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Showing posts with label Book Giveaways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Giveaways. Show all posts

Winners and a Legal Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. The autographed first edition of J.A. Jance's Betrayal of Trust will go to Connie H. from Sherman, TX. Sue F. from Crosslake, MN will receive Dana Stabenow's Whisper to the Blood. The books will go out in the mail tomorrow.

Legal thrillers anyone? I have two novels featuring lawyers to give away this week. I have an autographed first edition of Robert Dugoni's latest book, Murder One. When David Sloane reconnected with Barclay Reid, opposing counsel in his most prominent case, he never expected he'd be defending her against a charge of murder. It's Sloane's first criminal case. Is he up to the job of defending the woman he loves?



If you never got around to reading Michael Connelly's The Lincoln Lawyer, here's your chance to win a copy. It's the legal thriller that introduced Mickey Haller, the lawyer who operates out of Lincoln Town Cars. And, his defense of a rich boy arrested for assault isn't the easy case he anticipated. Instead, Haller find himself taking a deadly risk.

Which book would you like to win? You can enter to win both books, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win Murder One" or "Win The Lincoln Lawyer".  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, Aug. 4 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Winners and a Strong Women Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. Joel Fox' Lincoln's Hand will go to Linda S. in Columbus, OH, and Cindi H. of Edwardsville, IL won Steve Berry's The Jefferson Key. The books will go out in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I have crime novels by women, featuring strong women. I'm giving away the last autographed copy of Julia Spencer-Fleming's One Was a Soldier. Reverend Clare Fergusson has returned from Iraq, and she's still dealing with issues that she hasn't discussed with Russ Van Alstyne. They're trying to get back together, but when the death of a young Army specialist is ruled a suicide, Clare disagrees, and starts her own investigation.



Or you could head to Ohio's Amish country with Linda Castillo's Breaking Silence. Police Chief Kate Burkholder has one of her toughest cases when three members of an Amish family die terrible deaths. Were the deaths an accident, or linked to recent hate crimes against the Amish. Castillo's thrillers are violent, but probe the inner thoughts of a police officer responsible for the safety of her community.

Would you like to win One Was a Soldier or Breaking Silence? You can enter to win both books, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win One Was a Soldier" or "Win Breaking Silence."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, July 7 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Winners and an Authors @ The Teague Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. Carol-Lynn R. of Winthrop, Maine won Laura Lippman's I'd Know You Anywhere. Paul Doiron's The Poacher's Son is going to Kathy S. from Alba, TX. I'll put the books in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I'm giving away autographed books from two authors who appeared today for Authors @ The Teague. Kate Carlisle's Murder Under Cover was just released this week, so you might not own it yet. It's the latest book in the Bibliophile Mystery series. Bookbinder Brooklyn Wainwright is looking forward to restoring a beautiful copy of the Kama Sutra for her best friend. But, before she can even get started, her friend Robin is in big trouble. Her apartment is ransacked, and a man she recently met is found murdered in her bed. Robin is the number one suspect. Fortunately, Brooklyn's boyfriend has just moved to town, and can help her investigate what appears to be an international conspiracy.

Or you could win Avery Aames' first book in her Cheese Shop mystery, The Long Quiche Goodbye. Although Avery's second book, Lost and Fondue, just came out, I thought you might want an autographed copy of the first book, since Avery just won the Agatha Award for Best First Novel for this one. Try to win to own it as an award winner, or an introduction to the series. Discover the Fromagerie Bessette in Providence, Ohio. Meet proprietor Charlotte Bessette, her friends and family. You'll love the discussion of cheese. Oh, and Charlotte has to turn amateur sleuth when her beloved grandmother, the mayor of Providence, is accused of murdering a nasty landlord with one of Charlotte's beautiful knives.

Which book would you like to win, Murder Under Cover of The Long Quiche Goodbye? You can enter to win both books, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win Murder Under Cover " or "Win The Long Quiche Goodbye."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, May 12 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Winners and Edgar Nominees Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. Tim Dorsey's Electric Barracuda goes to Kris O. from Durant, OK. And James W. Hall's Silencer will be sent to Trish R. of Decatur, GA. The books will go out in the mail tomorrow.

The Edgars will be presented tonight, but I'm offering two books that were nominated for  Edgar Awards this year. Laura Lippman's I'd Know You Anywhere was nominated for Best Novel. I have an uncorrected proof to give away, the story of a wife and mother who had been kidnapped and held hostage for six weeks when she was fifteen. As her kidnapper sits on Death Row, he reaches out, contacting her.





