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Magical realism and breathtaking contemporary romance converge in the newest from Lisa Kleypas, Dream Lake. It’s our August 2012 Romance of the Month, and as romance columnist Christie Ridgway writes, “This is Kleypas at her contemporary best: The writing wows and the ending evokes happy tears.”

We chatted with Kleypas about writing, romance and great abs!

Describe your book in one sentence.
Alex Nolan, a dark and cynical man who is being haunted by the ghost of a WWII fighter pilot, fights his growing attraction to local innkeeper Zoe Hoffman.

What’s the most romantic thing that has ever happened to you?
I was on a first date with a charming but slightly reserved guy who took me out to dinner on Valentine’s Day. At the restaurant, they were passing around a bowl of conversation hearts—those candies with words printed on them—and he sorted through the bowl until he found the one he wanted to give to me. It said “TRUE LOVE.” We have been married for 18 years, and it’s still true love!

What’s your favorite thing about being a writer?
I love the fact that I’m always learning more about the craft. With writing, there is never a point at which you can say, “I don’t need to get any better.” That kind of challenge always makes it exciting and interesting.

What was the proudest moment of your career so far?
It was when I managed to summon the courage to try something new after almost two decades of writing historical romances, and I completed my first contemporary novel, Sugar Daddy. Also, I feel incredibly grateful that one of my books is being made into an upcoming Hallmark Hall of Fame movie titled Christmas With Holly. I can’t wait to watch it with my family and friends.

What are the sexiest scenes to write?
Often it’s not the love scenes as much as the intimate moments between two characters when you realize that some emotional change is happening. For example, in Dream Lake, there is a moment when Alex, a guy with a really tough and cynical personality, rushes to help Zoe, a young chef who has just gotten a minor burn on her arm. His behavior reveals a tender and caring side that is unexpected and I think very sexy. Having a man take care of you, show concern for you, is a much bigger turn-on for women than the sight of muscular abs—although the abs certainly never hurt!

If you had to be stranded on a desert island with one of your heroes, who would you choose?
I think Hardy Cates from one of my contemporary novels, Blue Eyed Devil. Very sexy, tough and charming. He would be fun to spend time with under a palm tree, but he could also build a boat to get us back home!

What are you working on next?
I am having so much fun writing Crystal Cove, a contemporary romance about a young witch who has been cursed never to fall in love . . . but then she meets a handsome and mysterious stranger, Jason Black, who may just break the spell.

Magical realism and breathtaking contemporary romance converge in the newest from Lisa Kleypas, Dream Lake. It's our August 2012 Romance of the Month, and as romance columnist Christie Ridgway writes, "This is Kleypas at her contemporary best: The writing wows and the ending evokes…
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Copenhagen cold case investigator Carl Mørck rocketed onto the Scandinavian noir scene with last year’s The Keeper of Lost Causes, and he returns in The Absent One to seek justice for a decades-old unsolved murder. This tale of revenge and sociopathic socialites is proof that Danish author Jussi Adler-Olsen has easily joined the front of the Nordic thriller pack.

Adler-Olsen answered our questions all the way from Iceland. He kept things short and sweet—well, maybe more salty than sweet.

Describe your book in one sentence.
Thrillastonishinggood.

Would you make a good investigator?
Oh yes, I solved my first mystery in 1960: Who scratched Per’s father’s car? (It was Per’s younger brother.) It took me 10 minutes to solve.

The report of each nation’s happiness index ranks Denmark as the happiest country in the world. Why are you guys so happy?
We are happy from absolute necessity. With the damp, cold winters and rainy summers, we have to, or else the suicide rate would go sky-high.

Why does happy Denmark make such a great setting for your crime novels?
Because I know everything about it.

What is one book you think every thriller fan should read?
A Kiss Before Dying by Ira Levin.

What is the greatest writing advice you’ve ever received?
Use the bathroom before taking your seat in front of the PC.

What are you working on next?
My next book.

Copenhagen cold case investigator Carl Mørck rocketed onto the Scandinavian noir scene with last year's The Keeper of Lost Causes, and he returns in The Absent One to seek justice for a decades-old unsolved murder. This tale of revenge and sociopathic socialites is…
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The Ugly Duchess, the September 2012 Top Pick in Romance, is a sexy, senusal Regency fairy tale that romance columnist Christie Ridgway calls “delicious” and “sensuous.” Eloisa James, Shakespeare professor by day and romance author by candlelit night, answered a few questions on fairy tales and the romance genre.

