yerim is taking her investigation so seriously. Captain Nicolau Aames is the alleged mutineer and his command of the Aldrin has come under fire. The crew swears he's in the right but the System Initiative says he disobeyed orders.

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Hot New Romance Novels | Fall 2019

Hot New Romance Novels | Fall 2019

The weather is cooling down and it's the perfect time to curl up on the couch with some new love stories. Whether you're a fan of steamy, sweet, or historical, we've got some amazing new romance novels for you to add to your fall reading list. Enjoy!



Laura (Chronicles of the Hudson River Valley Book 3)

by Jean Jacobsen

Release Date: August 24, 2019

New York, 1832. Laura and her long-time friend, Charles, have been discovered in a compromising situation during the high society ball. To preserve the family's good name and satisfy social dictates, her father insists that they get married immediately. Will Laura and Charles find a way to overcome their hurried union and make a life together or will they continue their platonic relationship.

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Hometown Girl Memories (Hometown Series Book 6)

by Kirsten Fullmer

Release Date: October 1, 2019

The sixth book in the bestselling Hometown Series... Winnie is content as the matriarch of Smithville. When she receives a letter from a long-lost friend, a door to her past suddenly reopens. Memories come flooding back from 1968, her college days. Tara knows her husband is up to something and there's more to Justin's busy schedule than just work.

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Holidate

by Monica Murphy

Release Date: October 15, 2019

Candice Gaines loves Christmas time. She basks in the twinkling lights, sings carols and goes crazy with decorations. Charlie Sullivan hates Christmas but it is what keeps the Sullivan Family Christmas Tree Farm in business. Now Charlie's parents want him to be their official public representative for their philanthropic projects. His mom asks Candice to accompany him to a variety of holiday parties. She is determined to male him embrace the Christmas spirit.

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The Seduction of Tallchief

by Doreen Owens Malek

Release Date: September 2, 2019

The new romantic suspense novel from bestselling author Doreen Owens Malek... Multi-millionaire and criminal, George Walden, has avoided detection for decades. Agent Jefferson Tallchief has been sent to Walden's New Jersey mansion to assemble a case against him. But when he arrives, a relationship starts to develop between him and Walden's bitter and reclusive daughter, Victoria.

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Lee's Lesson (Ditch Lane Diaries Book 4)

by D.F. Jones

Release Date: September 10, 2019

The fourth book in the Ditch Lane Diaries series by D.F. Jones... Everglade, Tennessee, 1950. Lee Campbell has just discovered a secret that will change her life forever. A messenger from the heavenly realm has revealed her true nature that has been hidden since birth. As her supernatural powers start to emerge, she is sent on a dangerous quest to save innocent souls from Hades.

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(Not) The One

by Donna Alam

Release Date: October 2, 2019

I have three reasons why rebound sex with my neighbor would be a bad idea. 1. My life is already complicated. 2. He knows that I wear Batman undies. 3. He's older, sophisticated and incredibly hot. Yes, I know that is more than three. But that still didn't make me stop.

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Interview with Crissi Langwell, Author of Numbered

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

Numbered is a dystopian romance that takes place in the year 2050. Technology has advanced so much that people now know the date and cause of their natural death. As you can imagine, knowing exactly how long you have to live will affect the way you live. But the biggest change is that in the last 100 days of life, people give up their jobs, their homes, and everything in their life, say goodbye to their families, and then enter a spa-like facility where everything is taken care of for them, spending the last three months of their life in complete comfort with no worries at all.

Noelle and Ryder move into one of these facilities on the same day. Because of their shortened lifespan, both have spent a lifetime avoiding relationships and connections. With only three months left to live, they don’t have time to fall in love, but they can’t deny the magnetic pull they feel toward each other.

And then they uncover a secret about the numbers. Everything safe becomes lethal, and the only people they can trust is each other. Noelle and Ryder find themselves in a fight for their lives, as well as a fight to save the rest of the world.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I’ve been a writer as long as I’ve known how. But before writing, I was a reader. I think what inspired me to want to write stories were the stories I was reading. I’ve always had my nose in a book, so storytelling became a natural passion. I started out making up bedtime stories for my sisters. Then I started writing stories as gifts for my family. I dreamed of writing a book one day, believing it to be a huge, hard to accomplish feat. When I finally did, it was awful, but it also showed me that I could write a book. That terrible book (that I never published) paved the way for future books that weren’t terrible, and led to becoming a published author.

