This month marks the beginning of a new promotion from Intrigue called "Shivers," featuring spine-tingling romantic suspense reads. I’m really excited that my latest book, STRANGER IN A SMALL TOWN, was chosen to launch this new promotion. Interestingly enough, one of my original goals for this book wasn’t to do something new, but recapture the feeling of some of the great Intrigues I so enjoyed in the past and bring something "old" back to the line.
I’ve long been a fan of creepy, chilling suspense tales, 
the kind of story where the suspense comes as much, if not more, from the 
atmosphere and sense of mood as from action and overt violence. I love stories 
that occur in an eerie setting and have a strong sense of place, from stories in 
the old Gothic tradition to more contemporary spinetinglers. Give me spooky old 
buildings, characters venturing down dark passageways and investigating the 
shadows, and that lurking sense of menace, and I'll eat it right up. I don’t 
read outright horror--I can’t deal with anything too dark or 
gruesome or downbeat myself--but I love that extra jolt of tension and suspense 
that comes from great atmosphere and an unsettling mood.  After all, shouldn't 
suspense be at least a little scary, for both the characters--and the reader? 
When I first started reading Intrigues, there were plenty 
of these types of stories. They were some of my favorites, and many of them 
remain keepers for me to this day.  Authors like Anne Stuart, Bethany Campbell, 
Elaine K. Stirling, Madelyn Sanders and Jenna Ryan brought readers suspenseful 
stories with that extra creepy edge. Those early Intrigue authors (among others) 
took me from sinister small towns full of secrets to dark castles, English manor 
houses with dark histories to haunted vineyards, shadowy Venetian palazzos to 
isolated lighthouses as their heroes and heroines were confronted with 
unsettling events that kept them--and me--on edge, wondering what lurked in the 
darkness, in the fog, in the shadows.... (And of course there was the 
short-lived, deliciously dark Silhouette Shadows line. Hopefully I'm not the 
only one around here who was a fan!) I loved all those stories that delivered 
those great thrills and chills, but with a guaranteed happy ending and the 
knowledge that they wouldn't get too dark or depressing. 
When I started planning my Stranger books in the fall of 
2000 (yes, it really was that long ago), the line had mostly moved away from 
those types of stories, and frankly, I missed them. Naturally, I also had long 
wanted to try writing a spooky story of my own. So I started thinking... 
As it often does with this kind of story, it all began 
with the house. I thought of an old house, isolated at the end of a street. All 
of the other houses on the street are nice-looking and well-kept, but not this 
one. It was likely beautiful once, but now it’s crumbling, falling apart. The 
lawn is overgrown, many of the windows are covered by boards. Clearly no one 
lives here or has for some time. Why not? What happened in this house that would 
prevent anyone from wanting to live there? 
In most of these kinds of stories, it seemed to be the 
heroine whose past was connected to the place, so I knew I wanted to do it a 
little differently and have it be the hero in my story. So why was the heroine 
drawn to this house? I imagined a woman traveling alone, with nowhere to be and 
nowhere to go. She's drifting, lost because of events in her recent past. She 
finds herself in a small town she’s never been before, somewhere she had no 
intention of going and doesn’t intend to stay. But she gets lost in the town and 
finds herself at the end of this street, in front of this crumbling old house. 
Once there, she can’t look away. Something in her responds to this house. It’s 
all alone, as she is. Worse for wear, as she is. It seems abandoned, as she has 
been. She notices an ancient, faded For Sale sign in front of the house. She has 
experience restoring houses, and in a fit of inspiration--or madness--she 
decides that she is going to save this house. 
In her determination, she doesn’t notice the eagerness of 
the real estate agent who sells her the house. She doesn’t ask too many 
questions about why the house is in such bad shape and why it’s been abandoned. 
The only thing that matters is that she’s going to save this house, when, of 
course, what she’s really trying to save is herself. But someone doesn’t want 
her in that house, someone who will do anything to try to drive her from it. All 
alone in this crumbling house, she soon realizes she has no allies in this town. 
It's only when another stranger suddenly arrives in town and agrees to work for 
her when no one else would that she has someone on her side. But naturally, 
there's more to him than there seems... 
It wasn't until last year when I finally got to write this 
story, and as is usually the case, things changed from the early idea stage. 
Considering the townspeople’s dislike of the house, it didn’t seem likely anyone 
would want to talk to two strangers in town about what happened there. The story 
would work better if one of them had an obvious connection to the town. The 
nature of the plot meant it couldn’t be the hero, so I changed it so that the 
heroine had inherited the house. The reason she’s alone was also changed 
slightly (what I originally intended was a little too close to what I 
inadvertently used in my previous book, TRUSTING A STRANGER). Otherwise it 
remains the tale I waited years to tell—the story of a house, a woman and a 
mystery—and the stranger who comes to be entangled with all three. 
While there weren't many spooky stories in the line 
anymore when I first came up with the idea, times have changed and happily 
they’ve found a home again in Intrigue over the past decade. Even so, I wasn’t 
sure if the editors would go for my story. So I was thrilled when they not only 
liked it, but decided it would be the first in the new "Shivers" promotion, 
which promises to bring plenty more spine-tingling tales to Intrigue readers in 
the months ahead. 
To celebrate (and because I'm the kind of person who 
foists books on people that I think they should read 
), 
I'm giving away a set of two classic Intrigue chillers that I loved, in as close 
to "new" condition as I could find. They are: 
Hand in Glove by Anne Stuart 
Judith Daniels knew that her friend, Lacey, feared for her 
life. And when Lacey died suddenly, Judith was convinced that her death had not 
been an accident. Desperate to learn the truth, she applied for Lacey's job at 
Ryan Smith's puppet factory. 
Her task proved difficult. The voices behind the puppets 
were cleverly disguised. So were the people involved, for each one--like Judith 
herself--seemed to have something to hide. Even Ryan Smith, the creative genius 
of the group, was deliberately evasive. 
Then it was Judith's turn to fear for her own life.... 
Dead Opposites by Bethany Campbell
Eerie sounds... 
that went bump in the night were part of Hawthorne 
Towers's history. When Ginnie Prince heard rumors that the building was haunted, 
she decided it was time to move. But her decision was made too late. For when 
she arrived home one evening, she found more than an empty apartment. 
Ex-Marine Wayne Priborski was starting his life over, 
alone, and didn't want to know his neighbors at Hawthorne Towers. However, he 
had no choice after encountering Ginnie stumbling down the marble staircase of 
the old Victorian building, unable to stand, fright evident in her eyes as she 
numbly told him there was a dead body in her bathtub. 
I’ll draw one winner from today’s commenters to receive 
both books. For those who don't win, the books are well-worth hunting down, 
because they deserve to be read. And of course, if you’d like to try my own take 
on a spine-tingling romantic mystery, STRANGER IN A SMALL TOWN is available now! 
I'll be back on Monday, May 10, 2010 with a new post and to pick the 
winner.  So how about you? Do you love your romantic suspense with that creepy, 
chilling edge? Any old favorites of your own you’d like to mention? 
www.kerryconnor.com