Describe your book in one sentence.
The Ugly Duchess is a version of “The Ugly Duckling,” in which the duckling is a duchess who falls in love with a pirate . . . because every ugly duckling deserves a gorgeous man with a tattoo (and a title).

If you could live in any fairy tale, which would it be?
Cinderella. Great dresses, magic wand, fabulous castle, singing mice—it’s got it all!

What are the sexiest scenes to write?
Scenes in which the hero and heroine are flirting. Nothing is as sensuous as elegantly constructed, witty conversation.

What is it about the Regency era that makes for such unforgettable romances?
The circumscribed nature of relationships between men and women at the gentry level and above make it an interesting period for romance. Sexual mores were not as rigid as they became during the Victorian period and nor as loose as during the Georgian.

Why are romances your favorite books?
The simple answer is that I love a happy ending. But a more complicated answer is that romance has a rhythm and a promise to it that appeals to me. I know the world is a tough and cold place; I’ve lost my mother and I have a child with a chronic illness. But—and this is a big but—I also know that love and joy make all the difference. Romance reminds me that if there’s a pattern to the universe, it’s one shaped around and by love. We can all use that reminder now and then.

What fairy tale will you remake next?
My version of Rapunzel will be published in July 2013.

And one question for your double life as a Shakespeare professor: In your opinion, what is the most romantic line Shakespeare ever wrote?
A half line, spoken by Romeo when he finds Juliet in the tomb: “O my love, my wife.”

The Ugly Duchess, the September 2012 Top Pick in Romance, is a sexy, senusal Regency fairy tale that romance columnist Christie Ridgway calls "delicious" and "sensuous." Eloisa James, Shakespeare professor by day and romance author by candlelit night, answered a few questions on fairy…
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Jo Nesbø has been called the next Stieg Larsson, and this month, our Whodunit columnist calls his newest thriller, Phantom, “one of the finest suspense novels to come out of Scandinavia to date.” It’s our Top Pick in Mystery, and it’s “easily the most troubling and heartfelt” of the Harry Hole series.

We checked in with Nesbø to talk a bit about reading, Harry Hole and great writing advice.

Describe your book in one sentence.
Harry, back in Oslo from Hong Kong to prove that Rakel’s son Oleg is not a murderer, sets out on a dangerous investigation that takes him deep into the world of the most lethal drug to ever hit Oslo, and into the maze of his own past, where he will find the truth.

If you woke up in Harry Hole’s shoes one morning, what would you do?
I have no idea. Harry is good, and although he may not be my alter ego, I’ve certainly used a lot of my own person in Harry. Let’s say 70%. The best parts. Well, some of the not so good, too. But I must have put some of my analytical abilities in there, I believe.

What is one book readers might be surprised to know you have read?
The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. I’m glad it was short.

What is the greatest compliment you’ve received for your books?
When young people says it inspired them to write.

What is the best writing advice you’ve ever received?
Be the psychopath. You have to be able to identify with a character, similar to how an actor works. It might be scary sometimes, but that’s what you have to do. Humans are complex; you’ll be able to find most things within yourself. Just use your imagination.

Some readers might not know that you are also the author of several children’s books in the Doctor Proctor’s Fart Powder series. What was your favorite book as a child?
My favorite book as a child was Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain. It was funny, had bizarre characters and suspense. And a bona fide murder.

What’s next?
Writing. Always writing.

Jo Nesbø has been called the next Stieg Larsson, and this month, our Whodunit columnist calls his newest thriller, Phantom, "one of the finest suspense novels to come out of Scandinavia to date." It's our Top Pick in Mystery, and it's "easily the…
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An exceptionally unusual premise and the strong characterization of a gentle giant hero deliver the old one-two in the November 2012 Mystery of the Month, The Dark Winter by debut author David Mark. Writes whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney, “English critics have compared David Mark to the likes of Val McDermid and Ian Rankin. My prediction: It will not be long until new voices in the genre are hailed as the ‘next David Mark.'”

With such high praise for this first-time novelist, we had to check in and see what he had to say about crime writing and favorite books.

