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5 Must-Read Novels for Fans of Longmire

Walt Longmire is a badass and we miss already miss seeing him on screen. He does his detective work the old-fashioned way, and there’s something admirable about that. If you’re missing the small-town setting, thrilling investigations, and perplexing mysteries in opens in a new windowLongmire, then you’ll enjoy our list of top 5 novels for Longmire fans.

opens in a new windowGhost Medicine by Aimée Thurlo and David Thurlo

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 75 Navajo Police Special Investigator Ella Clah searches for the murderer of her ex and former colleague, Harry Ute. Found dead in a remote area of the Rez, Harry seems to have discovered a group of artifact smugglers, which may have gotten him killed. Now, Ella has to find answers, even when the locals on the reservation are too scared of the Navajo witches to tell Ella anything. Like Longmire, this novel deals with the same difficult dynamic between Rez and county police. The jurisdictional issues, incorporation of Native American beliefs, and captivating murder investigation reminded us a lot of the show, making Ghost Medicine a great pick for Longmire fans.

opens in a new windowStrong to the Bone by Jon Land

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 29 The award-winning Caitlin Strong Novels are always captivating and the latest installment, Strong to the Bone, lived up to our expectations. Strong is a Texas Ranger who has taken on her father’s old cases. In this novel, she pursues the killer in a triple murder case inside a Nazi POW camp in 1944. Strong’s investigation leads to a grim discovery that Nazism is definitely not over. Strong to the Bone has the same southern vibe as Longmire, but tackles a more political and widespread movement, the likes of which Longmire only occasionally touches on. And if you like this book as much as we did, there are eight other volumes for you to enjoy!

opens in a new windowBenefit of the Doubt by Neal Griffin

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 12 In Longmire, the introduction of the casino means more big-city crimes for the small-town Absaroka police. Thriller novel Benefit of the Doubt also explores this evolution of crime — and also the secrets hidden in local police departments. Former metropolitan cop Ben Sawyer is now a detective in a tiny Wisconsin town, where the higher-up cops seem to be corrupt. Soon, Ben is fired and his wife is accused of murder… he poked his head where it didn’t belong. Longmire meets Blue Bloods in this thriller mystery.

opens in a new windowThe Dread Line by Bruce DeSilva

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -83 Bruce DeSilva’s Liam Mulligan novels are always a safe bet (and dangerous read). In The Dread Line, the former investigative reporter has become obsessed with a few cases: a cat that leaves its kills on his porch, a jewelry heist, and an animal torturer. But the biggest case — a case that is fighting for Mulligan’s attention — is that of the New England Patriots, who are carefully investigating a possible recruit to play it safe after their star player was accused of murder. It seems like a routine case, but it’s anything but. Filled to the brim with secrets and perfectly suited for new readers of the series, The Dread Line consists of big cases and small-town problems, just like Longmire.

opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 53 Imagine Longmire, but set in Nebraska with a female version of Walt, and you’ll get Stripped Bare. Kate Fox was happily married to Grand County Sheriff Ted Conner; they lived together with their orphaned teenage niece Carly on a cattle ranch. But one night, Kate receives a call from Roxy at Bar J. Carly’s grandfather is dead and Ted has been shot… in Roxy’s bed. And now Carly’s missing. Like when Walt has to find his wife’s murderer in Longmire, Kate has to find the killer… and it’s personal.

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Me and Robert Frost

opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker Written by Shannon Baker

and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Holy Cow, what a difference! When I was in college, I had plans. Big ones that involved corner offices and six-figure salaries, high heels, power suits, cocktail dresses. It was the same road all of us business majors hoped to travel. I attended the University of Nebraska (Go Big Red!) so it wouldn’t surprise a thinking person that at age 21, love hurtled into my life like the meteor that burned through our atmosphere wiping out the dinosaurs.  In my little life, love had about the same impact. The man I oh-so naively fell for was a rancher in the Nebraska Sandhills.

I went traipsing off to a place where cattle outnumber people by more than fifty to one and my nearest neighbor lived five miles away as the crow flies. Living so far out I learned all the survival skills, such as how to stock a pantry, cook on the lean, stay warm when the electricity goes out for a week. *hint: body heat is greatly underestimated. I was outdoorsy, but in the cross-country skiing way, not in the round-u- cattle-in-a-blizzard kind of category.

My father-in-law bought me a helluva good cutting horse. Named Big Enough because he wasn’t much larger than a pony. But that horse had a lot more cow savvy than I did. If you pointed him after a critter, you’d be hell-bent to get him stopped. Big Enough made me a good enough hand I got called on to work cattle often.

One blustery afternoon, we were out in the calving lot cutting heavies because there was a big storm coming in. What this meant is that my husband and father-in-law would slowly, ohmygod so slowly, ride through the bunched herd and quietly isolate one pregnant cow after another, checking their back ends to predict who would calve soon by “how loose” they were. When they chose one, they’d push it away from the rest and my job was to meet it, and Big Enough and I would walk it across the pasture, through the gate to a corral close to the house so they could keep an eye on her during the bad weather.

