First Cut by Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A medical examiner new to the San Francisco area finds herself embroiled in a harrowing case involving a murder to cover up the actions of a ruthless drug lord in authors Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchellโ€™s โ€œFirst Cutโ€. 

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The Synopsis

Wife and husband duo Dr. Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell first enthralled the book world with their runaway bestselling memoir Working Stiffโ€”a fearless account of a young forensic pathologistโ€™s โ€œrookie seasonโ€ as a NYC medical examiner. This winter, Dr. Melinek, now a prominent forensic pathologist in the Bay Area, once again joins forces with writer T.J. Mitchell to take their first stab at fiction. 

The result: FIRST CUT (Hanover Square Press; Hardcover; January 7, 2020; $26.99)โ€”a gritty and compelling crime debut about a hard-nosed San Francisco medical examiner who uncovers a dangerous conspiracy connecting the seedy underbelly of the cityโ€™s nefarious opioid traffickers and its ever-shifting terrain of tech startups.

Dr. Jessie Teska has made a chilling discovery. A suspected overdose case contains hints of something more sinister: a drug lordโ€™s attempt at a murderous cover up. As more bodies land on her autopsy table, Jessie uncovers a constellation of deaths that point to an elaborate network of powerful criminalsโ€”on both sides of the lawโ€”that will do anything to keep things buried. But autopsy means โ€œsee for yourself,โ€ and Jessie Teska wonโ€™t stop until sheโ€™s seen it allโ€”even if it means the next corpse on the slab could be her own.

The Review

A brilliant read, this novel perfectly blends the expertise and gritty reality of forensic work and the work of the medical examiners office with the harrowing and heart-pounding action that comes with a good thriller. 

The story cuts into the complex web of lies uncovered by Jessie Teska, from drug kingpins and dirty lawyers to collegues she thought she could trust and beyond. Haunted by a painful past, Jessie finds herself fighting to uncover the truth behind a horrific crime, with only her brilliant mind and determination to aid her in her fight against politics, criminal empires and more. 

The Verdict

A fantastic thriller for anyone who enjoys a heavy mix of medical forensics and suspense, authors Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell have created a masterful story that will give readers a protagonist to root for, a story to engage with and a brilliant race to the finish that will keep readers on the edge of their seat. If you havenโ€™t yet, grab your copy of Final Cut today!

Rating: 10/10

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About the Authors

Judy Melinek was an assistant medical examiner in San Francisco for nine years, and today works as a forensic pathologist in Oakland and as CEO of PathologyExpert Inc. She and T.J. Mitchell met as undergraduates at Harvard, after which she studied medicine and practiced pathology at UCLA. Her training in forensics at the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner is the subject of their first book, the memoir Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner.
T.J. Mitchell is a writer with an English degree from Harvard, and worked in the film industry before becoming a full-time stay-at-home dad. He is the New York Times bestselling co-author of Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner with his wife, Judy Melinek.

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EXCERPT

PROLOGUE

Los Angeles
May

The dead woman on my table had pale blue eyes, long lashes, no mascara. She wore a thin rim of black liner on her lower lids but none on the upper. I inserted the twelve gauge needle just far enough that I could see its beveled tip through the pupil, then pulled the syringe plunger to aspirate a sample of vitreous fluid. That was the first intrusion I made on her corpse during Mary Catherine Walshโ€™s perfectly ordinary autopsy.

The external examination had been unremarkable. The decedent appeared to be in her midthirties, blond hair with dun roots, five foot four, 144 pounds. After checking her over and noting identifying marks (monochromatic professional tattoo of a Celtic knot on lower left flank, appendectomy scar on abdomen, well-healed stellate scar on right knee), I picked up a scalpel and sliced from each shoulder to the breastbone, and then all the way down her belly. I peeled back the layers of skin and fat on her torsoโ€”an ordinary amount, maybe a little on the chubby sideโ€”and opened the womanโ€™s chest like a book.

I had made similar Y-incisions on 256 other bodies during my ten months as a forensic pathologist at the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coronerโ€™s Office, and this one was easy. No sign of trauma. Normal liver. Healthy lungs. There was nothing wrong with her heart. The only significant finding was the white, granular material of the gastric contents. In her stomach was a mass of semidigested pills.

When I opened her uterus, I found sheโ€™d been pregnant. I measured the fetusโ€™s foot length and estimated its age at twelve weeks. The fetus appeared to have been viable. It was too young to determine sex.

I deposited the organs one by one at the end of the stainless-steel table. I had just cut into her scalp to start on the skull when Matt, the forensic investigator who had collected the body the day before, came in.

โ€œClean scene,โ€ he reported, depositing the paperwork on my station. โ€œSuicide.โ€

I asked him where he was going for lunch. Yogurt and a damn salad at his desk, he told me: bad cholesterol and a worried wife. I extended my condolences as he headed back out of the autopsy suite.

I scanned through Mattโ€™s handwriting on the intake sheet and learned that the body had been found, stiff and cold, in a locked and secure room at the Los Angeles Omni hotel. The cleaning staff called the police. The ID came from the name on the credit card used to pay for the room, and was confirmed by fingerprint comparison with her driverโ€™s license thumbprint. A handwritten note lay on the bed stand, a pill bottle in the trash. Nothing else. Matt was right: There was no mystery to the way Mary Walsh had died.

