Tag Archives: Eden Glenn

Author Spotlight – Anne Eton

It is my pleasure today to welcome Anne Eton to my Author Spotlight.

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BIO:

I write first-time F/F erotic romance. I love what I do!

My stories always involve a woman who has sex with another woman for the first time. I write story, not just torrid descriptions of acts. I like to build the tension.

If you would like to know when I publish new books, click to join my New Release Mailing List at anneeton.com. I will not reveal your email to anyone, for any reason.

Thanks for reading!

Anne

SITE:

http://www.anneeton.com

1. Who is your favorite character in this book and why?

In The Beard I like Anna. She’s a very extreme kind of character: so outrageous and larger-than-life. The kind of person you either love or hate, you know? There’s no in-between. Anna falls for Kelly hard, it’s kind of love at first sight, and being Anna of course she is totally inappropriate from the get-go! Kelly’s shocked but deep down she responds to the kind of primal, reckless person that Anna is. I’ve never known anybody quite like Anna. Some come close but they are like a seven on the outrageous scale where Anna’s an eleven.

Incidentally, the audiobook will be arriving imminently and the voice actor captured Anna so well! Sexy, confident and naughty.

That is great news Anne! I also narrate professionally(as J.R. Lowe with Killian Group) and I can tell you it is a perfect moment when the author LOVES what the voice actor has done with the manuscript. E.G.

2. What inspires you for your stories?

True stories. Either I’ve heard them or read about them. It’s all grist for the mill.

3. Tell us something no one else knows about you.

 My favorite food ever is fried pickles! So good.

OMG! My favorite is fried pickles too!  Have you had fried olives?  There was a little pub down in Cocoa Village that would take different kinds of olives, stuff them with interesting kinds of cheese, roll them in bread crumb batter and fry those little suckers to nuggets of tongue succulent perfection.

4. What genre classification would you put on your book and what would you consider the heat level of the romance?

For The Beard I’d say the genre’s romantic comedy. I’d give it a 4.5 out of 5 on the heat level, just for the scene at the end. The tension between Anna and Kelly builds and when they finally become intimate, it’s pretty intense.

Sounds delightful!

 I find it interesting that you are exploring the theme of first time lesbian sex for your characters.E.G.

5. When did you start writing and what kicked off your passion to be an author?

In the mid-Nineties, I wrote a few F/F erotica and romance short stories but didn’t really do anything with them. It was just fun. When the self-publishing boom hit, I thought, “Huh: I wonder if I can actually earn something from writing?” So after wrestling with my insecurities, I began my career just a few months ago, in January. I do everything myself: covers, editing, you name it. Everything I’ve published is new fiction, by the way, I haven’t recycled anything from the old days! It’s been a great ride so far, and I’m amazed and touched by the thousands of people who have purchased my books. They are who I write for. I guess that’s where my real passion comes from.

The Beard

by Anne Eton

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 BLURB:

When tall, pretty Kelly interviews at Washington D.C.’s premier LGBT-centric lobbying firm, she claims she has a girlfriend. Nothing could be further from the truth; she’s never even kissed a girl. Kelly’s hired. However, a suspicious co-worker keeps inquiring about her girlfriend. To keep her lies straight, Kelly bases her fictional partner on Anna, an aggressive, gorgeous lesbian friend of a friend. But when the firm’s annual Christmas party looms, Kelly’s forced to produce her mysterious girlfriend. The real Anna agrees to be Kelly’s “beard”—her fake date. But at the party, alcohol flows… and Anna’s all over Kelly. Kelly pretends to her office mates that her “girlfriend’s” advances are perfectly normal—even as she feels her resistance to the beautiful woman melting away.

The Beard is a comedy with sexy scenes and some explicit passages.

First-time F/F erotic romance. Adults only. Over 15,000 words.

EXCERPT:

Kelly stumbled, tipsy. Anna guided her with a sure hand to the office supply room, opening the door and escorting her inside.

“Hey! Office supplies,” Kelly said with false cheer. She looked around nervously. “You need some gel pens? Ha, ha!”

Anna smirked. She shut the door behind them and pressed the doorknob’s button, locking it.

“Or paper clips, or toner,” Kelly babbled, casually backing away. “It’s a regular Staples in here!”

“Yes,” Anna replied. The blonde gave Anna a sexy look and flipped a wall switch. The room went dark.

“I think we should talk about expectations,” Kelly said in the pitch black, as if discussing the price of a car. “I admit, I did sort of use you for my own ends…”

“Yes.”

Kelly felt Anna’s hands. The tall girl backed away; she came up against waist-high pallets of paper boxes.

“You see,” Kelly gasped, “I know we’re supposed to be pretending that you’re my girlfriend—”

“Yes… yes…” Anna murmured. She began slipping Kelly’s dress up as the taller girl moved awkwardly against the immovable cartons.

BUY LINKS:

The Beard is available exclusively for the Kindle at:

http://www.amzn.to/147o8Vr

Author Spotlight – Jennifer Wilck

Today my guest for Author Spotlight is Jennifer Wilck.  My interview questions reveal a complex woman who has found expression through writing. Take a look and enjoy, my new friend and fellow Rebel Ink Press author,  Jennifer Wilck.

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Biography

When I was a little girl and couldn’t fall asleep, my mother would tell me to make up a story. Pretty soon, my head was filled with these stories and the characters that populated them. Each character had a specific personality, a list of likes and dislikes, and sometimes, even a specific accent or dialect. Even as an adult, I think about the characters and stories at night before I fall asleep, or in the car on my way to or from one of my daughters’ numerous activities (hey, anything that will drown out their music is a good thing).