Our job was as fun as watching Jello harden. The culling went on for millennia, until I couldn’t feel my feet in the stirrups, my lips were probably the color of the icy Atlantic, and my fingers couldn’t grip the reins. All I could think about was the warm cinnamon rolls and hot coffee I had in the kitchen. Frozen brain drifting, I was snapped to attention by hollering. I think Big Enough had been dozing because when I kicked him to attention he startled and jumped. I grabbed the saddle horn to keep from pitching onto the hard ground.

My husband—never one for subtly—started screaming unmentionable things at me with the general gist that they’d kicked a cow our way and, because of our inattention, she’d double-backed into the herd. I kicked Big Enough after her and, smart guy that he was, he identified her immediately. He went after her, cutting her from the herd. She was a determined bossy and tried moves a Husker running back would be proud of. But Big Enough had her number and he’d feint and parry until all I could do was clamp my knees into his sides and white-knuckle the saddle horn.

Big Enough succeeded in getting her separated from the herd but she was riled up. You can imagine running a pregnant cow is not good, but by now, Big Enough was focused. The cow took off on a full run across the pen, my father-in-law and my husband were telling me to stop chasing the cow, in between all the cursing, of course. But a mere mortal was powerless against the force called Big Enough. My ski hat blew off, tears streaked from my eyes and froze before they reached my temples. We raced across the frozen pasture, the cow in a panic, Big Enough committed, and only me with enough foresight to notice the approaching three-strand barbed wire fence.

Big Enough only saw the cow, who only wanted to get away from us. I wedged my feet in the stirrups and pulled the reins with all my strength, standing and leaning back.  This convoy was heading for disaster and nothing I did made any difference.

Big Enough didn’t slow. The fence loomed. The cow kept running. We were all going to die. I’m sure I ground a layer or two off my teeth.

The cow hit the fence at roughly 200 mph. She tangled in the wire and did a gymnast’s tumble. Still we careened toward her. We’d roll in the barbed wire. Big Enough would shred his flesh, maybe break a leg in the fall and have to be put down. I clenched, preparing for the Rodeo Apocalypse.

Did I mention Big Enough was smart?

He stopped inches from the fence line.

I didn’t. Like a cannonball, I shot out of the saddle, over the fence and landed in a heap on the frozen sand. The cow, tail still raised, turned from me and trotted into the corral. Big Enough stared at me in disappointment that I couldn’t do my job of staying in the saddle. My husband and father-in-law had already returned to sorting cattle.

A few minutes later I enjoyed coffee and rolls in my kitchen and about fifteen years later, I left the Sandhills for good.

I might have taken that well-traveled road after college to a business career. But I’m glad I took the one less traveled. No denying it was bumpy and rough, but along the way I discovered Kate Fox and now, I get to write her stories.

Order Your Copy

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of amazon -23 opens in a new windowPlace holder  of bn- 79 opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of booksamillion- 68 opens in a new windowibooks2 49 opens in a new windowindiebound opens in a new windowpowells

Find Shannon Baker on Twitter at opens in a new window@sbakerwriter and on her website.

(This is a rerun of a post that originally ran on August 30th, 2016.)

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New Releases: 9/5/17

Happy New Release Day! Here’s what went on sale today.

opens in a new windowAn Irish Country Love Story by Patrick Taylor

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 75 It’s the winter of 1967 and snow is on the ground in the colorful Irish village of Ballybucklebo, but the chilly weather can’t stop love from warming hearts all over the county. Not just the love between a man and woman, as with young doctor, Barry Laverty, and his fiancee Sue Nolan, who are making plans to start a new life together, but also the love of an ailing pensioner for a faithful dog that’s gone missing, the love of the local gentry for the great estate they are on verge of losing, or Doctor Fingal Flahertie O’Reilly’s deep and abiding love for his long-time home and practice.

opens in a new windowCloudbound by Fran Wilde

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of - 61 The Towers are in disarray, without a governing body or any defense against the dangers lurking in the clouds, and daily life is full of terror and strife. Nat Densira, the wing-brother to Kirit (Skyshouter, Spirebreaker, no-longer-of-Densira) sets out to be a hero in his own waysitting on the new Council to cast votes protecting Tower-born, and exploring lower tiers to find more materials to repair the struggling City.

