Saturday, August 24, 2013

The Special Days at the End by Brenda Whiteside

Sprinklers say summer
Hot August nights are starting to wane. As I write this, it's my birthday - which signals to me the end of summer drawing near. As a young girl, school shopping was finished. On my birthday, I'd get those last few things I'd really wanted when we'd gone school shopping. Sneaky Mom.

Summer has never been my favorite season. I didn't like the heat of
Stormy summer skies
Golden squash from the summer garden
Phoenix, and I liked school. It still isn't my favorite season even though we spent nearly twenty years in Minnesota. Summer around the twin cities can be wonderful, especially compared to the heat of southern Arizona. Even in Northern Arizona the heat can do me in.

But there is something special about the end of summer. There's a change in the air and autumn holds more appeal for me. The mornings have been just a touch cooler here on the prairie so I can already look forward to the change.

Gabby, Xena and Rusty
I'm okay with the dog days of summer.




My summer short read releases exclusively on Amazon in a few days, August 27. Amanda in the Summer will take through three generations of women and their summers filled with love, pain, laughter and tears. 


Visit Brenda at www.brendawhiteside.com.
She blogs on the 9th and 24th of every month at http://rosesofprose.blogspot.com
She blogs about prairie life and writing at http://brendawhiteside.blogspot.com/

Friday, August 23, 2013

Vacations of All Sizes and Shapes by Margo Hoornstra


My turn to share about vacations, so here goes.

Pre-marriage, my parents would load my brother and me into the car each and every March for a three or four day drive from Michigan to Florida. We'd go way down the peninsula to Fort Myers Beach or the Keys. Always somewhere on the ocean. Once we arrived, a two bedroom beach house complete with deck would be our home for a month. Sun filled days. Playtime on the beach, sandbars at low tide.

So much to see. So much to explore.

Fast forward a decade or so. One marriage, a couple of super busy careers and a quartet of children.

With our kids, we mixed it up a bit. Took a motor home -- along with my parents -- to Quebec one year. Made some trips out of state to visit family. Did a full range of amusement parks, the kind it takes two or three days to properly enjoy. Sometimes we'd stay in hotels on those trips, most times we camped. Tents when we and the kids were a lot younger. Later an assortment of campers and travel trailers, usually borrowed from family or friends.

So much to see. So much to explore.

Where does the time go? Our kids are grown now and on their own, the jobs served their purpose and are no longer needed. So now what? Lest the high point of our summer becomes putting in new grass seed then watching it grow, it's time to make a change.

We've always enjoyed camping, though these days I need to sleep up off the ground with modern facilities readily available. The 'we should buy a travel trailer' bug bit us recently when our oldest son did just that. Soon after our oldest daughter followed suit. We're confident their younger siblings will fall in line shortly.

Because, you see, we bought one too. Just last week end. A one bedroom - though it supposedly sleeps six - one bathroom, with a large living room and roomy kitchen. Our maiden voyage is this week end. Today, in fact. Yikes! We aren't going far, and family will be with us at the campsite next door. Then we'll try flying solo - if you can call a couple solo.  Short trips at first, expanding their scope as we get more confident.

Future plans are to take our new home southwest to warmer climes this winter.  To the northwest and beyond next Summer. A trip up the eastern seaboard next Fall.

So much to see. So much to explore.

My days to blog here are the 11th and 23rd.

Otherwise, I can be found at:

My Blog       My Website       FaceBook       Twitter        Goodreads

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Perfect beach days in Jersey



Although I currently live in southern Virginia, I’m a Jersey Girl, a “tag” I give myself after spending my growing years in the Garden State, then raising my own family there. I love Jersey in many, many ways. But what I love most (aside from family and friends) are her beaches – 127 miles of Atlantic Ocean coastline stretching from Sandy Hook in the north to Cape May in the south.

From the time I was about 6 years old until 16, I spent every nice summer day in Sea Bright, a sliver of land between the ocean and river. In the winter, the town was battered by cold winds turned arctic in their flight over the Atlantic, making its citizens hunker down in their winterized homes. But in the summer, Sea Bright transformed into a Rockwell-esque vacation mecca for those of us who lived a few miles inland. We joined her beach clubs, ate at her pizza joints and shopped for bathing suits and records at the stores along Ocean Avenue. We had a ball in that picture-perfect little town.