One day, I started writing them down (it was either that or checking into the local mental hospital—the computer was way less scary). Since then, I’ve published two contemporary romances with Whiskey Creek Press. The Seduction of Esther is my first book with Rebel Ink Press, and I’m excited to be part of their team.

In the real world, I’m the mother of two amazing daughters and wife of one of the smartest men I know. I enjoy spending time with my family and friends, reading, traveling and watching TV. In between chauffeuring my daughters to after-school activities that require an Excel spreadsheet to be kept straight, I serve on our Temple Board and volunteer for way more things than I have time to do. I also write freelance articles for magazines, newspapers, and edit newsletters.

When all of that gets overwhelming, I retreat to my computer, where I write stories that let me escape from reality. In my made-up world, the heroines are always smart, sassy and independent. The heroes are handsome and strong with just a touch of vulnerability. If I don’t like a character, I can delete him or her; if something doesn’t work, I can rewrite it. It’s very satisfying to be in control of at least one part of my life.

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Samara Goldberg has a problem even the most beautiful singing voice can’t fix. She’s a walking disaster, especially when she’s around handsome men. To make matters worse, she’s in desperate need of someone to play the character of Mordecai for the Purim spiel she’s producing and the new congregant, Nathaniel Abramson, is a perfect fit. Nathaniel is a divorced dad who’s recovering from the biggest public scandal of his life. The last thing he needs is a relationship with the choir director at his new synagogue, who also happens to be playing the lead female role of Esther in the very play he’s been coerced into joining.

Woven around the Jewish holiday of Purim, The Seduction of Esther is a story of two people whose lives mirror the plot of the Purim story. Like Esther, who had to hide her Jewish identity from the King of Persia, Samara and Nathaniel are hiding key pieces of themselves. Evil Haman wanted to destroy the Jews, and the nasty Josh will do anything to keep Samara and Nathaniel apart. Will their love survive, like the Jewish people in Shushan, Persia, or will their fear keep them apart?

1.    Who is your favorite character in this book and why? 

I love the heroine, Samara, in The Seduction of Esther. While I am many things, one thing I’m not is a klutz, and she is. It was so much fun to write about the escapades she gets herself into. Most of Samara’s klutziness comes out when she’s around men she’s attracted to, so I really enjoyed putting her into situations with the hero to see how she reacts, and then with another man who likes her but whose feelings are not reciprocated. Hopefully the reader will laugh as much as I did!

2. What inspires you for your stories?

I get my inspiration from many places. Sometimes from minor characters on TV, sometimes from people I see during the course of my day. Once I got inspiration from a billboard. Actually, The Seduction of Esther revolves around the Jewish holiday of Purim, so my friends at Temple are dying to see if anyone they know is in the book.

In all seriousness, for this story, I wanted to write a romance that had Jewish elements in it, much like so many of the romances have Christian elements—Christmas, wedding in a church, etc. So I took one of the holidays, Purim, and used it as the theme for the book. One of the main themes of Purim is hiding one’s identity, and the hero and heroine in The Seduction of Esther have things that they hide from others as well.

3 Tell us something no one else knows about you.

I think that’s a trick question, since there’s probably a reason on one knows certain things about me.

Yes, Jennifer, I’m sneaky like that — E.G. LOL

Most people know (or soon figure out) that I hate public speaking. However, what they don’t know is that I used to do it all the time when I was working as an editor of trade magazine. I spoke at conferences and seminars and led panel discussions about all sorts of techie topics. My problem with public speaking is doing it in front of people I know. I’m not sure if that says more about my friends  or about me, though.

4. What genre classification would you put on your book and what would you consider the heat level of the romance?

The Seduction of Esther is a contemporary romance with a Jewish theme. As for heat level, I’d say moderate. There are sex scenes, but they’re not excessively graphic.

5.   When did you start writing and what kicked off your passion to be an author?

I’ve always loved writing and have been writing in one form or another for as long as I can remember. However, I started “officially” writing romance when my oldest daughter was about six years old. I was watching TV one night and an idea for a story popped into my head. I ran to my computer and began writing it down. Three books later and I haven’t stopped writing. I’m hoping for a lot more books to be published in the future.

I can be reached at www.jenniferwilck.com or http://www.facebook.com/pages/Jennifer-Wilck/201342863240160. I tweet at @JWilck. My blog (Fried Oreos) is www.jenniferwilck.wordpress.com and I contribute to Heroines With Hearts at www.heroineswithhearts.blogspot.com.

Jennifer I love the cover and the premise for the book sounds very interesting. Here is an excerpt that put this on my must read list. E.G.

Nathaniel logged out of Facebook and leaned back in his desk chair. It squeaked in protest. The application had suggested a number of potential “friends” for him and as usual, he’d ignored them. But this time, the names filled him with a twinge of unease. Both names had been from his old synagogue. Both people knew of his past. The past he’d do anything not to repeat. Which is why today’s time with Samara puzzled him.

He couldn’t deny his attraction to her. The past few weeks he’d tried to deny it and it hadn’t gotten him anywhere. Her appearance at the Met had surprised him, although he wasn’t sure why. He was bound to run into people he knew in the city—it was big, but crossing paths wasn’t unheard of or unexpected.

His heart beat faster as he remembered the warmth of her hand in his, the syncopation of their steps as they meandered through the galleries, the mutual looks they’d exchanged at a comment of Zoe’s. She was real, natural and warm. She made him feel things he didn’t want to feel, wasn’t ready to feel, but couldn’t deny. When they were together, electricity filled the air. His senses went on hyper-alert. The scent of her perfume filled his nostrils and he longed for more—and he didn’t even like perfume. His skin tingled at her nearness, every hair on his arm and neck stood on end and it was as if he could determine her exact position in the room in relation to himself like a compass. He could stare at her for hours, read every emotion on her expressive face, gaze into the endless pools of brown liquid as she looked back at him. He knew her emotions from the tone of her voice and her singing made him forget who and where he was. His mouth went dry at the thought of kissing her, tasting her skin. He shook his head to clear it. At this rate, he’d never get any sleep tonight. As he rose and went to bed, the only thing he could think of was Samara.