But what he finds down-tier is more secretsand now Nat will have to decide who to trust, and how to trust himself without losing those he holds most dear

opens in a new windowDeath’s End by Cixin Liu

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of - 15 Half a century after the Doomsday Battle, the uneasy balance of Dark Forest Deterrence keeps the Trisolaran invaders at bay. Earth enjoys unprecedented prosperity due to the infusion of Trisolaran knowledge. With human science advancing daily and the Trisolarans adopting Earth culture, it seems that the two civilizations will soon be able to co-exist peacefully as equals without the terrible threat of mutually assured annihilation. But the peace has also made humanity complacent.

opens in a new windowThe Family Plot by Cherie Priest

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of - 30 Music City Salvage is owned and operated by Chuck Dutton: master stripper of doomed historic properties and expert seller of all things old and crusty. Business is lean and times are tight, so he’s thrilled when the aged and esteemed Augusta Withrow appears in his office. She has a massive family estate to unload—lock, stock, and barrel. For a check and a handshake, it’s all his.

Augusta Withrow left out a lot of things.

opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of  -66 Kate Fox is living the dream. She’s married to Grand County Sheriff Ted Conner, the heir to her beloved Nebraska Sandhills cattle ranch, where they live with Kate’s orphaned teenage niece, Carly. With the support of the well-connected Fox Clan, which includes Kate’s eight boisterous and interfering siblings, Ted’s reelection as Grand County Sheriff is virtually assured. That leaves Kate to the solitude and satisfaction of Frog Creek, her own slice of heaven.

One night Kate answers a shattering phone call from Roxy at the Bar J. Carly’s granddad Eldon, owner of the ranch, is dead and Ted has been shot and may never walk again. Kate vows to find the killer. She soon discovers Ted responded so quickly to the scene because he was already at the Bar J…in Roxy’s bed. And to add to her woes, Carly has gone missing.

NEW FROM TOR.COM

opens in a new windowAcadie by Dave Hutchinson

opens in a new window The Colony left Earth to find their utopia–a home on a new planet where their leader could fully explore the colonists’ genetic potential, unfettered by their homeworld’s restrictions. They settled a new paradise, and have been evolving and adapting for centuries.

Earth has other plans.

opens in a new windowThe Ruin of Angels by Max Gladstone

opens in a new window The God Wars destroyed the city of Alikand. Now, a century and a half and a great many construction contracts later, Agdel Lex rises in its place. Dead deities litter the surrounding desert, streets shift when people aren’t looking, a squidlike tower dominates the skyline, and the foreign Iskari Rectification Authority keeps strict order in this once-independent city—while treasure seekers, criminals, combat librarians, nightmare artists, angels, demons, dispossessed knights, grad students, and other fools gather in its ever-changing alleys, hungry for the next big score.

NEW IN MANGA

opens in a new windowArpeggio of Blue Steel Vol. 11 Story and art by Ark Performance

opens in a new windowCaptain Harlock: Dimensional Voyage Vol. 1 Story by Leiji Matsumoto; Art by Kouichi Shimahoshi

opens in a new windowGolden Time Vol. 8 Story by Yuyuko Takemiya; Art by Umechazuke

opens in a new windowTales of Zestiria Vol. 2 Story and art by Shiramine

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events for November

opens in a new windowSay No More by Hank Phillippa Ryan opens in a new windowAlien Morning by Rick Wilber opens in a new windowExtreme Makeover by Dan Wells

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in November! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Shannon Baker,  opens in a new windowStripped Bare

Tuesday, November 15
opens in a new windowNew Life Presbyterian Church
Alburquerque, NM
7:00 PM

Tina Connolly,  opens in a new windowSeriously Shifted

Monday, November 7
opens in a new windowPowell’s Books
Beaverton, OR
7:00 PM

Monday, November 14
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Tuesday, November 15
opens in a new windowCorvallis-Benton County Library
Corvallis, OR
4:00 PM

Wednesday, November 16
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Todd Fahnestock, opens in a new windowThe Wishing World

Saturday, November 12
opens in a new windowSecond Star to the Right Bookstore
Denver, CO
2:00 PM

Leanna Renee Hieber,  opens in a new windowEterna and Omega

Monday, November 14
opens in a new windowLittle City Books
Hoboken, NJ 07030
7:00 PM
Also with Nisi Shawl

Mary Robinette Kowal, opens in a new windowGhost Talkers

Tuesday, November 8
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, November 9
opens in a new windowMurder by the Book
Houston, TX
6:30 PM

Thursday, November 10
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Sunday, November 13
opens in a new windowBorderlands Café
San Francisco, CA
3:00 PM

Michael Livingston,  opens in a new windowThe Gates of Hell

Sunday, November 20
opens in a new windowM. Judson Booksellers
Greenville, SC
4:00 PM

Seanan McGuire,  opens in a new windowEvery Heart a Doorway

Monday, November 21
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM
Also with Dan Wells

Malka Older, Infomocracy

Saturday, November 12
opens in a new windowThe Harvard Coop
Cambridge, MA
7:00 PM

Hank Phillippi Ryan,  opens in a new windowSay No More

Tuesday, November 1
opens in a new windowBrookline Booksmith
Brookline, MA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, November 2
opens in a new windowMurder on the Beach
Delray Beach, FL
7:00 PM

