After
a couple of light release weeks, it’s time for another big blast of new books
in all our favorite speculative fiction genres, both adult and YA. (And next
week is huge, too!) I’m also including a few titles from earlier in the month
that slipped by me. (Shame on you, titles—shouldn’t be slipping by me.) An asterisk* after
a title means I already know I'll have a review coming soon and will also be doing a giveaway of
that individual title.
As
always, an international contest, so make your wish list and read on to enter!
Abarat: Absolute
Midnight, by Clive Barker (Sept. 27, HarperCollins)
Abarat is a vast archipelago where every island is a different
hour of the day—from The Great Head that sits in the mysterious twilight waters
of Eight in the Evening to the sunlit wonders of Three in the Afternoon, where
dragons roam, to the island of Midnight, ruled over by the evil Mater Motley.
But Mater plans to create a darkness so complete that it blots out every
glimpse of the light and vanquishes the sun, moon, and stars from the Abarat,
ending all hope and happiness. Only one person can stop her—Candy Quackenbush from
Chickentown, U.S.A. Third in the Abarat series. YA
All Men of Genius*,
by Lev AC Rosen
(Sept. 27, Tor)
In an alternate, steampunked London,
Violet Adams wants to attend Illyria College, a widely renowned school for the
most brilliant up-and-coming scientific minds. The school is run by the
founder’s son, Ernest, who has held to his father’s policy that the small,
exclusive college remain male-only. Violet sees her opportunity when her father
departs for America. She disguises herself as her twin brother, Ashton, and
gains entry. But keeping the secret of her gender won’t be easy, not with her
friend Jack’s constant habit of pulling pranks, and especially not when the
duke’s young ward, Cecily, starts to develop feelings for “Ashton.” science fiction/steampunk
Alterant,
by Sherrilyn Kenyon and Dianna Love
(Sept. 27, Pocket Star)
On the heels of saving mankind from
destruction at the hands of the Medb coven, Evalle attempts to convince the
Tribunal that she is an Alterant who can be trusted around humans. But the gods
and goddess ruling over this Tribunal twist words she’d uttered in the heat of
combat and hold her responsible for three dangerous Alterants that escaped
their prisons. Unsure that she can condemn another Alterant to a life she’d die
before accepting, Evalle takes on an impossible task only to learn that the
entire future of the Beladors rides on her success. Second in the
Belador Code series. paranormal romance
A Beautiful Dark,
by Jocelyn Davies
(Sept. 27, HarperTeen)
On the night of Skye Parker’s seventeenth birthday, she meets two
enigmatic strangers. Asher is dark and wild, while Devin is fair and calm.
Their sudden appearance sends Skye’s life into a tailspin. She has no idea what
they want, or why they seem to follow her every move—only that their presence
coincides with a flurry of strange events. Soon she begins to doubt not just
the identity of the two boys, but also the truth about her own past. YA
Bloodstone,
by Nancy Holzner
(Sept. 27, Ace)
Boston's Back Bay district is known
for high society, not lowlifes. So when mutilated human bodies begin turning up
in the area, the entire city takes notice. And even though there’s no real
evidence pointing to a paranormal culprit, the deaths are straining relations
between human and inhuman residents. As the bodies pile up, demon-hunter Vicky
Vaughn investigates, only to find that the creature behind the carnage is after
much more than just blood. Third in the Deadtown series. urban fantasy
Cast in Ruin,
by Michelle Sagara
(Sept. 20, Luna)
Seven corpses are discovered in the
streets of a Dragon's fief. All identical, down to their clothing. Kaylin Neya
is assigned to discover who they were, who killed them—and why. Is the evil
lurking at the borders of Elantra preparing to cross over? At least the
investigation delays her meeting with the Dragon Emperor. And as the shadows
grow longer over the fiefs, Kaylin must use every skill she's ever learned to
save the people she's sworn to protect. fantasy
Cold Fire,
by Kate Elliott
(Sept. 26, Orbit)
Cat and her cousin are key players
in a drama of dragons and politics. Everyone wants something from them,
including the warlord who’s conquering all Europa and the Cold Mages who dare
defy him. But the Master of the Wild Hunt is most dangerous of all. He will
command Cat’s loyalty using what she holds most dear. Second in the
Spiritwalker Trilogy. *some cover love from me on this one* fantasy
Conquer the Dark,
by L.A. Banks
(Sept. 27, Pocket)
Three
months ago, Celeste Jackson was pulled into a supernatural world by her
guardian angel, Azrael, only to learn that not only was he super hot, but he
was also the Angel of Death. Now, Azrael’s angel brother, Bath Kol, receives a
disturbing vision. Those members of the fallen that were conquered have found a
key to rebirth within the sacred tombs of Egypt. Now able to raise their full
armies of darkness against the small twenty-one angel battalion charged with
protecting the Remnant, evil has the advantage—unless Celeste, one of only
three half-angel/half-human hybrids left on the planet, can sway the balance.
