Sweet Talk, Sweet Dreams, Sweet Seduction
Boxed Sets
Publication date: May 1st 2015
Genres: Contemporary, Romance, Thriller
Sweet Talk Boxed Set
Priced at only $9.99, this
heart-warming, limited edition collection features ten BRAND NEW
contemporary romances by New York Times and USA Today bestselling
authorsAmazon US: http://www.amazon.com/dp/
B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/
Apple: https://itunes.apple.com/us/
Sweet Dreams Boxed Set
Priced at only $9.99, this fascinating limited edition collection
features thirteen BRAND NEW thrillers by New York Times and USA Today
Bestselling authors
Amazon
US:http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00R5CZ53I
Amazon
UK:http://tinyurl.com/m6ym8g3
Amazon De:
http://tinyurl.com/qf4jobb
Amazon Fr:
http://tinyurl.com/qed2ye8
Amazon Au:
http://tinyurl.com/n9rrstv
Amazon Ca:
http://tinyurl.com/kk9cnpy
B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ w/sweet-dreams-boxed-set- brenda-novak/1120945757?ean= 2940046471090
Sweet Seduction Boxed Set
Priced at only $9.99, this stunning limited edition collection features
thirteen BRAND NEW contemporary romances by New York Times and USA Today
Bestselling authors.Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/dp/
B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/
Apple: https://itunes.apple.com/us/
You can make a difference while you read! All proceeds from the sales of these boxed sets will be donated to the Diabetes Research Institute via Brenda Novak’s Online Auction for Diabetes Research.
I’m
a thriller writer, and a thriller reader, and hence a sucker for the
classic thriller plot, where an ordinary man or an ordinary woman
slowly becomes aware of a looming threat: someone or something is out
there, close by, infinitely dangerous; or perhaps an intruder is
already in the house, mocking, violating a sanctuary, or perhaps –
really creepy – he’s been living in the attic for a couple of
weeks already, camping out, undetected, silent, leaving odd nighttime
disturbances … who moved that chair?
Or
perhaps, for added anguish, it’s not the ordinary man or woman
under threat: it’s his or her son or daughter, their child, their
responsibility, the intended victim, a helpless target. What mother
or father wouldn’t fight to the death? And they do … 400 pages
later, an investigation has been conducted, the bad guy has been
identified, close scrapes have been survived, and finally the family
is sitting together on the bottom stair, stunned but finally safe, as
the bad guy is put in the cop car and driven away. The end.
Diabetes
starts like that. But it doesn’t finish like that.
It’s
a mysterious malfunction. No one knows the cause. Researchers
suspect an element of genetic susceptibility, and in those
susceptible it’s possible the Coxsackie B4 virus kicks things off.
Then a tiny balance among the human body’s billion moving parts
goes slightly out of whack, and the beta cells in the islets of
Langerhans (such an innocent name) inside the pancreas shut down and
stop producing insulin, so the body can no longer deal with the kind
of sugars we crave.
The
intruder is now in the house.
Untreated,
all kinds of complications will follow. Cardiovascular disease, and
stroke, and damage to the eyes, kidneys, and nerves. And more.
Including death. All in store, unbelievably, for the ordinary
parent’s beautiful and vulnerable child. No one’s fault. Type 1
diabetes is unrelated to lifestyle. Most victims are thin or normal,
healthy, well fed, well loved.
The
fight back begins with maintenance. Sometimes diet is enough; more
often, insulin must be provided. An endless round begins: testing
and injecting, testing and injecting. Most sufferers do OK for a
long time, but only OK. Quite apart from the social and
organizational burdens of diet and injection, they can feel under the
weather a lot of the time. But in thriller terms, we can at least
get them barricaded in a safe house, at least temporarily, doors and
windows locked, guns drawn, with the bad guy lurking outside in the
yard.
But
how do we get the bad guy in the cop car?
Research
is the answer, but it’s fantastically expensive. All around the
world, teams of biochemists are working hard, but they have to pay
the rent. And eat. Their funding comes from governments and
institutions and drug companies – but also from hundreds of
thousands of concerned individuals. Many of them are parents of
diabetic children, and it’s easy to see why. The primeval instinct
that makes a mother or father fight to the death is a powerful one –
perhaps the most powerful among our emotional inheritance. But in
the case of diabetes it’s frustrated. There’s no identifiable
antagonist, no role for a gun or a blade. There’s no bar fight to
be had. If only it was that easy. I know of no parent who wouldn’t
gladly smash a long-neck bottle and join the fray. But they can’t.
Such parents have to channel their natural aggression into a long,
patient, endless struggle for progress. They raise awareness and
money any way they can.
This
anthology is an example. It will help fund the search for a cure.
All good. In fact better than good, because whatever else, there are
some great authors and some great stories here to enjoy. So if you
buy it, you’ll get some excellent entertainment – but also you
might just get the chance to be that mysterious character on page 297
of our notional thriller, who contributes the tiny but vital clue
that eventually leads to the big reveal on page 397. Your few cents
could make the difference. You could be the one.
Lee
Child
New
York
2015
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