Find “The Seduction of Esther” and Jennifer’s other work at all fine e-book vendors.

Buy Links for The Seduction of Esther

Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/The-Seduction-of-Esther-ebook/dp/B00D4J6A80/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1370452674&sr=8-3&keywords=jennifer+wilck

Barnes & Noble:  http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-seduction-of-esther-jennifer-wilck/1115470189?ean=2940016445038

AllRomance: https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-theseductionofesther-1216717-162.html

Author Spotlight – Andi Marquette

Andi Marquette is my guest today for Author Spotlight.  She is an amazingly talented woman and funny as a whip. She writes F/F romance fiction.  She is a fellow NaNoWriMo alumni.  One lucky commenter will receive an E-version of her book so tell us if you like F/F romance and want to be considered for a free copy of her book and with that I give you Andi Marquette.

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  1.   Who is your favorite character in this “From the Boots Up” and why? 

First, thank you so much, Eden, for having me along for a bit of a ride!

Okay. Characters in Boots.

I dig all of ’em.

All right, all right. How about Meg and Gina, the protagonists? I have always had a soft spot in my heart for those two. Meg grew up on the family ranch in Wyoming (which is a working/dude ranch). Ranching and animals are in her blood and soul, and that’s why she wants to go to vet school. She’s practical and hard-working, but like her dad (who you will meet in this novella) she has a wry sense of humor and a deep love of the land. I grew up in rural Colorado, and Meg taps into those roots of mine. Gina, on the other hand, is a reporter from Los Angeles who’s got to come out to the ranch and do a story on dude ranching as an industry. Like Meg, she’s driven about what she does, but she’s a little more laid back about some things and she has a great sense of humor, which Meg keeps up with pretty well and it creates a nice rapport between them. I like Gina’s humor, and I like how it shows when she flirts. She’s confident but kind, and adaptable.

Gina would be the person I’d call if I needed somebody to bail me out of a Tijuana jail. Meg’s who I would call to haul my car out of a ditch in a full-on blizzard. Or save me from a stampede.

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2. What inspires you for your stories?

Hell, everything and anything. I started writing my New Mexico-based mystery series when I was living in Nashville, Tennessee (I’m no longer there) and I was totally homesick for Albuquerque. I was born in Albuquerque, and ended up going back in the early 90s for grad school. I stayed for over twelve years then moved to Nashville (then back to Colorado). So homesickness started that series. I started writing my sci fi series one super cold winter that I spent on Colorado’s Western Slope. I think I was kind of tired of the piles of snow and frigid temps that went on for weeks. So I wrote the first novel in that series that winter, and it was set in a desert. Hot and dry. Heh. Funny, what your subconscious can do.

I also find inspiration in mundane things every day. An overheard comment at work. An interesting story on NPR. An article in Outside magazine. I make up stories all the time about strangers. I try to figure out who they are and what kinds of lives they live, and what kinds of characters they’d be in a movie or a book. And over the years, I’ve ended up in some pretty interesting places, where I’ve met some fascinating people. But you don’t have to travel to get stories. Every day, it’s possible to meet somebody who inspires something or see something that does. You just never know what’s going to happen in a day. I love that.

3. Tell us something no one else knows about you.

How about I tell you something that not many people know, as opposed to no one? Heh!

Let’s see…I’ve played piano (lessons for years as a child) and drums (taught myself). Not so much these days, and I’m super rusty, but I didn’t lose my taste for music even when I drifted away from playing instruments. I’m a music fanatic and have been since I was a kid. I’ve also been a radio DJ and I DJ’ed at a small club in Albuquerque for a bit.

 

4. What genre classification would you put on your novella and what would you consider the heat level of the romance?

F/F romance. I’d put the heat level at warm to hot. There’s sexual tension and flirting throughout and what I’d call explicit (though hopefully tasteful) sexuality. I’ve gotten great comments from readers since I released From the Boots Up and one of the more common is “smokin’!”

5. When did you start writing and what kicked off your passion to be an author?

I’m one of those authors who’s just always been writing. I also read incessantly as a child (and haven’t stopped), so I’m sure that played a role in my wanting to craft stories, too. I did write a lot more nonfiction for a few years because of grad school, but the fiction thing has always been in my life. I think I wrote my first story in grade school. No, maybe before that. I wrote two atrociously bad novels when I was in high school, along with a slew of cringe-worthy angsty poetry in college. The poetry got a little better; I’ve had a few poems published here and there. In now-defunct publications, of course. Heh. I also wrote a couple more novels in college. I sent my first short stories out for consideration when I was working on my master’s degree in Denver. I was writing a lot of speculative fiction then, and I sent several stories for consideration to the late Marion Zimmer Bradley, who was doing the Sword and Sorceress series at the time. She sent me rejection letters with really great advice and encouragement. And she personally signed them. That’s a rare thing, and I think had I not gotten those letters, I may not have eventually come back to writing fiction. I still have them.