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

Only 5??? This list changes all the time because I have so many favorites, but at this moment, I’d consider these my favorites:

Jacob Have I Loved, by Katherine Paterson

The Alchemist, by Paulo Coelho

The Overstory, by Richard Powers

Mud Vein, by Tarryn Fisher

The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold

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

I would really love to talk with Katherine Paterson. Her books (She’s probably most known for Bridge to Terabithia) are full of well-rounded characters with real world problems. I feel like she gives a voice to grief or hardship, and then shows a way to keep living, even with this really hard thing the character is going through. Like in Jacob Have I Loved, she illustrates exactly what it feels like for someone to grow up feeling on the outside of everything, especially in one’s own family, and how it feels to live in the shadows of a sibling everyone loves. I resonated so much with this that I’ve cried buckets reading this book. So if I had her on my literary talk show, I’d ask about how she develops her characters, if they’re based on real people, and what kind of prewriting she does about her characters before she starts writing the story (or even while she’s writing it).

What's your favorite thing about writing?

I love how I can lose myself in the story. While writing, that’s my reality. Even when I’m not writing, the characters stay with me. I could be driving down the road, and I’ll feel their presence, think about their circumstance, and so on. It’s kind of relieving to immerse myself in the story because sometimes the world doesn’t feel very fun.

What is a typical day like for you?

Well, I have a day job, so that takes up most of my Monday – Friday. But I wake up extra early so that I have time to journal and read before work. I will often work on my manuscript during my lunch hour, sitting in a nearby park if the weather is nice. After work I’ll go to the gym, then eat dinner. Then I’ll spend another hour or so on my writing, if I have the energy. It’s hard to have a lot of time to write during the week, so weekends are when I get the most writing in. On those days, my favorite thing to do is grab my laptop and hole up in a coffeeshop for a few hours, sucking down caffeine while working on my novel.

What scene in Numbered was your favorite to write?

I loved writing the scenes where Noelle is a pretty awesome badass. Her father was a Navy Seal and trained Noelle and her brother throughout their childhood. So when society implodes and Noelle and Ryder become part of a rebel team, Noelle steps up to the plate with her training. It was really fun to write the fight scenes and show her fighting skills.

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

Everyone has their own story. I think this is something we all need to remember, especially in this divisive time. It doesn’t mean we have to agree with people who have differing points of views, but we would all do better as a society if we could aim to understand the reasons someone has for believing or acting a certain way. If more people approached others with curiosity instead of condemnation, I think this world could be a better place. Not a perfect place, but it’s a start.

Crissi Langwell is the author of the new book Numbered.

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Interview with Doreen Owens Malek, Author of The Seduction of Tallchief

What can you tell us about your new release, The Seduction of Tallchief?

"The Seduction of Tallchief" is a combination of romance and suspense which goes into more detail about the process of the story and the development of the main relationship than is usually possible in a shorter romance. I really enjoyed portraying the main male character because he's an anti-hero and his attitude toward life is changed by his interaction with the main female character. It has aspects of the narrative which go beyond the usual limits of this type of story and that provided a challenge for me as a writer.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

My father, who was a local Superintendent of Schools, was a big reader and had many books around the house. As a kid I would read them and gradually came to the conclusion that I would like to produce them myself. I always felt an affinity for language and was able to use it to my advantage eventually in my career.

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

"Ordinary People" by Judith Guest
Anything by Evelyn Anthony, especially "The Persian Price"
"Salem's Lot" by Stephen King
"The Exorcist" by William Peter Blatty
"Dancer from the Dance" by Andrew Holleran

This is just a sample, there are many more. These are all popular fiction, and lately I've reading non-fiction. Some favorites are:
"Leadership in Troubled Times" by Doris Kearns Goodwin; all of her books are wonderful
John Meacham's biography of Thomas Jefferson
"Leonardo da Vinci" by Walter Isaacson

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

Shakespeare would be my first guest and I would ask him how he developed his extraordinary talent growing up as the child of a small businessman in Stratford, England.

What is a typical day like for you?

I don't have a system or pattern that I follow. I might work like a demon through the night for several days running and then just decompress for a day or two. I've tried to be more organized about my writing but that just doesn't work for me. When I'm in the groove, the story I'm thinking about is like a movie running in head and I have to get it down as it comes to me.

What's your favorite thing about writing?

My favorite thing about writing is when people read what you have written they know what you think.

What scene in The Seduction of Tallchief was your favorite to write?

My favorite was the reunion scene at the end of the book when the two people in love have been torn apart by dire circumstances. It's highly emotional and demonstrates the attachment that will keep them together after their difficult separation.

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

"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

Doreen Owens Malek is the author of the new book The Seduction of Tallchief.