Describe your book in one sentence.
In the midst of a bleak winter in the Northern English city of Hull, a serial killer begins to take the lives of sole survivors in the manner they previously cheated death—and shy family man Detective Sergeant Aector McAvoy is the only detective who can see the connections.

What is the most important advice you can give to an aspiring crime writer?
Keep at it. I’m afraid to say you will likely be rejected and disappointed many times before your dreams even begin to come true. Write for the enjoyment of it first and keep your secret ambitions of world domination as a private fantasy rather than a definitive goal. It doesn’t happen for everybody, but the pleasure you get from writing is indisputable. More than anything, come up with a good story. It sounds simple, but you’d be amazed how few original tales there are to be told.

What special edge does your former career as a crime reporter bring to your novels?
First and foremost its authenticity. As a journalist I met people at extremes of emotion. I interviewed a lot of grieving families, right when they were at their most raw, and the characters I write about tend to exist in those moments. I know how the room tastes in that particular situation. A lot of the police procedure is research and guesswork, but in terms of the victims’ families and witnesses, I feel able to write with some degree of integrity. Being a journalist also helps you understand that almost anything can happen and everybody is fascinating at some point in their lives.

What’s one book you think everyone should read?
That’s a horrible question! Certainly everybody should read a dictionary, or at least have a glance through one from time to time. From a “greatest novel” perspective, everybody should read something by Cormac McCarthy. Personally, Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks affected me greatly, while I have never shaken the feelings that I was left with after reading Toni Morrison’s Beloved. If we want a better world, everybody should read The Long Walk to Freedom by Nelson Mandela. Can I have one more? Read The Fatal Shore by Robert Hughes. Oh, and apparently The Dark Winter by David Mark is OK, too.

What’s your favorite movie based on a book?
Well, The Godfather is the greatest ever film and that’s based on a book, but I’m not keen on the book, so that probably doesn’t count. The Shawshank Redemption shows how good a movie can be when the director doesn’t fiddle with the novelist’s vision. Mystic River is also pretty close to perfect as a film. I’m going to have to stop procrastinating, aren’t I? OK, my favorite movie based on a book is No Country for Old Men. It might not be in a few minutes when all of the other movies I’ve neglected start clamoring for my attention, but I’m going to stick with it.

What’s one bad habit you have no intention of breaking?
I swear too much, and I do drink more whisky than any human being (or bull rhinoceros) should really imbibe. I could also beat Mickey Mouse in a cheese-eating contest. I don’t really have any plans to change my ways anytime soon.

What are you working on next?
The second novel in the McAvoy series is completed. It’s called Original Skin and takes McAvoy to some very dark places. I’m busy putting the finishing touches on the third in the series, which is going to be called Sorrow Bound in the UK. I’ve also promised to write my children a novel for Christmas, and they are very hard masters to please so I’m going to have to make sure it’s good. If it’s not, the criticism will not be given gently!

An exceptionally unusual premise and the strong characterization of a gentle giant hero deliver the old one-two in the November 2012 Mystery of the Month, The Dark Winter by debut author David Mark. Writes whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney, "English critics have compared David Mark…
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Darren Shan has been scaring young readers for over a decade—and adults for even longer. His list of children’s books began with the Cirque Du Freak series (known in the UK as The Saga of Darren Shan), followed by the popular vampire series The Demonata. His newest book, Zom-B, launches a new 12-book teen horror series that promises new installments every three months.

For much of Zom-B, the impending zombie horde is little more than hearsay. There are reports of an outbreak in Ireland, but no one knows for sure. Zom-B also introduces B, a high school bully who picks fights with Muslims, blacks, immigrants—anyone B’s dad doesn’t like. But B hasn’t totally bought into this blind hate, and when the zombie rumors prove true, there’s no time for anything but a desperate dash for survival.

Shan stretches the tension to its limit—the reader knows it’s coming, and the anticipation boils as rumors circulate and theories fester. An abrupt, gory cliffhanger will leave readers hating Shan just a little bit (but in the best possible way) and anxiously awaiting Zom-B Underground, book two in this gruesome new series.

These days, everyone is a zombie survival expert. It doesn’t matter if we’re dealing with old-school slow zombies or contemporary runners, the basic rules stay the same: Don’t get bit, shoot the brain, etc. How do your zombies stand apart from the rest of zombie history?

