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    JoAnn Ross

    Pocket Star
    2006
    384 páginas
    12h 48m
    ISBN-1: 0
    0
    0 avaliação
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    A haunted man. . . A hunted woman. . . Together they must stop a madman before it's too late! A new novel of bone-chilling suspense and white-hot passion from New York Times bestselling author JoAnn Ross Hazard, Wyoming, is a quiet mountain town, where there's snow on the ground from October until June, the wind blows all the time, and nothing much ever happens. But that's all about to change. Because a killer has come to Hazard, a hunter as deadly and primal as evil itself. Finding a murdered teenage girl, her throat slit, her face eaten away by wild animals, is as bad as Sheriff Will Bridger has ever seen. But there's worse to come. Much, much worse. While the nights grow longer and the winter snow gets deeper, the violence intensifies. As does the blazing passion between Will and late night radio host Faith Prescott. Harboring secrets as potentially dangerous as his own, Faith knows all too well the dark side of the human heart. She can help Will. If he'll only let her. It won't be easy. The man who was once the boy raised by wolves is no ordinary serial killer. Fortunately, Will Bridger is no ordinary cop.

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    JoAnn Ross profile picture

    JoAnn Ross

    When New York Times bestselling author JoAnn Ross was seven-years-old, she had no doubt whatsoever that she’d grow up to play center field for the New York Yankees. Writing would be her backup occupation, something she planned to do after retiring from baseball. Those were, in her mind, her only options. While waiting for the Yankees management to call, she wrote her first novella — a tragic romance about two star-crossed mallard ducks — for a second grade writing assignment. The paper earned a gold star. And JoAnn kept writing. She’s now written around one hundred novels (she quit keeping track long ago) and has been published in twenty-six countries. Two of her titles have been excerpted in Cosmopolitan magazine and her books have also been published by the Doubleday, Rhapsody, Literary Guild, and Mystery Guild book clubs. A member of the Romance Writers of America’s Honor Roll of best-selling authors, she’s won several awards, including RT Reviews’ Career Achievement Awards in both category romance and contemporary single title. In addition, she received RWA’s national service award and was named RWA Pro-Mentor of the Year. Although the Yankees have yet to call her to New York to platoon center field, JoAnn figures making one out of two life goals isn’t bad. Currently writing her Shelter Bay series (set on the Oregon Coast, where her high school sweetheart husband bought her a bag of saltwater taffy, then proposed), along with a River’s Bend Murphy Brothers trilogy spin-off (set in Southern Oregon ranching country, where she grew up), and her award winning Irish Castlelough series, JoAnn lives with her husband and three rescued dogs, who pretty much rule the house, in the Pacific Northwest. A Note from JoAnn Dear Reader, My grandfather McLaughlin (who kidnapped — with her consent — my grandmother, when her wealthier Cavanaugh family wouldn’t permit them to marry) was a seanachie — an Irish teller of tales. My earliest memories are listening to the music of his lyrical brogue spinning grand stories of kings and castles, battles and banishments, magic and miracles. Inheriting his love of storytelling, I wrote my first novella when I was seven-years-old and immediately decided to become a writer when I grew up. Taught by Grandda to think big, my youthful fantasies invariably involved me dashing off the great American novel in some Greenwich Village garret, hand carrying it to a New York publisher who would proclaim it brilliant and launch my career to both critical acclaim and commercial success, after which I’d move to Cape Cod and live among all the other rich and famous novelists. Well, it didn’t quite work out that way. I’ve written advertising copy extolling the wonders of everything from household appliances to diamonds to tires. For a few years, I wrote for a large metropolitan newspaper, only to feel more and more constrained by the rigid parameters of fact. It was then I reminded myself what I really wanted to do – what I’d always wanted to do: make up stories I could share with others. Hardly a day goes by that I don’t realize that by exploring my favorite themes of love, loyalty, family, and, of course, my favorite, redemption, I’m still following in my grandfather’s footsteps. In all his tales, heroes and heroines ventured forth on perilous quests against seemingly impossible odds, slaying myriad dragons along the way. Tyrants were toppled, lovers united, the wicked were punished, justice prevailed in the end and the good always lived happily ever after. And isn’t that what the best stories are all about? xoxo, JoAnn 10 Things About JoAnn 1) Her first job, when she was three years old, was in a roller skating follies. Her mother was a chorus line skater (sort of a Rockette on wheels), and since dependable day care was hard to come by in those days, JoAnn was made a member of the troop. Her pay, a hot fudge sundae and a weekly movie matinee, seemed extraordinarily generous at the time. 2) Her early years were spent in a bungalow on Santa Monica Beach, with bulked up bodybuilders from L.A.’s Muscle Beach as babysitters. 3) While still in grammar school, she wrote melodramas, casting her sisters and neighborhood kids in the roles; tickets cost a dime and since she was a prolific writer, box office receipts paid for her first bike. 4) After her mother remarried, she moved to the remote ranching country of Southern Oregon. Because the Cascade Mountains blocked television signals, people were forced to find other ways to amuse themselves. When she was ten-years-old she led a group of kids to an abandoned cattle slaughter house and convinced them that the blood spattered all over the floor and walls was from murdered Girl Scouts. 5) While in high school, she interviewed local “celebrities” on a weekly afternoon television news/talk show. 6) She worked as a magician’s assistant. (And no, she will not reveal how she was cut in half.) 7) She played folk piano in coffee houses, still believes Dylan’s Blowin’ in the Wind is one of the best songs ever written, but hopes never to hear Puff the Magic Dragon again! 8) She married her high school sweetheart. Twice. 9) She has skydived over the Arizona desert. 10) She dearly hopes editors never discover that she’d write for chocolate.

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    JoAnn Ross