Anyway, I finally started really writing fiction in the mid-2000s after I came across some of the novels I’d written in college in my parents’ storage shed on a visit to Colorado (I was living in Nashville at the time). The manuscripts weren’t horrible. They weren’t that good, certainly, but the stories were actually kind of cool. So I thought, “Huh. Maybe I can turn some of this into something or jumpstart something else.” So I wrote two novels that summer. One prior to November and then I did NaNoWriMo and hammered out what became the first book in my New Mexico mystery series, which ended up winning a couple of awards after it was published. Then I just…kept writing. Maybe it’s a sickness. Oh, well. I’ve got it, and I don’t think there’s a cure. Guess I’ll just have to write more. Stay tuned…

And thanks again for having me along. Really appreciate it.

Here’re my deets.

For more information about my work, excerpts, freebie F/F romance short stories, and links to buy, come on down to my website: http://www.andimarquette.com

From the Boots Up is available on Kindle here: http://www.amazon.com/From-the-Boots-Up-ebook/dp/B00BRBZ3HG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1370045797&sr=8-1&keywords=andi+marquette

My other F/F romance novella, Some Kind of River, is also available on Kindle:

http://www.amazon.com/Some-Kind-of-River-ebook/dp/B006YHTV1M/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1370045797&sr=8-3&keywords=andi+marquette

And if you read F/F fiction, come on down to Women and Words, where I also blog. http://www.lesbianauthors.wordpress.com

Andi Marquette writes mysteries:
Land of Entrapment (2008)
State of Denial (2008)
The Ties that Bind (2009)
Day of the Dead (forthcoming 2013)
and sci fi:
Friends in High Places (2009)
A Matter of Blood (2011)
The Edge of Rebellion (2013)
and romance:
Some Kind of River (2012)
From the Boots Up (2013)

Guest today Helen Ogrodnick

Helen is one of my Rebel Ink Press peers.  She is unlike any of the other Rebel Ink Press authors that I’ve developed friendships with over the years.  Because, you see… Helen wrote Dear Elvira when she was 77 years old.  Yes Helen is a real rebel! Her first chapter is available for a free read on the Rebel Ink Press blog.

5x6 Elvira

Blurb for Dear Elvira

    Matt Joplin was a small town boy who moved to the city after graduating from high school in Amherst, Texas. He was the product of divorced parents because of an incident which left Matt heartbroken.  After moving to Lubbock, he was fortunate to land a job at the City Newspaper.  After a few years of working at the newspaper, he developed close friendships with some of the other employees and was asked to join their bowling team. Here he met an older gentleman and his granddaughter, whose family values made a lasting impression on him. Not only did the other employees like and respect Matt, Grace, took him shopping to introduce him to “modern” fashion.  Matt was given a special assignment by his editor, the nature of which was to remain a secret.  Two of the other newsmen and Matt were sent to a nearby city to cover an important event.  There, his co-workers were introduced to Matt’s father and his stepfather, both of whom were very wealthy and influential men. Matt decided he wanted to use his job as a reporter to make a difference in the lives of people less fortunate than he.

Then there was this certain girl…..

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Author Spotlight with Robin Roseau

Today my author spotlight is with the very talented Robin Rouseau. Pass the link along and lets visit with her today.

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1. Who is your favorite character in this book and why? 

Michaela, of course 🙂 I love her feisty attitude, and she is always surprising me.

I love characters who are strong but also flawed in some way. Real people have flaws. Michaela has her history and is “excitable” as she is described in a later book. Lara can be very heavy-handed and overly direct in how she treats Michaela. I didn’t think about them this way when I started writing; I let the characters decide who they are.

2. What inspires you for your stories?

I am fascinated by so many things. I don’t suffer from ADHD, but sometimes I feel like it, drawn from one interest to another.

One of the things that fascinates me is the power relationship between two people. In a relationship, power is rarely equal. One is stronger, smarter, earns more money, or just generally more dominant.

In the Fox stories, I wanted to explore that. I wanted to take two stubborn people and put them together. Lara is heavy-handed and direct, and Michaela is stubborn and feisty. That is how they started — in my head, I had a scene of Lara being exceedingly heavy-handed with Michaela. At the time, I didn’t even realize they were werewolf and were fox, and they certainly didn’t have names. I simply wanted to explore what would happen next.

I never wrote that scene, but I worked around it, and now we have the results.

3. Tell us something no one else knows about you.

Oh dear. That may be difficult. I am pretty open to the people who know me the best.

I grew up in the 60s, so our younger audience may not appreciate this. But growing up, I had a huge crush on Catwoman from television. I could be quite jealous of the attention she gave to Batman.

Oh wait, maybe I wasn’t supposed to share something quite so revealing about myself.

4. What genre classification would you put on your book and what would you consider the heat level of the romance? 

The Fox stories are dual listed in lesbian romance and paranormal romance.

I’m not sure about the “heat level”. I am turned on by setting and attitude far more than graphic love scenes. But there are a few of those, and they seem to be well-received.

5. When did you start writing and what kicked off your passion to be an author?

I have been writing since I was very young. I remember writing my first story when I was seven years old. It wasn’t remotely original, but it got things moving.

I wrote more in high school and really ramped up in college, but none of it really went anywhere.

I’ve now been writing seriously for about fourteen years, but it is only recently I have begun publishing. I have a backlog of stories and novels to get out the door some day, but right now, I am focusing on new works. I haven’t published any of the backlog yet.

As for the passion — it’s not something that I can control. The stories get into my head, and then they scream at me to climb out. If I don’t write them down, they fill my thoughts for weeks; I go around and around with them. I am much happier when I surrender to the need and start typing.

Fox Run Blurb

Michaela Redfur is a were fox living a quiet life in Bayfield, Wisconsin. She has a quiet job that gets her out of doors and avoids the werewolves as if her life depended on it. Which it does.