For me it was crucial to come at zombies from a different angle, like I did with vampires when I was writing Cirque Du Freak. I had no interest in just telling a normal zombie story. The first book does revolve around a classic zombie situation, with a group of characters trapped in a school and having to run from the hordes of living dead. But that’s just the starting-off point. From book two, we’re going to be in uncharted waters. I can’t say too much about how I’ve twisted things, as I don’t want to spoil any of the surprises or plot twists, but in this series, after the first book, “ordinary” zombies are more of the background scenery than the main show.

Why have zombies become such a cultural horror icon? Why is society currently obsessed with the walking dead?

I think they’re a useful way of creating a dystopian, apocalyptic society where you can explore a variety of social and political themes. Lots of us have a fascination with imagining our world gone to seed: What would it be like to live in an anarchic society where law and order have broken down? You can set up such a scene with giant plants (The Day of the Triffids), a deadly virus (The Stand) or whatever. But zombies give the scenario a bit of an extra . . . bite!

“Zom-B urges self-empowerment. We all have the power to change the world, even if only in a very small way, but we have to stand up and do it, not just let events wash over us.”

You’ve said that Zom-B was inspired by the fear and paranoia that became prevalent after the 9/11 and 7/7 terrorist attacks. How did these events influence a zombie book?

Zombies by themselves don’t provide much mileage. They’re one-dimensional monsters, and if your story only features scenes of zombies attacking humans, and humans trying to evade them, you’re not going to get very far. You need to have a meatier subject matter.

Zom-B began with me wanting to write about racism and the abuse of power. We live in troubling times, where people with grudges are trying to stoke up everybody else and create an atmosphere of fear and mistrust. I wanted to get young people thinking about the issues of the day, to urge them to always use their common sense, to question everything that they are told, to not just blindly follow those in positions of power or those with the loudest voices. But I wanted to do it in a fun, exciting way. Zombies gave me the means to do that, to create a dark, thrilling series of books that would also hopefully give readers food for thought, mixed in with the scares and intrigue.

Some of the humans in Zom-B are far more horrifying than the zombies, such as B’s racist, abusive father. Fighting zombies is basically kill-or-be-killed, but how do you fight someone like B’s dad?

That’s really the core message of the series. Yes, zombies are terrifying and deadly, but humans are far more dangerous than any fictional monsters we might come up with. It’s a recurring theme throughout the series—the living pose more of a threat than the undead. As for how you fight such a threat, it’s simple—you use your brain, listen to your heart and make a stand. Zom-B urges self-empowerment. We all have the power to change the world, even if only in a very small way, but we have to stand up and do it, not just let events wash over us.

The debate over children’s horror has gone back and forth for years—mostly with movies, but it’s relevant to your books for kids and teens. Obviously, you get a kick out of scaring kids. Why is it good for kids to be scared? How do you know when a horror book is just scary enough for young readers? Where is the line?

I do a lot of touring, and when I’m writing a particularly disturbing scene, I think about what it would be like to read it out loud to a group of children or teenagers. If I would feel uncomfortable doing so, then I go back and rewrite. I don’t think there’s any clear, defining line between what is acceptable and what is not. It’s a gut instinct and always should be. I don’t believe in having imposed limits in children’s literature. It should be a writer’s job to examine their conscience and use their common sense.

When you were a kid, what were you most scared of? What are you most scared of now?

I was scared of things like spiders and snakes when I was younger, and of fictional monsters. Although actually, no, I wasn’t really scared of monsters, because I knew they were fictional. They were fun. Reading horror books or watching horror movies was fun-scary. I think reality always provides the worst scares—if something nasty really happens to you, it can be horrible. When the scares are only in your head, it can be enjoyable.

Based on the books you write, readers might think you spend your free time seeking out the grisly and weird, especially by titling your vampire series The Saga of Darren Shan. How much time do you spend doing super creepy things?

Not much actually. I lead a pretty normal life most of the time. I do like visiting graveyards and creepy crypts, but I don’t seek out creepiness. I’ve done some thrill-seeking stuff in my time—bungee-jumping, sky-diving, whitewater-rafting—but that has been for the buzz rather than the scariness factor.

With each book you write, what do you hope your reader’s reaction will be?

I hope, first and foremost, that they enjoy the story. Reading should be fun. But I also like to send them away thinking. The best books provide entertainment and food for thought. It shouldn’t be an either/or situation.

