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  • 🛳️Ready for a Cruise to Cock Island? 🛳️

    It’s Frick’ng Release day!

    I can’t wait for you to read about these two best friends to lovers faking a relationship and discovering how much fun a Cruise to Cock Island can be!

    🏳️‍🌈Pride Cruise 2024: Cruise to Cock Island

    On Paperback, eBook, and Kindle Unlimited: https://mybook.to/cruisecockisland 

    Blurb

    Jamie

    Four years in undergrad and two in law school have me over drunken trips to Mexico, so an adults-only cruise with my best friend sounds more relaxed and grown up. What I don’t expect is the cruise being Pride-themed. I always love messing with Teddy, though.

    Teddy

    When my best friend suggests celebrating being only one year away from finishing our law degrees with a Caribbean cruise, I jump at the chance for a quiet vacation. I’m less impressed when Jamie signs us up for a newlyweds game, but maybe it’s not all fake…

    Take a cruise to Cock Island with two frat bros who get more than they bargain for when they pretend to be a couple on a pride-themed cruise… especially since neither of them is gay!

    🛳️Pride Cruise 2024!

    Where the water is crisp, the men are HOT, and the party has started! Each book is a standalone but feel free and dive in and binge them all. You won’t want to miss a second of their naughty antics. If you think they’re silly when the sun is up, just wait until it goes down.

    🛳️Don’t forget to check out the Pride Cruise books already out:

    Brina Brady: Secrets Aboard!
    Lynn Michaels: Playing with Sunshine
    Janice Jarrell: Under the Midnight Sky
    Joe Satoria: Only One Cabin
    Nic Starr: Sun-Kissed
    TL Travis: Ahoy Daddy!

    🛳️And the rest up next to round out Pride Month:

    BL Maxwell: Below Deck
    JP Sayle: Cruising Right Into Love
    Layla Dorine: Seafoam and Salt Water Taffy
    Dora Esquivel: Murder, Mischief, And Mayhem
    Kota Quinn: A Daddy in Paradise

    🛳️Series page: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CLKWB4JJ 


    Make sure to follow this site and my Facebook group so you get updates first!


    Stay Kinky

    📚

    R.A. Frick

  • 🏳️‍🌈Packed Pride Month🏳️‍🌈

    📚 Happy Frick’ng Friday 🏳️‍🌈

    The first week of Pride month has been packed, and the rest of the month looks even busier. I attended the Hot & Steamy Book Event in Portland, where I met a ton of great authors and lovely readers, many new to queer romance. I look forward to going again next year. Here’s my booth, and I’m so thankful my spouse came with to help set up and be my PA for the event!

    This week has been all about getting words in to finish my next release, and the end of the school year. My gremlins are going into sixth and eighth grade, and I just finished the hardest year in my fifteen years in Education. I did agree to do Summer School, but that’s easy compared to my past ten months. My classroom is cleaned out, words are flowing, and I’m ready for the month/year ahead!

    🏳️‍🌈 Check out my releases this month: 🏳️‍🌈

    What else is happening this summer for RA? All the things!

      🏳️‍🌈 June RoMance Book Box: Happy Pride is feature in the Book Box for LGBTQ+ Adversities, with a trans sub trying to get out of an abusive BDSM relationship, pet play, and corgis at the Pride Parade! Get it here: https://diannaroman.com/shop-1/ols/products/romance-box-jun-2024

    🏳️‍🌈 June 10-16: 99c/99p sale for US and UK on HAPPY PRIDE, along with many of the other Pride Pet Play books from 2023! It is 99 cents the first two days, then $1.99 for two days and so on, so catch them early!  https://mybook.to/HappyPride

    🏳️‍🌈 June 14-15: Pride Party in Dianna Roman’s Rascals Facebook Group, with author giveaways, games, and charity going to raising funds for the Center on Halsted, a Chicago-based LGBTQ+ Community Center. The group is here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/romansrascals/

    🏳️‍🌈 June 19: Release day for CRUISE TO COCK ISLAND is an MM Fake Relationship, idiots-to-lovers, dual sexual awakening, contemporary romance on a Pride Cruise! Preorder here – https://mybook.to/cruisecockisland

    🏳️‍🌈June 19th – 21st: Blind Date with a Book Summer event in MM and MMM+ Romance Reviewed Facebook group, where you can entre to win a ton of ebooks!

