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Giveaway: Win Anton Svensson's New Thriller "The Father"

Anton Svensson's flawlessly constructed new thriller, The Father, follows the transformation of three boys as they turn into some of Sweden's most wanted criminals. The novel has attracted the attention of people from all around the world, and authors and readers alike are raving about it. The Guardian called it a "powerful real-life story." We are giving away 150 copies of this exciting new book, so make sure to enter today!

Fans of Jo Nesbo and Stieg Larson will love The Father. Enter to win your free copy!

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About The Book


Publication Date: April 5, 2016

How does a child become a criminal? How does a father lose a son?

None had committed a crime before. All were under twenty-four years old. When their incredible spree had come to an end amid the glare of the international media, all of them would be changed forever as individuals and as a family.

This intoxicating, heartbreaking thriller tells the story of how three boys are transformed over the course of their lives from innocent children to the most wanted criminals in Sweden. And of the man who made them that way: their father.


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Books to Read If You Like MC Romances

Bad boys run rampant throughout motorcycle club romance novels, and honestly, it's hard to resist these raw and gritty heartthrobs. There's just something about a guy on a motorcycle that's intriguing. After all, they're never as "bad" as they seem. If you are looking for a thrilling romance read, look no further. Here's a list of books to read if you like MC romances. Let your hair down, grab a leather jacket and take one of these bad boys for a spin.

Books to Read If You Like MC Romances


Outlaw Revenge

London Casey

Release Date: July 3, 2014

After her best friend takes a bullet for a member of the Black Down Devil MC club, Emily has no one else to turn to. She ends up staying with Gaige, the VP of the club, and her secrets from the past start to creep up and haunt him.

Walk Through Fire

Kristen Ashley

Release Date: October 27, 2015

After many years apart, former loves Millie and High cross paths again. High, a classic bad boy, is wary because Millie walked away from their relationship in the past. Nevertheless, he realizes that something about her has changed and is intrigued.


Hold

Cora Brent

Release Date: January 26, 2016

The Gentry's are a rough group of brothers who have had to fight their whole lives to survive. Just when they thought that everything was getting better, they are forced to confront their demons from the past one last time

Souls Unfractured

Tillie Cole

Release Date: August 9, 2015

After years of physical and mental torment, Maddie is finally free. She is being protected by the most volatile member of the Hangmen, Flame, who watches over her with a dark intensity. When he finds himself in need of help, Maddie steps in.



Desertion

River Savage

Release Date: July 14, 2015

Jesse Carter, a former Marine, found a new brotherhood in the Knights Rebels after he lost everything he knew. There he meets shy and awkward Bell, and he forced himself into her life. Can she survive his reckless personality?


Arrow's Hell

Chantal Fernando

Release Date: June 16, 2015

Even though she's not supposed to, Anna falls in love with Arrow, a member of the Wind Dragons Motorcycle Club. He tries to resist her at first, knowing that he can't be with the younger sister of an MC member, but he can't hold back for long.


Looking for more gifts for book lovers? Check out our entire collection here.

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Interview with Ed Tarkington, Author of Only Love Can Break Your Heart


Tell us a little bit about your new release, Only Love Can Break Your Heart.

It’s sort of a mash-up of Cain and Abel, the Prodigal Son, The Graduate, Helter Skelter, and “A Rose for Emily,” set in the small-town Upper South, with a soundtrack by Neil Young and Joni Mitchell.

More seriously: I think this book is a unique variation on the domestic novel in that it approaches a deceptively broad variety of forms and relationships in the fairly precise and familiar space of the Southern small-town family drama. It is a first-person coming-of-age novel, but it is also a Gothic tale with macabre undertones, a murder mystery in which the damsel-in-distress is also a suspect, a story of fathers and sons and brothers, of love and betrayal and reconciliation, and a time-capsule view of the imperiled American middle class at a point in history which in some ways foreshadows our current cultural moment. Most of all, it is as emotionally honest as anything I’ve ever written, which I’m told is its greatest strength.

What's rocking your world this month?

Well, I’m pretty excited about my debut novel being published, but if I’m being completely honest, I’m probably more hyped up about the new Star Wars movie.