What can readers expect from book two, Zom-B Underground, coming next January?

I can’t say too much about it, except it’s all set in an underground complex, and it’s where the story starts to go off in a new, disturbing direction. It also features a very, VERY freaky clown . . .

Shan gives us a behind-the-scenes look at the monsters in his head and tells us how he manages to stay just this side of "too scary."
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Megan Mulry’s stylish debut, A Royal Pain, is an unusual fairy tale, but one romance columnist Christie Ridgway calls “a modern love story fizzing with bubbles of Cinderella fantasy.” For anyone who watched the Royal Wedding in rapt attention—or simply lusted after those hats—this story of a Yank and a Brit is the perfect contemporary spin on fairy-tale love.

We chatted with Mulry about British gossip, sexy waiters and much more.

Describe your book in one sentence.
A Royal Pain is the story of a strong-willed, independent American woman who unwittingly falls for a British duke . . . trials and tribulations ensue.

What’s your celebrity guilty pleasure? Do you love British royalty gossip?
The Duchess of Cambridge is my celebrity guilty pleasure. I try to rationalize that visits to www.whatkatewore.com are really my way of addressing matters of high sociological philosophy and help me speak to modern feminism. I’m really just there for the dresses. I’m not that into the gossip side of things . . . I’m more of a voyeur than a delver.

What are the sexiest scenes to write?
The ones at the beginning of a relationship when both characters are a little unsure; I love writing scenes that are all tingly and full of unspoken promise.

Who would you invite to your fantasy dinner party?
All the best people, darling! Julia Child, Christopher Hitchens, Coco Chanel, the Duchess of Cambridge, the Duchess of Devonshire, Caitlin Moran, Colin Firth, Anthony Bourdain, Vita Sackville-West and some of my real-life friends to round out the numbers. David Gandy would be the waiter.

How do you conquer writer’s block?
I write every day. No excuses.

What’s one book your readers might be surprised to know you have read?
I am in the process of reading the 10 original Harlequin Presents by Violet Winspear, Anne Hampson and Anne Mather. Not that surprising, actually.

What’s next?
Earl Meets Girl (June 2013) and L is for Lady (November 2013) are the next two books in this royal series. There’s also a sexy little historical novella coming out sometime in 2013.

Megan Mulry's stylish debut, A Royal Pain, is an unusual fairy tale, but one romance columnist Christie Ridgway calls "a modern love story fizzing with bubbles of Cinderella fantasy." For anyone who watched the Royal Wedding in rapt attention—or simply lusted after those hats—this…
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Margaret Maron’s popular Deborah Knott mystery series is a mix of “homespun sweetness” and “edginess,” a combination that works so well that Whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney compares her work to that of Alexander McCall Smith and Peter Mayle.

We chatted with Maron about her 18th Deborah Knott installment, The Buzzard Table, and holiday traditions.

Describe your book in one sentence.
NYPD homicide detective Sigrid Harald learns more than she wanted to know about turkey buzzards when she comes down to the home turf of NC District Court Judge Deborah Knott.

What do you most admire about Deborah Knott?
Her curiosity, her humor and her sense of fair play.

Would you make a good judge?
I actually think I would. I can usually tell when I’m being gamed and I have enough common sense that I wouldn’t overthink a situation.

What are you reading now?
Paging the Dead by Brynn Bonner and A History of Private Life: From Pagan Rome to Byzantium, ed. by Paul Veyne.

What’s one bad habit you have no intention of breaking?
Me? Bad habits? Don’t be silly.

What is your favorite thing about the holidays?
Our “Christmas Sing,” which is when close family and friends come out to the farm for an evening of good food, off-key singing, skits and much laughter—a 40-year-old tradition. The preteen children of those early years are grandparents now, and the in-laws and babies come, too.

What’s next?
My 19th Deborah Knott novel, Designated Daughter.

Margaret Maron's popular Deborah Knott mystery series is a mix of "homespun sweetness" and "edginess," a combination that works so well that Whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney compares her work to that of Alexander McCall Smith and Peter Mayle. We chatted with Maron about her…
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Our December 2012 Top Pick in Romance is a tale of an inescapable connection from “an author deft at mining deep emotion.” Robyn Carr takes her readers to Virgin River at Christmastime in My Kind of Christmas, a hopeful tale of a rugged Navy man and the woman he loves.

