Praise for New York TimesBestselling Author Heather Graham
âGraham plays the storyâs supernatural angle for both chills and chuckles ⦠Ringo is the best ghost to come along in ages.â
âRT Book Reviews on Nightwalker
âRomantic flourishes enhance this bewitching blend of Native American lore, ghostly shenanigans and modern-day chicanery.â
âPublishers Weekly on Nightwalker
âMystery, sex, paranormal events. Whatâs not to love?â
âKirkus Reviews on The Death Dealer
âGraham peoples her novel with genuine, endearing charactersâ
âPublishers Weekly on The Séance
âGrahamâs latest is an entertaining vampire yarn.â
âPublishers Weekly on Blood Red
âThe intense, unexpected conclusion will leave readers well satisfied.â
âPublishers Weekly on The Dead Room
âEven though this ghostly thriller is not a romance ⦠[Graham] introduce[s] delicious romantic interludes. She also brings a fresh perspective to New Yorkâs mysterious underground city.â
âBooklist on The Dead Room
New York Times bestselling author HEATHER GRAHAM has written more than a hundred novels, many of which have been featured by the Doubleday Book Club and the Literary Guild. An avid scuba diver, ballroom dancer and mother of five, she still enjoys her south Florida home, but loves to travel as well, from locations such as Cairo, Egypt, to her own backyard, the Florida Keys. Reading, however, is the pastime she still loves best, and she is a member of many writing groups. Sheâs currently vice president of the Horror Writersâ Association, and sheâs also an active member of International Thriller Writers. She is very proud to be a Killerette in the Killer Thriller Band, along with many fellow novelists she greatly admires. For more information, check out her website, theoriginalheathergraham.com.
Dear Reader,
First, thank you for reading this! Thereâs nothing in the world to me like the pleasure of telling a storyâunless itâs getting to do so with friends.
Alex Sokoloff is the author of the second book in this series. I met Alex when we were both called to be in the Thriller Killer Bandâand it felt immediately as if I had known her all my life. We share a love of adventures, in the water, on landâand in our great cities. Every year I do a Labor Day benefit in New Orleans, and Alex has been there, helping, teaching screenwriting and giving her all.
Deborah LeBlanc is another amazing women. Sheâs from Louisiana, and has done brilliant things for me and on her own to support reading, our youthâand New Orleans. Deb is president of Horror Writers of America, teaches a boot camp called Pen to Press and has attended many an autopsy!
For the three of us to come togetherâas we were able to do several times, luckily, in the planning of this seriesâand work on a project has been sheer joy. And, of course, since we all love New Orleans so much, when we began to think of a world where paranormal beings might just blend in ⦠well, New Orleans popped right into all our heads. Seriouslyâwhere else would you hide in plain sight if you were a bit different from others?
My admiration for these two wonderful authors is absolute, and I hope youâll enjoy our combined venture, that youâll enjoy The Keepersâour three sisters charged with keeping the balance in the underworld.
Please look for their books in the months to come!
Best,
Heather Graham
To Connie Perry, my extremely dear friend and cohort in many an endeavor. Thank you for all you doâand especially for New Orleans!
Also, for Daena Moller and Larry Montz and the ISPR. Thank you for some great adventures, too!
When the world as we know it was created, it wasnât quite actually as we know it.
Thatâs because so much was lost in the mists of time, and the collective memory of the human race often chooses what it will hold and what it will discard.
But once the world held no skyscrapers, rockets did not go to the moonâin fact, the wheel had barely been invented, and families lived together and depended upon one another. The denizens of the world knew better the beauty of waterfalls, of hills and vales, sun and sunset, shadowsâand magic.
In a time when the earth was young, giants roamed, gnomes grumbled about in the forests and many a creatureâmalignant, sadly, as well as benignâwas known to exist. Human beings might not have liked these creatures, they might have feared themâfor a predator is a predatorâbut they knew of their existence, and as man has always learned to deal with predators, so he did then. Conversely, there were the creatures he loved, cherished as friends and often turned to when alliances needed to be formed. Humankind learned to exist by guidelines and rules, and thus the world went on, day after day, and man survived. Now, all men were not good, nor were all men bad, and so it was also with the giants, leprechauns, dwarfs, ghosts, pixies, pookas, vampires and other such beings.