Thursday, November 3
opens in a new windowVero Beach Book Center
Vero Beach, FL
6:00 PM

Friday, November 4
opens in a new windowConcord Festival of Authors
Concord, MA
7:30 PM
Also with Peter Swanson, Thomas O’Malley, and Douglas Graham Purdy, moderated by Kate Flora

Sunday, November 6
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
2:00 PM

Monday, November 7
opens in a new windowTattered Cover
Littleton, CO
7:00 PM
Also with Laura DiSilverio

Wednesday, November 9
opens in a new windowMystery to Me Bookstore
Madison, WI
7:00 PM

Thursday, November 10
opens in a new windowMystery Lovers Bookshop
Oakmont, PA
7:00 PM

Thursday, November 17
opens in a new windowNew Bedford Art Museum
New Bedford, MA
6:00 PM
Also with Peter Abrahams and Hallie Ephron
Hosted by the New Bedford Free Public Library

Friday, November 18
opens in a new windowJabberwocky Bookshop
Newburyport, MA
7:00 PM

Monday, November 28
opens in a new windowBookends
Winchester, MA
6:00 PM
Also with Jerry Thornton

Nisi Shawl, opens in a new windowEverfair

Saturday, November 12
opens in a new windowBook Riot Live
New York, NY
2:30 PM

Monday, November 14
opens in a new windowLittle City Books
Hoboken, NJ
7:00 PM

Dan Wells,  opens in a new windowExtreme Makeover

Tuesday, November 15
opens in a new windowLittle Professor Book Center
Homewood, AL
5:30 PM

Wednesday, November 16
Volumes Bookcafe
Chicago, IL
7:00pm
Also with Mary Robinette Kowal and Wesley Chu

Thursday, November 17
opens in a new windowJean Cocteau Cinema
Santa Fe, NM
7:00 PM
Also with Bracken MacLeod and Robert Brockway

Friday, November 18
opens in a new windowThe King’s English Bookshop
Salt Lake City, UT
7:00 PM

Saturday, November 19
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
5:00 PM

Sunday, November 20
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
2:00 PM

Monday, November 21
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM
Also with Seanan McGuire

Rick Wilber,  opens in a new windowAlien Morning

Friday, November 4
opens in a new windowBooks at Park Place
St. Petersburg, FL
5:00 PM

Friday, November 12
opens in a new windowUniversity of South Florida – St. Petersburg
St. Petersburg, FL
6:00 PM
Tampa Bay Times Festival of Reading

Sunday, November 13
opens in a new windowAmerican Bookbinders Museum
San Francisco, CA
6:30 PM
SF in SF – also with Nick Mamatas

Monday, November 14
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM

Wednesday, November 16
opens in a new windowOld Firehouse Books
Fort Collins, CO
6:00 PM
Also with Kevin Anderson

Thursday, November 17
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM
Also with Gerald Brandt

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events for October

tor-Everfair-2 forge-Stripped-Bare Stranded by Bracken MacLeod

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in October! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Shannon Baker,  opens in a new windowStripped Bare

Monday, October 3
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:00 PM
Also with William Kent Krueger

Tuesday, October 4
opens in a new windowBook Carnival
Orange, CA
7:30 PM
Also with William Kent Krueger

Thursday, October 13
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
7:00 PM
Also with Kevin Wolf

Blake Charlton,  opens in a new windowSpellbreaker

Saturday, October 1
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
3:00 PM

Todd Fahnestock, opens in a new windowThe Wishing World

Saturday, October 29
opens in a new windowTattered Cover
Littleton, CO
6:00 PM

David Lubar, opens in a new windowStrikeout of the Bleacher Weenies

Saturday, October 22
opens in a new windowLet’s Play Books
Emmaus, PA
4:00 PM

Bracken MacLeod opens in a new windowStranded

Tuesday, October 4
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Framingham, MA
7:00 PM

Friday, October 7
opens in a new windowJabberwocky Bookshop
Newburyport, MA
7:00 PM

Wednesday, October 12
opens in a new windowMysterious Bookshop
New York, NY
6:30 PM

Hank Phillippi Ryan, opens in a new windowSay No More

Saturday, October 29
opens in a new windowTurn the Page Bookstore
Boonsboro, MD
12:00 PM
Also with Nora Roberts

Nisi Shawl, opens in a new windowEverfair

Sunday, October 2
opens in a new windowBorderlands Books
San Francisco, CA
2:00 PM

Monday, October 3
opens in a new windowCellar Door Bookstore
Riverside, CA
6:00 PM
Also with Nalo Hopkinson

Kristen Simmons, opens in a new windowMetaltown

Tuesday, October 4
opens in a new windowBooks and Company
Beavercreek, OH
7:00 PM

Simone Zelitch, opens in a new windowJudenstaat

Tuesday, October 18
opens in a new windowPenn Book Center
Philadelphia, PA
6:30 PM

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On the Road: Tor/Forge Author Events for September

tor-Everfair-2 forge-Stripped-Bare teen-Dark-Talent

opens in a new windowTor/Forge authors are on the road in September! See who is coming to a city near you this month.