    🏳️‍🌈 June 26: Cover reveal for AFTERCARE AT RANDY’S, part of the Trans Romance collab series, Diner Days. I’ll post on this site as well as in my Facebook group and other socials, but see it first in the Diner Days group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/dinerdays

    🏳️‍🌈 June 28: Release day for the Twisted Pride Anthology, which includes my Hansel & Gretel retelling, Witches and Woodcutters, featuring a Trans “Rhett” and his hunky neighbor the Woodcutter. Preorder here – https://mybook.to/TwistedPride2024

    And where will I be in June 2025?

    🏳️‍🌈 I’m signing at Pride LitCon in Richmond, Virginia, June 14, 2025🏳️‍🌈

    🏳️‍🌈July 14 (11 months ahead so you can plan travel): Tickets go on sale for $25 until September 14th, at which time they will go up to $35

    While I’d love to say that’s all for now, folx, I’m sure I’m missing something… Make sure to follow this site and my Facebook group so you get updates first!

    Stay Kinky

    📚

    R.A. Frick

  • It’s Game Time!

    Happy Fricking Friday!

    💕Game Night: Truth or Dare Anthology is out now! 💕

    Eleven of your favorite LGBTQ authors are bringing you hot, new stories from one of your favorite party games…Truth or Dare!

    ✨

    Take a ride on the wild side and enjoy fourteen fresh stories, all with a different take on this go-to party game. From sugary sweet to red hot spice, come join these authors as they show you what can happen when you choose truth or dare.

    💋

    Get it on paperback, ebook, or read in KU: https://mybook.to/gamenighttruthordare

    🏳️‍🌈

    Size Queen is my 17K word novella in the anthology with a bit of Cinderella and a lot of fun:

    Miles O’Donnell was a graphic novelist and comic artist in San Francisco. With rainbow hair and a sassy personality, Miles never had trouble getting attention. Unfortunately, most couldn’t satisfy what he really needed…

    Shane Long was an engineer who just turned forty and wasn’t sure there was a partner out there for him when they all complained he’s too big. Until a chance meeting and a game of Truth or Dare put a certain size queen in Shane’s path.

    Can a game night bring these two together? It might take more truth than they expected to share. 

    🥳

    Authors include:

  • Cover Reveal: X Club Book 4

    Title: FOR LIFE 

    Sub-title: An M/X BDSM Romance

    Series: X Club (Book 4)

    Releasing: September 19, 2022

    📖
    Pre-order Linkgetbook.at/ForLife

    Amazingly steamy cover by Jamie Luther of Luther Designs.

    🔥
    Blurb:

    Police Officer, Maxx Wu, has never explored BDSM but is certain he’s a top… and maybe a Daddy. A not-so-innocent kitty, Anthony “Ant”, might need to teach him a few things about kinks and how you can always have more.

    When Ant witnesses a crime by a dirty cop and the Russian Mafia, all they see is that Ant is Italian, and they think he is in the mob. Wanting to stop the dirty cop and protect Ant, Maxx puts them into hiding knowing he will likely lose his career.

    For Life is an M/X BDSM Romance with primal kitten play, forced proximity, mafia families fighting, and two tops learning to improvise and compromise.

    🖤

    #CoverReveal #mxromance #queerromance #nonbinaryromance #rafrick

  • Confidence or Lack Thereof…

    Writers are a rare breed who can simultaneously think we have the most amazing ideas that simply must be shared with the world, while also feeling crippling self doubt. How can such a huge group of people think they are both awesome and ordinary?
    writer hot

    For writers with serious self-esteem issues, you will hear that it was the characters who led the story, not them. A family member told me I must have based the main character in my story on myself, since she was so smart and loved to read. While that was a nice compliment, I got very annoyed! My characters are fully formed people in my head, with hopes and dreams as well as flaws and problems. Sometimes, they surprise me…

    writing characters

    I wrote my first full manuscript in two months, including a second draft that had all spelling, grammar, and syntax edits done. How? I sent in 2-5 chapters a week for my editor. I’m my biggest critic. I reread far too often and can never take a compliment. Half the time I think it’s good, the other half it’s crap that should be deleted and never read. Without my editor giving me both positive feedback and helpful critiques for my first manuscript, I never would have had the confidence to write a second!

    writing monkey

    So why does it matter? If you have too much self confidence, you can’t take critiques and your story will suffer. If you have too much self doubt, you will keep deleting and editing until you lose your way in the plot and the story has been stripped of all value. Sometimes, it is best to just write, ignoring spelling and word choice. You can go back!

    writing

    So when someone asks you when that little story you’re writing will become a movie, just smile. They don’t know that inside you wages a battle: That would be so cool to see my characters come to life! Not like I’ll ever sell my book. I would want full control of script and casting! No, it’s not a good enough story to make a movie. I’d make a lot of money and could write all the time! I can’t even get an agent, no way my book will be popular. My story is far to full of plot and characters for anyone to make a movie of. Why does it need to be anything but a book? Will people think it sucks and I’m a failure if it doesn’t at least become a TV pilot? Screw you and your stupid question! 