L.A. Banks passed away on August 2. urban
fantasy
Creatures: Thirty
Years of Monsters, by Clive Barker, Christopher
Golden, Joe R. Lansdale and Robert R. McCammon (Sept. 27, Prime Books)
Monsters: As old as the oldest of
stories, as new as our latest imaginings. From the ancient stone corridors of
the labyrinth to the graffitied alleyways of the contemporary metropolis, they
stalk the shadows. Creatures features
the best monster fiction from the past thirty years as well as contemporary
authors such as Clive Barker, Joe R. Lansdale, Kelly Link, China Mieville, and
Cherie Priest. urban fantasy/horror
The Darkest
Surrender, by Gena Showalter (Sept. 27, HQN)
Possessed by the demon of Defeat, Strider
cannot lose a challenge without suffering unimaginable pain. Until Kaia, an
enchanting Harpy, tempts him to the edge of surrender. Known among her people
as The Disappointment, Kaia must bring home the gold in the Harpy Games or die.
Strider is a distraction she can’t afford because he has an agenda of his own.
Eighth in the Lords of the Underworld series. *more cover love from me on this one. niiiiiice * paranormal romance
Darkness Falling,
by Peter Crowther
(Sept. 27, Angry Robot)
The zombie-monster onslaught is heralded
one day by a predawn flash of unearthly light that cuts off Jesman’s Bend from
communication with the outside world. When four employees of local radio
station KMRT investigate, they find the town mysteriously depopulated,
apparently in the middle of regular routines. Familiar folk reappear shortly
afterward, all wearing concealing sunglasses and gloves and driven by malignant
alien motives revealed when they descend en masse upon the terrified foursome.
First in a new series. urban fantasy
Darkness Unbound, by Keri Arthur (Sept. 27, Dell)
Being half werewolf and half Aedh,
Risa Jones can enter the twilight realms between life and death and see the
reapers, supernatural beings that collect the souls of the dead. But she soon
makes a terrifying discovery: Some sinister force is stealing souls, preventing
the dead from ever knowing the afterlife. Reapers escort souls—not snatch
them—but Risa is still unnerved when a reaper shadows her in search of someone
Risa has never met: her own father, an Aedh priest, who is rumored to be
tampering with the gates of hell for a dark purpose. First in the Dark Angels series.
urban fantasy
The Dark of the Moon, by Tracy Barrett (Sept. 20, Harcourt Children’s)
Ariadne is destined to become a
goddess of the moon. She leads a lonely life, filled with hours of rigorous
training by stern priestesses. Her former friends no longer dare to look at
her, much less speak to her. All that she has left are her mother and her
beloved, misshapen brother Asterion, who must be held captive below the palace
for his own safety. So when a ship arrives one spring day, bearing a tribute of
slaves from Athens, Ariadne sneaks out to meet it. Ariadne finds herself drawn
to Theseus, the son of the King of Athens. Yet Theseus is doomed to die as an
offering to the Minotaur, that monster beneath the palace—unless he can kill
the beast first. And that "monster" is Ariadne’s brother. YA
Daughter of Smoke
and Bone, by Laini Taylor (Sept. 27, Little, Brown)
Around the world, black handprints
are appearing on doorways, scorched there by winged strangers who have crept
through a slit in the sky. In a dark and dusty shop, a devil’s supply of human
teeth grown dangerously low. And in the tangled lanes of Prague, a young art
student is about to be caught up in a brutal otherwordly war. Meet Karou. She
fills her sketchbooks with monsters that may or may not be real; she’s prone to
disappearing on mysterious “errands,” she speaks many languages—not all of them
human, and her bright blue hair actually grows out of her head that color. * Liking this cover and finding it creepy all at the same time* YA
Dead Bad Things,
by Gary McMahon
(Sept. 27, Angry Robot)
He sought to flee his tragic past,
but when Thomas Usher hears a clockwork voice on the phone and sees ever-more
disturbing visions in a derelict warehouse, he realizes that he has to return