Shannon Baker,  opens in a new windowStripped Bare

Wednesday, September 7
opens in a new windowBoulder Bookstore
Boulder, CO
7:30 PM
Also with Kevin Wolf

Thursday, September 8
opens in a new windowOld Firehouse Books
Fort Collins, CO
6:00 PM

Tuesday, September 20
opens in a new windowBookworks
Albuquerque, NM
6:00 PM

Wednesday, September 21
opens in a new windowOp. Cit. Books
Taos, NM
11:30 AM

Saturday, September 24
opens in a new windowBarbed Wire Books
Longmont, CO
3:00 PM

Sunday, September 25
opens in a new windowHampden Hall
Englewood, CO
3:00 PM

Tuesday, September 27
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Cheyenne, WY
4:00 PM

Wednesday, September 28
opens in a new windowBooks-a-Million
Rapid City, SD
6:00 PM

Thursday, September 29
opens in a new windowTattered Cover
Littleton, CO
7:00 PM
Also with Kevin Wolf

Friday, September 30
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Pueblo, CO
4:00 PM

Robert Brockway, opens in a new windowThe Empty Ones

Saturday, September 3
opens in a new windowVillage Books
Bellingham, WA
7:00 PM

Blake Charlton,  opens in a new windowSpellbreaker

Wednesday, September 14
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Max Gladstone, opens in a new windowFour Roads Cross

Sunday, September 4
opens in a new windowDecatur Book Festival
Decatur, GA
5:00 PM

David Hagberg, opens in a new windowEnd Game

Sunday, September 4
opens in a new windowDecatur Book Festival
International Covert Ops Panel, with David Hagberg, Bret Witter, moderated by Alice Murray
Decatur, GA
5:00 PM

Thursday, September 8
opens in a new windowBookstore 1
Sarasota, FL
7:00 PM

Kij Johnson opens in a new windowThe Dream-Quest of Vellitt Boe

Thursday, September 15
Kansas University, opens in a new windowJayhawk Ink Lounge
Lawrence, KS
5:30 PM

Sarah Porter, opens in a new windowVassa in the Night

Sunday, September 18
Brooklyn Book Festival
opens in a new windowMagic and Mayhem in New York
Brooklyn, NY
4:00 PM

Sunday, September 25
opens in a new windowOblong Books
Also with Danielle Paige
Rhinebeck, NY
4:00 PM

Monday, September 26
opens in a new windowBooks of Wonder
Also with Kerri Maniscalco
New York, NY
6:00 PM

Thursday, September 29
opens in a new windowOne More Page Books
Fall for the Book YA Panel
Also featuring opens in a new windowA. J. Hartley and opens in a new windowCarrie Jones
Arlington, VA
7:00 PM

Cherie Priest, opens in a new windowThe Family Plot

Tuesday, September 20
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
Chattanooga, TN
7:00 PM

Thursday, September 22
opens in a new windowStar Line Books
Chattanooga, TN
6:00 PM

Brandon Sanderson, opens in a new windowThe Dark Talent

Tuesday, September 6
opens in a new windowThe King’s English Bookshop
Salt Lake City, UT
6:00 PM

Nisi Shawl, opens in a new windowEverfair

Tuesday, September 6
opens in a new windowUniversity Bookstore
Seattle, WA
7:00 PM

Friday, September 9
opens in a new windowMalvern Books
Also with Christopher Brown
Austin, TX
7:00 PM

Saturday, September 10
opens in a new windowPoisoned Pen
Scottsdale, AZ
2:00 PM

Monday, September 12
opens in a new windowMysterious Galaxy
San Diego, CA
7:30 PM

Tuesday, September 13
opens in a new windowEso Won
Los Angeles, CA
7:00 PM

Monday, September 19
opens in a new windowA Room of One’s Own
Madison, WI
7:00 PM

Wednesday, September 21
opens in a new windowNicola’s Books
Ann Arbor, MI
7:00 PM

Friday, September 23
opens in a new windowCharis Books & More
Atlanta, GA
7:30 PM

Kristen Simmons, opens in a new windowMetaltown

Tuesday, September 20
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Crestview Hills, KY
7:00 PM

Thursday, September 22
opens in a new windowJoseph-Beth Booksellers
Lexington, KY
7:00 PM

Friday, September 23
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
Also with Paula Stokes
Downers Grove, IL
7:00 PM

Paula Stokes, opens in a new windowVicarious

Thursday, September 22
opens in a new windowLeft Bank Books
St. Louis, MO
7:00 PM

Friday, September 23
opens in a new windowAnderson’s Bookshop
Also with Kristen Simmons
Downers Grove, IL
7:00 PM

