|
Jan 19
2012
|
When Joya Fields was a senior at the University of Maryland, she interned for Easter Seals and met many people with disabilities. It was an eye-opening experience that the book-loving English major drew on years later for her first novel, Beneath the Surface, which released this month from The Wild Rose Press.
“The heroine, Brooke, is a below-the-knee amputee. I wanted her to fight injustice to find inner strength. Since this is a romance, of course I wanted her to fall in love, too.”



Let’s start with the answer that everyone wants from Marni Mann: no, she’s not a heroin addict, and she’s never been a heroin addict. But she’s flattered when readers of her debut novel,
To call Andy Gavin a “serial creator who doesn’t sleep much” is a bit of an understatement. He co-founded the video game development company
Where were you on September 11, 2001?
With the New York Times debut bestseller Still Missing, Chevy Stevens delivered the "not-to-be-missed thriller of the year." Now she returns with 