    So maybe you’re not on a never-ending see-saw of emotions and you can separate yourself from the writing process and your characters. But you are probably in the minority. At least I hope I think so. Please tell me I’m not the only one?

  • Book reviews and Ratings

    All readers have their own way of reviewing a book. Brutally honest, overwhelmingly positive, full of gushing praise with gifs for emphasis, or always negative because you hate everything. Book bloggers are often lucky to get free ARC’s, Advanced Reader Copies, of books to review. Recently, I’ve noticed a common opinion. If you receive an ARC, people expect you to be overwhelmingly nice. I know this has to do with bringing an average down, but shouldn’t you be truthful?

    I have a simple ratings system on Goodreads (also Amazon and B&N), and try to be as complimentary as possible while telling the truth. 5 stars means I put it straight on my Favorites shelf and either re-read it immediately, or buy the sequel immediately. I want everything by that author and perhaps a new tattoo. Maybe not a perfect book, but perfect for me. 4 stars is for a great book that had some flaws, such as too many narrators or a narrator lacking depth, or missed words/errors that it took me out of the story a few times. I might read it again, definitely want the sequel, and will check out other books by the author. 3 stars for me is the hardest. It means the book was good, but not great for me. I finished it quickly, and possibly want the next in a series or another by that author, but I wouldn’t suggest it to someone who likes the same books as me. Good, but probably for someone else. 2 stars is seen as offensive, and I don’t know why. I’m giving you a nearly 50% rating for a book I struggled to finish. Maybe your concept and characters or good, but I had trouble with the writing style or plot. You could do a big edit and improve! 1 star is offensive, and I won’t review a book I would give one star to. One star is reserved for rating a product that arrived broken or not at all, and that s how I feel about the plots of books that earn only one star. If I never finish a book because I so disliked it, I just don’t rate it.

    Here is an example of a pre-release ARC I rated this week:

     “4 out of 5 stars for Gypsy by Trisha Leigh. While the story was complex with new terms and characters from the first page, it picked up quickly and never slowed down. Every time I thought I had a hold in the story, it presented a new twist. 

    The Cavies, or teenagers with special powers, are a wily bunch of kids with a wife range of personalities. I had a hard time holding on to their multiple names, especially when a whole new group of teens and adults were added. The standout of the group, thankfully, was the narrator Gypsy. While often shy and unsure of herself, she was also introspective and curious enough to be a reliable storyteller. I also loved seeing her navigate new situations! 

    While I normally dislike present tense, Gypsy was very descriptive of her surroundings, making the story flow. Between the intrigue of her investigating her own powers, and figuring out the trail of cute boys after her, I had trouble putting the book down. I laughed, cried, and gasped throughout and was left gasping to the very last line!

    If you like stories similar to X-Men or The a Unbecoming of Mara Dyer, I would suggest this book to you. Leigh still has quite a bit if editing, but this ARC did not disappoint! 4/5 stars for Gypsy, and I can’t wait to read the next Cavy Files story!” 

    I enjoyed the book even though it needed a ton of editing and I normally dislike present tense. I want to read the next one, but probably wouldn’t read the first again. I could have added that the first chapter was mostly unnecessary to the story, but that would have been an opion that helped no one, and that’s the important part of a review, to be helpful. Now let’s look at a review I gave 2 stars because there isn’t a 2.5 star choice. I could have rounded up, but it wouldn’t have been true to my rating system. You’ll see what I mean:

    “When I saw the synopsis for The Only Boy I was extremely curious. As a young, passionate feminist, I used to rail about genetics having reached a point which we no longer need the male of our species. As an older, but no less passionate, wife and mother of two boys, I am willing to admit I’d like to keep them around.

