In short, everything she seeks in a biography subject. Except the man is a mass of fascinating contradictions–manipulative, honest, gifted, charismatic and morally ambiguous. So bad-boy rock icon Zander Freedman couldn’t possibly tempt her to write his memoir. I wanted to get all nosy about it, and she agreed to do a Q&A with me about the book.įirst let’s introduce the book, right? Right.Ī | BN | K | AB Acclaimed literary biographer Elizabeth Winston writes about long-dead heroes. He won’t rein in his swearing.” (You can read the transcript after Karina arrived at about 9:57pm, if you’d like to see the conversation.)Īpparently the idea stuck with her for awhile, and now, she’s self-published Rise, Zander’s story. To which we, and especially Elyssa, replied, “YES.”Īnd after some additional conversation, Karina said, “ I like to write another and honestly you’re making me think about Zander…probably not for Super. Well, she actually said, “ Zander….really, guys, you think he’s redeemable?” And during the book club chat, many of us argued that Zander, the antagonist brother who was a selfish, loutish tool in What the Librarian Did and who showed his selfishness again in Bring Him Home, well, he CLEARLY needed to be the hero of a romance sequel. A | K | AB Then, Bring Him Home, which was connected to the Freedman series, was a Sizzling Book Club Pick in 2012.
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