Or you could win Paul Doiron's The Poacher's Son, nominated for Best First Novel.  Game warden Mike Bowditch took the opposite direction as his father who makes his living poaching illegal game. But, when the police search for his father, suspecting him of killing a cop, Mike is the only one who believes his father is innocent. Together with a retired warden, Mike goes searching for his father in the Maine wilderness, knowing he needs to stay out of the way of the real cop killer.

Which Edgar nominee would you like to win, I'd Know You Anywhere or The Poacher's Son? You can enter to win both books, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win I'd Know You Anywhere " or "Win The Poacher's Son."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, May 5 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Winners and an Autographed Cozy Contest

The most recent contest was a great success, over 200 participants. Congratulations to the winners. Chelsea Cain's The Night Season will go to Gary V. of Schaumburg, IL. And, Lisa Gardner's Love You More was won by Doreen D. of Long Beach, CA. The books will go in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I have ARCs (Advanced Reading Copies) of two cozy mysteries to give away. They're both autographed. You could win Juliet Blackwell's A Cast-Off Coven. Lily Ivory, the witch who owns Aunt Cora's Closet, a vintage clothing store in Haight-Ashbury, is called in to search for possible paranormal activity in the San Francisco School of Fine Arts. She not only finds murder, she finds the unmistakable aura of evil intent.





Or, you could win Casey Mayes' A Deadly Row. Savannah Stone  creates math and logic puzzles for newspapers. When she accompanies her former police chief husband back to Charlotte, North Carolina, they deal with a real life puzzle, threats to the current police chief that could lead to murder.

So, do you want to win A Cast-Off Coven or A Deadly Row? You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win A Cast-Off Coven" or "Win A Deadly Row."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, April 14 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Thriller Giveaway

This week's contest is for thriller readers.

Lisa Gardner's latest thriller is a D.D. Warren book, Love You More. The police detective  is called in when it appears that an officer when a state police officer is accused of killing her abusive husband. But, Tessa Leoni isn't talking about her dead husband, nor about the disappearance of her six-year-old daughter. This one will keep you guessing.






Chelsea Cain brings back Archie Sheridan in The Night Season. A relentless storm hits Portland, flooding the Willamette River, washing up a decades' old body, setting Archie on the trail of a killer unlike anything he's seen.

So, which book would you like to win, Love You More or The Night Season? You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win Love You More" or "Win The Night Season ."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, April 7 at 6 PM PT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Winners and The Next Contest

Congratulations to the three winners of last week's contests. Cleo Coyle's Roast Mortem will go to Jeanne S. from Cary, NC. Claudia W. of Escondido, CA won Deborah Coonts' Lucky Stiff. And, Michael Harvey's The Third Rail will go to Joyce D. of Bayville, NJ.

It will be two weeks until the next contest. I'm leaving next Tuesday for Santa Fe to attend Left Coast Crime, so I won't be around to mail out books.  But, I'll have special autographed books to give away again, beginning Thursday, March 31.

In the meantime, the blog will still be appearing daily. I'm still blogging. I have some book reviews, coverage recaps from Tucson Festival of Books, a guest blog coming up. And, I'm sure I'll be at least sending pictures from Left Coast Crime, and covering the conference as I can.

If you only check out my blog for the free books, stop back in a couple weeks. But, if you're looking for coverage of books, I hope you continue to read it daily. I'll still be writing!

Winners and Yarbro/Gaus Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. Kelli Stanley's The Curse-Maker will go to Sandie H. of Sarasota, FL. Mickie T. from Sykesville, MD won The Spies of Sobeck by P.C. Doherty. The books will go in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I'm able to announce a giveaway of two copies of Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's new book,  An Embarrassment of Riches.  This is the new Count Saint-Germain novel, just released this week.  Here's a brief summary from the publicist. In An Embarrassment of Riches, the vampire Count finds himself a virtual prisoner in the Court of Kunigunde in Bohemia in the 1200s. Rakoczy Ferncsi, as Saint-Germain is known, passes his days making jewels to delight Queen Kunigunde and trying not to become involved in the Court's intrigues. In this, the vampire fails. Handsome, apparently wealthy, and obviously unmarried, he soon finds himself being sexually blackmailed by Rozsa, an ambitious lady-in-waiting. If he does not satisfy her, she will denounce him to the priests and he'll be burned at the stake, resulting in his True Death. Despite his care, the vampire makes more than one enemy at the Bohemian Court, and by the end of An Embarrassment of Riches, the Count can see only one road to freedom...through death.

