Books

NATIONAL WEATHERMAN DAY

NATIONAL WEATHERMAN DAY
Buzz Bernard
Supercell
Eyewall

Today is National Weatherman Day and to celebrate, why not pick up a couple books written by an actual weatherman? 

After all, without them, we would never be prepared for all of this crazy weather we always have!

So show your appreciation for once upon a time weatherman – Buzz Bernard – today! 

Buzz BernardIn early 2009, after 13 years with The Weather Channel, Buzz Bernard retired from the network as a senior meteorologist. Prior to joining The Weather Channel, he served as a weather officer in the U.S. Air Force for 33 years, retiring with the rank of colonel and having received, among other awards, the Legion of Merit.

Prior to becoming a novelist, Buzz published five nonfiction books about weather and climate. He’s had first-hand experience with hurricanes, having penetrated the eyewall of such a storm with the Air Force Reserve Hurricane Hunters. That mission wasn’t nearly as exciting–or as terrifying–as the one described in Eyewall, but he did get an up close and personal look at how the job is done.

Besides his trip with the Hurricane Hunters, Buzz has flown air drops over the Arctic Ocean and Turkey, and was a weather officer aboard a Tactical Air Command (now Air Combat Command) airborne command post (C-135). Additionally, he provided field support to forest fire fighting operations in the Pacific Northwest, spent a summer working on Alaska’s arctic slope and served two tours in Vietnam. Various other jobs, both civilian and military, have taken him to Germany, Saudi Arabia and Panama.

A native Oregonian, Buzz attended the University of Washington in Seattle where he earned a bachelor’s degree in atmospheric science while also studying creative writing. After leaving active duty with the Air Force, he and his wife Christina lived in New England and suffered through its winters for two decades before heading for the warmer climate of Roswell, Georgia, near Atlanta. It’s much warmer there!

Make sure you go grab Buzz’s weather based novels – EYEWALL and SUPERCELL – off of Amazon TODAY! 

Just click the links!

                                 Supercell Eyewall

COVER REVEAL FOR VAMPIRES IN AMERICA

COVER REVEAL FOR VAMPIRES IN AMERICA
Raphael
Jabril
Rajmund
Sophia
Aden
Duncan

We are RE-VAMPING the entire Vampires in America series! 

 RAPHAEL, SOPHIA, ADEN, JABRIL, and RAJMUND have all been given new covers…..

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And now DUNCAN – Book 5 in the Vampires in America series is being revealed!

Duncan - 200x300x72   Just click the links and you’ll be taken to Amazon where you can get this entire series with the new covers! Don’t wait! 

This series by D.B. Reynolds is just too good to miss out on!

MAGICK RISING GIVEAWAY

MAGICK RISING GIVEAWAY
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Magick Rising 200x300x72

Every sort of magick collides in these six paranormal tales of magick and romance . . .
Magick Justice from P.J. Bishop, a wonderful new voice in urban fantasy
A man on a mission to save his soul and a young reporter descended from a Samurai magicker must risk everything in a fight against a Rising of Demons.
Spirits Rising from RITA winner Evelyn Vaughn
A little haunted history is what Penny expects when staging a Victorian mansion in Galveston. What this amateur ghostbuster doesn’t expect is a mysterious stranger and a dark curse.
Blood Rising from RITA finalist and Reader’s Choice award winning author Karen Fox
When revenge for her sister’s killer drives a vampire slayer’s every thought, can she put aside her vengeance long enough to trust the one man who can help her?
A Shift in Magick from Golden Heart winner Laura Hayden
Private investigator Jonathan Craft’s tricks-of-the-trade include the carefully guarded secret of his shapeshifting. A routine case turns dangerous and forces him to rethink everything he knows about his life.
Destiny Rising from popular romance writer Jodi Dawson writing as Jodi Anderson
Celeste and Erik have serious history. Centuries ago she doubly damned herself by killing the man she loved to save the world from an evil wizard. Her one chance to bring him back to her has gone horribly wrong.
Wolf Rising from bestselling YA author Parker Blue
Duncan Gray desperately needs a cure for the lycanthropy that is killing him. His last hope is a Wiccan woman with secrets and fears of her own.

Comment below to be entered to win in the MAGIC RISING GIVEAWAY!

We will be giving out Tarot Cards to the lucky winner, so comment away! 