I hit the dictaphoneโ€™s toe trigger and pointed my mouth toward the microphone dangling over the table. โ€œThe body is identified by a Los Angeles County Medical Examinerโ€™s tag attached to the right great toe, inscribed LACD-03226, Walsh, Mary Catherineโ€ฆโ€

I broke the seal on the plastic evidence bag and pulled out the pill bottle. It was labeled OxyContin, a powerful painkiller, and it was empty.

โ€œAccompanying the body is a sealed plastic bag with an empty prescription medication bottle. The name on the prescription labelโ€ฆโ€

I read the name but didnโ€™t speak it. The hair started standing up on my neck. I looked down at my morningโ€™s workโ€”the splayed body, flecked with gore, the dissected womb tossed on a heap of other organs.

That canโ€™t be, I told myself. It canโ€™t.

On the clipboard underneath the case intake sheet I found a piece of hotel stationery sealed in another evidence bag. It was the suicide note, written in blue ink with a steady feminine hand. I skimmed itโ€”then stopped, and went back.

I read it again.

I heard the clipboard land at my feet. I gripped the raised lip of my autopsy table. I held tight while the floor fell away.


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Q&A with Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell

Q: Do you plan your books in advance or let them develop as you write?

A:The idea for First Cut was prompted by some of Judyโ€™s actual cases when she worked as a San Francisco medical examiner. She has real experience performing autopsy death investigation, and she also has the imagination to apply that experience to a fictional framework for our forensic detective, Dr. Jessie Teska. Judy invented the story, and together we worked it up as an outline. Then T.J. sat in a room wrestling with words all dayโ€”which he loves to doโ€”to produce the first complete manuscript. Thatโ€™s our inspiration plus perspiration dynamic as co-authors.

Q: What does the act of writing mean to you?

A: It is, and has always been, something we can do together, an important part of our marriage. Weโ€™ve collaborated as a creative team since we were in college together many years ago, producing and directing student theater. Weโ€™ve also spent twenty years raising our four children, and have always approached parenting as a partnership. We find it easy to work together because we write like we parent: relying on one another, each of us playing to our strengths. It helps that, in our writing process, we have no overlapping skill set!

 Q: Have you ever had a character take over a story, and if so, who was it and why?

A: Oh, yes! Thatโ€™s our heroine, Dr. Jessie Teska. She has elements of Judy in her, and elements of T.J., but Jessie is a distinct individual and a strong-willed one. Weโ€™re often surprised and even shocked by the ways she reacts to the situations we put her in. There are times weโ€™ll be writing what we thought was a carefully laid-out scene, and Jessie will take us sideways. Sheโ€™s coming off T.J.โ€™s fingertips on the the keyboard, both of us watching with mouths agape, saying, โ€œWhat the hell is she up to?โ€

Q: Which one of First Cutโ€™s characters was the hardest to write and why?

A: Tommy Teska, Jessieโ€™s brother. Heโ€™s a minor character to the bookโ€™s plot, but the most important person in Jessieโ€™s life, and heโ€™s a reticent man, downright miserly with his dialogue. Tommy carries such great emotional weight, but it was hard to draw it out of him, especially because so much of his bond to our heroine is in the backstory of First Cut, not in the immediate narrative that lands on the page. Weโ€™re now working on the sequel, Cross Cut, and finding that Tommy has more occasion to open up in that story.

Q: Which character in any of your books (First Cut or otherwise) is dearest to you and why?

A: The late Dr. Charles Sidney Hirsch, from our first book, the memoir Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner. Dr. Hirsch is not just a character: He was a real person, Judyโ€™s mentor and a towering figure in the world of forensic pathology. Dr. Hirsch trained Dr. Melinek in her specific field of medicine and imbued in her his passion for it. He was a remarkable man, a great teacher and physician and public servantโ€”a person of uncompromising integrity coupled with great emotional intelligence.

Q: What did you want to be as a child? Was it an author?

A: Judyโ€™s father was a physician, and though she never wanted to follow in his immediate footstepsโ€”he was a psychiatristโ€”she has always wanted to be another Dr. Melinek. T.J. has always been a writer, but also has theater training and worked in the film industry. As much as we enjoyed authoring the memoir Working Stiff, and as happy as we have been with its success, we are even more thrilled to be detective novelists.

Q: What does a day in the life of Judy Melinek and T.J. Mitchell look like?

A: Judy is a morning person and T.J.โ€™s a night owl, so we split parenting responsibilities. Judy gets the kids off to school and then heads to the morgue, where she performs autopsies in the morning and works with police, district attorneys, and defense lawyers in the afternoon. T.J. takes care of the household and after-school duties. If we work together during the day, itโ€™s usually by email in the late afternoon. T.J. cooks dinner, Judy goes to bed early, and heโ€™s up lateโ€”at his most productive writing from nine to midnight or later.

Q: What do you use to inspire you when you get Writerโ€™s Block?

A: We go for a long walk together. Our far corner of San Francisco overlooks the Pacific Ocean, bracketed by cypress trees and blown over with fog, and serves as an inspiring landscape. We explore the edge of the continent and talk out where our characters have been and where they need to get, tossing ideas back and forth until a solution, what to do next on the page, emerges. Getting away for a stroll with our imaginary friends is always a fruitful exercise!

Q: What book would you take with you to a desert island?

A: T.J. would take the Riverside Shakespeare, and Judy would take Poisonous Plants: A Handbook for Doctors, Pharmacists, Toxicologists, Biologists and Veterinarians, Illustrated.

Q: Do you have stories on the back burner that are just waiting to be written?