In an entirely different vein (vampires/vein/blood), I also have an autographed copy of P.L. Gaus' debut mystery, Blood of the Prodigal. That book takes readers to Amish Country in northeastern Ohio, where a young boy has disappeared. It takes a college professor, a pastor, and a sheriff to investigate the story of the disappearance and a murder.

Would you like to win An Embarrassment of Riches or Blood of the Prodigal? You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Send entries to me at lholstine@yahoo.com. The subject lines should read either, "Win Embarrassment of Riches" or "Win Blood of the Prodigal." Include your name and mailing address in the message. Entrants from the U.S. only, please.

Since I'll be going to Poisoned Pen Thursday night to see authors, this contest will end next Thursday morning, March 10, at 5:30 AM MT. I'll draw the winners using a random number generator. I'll mail the Gaus book out, and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro's publicist will mail out her books.  Good luck!

Winners and an Ancient Mysteries Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the last contest. Steven Hockensmith's The Crack in the Lens will go to Helen K. of Winchester, VA. Sandy O. from Milford, OH will receive Tim Dorsey's Electric Barracuda. The books will go out in the mail tomorrow.

This week we'll go back in time for two historical mysteries.  I have an autographed ARC of Kelli Stanley's The Curse-Maker. Stanley takes readers to Bath in Roman Britain, where physician Arcturus is on holiday with his wife. A dead body is found floating in the sacred spring, the body of a curse maker whose curses actually come true. As one murder follows another, it looks like there is a curse on Arcturus. And, to prevent any curses falling on the reader, Kelli Stanley has stamped the book with a blessing.

Or, you could go back in further in time with P.C. Doherty's The Spies of Sobeck. In 1477 B.C., treacherous forces are on the rise in Egypt, threatening the power of Pharaoh-Queen Hatusu. Imperial messengers and members of the elite army are disappearing. When the former chief scout of the Spies of Sobeck is murdered, it's up to Amerotke, Chief Judge of the Hall of Two Truths, to deal with treason and murder.

So would you like to win the mystery set in Roman Britain or ancient Egypt? You can enter to win both, but I'll need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject lines should read either "Win The Curse-Maker" or "Win The Spies."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entrants from the U.S. only please.

The contest will end at 6 PM MT on Thursday, March 3. I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out on Friday. Good luck!

Winners and A Comedy Tonight Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the last contests.  Copies of Julia Spencer-Fleming's One Was a Soldier go to Joyce D. of Bayville, NJ, Susan M. from Williamsburg, VA, and Kay M. of Lubbock, TX. Diane K. from Crown Point, IN won Chelsea Cain's books, and Michael Palmer's A Heartbeat Away goes to Charlotte W. of Covington, GA. The books will all go out in the mail tomorrow.

These heart-stopping books were a little heavy, so I'll lighten it up this week with some humor.  You could win a copy of Tim Dorsey's Electric Barracuda.  It's a non-stop ride across Florida as Serge Storms leads the police on a merry chase.  Please don't enter this contest, though, if you are easily offended by crude language or situations.  Tim's Serge Storms is a lovable antihero, but he and his sidekick, Coleman, are also coarse and outrageous.

Or, you could enter to win Steve Hockensmith's The Crack in the Lens.  Travel back in time to 1893, when Otto "Big Red" Amlingmeyer and his brother Gustav "Old Red" have the time to investigate the murder of Old Red's girlfriend.  Her death at the hands of a brutal killer was swept under the rug by authorities.  When the brothers decide to find out what really happened, everyone in town wants to keep those secrets buried.  Maybe they'll try to bury the brothers with the secrets.  It's a twisted puzzle that would have baffled even the brothers' hero, Sherlock Holmes.

So, would you like Tim Dorsey's book or Steve Hockensmith's?  You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries.  Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  The subject lines should read, either "Win Dorsey" or "Win Hockensmith."  Include your name and mailing address in the body of the email.  Entries only from the U.S., please.

The contest will close Thursday, Feb. 24 at 6 PM MT when I'll draw the winners using a random number generator.  The books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!

Julia Spencer-Fleming, Guest Blogger

It really is a pleasure to welcome award-winning mystery author, Julia Spencer-Fleming, today.  It's been three years since the last book in her Reverend Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alystyne series, and we've all been impatiently waiting.  But, three lucky winners won't have to wait much longer.  Details on the giveaway later.  Now, I'd like to welcome Julia, author of the forthcoming book, One Was a Soldier.

