Saturday, November 22, 2008

Feature in the BOLIVAR COMMERCIAL - "Darden North's Fresh Frozen"

LIFESTYLES
Darden North's Fresh Frozen
Thursday, Oct 09, 2008

Darden North, a former resident of Cleveland, is releasing his third medical mystery Fresh Frozen this week and plans on attending Octoberfest for a book signing Saturday.

Dr. North, son of Evelyn Hays North and the late Linton Darden North, is an obstetrician/gynecologist practicing in partnership at Jackson Healthcare for Women, but found time to write during quiet hours and late night shifts at the hospital.

He has written two books House Call and Points of Origin, and has continued in this same vein in Fresh Frozen.

In Fresh Frozen, a young policeman and his tormented wife fail miserably to produce a family, finding themselves outcasts of the renewed baby boom sweeping the United States. However, there is one last hope for them: a catalogue of human embryo and egg donors peddled by a woman whose standards are easily dismissed for the right price. Pursuing their futile attempts to become parents has nearly cost the wife her life and pushed the couple to the brink of bankruptcy. This seemingly last chance for Wesley and Carrie Sarbeck to satisfy their place as parents in Middle America unknowingly tosses them in the midst of a grisly murder, the world of Hollywood celebrities, and a heist of freshly frozen human embryos.

The lives of Sarbeck, international superstar Allyn Saxton, and socialite Cheryl Choice unknowingly collide at the Van Deman Institute, once a decaying brick building complex just north of Jackson, but now a state-of-the-art center for the treatment of infertility. While an Internet voyeur and thief looks on, each of the three women has her own reason for entering the Institute. However, as a result of subjecting herself to a concoction of hormones and surgical procedures, one of the three is gruesomely murdered in an intriguing twist of human greed, mental torment and medical science.

You can also feel good about purchasing this book at his booth during Octoberfest. North will give a portion of each autograohed book sold during the weekend to the Delta State University School of Nursing.
North continues to hone his craft and promises readers will spend a late night curled up on the couch with Fresh Frozen.

http://www.bolivarcom.com/index.cfm?event=news.view&id=DDDC0E5C-19B9-E2E2-6796FE406159B33B

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Doctor Pens Third Medical Thriller - Feature in THE CLARION LEDGER

--------------------------------------------------------------
Mississippi author and full-time physician Darden North is featured in an article by Billy Watkins of The Clarion Ledger. The article appears below:

October 19, 2008
Section: Southern Style
Edition: Metro
Page: 1F


Doctor pens 3rd medical thriller
Billy Watkins
bwatkins.clarionledger.com


By Billy Watkins

bwatkins.clarionledger.com


Darden North keeps a list of people he plans to invite to the premiere party when Hollywood turns one of his novels into a movie.


"If you're going to do what it takes to write books, you might as well dream big," says North, a Jackson ob-gyn for the past 23 years who has just released his third medical mystery thriller, Fresh Frozen (Ponder House Press, $26.95).


North, 52, has chosen to publish his books through independent sources, which used to mean certain death for a book. That has changed, in part, because of the success of books that were originally self-published.


Examples: The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller and The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield. Both have sold millions. Both were turned into major motion pictures.


North's first two novels, House Call and Points of Origin, have sold about 15,000 copies, he says. That may pale when compared to best-sellers such as John Grisham and Tom Clancy. But the average book sells fewer than 2,000 copies, according to Publishing Associates. By their scale - 7,000 or more copies sold - North is labeled "a star."


House Call and Points of Origin were nominated for awards by the Mississippi Institute for Arts and Letters and by the Southern Independent Book Association.


North, who has delivered "about 4,000" babies, became interested during the mid-1990s in collecting first-edition copies of Mississippi authors.


"Grisham, Nevada Barr, Martin Hegwood, Greg Iles," he says. "I would read their books at night for relaxation after a long day at the office.


"The more I read, the more I said to myself 'I can do this.' "


North began writing in his spare time. And he discovered something: "Writing was hard. But I still believed I could do it if I stuck to it."


It took him nearly 10 years to complete his first novel, House Call, which was released in 2005. He followed that in 2006 with Points of Origin.


"And I stuck to what I know - medicine and Mississippi," says North, who grew up in in the Delta town of Cleveland. "Then you throw in a murder here, a murder there and suddenly you've got a story that people want to read."


Fresh Frozen follows the same path as his first two, combining a Hollywood star, a mysterious death and the heist of freshly frozen human embryos from a Mississippi fertility clinic.


"I've been a fan since his first book," says Claire Aiken of Jackson. "I read the first page, and I was hooked."


Says Lee Ann Denton, 44, of Clinton: "Two things I like about Darden's books are that he really makes you feel like you know the characters personally, and the other is he captures the essence of Mississippi in the way he describes things." ·


To comment on this story, call Billy Watkins at (601) 961-7282.