You’re hosting a literary dinner party. Which three writers are invited?

I think Toni Morrison is our greatest living writer; I couldn’t let pass the opportunity to bask in the glow of her genius. Walker Percy, one of my great heroes, was reputed to be a charming dinner companion, and is responsible for the best bourbon cocktail recipe I’ve ever tasted. Lastly, I’d love to sit down with Ken Kesey, and hope he would bring along a pot of his famous venison chili.

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

With my children. They are still small and perpetually full of joy. I never tire of listening to them laugh. Plus it won’t be long before they become teenagers and want nothing to do with me.

Who is your favorite fictional character from literature?

Like his creator, T.S. Garp shares two of my greatest passions: writing and wrestling. From Garp, I have learned about lunacy and sorrow, what it means to live with energy, and, most importantly, how to embrace difference.

Who was your childhood hero?

If you’d asked me then, I’d say Ralph Sampson, #50 for the Virginia Cavaliers, greatest center in the history of NCAA basketball (sorry, Kareem). Ask me today, and I’ll tell you that it was always my father, Ed Tarkington, Sr., who was far from perfect but never quit trying.

What's your favorite quote or scene from Only Love Can Break Your Heart?

“At some point, every boy feels the urge to lash out at something, to be cruel and violent, to curse the world for its frail humanity. But only a few have the will — be it born of courage or recklessness, folly or sublime wisdom — to act and, by their action, transform themselves. They will pay for their courage, of course; the world does not treat its others lightly. But so will the rest of us — the ones who love them — haunted as we are by our envy of their bright, burning beauty, which we can bear neither to look at nor to turn away from.”

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

“Half my life is an act of revision.” – John Irving

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Ed Tarkington is the author of the new book Only Love Can Break Your Heart.

Connect with Steve
Author Website
 Twitter

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Books To Read if You Like Books by Emma Chase

If you love Emma Chase's vibrant romantic comedies, we think you'll enjoy these titles. Expect to find enchanting characters with wit and charm. You may just meet your next fake boyfriend. 

Books to Read if You Love Emma Chase


I Wish You Were Mine

Lauren Layne

Release Date: February 2, 2016

This story of forbidden desire heats up as a brooding jock hoping for a comeback falls for the one girl he could never have: his ex wife's younger sister.

Nuts

Alice Clayton

Release Date: October 20, 2015

When private chef Roxie Callahan goes back home to bail out her hippie mother and run the family diner, she meets gorgeous local farmer Leo Maxwell and wonders if a summer back home isn't so bad after all. 


The Deal

Elle Kennedy

Release Date:February 24, 2015

To get her crush's attention, Hannah Wells will even tutor the annoying, childish, cocky captain of the hockey team in exchange for a pretend date...and it's going to be good.

Wrong Number, Right Guy

Elle Casey

Release Date: September 22, 2015

A mysterious text message gets May Wexler into a serious mess, but it may get her the right guy.


The Offer

Karina Halle

Release Date: June 13, 2015

She thinks he's an arrogant playboy. He thinks she's an uptight prude. But he's about to make her an offer she can't refuse

Wrong

Jana Aston

Release Date: October 7, 2015

I have a history of picking the wrong guy. Now I can't stop fantasizing about one of the customers at the coffee shop I work at between classes. It's not like I'm going to see him while attempting to get birth control at the student clinic, right? Wrong. 


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Interview with Lauren Layne, Author of I Wish You Were Mine


Tell us a little bit about your new release, I Wish You Were Mine.

I Wish You Were Mine is the second book in my Oxford series (although it can most definitely be read as a standalone!) about a former NFL quarterback whose career is ended abruptly by a car accident. He finds himself accepting a job as Fitness Editor at Oxford magazine in New York City, where the only person he knows is his ex wife’s sister—the one woman who’s always been there for him . . . and the one he can never have.

Who is your favorite couple from literature?

Emma and Mr. Knightley from Jane Austen’s Emma. I find Mr. Darcy as swoony as the next gal, but to be honest, I was much more convinced of Emma and Mr. Knightley’s happy ever after.