Why write mysteries?

When readers ask, I usually tell them I write mysteries because crime fiction today has greater breadth and depth and quality than any other type of novel being published. And it’s true--crime fiction deals with all times, all places, every variation of the human condition, every social ill and grace note of redemption. It’s practiced by writers fanatical about the sometimes-forgotten craft of storytelling; writers who labor like kobolds in the mines over plot and characterization, setting and language. I revel in being one of them. But that’s not the real reason I write mysteries.

When I’m hanging with writer friends, I’ll sometimes say I write mysteries because they’re one of the few genres in which an author can reliably make a living. According to Booksense, mysteries account for 40% of the fiction purchased in this country. Mystery lovers flock to conferences to meet with authors and talk about the books they love. Libraries consistently report mysteries among their best-circulating collections. In an economy that's taken the axe to many independent bookstores, mystery booksellers from coast to coast are thriving by supplying their customers with the newest fix for their jones.  But truthfully, that’s not the real reason I write mysteries.

Just between you and me, I’ll give you the real reason: sheer bloody-mindedness. I started a science fiction novel once. There was a dead body on the floor by the end of the first chapter. Another time, I made a lot of character notes for what I hoped would be a literate study on the effect of materialism and constant striving on a modern marriage. But then the husband took out a contract on the wife, who ended up on the lam after he was whacked by mistake. Once on a book tour, I stayed with a lovely family in a quintessentially middle-American town in Ohio. They have nine adult children, and I thought, wouldn’t a novel based on them make a delightful reading experience about enduring family bonds? Then I started to think, what if one of the daughters was killed? And her husband was the prime suspect? What if one of the brothers was a police officer, being kept off the case? And what if someone else in the picture-perfect family had wanted her dead...?

So that’s it. The reason I write mysteries: no matter what the character and situation I conjure up, sooner or later, somebody gets plugged. Thank heavens I have the outlet, because who knows what might happen to a murder-minded author who can’t keep killing people on the page? Hmmm...something to think about.


Julia Spencer-Fleming is the Agatha and Anthony-award-winning author of the upcoming One Was A Soldier, the seventh Clare Fergusson/Russ Van Alstyne mystery. You can find her at Facebook, on Twitter, and at her Reader Space.

One Was A Soldier is available for preorder at: Amazon      Barnes & Noble      Books-A-Million Borders      Powell's Books and your locally owned independent bookstore.

***** 
Thank you, Julia.  I think we're all quite glad you turned to mystery writing.  And, maybe your husband and other family members are too!


The release date for One Was a Soldier is actually April 26.  But, Julia was kind enough to send me three Advanced Readers Copies to give away right now.  So, three of you will have the chance to win it, and read it early!  So, you need to email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject heading should read, "Win One Was a Soldier."  The body should include your name and mailing address.  Entries only from the U.S. please.

This contest will end Thursday night, Feb. 17 at 6 PM MT, when I usually end my contests.  So, you have four days to get your entries in to be one of a small group who can find out right now what's going on with Clare Fergusson and Russ Van Alstyne.   Good luck!



Winners and an Autographed Poisoned Pen Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the recent contests.  Kari W. from Mesa, AZ won Todd Ritter's Death NoticeSecrets to the Grave by Tami Hoag will go to Penny T. off Klamtha Falls, OH.  In addition, I was giving away five copies of movie posters, along with the book, The Lincoln Lawyer by Michael Connelly.  The winners were Barbara A. of Brookville, FL, Connie H. from Sherman, TX, Pearl Elliott of Albuqueque, Patricia R. Kansas, and Kathy D. from NY, NY.

So, while I was at the Poisoned Pen on Saturday, I had authors autograph some books for you.   I do have an autographed copy of Donis Casey's latest book in the Alafair Tucker series.  In Crying Blood, Alafair's husband, Shaw, takes center stage, after finding a body on a hunting trip.  It's always a treat to return to Oklahom with Casey's Tuckers.






Jeffrey Siger also signed an ARC in his series set in Greece.  Assassins of Athens takes Chief Inspector Andras Kaldis of the Greek Police's Special Crimes Division deep into the sordid, criminal side of Athens nightlife and then to the glittering world of Athens society.  That's what happens when your investigation involves a boy from one of Greece's most prominent family, whose body turned up dead in a dumpster in one of the city's worst neighborhoods.