home—for the sake of his own sanity. Meanwhile, a deadly figure from Usher's
past threatens to undermine the very fabric of reality. A Thomas Usher novel. urban fantasy/horror
Dead Six,
by Larry Correia and Mike Kupari
(Sept. 27, Baen)
Michael Valentine, veteran and former member of an elite private
military company, has been recruited by the government to conduct a secret
counter-terror operation in the Persian Gulf nation of Zubara. The unit is
called Dead Six. Their mission is to take the fight to the enemy and not get
caught. Lorenzo, assassin and thief extraordinaire, is being blackmailed by the
world’s most vicious crime lord. His team has to infiltrate the Zubaran
terrorist network and pull off an impossible heist or his family will die. When
Dead Six compromises his objective, Lorenzo has a new job: Find and kill
Valentine. science fiction
Debris, by Jo
Anderton (Sept. 27, Angry Robot)
After being exposed to radioactive
particles as part of a cleanup gang in the depths of space, Tanyana is told she
has developed a hitherto-unseen ability to understand the apparently sentient
stuff. Powerless, penniless and scarred, Tanyana must adjust to a new life
collecting magical garbage—“debris”—but starts to realize debris is more
important than anyone could guess. science
fiction
Empire of Gold,
by Andy McDermott
(Sept. 27, Bantam)
Nina
Wilde and Eddie Chase possess extraordinary pieces of an ancient puzzle that
leads them from Singapore to the jungles of South America. Inside a storm of
political and drug warfare, Nina is getting close to one of history’s greatest
secrets: the mythical golden city of El Dorado. As one discovery unveils
another, Nina realizes that a legendary Incan leader made a deal with his
Spanish captors—and hid forever the real El Dorado. Now, Nina and Eddie
face a maze of death traps and betrayals, including one that reaches into
Eddie’s past in Afghanistan, even into his own family in England. urban fantasy
The Faerie Ring,
by Kiki Hamilton
(Sept. 27, Tor Teen)
The year
is 1871, and Tiki has been making a home for herself and her family of orphans
in a deserted hideaway adjoining Charing Cross Station in central London. Their
only means of survival is by picking pockets. One December night, Tiki steals a
ring, and sets off a chain of events that could lead to all-out war with the
Fey. For the ring belongs to Queen Victoria, and it binds the rulers of England
and the realm of Faerie to peace. With the ring missing, a rebel group of
faeries hopes to break the treaty with dark magic and blood—Tiki’s blood. YA
Ganymede,
by Cherie Priest
(Sept. 27, Tor)
The air pirate Andan Cly is going
straight. Well, straighter. Although he’s happy to run alcohol guns
wherever the money’s good, he doesn’t think the world needs more sap, or its
increasingly ugly side-effects. But becoming legit is easier said than done,
and Cly’s first legal gig—a supply run for the Seattle Underground—will be paid
for by sap money. New Orleans is not Cly’s first pick for a shopping run. He
loved the Big Easy once, back when he also loved a beautiful mixed-race
prostitute named Josephine Early—but that was a decade ago, and he hasn’t
looked back since. Jo’s still thinking about him, though, or so he learns when
he gets a telegram about a peculiar piloting job. It’s a chance to complete two
lucrative jobs at once, one he can’t refuse. Fourth in the Clockwork Century
series. science fiction
The Highest Frontier*, by Joan Slonczewski (Sept. 13, Tor)
One
of the most respected writers of hard SF, it has been more than ten years since
Joan Slonczewski's last novel. Now she returns with a spectacular tour de force
of the college of the future, in orbit. Jennifer Ramos Kennedy, a girl from a
rich and politically influential family (a distant relation descended
from the famous Kennedy clan), whose twin brother has died in an accident
and left her bereft, is about to enter her freshman year at Frontera
College. Frontera is an exciting school built with media money, and a bit from
tribal casinos too, dedicated to educating the best and brightest of this
future world. We accompany Jenny as she proceeds through her early days at