It takes only a few minutes to bring back the memories, and once again I'm back in my mom's old Buick, making the 5-mile trek from home. Stuck in traffic on the drawbridge, I wonder how I can actually see the heat waves coming off the concrete. At the top of the bridge we catch our first glimpse of the water ahead…beyond the buildings lining the shore: The Atlantic, glistening brilliant shades of blue and silver-white in the mid-morning light, stretching for miles and miles and miles, all the way to the other half of the world. 

Mom drops my sister and me off and heads to work, and we make the short trip to the tiny locker we have for the summer. We load up our arms with our blankets and towels and bags of suntan lotion and books (always books) and other paraphernalia, and we lumber toward the sand to the symphony of gulls calling insults to each other as they dive-bomb for dropped crumbs in the parking lot. 

We reach the beach, kick off our flip-flops, and start the trek across sand that sinks under each step. The sand is hot – so hot we can nearly smell the soles of our feet singeing, so we drop towels to use as stepping stones. On our journey, we pass sun-bathers who’ve foolishly slathered themselves with baby oil and lotion intended to intensify the rays instead of block them. Some are reading, their eyes squinting against the sun’s glare, some are chatting, some are listening to the AM radio tuned to a Top 40 station, and some are sleeping, lulled by the heat of the day and the music of the sea.

We find a spot, spread our blanket, then sit to layer on our own suntan lotion, giving ourselves Mother Nature's body scrub from the mixed-in sand. I smell like the beach, and I don’t care.Wind rushes on shore, and I taste the brine in the air while I try to brush sand from my now sticky fingers.



We lean back, pretend to sleep, but keep an eye out for the young tanned and toned lifeguards running drills up and down the harder-packed shoreline. Those on guard scold bathers who’ve gone too far, their whistles shrill and sharp against the wind  buffeting our  ears. Waves crash against the beach, dumping laughing (and tumbling) wave-riders in their wake. 

Lovers stroll the shoreline, their hands joined, and I dream of some day having that. Moms and dads stand sentry while little ones play in the surf, and suddenly I'm too hot. I jump up to get my toes wet, then brave the chilled but bracing water and fight the tides forward. I make it past the break line and go weightless with each wave that rolls by on its way to shore.

A big one is cresting ahead, and with the under-toe sucking me forward, I race to meet it before it can break and knock me down.

I have to hurry. It’s curling, glistening metallic green, and just as it reaches its peak, I take a breath and dive through its center. For an instant I'm airborne, riding the wave as if it's a giant stallion. It passes beneath me yet carries me before lowering me as gently as a mother putting a newborn to bed. My feet touch the smooth, silky sand of the bottom, and my world is perfect. 

Footnote:   The tiny village of Sea Bright was nearly obliterated by Hurricane Sandy, and so many of the businesses I remember are gone. But I’m happy to report the town is coming back strong. Businesses are rebuilding and the beaches are open, ready to make more perfect memories.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Enough of the hot by Barbara Edwards

I love each season, but I'm tired of being hot and sweaty.
Remember winter? Remember the snow?

My Yard
How about the freezing wind? 

The dog has to go no matter what the temperature.

Bundled up to shovel off the porch and walks.
 Time to go inside and get warm!


Hope that my photos made you smile.

My new release from The Wild Rose Press, Journey of the Magi, is a Christmas story and will be available on Kindle on September 2, 2013.
Widow Noel Martin never breaks promises, and she promised her kids they’d have Christmas at her childhood home in Connecticut. But driving across country takes money. Noel is broke when a snowstorm blows them into a tiny Minnesota café owned by a man who can change her mind. She accepts his offer of a job. Despite her attraction to him, she makes it clear she is only temporary help.
Dan Longstreet isn’t adopting any more strays, but he needs a waitress. Dan works so hard to make his café a success, he doesn't have time for love. Though Noel’s slender blonde beauty stuns him and her two adorable children tug at his heart, he denies how they threaten to change his life.
When tragedy strikes, their new-found love is the first victim. Noel can't stay and Dan can't leave. Will their journey be the gift that reunites them? 