So, would you like to win Assassins of Athens  by Jeffre Siger or Crying Blood by Donis Casey? You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject lines should read either, "Crying Blood," or "Assassins of Athens." Include your name and mailing address. Entrants from the U.S. only please.


The contest will end Thursday night, Feb. 10 at 6 PM MT. I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out in the mail on Friday. Good luck!

Winners and Good Old USA Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the historical mysteries.  Carol K. Carr's India Black is heading to Judith K. from Arlington, VA.  And Jed Rubenfeld's The Death Instinct will go to James K. of Nashville, TN.  The books will go out in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I'm giving away two mysteries set in the U.S.  Todd Ritter's Death Notice is set in a small town in Pennsylvania.  Perry Hollow, Pennysylvania has never had a murder, at least as long as Kat Campbell has been police chief.  And, the first one, the murder of a local farmer, might be the work of a serial killer that is being tracked by the FBI.  A serial killer in Perry Hollow?  But, there must be a local connection since the newspaper's obituary writer received a notice before the victim died.




Or, you could read Tami Hoag's Secrets to the Grave.  An artist is murdered, leaving her young daughter as the only witness.  In the early days of criminal profiling, before DNA analysis, that little girl may be the key element to solving the crime.  When Sheriff's deputy Tony Mendez calls in child advocate Anne Leone, he opens up a hornet's nest.

Would you like to win Death Notice or Secrets to the Grave?  You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject lines should read either, "Win Death Notice," or "Win Secrets to the Grave." Include your name and mailing address. Entrants from the U.S. only please.


The contest will end Thursday night, Feb. 3 at 6 PM MT. I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out in the mail on Friday. Good luck!






Saturday Tidbits

Did I tell you I did a short interview for Woman's World magazine?  The January 31 issue just hit the newstands, grocery stores and drug stores.  On page 34 is an article called "You Deserve The Best...New Mystery Novel."  I'm not going to tell you what we recommend, but I'm honored to be in wonderful company.  We each highlighted one book in a category that was given to us.  They interviewed Stefanie Pintoff, the award-winning author of In the Shadow of Gotham (http://www.stefaniepintoff.com/), Sarah Weinman, crime fiction columnist for the Los Angeles Times, David J. Montgomery, the thriller/mystery critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, Molly Weston (http://www.mysteryheel.blogspot.com/), and me.  You can pick up a copy for just $1.79 for about another week.  And, I have no idea who gave them my name, but I appreciate it!

**********

Oh, I have a fun giveaway this week.  The contest will run until Thursday, Feb. 3 at 6 PM MT.  It's a promotion for the upcoming March movie release of THE LINCOLN LAWYER by Michael Connelly. The movie stars Matthew McConaughey as Mickey Haller, Ryan Phillippe, Marisa Tomei, William H. Macy, Josh Lucas, John Leguizamo and more.

I have 5 movie posters and 5 copies of THE LINCOLN LAWYER mass market paperback to give away.  So, five lucky winners will receive both a movie poster and a book.  I'm not sending them out; the publicist is.  But, you need to send me your name and mailing address in an email to lholstine@yahoo.com.  Your subject line should read, "Win The Lincoln Lawyer." 

Would you like to see the trailer for the movie?  http://www.michaelconnelly.com/Book_Collection/Lincoln/Movie/movie.html

Fun contest!  And, Michael Connelly's next Mickey Haller novel, The Fifth Witness, will be released April 5.  Michael Connelly's website is http://www.michaelconnelly.com/.   Good luck!

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And, if you are one of those lucky people who received an ereader over the holidays, a group of suspense writers have an offer for you.  I recently received this news release.

Navigating the Sea of E-Books


Nine top suspense authors join forces to promote quality e-books http://www.topsuspensegroup.com/

The e-book market is exploding. With over 700,000 e-books currently available and hundreds more added every week, it’s growing increasingly difficult to distinguish quality books from those that are unedited and written by inexperienced authors.

That’s why nine established, professional authors have formed Top Suspense Group, a site where readers are guaranteed to find top-notch, award-winning authors in multiple genres who deliver a great e-reading experience in their dozens of highly-acclaimed books.

"Readers can count on us," acclaimed author Max Allan Collins explains. "Every member of our group has already made his or her mark on genre fiction, whether it's noir, crime, mystery, thriller, horror or Westerns, and in some cases, several of these genres."

