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ONE OF PUBLISHERS WEEKLY'S BEST BOOKS OF THE YEARMaster storyteller Sharon Shinn has thrilled readers with her national bestselling Twelve Houses series. Now experience her original new novel in which love and loyalty are tested at every turn.... For fifteen years, Maria Devane has been desperately, passionately in love with Dante Romano. But Maria knows that Dante can never give everything of himself back - at least not all of the time. Every month, Dante shifts shape, becoming a wild animal. He can't choose when he shifts, the transition is often abrupt, and, as he gets older, the time he spends in human form is gradually decreasing.Maria has kept his secret since the beginning, knowing that their love is worth the danger. But when a string of brutal attacks occurs in local parks while Dante is in animal form, Maria is forced to consider whether the lies she's been telling about her life have turned into lies she's telling herself.



About the Author

Sharon Shinn

I've been writing stories and poems since I was eight years old. My first poem was about Halloween: "What is tonight? What is tonight?/Try to guess and you'll guess right. " Perhaps this inauspicious beginning explains why it took me till I was in my thirties to sell a novel. It occurred to me early on that it might take some time and a lot of tries before I was able to publish any of my creative writing, so I pursued a degree in journalism at Northwestern University so I'd be able to support myself while I figured out how to write fiction. I've spent most of my journalism career at three trade and association magazines - The Professional Photographer (which, as you might guess, went to studio and industrial photographers) , DECOR (which went to frame shop and art gallery owners) , and BizEd (which is directed at deans and professors at business schools) . My longest stint, seventeen years, was at DECOR. Many people don't know this, but I'm a CPF (Certified Picture Framer) , having passed a very long, technical test to prove I understood the tenets of conservation framing. Now I write about management education and interview some really cool, really smart people from all over the world. I mostly write my fiction in the evenings and on weekends. It requires a pretty obsessive-compulsive personality to be as prolific as I've been in the past ten years and hold down a full-time job. But I do manage to tear myself away from the computer now and then to do something fun. I read as often as I can, across all genres, though I'm most often holding a book that's fantasy or romance, with the occasional western thrown in. I'm a fan of Cardinals baseball and try to be at the ballpark on opening day. If I had the time, I'd see a movie every day of my life. I love certain TV shows so much that knowing a new episode is going to air that night will make me happy all day. (I'm a huge Joss Whedon fan, but in the past I've given my heart to shows all over the map in terms of quality: "Knight Rider," "Remington Steele," "Blake's 7," "Moonlighting," "The Young Riders," "Cheers," "Hill Street Blues," "X-Files," "Lost," "Battlestar Galactica"...you can probably fill in the gaps. And let's not forget my very first loves, "The Partridge Family," "Here Come the Brides" and "Alias Smith & Jones. ") I don't have kids, I don't want pets, and all my plants die, so I'm really only forced to provide ongoing care for my menagerie of stuffed animals. All my friends are animal lovers, though, and someone once theorized that I keep friends as pets. I'm still trying to decide if that's true.



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