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SWEETWATER AND BAKED ALASKA

SWEETWATER AND BAKED ALASKA
Baked Alaska Sweetwater Feb 1
Sweetwater 200x300x72

Sweetwater 200x300x72“He’d spent several hours thinking about what had happened between them. It had come as something of a surprise to discover that he really wanted to marry her. They had nothing in common except a firm wish to be in charge on both their parts. But he found himself remembering her loyalty, her honesty as she asked to touch him, and her great passion. What more could a man ask for in the woman he wanted to spend his life with?

He could see them together, not in his New York hotel, but in the wilderness, in a small rough cabin beside a roaring winter fire, making love. Alaska and Portia both called to him in a way he’d not felt in a very long time. Exciting, passionate, each with great promise to one who understood what was being offered.”

-From SWEETWATER by Sandra Chastain, available in most ebook platforms

 

Today is National Baked Alaska Day!

Baked Alaska Sweetwater Feb 1Ingredients:

Vegetable oil (for brushing)

1 pint raspberry sorbet (softened)

1 pint vanilla ice cream (softened)

1 quart chocolate ice cream (softened)

1 c crushed Oreos

1 loaf pound cake

1 c egg whites (about 6 at room temperature)

1 t cream of tartar

1 c sugar

 

Brush large metal bowl with oil and line with plastic wrap. Fill the bowl with random scoops of the raspberry sorbet, vanilla ice cream, and half of the chocolate ice cream. Press firmly to remove spaces between scoops. Sprinkle with crushed Oreos. Spread the remaining chocolate ice cream over the crumbs.

 

Slice the pound cake into ½ inch strips. Cover the chocolate ice cream base with pound cake (may have cake left over. Cover with plastic wrap and freeze for 3 hours (2 days max).

 

Once frozen, whip the cream of tartar into the egg whites for 2 minutes. Slowly beat in the sugar and continue to whip until the meringue forms stiff peaks.

 

Remove the frozen cake/ice cream mound from the bowl by pulling on the plastic wrap and invert  it onto parchment paper. Cover the mound with meringue (making sides of dome thicker). Freeze for 2 hours.

 

Turn oven to Broil. Bake cake for 3-4 minutes until meringue browns. Let soften for 5 minutes and serve immediately.

 

 

THE BLENDER APPROACH

THE BLENDER APPROACH
MES Facebook photo
Cooper

MES Facebook photoTHE BLENDER APPROACH

by Mary Strand

I grew up loving blenders.  Much like my mom, the only thing I really enjoy doing in a kitchen involves a blender and rum, and she taught me how to make a killer daiquiri before I was old enough to drink one.  In college, I went on to become a bartender.

I’m sure this made her proud.  heh heh.

Before long, I left my bartender and college days behind for law school, then the practice of law, going from killer daiquiris to killer shoes and suits, killer mergers and acquisitions, and killer hours.  Lots and lots of killer hours.  All-nighters at the printer.  Making critical word choices in closing documents at three a.m. when we were blinking to stay awake.  Arguing over inane details that often didn’t matter as much as we pretended they did.

Here’s a not-so-secret secret:  lawyers daydream.

They daydream about not being lawyers.

When I started daydreaming in earnest, I thought about writing novels.  I didn’t have the faintest idea how to write a novel, mind you, but as a lawyer I learned to be ridiculously confident regardless of the facts.

I blithely assumed I could write a novel even though at that point I was entirely left brained (logical thinking) and hadn’t really used my right brain (creative thinking) in 15 years.  For my birthday one year, my husband bought me a software program that helps a left-brained thinker conceptualize a novel using a logical question-answer process.  Perfect.

My debut novel, Cooper’s Folly, was the first book I wrote, many years ago.  I started by using my left-brained software program, assisted by my completely unwarranted confidence.  When I began, I hadn’t taken a single writing class.  In the first draft, I changed point of view Every Single Time someone spoke, because, gee, the reader would want to know what everyone was thinking, right?  My first critiquers laughed.  I was too confident to know better.

I had a blast.

I also returned to blenders, but this time minus the rum.  I quickly learned it was easier to write about characters I already “knew”—so I put everyone I knew, everyone I’d ever met, into an imaginary blender in my head.  I’d turn on the blender, imagining it swirling them all around, then poured out characters made up of tiny pieces of my friends, my not-so friends, and me.  Lots and lots of me.  Cooper Meredith of Cooper’s Folly is chock full of pieces of me, and I wrote the book for that part of me:  a lawyer who daydreams of not being a lawyer.  Of having more fun and being more fulfilled.  Of figuring out what I was meant to do and be.