Fran Wilde, opens in a new windowCloundbound

Tuesday, September 27
opens in a new windowBarnes & Noble
With Chuck Wendig
Philadelphia, PA
7:00 PM

Anne A. Wilson, opens in a new windowClear to Lift

Thursday, September 22
opens in a new windowCoronado Public Library
Books provided by Bay Books
Coronado, CA
6:00 PM

Simone Zelitch, opens in a new windowJudenstaat

Saturday, September 3
opens in a new windowDecatur Book Festival
Decatur, GA
12:30 PM

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Me and Robert Frost

opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker Written by Shannon Baker

and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Holy Cow, what a difference! When I was in college, I had plans. Big ones that involved corner offices and six-figure salaries, high heels, power suits, cocktail dresses. It was the same road all of us business majors hoped to travel. I attended the University of Nebraska (Go Big Red!) so it wouldn’t surprise a thinking person that at age 21, love hurtled into my life like the meteor that burned through our atmosphere wiping out the dinosaurs.  In my little life, love had about the same impact. The man I oh-so naively fell for was a rancher in the Nebraska Sandhills.

I went traipsing off to a place where cattle outnumber people by more than fifty to one and my nearest neighbor lived five miles away as the crow flies. Living so far out I learned all the survival skills, such as how to stock a pantry, cook on the lean, stay warm when the electricity goes out for a week. *hint: body heat is greatly underestimated. I was outdoorsy, but in the cross-country skiing way, not in the round-u- cattle-in-a-blizzard kind of category.

My father-in-law bought me a helluva good cutting horse. Named Big Enough because he wasn’t much larger than a pony. But that horse had a lot more cow savvy than I did. If you pointed him after a critter, you’d be hell-bent to get him stopped. Big Enough made me a good enough hand I got called on to work cattle often.

One blustery afternoon, we were out in the calving lot cutting heavies because there was a big storm coming in. What this meant is that my husband and father-in-law would slowly, ohmygod so slowly, ride through the bunched herd and quietly isolate one pregnant cow after another, checking their back ends to predict who would calve soon by “how loose” they were. When they chose one, they’d push it away from the rest and my job was to meet it, and Big Enough and I would walk it across the pasture, through the gate to a corral close to the house so they could keep an eye on her during the bad weather.

Our job was as fun as watching Jello harden. The culling went on for millennia, until I couldn’t feel my feet in the stirrups, my lips were probably the color of the icy Atlantic, and my fingers couldn’t grip the reins. All I could think about was the warm cinnamon rolls and hot coffee I had in the kitchen. Frozen brain drifting, I was snapped to attention by hollering. I think Big Enough had been dozing because when I kicked him to attention he startled and jumped. I grabbed the saddle horn to keep from pitching onto the hard ground.

My husband—never one for subtly—started screaming unmentionable things at me with the general gist that they’d kicked a cow our way and, because of our inattention, she’d double-backed into the herd. I kicked Big Enough after her and, smart guy that he was, he identified her immediately. He went after her, cutting her from the herd. She was a determined bossy and tried moves a Husker running back would be proud of. But Big Enough had her number and he’d feint and parry until all I could do was clamp my knees into his sides and white-knuckle the saddle horn.

Big Enough succeeded in getting her separated from the herd but she was riled up. You can imagine running a pregnant cow is not good, but by now, Big Enough was focused. The cow took off on a full run across the pen, my father-in-law and my husband were telling me to stop chasing the cow, in between all the cursing, of course. But a mere mortal was powerless against the force called Big Enough. My ski hat blew off, tears streaked from my eyes and froze before they reached my temples. We raced across the frozen pasture, the cow in a panic, Big Enough committed, and only me with enough foresight to notice the approaching three-strand barbed wire fence.

Big Enough only saw the cow, who only wanted to get away from us. I wedged my feet in the stirrups and pulled the reins with all my strength, standing and leaning back.  This convoy was heading for disaster and nothing I did made any difference.

Big Enough didn’t slow. The fence loomed. The cow kept running. We were all going to die. I’m sure I ground a layer or two off my teeth.

The cow hit the fence at roughly 200 mph. She tangled in the wire and did a gymnast’s tumble. Still we careened toward her. We’d roll in the barbed wire. Big Enough would shred his flesh, maybe break a leg in the fall and have to be put down. I clenched, preparing for the Rodeo Apocalypse.

Did I mention Big Enough was smart?

He stopped inches from the fence line.

I didn’t. Like a cannonball, I shot out of the saddle, over the fence and landed in a heap on the frozen sand. The cow, tail still raised, turned from me and trotted into the corral. Big Enough stared at me in disappointment that I couldn’t do my job of staying in the saddle. My husband and father-in-law had already returned to sorting cattle.

A few minutes later I enjoyed coffee and rolls in my kitchen and about fifteen years later, I left the Sandhills for good.