What's on your writing desk?

Not much! My computer, my planner and a water bottle. I like a clean writing space. No papers, sticky notes, notebooks, etc. Sometimes I’ll splurge and buy some fresh flowers for the desk.

What's your favorite thing about New York City?

The energy. I know that sounds sort of woo-woo, but there’s an energy in New York that I haven’t found anywhere else, and I’ve lived quite a few places. I don’t know how to describe it other than that everyone is always doing something, going somewhere. It almost feels like every person in the city is there for a reason, living with a very deliberate purpose, whether it be making it on Wall Street or having the best fruit stand on the block. I find it incredibly intoxicating.

What's a typical day like for you?

I’m pretty regimented! I feel like my best self when I have a routine. I wake up early. I aim for 5, never later than 7. I drink my first cup of coffee while updating my planner for the day (I use the DayDesigner). By the time I’m on my second cup of coffee, the laptop is open and I’m writing my first words of the day.

My first writing session always lasts for at least two hours, but I’ll often do more if I’m on a roll. If I’m not on a roll, this is usually about the point where I take a break to gym, shower, have breakfast etc. Then it’s back to the computer, where I’ll set my timer for thirty minutes and catch up on my social media messages (I use SproutSocial so that I don’t actually log into Facebook/Twitter/Pinterest and get distracted).

Then it’s back to the writing (or editing, depending what part of the book process I’m in). My creative energy is usually pretty spent by about 4pm, so I’ll switch over to email, website updates, and other business tasks for an hour or so.

The laptop is usually closed around 5/6pm and I’ll have happy hour with Mr. Layne. Usually at home, but sometimes we’ll go out. Drink transitions to dinner, then we tidy up the apartment (love waking up to a clean home!) and get ready for bed. I’ll read sometimes, but I prioritize sleep over TV, and even my Kindle, so I’m almost always asleep by 10pm.

Thrilling, right?!

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

Well this answer is perhaps “too obvious,” but writing really is the center of my world. I had a recent epiphany recently after I started getting irritable when I was expected to do “fun” things like go out to dinner, or go to a movie, or watch Netflix … I realized that it’s not that I don’t want to do those things, it’s that I just want to write more. There are very few things in life I’d rather be doing than writing. Hanging out with my husband is perhaps, the one exception, but often he hangs out with me while I write. Win/win!

What's your favorite quote or scene from I Wish You Were Mine?

“If she’d thought the man was dangerous in a football uniform, he was positively lethal in a tux.”

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

“Stop Wishing. Start Doing.”

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Lauren Layne is the author of the new book I Wish You Were Mine.

Connect with Lauren
Author Website
 Twitter

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New Romance Books to Read | February 2

These brand new romantic reads are just the thing to put you in the mood for Valentine's Day! In Lauren Layne's I Wish You Were Mine, professional football player Jackson Burke struggles to find his footing after a career-ending car crash but is helped in more ways than he realizes by a former flame. An Undisturbed Peace, written by Mary Glickman, tells a sweeping epic of the challenges faced by a poor immigrant from London, a recently freed slave in Greensboro, N.C., and an Indian being forced from his homelands on the Trail of Tears.


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New Books to Read in Literary Fiction | February 2

Literary legend Charles Bukowski's On Love is a poignant collection of poems that give us a reflective portrait of the author's thoughts on life.  If you're looking for a more energetic read, Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee tells the gripping story of a poor girl who transforms herself from a pauper into Paris' greatest opera singer.


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New Mystery & Thriller Books to Read | February 2

This week's exciting new reads follow a special, sleuthy theme. Bestselling author Sara Blaedel weaves the past and present together as a special service agent searches for a lost girl in The Killing ForestIn the New York Times top rated crime thriller Keep Calm, former Michigan detective Adam Tatum takes on a special case without realizing how high the stakes really are.


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Interview with Abby Geni, Author of The Lightkeepers


Tell us a little bit about your new release, The Lightkeepers.

It's a murder mystery. It's an exploration of the natural world. It has a gothic streak. It's set on the Farallon Islands, a wild archipelago off the coast of California. There's a ghost in it. There are great white sharks, elephant seals, and a horde of malevolent seabirds. There's an octopus. In a starred review, Booklist describes The Lightkeepers as "a first novel of gripping, talon-sharp intensity."