A: Always! We are inspired by Dr. Melinekโ€™s real-life work, both in the morgue and at crime scenes, in police interrogation rooms, and in courtrooms. Our stories are fictionโ€”genre fiction structured in the noir-detective traditionโ€”but the forensic methods our detective employs and the scientific findings she comes to are drawn from real death investigations.

Q: What has been the hardest thing about publishing? What has been the most fun?

A: The hardest thing is juggling our work schedules to find uninterrupted time together to write. The most fun is meeting and talking to our readers at book events, especially those who have been inspired to go into the field of forensic pathology after reading our work.

Q: What advice would you give budding authors about publishing?

A: Itโ€™s all about connectivity. Linking up with other writers, readers, editors, and research experts is a crucial way to get your work accomplished, and to get it out to your audience. Yes, ultimately itโ€™s just you and the keyboard, but in the course of writing your story, you can and should tap into the hive mind, online and in person, for inspiration and help.

Q: What was the last thing you read?

A: Judy last read The Cadaver King and the Country Dentist by Radley Balko and Tucker Carrington, and T.J. last read The Witch Elm by Tana French.

Q: Your top five authors?

A: Judyโ€™s are Atul Gawande, Henry James, Kathy Reichs, Mary Roach, and Oliver Sacks. T.J.โ€™s are Margaret Atwood, Joseph Heller, Ed McBain, Ross Macdonald, and Kurt Vonnegut.

Q: Book you’ve bought just for the cover?

A: T.J.: Canary by Duane Swierczynski. Judy: Mรผtter Museum Historical Medical Photographs.

Q: Tell us about what youโ€™re working on now.

A: First Cut is the debut novel in a detective series, and weโ€™ve recently finished the rough draft of Cross Cut, its sequel. We are in the revision phase now, killing our darlings and tightening our tale, working to get the further adventures of Dr. Jessie Teska onto bookshelves next year!

The Last Affair By Margot Hunt Review

I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A beautiful and beloved housewife is found brutally murdered, and the seemingly perfect life she was seen leading soon proves to be a mere disguise over a more tragic and cruel reality in author Margot Huntโ€™s novel โ€œThe Last Affairโ€. 


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The Synopsis

Gwen Landonโ€”poster woman for perfect wife, mother, and suburban blissโ€”is found brutally bludgeoned to death behind her Floridian McMansion. Beautiful and beloved by her community, Gwen makes an unlikely victim. But just a scratch below the surface of her perfectly curated world reveals one far more sinister. When looking back over the six months leading up to her death, the question of, โ€œwho would do this?โ€ quickly shifts to, โ€œwho wouldnโ€™t?โ€ 

Commercially successful food blogger and mother of three, Nora Holliday never imagined she would have the nerve, let alone time, to get involved an affair. Trapped in an unhappy marriage, she does whatever it takes to keep it all together. But when Nora runs into Gwen Landon’s husband at a hotel in Orlando, his easy kindness and warmth proves too tempting to resist. As their affair spirals dangerously out of control, it seems things canโ€™t get more complicatedโ€”until Gwen turns up dead.


The Review

One of the most intriguing murder mysteries of the year! Margot Hunt has done a fabulous job of creating a narrative that showcases the mystery of the murder while exploring the intimate lives and decisions of these families in a local community. Expertly crafting the tale to present the crime first, then spending the majority of the book showcasing the various individuals and acts that could lead to who committed the crime, the author creates a story that draws readers in instantly. 

The story showcases that the world is not as black and white as most like to believe, and sometimes the path some take towards affairs come from troubled lives themselves, and their desperate need to find solace can start a chain reaction that leads to dire consequences. A complex cast of characters help drive this narrative forward, with each suffering from their own internal and external problems that continue to help the situation spiral further and further out of control. In this story, no one is innocent, and even the victim herself hides a dark side to herself that could lead to who took her life. 


The Verdict

This was an amazing read that fans of murder mysteries, dramas and thrillers will absolutely love. With thematic and tonal qualities reminiscent of Gillian Flynnโ€™s Gone Girl, this new thriller is something fans will not want to miss out on this holiday season, so be sure to grab your copy of Margot Huntโ€™s The Last Affair today! 

Rating: 10/10


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About the Author

Margot Hunt is a critically acclaimed author of psychological suspense. Her work has been praised by Publisher’s Weekly, Booklist and Kirkus Reviews.

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EXCERPT 

The Last Affair, Margot Hunt

Prologue

Other than the womanโ€™s blood-covered body splayed facedown in the grass, it could have been any typical upscale Floridian backyard.

There was the ubiquitous pool with a water fountain feature, a patio furnished with both a dining set and outdoor sectional couch, and an enormous gas grill capable of cooking hamburgers by the dozen. A large pergola with a tropical vine trained over it covered part of the patio. The dining area was shaded by a black-and-white-striped awning. It was the very picture of suburban domestic bliss. It could have been the set for a commercial advertising anything from laundry detergent to allergy medicine.

Again, except for the dead body.

The area had already been taped off. The first officers on the scene appeared with an ambulance in response to a frantic 911 call placed by the womanโ€™s daughter. The paramedics had assessed the situation, and quickly determined that the woman was dead. The fact that the back of her head had been bashed in with what looked like a paving stone, conveniently dropped next to her prone body, made it immediately clear that it had not been a natural death. The responding officers called the sheriff, who responded by sending in a full investigative team. The medical examiner was now doing a preliminary examination of the body, while police officers combed the area for additional evidence. Two detectives, Mike Monroe and Gavin Reddickโ€”separated by twenty years and sixty poundsโ€”were overseeing the operation, standing at the edge of the patio under the shade of the pergola. It was the third week in April, but this was South Florida and the temperature had already climbed into the low nineties.