    The book opens with Mary, a narrator that knows how to paint the scene, then quickly switches to Taylor, who has a secret. We are meant know that Taylor is a boy before he ever speaks. While I enjoyed the concept, there was something off about the first person present tense. My favorite parts were the characters’ memories and flashbacks, as well as quotes the characters read. I realized that was because they were in past tense. If you like present tense, this book is for you! I could see how it was meant to draw you in, see the world from the characters’ points of view, but because it switched between characters every few paragraphs, that was difficult. 

    As the book progressed, because it was just interesting enough to keep me reading, there were a lot of parallels between what people think men are, and what is actually just human nature. We are shown through the characters words and actions that men and women are more alike than stereotypically presumed. 

    The story was a lot of missed cues and missed meetings. The two main characters run the gamut of emotions, including thinking they are both in unrequited love with each other after a couple of kisses. Reminiscent of Romeo and Juilet, minus the intrigue. I was annoyed that the girl was constantly trying to be prettier for the boy. Trying makeup and revealing clothes. She also changed her mind every half-day. The plus side of that was that I never knew what she was doing. 

    When moved to the “Earthers” I found the first truly interesting characters. Characters with depth and back stories that weren’t shallow or obvious. I wanted more of them! The ending of the book was one big climax that was oddly paced. The main characters missed each other a lot, then found each other suddenly, then it was over. The epilogue was meant to confuse until the last page, then ended abruptly. 

    I enjoyed the idea and the dystopian world, but in the end, the present tense was hard to read. The characters had no depth and seemed to have random development. I kept reading to know if the presumptions I had in the beginning came true, and they did. A third person past tense narrative would have made this book 3 or even 4 stars. As it is, I rate it a 2.5 out of 5″

    I could have lied, but that would be dishonest and not me. The reply to my review was, “I really don’t like reading present tense, so your review was helpful to me. Thanks.” So my review fulfilled the purpose of a review, to explain to potential readers why they should read the book.

     For the record, his average is 3.8, and her’s is 4.6. I feel like my reviews were not so far out there, but was told the first was too complimentary and the latter too harsh. If you like present tense, try these stories out and see if you agree or disagree. The Only Boy is available in print to order from Barnes & Noble, and Gypsy is available soon. Follow the authors on Twitter, they’re both awesome people. A review shouldn’t be personal, except that you are expressing your personal opinions. 

    Do you have your own set ideas about what the stars mean?

  • Naming Characters

    Alright, it’s time to confess, I love Onomastics! You don’t know what onomastics is?! It’s only one of my favorite hobbies. Names! Doesn’t everyone belong to a dozen different sites to discuss and research names? No! Well, if you are a writer, you have to care a little about your characters’ names. 

    You could pick names based on a person you used to know, family members, a name you would use on a kid, one that “just sounds right”, or a name with a hidden meaning. 

    Image

    You should have a site or two bookmarked to look up characters, whether or not you want to join the forums. Most of these sites have baby in the web address or description, but they are mostly women who love names but are not pregnant. Either way, your writing might feel like your baby! My favorite is ebabynames.com for their easy-to-use database. Others are: behindthename, babynamesworld, babycenter, Native American names, babynamewizard, nameberry, and the US Social Security Names site. 

    Authors have a history of giving characters names with secret meaning. *Spoilers* Remus Lupin is a werewolf, when both names mean wolf. Darth Vader is Luke’s Father, and Vader is Father. 


    I love to give my characters a mix. Some names I love but will never use (I have two sons), some from family members, some to show a comparison (named after a famous person), and most are named for the name meaning. I’m currently having fun with my WIP naming Native American and Irish characters very culture specific names. I even got to name a car this week!


    How do you name your characters? 

  • Is Writing a Job?

    Do you have a day job that doesn’t involve your creative writing? Yes? Me too. I’m a teacher, and I have found that most writers (except the most successful) have day jobs. There are the teachers like me who write in limited free time, agents and book reviewers who make their living as close as possible to the publishing world, and those in random professions who use writing as their creative outlet. Many of us are hoping to get published.

    Now here’s the rub: Do you consider your writing to be another job?

    Image

    A person who has supported me told me today that writing was a hobby, and I shouldn’t spend so much time on it. Apparently, it is only a job if it makes you money. And if it is for fun, it can’t be work.

    So this got me thinking (and furious), what constitutes a job? Here is the definition (noun): A paid position of regular employment, or, a task or piece of work, especially one that is paid.

    I love writing, and I also love teaching. Teaching pays me a salary after 6 years of college, 2 degrees, a credential, and years of hard work climbing ladders to get to the awesome job I have today. Writing fulfills my creative outlet, for the first time in 10 years. If I love my job, it is philosophically not work. But would you tell an artist that they’re art is a hobby if their goal is to sell it? That would be insulting.