That all changes early one morning when Lara Burns, the Madison Wolves alpha, introduces herself, much to Michaela’s chagrin. Lara explains to Michaela that “we only want to talk”, but when a werewolf comes knocking on a tiny, delicate foxes’ front door, Michaela knows talking is the last thing in the wolfy mind.

This novel is 93,000 words and is the first in in The Madison Wolves Series.

Robin’s Bio

A writer by avocation, Robin has a renaissance interest in many areas. A bit of a gypsy, Robin has called a few places home and has traveled widely. A love of the outdoors, animals in general and experimenting with world cuisines, Robin and partner share their home with a menagerie of pets and guests, although sometimes it is difficult to discern who is whom.

Robin can be reached via email at robin.roseau@gmail.com or found on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/robin.roseau

Buy Links

Fox Run: http://www.amazon.com/Fox-Run-Madison-Wolves-ebook/dp/B00CK69NMI

Fox Play: http://www.amazon.com/Fox-Play-Madison-Wolves-ebook/dp/B00CKIJAD8

Stark’s Dell: http://www.amazon.com/Starks-Dell-ebook/dp/B00BZZG1G6

Cooking for Love: http://www.amazon.com/Cooking-for-Love-ebook/dp/B00CABG1OQ

Southern Night: http://www.amazon.com/Southern-Night-ebook/dp/B00CB2YLL4

Oklahoma

I am moved beyond words for the loss the folks in Oklahoma are experiencing.

We lived in Florida for many years. Hurricane Haven. The thing about a hurricane though is you have time to leave…days usually. Tornadoes, humm, not so much.

We lost our house and belongings during the Hurricane, Charlie, Jean, Frances, Katrina 2005 mess.  Jean and Frances took us out.  Probably little tornadoes in the storm.  We were able to evacuate safely prior to the storm.

I took the family photo albums, clothes, provisions.

The three things I wish I had taken

1. Christmas Ornaments. – The kids had a collection of ornaments that dated back one per year from the time they were born. I had ornaments hand made by my mother, grandmother, great grandmother. Small hand blown glass ones over a hundred years old.

2. My oldest had written a little chapter book and illustrated it called “Buckwheat the Wonder Pony” That is a cherished thing that can’t ever be replaced.

3. My college box with research papers from school, my diplomas and yearbooks.

I really don’t miss anything else. We were able to save the family china, after the storm.

Odd huha?

I saw a video clip of an older woman talking about the storm in Oklahoma.  I started crying. She talked about how she sat on a stool in the bathroom holding her dog. She recounts her experience and finding herself under the rubble of her house…seeing light and crawling out from under the debris. Her little dog wasn’t with her. She said, he must be under there somewhere. She didn’t have to say, dead.

Then there is a movement from off to the right. The camera pans over and there is something moving. The dog is under some bits of her house. She goes over and starts pulling stuff off of him telling the reporters “help me”. Her reunion with the dog broke me up.

You can replace stuff…most stuff. You can’t replace life. My thoughts for those folks who lost the lives of their children and those they love.

Author Spotlight – Abigail Sharpe

Today my guest is the brilliant, funny, one of my very best friends, my breast buddy, Abigail Sharp. She is my breast buddy because when I was recovering from Breast Cancer and had dropped out to hide from the medical community….there is only so much poking and prodding a person can stand… (anyway) Abigail dragged me to the doctor again to be sure I was still in remission and shared her wonderfully talented friend and cancer reconstruction surgeon with me who completely changed my life. BUT! That is a whole nother story.  Enjoy her interview

Abigail

Biography

Abigail is a Boston-bred Yankee now eating grits and saying “y’all” in North Central Florida. She dreamed more of being a stage actress or joining the CIA than being an author. While she still enjoys participating in community theater productions and singing karaoke, the secret-agent career was replaced by hours at her computer, writing stories of love and laughter and happily ever after.

Abigail lives with her husband, two kids, and one crazy princess puppy. She is part of a kitchen blog with friends – chickletsinthekitchen.com – and you can keep up with her on Goodreads or at her website – http://www.abigailsharpe.com

 

 

WWTMACCOVER

 

1. Who is your favorite character in this book and why? 

My favorite character is the one I’m writing at the moment.  *laugh*  Of course I adore Ainsley and Riley in Who Wants to Marry a Cowboy, so I’m going to leave them out of the running and go with Quinn Donnelly.  He’s the brother of a secondary character who’s getting married (the secondary character, not Quinn) and he’s all blue-eyed, dark-haired Irish charm.  It doesn’t hurt that he’s the hero in the next story, Who Wants to Marry a Doctor?  And no, he’s not the doctor.

2. What inspires you for your stories?

Who Wants to Marry a Cowboy? was HEAVILY influenced by reality TV shows like The Bachelor.  Some men don’t want the attention of many women trying to lasso their hearts.  I thought, how funny would it be if the poor guy didn’t want to be there?  And cowboys are so hot and sexy that it made finding the hero so much easier

3. Tell us something no one else knows about you.

I used to suck my toes.

Not for any purpose, really.  Just the fact that I could do it was enough.

Though I did have a boyfriend who liked to suck my toes.  That was a little weird for me.  I don’t like anyone but me touching them. Pedicures are more of a cringe-fest than any kind of relaxing.

My husband, however, has found the perfect way of massaging my feet, so I’m okay when he touches them.

4. What genre classification would you put on your book and what would you consider the heat level of the romance?

Contemporary fun and flirty romance.  Boy meets girl, boy does something stupid and loses girl, boy redeems himself and gets the girl.  It takes place on earth, in the present time, and without vampires.

As for the heat level – well, there are naked bodies and I don’t close the door.  But it’s one man-one woman and no gadgets.  What does that make it?  Am I 25 Shades of Vanilla?