I still use the blender approach with every book I write, which means that pieces of my friends and me—especially me—are scattered all over all my books.

But which pieces?  Try to guess.  And good luck with that.  🙂

Go grab Mary Strand’s debut novel, COOPER’S FOLLY, out now!!!

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BONKERS IN BOCA

BONKERS IN BOCA
Dead in Boca
Dirty Harriet 200x300x72
Dirty Harriet Rides Again 200x300x72
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERABONKERS IN BOCA

by Miriam Auerbach

Boca Raton, Florida, has been hailed as the Beverly Hills of the East Coast.  Now, to me, that’s a claim that cries out for corroboration.  So let’s see – what are the commonalities between Beverly Hills and Boca?  Opulent mansions and beautiful shopping areas?  Check.  Young blonde women precariously balancing a size sixteen stack atop a size two tuchus?  Check.  But frankly, I think they’ve got it backwards – it should be Beverly Hills that aspires to be the Boca of the West Coast.  After all, we’ve got some home-grown beauts that they can’t shake a stick at.  Namely, we’ve got Boca Babes.  What is a Boca Babe?  Here are some clues:

  • If you live in a house the size of a jumbo jet hangar, then you are likely a Boca Babe.
  • If Neiman Marcus is #1 on your cell phone speed dial, you might be a Boca Babe.
  • If you’ve had diamond studs soldered into your earlobes, you could be a Boca Babe.
  • If your dog owns more clothing and toys that some people’s children, you just might be a Boca Babe.
  • If the only thing you know how to make for dinner is reservations, you are probably a Boca Babe.
  • And if you are all these things but you’ve hit the big 4-0, then you’re no longer a Boca Babe – you’re now a Botox Babe.

My series protagonist, Harriet Horowitz, is an ex-Boca Babe.  Why an ex?  Here’s the thing: a rich husband, no matter how revolting, is the price of admission to the Boca Babe Club.  Harriet’s husband was indeed revolting.  He abused her for ten years.  Finally she’d had enough.  One day when her husband raised his fists at her one last time, she told him, in the words of movie anti-hero Dirty Harry, “Go ahead – make my day.” He obliged, and she shot him through the heart – with his (now hers) .44 Magnum.

Harriet’s act was ruled justifiable homicide, and she embarked on a new identity – Dirty Harriet – and new life.  She sold everything, bought a Harley, and moved to a desolate cabin in the Everglades.  She swapped swank for swamp, indulgence for independence.

Harriet embarked on a new career as well: she opened up her own private eye agency, ScamBusters.  And business is booming.  Boca’s got a slew of scams.  Investment scams, insurance scams, immigration scams – you name it, we’ve got it.

So Harriet is doing just fine as a ScamBuster.  But occasionally, murder intrudes.  In my third Dirty Harriet mystery, DEAD IN BOCA, a prominent Boca developer hires Harriet to find the con artist who stole his elderly mother’s heart and identity.  It’s just another routine case for ScamBusters – that is, until Harriet’s client is murdered when he’s buried by a bulldozer at one of his construction sites.  The dead man’s new bride asks Harriet to continue the search for the con man, who just may – or may not – be the killer.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got to get back to my work in progress.  But first, I’ve got to head to the salon to get twelve subtle shades of highlights put in my hair.  After all, this is Boca – we’ve all got to keep up appearances.

 Make sure you grab Miriam’s newest release, DEAD IN BOCA, the third in the Dirty Harriet Mystery Series OUT NOW!!!

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And don’t forget to grab the first two in this awesome series!!

Dirty Harriet 200x300x72      Dirty Harriet Rides Again 200x300x72

A LITTLE TRUE LOVE AT CHRISTMASTIME

A LITTLE TRUE LOVE AT CHRISTMASTIME
Heidi Sprouse
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   A LITTLE TRUE LOVE AT CHRISTMASTIME

by: Heidi Sprouse

 

It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas and I have one of the best presents coming up right now…the release of my first novel, All the Little Things.  I’ve been plugging away for ten years now, dreaming big, and can’t wait to share this with friends, family, and readers that I hope will fall in love with my characters the way I do every time we meet again. More is on the way, but right now it’s time to get to know Sam, Meg, and all of the little things that matter most when it comes to love!