Top Suspense authors have each:

• Published multiple novels with traditional publishers

• Won or have been nominated for major literary awards

• Been internationally published

• Received critical acclaim from national publications

Many of the authors have graced the national bestseller lists and have had their work produced or optioned for film (the Oscar winning “Road to Perdition”) and television (the Emmy winning “Monk”). Our authors include:

Max Allan Collins • Bill Crider • Lee Goldberg • Joel Goldman • Ed Gorman • Vicki Hendricks

Paul Levine • Harry Shannon • Dave Zeltserman

This unique site provides a one-stop-shop of quality suspense fiction. As the e-book market continues to flood and overwhelm readers, Top Suspense will remain a succinct guide to quality, professional e-books written by today’s leading authors.

Winners and a Historical Mystery Giveaway

Congratulations to the winners of the cozy mysteries.  Wendy Lyn Watson's Scoop to Kill will go to Kat B. from Winterset, IA.  And, Kevin R. of Plano, TX will receive E.J. Copperman's Night of the Living Deed.  I'll put them in the mail tomorrow.

This week, I'm giving away copies of the two fascinating historical mysteries I reviewed earlier this month.  Carol K. Carr's debut mystery, India Black, takes readers back to Victorian England where India Black, a madam, tries to hide the body of a man who died in her house, only to be blackmailed into a deadly spy game.  This debut has a wonderful cast of characters, and a non-stop plot.





If you prefer the United States and Europe in the twentieth century, you might want to read Jed Rubenfeld's The Death Instinct.  Rubenfeld built an intriguing story around events that aren't well-known, including a Wall Street bombing that killed 400 people in September 1920.  Whether it's an investigation of the bombing, or medicine on the battlefields of World War I, this is another powerful historical mystery, involving characters such as Sigmund Freud and Madame Curie.


So, which mystery would you like to win, India Black or The Death Instinct? You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject lines should read either, "Win India Black," or "Win The Death Instinct." Include your name and mailing address. Entrants from the U.S. only please.


The contest will end Thursday night, Jan. 27 at 6 PM MT. I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out in the mail on Friday. Good luck!


Winners and a Cozier Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the last couple contests.  The Tami Hoag books will go to Caryn St. C. from St. Louis, MO.  Mirror Image by Dennis Palumbo will be sent to Claudia W. of Klamath Falls, OR.  And, Lois H. from Beverly Hills won Jilliane Hoffman's Pretty Little Things.  I'll be mailing those last two books tomorrow, while the publicist will send out Tami Hoag's books.

This isn't the week to offer violent mysteries.  Instead, I have two cozier mysteries as prizes.  How about a mystery featuring "7 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2 ghosts."  E.J. Copperman's Night of the Living Deed is the first in a new series.  When newly divorced Alison Kerby bought a fixer-upper to turn into a guesthouse, she didn't count on dealing with two resident ghosts who claim their deaths were not suicide.  If she doesn't want to become a ghost herself, Alison better find the killer.




Or, how about an autographed ARC of Scoop to Kill by Wendy Lyn Watson?  Tally Jones, proprietor of an old-fashioned ice-cream parlor is shocked when the local colelge serves up "A double dip of death," bodies of a graduate student, and then a professor.  The list of suspects is as long as the ice cream shop's menu, but Tally wants to find the killer before her niece becomes the next choice of the day.

So, which mystery would you like to win, Night of the Living Deed or Scoop to Kill?  You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject lines should read either, "Win Living Deed," or "Win Scoop to Kill." Include your name and mailing address. Entrants from the U.S. only please.


The contest will end Thursday night, Jan. 20 at 6 PM MT. I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out in the mail on Friday. Good luck!

A Thriller Contest

Although Jennifer M. of Dublin, CA and Wendy A. of Ferndale, WA  won the copies of Kristin Hannah's Winter Garden, and I'm currently running a contest for books by Tami Hoag, this thriller contest officially kicks off the weekly giveaways for 2011.  If you're still reading actual books, as well as, or instead of on an ereader, maybe you'd like to enter the contests that normally start every Thursday evening.  This week, I'm giving away two thrillers.

The internet, and a thirteen-year-old girl who disappeared kick off Jilliane Hoffman's Pretty Little Things.  FDLE Special Agent Bobby Dees, who has headed up the Department's Crimes Against Children Squad in Miami for over a decade, doesn't think Lainey Emerson was a runaway.  It seems there's an online predator out there, and he wants Dees watching him.