5.   When did you start writing and what kicked off your passion to be an author?

I’m not one of those “I always knew I wanted to be a writer” types.  I’m more of the “I read a really awful book and thought I could do better” type.  But let me tell you, now that I’ve written one, I have a lot more respect for the author who penned that book.  And I’ve also realized that just because I don’t like a book, it doesn’t mean the book is bad.  It means only that the book is not for me.

Available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble

“Charming and witty. Abigail Sharpe will delight you.”– New York Times bestselling author Christie Craig

“A rich and rustic tale of family, friendship, and love guaranteed to lasso your heart.” — Jessica Lemmon, author of TEMPTING THE BILLIONAIRE

In the bestselling tradition of Lori Wilde…

SOMETHING BORROWED, SOMEONE NEW . . . 

There’s nothing florist Ainsley Fairfax won’t do to help her sister get the love of her life-even if it means taking her place on a bachelorette weekend at a Wyoming ranch so Cecelia can sail off with the man of her dreams. Ainsley is determined to spend the time keeping her head down and her heart safely tucked away-until an encounter with the ranch’s hunky owner gets her heart-and steamy desires-to bloom . . .

Riley Pommer doesn’t want to be lassoed into any relationship. But with the family ranch in dire straits, Riley knows his sisters’ crazy plan to turn the ranch into the setting for a dating competition-and using Riley as the bait-is the only thing standing between them and foreclosure. But the rules of the game change the instant Riley lays eyes on the spirited Ainsley. Now, as others try to stampede over their love, can Riley prove to Ainsley that true love is a prize worth fighting for?

Mother’s Day Thoughts

I am exhausted after a whirlwind emotional trip to drop my youngest off at college. The nest is officially empty and I run a gamut of emotional over that realization. Mother’s day is next week my first with all the kids “gone”.

Last month I met a brilliant woman, A librarian by profession and talented in a plethora of ways yet she has not had the experience of being a mother … nor did she have a particularly nurturing mother herself. She shared with me the “other” side of Mother’s Day in a talk she did for her church. The talk opened doors that people might prefer left shut. But in a very visceral way I came to understand the pain many women experience.  Take a read it is well worth your time.

(reprinted here with her permission)

In Anticipation of Mother’s Day

 

A daughter’s journey towards a peace with Mother’s Day.

 

byJill Ellern

 

Presented to Boone Unitarian Universalist Fellowship on May 6, 2012 and Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Franklin, NC on May 8, 2011

 

First, I want to do a reading from the children’s book, Are you my mother? By P.D Eastman

Also available from on YouTube at: http://www.splicd.com/x4Koi-RJATE/0/159

 

A mother bird sat on her egg.

The egg jumped.

“Oh oh!” said the mother bird.  “My baby will be here! Hewill want to eat”

“I must get something for my baby bird to eat!” she said “I will be back”

So away she went.

The egg jumped.  It jumped and jumped and jumped, and jumped!Out came the baby bird.

“Where is my mother?”he said.

He looked for her.

He looked up.  He did not see her.

He looked down he did not see her.

“I will go and look for her,” he said.

So away he went.

Down, out of the tree he went.

Down, down, down! It was a long way down.

The baby bird could not fly.

He could not fly, bu the could walk.  “Now I will go and find my mother,” He said.

He didn’t know what his mother looked like.  He went right by her.  He did not see her.

He came to  a kitten.  “Are you my mother?” He said to the kitten.

The kitten just looked and looked.  It did not say a thing.

The kitten was not his mother, so he went on.

Then he came to a hen.  “Are you my mother?” he said to the hen.  “No,” said the hen.

The kitten was not his mother.  The hen was not his mother.  So the baby bird went on.

I have to find my mother!” he said.  “But where? Where is she? Where could she be?”

Then he came to  a dog.  “Are you my mother?” he said to th edog.

“I am not your mother.  I am a dog,” said the dog.

The kitten was not his mother.  The hen was not his mother.  The dog was not his mother.  So the baby bird when on.  Now he came to a cow.

“Are you my mother?” he said to the cow.

“How could I be your mother” said the cow.  “I am a cow.”

The kitten and the hen were not his mother.  The dog and the cow were not his mother.  Did he have amother?

I did have a mother,”said the baby bird.  “I know I did.  …

 

Let us stop the story here.

 

What do you think might happen to this baby bird?  Take a moment and let yourself imagine his future and his journey to find his mother.   And what about the mother bird in this story?  What about her journey in the story?  Take a moment to imagine her future? Are you a happy ending kind of person or a tragedy ending kind of person?

 

I think it’s a good possibility that your personal experiences as a child or as a mother will have colored what you might imagined what happened to this baby bird and his mother and about how their stories could end.

 

Today, I want to share the journey of discovery I took to find, to talk and share some of those other visions and stores of children, mothers and motherhood that we don’t often think about.   I think it would be a good topic for us all to ponder because I have found that there is sizable minority of us with negative experiences with motherhood. Mother’s Day for those like me, is a day of contradictions, of turmoil,and of anticipated sadness amidst the reverie and festivities of others.

 

My adventures actually began during my visit to a friend’s church three years ago.  My friends had invited me to their church after they had attending mine.  I had thought it was only fair that I go but I hadn’t realized that it was Mother’s Day until after I had agreed. Friends are wonderful.  I had seriously considered staying home that day anyways. However, after much internal debate, I decided that I really wanted hear the speaker regardless of his Mother’s Day topic and to go that afternoon to my friends’ church.