โ€œThe paving stone came from the stack out in the front yard. They were delivered last week by the company whoโ€™s installing the driveway,โ€ Detective Reddick said. He was the younger of the two men and had a wiry frame and angular face.

โ€œWeapon of convenience. Suggests it wasnโ€™t premeditated,โ€ Detective Monroe said. He had a ruddy complexion and a full head of thick dark hair, swept back off his face. A strand never moved out of place, even in a strong wind.

โ€œPlus he dropped the weapon, rather than taking it with him. Probably panicked.โ€

โ€œCould be a she,โ€ Monroe said mildly.

Reddick shrugged. โ€œBlunt force trauma to the back of the head? You know the stats. Overwhelming likelihood that itโ€™s a man, and probably someone the victim was intimately involved with. Husband, maybe a boyfriend.โ€

โ€œThe husband was with the daughter when she called it in.โ€

โ€œDoesnโ€™t mean he didnโ€™t do it, and then had her place the call.โ€

โ€œNo, it doesnโ€™t.โ€

The family had been sequestered indoors, both to keep them out of the way, and so that the officers waiting in the house with them could observe anything they did or said. Other than the husband, there was a daughter in her early twenties and a teenage son. The daughter was reportedly distraught, while the husband and son had both been eerily quiet. It was possible they were in shock.

โ€œDo we have an ID on the victim?โ€ Reddick asked.

โ€œItโ€™s her house,โ€ Monroe grunted.

โ€œYeah, but I like doing things the official way, you know? Iโ€™s dotted, tโ€™s crossed, all of that. Building a case, basic detective work.โ€

Despite the chilling scene in front of themโ€”the womanโ€™s body still sprawled on the grass, the back of her head a pulpy, bloody messโ€”the corner of Monroeโ€™s mouth quirked up in a half smile. โ€œSure, kid, tell me all about basic detective work. Iโ€™ve only been doing this for, whatโ€ฆthirty-two years now? The husband IDโ€™d her. Victim is Gwen Landon, age forty-nine. Married, mother of two. Husband said she hasnโ€™t had any recent conflict with anyone.โ€

โ€œOther than the person who caved in the back of her head with a paving stone,โ€ Reddick pointed out.

โ€œWouldnโ€™t be the first time a husband didnโ€™t know his wife as well as he thought he did.โ€

โ€œPossible. But thereโ€™s another possibility, too.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€

Reddick turned to look at his partner. His eyes were small and dark, and he had a habit of squinting when he concentrated intently on something.

โ€œThe husband is a liar,โ€ Reddick said.

Blog Tour: Meant To Be Yours By Susan Mallery

I am excited to share with everyone that I am officially participating in the first of many blog tours in association with Harlequin Books. It is an honor to be working with such a prestigious publisher and I am excited to share the slew of books heading my way over the next few months and hopefully beyond. As always, I want to preface this with the fact that all my opinions in this post are my own, and I received a free copy of this book in exchange for that opinion. With that in mind, letโ€™s take a look at this incredible romance novel, Meant To Be Yours by Susan Mallery. 


I received a free copy of this book in exchange for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own. 

A popular author struggling with his past in the military and a wedding coordinator who makes couples dreams come true while rejecting commitment herself find one another in author Susan Malleryโ€™s novel โ€œMeant To Be Yoursโ€.

The Synopsis

In Happily Inc, love means never having to say โ€œI doโ€โ€ฆ

Wedding coordinator Renee Grothen isnโ€™t meant for marriage. Those who can, do. Those who canโ€™t, plan. But she never could have planned on gorgeous, talented thriller writer Jasper Dembenski proposingโ€”a fling, that is. Fun without a future. And the attraction between them is too strong for Renee to resist. Now she can have her no-wedding cakeโ€ฆand eat it, too.

After years in the military, Jasper is convinced heโ€™s too damaged for relationships. So a flirtationโ€”and moreโ€”with fiery, determined Renee is way too good to pass upโ€ฆuntil his flame becomes his muse.

Renee is an expert at averting every crisis. But is she finally ready to leap into the one thing that can never be controlled: love?

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The Review

The fifth book in the Happily Inc. series, (sixth if you include book #2.5), author Susan Mallery has done a masterful job of creating a connected storyline across multiple books and characters, while also creating a wholly unique story that allows for anyone to jump into the narrative. While the cast of characters of this novel all stem from previous books, the protagonists take center stage in the story as these two people trying to escape their past come together in ways neither one of them expected.

The complexity of the characters makes this love story bloom much more than the traditional romance tale. Taking the time to explore both Jasper and Reneeโ€™s pasts that have influenced how they go about their relationship really depend the readers connection with both the book and the characters. The theme of finding love and overcoming that feeling of being โ€œbrokenโ€ played out eloquently throughout the novel, and the author did an amazing job of incorporating the atmosphere of love and romance that has become associated with this series into the characterโ€™s overall struggles.

The Verdict

Beautifully written, expertly crafted and emotionally driven. Author Susan Mallery has created a wholly original tale that keeps the overall setting and story of the Happily Inc. series in line while giving readers two protagonists that are relatable, honest and emotionally driven, giving readers an evenly paced read that will have them rooting for these two to overcome the odds and find solace with one another. Can two people who feel broken find love and overcome the odds? Find out by grabbing your copy of โ€œMeant To Be Yoursโ€ by Susan Mallery today! 