Or you could win Dennis Palumbo's Mirror Image.   Dr. Daniel Rinaldi is a psychologist who specializes in treating victims of violent crime.  But, when he finds a patient murdered, one who had mirrored himself on Rinaldi, dressing and acting like him, Daniel and the police suspect he was the target, not Kevin.  Feeling responsible, Rinaldi's searches for a killer.  Then, the original victim become national news, and another person turns up dead.

Would you like to win Pretty Little Things or Mirror Image?  You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries.  Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.  Your subject lines should read either, "Win Pretty Little Things," or "Win Mirror Image."  Include your name and mailing address.  Entrants from the U.S. only please.

The contest will end Thursday night, Jan. 13 at 6 PM MT.  I'll use a random number generator to pick the winners, and the books will go out in the mail on Friday.  Good luck!




Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah - An Update & a Giveaway

Kristin Hannah's Winter Garden will be released in trade paperback tomorrow.  If you're still working on plans for this year's book discussion group, you might want to take a look at this book.  In fact, here's a link to an excerpt from the book, to give you a taste. 


There's a discussion guide available with the book as well, but don't read it if you haven't read the book.  There are spoilers in the guide.  http://www.kristinhannah.com/content/books_winter_garden.php?id=Discussion%20Guide

You can even watch Kristin Hannah discuss the book.  http://www.kristinhannah.com/content/books_winter_garden.php?id=Video 

And, you could get the chance to have Hannah speak to your book group via speakerphone.  http://www.kristinhannah.com/content/book_clubs.php?id=Signup%20Form

I reviewed the book last February when it came out in hardcover, and I thought I'd share my review.

"In times of trouble, Meredith did chores, Nina took photos, and Mom cooked. The one thing the Whitson women never did was talk." Kristin Hannah's Winter Garden is the story of two daughters, struggling to understand their mother. They may never understand themselves, if they don't understand the woman who never seemed to love them.


Meredith did everything she could to impress her mother, but it took a play when she was twelve to disabuse her of any idea she would ever please her. She wrote a play, and performed it with her sister, Nina, and the neighbor, Jeff, basing it on one of her mother's Russian fairy tales. When her mother angrily interrupted, Meredith was humiliated, and unforgiving. She gave up on trying to win her mother's love. Nina continued to push a little longer, but she finally surrendered to the futility.

Twenty-eight years later, Meredith is married to Jeff, has two adult daughters, runs the family orchard, and lives down the road from her parents. Nina ran as far as she could, and keeps running, as a successful photographer in war zones and scenes of human crisis. And, she finds herself afraid to return the love of a good man, afraid to trust. It takes a family crisis to bring her home, the heart attack of their beloved father. Evan Whitson was the one who held the family together, loving his wife, and acting as the intermediary between Anya and her daughters. Evan was the only one who could actually communicate with his cold, Russian wife. And, despite his death bed request that his daughters try to understand her, and force her to tell that fairy tale of the peasant girl and the prince, Meredith and Nina don't know if they'll ever be a family again. They never understood their mother. When their father died, they realized, "He was home, the very heart of them. How would they stand life without him?"

It appears that Anya never will tell her daughters the truth, turning only to her winter garden, where she sits and mourns the man she loved. As Meredith's whole world falls apart around her, Nina is convinced that fairy tale might be the only thing that can save the family. If she has to push, in her usual style, she will. Neither woman understands the woman who raised them. Are there secrets to her life in that fairy tale, secrets that could save the Whitson women?

The author of Firefly Lane and True Colors has written another powerful story of misunderstanding, family love, and strong women. It's a story of women trying to discover who they are, when they don't know their own family stories. And, it's a fascinating story that weaves fairy tales into reality, fairy tales that don't always have the expected endings.

Kristin Hannah is a master at creating worlds and characters. Anya's winter garden is as cold and unforgiving as the story she eventually tells her family. Hannah prepares readers for it with the opening paragraph. "On the banks of the mighty Columbia River, in this icy season when every breath became visible, the orchard called Belye Nochi was quiet....As temperatures plummeted and color drained from land and sky, the whitened landscape caused a kind of winter blindness, one day became indistinguishable from the next. Everything froze, turned fragile." That paragraph beautifully illustrates the Whitson family story - frozen, fragile, with the color drained. Winter Garden is Kristin Hannah's family fairy tale, a gift to readers.

Kristin Hannah's website is http://www.kristinhannah.com/

Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah. St. Martin's Press, ©2010. ISBN 9780312364120 (hardcover), 400p.
Paperback ISBN is 9780312663155.