 

What I got was instead of one dose of Mother’s Day, was a double dose of Mother’s Day. But what inspired my writing was what happened at my friend’s church in Clayton,GA.  Amidst the praising and crying and room filled with love for mothers, (and it really was all that) a woman bravely stood up and said, “Please be mindful, that not everyone had a good mother.  For some, this is not a happy day because some of us truly had bad mothers.”

 

Wow, I thought, what courage to bring this up on such a day in such a venue.  My next thought was “hey, I was not the only one” … I was impressed because here was the first person I’d ever heard in a public setting to voice what I had been feeling for a long time.

 

And I began to wonder just how many others are feeling the same way and who they are and what their stories are. It immediately occurred to me that this would be a good topic to bring back to my own fellowship for thought and discussion. So that’s what I did, I gave this talk. Afterwards, it was recommended that I share it with others, and that’s why I did it again for the church group in Boone North Carolina.  Since then I have read it to many individuals and I was asked to provide it as a blog or publication.

 

In the process of writing this original talk, I thought and wrote about this topic; about the reasons why someone would not want to celebrate Mother’s Day and about my own experiences with my mother. Ihave asking many others what they think about the topic and I’ve gotten lots of answers and advice.

 

You probably don’t know just how many folks like me secretly dislike, dread, and even hate this day.  No one really wants to talk about it much.  We are embarrassed, sad, mad,envious and hurt.  Most of us will most likely stay home quietly next Sunday or if we have to attend any event on the subject, we will have tears in our hearts as we listen to the stories oft hanks, ideal mothers and mother love.

 

We are those persons we mention each week after the sharing part of my UU service when we mention thoughts “for the joys and concerns that although unshared, are in our minds and hearts”. No one really wants to talk aloud about what we are feeling on this day and we don’t really want to ruin the day for others.  And thatis why I presented it in the churches the week before Mother’s Day, and why I present it to you in this publication this same week.

 

Today I would like to share some of what is in mymind and heart and what I have discovered over that year of discovery as I wrote this talk. —

 

I have found that there are several groups of folks who will be suffering some pain on Mother’s Day.  These include:

 

•those that had no mothers,

•those that have lost child,

•those that given up or had a child taken from them

•those that can’t have children and finally

•those with bad mothers

 

I have known women from all these categories and I’m sure you have as well although you might not know it.  There is no equivalent day for us.   But on this week before Mother’s Day, I think it’s a good time to talk and reflect on them.  Let me first talk about the categories I’m not in and then reflect upon my own situation.

About motherhood after the loss of a child or being denied motherhood

 

It doesn’t matter if this loss is through death or having them taken away, my observation is that the level of pain is the same.  I have known women that have lost children to legal action that removed them from home.  I have held mothers that have miscarried and those that have tried and failed to conceive. I have seen the tears of mothers who have lost their children through disease or accident.

 

I have listened to them when they have cried for their loss; heard her prayed at every sanctuary they passed for their safe return; wondering what the future might have held if that tragedy or event  had not happened.  It is heartbreaking.  Mother’s Day for these mothers or would-be mothers is just a reminder of what they have lost or future they could never experience.

 

About having no birth mother

 

Do you know anyone that’s been adopted and doesn’t know who their birth mother is? There are mother’s that for some reason (oftentimes good ones), have given up their children to adoption.  Over 125,000 children are adopted each year.It’s a pretty good bet you have known someone in this category.

 

I have known several folks who were adopted.  Most of them don’t know who their birth mother is.  But there is something primal in a connection to your birth mother. Even if you were raised in love, even if you had a good adopted mother,a great adopted family, there is an ache in your heart for that biologica lmother you don’t know, don’t have and wish you did.

 

Also in this category are those that lost their mothers too early in their life so that they never really knew their mother.  The child within them cries for this mother all of their life.  Mother’s Day for these children is just a reminder of the mother they have lost.

 

About having a bad mother

 

I don’t want to woman-bashing here. I’m not talking about a bad day, a bad experience, or a bad event with your mother. I’m talking about the realization and undeniable truth that you had a bad mother. I’m talking about having experienced mental, sexual, or physical abuse or neglect. My own mother fits into the category.

 

Being a librarian, when I began working on this talk, I started by trying to do research on the topic for other’s thoughts on  this subject of having a bad mother.  I tried to do a Google search on it and found that I had a very hard time finding an appropriate term to search on. I think that I couldn’t find good search term for this concept because our society doesn’t really think about this as a possibility.  We have a group denial and delusion about it.

And this is true despite the number of abuse cases,the untreated or under-treated mental illness, the incidence of addiction and failure to have effective drug treatments to fix it … the list goes on and on…I’m not saying that having a bad mother causes these things, but if you have these afflictions, just how can that not affect your mothering.  We want to believe, we need to believe, that everyone grew up with a good mother, an ideal mother and that every woman can be a good mother.  We want to believe that every woman has an automatic capacity to just know how to be a good mother. No education needed, no broken places fixed, no good role models needed, a woman that has given birth just knows how to be a good parent. Ou rsociety, our culture thinks that motherhood is an instinctive action.

 

I do not believe this is true.

 

Mother’s Day for me is about being silent amidst the joy and celebration of others. I’ve experienced this denial personally both in myself and to me by others. I have had people tell me that my experience can’tbe as bad as I think or remember. That every mother had something you should celebrate on this day.

 

And while that might be true to some extent, denial of the bad is not a good practice for the healthy.  Among other things, I have been told that it can’t be true, or that I must forgive her.  Well, too much of this, the social stigma, the silence of not sharing because it is so painful or socially unacceptable and you begin to doubt your own experience or thinking you were the real problem and that you were a bad daughter.  I have had my relatives tell me that they didn’t want me around for the holidays because I might be thinking bad thoughts about her.  They did not feel that same way about the betrayal, the hurt and the suffering that my mother allowed to happen to us.

