Layout Image
Layout Image

Archive for February 2007 – Page 2

TGIF

Friday, February 9th, 2007
Jill Shalvis Icon

If you read my daily blog, you know it’s been one of those weeks. A sick kid, a broken washing machine, and a blank screen, and no junk food in the house anywhere (because I’ve consumed it all, damn it). There were some positive events. I’ve received some really great advanced reviews for my upcoming Brava SMART AND SEXY.

If you want my undying gratitude, feel free to preorder! As enticement, I’ll give you a little excerpt. And as always, I’ll draw a few names from the commenters for a free book from my Brava backlist. Happy, happy weekend!

Excerpt:
As the sun sank below the mountain line, he touched down and taxied them in, while Bailey sat still, white-knuckled, white-faced.

Finally he turned off the engine.

She didn’t move.

He stood, then crouched at her side. “We’ve landed.”

She nodded, but didn’t look at him until he slid his hand along her jaw and tilted her head down toward him.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, her hair falling over his hand, her skin creamy soft beneath his fingers.

Sorry for coming along, he wondered, or for running out on him, which she’d most likely do while he arranged for the plane’s tie-down and complete re-check of the landing gear.

“I didn’t mean to ruin your night,” she said. “I didn’t know it was your plane I was boarding.”

“Whose plane did you mean to board?”

“It was going to Mammoth, that’s all that mattered.”

Their faces were level. He was close enough to see that her baby blues were outlined in a ring of midnight blue, and that she had a light smattering of freckles high across her perfect nose. Close enough to see the pulse beating faster than a hummingbird’s at her throat. Without conscious thought, he stroked a thumb over that beat.

Her gaze caught his, and held.

Their mouths were nothing but a whisper apart. He knew it was crazy, but he wanted to close the gap, wanted to put his mouth on hers as he’d so pathetically fantasized about on more than one dark, sweaty, sleepless night. The only thing that stopped him was the knowledge that she didn’t want anything but her freedom.

But her gaze lowered to his mouth, too, and her tongue darted out to moisten her lower lip.

He nearly moaned. Instead, his hand slid from her jaw to the back of her neck, his fingers slipping into her silky hair, which was now teasing his forearm.

She said his name again, just a whisper of a sound this time, and her eyes fluttered closed, which sent a ridiculous surge of lust coursing through him.

She wanted him back.

This was crazy, crazy, and yet he leaned in.

So did she.

He’d never be sure which of them closed that last inch between them but it didn’t matter because suddenly her mouth was soft and warm on his. He had one last blinding thought before he went under — one kiss would never be enough, not with her, his walking/talking/breathing wet-dream.

Then she let out this breathless little sound, and her tongue was so hot and sweet he could have sustained himself on that alone. She slid her fingers up over the back of his head to keep him where he was.

As if he’d move.

Fat chance.

Comments (34)
Categories : General, Jill Shalvis

proposals

Thursday, February 8th, 2007
Karen Kelley Icon

Hi Everyone!
I just finished my deadline book–yea! So now I’m working on putting proposals together. I found the perfect hero. Cryna posted the pic of a good looking hunk on the Scamps and Vamps loop back in December and this guy was so—HOT—and he so fits the hero in the proposal I’m doing.

It’s nice to be able to hang a good looking guy’s pic right beside my computer and get away with it. He’s really, really hot!

I also found my heroine. She’s petite and blond. You know, as tiny as she is, Kaci is going to give Peyton so much grief. That’s their names, by the way. I think I spent almost as much time on finding them as I did hunting up their names.

In the past, I didn’t do much of a character profile, and I still don’t, but I’m doing more with this book. I’m finding it interesting to see what makes these people tick before I write the book. I guess everything and everyone changes with time.

Reviews are starting to trickle in for Close Encounters of the Sexy Kind. I was really holding my breath (think Goodyear Blimp) because this book has a LOT more comedy. Still really sexy, though. So far, the reviews have been fantastic! Thank you reviewers. As soon as I get the go ahead, I’ll start posting them to my website.