school, encountering surprises and wonders and some unpleasant problems—namely,
an invasive alien species that threaten the Earth’s surviving ecosystem. *seriously cool cover! * science fiction
House
of Fear, ed. by Jonathan
Oliver
(Sept. 27, Solaris)
The tread on the landing outside the
door, when you know you are the only one in the house. The wind whistling
through the eves, carrying the voices of the dead. The figure glimpsed briefly
through the cracked window of a derelict house. Editor Jonathan Oliver brings
horror home with a collection of haunted house stories by some of the finest
writers working in the horror genre, including Joe R. Lansdale, Sarah Pinborough, Lisa Tuttle, Christopher Priest, Adam
L. G. Nevill, Nicholas Royle, Chaz Brenchley, Christopher Fowler, Gary
Kilworth, Weston Ochse, Eric Brown, Tim Lebbon, Nina Allan, Stephen Volk, Paul
Meloy and more. horror
The Hum and the
Shiver*, by Alex Bledsoe (Sept. 27, Tor)
No one knows where the Tufa came from,
or how they ended up in the mountains of East Tennessee. Dark-haired and
enigmatic, they live quietly in the hills and valleys of Cloud County, their
origins lost to history. But there are clues in their music, hidden in the
songs they have passed down for generations. Private Bronwyn Hyatt, a true
daughter of the Tufa, has returned from Iraq, wounded in body and spirit, but
her troubles are far from over. Cryptic omens warn of impending tragedy, while
a restless “haint” has followed her home from the war. *cool cover--can't wait to read this one* urban fantasy
In Blood We Trust,
by Christine Cody
(Sept. 27, Ace)
They are monsters: Mariah--the
reluctant rebel who has become a god to others of her kind. And Gabriel, the
vampire, who loves her at his own peril. Together, they freed the unhuman and
inhuman from captivity, to lead them in reclaiming the land. But even Mariah
can’t keep the newly liberated monsters from quarreling among themselves. Third
in the Bloodlands series. urban fantasy
Lost in Time,
by Melissa de la Cruz
(Sept. 27, Hyperion)
After their beautiful yet brief
bonding ceremony in Italy, Schuyler Van Alen and Jack Force are forced to
separate. To fulfill the Van Alen Legacy, Schuyler travels to Alexandria to
search for Catherine of Siena and the Gate of Promise. But Schuyler quickly
discovers that everything she believed about the Gate to be wrong. Meanwhile,
Jack makes the difficult decision to return to New York to face his twin and
former bondmate, Mimi. With all roads leading to Hell, Mimi learns that not all
love stories have happy endings. Sixth in the Blue Bloods series. YA
The Mephisto
Covenant*, by Trinity Faegen (Sept. 27, Egmont)
Sasha is desperate to find out who
murdered her father. When getting the answer means pledging her soul to Eryx,
she unlocks a secret that puts her in grave danger—Sasha is Anabo, a daughter
of Eve, and Eryx’s biggest threat. A son of Hell, immortal, and bound to Earth
forever, Jax looks for redemption in the Mephisto Covenant—God’s promise he
will find peace in the love of an Anabo. After a thousand years, he’s finally
found the girl he’s been searching for—if she’ll give up her mortal life. *pretty, pretty cover* YA
A Monster Calls,
by Patrick Ness, inspired by an idea from Siobhan Dowd (Sept. 27, Candlewick)
At seven minutes past midnight, thirteen-year-old Conor wakes to
find a monster outside his bedroom window. But it isn’t the monster Conor’s
been expecting— he’s been expecting the one from his nightmare, the nightmare
he’s had nearly every night since his mother started her treatments. The
monster in his backyard is different. It’s ancient. And wild. And it wants
something from Conor. Something terrible and dangerous. It wants the truth.
From the final idea of award-winning author Siobhan Dowd— whose premature death
from cancer prevented her from writing it herself — Patrick Ness has spun a
novel of mischief, loss, and monsters both real and imagined. YA
The Name of the Star, by Maureen Johnson
(Sept. 29, Putnam Juvenile)
The
day Louisiana teenager Rory Deveaux arrives in London marks a memorable
occasion. For Rory, it's the start of a new life at a London boarding school.