Rating: 10/10

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Interview with Author Susan Mallery

Q&A With Susan Mallery

What was your favorite part about writing Meant to be Yours

Ohhh, thatโ€™s a hard question! I love everything about writing romance. The first kiss is still magical to me. The passion, the emotional intensity. Itโ€™s a moment that changes the course of a personโ€™s life. When you fall in love, your life is bisected into before and after. Love is transformative, and the greatest pleasure of my life is to write about it.

Jasper and Renee in particular were a lot of fun to write because Renee is just such a mama bear when it comes to protecting her brides. Sheโ€™s a wedding planner at Weddings Out of the Box, a theme wedding venue in the town of Happily Inc. Jasper is a bestselling thriller writer who wants to set his next book at a wedding. Reneeโ€™s response made me laugh so loud that Iโ€™m pretty sure I scared my pets.

Jasper continued. โ€œI thought I could follow you around for a few weeks, learn about the business andโ€”โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she said firmly, as all thoughts of them having another close encounter faded from her mind. โ€œYouโ€™re not getting your serial killer cooties on my weddings. Iโ€™m a big believer in keeping the energy positive and flowing forward. Do you know what a serial killer would do at a wedding?โ€

He stared at her, his gaze intense. โ€œThatโ€™s what I was thinking. I want the serial killer to be a wedding crasher.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she said firmly. โ€œJust no.โ€

When Jasper goes behind her back to get intimately involved with one of her weddings, Renee vows to keep him from bringing darkness to her brideโ€™s special day.

I also adored the animals in this book. In the beginning, Jasper doesnโ€™t trust himself to let a woman into his heart. His simple but profound act of kindness to a dog who needs a home leads to him finally being ready to fall in love. The dog, Koda, is based on a readerโ€™s real-life dog. I gave Koda the same adorable quirks and characteristics that make him specialโ€”and I gave Renee the readerโ€™s last name in her honor.

Did you find out any funny or interesting facts about wedding planning when writing this book?

I have learned that brides and wedding planners are some of the most creative people in the universe. I canโ€™t tell you how much time I spent on Pinterest, looking at pictures from theme weddings. There are some really beautiful themes, and some that are charming and humorous. Every theme uniquely reflects the bride and the groom in the most beautiful way. In Meant to Be Yours, Renee designs several lovely theme weddings with beautiful touches I think readers will enjoy. Hereโ€™s a snippet from one:

Jim and Monica Martinez were a sweet couple with a fun firefighter theme for their big day. There was a long tradition of firefighters on both sides of the family and plenty of cute touches in the wedding and reception.

Monicaโ€™s dress laced up the back and instead of white ribbon to cinch her gown, sheโ€™d used bright red. The centerpieces were ceramic boot vases painted to look like firefighter boots, filled with red, orange and yellow flowers. There was even a walk-through fountain at one end of the reception area, created with fire hoses, a pump and a lot of engineering.

Pay attention to that last sentence because I also discovered that a lot can go wrong when you invite a few hundred people to a party. Imagine a room filled with people who arenโ€™t used to dressing up, plus a fountain made with fire hoses, and a wedding planner who will do anything to protect her bride.

Did Renee or Jasper surprise you while you drafted this novel? 

They did! When I started this book, I thought Jasper was the more wounded of the two. But as I wrote, I discovered that Reneeโ€™s scars went deeper than I thought. Sheโ€™s been keeping a secret from her friends in Happily Inc, a secret about her mother that has cost her jobs, friendships and romantic relationships. Just when she starts to feel safe and accepted in her new home, her mother comes for a visit. . .

Can you share about what you’re working on right now? 

Iโ€™m working on revisions on the next Happily Inc book, a Christmas book that will be out next year. No title yet. It has all of the humor and heartfelt emotion readers love in my booksโ€”plus Christmas! I invited members of the Susan Mallery All Access group on Facebook (www.facebook.com/groups/susanmalleryallaccess) to suggest random items for me to incorporate into the story. When the book comes out next year, Iโ€™ll share a scavenger hunt list with my readers so they can find the objects as they read. Itโ€™s just a fun way for me to stay connected to my readers as I write.ย 

Who is an author you draw inspiration from?

Years ago, the fabulous Debbie Macomber suggested to me that I stop writing series about families, and start writing series about people who live in the same town. That advice was the inspiration for my Foolโ€™s Gold series, which led to my Happily Inc series, as well. Iโ€™ll always be grateful to Debbie for that.

What is your favorite place to read a book? 

At home with my feet up on the sofa and a cat curled in my lap.

Who is a book character youโ€™d be best friends with?

Each of my heroines is someone Iโ€™d be friends withโ€”after all, I spend months with them, so I want them to be people I enjoy hanging out with. As for best friends, Iโ€™ll go with Ellen Fox, heroine of The Friendship List, which will come out next year. Ellen had me laughing all the way through the book. Sheโ€™s blunt and smart and would drop everything to help someone she loves.

Sheโ€™s a single mom who got pregnant in high school. She had sex one time, got pregnant, and then… nothing. Sheโ€™s basically a virgin with a kid. But when she discovers what sheโ€™s been missing, she has no inhibitions. Her lack of filter was a source of constant amusement for me. Every day, I was excited to get back to work so I could spend time with her again. Such a fun book to write!

Pen & Paper or Computer?

Computer. I couldnโ€™t keep up with my thoughts with paper and pen. I type about 120 words per minute, so thatโ€™s easier for me. Hard on my wrists and hands, but easier on my brain.

Favorite decade in fashion history?