There’s a lot of exciting things coming up with the Brava authors that I can’t talk about just yet but keep watching. It’s sooooo exciting!!!!!!!!!!!!
And on that secretive note I’ll get back to writing those proposals!
Best wishes,
Karen Kelley
Available Now! Hell On Wheels/Brava
Available Now! Texas Bad Boys/Brava
04/07 Close Encounters of the Sexy Kind/Brava

Secondary Love Stories

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007
Jennifer Apodaca Icon

I was minding my own business…

Okay that’s not true. If I was minding my own business, I wouldn’t be able to write Luke and Ivy’s story. I’m very deep into THEIR business.

So I was minding Luke and Ivy’s business when Ivy’s mom, Mallory, started whining and being generally difficult. Which is odd because her scenes were working fine, there was just something missing from the book as a whole.

Mallory picked that moment to start talking to me. “I want my own love story.”

I answered, “Uh, I’m trying to be nice, but seriously, you’re a little too old to be a Brava heroine.” Oh yeah, that went over will.

Mallory shrieked, “What do you mean? I’m only forty two!”

Forty two? Ha! Try forty-seven. “Too old.” I’m done being nice. This book is DUE. Like NOW. I don’t have time to think about another book. And why is forty-seven too old? Never mind, I have to concentrate on this book!

Mallory is not giving up. “I want my own love story! I’ve never had a love story…just an endless string of bad boys. What’s wrong with me that I can’t have my own love story? Huh?”

I’m trying to work, trying to figure out what’s missing in the book, when it dawns on me. “Secondary love story!”

Mallory is in a real snit now. “What have I been telling you?”

“That you want to take over the book?” I’m being sarcastic and snide because THE BOOK IS DUE!

“I never said that, I just want my own love story. A man who loves me, really loves me, a man who sees me for who I really am.”

Now I feel bad. “Okay, I get it. And I know exactly who is the perfect man for you.” I tell her.

“NO! NOT HIM!”

Excited now, I say, “Yes him, trust me, this will be perfect.”

Mallory storms away, finally leaving me in peace. Then my husband walks in and looks around my office. “Who were you talking to?”

I look up and see the grin on his face. “Shut up.”

He laughs. “How many people are in your head today?”

I smile sweetly, “Well there’s the woman who kills her husband…”

He holds up both hands, still laughing, “Okay I’m leaving.”

So my question for you all is–Do you like secondary love stories in your romances?

Comments (13)

Sneak Peek…

Tuesday, February 6th, 2007
Donna Kauffman Icon

Okay, so I’m cheating a little today. But I’m excited about my new book coming out later this month and thought I’d lure you all in with a little excerpt. The sequel to my 2006 book, BAD BOYS IN KILTS, will be hitting the shelves on February 27th. (Both books stand alone, but hey, why not read both? :) ) THE GREAT SCOT is Dylan Chisholm’s story and takes you back to Glenbuie, my little highland village, and all the assorted characters you first met in Bad Boys in Kilts. I hope you give it a try. In the meantime, here is a little taste of what is in store…

The Great Scot

“How good are you at hiking?”

Erin looked down at her shoes, which were comfortable lace ups, but far from hiking boots. “Not much on traction,” she said, “and I’m kind of fond of these.” She glanced at him and smiled in the face of his obvious anticipation. If she didn’t know better, she’d swear he was maybe a little excited. Or nervous. Or something. It was that something that made her smile broaden. Whatever on earth could make the Great Scot nervous was something she had to see. “What the hell. I can always buy another pair if I trash these, right?”

He nodded in approval, then gestured for her to go in front of him.

“I don’t know where I’m going. Why don’t you lead?”

He pointed. “See that trail there, angling off by that split tree trunk? We’re headed that way.” He stepped up behind her, making her quite aware he was in her personal space again.

Just as she was quite aware she did nothing to move herself out of it, either.

“I’d go first,” he added, a teasing note clear in his tone this time, “but you have this alarming habit of stumbling about. Best I stay behind ye, in case you need catching.”

She shifted just enough to look up at him over her shoulder. His eyes were crinkling at the corners. Probably the sun. But maybe not.

“What?” he asked, making her realize she was staring.

“When was the last time you laughed? Really laughed?” The words were out of her mouth before the thought had even completed itself.

“Far too long ago, I’m certain. I’ve been busy.”

She turned to face him. “Since when did busy and laughter become mutually exclusive?”

“Good point. I have no idea.”

“Before, when you lived in the city, were you happier?”

The question seemed to surprise him. “Since when was happiness measured by laughter?”

“How would you measure it?”

“Fulfillment. Contentment.”