Visit me:  

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Victorian Mystery Romance - Win a Copy Today!

Laura Breck
I’m excited to offer an ecopy of my friend Joyce Proell’s book to one lucky commenter. I purchased the code when she gave a talk at our local RWA chapter meeting, and realized I already had a copy. 

It’s a fabulous book. Here’s the blurb: 

A Deadly Truth
  A man obsessed, a woman willing to risk it all… 

Tainted in the eyes of Victorian society by his wife’s suicide, successful entrepreneur Doyle Flanagan turns a deaf ear to the baseless gossip and harsh rebukes. Ignoring his shattered reputation, he goes about his business making money, doing some good for others and making a few enemies along the way. Arrested for murder, he is forced to rely on a feisty school administrator to solve the puzzle. As he struggles to prove his innocence, he realizes gaining the trust and loyalty of Cady Delafield may be more important than his freedom. 
 
On a quest to locate a missing student, school matron Cady Delafield enters a stranger’s house and discovers the woman murdered. Driven to see the murderer brought to justice, she is determined to prevent any further tragedy even if it means joining forces with the very man accused of the atrocity. Against the wishes of her powerful family, she risks her job and reputation to learn the truth. But will the truth, once revealed, drive her away from the man she has come to love?  

Passion and murder collide in 1880’s Chicago as they race to keep one step ahead of the police who want Doyle to pay for his crime. As the attraction between Cady and Doyle sizzles, they battle suspicions, lies and lethal actions to uncover the murderer before he destroys them both.  

* * *

Leave a comment for your chance to win an ecopy of A Deadly Truth and I'll chose a winner tomorrow.
 
Good luck!
Laura
~Smart Women ~Sexy Men ~Seductive Romance
LauraBreck.com
~Dancing in a Hurricane is available in digital formats at Amazon, Smashwords, and Barnes & Noble and in paperback at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Createspace
~Love in the Land of Lakes is available in digital format at Smashwords, All Romance Ebooks, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon, and in paperback at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Createspace

Monday, August 19, 2013

10 Things I hate about August by Alicia Dean

Instead of posting about vacations, I thought I would post about why August is my least favorite month of the year. But before I do, do you know how August got its name? No? Well, I’ll tell you. July was named for Julius Caesar. After Julius's grandnephew, Augustus, defeated Marc Antony and Cleopatra, and became emperor of Rome, the Roman Senate decided that he too should have a month named after him.

There, don’t you feel just a little bit smarter?

Okay, now for Ten Things I Hate About August:

1)      Back to school when I was a kid. Because, well, I had to go back to school
2)      Back to school when my kids were young. Because of school supply shopping, getting back in the hectic routine, buying school clothes, figuring out transportation, homework, etc
3)      My favorite all time entertainer died in August. Elvis Presley died on August 16th, 1977, and that date will always hold bad memories. I can remember exactly what I was doing the day I found out, down to every detail. I have found over the years, that most people, if they’re in the age range to remember things like this, remember hearing about Elvis’s death. Even if they were not fans. Whether or not you liked Elvis, you cannot deny the huge impact he had on the world. To this day, thousands upon thousands of fans flock to his home in Memphis Tennessee—fans of all ages and from all over the world. My kids, my niece and I went to Atlanta last month for a Vampire Diaries/MLB/RWA Conference. (Below is a picture of the three of them in front of Graceland. The tall blonde is my niece, the others are my kids). We spent the night in Memphis, which is the halfway mark, and toured Graceland. It never ceases to amaze me how many young people visit his home, wearing Elvis shirts, taking pictures, and being overwhelmed at his stardom. 


