Articles
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Mar 13, 2024 |
crimereads.com | Kristen Bird
I joined my first cult when I was…just kidding. Mostly. When I was born in the early 80s, my parents were part of a church in Virginia Beach, an area influenced by the likes of Pat Robertson and his Christian Broadcasting Network as well as Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker. These are the kinds of organizations that helped fuel the Satanic Panic, decrying games like Dungeons & Dragons and any Halloween celebration that wasn’t spent as a simple “Harvest Festival” in a church gym.
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Mar 10, 2024 |
redcarpetcrash.com | Kristen Bird |Jennifer Ryan
In stores on Tuesday, March 12th form MIRA. Click on the link to buy a copy. https://amzn.to/49fHivtIt’s early morning in the small Texas town of Edenberg when the body of sixty-five-year-old Beverly Hoffman is discovered in the Guadalupe River—drowned in only two inches of water.
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May 4, 2023 |
thebuzzmagazines.com | Cindy Burnett |Jessa Maxwell |Ann Napolitano |Kristen Bird
A number of years ago I started creating my best books of the year list from the beginning of the year forward. It is a loose list, but I find that if I work on it as the year progresses, I don’t accidentally leave off any of the books I read early in the year. 2023 has been such an incredible year for books already, and there are no signs that it will be slowing down.
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Mar 14, 2023 |
amazonadviser.com | Kristen Bird |Alexandria Ingham
I Love It When You Lie by Kristen Bird doesn’t quite hit the mark as a suspenseful thriller, but it is an interesting book to read. Disclaimer: I got a free advanced copy of this book from NetGalley in return for an honest review. When something is described as a suspenseful thriller, I expect it to have twists and turns along the way. That wasn’t the case when it came to I Love It When You Lie by Kristen Bird. Instead, the novel more fits the women’s fiction genre.
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Mar 14, 2023 |
crimereads.com | Kristen Bird
I write books set in the South, and it’s always interesting to hear readers ‘not from around here’ describe my leading ladies. To some, the women I pen are ruthless. To others, they are misguided. To a few, they are unimaginable. To most, they are strong, for better or worse. To me, they are simply writing what I know. My family from north Alabama speaks in a southern drawl so thick you’d think they’d just eaten a spoonful of sorghum syrup at any given moment.
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