She nodded. “Valid. So, were you? Fulfilled and content?”

“At times. Never completely, but then that’s what provides the drive necessary to fight on, does it not? Are you?”

That gave her pause. She’d poked and prodded him almost since the moment they met. This was the first time she could recall him asking something about her. “No, not completely. But I am happy. Maybe I should have used the word joyful. Are you a such a serious man as all that? Or is it life circumstance that has made you so dour.”

“Dour? Dour am I now?”

She merely arched an eyebrow.

He shook his head. “Och, if true, that’s a sad state of affairs then. I’m no’ a dour man, Erin. But perhaps you have a point about me no’ finding much to be joyful about, not in the sense you mean. But my business has been serious of late. My new life is fulfilling in ways my old life never was. And there is peace in that, which is a good start. The rest will come in time.”

“So you’re saying you’re an optimist.”

“You think me the opposite?”

Now she smiled. “Honestly, I don’t know what to think of you. I guess that’s why I keep badgering you with questions. You aren’t easy to figure out, Dylan Chisholm.”

Amusement did shift into his eyes then, and the resulting gleam was no trick of the sun. She swallowed hard. Perhaps it would be wiser not to provoke the playful side of him after all.

And then he was lifting his hands, pushing back the errant strands of hair the car ride had likely blown into a complete rats nest around her face. Suddenly painfully aware of her looks, or lack thereof, and at the same time exquisitely aware of his touch, almost to the point of pain, she wanted to shrink away, pretend this moment wasn’t happening. Because whatever he was thinking behind those dancing gray eyes of his, no way could it be anything she found herself suddenly hoping, praying, it would be. She didn’t attract men like Dylan Chisholm.

Gorgeous, confident, successful men were typically attracted to beauty first, and brains a distant second. Erin was used to falling in the distant second category, okay with it even. When it came to men like the one touching her now, looking at her so intently, well…it simply didn’t happen. So it had hardly been a problem for her. It would be the epitome of foolishness to allow herself, even for a second, to think this was somehow different.

“I canno’ figure you out either, Erin MacGregor,” he said, his voice deeper, somewhat rougher, as if…as if he were perhaps at least a tiny bit affected by her. Then all rational thought fled, because he was lowering his head towards hers, pressing his fingers into the back of her neck, to tip her face upward to his.

“You badger me with yer questions, talk me into abandoning my own home…” He lowered his head further until his mouth was hovering just above her own.

He couldn’t be, wasn’t going to—

“You sneak into my dreams, haunt my waking hours. What’ve ye done to me, lass?”

She haunted his dreams? In a good way? “Dylan—”

He made a guttural noise at the sound of his name that had a little instinctive moan of her own escaping her lips.

“I havena felt a hunger such as this in a very long time. Will ye allow me the pleasure?”

He was asking permission? Did he not realize that a second or two more of his heated whisperings and he could have her naked on the hood of his Jag?

He brushed her lips with his. “Perhaps I havena been the most merry of fellows, but if there has been anything to cause me to want a bit of respite from the endless hours of work, it has been you.”

“I thought I made you crazy.”

And there it was. The smile she’d been waiting for. It was slow to happen, but as it stole across his face, his entire countenance changed, as if he was lit from within. There was fire there, passion. “Aye, that you do. You’re trouble, Erin, with a capital T. Ye plague me.”

“A plague am I,” she said, but the intended dry sarcasm was somewhat offset by the breathy quality of her voice.

Which served to widen his smile further. “You have refreshing candor, and a smart mouth. You don’t seem to care overly much what I think.”

She tipped her head back slightly, to look fully into his eyes. “And that’s attractive to you? Hard to believe I’m still single with those lovely attributes.”

He rubbed his thumbs along the corners of her mouth, making her shiver at the feel of his work-roughened fingers on her skin. “Hard.” Then he slipped his arms around her waist and brought her fully up against him. “Aye, ‘tis that.”

She barely had time to register the stunning truth of it, then he claimed her mouth with his own and any hope of rational thought fled completely.

Comments (9)
Categories : Donna Kauffman

Book Club #3

Monday, February 5th, 2007
Sylvia Day Icon

Did you finish All Through the Night? What did you think?

I admit, some of the heroes surprised me. Balls-to-the-wall committed to getting their girl, no matter what. *g* One of the great things about multi-author anthologies is the variations in styles. I really enjoyed the dynamic of these four authors together in one volume.