The 1980โ€™s.

KIDDING!!!!!

I am enjoying the fashion of today. I like that there really arenโ€™t any rules anymore, itโ€™s all about self-expression.

What is your signature drink?

A Starbucks latte. This time of year, pumpkin spice. Even though the baristas cannot, for the life of them, spell Susan.

What do you hope readers will experience or gain when reading Meant to Be Yours?

I hope Meant to Be Yours will be a happy escape for them, an entertaining break from the stresses of their daily lives. This is a book for readers who like to feel the sharp pings of emotionโ€”and the release of laughter with a guaranteed happy ending.

How did you get into writing?

I was in college studying to be an accountant. It wasnโ€™t exciting, but it was practical. I honestly didnโ€™t know that regular people could be professional writers. It seemed so exotic, somehow. I thought writers had to live in France and wear turtlenecks. I think I must have choked to death in a previous life because I canโ€™t stand wearing turtlenecks.

One day, I got a flyer in the mail from an adult education center called The Learning Tree, with evening classes people could take. These classes were not for credit and therefore were very impractical for a young woman carrying a full course load of university classes, and a newlywed trying to learn how to cook. But one of the classes caught my eye: How to Write a Romance Novel. Still, I thought, no time. I threw away the flyer. Eight weeks later, it came again. I threw it away again. Eight weeks later, there it was again, and I realized the woman wasnโ€™t going to teach the class forever.

So I signed up for the class, and I immediately fell in love. By week six, I knew this was what I was meant to do with my life. I made a deal with my then-husband. I gave myself two years to sell a book. If I didnโ€™t, then I would have to get a job. That was in May, and I sold my first book in August of that year. Best decision ever.

What inspired you to write Meant to Be Yours?

I loved the humor inherent in the idea of a thriller writer wanting to research weddings, and a wedding planner who wants to keep his darkness away from her brideโ€™s special day. Jasper is the kind of writer who does his research in tangible ways. Before he writes a fight scene, he blocks it out with his buddiesโ€”weapons and all. He wants to get the details right.

So when he decides to set his next book against the backdrop of a wedding, heโ€™s determined to get those details right, too. And the only way to do that is to be involved with a wedding from start to finish. But Renee is determined to keep any hint of darkness away from her brideโ€™s special day. Itโ€™s not an intellectual exercise to herโ€”itโ€™s someoneโ€™s wedding day, and that means something.

Itโ€™s just a humorous conflict that I thought would be a ton of fun to write. And it was!

Oh, and by the way, Jasper also decides that his detective character needs a love interest…so he needs someone to block out the kissing scenes with him, too. (Full confession: I do occasionally ask my husband for help with my research. ๐Ÿ˜‰ )

What drew you into writing romance?

Iโ€™ve been a romance reader since I was in middle school, and theyโ€™re still the books I enjoy the most. I love everything about them. I still get that intake-of-breath feeling when the characters first kiss. And when they finally overcome their obstacles and admit that theyโ€™re meant to be togetherโ€”thereโ€™s just nothing happier or more life-affirming.

If you could sit down with any character in your book, what would you ask them and why?

I would love to sit down with Verity, Reneeโ€™s mother. But I canโ€™t tell you what I would ask her or why without spoilers, so Iโ€™ll just leave you with this: Verity has a very special talent that gives her an insight few people can claim. I would love to have this talent. Since I donโ€™t, Iโ€™d love to ask Verity to tell me what she knows.

What social media site has been the most helpful in developing your readership?

Iโ€™m active on Facebook, Instagram and Twitterโ€”but mostly on Facebook. I share book news on my main page, www.facebook.com/susanmallery. In the Susan Mallery All Access group, www.facebook.com/groups/susanmalleryallaccess, I share personal anecdotes and pictures, hold contests and play games. Itโ€™s a lot of fun, and everyone is welcome to join! (Unless youโ€™re some weird spammer guy who wants me to marry you. Ew.)

What advice would you give to aspiring or just starting authors out there?

Stick with it. The writers who succeed are the ones who donโ€™t give up. Write every day. Experiment with different methods and techniques to find what works for you. Analyze successful books and try to figure out why they work, and then incorporate those lessons into your own writing. I found that screenwriting classes helped a lot with developing story structure.

What does the future hold in store for you? Any new books/projects on the horizon?

Always something new on the horizon! In 2020, Iโ€™ll release four brand new books: Sisters by Choice (a Blackberry Island novel), The Friendship List (a standalone), A Foolโ€™s Gold Wedding (a Foolโ€™s Gold romance), and the yet-to-be-titled Happily Inc Christmas romance.

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About the Author

SUSAN MALLERY is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of novels about the relationships that define women’s livesโ€”family, friendship, romance. Library Journal says, โ€œMallery is the master of blending emotionally believable characters in realistic situations,” and readers seem to agreeโ€”40 million copies of her books have sold worldwide. Her warm, humorous stories make the world a happier place to live.

Susan grew up in California and now lives in Seattle with her husband. She’s passionate about animal welfare, especially that of the two ragdoll cats and adorable poodle who think of her as mom.

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Buy Links: 

Harlequin 

Indiebound

Amazon

Barnes & Noble 

Books-A-Million

Target

Walmart

Google

iBooks

Kobo

Social Links:

Author Website

Twitter: @susanmallery

Facebook: @SusanMallery

Instagram: @susanmallery

Goodreads

The Blurb Factor: 3 Crucial Steps to Optimize Your Book Description | Guest Post

I am honored to be able to share this next guest blog post with you all. Writer Greg Josselyn from Reedsy has reached out with a brand new post on the Blurb Factor to share with aspiring authors and writers out there. Enjoy and be sure to follow Greg’s work on Reedsy.