We chatted with Carr about sexy scenes, great books and the upcoming holiday season.

Describe your book in one sentence.
The hardest question in the world—Angie LaCroix and Patrick Riordan retire to Virgin River for a respite from their traumas and find that love and passion does as much to heal wounds as a vacation could.

What is it about Virgin River that makes it such a hotbed for romance?
It’s removed from the world in a way and exists as a place of community and caring, a kind of magical town where people help each other, can trust each other, and commitment is the order of the day. It could be something in the water, but whatever you need, chances are you’ll find it in Virgin River.

Who is your favorite character you’ve ever written?
That’s a little like asking a mother who her favorite child is. I guess the character I’ve gotten to know best is Jack Sheridan, who has appeared in every Virgin River novel. He has so many sides—by turns sexy and courageous or funny and meddling. I do love him. And he loves me.

What are the sexiest scenes to write?
Not the sex scenes, actually, but the scenes that lead up to the sex scenes—the caress, the touch, the shiver of expectation, the kiss. The seductive words and the growing expectation that it’s the right match, the perfect possession.

What’s one book you think everyone should read?
The Prince of Tides by Pat Conroy, so much deeper and more complex than the movie by the same title. The character growth and story development and smashing denoument are stunning.

What do you enjoy most about the holidays?
The gathering of friends and family, not to mention dangerously delicious food everywhere you turn. For our family, the pleasure in giving far exceeds the fun of opening our own presents—both giving gifts within our family and giving to charities. Every time I put five dollars in the bell-ringer’s bucket, my heart gets larger!

What’s next?
After 20 Virgin River novels, a new series starts in March with three novels scheduled for 2013. The anchor character came out of Virgin River, and we’ll travel to a new location in the beautiful wilds of the Oregon coast—and I am having so much fun! That doesn’t mean I’ll stop writing about Virgin River, but it’s time to freshen things up a bit.

Our December 2012 Top Pick in Romance is a tale of an inescapable connection from "an author deft at mining deep emotion." Robyn Carr takes her readers to Virgin River at Christmastime in My Kind of Christmas, a hopeful tale of a rugged Navy…
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It’s been said that the mind is the sexiest part of the human body, and that’s never truer than in Jayne Ann Krentz’s Dark Legacy series. The second in the series, Dream Eyes finds psychic counselor Gwen Frazier and psychic investigator Judson Coppersmith drawn into a tricky web of deception and murder—and drawn helplessly to each other.

An “imaginative and exciting” psychic romance, Dream Eyes is our Top Pick in Romance for January 2013, so we chatted a bit with author Jayne Ann Krentz about writing and sexy scenes.

Describe your book in one sentence.
I can’t do this! I’m no good at the one-line pitch thing. Okay, okay, Dream Eyes is contemporary romantic suspense with a psychic twist. And there’s a cat in it. How’s that?

What do you love most about writing?
That great feeling I get when I can see the whole vision of the book and finally know where I’m going. Unfortunately, I don’t usually get that feeling until I’m on the last chapter—sometimes not until I’m on the last page. It’s a very inefficient approach to my craft.

What’s the most romantic scene you’ve ever written?
I’m rather fond of the scene in Dream Eyes when the heroine, Gwen, walks into Judson Coppersmith’s deeply troubled dreamscape.

If you could read only one book for the rest of your life, what would it be?
The one I would immediately start writing in my head. That way I could keep changing the story around to make it new and different. I would be in control so I wouldn’t ever finish the book.

What’s the proudest moment of your career?
What makes me proud is knowing that my family is seriously proud of me. Their support and enthusiasm for my career means more than they will ever know.

If you had psychic powers, what would you do with them?
Figure out how to describe my books in a single sentence.

What’s next?
The Mystery Woman, a Ladies of Lantern Street novel written under my Amanda Quick pen name. More romantic suspense with a psychic twist, but this one is set in the Victorian era. There is no cat, but there is an Egyptian mummy.

It's been said that the mind is the sexiest part of the human body, and that's never truer than in Jayne Ann Krentz's Dark Legacy series. The second in the series, Dream Eyes finds psychic counselor Gwen Frazier and psychic investigator Judson Coppersmith drawn into…
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Mary Burton’s new romantic suspense The Seventh Victim is our February 2013 Romance of the Month, and Romance columnist Christie Ridgway promises a cold case adventure packed with “procedural details, red herrings and spine-chilling danger.”