And, even better, I have the chance to give away two copies of Winter Garden.  If you would like to win a copy email me at lholstine@yahoo.com with the subject line, "Win Winter Garden."  Send me your name and mailing address.  Entrants from the U.S. only, please. 

The contest will close on Thursday, Jan. 6 at 6 PM MT, and I'll pick the winners, using a random number generator.  Good luck!

FTC Full Disclosure - The publicist is supplying the two copies for the book giveaway.

Sunday Salon - Donna VanLiere, Guest Blogger

It's the perfect day, week, and season to welcome guest blogger Donna VanLiere.  What better time to welcome the author of The Christmas Journey than the week I'm running a contest to give away a copy of the book?  After you read Donna's post, I'll remind you how you can enter to win a copy of the book.  Welcome, Donna!


The Journey of The Christmas Journey

Donna VanLiere

Nearly twenty years ago I was asked to write something for a church Christmas banquet. I had never done anything like that before and really had no idea what to do. As the time grew closer and closer I began to get more than just a little anxious because it looked as if there was going to be a big hole in the programming! One afternoon, I set the mail on the kitchen counter and began to prepare dinner. Once it was underway I opened the mail and we had received the first Christmas card of the season. There was Mary and Joseph lounging in their Calvin Klein robes looking warm and happy in that brightly lit, cozy stable surrounded by Lamb Chop and other well groomed animals. I thought, “Who wouldn’t want to give birth there? That place looks great!”

It struck me then, as it continues to do today, that we somehow romanticize the journey that Mary and Joseph took and the subsequent birth of Christ. We’ve sanitized the cave and stripped the people involved of all fear, emotion and pain. At that point, I wanted to bring the story to life and give it texture, mood, emotion and smell. I read it as a narrative at that Christmas banquet and continue to do so for any group, organization or church that invites me. My editor asked to see The Christmas Journey narrative and felt she could make a beautiful gift book out of it. It is my hope that this short read will become part of the reader’s annual Christmas Eve tradition or a small part of their day on Christmas.

I hope you and your readers have a bright Christmas and amazing New Year!

Donna


Thank you, Donna.  Your story truly does remind us what that journey was probably like, without the glitz and glamour.

If you'd like to win a copy of The Christmas Journey, email me at lholstine@yahoo.com.   Your subject line shoud read, "Win The Christmas Journey."  Your message should include your mailing address. Entrants only in the U.S., please.


This contest ends Tuesday night, Dec. 14 at 6 PM MT. The winner will be selected by random number generator. I'll notify the winner, and Donna's publicist will mail out the book. Good luck!

Donna VanLiere's website is http://www.donnavanliere.com/


The Christmas Journey by Donna VanLiere. St. Martin's Press, ©2010. ISBN 9780312613 (hardcover), 96p.


Winners and the Last Christmas Contest

Congratulations to the winners of the Christmas romances.  Lisa Kleypas' Christmas Eve at Friday Harbor will go to Rob K. in Kalaheo, HI.  He's my first winner from Hawaii!  And Cheryl K. from Gilberts, IL won 'Twas the Night.  The books will go out in the mail this afternoon on my way to work.
This week's contest will be the last contest of 2010, so the books will all arrive before Christmas.  I have two last Christmas books to give away.  Donna VanLiere's The Christmas Journey takes a different look at Mary and Joseph's trip to Bethlehem.  It takes the gloss off a difficult journey and birth, while actually making it even more beautiful.   The publicist will be sending a copy of this book to the winner.






Or, you could win A Piggly Wiggly Christmas by Robert Dalby, the story of a small Southern town's Christmas tragedy and triumph.  The people of Second Creek, Mississippi always have an unusual view of life.  But, when a fire burns down many of the historic buildings on the town's square a week before Christmas, they have to find a way to bring joy and community back to the town.  

Would you like to win The Christmas Journey or A Piggly Wiggly Christmas?
You can enter to win both, but I need separate entries. Email me at lholstine@yahoo.com. Your subject line should read either "Win Christmas Journey" or "Win Piggly Wiggly." Your message should include your mailing address. Entrants only in the U.S., please.

This contest will end a little sooner, since I'm going on Christmas vacation next week.  The contest ends Tuesday night, Dec. 14 at 6 PM MT.  The winners will be selected by random number generator. I'll notify the winners and mail the books the next day. Good luck!

And, I'll be kicking off 2011's contest year on Thursday night, January 6th, when I announce the first mysteries to be given away then.  Watch for the new giveaway!