SD Book ClubFavorite line

Favorite scene

Book Club #3 will be a historical, a new one by Katherine O’Neal — THE ART OF SEDUCTION (Feb. 07 Brava). As is the usual, one of this week’s participants will receive a free copy of the Book Club Selection. :grin:

What should we read next? An older title, since next club is a new release.

And if you haven’t yet, you can sign up to be notified when a Book Club post goes up, by filling out the form below.


 

So, let’s hear what y’all thought of this latest selection!

Comments (14)
Categories : Sylvia Day
Tags :

Is There A Too Far?

Friday, February 2nd, 2007
HelenKay Dimon Icon

The coverflats for my July ’07 release, Your Mouth Drives Me Crazy, came in the mail last week. They’re gorgeous and sexy and classy. Perfect for the book. Here, see for yourself:

I love this because it’s mine. I also love it because I love well-done covers. I’ve purchased many books and new-to-me-authors based on covers and cover copy. See, I’m one of those folks who enjoys going to a bookstore, browsing through the shelves and tables and looking at covers. A bit dork-like, I know, but we all need to find a thrill however we can.

On this search I sometimes stumble across a cover that makes me, well, wonder a bit at the boldness of the cover. In case you’re unclear, “boldness” in this context usually means my reaction to the cover went like this: “wow, look at all the naked people…wait, where is his hand?” Now, I’m not a prude. In my novella in the anthology When Good Things Happen To Bad Boys my hero spent a good portion of the story naked and handcuffed to the ceiling in a secret basement room. Yeah, there’s nothing prudish about that. Despite my likes and dislikes in romance reading, some covers do seem to go a bit far for my book buying taste. Not sure why, but they do.

Now, if you’re visiting the Brava blog I’m assuming you enjoy romance with a bit of spice and heat. Some of you may spend time checking out covers just as I do. So, let me ask you – have you seen the cover that goes that one step too far? The one that makes you squirm a bit…and not in a good way. I haven’t in Brava. I can’t think of a single Brava cover that crossed that line for me. In fact, I can only think of a few covers over the course of the entire imprint that I didn’t like. Usually, I love them. And, just wait because some of the 2007 releases have amazing covers.

But what about you? Ever have an adverse reaction to the “hotter” covers for the “hotter” books (I’m afraid to use the term erotic romance because the phrase tends to make people nutty, so we’ll go with “hotter). Did the cover keep you from buying the book? Did it make you seek it out on the internet/in private? Did it make you want to check out the reviews or the author? Or, are those hot covers not having any real impact on you?

Since I’m curious, you leave a comment and you’ll have a chance to win a copy of When Good Things Happen To Bad Boys…you know, to read that handcuff scene for yourself :) I’ll pick a winner at random on Monday.

Comments (33)
Categories : HelenKay Dimon

Books to Television

Thursday, February 1st, 2007
Gemma Bruce Icon

Did anybody watch Angels Fall on Lifetime Monday night? They’re doing four Nora Roberts stories for the next few Mondays.

I thought it was a really good adaptation. I’ve worked in film and it’s a committee project. The last movie I worked on had 19 versions of the script. Everyone puts in their two cents worth and I always find it amazing that the director somehow meshes it into a story that works.

I’m amazed at how they can distill a book of hundreds of pages into two hours with commercials.

I’m glad more books are being made into television movies and feature films. I love the medium. But I have to admit, for me, nothing comes close to the long, drawn out, nail-biting suspense of page turning.

Because as effective as those collage-like fast edits are, they don’t have that slow, gut wrenching suspense that the written word creates. It’s a different kind of experience. One that speeds you through the story, not giving you time to breathe except during the commercials. Then before you know it, you’re watching Will and Grace.

(Could anybody read those credits at the end? They went by so fast, that I had to look up the actors on the internet.)

The camera can collapse action or flashback into a few seconds, while we slowly world build word after word, page after page.

Two different media, two different ways of expressing the same thing. Is one better than the other, or is it apples and oranges?

I’d just finished listening to Angels Fall on audio books, just for the flow of the language, something that you miss in the shorter, visual version. And yet it did capture the essence of the story. And there was some wonderful scenery.

But I’m still undecided. What do you think? Is a picture worth a thousand words?

Comments (7)
Categories : Gemma Bruce