What's rocking your world this month?

Jessica Jones and The Flash. This is a great era to be a huge comic book nerd.

You’re hosting a literary dinner party. Which three writers are invited?

Agatha Christie, since I'd love to pick her brain. E.M. Forster, since he's probably my favorite writer of all time. James Joyce, since I'd like to slap him, then ask him to explain himself, then chat with him over a glass of wine.

What will your next adventure be?

A new novel is on its way down the long tunnel from mind to page. I haven't started writing yet, beyond note-taking and extensive brainstorming, but I can feel that the next book is coming, and that's always a wild adventure.

What books are currently on your night stand?

THE HOUSEGUEST by Kim Brooks, out in April, and HEART ATTACK WATCH by Alyson Foster, out in May. Both are absolutely remarkable.

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

Writing, writing, writing...

What's your favorite quote from The Lightkeepers?

"What is your nature?"

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

I was raised on what I like to call "Larryism" - the personal philosophy of my dad, Larry, which mingles Taoism, optimism, a general hippie mindset, ferocious curiosity about the world, a healthy dollop of science, and lots of stopping to marvel at clouds.

Abby-final

Abby Geni is the author of the new book The Lightkeepers.

Connect with Abby
Author Website
 Twitter

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Interview with Elizabeth Boyle, Author of The Knave of Hearts


Tell us a little bit about your new release, The Knave of Hearts.

I think readers will really relate to the heroine, Lavinia Tempest—she’s spent her entire life desperately trying to fit in—which I think we all do to some extent—but her attempts usually land her in worse straits. So when The Knave of Hearts opens, Lavinia has taken a tumble on the dance floor and taken down with her most of London’s biggest gossips and social mavens. It’s a huge disaster and now she has to find a way to rehabilitate her ruined reputation. Enter Tuck Rowland, the worst sort of knave and rake, (who after making an outlandish wager as to Miss Tempest’s nature) now finds himself in the very uncomfortable position of having to turn this ungainly miss into a lady.

Where is your happy place? Why does it bring you joy?

My home. I am a bit of homebody. I love having my family around me, my gardens, and being able to look out at Puget Sound and see the sky and water as it changes with the moody and temperamental light that is Seattle. Any day I can see Mount Rainier is a perfect day!

Who is your favorite couple from literature?

Anne Elliott and Captain Wentworth from Persuasion by Jane Austen. I love that they had to wait, to be in the right place for it all to work. And that they loved each other so deeply. They knew they were right and finally ignored what the rest of the world thought and followed their hearts.

What's your favorite thing about Seattle?

Everything. My family were early pioneers, so I have very deep roots here. But I just love being surrounded by mountains and the Sound, and big lakes, and all the green. But I have to admit to being overly fond of the Space Needle— it is so wonderfully Seattle.

When you were a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?

A writer. There was never a question or a doubt as to what I was going to do with my life.

What will your next adventure be?

I have it in the planning stages right now—it is going to be a dream come true, but like all dreams it has to stay under wraps for just a bit longer. I know, I am a terrible tease. But I encourage everyone to find a way to follow their heart—even if it takes time and extra effort and a bit of sacrifice.

What's your favorite quote or scene from The Knave of Hearts?

I love the moment in the book where the heroine, Lavinia Tempest decides to abandon all the rules and restrictions she’s put upon her life, her very identity and take a big risk. She thinks to herself:

That book, that wretched list, had bound up her life in ways that would never have led to any true happiness.

And I think we all have things that bind us up, restrictions we place upon ourselves that have no true meaning, other than what we give them. The book is truly about being yourself and being comfortable in your own skin. Owning your faults and your strengths.

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

Be kind. Be true. Be brave.

It is the motto of a local Catholic high school and I think it is the perfect sort of guide for life. I reach for it often.

AuthorElizabethBoyle

Elizabeth Boyle is the author of the new book The Knave of Hearts.

Connect with Elizabeth
Author Website
 Twitter

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