I might have taken that well-traveled road after college to a business career. But I’m glad I took the one less traveled. No denying it was bumpy and rough, but along the way I discovered Kate Fox and now, I get to write her stories.

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Sneak Peek: Stripped Bare by Shannon Baker

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opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker opens in a new windowStripped Bare by Shannon Baker is “A must read” (Alex Kava, New York Times bestselling author) that stars a female Longmire in the atmospheric Nebraska Sandhills.

Kate Fox is living the dream. She’s married to Grand County Sheriff Ted Conner, the heir to her beloved Nebraska Sandhills cattle ranch, where they live with Kate’s orphaned teenage niece, Carly. With the support of the well-connected Fox Clan, which includes Kate’s eight boisterous and interfering siblings, Ted’s reelection as Grand County Sheriff is virtually assured. That leaves Kate to the solitude and satisfaction of Frog Creek, her own slice of heaven.

One night Kate answers a shattering phone call from Roxy at the Bar J. Carly’s granddad Eldon, owner of the ranch, is dead and Ted has been shot and may never walk again. Kate vows to find the killer. She soon discovers Ted responded so quickly to the scene because he was already at the Bar J . . . in Roxy’s bed. And to add to her woes, Carly has gone missing.

Kate finds out that Eldon was considering selling his ranch to an obscenely rich environmentalist. Some in town hate the idea of an outsider buying up land, others are desperate to sell . . . and some might kill to get their way. As she becomes the victim of several “accidents,” Kate knows she must find the killer before it’s too late. . . .

Stripped Bare will become available September 6th. Please enjoy this excerpt.

1

I’ve never trusted happiness. Just when you think you’ve corralled that mustang, she busts through the fence and leaves you with splinters. I should have seen it coming.

Still, when I tromped across the back porch, feeling grateful to be out of the frosty night air, I wasn’t worrying about my world turning into a sloppy, wet pile of manure. My calving ratio sat at a hundred percent so far this year. Maybe I could convince Ted to take a week off after the election and head down to a beach someplace, anyplace away from cattle and family and sheriffing.

The house lights weren’t on when I’d trudged from the barn. Carly was supposed to be home working on the term paper she’d blown off last semester. Using her charm, Carly had convinced the English teacher to give her another chance. If she didn’t finish the paper this time, though, she wouldn’t graduate, and my dear niece would be living with me forever.

I pried off one cowboy boot and dropped it to the porch floor, wondering how to motivate Carly without pushing too hard. The jangle of the phone penetrated the door to the house. I could have ignored it, but if Ted didn’t answer his cell, the county sheriff’s number rolled over to the landline installed in our house. I burst through the door and thudded across the kitchen. With one boot on, one boot off, I flew into the closet-turned-office and grabbed the old-fashioned receiver. “Sheriff’s phone.”

“Listen, Kate, Uncle Bud and Aunt Twyla are planning Easter at their place and I told them you’d bring that seven-layer salad.”

As far as the Fox family was concerned, you can run but you can’t hide. “Hi, Louise.” My older sister. One of them, anyway. “We’ve talked about you using the sheriff’s phone only for emergencies. Right?”

The reminder was as effective as ever. “You won’t answer your cell. Let me talk to Carly.”

“Carly’s not here.” Where was she, anyway? And where was Ted?

I stretched the phone cord. Grand County didn’t believe in fancy equipment like cordless phones. They sprang for Ted’s cell phone, but he wasn’t supposed to use it for personal calls. I slapped on the light, squinting into the tiny living room. Several books were scattered on the floor. A potted plant spilled dirt onto the worn carpet and the throw from the threadbare couch puddled in the middle of the living room. The chaos seemed unusual, even for Hurricane Carly.

“Where is she?” Louise asked.

“Not sure.” Maybe I wasn’t fit to be a guardian, but I thought a girl destined to graduate from high school in a month ought to have a fair bit of autonomy. ’Course, with Carly’s history, I was balancing on barbed wire there.

Louise paused to build up steam. “You should supervise her better. She needs—”

A syllable blanked from her lecture. “Gotta cut you off,” I said. “The sheriff’s second line.”

I punched line two, expecting another one of my siblings, who’d also been warned against using the official sheriff’s line. “Sheriff’s office.”

“Oh God, oh God, oh God!” Sobbing, hysterical. A woman blubbered into the phone. “Oh God!”

It took a moment to recognize the voice. It wasn’t one of my favorites. “Roxy?”

More sobbing. “He’s dead. He’s dead. I think. Oh God.”

“It’s Kate. Who’s dead? Where are you?”

“Kate. Oh my God. Blood!”

My skin chilled and my scalp prickled, despite knowing Roxy’s penchant for drama. As Ted’s old high-school girlfriend, and by some unfortunate quirk of fate, Carly’s stepmother, she’d been plaguing me for years. “Roxy!” I yelled, trying to shock her hysterics away.