Have you ever wished you could find your true soul mate, someone who knows you better than you know yourself? A man who doesn’t want anything else but to be at your side? Sam O’Malley is that man and he fell in love with Megan Taylor the moment he laid eyes on her. Maybe he was only 10-years-old, but the 8-year-old girl literally swept him off his feet and sent him for a freefall out of a tree the day she moved into the neighborhood.

Twenty years later, this small town boy has become a successful architect, knows what direction he’s headed, and doesn’t want anything more than what he’s found in Meg. There’s only one problem. The girl has begun to question her life and it will be up to Sam to pull out all of the stops, digging up memories, and leaving no stone unturned in their past to try and change her mind.

I’m a small town girl myself and many of the things that are precious to Sam and Megan come from my own childhood and life, moments that will be locked in my heart forever. As for a man like Sam, he’s of the solid, reliable sort any woman would love and has many of the qualities of the greats I’ve known over the years. I hope you’ll like him as much as I do, cheer him on, and stick it out to see what happens. If you love Sam, just wait until you get tangled with his best friend, Michael, and a hot-blooded Italian, Sophia, in Lightning Can Strike Twice (coming soon!).

      

Grab Heidi’s novel – ALL THE LITTLE THINGS – out TODAY! 

I KNOW ENOUGH TO BE DANGEROUS

I KNOW ENOUGH TO BE DANGEROUS
Donnell Bell
Betrayed

I KNOW ENOUGH TO BE DANGEROUS

By Donnell Ann Bell

Whenever I sit down with my husband to watch Jeopardy, and a writer is one of the three contestants, my Dear Husband automatically says, the writer will win, he/she’s smart.  I sit back and think, maybe.  He might be a descendant of Einstein’s, a Harvard graduate, incredibly well read, or he might be like me –he gets this crazy idea that won’t let go, and has to finish it so his head won’t explode.

Being thought of as the owner of a high IQ is much more glamorous so I smile and remain quiet.  Still, just between you, me and the blogosphere, writers answer to their muse, and, sadly, that muse often takes them in a direction writers don’t want to go.

My muse couldn’t care less about the amount of work I have to do or the fear involved when I write a character.  What do you mean you think my protagonist needs to be a nuclear physicist?  I know nothing about nuclear physicists.  Do you know how much researching and interviewing that occupation will entail?

I’ll subtly insert, say, a janitor when my muse isn’t looking.  I can write a janitor.  To which she’ll cross her arms, lift an eyebrow (my muse has eyebrows) and say, I distinctly ordered a MIT-caliber character—write one.

In BETRAYED, my November release from Bell Bridge Books, my characters consist of a trap shooting champion, a world class soccer player, a cop with a masters in psychology,  an Ob-GYN, artists dealing with glass, iron and paint disciplines, and several others who would do so much better on Jeopardy than me.  You would think my muse would be satisfied with the amount of research I had to put into this book. Not even close.  She’s already moved on to my next work in progress.

Maybe writers are like me and try out for Jeopardy to hide from their muses.  Anyone have Alex Trebeck’s contact information?  The next time you see one on a game show, don’t fall for that ‘they must be smart’ routine.  The truth is if writers are doing something besides writing, they’re avoiding their muses.  Writers – most know enough to be dangerous.

    

Click on the covers to check out Donnell Ann Bell’s “dangerous” novels – DEADLY RECALL and THE PAST CAME HUNTING!

And don’t miss out on BETRAYED.  Out TODAY!

FALLING IN LOVE IS A REALLY BIG DILL

FALLING IN LOVE IS A REALLY BIG DILL
debsmith
The Pickle Queen

    ASHEVILLE – THE SETTING OF THE CROSSROADS CAFE NOVELLAS

by: Deborah Smith

 

My Inspiration . . .

He was a little guy, thin inside baggy thrift-store clothes, grubby-looking, with ear-flaps flapping on his cap as he walk-loped up theAshevillesidewalk toward my husband and me. It was nine a.m. on an autumn Saturday, bright and sunny and blue-skied, and we were headed up and down the hilly city streets toward eggs and soy sausage at Tupelo Honey’s.

We could see his lips moving as he came closer, but we couldn’t hear what he was saying and, even if we could read lips, we couldn’t see his. He held a ratty Teddy Bear in front of his face. A big one. We weren’t sure how he saw around it.

He never paused, never glanced our way, never stopped whispering to his bear. He and his secret friend passed by us and continued up the hill, two pals communing inside the mysteries of their minds.