    What about you, is writing just for fun? A job?

  • Music I Write To…

    I love music. Not as much as reading, possibly as much as writing. I love pop, country, punk, ska, bluegrass, oldies, rock, Motown, Broadway, alternative, and even some rap. Over the past two months writing my novel has been spent mostly listening to popular music.

    Music I Write To… is a playlist of those songs plus a couple that make me think of my plot (Radioactive, Royals, Let Her Go). Iris is there because it is always calming to me, Sweeter Than Fiction is there almost purely for the title.

    Music can set your mood for a scene. Before I wrote my climactic action scene, I put on upbeat angry rap (The Streets and Eminem, not on this playlist). When I was gearing up for a kissing scene, I listened to sugary sweet love songs. While doing long stints of writing, I played Country or light Rock since they have soothing, even tone throughout.

    You can make you own playlists online, or with your smart phone, or you can listen to the radio through your computer. Other sites for music listening and making playlists:

    Playlist.com

    Pandora

    Sirius XM

    8Tracks

    iHeartRadio

    iTunes Radio

    What do you listen to when writing? Do you like your favorite music? Only Instrumental? What about for reading? Leave a comment or tweet me and share!

    spiderman-dancing-o

    P.S. If you feel like dancing, Spiderman will dance along to any music. He’s magic like that.

  • Where I write…

    “Where” is a relative term, since I write at my desk, in my bed, and on the couch. So is “write” since I never actually write anything, I type it. What a terrible title! What I actually mean is: The Tools I Use to Organize Writing Stuff on My PC. But that would have been a terrible title.

    I start with OneNote which is a Microsoft program. I began using it when I was a post-graduate student getting my credential and a classmate had all his files on one screen. I had my documents in an organized file, but got tired of opening and closing the wrong thing constantly. OneNote is amazing!

    Here is a screen shot of how I organize my outlining notebook for one book series, within the binder of Writing on the side. I also have work binders for each school year I teach for writing lessons and pacing, I cropped those out since they have my school’s name on them. You can see there is all the options within Word for editing and formatting, but you can drop text boxes anywhere.

    Image

     

    You can see there are sections along the top, those are notebooks. You can add as many pages as you want within them. Below is the notebook for chapter organization. I moved the writing to the bottom, I love that I can move the chapters around so easily without loosing information. You can also add text anywhere.

    Image

    After I have my outlining, characters, research, and chapters organized how I want them, I start writing. When I had a few chapters done, I moved it to a word document so I could send it to my editor.

    I’ve heard that there is a thing called Scrivener, and I even saved the link: http://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener.php

    Perhaps I’ll try out that site or another in the future, but for right now, it’s OneNote for me! Do you outline and write on paper, all in word docs, or with a giant cork board? Leave a comment with how you write!

     

  • A Query…

    As I finish my final chapter (Tomorrow, I swear!), proofread, and await the chapters back from my editor, I find my self entering the wild world of Querying! Every time I look at it, I edit it. I’m not nearly so indecisive about my writing, which has a clear plot. Luckily, I found The Write Shadow’s Query Workshop. It is since closed, but the information was invaluable. Agent name, Hook, Title, Type of story, word count, short description (why your book is unique), transitional hook, blurb/synopsis, very brief info about yourself, thanks, name. I used the formula, but won’t know if it worked until I start sending it out there. I hope your own writing and querying goes beautifully!

    Image

    Dear Correctly Spelled Name,

    In the People’s Republic of Time, every minute is accounted for and Elise cannot go outside without permission. Outside lies the danger of radiation poisoning, but also opportunity. THE TIME TRIALS, a Speculative Fiction YA of approximately 60,000 words, is a look at a future where every person has a job and family based on their intelligence and genes.

    There are four inhabitable buildings in Dystopian Denver. Elise lives in the West Community building, but dreams of moving to the Palace as an adviser. What she doesn’t dare hope for, becoming the next Timekeeper Queen, may be a possibility. On her seventeenth birthday, Elise is chosen for the Timekeeper Trials. Is she ready to step into the dangerous world outside the safety of the community for the chance to travel back in time? 

    My TIMEKEEPER series is a trilogy, with a prequel and novellas from other characters’ POV planned as well. As a Junior High and High School History & Social Science teacher, I spend my time paying attention to what teens like, and this informs my writing.