But for many, this will be remembered as the day a series of brutal murders
broke out across the city, gruesome crimes mimicking the horrific Jack the
Ripper events of more than a century ago. Soon "Rippermania" takes
hold of modern-day London, and the police are left with few leads and no
witnesses. Except one. Rory spotted the man police believe to be the prime
suspect—and she’s become his next target. YA
Red Phoenix*,
by Kylie Chan
(Sept. 27, Harper Voyager)
When
Emma Donahoe took the position of nanny to John Chen’s daughter Simone, she
never expected to be caring for the child of a Chinese god, and she didn’t
expect that demons would want him dead. Nor has moving from nanny to partner in
his heavenly realm made Emma’s life any easier. Now a powerful race of demons
has been created to hunt her and her family from Hong Kong to Europe. And she
and Simone have become targets—pawns to be used in a deadly celestial power
play. Book two in the Dark Heavens series. U.S. release. urban fantasy
The Savage Knight,
by Paul Lewis
(Sept. 13, Abaddon)
Sir Dodinal the Savage is more at
home in the wild forest than in the tilting yard or the banquet hall. Keenly
attuned to the natural world, but burdened with a terrible rage, he turns his
back on Camelot to find peace, or a just death. In a quiet village on the Welsh
border, Dodinal believes he may have finally found a home, but the village is
struck by child-stealing raiders from the hills, and he must take up arms once
again in his new friends’ aid. His quest will take him into the belly of
darkness, as the terrible secret hidden in the hills comes to light. *uh, is it just me, or is this cover CREEPY? * fantasy
Sexiest Vampire
Alive, by Kerrelyn Sparks (Sept. 27, Avon)
When a
video reveals to the world that vampires live among us, it’s up to “young” vamp
Gregori Holstein to persuade the U.S. government to declare the video a hoax.
But first the president wants a favor, one that requires Gregori to spend
forty-eight hours in very close contact with the First Daughter. Abby Tucker
would rather spend her nights in a lab than attend her father’s state dinners.
She’s dedicated her life to finding a cure that will save her dying mother and
needs only two more ingredients. To find them, she’ll have to venture into the
most dangerous region of the world—with a vampire. paranormal romance
Shifting,
by Bethany Wiggins
(Sept. 27, Walker)
After bouncing between foster homes,
Magdalene Mae is transferred to what should be her last one, in the tiny town
of Silver City, New Mexico. She’s determined to stay out of trouble and be
normal. Agreeing to go to the prom with Bridger O’Connell is a good first step.
But even in her new home danger lurks, waiting in the shadows to pounce. They
are the Skinwalkers of Navajo legend, who have traded their souls to become the
animal whose skin they wear—and shapeshifter Maggie is their next target. *oh, oh, cover adoration, in an almost-gross way* YA
Sins of the Angels,
by Linda Poitevin
(Sept. 27, Ace)
Homicide detective Alexandra Jarvis
answers to no one. Especially not to the arrogant new partner assigned to her
in the middle of a gruesome serial killer case. Aramael is a Power—a hunter of
the Fallen Angels. A millennium ago, he sentenced his own brother to eternal
exile for crimes against humanity. Now his brother is back and wreaking
murderous havoc in the mortal realm. To find him, Aramael must play second to a
human police officer who wants nothing to do with him and whose very bloodline
threatens both his mission and his soul. First in a new Grigori Legacy series. urban fantasy
Slayers, by C.J. Hill
(Sept. 27, Feiwel & Friends)
Dragons
exist. They’re ferocious. And they’re smart: Before they were killed off by
slayer-knights, they rendered a select group of eggs dormant, so their
offspring would survive. Only a handful of people know about this, let alone
believe it – these “Slayers” are descended from the original knights, and are
now a diverse group of teens that includes Tori, a smart but spoiled senator’s
daughter who didn’t sign up to save the world. The dragon eggs have fallen into
the wrong hands. The Slayers must work together to stop the eggs from hatching.
They will fight; they will fall in love. But will they survive? YA
Spider’s Revenge,
by Jennifer Estep
(Sept. 27, Pocket)
Killing used to be my regular gig, after all. Gin Blanco, aka the
Spider, assassin-for-hire. And I was very, very good at it. Now, I’m ready to
make the one hit that truly matters: Mab Monroe, the dangerous Fire elemental
who murdered my family when I was thirteen. Oh, I don’t think the mission will
be easy, but turns out it’s a bit more problematic than expected. The
bitch knows I’m coming for her. Good thing I’ve got my powerful Ice and Stone
magic—and my irresistible lover, Owen Grayson—to watch my back. urban fantasy
Steel and Other
Stories, by Richard Matheson (Sept. 27, Tor)
Imagine a future in which the sport
of boxing has gone high-tech. Human boxers have been replaced by massive
humanoid robots. And former champions of flesh-and-blood are obsolete.