We chatted with Burton about the romantic suspense genre, her career and much more.

Describe your book in one sentence.
The Seventh Victim features the woman who escaped death, the serial killer who never forgot her and the Texas Ranger determined to let neither escape.

What’s your favorite part of mixing romance and suspense?
It’s just a perfect blend. I love the puzzle of the suspense and the constant wondering of whodunit. And if there is a romance to complicate matters, all the better. The suspense offers a sense of justice for the reader, and the romance, hope.

What are the sexiest scenes to write?
I love the scenes that are loaded with sexual tension. The hero and heroine are very aware of each other but for whatever reason can’t do anything about their attraction. It’s that lingering question of “will they or won’t they?” that keeps me turning the pages.

What has been the proudest moment of your career?
Last year the Washington Romance Writers awarded me their Lifetime Achievement Award. I’ve been a member of the group for many years, and I was very touched and humbled by the acknowledgment.

What’s one book you think everyone should read?
Great by Choice by Jim Collins.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve received?
Write every day. Even if I only have a few minutes, I write every day. This keeps the story fresh in my head and my writing skills sharp.

What’s next?
No Escape, which will be released in November 2013. This is the second in my Texas series and tells the tale of Dr. Jolene Granger and Texas Ranger Brody Winchester.

Mary Burton's new romantic suspense The Seventh Victim is our February 2013 Romance of the Month, and Romance columnist Christie Ridgway promises a cold case adventure packed with "procedural details, red herrings and spine-chilling danger." We chatted with Burton about the romantic suspense genre,…
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Lachlan Smith’s debut thriller Bear Is Broken introduces fledgling attorney Leo Maxwell, who is thrust into the crime-solving business when his brother is shot right in front of him. Whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney loves how it “reads as if the writer has toiled at his craft for ages.”

BookPage welcomed Smith to the mystery genre with a few questions about writing and favorite authors.

Describe your book in one sentence.
Bear Is Broken is a detective novel, a coming-of-age novel and a legal thriller all in one, featuring a young San Francisco lawyer, Leo Maxwell, who seeks the truth behind his brother’s shooting but doubts whether truth can lead to justice; many, including the police, seem to think that in the shooting of Teddy Maxwell, one of San Francisco’s most successful and notorious criminal defense attorneys, justice may already have been served.

Leo’s not your typical mystery hero. What do you think readers will like most about him?
What Leo lacks in judgment he makes up for in perseverence and loyalty, qualities that I hope readers find admirable. Also, no matter how cynical he may become once he begins to shed his naivete, he never stops seeking the best approximation of justice he can achieve in a murky and uncertain world.

Would you make a good amateur detective?
Alas, no. Imagination, helpful as it is in writing fiction, tends to be a handicap in the real-life mysteries I occasionally encounter as a lawyer. In my legal career, I learned early on that it’s best to stick with what can be proved from established facts.

What books or authors have most influenced your writing?
Robert Traver’s Anatomy of a Murder and Scott Turow‘s Presumed Innocent are my favorite courtroom novels. As a budding series writer, I’ve tried to learn from John D. MacDonald, Michael Connelly and Lawrence Block. Daniel Woodrell and Elmore Leonard are writers I turn to whenever I need to remember what fiction is all about.

This is one complex plot, with lots of characters all with complicated, often secretive motivations. What were your favorite parts to write?
The beginning, because in an hour of writing I knew I had a novel and a series. The momentum of my excitement for that scene carried me through the first half of the book. After the beginning, my next favorite scenes to write were the courtroom scenes.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve received?
John L’Heureux, my teacher at Stanford, taught me that if you write 500 words a day, every day, you can aspire to write a novel in a year.

What’s next?
Lion Plays Rough, the second novel in the Leo Maxwell series, comes out in February 2014. It takes place in Oakland and, in addition to further developing the relationship between Leo and his brother, finds Leo uncovering scandal in the Oakland Police Department. Right now I’m working on the third book in the series, in which Leo’s father is released from prison and promptly becomes the chief suspect in the murder of a former cellmate.

