Twenty years ago this month, Intrigue released UNDER THE KNIFE by Tess 
Gerritsen, who of course would go on to become the bestselling author of awesome 
thrillers.  (Fun fact: the other Intrigue released that month was SWITCHBACK by 
Catherine Anderson, another future New York Times bestselling author.  
Quite an auspicious month!).  I was still relatively new to Intrigue, having 
only started reading the line a couple months earlier.  UNDER THE KNIFE was the 
book that not only cemented my love of the line, but made it clear that this was 
the kind of story I wanted to write.  I didn't just want to write mysteries, as 
I'd always thought.  I wanted to write THESE. 
The book had all the hallmarks I had already come to 
associate with the line.  Strong characters with a juicy interpersonal 
conflict.  A great mystery with plenty of suspects.  A well-developed love 
story.  Numerous twists and turns.  Suspenseful sequences.  But what really 
stood out about it was how emotional it was.  I found the hero's story 
incredibly moving, and the ending in particular hit me hard.  The story's 
emotional impact was what made it something extra-special and a book I knew 
would really stick with me.  As far as I was concerned, the book contained 
everything a great read could--and should, and set the bar for what I wanted to 
try and accomplish in my own stories--that perfect combination of mystery and 
emotion.   
It seems somehow fitting that my latest book, STRANGER IN A 
SMALL TOWN, is being released almost exactly twenty years later.  (Okay, it’s 
technically a May release, but it’s already available on eHarlequin, so 
close enough. 
)  
It's a book that means a lot to me, partly because I think it really exemplifies 
the kind of story I've always wanted to write since reading UNDER THE KNIFE, 
combining a mystery I hope will keep readers guessing with (at least for me) 
that level of emotion I’ve been aiming for from the beginning.  It’s the story 
of two people, both running from their pasts in different ways and for different 
reasons, bound together by the creepy, crumbling house that each has been drawn 
to.  The house has largely been abandoned since two people were murdered there 
almost thirty years before, a crime that remains unsolved.  The heroine is 
determined to restore the house; the hero hires on to help her while keeping his 
true motives secret.  But no one in the town wants the house restored, least of 
all the killer.  When the danger surrounding the house escalates, the hero and 
heroine are driven to try to solve the murders.  Over the course of the story, 
they work to find the truth, and in the process find the strength to face their 
respective pasts and move on into the future. 
)  
It's a book that means a lot to me, partly because I think it really exemplifies 
the kind of story I've always wanted to write since reading UNDER THE KNIFE, 
combining a mystery I hope will keep readers guessing with (at least for me) 
that level of emotion I’ve been aiming for from the beginning.  It’s the story 
of two people, both running from their pasts in different ways and for different 
reasons, bound together by the creepy, crumbling house that each has been drawn 
to.  The house has largely been abandoned since two people were murdered there 
almost thirty years before, a crime that remains unsolved.  The heroine is 
determined to restore the house; the hero hires on to help her while keeping his 
true motives secret.  But no one in the town wants the house restored, least of 
all the killer.  When the danger surrounding the house escalates, the hero and 
heroine are driven to try to solve the murders.  Over the course of the story, 
they work to find the truth, and in the process find the strength to face their 
respective pasts and move on into the future. 
All of my characters mean a great deal to me, but I 
especially felt for these two people, two lost souls who find a connection when 
neither expects it.  I just "got" them on a level I hope comes across on the 
page.  I admit, there were a few points while I was writing it where I felt a 
lump in my throat.  A tear or two may have even been shed.  I can’t guarantee 
that anyone else will have the same reaction (though I certainly wish I could!), 
but I do hope anyone who decides to take a chance on the book will enjoy it and 
maybe even find themselves as caught up in the emotions of the characters' story 
as I was.   
In the meantime, what are some of your favorite emotional 
reads that really got to you and stuck with you?  Do you have any books that 
really made you cry? 
Kerry Connor
www.kerryconnor.com