From botched to bestselling

When romance writer Alessandra Torre uploaded her first book on Amazon eight years ago, she only sold three on the first day. And for the next few months, she averaged a still-disappointing 15 โ€“ until one night, she looked at her book description and said: โ€œIโ€™m going to re-write this.โ€ 

That re-write sparked a renaissance. First, it was 100 books sold in one day. Then 300. Then 2,000. Thatโ€™s when she started ranking as a top seller in the Romance category, and offers from agents and publishers came flooding in. Now, Torre is an Amazon International bestselling novelist, with over a dozen books to her name. 

We canโ€™t pin Torreโ€™s success entirely on a book blurb โ€“ she is a good writer, after all! But we would be remiss not to poke around the subject, especially since this is a great Amazon self-publishing success story. The fact is, without the social credit and marketing budget of a big publishing house, the seemingly small things we usually save for last โ€“ like book descriptions โ€“ will make or break you. 

If youโ€™re a writer whoโ€™s planning to self-publish, this post will help improve your book description (or back cover text) and grow your profitability on Amazon. But even if you arenโ€™t quite at that stage yet, you can apply these techniques to query letters and pitches for your book. After all, itโ€™s never too early to start selling people on your ideas.

Step 1: Get a hook and bait

Hook, hook, hook. That seems to be all writers and editors ever talk about, and yet, most of us still wonder what it really means. When we say โ€œhookโ€, we mean like a fish hook, with โ€“ you you guessed it โ€“ bait. This is particularly important in the sea of distractions that is Amazon.com. But what are the raw materials that will make up your hook and bait? Youโ€™ll require: 

  1. A brief โ€“ we cannot stress this enough โ€“ summary of the story (no spoilers, please!) 
  2. A question that the story poses (which, of course, makes the reader want to find the answer so much that theyโ€™re willing to pay $9.99 for it). Whatโ€™s going to compel Suzie So-And-So to forgo her mocha lattes this week for your book? 
  3. A little typography dress-up. You donโ€™t have to go to coding boot camp to try on bolds, italics, and colors when setting up your product page. For example, on Amazon, you can:
    • Make things bold: <b>Be Bold My Friend, Be Bold</b>
    • Italicize Things <i>donโ€™t go overboard though here because sometimes readers breeze over italics </i> 
    • Headline: <h1>This is a classier way to do all caps</h1>
    • Amazon Colors: <h2>Jeff Bezos will approve.</h2>
    • Indent: <blockquote>for anyone who likes a good old indent, youโ€™re welcome. </blockquote>

Step 2: Blurb it out

Try to think of your book description in the most succinct terms possible. This isnโ€™t a school book report; itโ€™s like more like an elevator pitch. In other words, donโ€™t blurt it out โ€“ blurb it out!

And when it comes to blurbs, our friend Torre is the master. If she didnโ€™t revise the blurb for her first book, she may have switched careers instead of rising to the New York Times best seller list, which is why we always refer aspiring writers to her video tips on the subject. But in brief, she stresses these two essential facts: 

  1. The first three sentences of the blurb matter most. Itโ€™s like a teaser trailer โ€“ after those three sentences, users are going to have to click โ€œRead Moreโ€ to well, read more. To keep them scrolling, or get them to move onto the โ€œfull trailer,โ€ as it were, those three sentences should stand out by utilizing the problem/question structure mentioned above.

One strong way to do that is to employ the classic proposition โ€œbut.โ€ For example: โ€œWill Byers lived a normal life in a boring suburban town. But when a mysterious alien creature shows up, his life turns upside down. Will it ever turn right side up again?โ€ (Read Moreโ€ฆ)

  1. Leave out unnecessary details. All too often, authors use their blurbs to share irrelevant details like character surnames, where they live, their professions, or other excess exposition to no end. Cut all of that out โ€“ just set up the problem and the stakes of the story. You can always go full-on Charles Dickens in the actual book. But donโ€™t make your blurb into Bleak House, or youโ€™ll send readers running for the hills. 

Step 3: Demonstrate (and prove!) a social benefit

Youโ€™ve done it all so far: The blurb is short enough for a social media share. Your first three sentences set up a key question and further dilemma. Youโ€™ve omitted unnecessary details, like your characterโ€™s middle name or their townshipโ€™s population.

And yet, potential readers are still scrolling to click on other book titles in your category. Yes, it could be other factors like book cover design and reviews, but still โ€“ thereโ€™s one last ingredient needed to seal the deal on your blurb. This is, of course, why the book matters to the potential buyer. What does your book provide for them? How will it make an impact on their life? Advertisements do it all the time, so why not utilize this technique to sell your book?  

For example, if your book is self-help, be sure to mention that theyโ€™ll never think the same way about X problem ever again. Or if itโ€™s fiction, show how your main character is relatable to readers, and how they overcome problems that many of us experience in our own lives.

If you have reviews or testimonials to prove this, even better: up the social proof to the max. And if youโ€™re new to self-publishing, drawing comparisons to pre-existing works is one great way to do it (e.g. โ€œThis Gender Bending Historial Fantasy is Games of Thrones meets Queer Eye), or just stress how itโ€™ll change the readerโ€™s way of looking at the world (โ€œfantasy fans and fashionistas will never be the same againโ€ฆโ€). 