    Thank you for your time and consideration, I hope to hear from you soon.

    Sincerely,

    Rachel Anne Little

    rafrickauthor.wordpress.com

    @MrsRALittle

  • Novel Inspiration

    Pun intended. I found it very helpful when doing my original outlining to save images to a Pinterest board. That way, I could reference them from anywhere. Some were helpful to me as a writer:

    writer chart

     

    Others were specific to my story:

    lead lined radiation suit

    There are also the random pictures of actors, models and various celebrities, that probably made my family and friends confused. Those were to help with the characters. They are clear in my head, but if I go two months between describing one, I don’t want to have to go back and find exactly how I want them. Sometimes it’s also fun to look at the pretty people

    Adrian grenier

    This obsessive pinning to my Novel Inspiration board paid off today, when I needed it for a Book Trailer opportunity. I’ve also heard publishers want to know this when they get to the Book Cover phase. It is nice to direct people to a one stop web address rather than sending my barely coherent Characters document which contains spoilers for later plot points.

    This is sounding like an add for Pinterest, which I hardly use, except for Novel Inspiration. You don’t have to use it, you can just use Google and save to a file on your PC. Either way, get those images saved, because it is much quicker than writing. A picture is worht a thousand words, as they say.

  • Writing in Progress

     Image

    My current WIP is a YA Dystopian set 70 years in the future after World Wart III ended in a nuclear holocaust. It also brought the ability to time travel for certain people. My main character finds she has the genetic trait and must compete to become Timekeeper Queen of the small community of survivors. 

    Also working on novellas from other characters’ POV, the sequel, and the finale of the series!

  • Perfect Books List

    This is from my favorites list on Tumblr. Enjoy!

    Fantasy Series: 

    Harry Potter – JK Rowling

    The Infernal Devices – Cassandra Clare

    The Mortal Instruments – Cassandra Clare

    The Bane Chronicles – Cassandra Clare+

    Vampire Academy  – Richelle Mead

    Hush, Hush – Becca Fitzpatrick

    Grisha trilogy – Leigh Bardugo

    Bloodlines – Richelle Mead

    Switched – Amanda Hocking

    Unspoken -Sarah Rees Brennan

    Need – Carrie Jones

    Fallen – Lauren Kate

    Sci-Fi Series:  

    The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer  – Michelle Hodkin

    Ender’s Game (& Ender’s Shadow) – Orson Scott Card

    Lunar Chronicles – Marissa Meyer

    Lux  – Jennifer Armentrout

    Dystopian Series:       

    Divergent – Veronica Roth

    Shatter Me (all) – Tahereh Mafi

    The Hunger Games – Suzanne Collins

    Delirium, Pandemonium, & Requiem – Lauren Oliver

    Under the Never Sky – Veronica Rossi

    The Selection – Kiera Cass

    Uglies – Scott Westerfeld

    Matched – Allie Condie

    Standalone Fiction:

    Fangirl – Rainbow Rowell

    Wicked – Gregory Maguire

    Before I Fall – Lauren Oliver

    Looking For Alaska – John Green

    The Fault in Our Stars – John Green

    The Princess Bride – William Goldman

    The Time Travelor’s Wife – Audrey Niffenegger

    Memoirs of a Geisha – Arthur Golden

    My Sister’s Keeper – Jodi Picoult

    Warm Bodies – Isaac Marion

    The Help – Kathryn Stockett

    Catch-22 –  Joseph Heller

    Non-Fiction:

    Holidays on Ice  – David Sedaris

    Me Talk Pretty One Day – David Sedaris

    The Glass Castle –  Jeanette Walls

    Pre-Teen/Children’s:

    Pride & Pedjudice – Jane Austin

    Little Women –  Louisa May Alcott

    The Chronicles of Narnia – C.S. Lewis

    A Wrinkle In Time series – Madeleine L’Engle

    A Girl of The Limberlost – Gene Stratton-Porter

    Anne of Green Gables series – L.M. Montgomery 

    New Adult (Romance):

    Crossfire Series – Sylvia Day

    Breathless trilogy – Maya Banks

    Outlander series – Diana Gabaldon

    Immortals After Dark series – Kresley Cole

    The Finding, The Keeping, The Mating, etc. – Nicky Charles

    Sookie Stackhouse series – Charlaine Harris

    Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy – E.L. James

    Beautiful Disaster – Jamie McGuire

    Plus all the classics and so many more…

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