Richard Matheson’s classic short story is just one of over a dozen tales in
this collection, which includes two new stories that have never appeared in any
previous Matheson collection. Also featured is a satirical fantasy, “The
Splendid Source,” that was turned into an episode of The Family Guy. science
fiction
A Thief in the
Night*, by David Chandler (Sept. 27, Harper Voyager)
As a
thief, Malden is unparalleled in the Free City of Ness, and happy there. But by
saving the life of the knight Croy, Malden has bound himself to an ancient,
noble brotherhood, and he now possesses one of only seven Ancient Blades
capable of destroying demons. Malden fears accompanying Croy and the barbarian
Morget on their quest to dispatch a foul creature of nightmare, but with an
assassin on his heels, the young cutpurse is left with no choice. Second in the
Ancient Blades series. fantasy
The Unbecoming of
Mara Dyer, by Michelle Hodkin (Sept. 27, Simon & Schuster Children’s)
Mara Dyer doesn’t think life can get any stranger than waking up
in a hospital with no memory of how she got there. It can. She believes there
must be more to the accident she can’t remember that killed her friends and
left her mysteriously unharmed. There is. She doesn’t believe that after
everything she’s been through, she can fall in love. She’s wrong. YA
Vacation, by Matthew Costello (Sept. 27, Thomas Dunne)
After
a global crisis causes crops to fail and species to disappear, something even
more deadly happens. Masses around the world suddenly became predators, feeding
off their own kind. These 'Can Heads' grow to such a threat that fences, gated
compounds, and SWAT-style police protection become absolutely necessary to
live. And after one attack leaves NYPD cop Jack Murphy wounded and his partner
dead, Jack takes his wife and kids on a vacation. Far up north, to the
Paterville Family Camp, a fortress-like compound in the mountains, where
families can still swim and take boats out on a lake. At first, it's idyllic. But
Jack slowly comes to realize that there's something else going on at Paterville
Family Camp...and when he makes a gruesome discovery, he will be forced to get
his family out, no matter who...or what...stands in his way. science fiction/horror
Where All the Dead Lie, by J.T. Ellison (Sept. 20, Mira)
In
her showdown with the murderous Pretender, a bullet taken at close range
severed the connection between Taylor's thoughts and speech. Trapped in silence,
she is surrounded by ghosts--of the past, of friendships and trusts lost. When
Memphis Highsmythe offers Taylor his home in the Scottish highlands to
recuperate, her fiancé John Baldwin can't refuse her excitement, no matter his
distrust of the man. At first, Memphis' drafty castle seems the perfect place
for healing. But shortly the house itself surrounds her like a menacing
presence. As Taylor's sense of isolation and vulnerability grows, so, too, does
her grip on reality. PTSD. Pills. Ghosts. Grudges. Someone or something is
coming after Taylor. But is she being haunted by the dead...or hunted by the
living? urban fantasy
Wisdom’s Kiss,
by Catherine Gilbert Murdock (Sept. 13, Houghton Mifflin)
Princess Wisdom, known as Dizzy,
longs for a life of adventure beyond the staid old
kingdom of Montagne. Tips, a soldier, longs to keep his true identity a secret.
Fortitude, an orphaned maid, longs only for Tips. These three souls might
possibly attain their dreams while preserving their empire from ruin — if only
they can bear one another’s company long enough to come up with a plan. Magic,
cunning, and one very special cat join forces in this tale told in diaries,
letters, encyclopedia entries, and even a play, all stitched together. YA
Wizard
Undercover, by K.E. Mills (Sept. 27, Orbit)
Wedding
bells are ringing for the constantly battling nations of Splotze and Borovnik,
and the upcoming royal nuptials could at last put an end to their dangerous
hostilities. But in a development that hardly bodes well, one of Gerald's
fellow janitors goes missing after delivering a dire warning of danger
surrounding the marriage treaty. So Gerald must embark on a dangerous mission
to uncover the troublemakers before wedded bliss becomes international war.
Fourth in the Rogue Agent series. fantasy
Whew! See
anything you want? So…International Reader’s Choice―you tell me. Just a note:
if you like a title but it isn’t the first in a series, you can always request
the first in that series instead. As always, four entries possible and please
include your e-mail: +1 for comment, +1 for blog follow, +1 for Twitter follow
@Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for a Tweet or RT about the contest. Now….go!