Takeways

In order to make a successful book blurb, be sure to include:

  1. An enticing lead to grab readers
  2. A question that a reader can only answer by actually reading your book
  3. Proof that the story will benefit the readerโ€™s life โ€“ this might be pure entertainment, or genuine self-improvement

There are endless ways to play around with these elements. Try out different options โ€“ at least three โ€“ and test them with friends and family, as well as pro beta readers. Ask: which description pulls you in? Which one doesnโ€™t do it for you? And why? Or, do an A/B test in Amazon: swap out the different descriptions and see which one performs the best.

Still no sales? Keep re-writing and testing until you do, like Alessandra Torre. Otherwise, accept that the marketplace just may not be ready for this particular book, and start re-examining your content from the ground up.  

Greg Josselyn is a writer for Reedsy, a curated marketplace dedicated to empowering authors. When heโ€™s not covering KDP Select, he writes short fiction and makes podcasts.

Twitterย /ย Instagram.

Guest Post: Redemption by Author Mike Schlossberg

Note From Anthony Avina:ย 

 

Hi there everyone! I am thrilled to share with you an amazing guest blog post from an author I will be working with in the months to come. Please read and enjoy this post from author Mike Schlossberg on how he came up with the title for his book Redemption and how others can learn from it.ย 

 

 

My book is calledย Redemption,ย and itโ€™s about depression, anxiety and saving the world. From the blurb:

Twenty young people wake aboard the spaceship Redemption with no memory how they got there.

Asher Maddox went to sleep a college dropout with clinical depression and anxiety. He wakes one hundred sixty years in the future to assume the role as captain aboard a spaceship he knows nothing about, with a crew as in the dark as he is.

Yanked from their everyday lives, the crew learns that Earth has been ravaged by the Spades virus โ€“ a deadly disease planted by aliens. They are tasked with obtaining the vaccine that will save humanity, while forced to hide from an unidentified, but highly advanced enemy.

Half a galaxy away from Earth, the crew sets out to complete the quest against impossible odds. As the enemy draws closer, they learn to run the ship despite their own flaws and rivalries. But they have another enemy . . . time. And itโ€™s running out.

Now, hereโ€™s the question I keep getting: Why is it calledย Redemption?

First is the obvious: Itโ€™s the name of the ship. But itโ€™s the name of the ship in the book for a reason.

Okay. So I wrote this thing not just to tell a science fiction story, but to tell a story of mental illness and give those who suffer hope. Thatโ€™s sort of been my driving force, as an elected official and advocate for the mentally ill. And to be perfectly honest, that permeates just about every facet of the book. Including the name of the ship.

I named it Redemption because I think the idea of guilt โ€“ and seekingย Redemption โ€“ย was and is a big part of my depression. Guilt is aย common symptom of depression. Itโ€™s something I certainly got to know in a very personal way. And I spent most of my life searching forย redemption.ย I desperately wanted to be redeemed from some unknown sin. And I think thatโ€™s something thatโ€™s relatively common among those who have suffered.

The entire plot is, at itโ€™s core, a redemption story, but not from a sin: From mental illness, from depression and from anxiety. Itโ€™s a redemption that I think we all strive for. In my experience, itโ€™s almost not complete obtainable. Personally, I know I will never be completely free from mental illness. It will always be there, running in the background like an iPhone app. Recovery isnโ€™t an end state, itโ€™s a journey. And thatโ€™s a lesson I that I have tried to learn all my life, and a journey I try to highlight inย Redemption.

As always, Iโ€™d love to have your thoughts. Is this an experience you understand? No? Either way, let us know in the comments!

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07C7M8WT8

https://mikeschlossbergauthor.com

http://www.twitter.com/MikeSchlossberg

http://www.facebook.com/MikeSchlossbergAuthor

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/39896276-redemption

Summary:

Redemption Cover from Amazon

Twenty young people wake aboard the spaceship Redemption with no memory how they got there.

Asher Maddox went to sleep a college dropout with clinical depression and anxiety. He wakes one hundred sixty years in the future to assume the role as captain aboard a spaceship he knows nothing about, with a crew as in the dark as he is.

Yanked from their everyday lives, the crew learns that Earth has been ravaged by the Spades virus โ€“ a deadly disease planted by aliens. They are tasked with obtaining the vaccine that will save humanity, while forced to hide from an unidentified, but highly advanced enemy.

Half a galaxy away from Earth, the crew sets out to complete the quest against impossible odds. As the enemy draws closer, they learn to run the ship despite their own flaws and rivalries. But they have another enemy . . . time. And itโ€™s running out.

Author bio:

Michael Schlossberg

Mike Schlossberg has been a writer since he wrote his first short story in eighth grade, a Star Wars fanfiction. While he claims it was terrible, the creative passion followed him into adulthood.

Serving as a State Representative in Pennsylvania, Mike has had the chance to make a difference. The problem closest to his heart is mental health, where he strives to break the stigma surrounding those who suffer from mental illnesses and give them hope. For Mike, this issue is personal, as he has been treated for depression and anxiety related disorders since he was 18. It was this desire to help which drove him to write Redemption, his first novel, but not his first book. That honor goes to Tweets and Consequences, an anthology about the varied ways elected officials have destroyed their careers via social media.

When not writing, Mike plays video games (both modern and old school), watches anything related to the Muppets (specifically Fraggle Rock!), reads, attempts to get to the gym, and calls his constituents on their birthdays.

Mike lives in Allentown, Pennsylvania, with his wife Brenna and his two wonderful children: Auron, born in 2011, and Ayla, born in 2012.