Traci Hunter Abramson was born in Arizona, where she lived until moving to Venezuela for a study-abroad program. After graduating from Brigham Young University, she worked for the Central Intelligence Agency for several years, eventually resigning in order to raise her family. And though Traci found her passion in caring for her family, she couldn’t manage to forget the action of the CIA, so she turned to writing about it. She has gone on to write a number of bestselling suspense novels that have consistently been nominated as Whitney Award finalists and won her first this year. She enjoys reading, writing, and coaching high school swimming.
Visit Traci: WEBSITE | BLOG | TWITTER | FACEBOOK | GOODREADS
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LDSWBR: What books do you plan/hope to read this summer?
TRACI: Since I have a daughter leaving for Taiwan in a few months, I’m sure I’ll be reading about that country as we prepare for her to leave. As for fiction, two novels that I’m really hoping to make time to read this summer are The House at Rose Creek by Jenny Proctor and Second Chances by Melanie Jacobson.
LDSWBR: Did you ever go to summer camp, and/or what is your most memorable camping experience?
TRACI: Believe it or not, one of my most memorable camp experiences happened just last year when I was one of the camp directors for girls’ camp. Trying to be helpful, I had suggested that some of the girls use a tarp to sit on after a rainstorm. They weren’t too happy with me when they discovered a slug wrapped up inside of it.
That evening my friend Tami and I were doing bed checks and the girls commented on the slug again, insinuating that I might have set them up to find it. After insisting that I really hadn’t tried to pull any practical jokes on them, Tami and I turned to check on the next tent. And the beam of our flashlight landed on a tree…and a big slimy slug.
Words weren’t needed. Tami tried to use a stick to collect the slug, unfortunately knocking on the ground. While we were looking in the leaves for it, I found another slug. Using a leaf, I picked up the smaller slug. After all, slugs really are slimy. Then we found the larger slug and Tami followed suit. On the count of three, we pulled open the tent flap and tossed both slugs inside.
Needless to say, I never have to research what it sounds like when ten teenage girls scream simultaneously.
LDSWBR: If you could have a summer home anywhere in the world, where would it be?
TRACI: That’s a tough one. I love the Finger Lakes region in New York, especially since my family loves canoeing and boating. For me, I really enjoy Virginia Beach, although I prefer it in the winter when it isn’t so crowded. Another place I would love to summer would be at a lakeside house at Smith Mountain Lake, also here in Virginia. I guess the short answer would be somewhere near the water.
LDSWBR: Thanks, Traci!
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Find Deep Cover
AMAZON (Paperback & Kindle) | DESERET BOOK (Paperback, ebook & CD) | SEAGULL BOOK (Paperback & CD) | GOODREADS
Twenty-eight-year-old Kelsey Weber is one of the CIA’s finest undercover agents. After two years under deep cover in Salman Nassar’s desert compound, she’s unearthed vital information on the volatile Middle Eastern extremist sect. When her allegiance is called into question, Nassar teaches her a lesson she won’t forget—with a bullet to the leg. Kelsey is whisked out of the field to recuperate in the safety of her missionary parents’ empty Virginia home. But civilian life proves to be more complicated than Kelsey anticipated when she meets FBI agent Noah Cabbott, the handsome neighbor tasked by her parents with safeguarding the family home in their absence. As their relationship deepens, she’s torn by her inability to divulge who—and what—she really is.
In a twist of fate, their separate investigations converge in a horrifying plot that threatens the nation’s security, and Kelsey’s identity is revealed. She and Noah have been assigned as members of a secret task force, united with one common goal: to thwart Nassar’s impending terrorist attack. As the situation grows increasingly dire, she is horrified to learn that there is a traitor in their midst: An agency mole has been leaking information to the enemy. Kelsey’s world is thrown into chaos with the shocking realization that nothing is as it seems, and each step toward the truth draws her deeper into a web of conspiracy more intricate and deadly than she dreamed . . .
Do you have a funny insect/slimy creature story?