4)      All of my favorite shows are between seasons. There’s no Vampire Diaries, no True Blood, no Justified, no Dexter (soon to be no more Dexter ever, waahaaa!), no New Girl, etc. Nothing but reruns to get me through the long, hot summer. (Well, reruns and MLB, which is one of the few things I like about August).
5)      It’s hot. I mean really, really, unbearably hot. I am a winter person. I love the cold, dark, snowy, damp weather. (I think I should have been a vampire)
6)      School Zones (need I say more?)
7)      I am racing against the clock to finish Liberty Divided, Isle of Fangs Book 2 by my self-imposed deadline of August 31st, and I’m losing the race. (See below for my cover and info on Liberty Awakened Isle of Fangs Book 1)
8)      Okay…I can really only think of seven things I hate about August, but I thought the title was catchy since it played on the move, Ten Thins I Hate About You. I LOVE that movie, which did NOT come out in August. See…there’s number 8.

What month(s) are your least favorite and why? What month(s) are your favorite? (Mine’s December)



Evil lurks beneath the surface in the beauty of the tropics…

After graduation from her small, Oklahoma high school, Liberty Delacort is looking forward to a fun-filled summer before college. But when the people she trusts the most betray her, and a letter arrives claiming her deceased father is still alive, she jumps at the chance to travel to an exotic island to meet him.

But her excitement is short-lived. Her father is dying, and he doesn’t want her around. And, in spite of its outward tranquility, the island is filled with danger and ominous secrets. The secrets soon begin to unravel, and she discovers she is a descendant of Van Helsing, the vampire hunter.

The one up side is her budding romance with the sweet and sexy Ryan Kelly. But even that is threatened when—in spite of her fear of him—she finds herself attracted to an insolent, formidable vampire. Her plan to stay away from him fails when she learns he is the only one with the ability to train her to fulfill her destiny—to save humans from a faction of vicious vampires.

Will her inexperience lead to her death—and the death of others—or will she rise to the challenge and realize her full potential as a Hunter?

Available on Amazon

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Do Hot Covers Sell Books? by Jannine Gallant

Hot summer nights bring to mind a wealth of images. Some straight out of a romance novel... A couple standing in silhouette on a back lawn, hands clasped as they gaze up at  a star studded sky. Young lovers swimming beneath the moon in a secluded pool, just their heads visible as they look into each other's eyes. Tangled sheets revealing sweat dampened bare legs twined together... Three completely different images. I can picture them all on a book cover. But which one would sell the story?

Call me boring, but I tend to be attracted to scenery covers. A glimpse into the setting of the book. I may be boring, but I am versatile. I'm equally drawn to sweeping landscapes with dramatic mountains or a windswept, wide open plain or a homey scene featuring a back porch complete with a rocking chair. Yawn.

When my first few books were published, this is the type of cover I requested. The artists did add the inset of floating heads in several cases, apparently their attempt to liven things up. I was somewhat unnerved at first, but I got used to them. When my books released, I sat back and waited for my babies to sell. Okay, maybe I didn't just sit. I promoted. I blogged. I tweeted. I bored my friends on Facebook. Still, sales were dismal.

Then something happened that made me rethink my love affair with gorgeous scenery covers. For my cowboy book, Nothing But Trouble, I requested a barnyard scene complete with a bull in the background. The cover artist completely ignored me. When I got my first look at the cover, I nearly had a heart attack. No red barn. No fenced in bull. Instead, a hot cowboy with bulging muscles in an embrace with a very pretty girl. Yikes!

As hot covers go, this one is actually pretty tame. Remember what our mothers called books with bare chested heroes and women in undone dresses? Bodice Rippers. What would my friends and relatives think of this new book? They'd think I write smut, that's what! With trepidation, I boldly set out to promote this new book. And what do you know, it started selling! Okay, maybe not like Nora Roberts sells books, but sales for this one double all my others combined.

Is the story any better? I don't think so. Did I do more promotion? I'm not sure. Maybe. But a year and a half later, I still see a sale or two each week. Not great, but it's something. So, could it be that hot cowboy cover is selling the book? I'm not sure, but when the sequel comes out sometime next year, you can bet I'm going to ask for a good looking man on the front--hold the shirt!

Alright, ladies, let's hear it. Do your books with hot covers sell better? Or is my experience a fluke? What do you want to see on a book cover?

Find all my books with their tame covers on my website, and enjoy the rest of your hot summer nights reading a good book!