Just another moment in theNorth Carolinacity where the favorite t-shirt slogans include “Why be normal?” and “It’s not weird, it’sAsheville.”

Of course every city has its share of citizens who live in alternate realities. But here, in this artsy-bohemian  informal capital of westernNorth Carolina(the mountain side of the state) “alternate”   is  square one  on the yellow brick road to everywhere.

“There’s the nun,”  someone says, as a guy in a habit flies by on a tall bicycle, hairy knees pumping as he dodges pedestrians and halloooos at the street performers. The flying bicycle nun can only mean one thing: the purple LaZoom comedy tour bus is coming.  It rolls by, a comedy routine in motion, the passengers wearing bizarre hats.

Hardly anyone gives it an astonished look.

Over inPritchardParkpeople are smoking roll-your-owns and playing chess at the granite chess tables; on Friday evenings dozens of drummers show up with djembes and rattles, bongos and small drums. The drumming is loud and primitive and exciting.  A lot of very bad stomp-dancing commences, mostly by white people, though the crowd is always diverse.   Kids run in circles, laughing.  Young women in peasant skirts roll their waist-bands down and  belly dance.

Hank enjoys that part. Go figure.

On my latest birthday I decided I wanted my ears pierced. Hank and I can’t agree that I should  get a tattoo – I keep working on that plan, but the ear piercings are the first baby steps toward my Wild Cronehood Transition, so far.

I come from the kind of southern family where one hole in each ear was the maximum; and that was only acceptable after about 1975 (among the Methodists;) not until the late 1980’s among the Southern Baptists.  I was raised among a wild branch of semi-Methodists, so Daddy pierced my ears early,in the late 1960’s, using a large sewing needle and a tray of ice cubes to numb the lobes.

It was great family entertainment. Sister, mother, and grandma gathered to watch. No one fainted, and a good time was had by all.

So I came from a streak of rebellion. I got a second set of piercings in my lobes some years ago. Wild stuff. Made family reunions a little tense. Look at her. Four holes!

And now. Well. I was going to hell. I was taking my piercings outside the realm    of all decent folk.

I was going above the lobes.

So Hank and I walked into anAshevilletattoo  parlor (the optimum place to get a professional piercing done, according to the multi-pierced college students at our hometown pub.)

The staff and clientele looked at us as if we might have wandered in by mistake, intending to enter the Oldies But Goodies Vinyl Records Collectibles Shop next door. I explained that I wanted a piercing in each ear.

The young man behind the counter decided to humor me and asked where? I pointed vaguely to my ears. Somewhere in there. And on the edge over there.

This is when he gets out the chart. The ear anatomy chart.

We go over more terms than a high school human physiology class.

Helix, triangular fossa, crus helix, tragus.

Tragus. I ask if that isn’t the time travel thingie in Dr. Who?

Hank sits down in a corner and hides behind his cell phone.

No, the tragus is that thick ridge that guards the entrance to your ear canal.

Okay, that would be a prominent display spot for a glittery semi-precious stud. Very cool.

“I’ve got a pierced tragus. Want to see my tragus?”

I like the sound of that.

On to the other ear. Helix. The outer fold. Soft and fleshy. “That looks like a good spot. Not much cartilage. Won’t hurt, right?”

“Not much,” the child-man behind the counter says.

He said something similar about the tragus.

Actually he said, “Not too bad.”

Next to me, a young child of twenty or so, dotted with a lot of metal already, says, “Hey, you  oughta try this. She points to her ear. Inside, upper half. A stud gleams on a  shallow mound that looks as if it would be very hard to maneuver a needle through. My stomach felt funny. I looked  at the ear chart.

The antihelix.

That sounded . . . anti. Not for me.

I paid, I signed papers, I swore I wasn’t underage, high or drunk, and I showed my driver’s license. I was disappointed when I found out all the pretty studs on display in the jewelry cases were forbidden for a piercing process. I had to go full-titanium pre-sterilized. This was some serious stabby work.

“Come on back here,” said a reincarnation of John Belushi, covered in tattoos and a beard, and wearing inch-wide ear-plugs in his lobes.

This is how men think they’re proving they could give birth if they had to.

John took me into a very doctorly room with sterilizers and cabinets and an exam table with sanitary paper on it. He had nearly twenty years of experience piercing everything that can be pierced on the human body, and when he realized I was happy to hear the gory details, (writers ask questions, and former  newspaper reporters ask a LOT of them) he merrily told me.