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Interview with Olivia Hardy Ray, Author of Annabel Horton and the Black Witch of Pau

What can you tell us about your new release, Annabel Horton and the Black Witch of Pau?

The character of the Black Witch just came to me. I’m not sure where I found her in my mind, but I ended Book One with a message from the Black Witch to Annabel that she had Michele in her cage. She obviously wanted to lure Annabel to her, and it works, of course. The personality of The Black Witch is haughty and strong, but I think she’s appealing. She’s not all on one level. I think readers will find the book amusing and adventurous.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

I was inspired by the books I read when I was younger, books like the Bronte’s wrote, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Cheri and The Last of Cheri, etc.

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

The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, The Invention of Wings, Idaho, All He Ever Wanted and The Gold Coast.

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

William, did you really write all those wonderful plays? How ‘bout the sonnets?

What's your favorite thing about writing?

Letting my imagination wander and creating characters.

What is a typical day like for you?

My days are spent at home where I work a day job and write my novels on holidays and Sundays. It’s cool.

What scene in Annabel Horton and the Black Witch of Pau was your favorite to write?

I loved writing the opening because it establishes who Geneviève is.

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

Try and be kind, open and committed every day of your life.



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Interview with Gena Webb, Author of The Write Decision

What can you tell us about your new release, The Write Decision?

It’s the sequel to Finding Miss Write, the 1st novel in The Misadventures of Miss Write series. Most of it takes place in a courtroom, because the heroine, author Carla Williams, has been selected for jury duty. She initially was thrilled, thinking it would be a good research opportunity, but things quickly took an ugly turn. I had someone describe it as a roller coaster of emotions. I think that pretty much sums it up.

What or who inspired you to become an author?

Good question. I started reading at a very early age, and my summer vacations from elementary school found me either climbing a tree or reading a book. Occasionally, reading a book in a tree. Books take you to other worlds, normally much more glamorous than the one you live in. That’s where my love of words started, and eventually I switched from reading to writing. I’ve been writing most of my life and was always satisfied being a writer and not a published author, but always wanted to see my name on the front cover of a novel. And so, I started that journey.

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

Gone With the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell. (How can any little girl not want to be Scarlett and loved by Rhett?)
Jonathan Livingston Seagull, by Richard Bach. (Not sure why, but I love that book!)
The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam. (I won a copy of this from my H. S. English teacher for memorizing more Shakespeare than anyone in the class.)
A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens. (“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” One of the greatest opening lines I’ve ever read.)
The Holy Bible. (All the action, suspense, romance, life lessons you could ever want, all in one book. Preferably in the King James Version, because it has beautiful, poetic wording.)

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

Well, since it can’t be Abraham Lincoln or Martin Luther King, my two personal heroes, I’d have to say Jane Friedman. Her advice is always spot-on. And my first question would be: How does a 1st time author find a publisher willing to take a chance? That’s the hardest part of writing and the question every new author wants an answer to. My publisher, Journey Fiction, was an answer to a prayer. (Or several prayers.)

What's your favorite thing about writing?

Getting an e-mail from someone asking when the next novel will be available because they’ve run out of anything to read. In other words, knowing that someone can lose themselves in a world you created.

What is a typical day like for you?

Sleep, eat, write. Sometimes eat and write at the same time. And occasionally, just occasionally, falling asleep in front of the laptop with one hand on the keyboard and a half-eaten cookie in the other. I’m a night owl, so I write all night (literally) while the hubby sleeps. Then I sleep while he reads my draft from the previous night and does whatever it is he does during the day. I find it so much easier to be creative when it’s just me pounding a keyboard while listening to a cat purring on the back of the recliner.

What scene in The Write Decision was your favorite to write?

There’s one scene describing a railroad trestle. I love that one, because it’s taken from real life. Like most authors, something in my life becomes the inspiration for a novel. The Write Decision took form when I sat on a jury many years ago. I made notes about my experience there, but never wrote the novel until years later. Because I think that particular railroad trestle is as spooky as described in the novel, it became a setting where the action took place. If there were awards for inanimate objects, the trestle would win. Hands down!

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

Let go and let God. God’s in control, He has a plan, and that plan includes only what is best for me. A hard lesson to learn when you’ve lost one spouse to cancer, but when you finally realize how true it is, life becomes so much easier. It’s more satisfying to live a life on autopilot, knowing someone else has the wheel.

Gena Webb is the author of the new book The Write Decision.

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New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | October 15

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 Gena Webb, John Grisham, Stuart Woods, John Connolly, and many more. Enjoy your new mystery, thriller, and suspense novels. Happy reading!



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