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Book prizes generously donated by the authors as of 6/21/2013 (more added throughout the countdown!):
- A Blind Eye by Julie Daines (signed), a bookmark AND a Mind the Gap temporary tattoo
- I, Spy by Jordan McCollum (choice of paperback or ebook)
- Sworn Enemy by A.L. Sowards (choice of paperback or ebook)
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- A Change of Plans by Donna K. Weaver
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23 Responses to “Deep Cover by Traci Hunter Abramson – Countdown to Summer 2013”
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No thank goodness! I don’t like slimy creatures!
Well, snakes aren’t really slimy, and it’s not really a funny story, but something interesting that I’ve done is eaten (okay, I had a single bite of :-) ) snake.
Oh, snails are slimy! There was a snail that lived outside my front step once that I sort of thought of as my pet. :-)
While mowing our lawn we found some slimy frogs and even a newt! My kids loved holding them!
One time, I was riding my bike in the evening and once I had gotten home, I started getting ready for bed. I began brushing my teeth, but there felt like there were little lumps in my mouth. I spit out the toothpaste, and withing it, there were about 100 (more like 8 :D) little bugs that had flown into my mouth and had gotten tragically killed… Poor things :)
Just that our window well was about to flood and I had to get down on my knees to furiously scoop out the water. Just happened to scoop out a little snake. Little thing went flying off to the side and slithered away. I probably saved it from drowning.
I don’t think that insect and funny belong in the same sentence. I am not an insect fan, and especially not of the insects that bite.
We lived in Arizona, and we had a brother-in-law that was living with us as he worked on a job. One night we were eating dinner and the BIL all of a sudden said, “Ok, everyone’s feet up, there’s a scorpion under the table.” So everyone’s feet went up, and he and my hubby got the scorpion and disposed of it. That next week, the BIL was walking down the hallway, and as he passed my boy’s room he said “the boys left their toy snake in the hall.” I said “my boys don’t have a toy snake”. He then scooped it up and took it down to the field at the end of the street, thankfully without any bites. Oh those Arizona creatures.
Oh! I forgot! (Don’t count this comment as an entry.) One time when I was younger, I went on a motorcycle ride with a guy that I was dating. We doubled with another couple. When we got to our destination and took off our helmets, everyone started laughing at me. I was confused until they told me to look in the little mirror. I had put some lipgloss on right before the ride, and I guess that we had rode through swarms of bugs because I had a lot of them stuck to my lips.
Living in Texas, we get our fair share of bugs and snakes and other not-so-cute critters. I’m just feeling good if I can keep them out of the house!
I really dislike insects, so the only thing funny is probably how I freak out around them. Someday I might grow up and get over my fear, but it doesn’t seem to be happening.
No – and I hope it stays that way! Of course with one baby boy (and three girls), I bet that will change sometime soon……
No funny stories about slimy creatures and due to the fact that I do not like them that is fine with me .
Where I grew up if it rained a lot then our front walkway would have a ton of snails. I was often fascinated by them as a kid. I miss hardly ever seeing them now.
I LOVED this book!
Traci is one of my most favorite authors!
I try to avoid insects/slimy creatures at all costs!
um no? I hate 8 legged creepers. We don’t even say the “s” word in our house because I hate them so much.
I watched, unable to do anything, as my two year old stepped on a snake in my in- laws yard. I screamed as it slithered away. My son was completely unaware that anything had happened and started crying because I was screaming.
Growing up in Oregon we were all encouraged to lick a banana slug because of the numbing properties in the slime. Gross but cool.
Killed a spider during an EFY pizza party, I’m okay with killing bugs, which is good because most of my friends aren’t.
My sibling sand I once caught a wolf spider while we were hiking and kept it in a plastic cup with a book placed over the top for the entire ride home. We then proceeded to put it into an empty fish tank and fed it crickets that we caught for two weeks until my mom finally said that it needed to go because if it escaped she would be forced to burn the house down. So the sad day came when we walked a block down the road and let her (she was a fiery one so we assumed she was female) go in a construction sight.
I love all of Melanie’s books and have lovingly gotten many others hooked on them as well! Keep up the fantastic work Melanie! ( and if you could have more come out soon that would be great :-) )
When i was a boy, I threw my two pet salamanders in the bathtub–where my sister was bathing. She remembers that less fondly than I.
Insects and slimy creatures are never funny. Only gross and scary.
Does being bit by a water snake count? I have some other bug stories, but having a snake gnaw at my knuckle definitely takes the cake.