It didn’t work. “I don’t know who to call. I came home and the door was open. There’s blood everywhere.”

“Whose blood? Where are you?”

She finally sounded as if someone caught her with a grappling hook and dragged her slowly down to the ground. “I’m at Eldon’s.”

Eldon Edwards was her father-in-law. Their houses were only one hundred yards apart and a good half hour from the nearest town. “Is he hurt?”

She started to sob again. “He’s dead. He’s been shot.”

Dead? Eldon? No. My brain tried to push the words away. This was definitely a job for the sheriff. “Okay, hang on. I don’t know where Ted is, but I’ll find him and get him out there right away.”

“He’s shot.” Roxy sounded like she jumped on the panic wagon again.

“I’ll get an ambulance and find Ted.”

She wailed out his name. “Ted.”

“Stay calm and he’ll be there soon.”

“He’s bleeding. Oh God, he’s dying!”

I’d often wanted to slap Roxy, but this time I could probably get away with it. “I thought you said he’s dead.”

“No, Eldon is dead.” Sob, sob.

“Then who is dying?” Maybe Ted was buying drinks at the Long Branch, since it was campaign season. Or visiting his mother in Broken Butte, more than an hour’s drive away. I ran through a list of places he might be.

“Ted!” Roxy shrieked into the phone.

That’s when her stampeding words started to make sense. “Ted what?”

“He’s shot. And there’s blood everywhere!”

I dropped the phone and didn’t hear whatever else she said.

Copyright © 2016 by Shannon Baker

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Visit Tor/Forge Books at ALA!

AC16-General opens in a new windowThe American Library Association’s 2016 Annual Conference is in Orlando this week! Tor/Forge Books will be there. Come say hello at Booth #2114, or at one of these events:

Saturday, June 25

  • 9:30 – 10:15 AM opens in a new windowBook Buzz Theater: The Future According to Harlequin TEEN, Tor Teen, and Starscape
    We’re pleased to present a selection of must-shelve upcoming fiction from Harlequin TEEN, Tor Teen, and Starscape. Join us as Tor’s Ali Fisher and Harlequin TEEN’s Siena Koncsol discuss some of our excellent forthcoming titles, as well as highlights from the current season. Galleys, posters, and other giveaways are available in booth #1402 and #2114.
    Location: Orange County Convention Center, Exhibit Hall – Book Buzz Theater
  • 1:00 – 2:30 PM opens in a new windowTor/LITA Author Panel: Science Fiction/Fantasy and Information Technology: Where We Are and Where We Could Have Been
    Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature have a unique ability to speculate about things that have never been, but can also be predictive about things that never were. Through the lens provided by alternate history/counterfactual literature one can look at how the world might have changed if different technologies had been pursued. For examples what if instead of developing microprocessors computing depended on vacuum tubes or something fantastic like the harmonies in the resonance of crystals? Join LITA, the Imagineering Interest Group, and a panel of distinguished Science Fiction and Fantasy writers as they discuss what the craft can tell us about not only who we are today, but who, given a small set of differences, we could have been. Featuring authors Charlie Jane Anders, Brian Staveley, Catherynne M. Valente, and Katherine Addison.
    Location: Orange County Convention Center, Room W208
  • 3:30 PM – Thomas Olde Heuvelt will be signing copies of his nightmare-inducing novel opens in a new windowHEX
    Location: Booth #2114

Sunday, June 26

  • 9:00 – 10:00 AM opens in a new windowYA Author Coffee Klatch
    Enjoy coffee and meet with YALSA’s award winning authors! This informal coffee klatch will give you an opportunity to meet authors who have appeared on one of YALSA’s six annual selected lists or have received one of YALSA’s five literary awards. Librarians will sit at a table and every 3 or 4 minutes, a new author will arrive at your table to talk about their current projects! Featuring Tor Teen author Kathleen Baldwin.
    Location: Orange County Convention Center, Room W110
  • 1:00 – 1:50 PM opens in a new windowPop Top Stage: Thomas Olde Heuvelt
    Named as “One of Europe’s foremost talents in fantastic literature” by BBC Radio, a multiple winner of the Paul Harland Prijs for best Dutch Fantasy, and nominated for a Hugo and World Fantasy Award for his short fiction, Thomas Olde Heuvelt brings his bestselling Dutch horror-fantasy— opens in a new windowHEX—to the English language. HEX has been praised by authors such as Paul Cornell, Sarah Lotz, among others, and lauded by venues including Crimezone, for “…expos[ing] how psychological fear can make a modern society spiral into dark, medieval practices…. Terrifying and tantalizingly good.”
    Location: Orange County Convention Center, Room Exhibit Hall – PopTop Stage
  • 2:00 PM – J. A. Souders will be signing copies of the first book in her young adult series The Elysium Chronicles, opens in a new windowRenegade
    Location: Booth #2114

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