Lachlan Smith's debut thriller Bear Is Broken introduces fledgling attorney Leo Maxwell, who is thrust into the crime-solving business when his brother is shot right in front of him. Whodunit columnist Bruce Tierney loves how it "reads as if the writer has toiled at…
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Leighton Gage’s Perfect Hatred, the newest installment in his series featuring Brazilian Federal Police Inspector Mario Silva, is BookPage’s Top Pick in Mystery for March 2013. With an exotic location and perfect plotting, it is “hands down the first ‘do not miss’ mystery of 2013!”

BookPage chatted with Gage about Brazil, the tough lives of cops and To Kill a Mockingbird.

Describe your book in one sentence.
Armchair tourism for crime fiction lovers.

Why does Brazil make such an excellent setting for your thrillers?
Brazil is big, larger than the continental United States, and endlessly variable. From the Amazon region in the north, with the biggest rainforest in the world and a single river that pumps out 20 percent of all the fresh water on earth, to the Pantanal, the largest wetland area on the planet, there are thousands of potential locations I can transport my readers to—and hundreds of issues to explore.

In Perfect Hatred, for example, we range from São Paulo, the largest city in the Southern hemisphere, to the great waterfalls at Iguaçu, where three countries meet. And then we cross over the border into Paraguay, a sad little country where contraband makes up 80 percent of the national economy and human life is cheap.

Would you make a good cop? Why or why not?
I’d make a lousy cop.

In researching my books, I’ve spent a lot of time with cops and their families. And through those experiences, I’ve come to realize how hard the job is. I’m not talking about the technical challenges or the day-to-day investigations. I’m talking about the emotional side, about what working as a cop does to you inside.

By way of illustration, here’s a story I got from one detective’s wife:

“There’s no truth in the adage ‘it’s a small world.’ It is, in fact, a very big world.”

Her husband was assigned to investigate a double murder. A 17-year-old girl claimed she’d returned home from a date to find her parents bludgeoned to death in their bed. But the cop’s instincts told him the girl was lying. Ultimately, she confessed that she and her boyfriend had committed the crime. Not because she’d hated her parents, not because they’d abused her, but because they’d objected to her continuing relationship with the thug who helped kill them. She showed no remorse for what she’d done. She didn’t shed a single tear during the entire interrogation. Her only concern was that she’d been caught.

But the cop was so shocked that he went home, sank into a chair, wrapped his 7-year-old daughter in his arms and bawled like a baby. “Seventeen years old,” he kept saying, over and over again. “Seventeen years old.”

His wife felt helpless. She couldn’t find a way to comfort him.

If you could take one of Mario Silva’s characteristics for yourself, what would it be?
Hmm. That’s a tough one. He’s an amalgam, you see, of the best cops I’ve known. He has integrity. He’s smart. He’s a good team leader, compassionate, intuitive and not cowed by his bosses, the bureaucracy or the largely corrupt system in which he works. So there are a lot of sterling qualities to choose from. But if I had to choose just one, I’d have to say it’s his dogged persistence.

Why?

Because, invariably, when I start a new book, it’s like looking at a cliff I have to climb. All authors know this feeling, know we’ll get to the top eventually, but it requires the expenditure of considerable energy to keep at it, day after day, week after week, scrambling our lonely way up that mental rock face.

If Silva could bottle his dogged persistence, writers would buy it by the caseload.

Name one book you think everyone should read.
Everyone? I can’t even come up with a book that I think would appeal equally to my wife and my daughters.

No, wait, I take that back. There’s To Kill a Mockingbird.

For once, I put aside our dissimilar reading preferences and recommended that one to all the members of my family. All of them loved it. As, I think, has everyone who has ever read it.

You’ve done quite a bit of traveling. What’s the greatest thing you’ve learned from all your adventures?
That there’s no truth in the adage “it’s a small world.” It is, in fact, a very big world. No lifetime is long enough to see it all—and 100 lifetimes wouldn’t be enough to learn all its languages and understand all its cultures.

What’s next?
The Ways of Evil Men. Silva and his crew are called in to investigate the extermination of a tribe in the heart of the Amazon rainforest. The good folks from Soho will be publishing it in the early part of next year.

Leighton Gage's Perfect Hatred, the newest installment in his series featuring Brazilian Federal Police Inspector Mario Silva, is BookPage's Top Pick in Mystery for March 2013. With an exotic location and perfect plotting, it is "hands down the first 'do not miss' mystery of…

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