I began making a mental list of the anecdotes I would not be sharing with Hank.  A lot of men don’t like hearing stories about needles going through that down there.    

“Ready?” John said, his Latexed fingers holding a needle the size of a toothpick  next to my unsuspecting targus.

“Sure!”

When  your daddy stabbed your earlobes with Mama’s  largest sewing needle while your kid sister went “MAKE IT BLEED,” you’re  confident you can handle a steel toothpick through your targus.

Zap.

I said bad words. My eyes watered. It was over in three seconds. Maybe two. But still. Damn.

“You all right?” John asked.

“Sure!”

I was looking around for something sharp to cut him with if he picked up a second needle. Fortunately, he recognized the reaction. “The other side will be a piece of cake. You’re doing great. Didn’t you say you have a calico cat? Look, here’s a picture of my calico. She sleeps between me and my wife every night.”

He distracted me with photos of his kitty on his cell phone. The dull throbbing in my targus settled down. Okay, it was still attached. I took a deep breath. “Ready.”

“Good girl.”

He moved fast. Ready, set, aim. Ka-zap. My helix lost its virginity. Not so bad. John gave me instructions on saline cleansing. We shook hands. We’d bonded.

I swaggered out like a female pirate. A stud in my targus. A stud in my helix.

“Do I look hot, or what?” I asked Hank.
“Pale, really pale,” he said.
“I need wine. A lot of it.”

He took me by the arm and we wandered out into the sunshine.

Ashevillesurrounded me. I was one with the weirdness. Proudly alternative.

But a little wobbly.

I wanted a Teddy Bear to talk to.

 

CHECK OUT ALL OF DEBORAH SMITH’S BOOKS ON AMAZON NOW!! 

                                                              

 

AND DON’T MISS THE PICKLE QUEEN OUT TODAY!!!!

JUST CLICK THE PICTURES!!

WRITING FOR FUN

WRITING FOR FUN
Trish Jensen
Just This Once
Send Me No Flowers

                               WRITING FOR FUN

by: Trish Jensen

 

I admit it, I’m a zone person. There are days when writing feels like a chore, and there are days when I get into the zone when things just seem to flow.

This was a zone book. It flowed, and I was annoyed when anyone interrupted that flow, including family.

Here was the excellent thing. I wrote a book totally out of my comfort zone. It was set in LA, where I’d never been, at a TV network, which I knew nothing about, and starred a producer (still nothing in my world) and a talented hair dresser (I barely know how to blow dry my hair correctly) who’s been recruited against her will to be the talent for a national makeover show.

She and I have nothing in common, as she’s tall and gorgeous and I’m short and “cute.”

One thing we had in common I could tap into is that we are both extremely shy, but can ratchet it up if someone annoys me. So in that way, I knew her. But Hollywood? A TV show? We both felt so out of our element.

Yet it was probably the most fun I’ve had writing a comedy. The two main characters zing each other at every opportunity.

The hero, AJ Landry is coerced into producing the show. He is not a happy dude. But as he gets to know Tanya Pierce, the talented makeover artist, and begins to realize she was so not out for fame and fortune, but instead was scared spitless at the thought of performing her craft for a national audience to witness, AJ becomes invested in her success and the success of the show.

The problem is, the only way he can eek any form of productivity out of her is to make her angry. So he shows up on the set, lists of insults in tow. Much as he hates her thinking he’s the biggest jerk in the universe, he knows it’s necessary to get any work done.

What a conundrum.  Unfortunately, his insults work to help her be so angry she forgets to be scared, and the result is a fabulous show that catches on fast with the public.

Now to try to get her to realize that he’s really not an ogre. Not having a great deal of success on that front. Or so he thinks.

Tanya can’t understand her attraction to the jerk, who never fails to remind her who’s the boss. Still, she does everything in her power to get him to fire her so she can head home to her small town and her shop. Instead, the man not only refuses to fire her, he starts threatening her with guest appearances on talk shows and at boat christenings.

Their animosity is palpable to everyone working on the set. They begin to call it “Zoning Tanya.”

And that is what Tanya and I have in common. We both need to be “zoned” to get work done. Now if I could only find my own AJ Landry to keep me in the zone.

Go check out ALL of Trish Jensen’s FABULOUS books now on Amazon!     

And DON’T FORGET to go grab her newest release BEHIND THE SCENES!!!