 

But I know what it is like not to be loved as a daughter but instead to feel that you were a burden, an obligation, a rival for the affections of men, and just a student that she had the obligation to teach about the hardness of the world through direct experience. It is not a good place to be.  Like those other catalogues of people I’ve already mentioned, Mother’s Day is a painful reminder of what you don’t have but that other do.

 

But it does get better —-and healing does slowly happen.  But I’m not talking about forgiveness… I’m talking about the healing power of sharing our stories.

 

Mothers that have given up their children for adoption, mothers that have lost their children traumatically, those that have suffered from flawed mothers or no mothers. We all have painful stories to share. But I think that it is that sharing, the finding of trusted friends and activities that validate our feelings of lose and hurt. It’s about breaking the silence and finding the courage to stand up, open up and talk about what has happened to us despite the social stigma. That is all part of the working towards a peace with Mother’s Day.

 

I had the opportunity, to read the diary that m ymother kept during some of the crazy parts of my childhood.  It confirmed what I already knew, that it was really as bad as I remember it. And that she was very badly damaged from her own childhood experiences, filled with self-loathing and that she didn’t understand the depth of the pain she caused her children.

 

I have been asked many times why I have survived the experience so well; I have even asked myself this as I read my mother’s own words about what was going on around me during that time.  Beside genetics, I can only attribute it to blind luck, hard headedness and the love of reading.

 

What is it about the love of reading and the healing power of a story?

 

In fact, it was when I was a preteen or teen that I read a story that has kept with me over the years and helped me though. I don’t remember the title or what else it was about. What I do remember is that somewhere in the first chapter or so that the author was imagining a conversation that she wished had happened between her and her mother. In the scene, she saw herself about the same age I was at the time I read it. In this imaginary conversation, her mother sat her down and said to her, “I am flawed;I cannot be the ideal mother you wish or deserve. I will disappoint you, as I was disappointed by my mother. You will need to find other mothers, other women that can fulfill the gaps and needs in you that I cannot.”

 

I think that story was one of the reasons I have survived my childhood as well as I have. That story helped me to seek and see the mothers in the women around me as I grew up. And I found them everywhere. Perhaps in my own way, I was asking the same question as our baby bird in the reading..  “Are you my mother?”And these women, these mothers of my heart, have been there to teach, scold,encourage, inspire, cry to and love.

 

And so now that you have read this talk and after you have time to think about it, I hope that like the woman in the church in Clayton,I can inspire you to be mindful on this Mother’s Day.  To remember that for a whole story of Mother’s Day, you should seek out not just the good parts with your celebrations and the festivities.  That as you listen to the thank yous, the stories, the singing, and the general love of all things motherly, that you also listen and notice the folks that have not shared.  For somewhere in amidst the merriment may be a few quiet or absent people with other thoughts on their minds this day.  Ask them and be supportive of those stories of their mothers. And if you, like me, are usually silent or missing on this day, that youfind a way to share a little part of your story, because you never know when it might help the healing of yourself or others.

Thank you for reading this.

 

Dragon’s Unbound

I love dragons.

These two had a lot to overcome to be together. You may have met them briefly near the end of “Dar’kind Promises” Rhys and Haydn were there at Isobeau the healer’s home when Maura and Zelia needed help.

Their story will be out later this spring. A M/M Erotic Romance

DragonsUnbound_Cover (1)

The Galloping Ghoul of Hockomock Swamp

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(Drawing on Saturday for Prizes.)  See below for Rafflecopter

Riding the Natchez Trace and exploring the historic cites along the way makes me think of my first published romance. A M/M HISTORIC EROTIC ROMANCE. Yes, I was the girl who introduced myself as a paranormal romance writer. How ironic is it to have my first work published several years ago and it be not only a historic but a m/m erotic romance.  It is still a wonderful story and I enjoyed writing it very much.

GallopingGhoul_Cover

M/M Erotic Historic Romance
The Galloping Ghoul rides each full moon, exacting revenge by frightening those who tormented his past. By day, he is one of the town people, Nathaniel Hawkins, an affluent entrepreneur. He identifies with Ike Sandhill, a government surveyor, and wants to protect him from the same thugs who drove Nathaniel to revenge.

Ike goes to the extreme to prove to everyone how straight laced he is. He pursues Misty VonMix with the intention of marriage.

Nathaniel doesn’t know how to confess his desire without driving Ike away. He comes up with a plan of seduction. Before the night is over Ike discovers things about himself he always knew, yet denied.
Excerpt
“Massachusetts, 1790
Somewhere in the Bridgewater Triangle, old wives tell tales in hushed tones about strange lights in the sky and the Galloping Ghoul of Hockomock Swamp. They say the specter rides on the night of the full moon. They don’t know what drives him to haunt unsuspecting travelers. Those who’ve crossed his path flee in fear for their lives. If the victims know why he rides, they never say.”….

***
…Hell’s bells, what a goat fuck. Augustus stood patiently while Nathaniel hoisted Ike’s lanky frame up into the saddle and mounted behind to support his unconscious burden. The flight brought them to the borders of Nathaniel’s estate.
“Time to go home, Augustus.”
Nathaniel’s pulse pounded at the proximity of Ike in the saddle, his head resting on Nathaniel’s shoulder. How badly he wanted to brush the wayward lock of golden hair back from the man’s brow. No more hiding. Before the night was over, Nathaniel would be sure Ike Sandhill knew his full intentions. He couldn’t go on in this limbo half-life watching from afar. By dawn, they’d both be changed men. He prayed he could convince Ike to take what he had to offer, to take a chance, to take something, anything from him.

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