I'm thrilled that my Contemporary Romance CERTAINLY SENSIBLE was released on Dec. 2, 2015. So far a few great reviews have been posted on Amazon and I'm optimistically hoping for more.
I wish I could say how I got the idea for this novel. I had never written one before, so the fact that I suddenly started writing a book amazes me. I think what nudged me along was a(nother) viewing of the Emma Thompson 1995 film "Sense and Sensibility." With a degree in English literature, a love of all things Jane Austen, and the naivety that first-time authors sometimes have, I sallied forth. I finished it, refinished it, re-refinished it...You get the idea. It took years. I want to thank TWRP for taking me on, and thank my editor Kinan Werdski who saw the potential and helped me whip CERTAINLY SENSIBLE into a salable form.
CERTAINLY SENSIBLE is set in 21st century Indianapolis, and I hope Austen fans will embrace my novel, as well as readers who just like a nice romantic story. Spread the word! Check me out on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/Pamela-Woods-Jackson-1523690337865060/?ref=hl
Wild Rose Press is an exciting small electronic and print publisher of romance. Our titles span the sub-genre spectrum from sweet to sensually erotic and are available in all lengths, including short story, category, and single title.
Friday, January 29, 2016
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Hello From a New Wild Rose Press Author
Wood rotates against stone as the grinding wheel of writing is slowly
set to motion. Low rumbles and a high-pitched squeal register its
complaints. Five solid years of studying craft, writing, revising, and
searching for representation has finally gained me some notice. The cog
completes a full revolution. The Wild Rose Press has accepted my story.
Let the edits begin!
"Never give up on something that you can't go a day without thinking about." Winston Chruchill
Karen Ginther Graham
www.facebook.com/ginthergraham
"Never give up on something that you can't go a day without thinking about." Winston Chruchill
Karen Ginther Graham
www.facebook.com/ginthergraham
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Review: Melt My Heart by Marie Tuhart
I received a free ARC copy of Melt My
Heart in exchange for an honest review.
Veterinarian Lexi Mallory wants
to submit to the sexy new Dom from the club, but trauma from her past
keeps getting in the way.
It's a good thing Gabriel Huntington has
a special way with difficult subs and sees the gorgeous Lexi as a delicious
challenge.
Relinquishing control is an issue for
Lexi, but when Gabriel brings an injured puppy to her clinic, she takes control
to save the puppies life. Gabriel is happy to stand back and watch her work.
The mutual respect is just what Lexi needs to let Gabriel take their relationship to the next level.
Will it be enough?
Can Lexi lower her barriers and allow
Gabriel's touch to melt her heart?
From beginning to end, I was invested in
the characters and their struggles. The
puppy was an unexpected, adorable addition that added interesting insight to
both characters. I highly recommend Melt
My Heart. It’s a wonderfully romantic
Valentine read worth five stars!
Tena Stetler
Remember the Magic for Happily Ever After!
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Review: Sweet Kiss by Judy Ann Davis
I
love small towns, hence why I was immediately drawn into Sweet Kiss.
The characters are ones you might expect to see in your own home town,
at the coffee shop & bakery where Kate works. Her little shop was
described in such detail that I could envision it perfectly in my mind,
and it had my mouth salivating for the baked goods! Two sweethearts, who
still carry the flame of their youthful romance must overcome
misunderstandings, gossip and family drama to find love. A heartwarming
story to get you in the mood for Valentine's Day, and an opportunity to
reminisce about your own youthful memories as you share in Kate and
Tappe's walk down memory lane.
Maureen Bonatch
Making the ordinary extraordinary and laughing all the way.
Monday, January 25, 2016
Review: For Keeps A Candy Hearts Romance
FOR KEEPS (A Candy Hearts Romance) By Veronica Lynch
Reviewed by Peggy Jaeger
5 stars
Decisions, decisions. How does a girl decide between being
with the greatest guy she’s ever known and a job that fulfills her in every
way? For Meghan Muldoon it’s no easy choice.
Or is it?
In 1986, women’ s defining roles in law enforcement and
victims counseling services were in their infancy. Meghan Muldoon is a
trailblazer. As the Director of Crime Victim Services in upstate New York, she
works hand in hand with the police, one member of law enforcement in
particular, Keenan Rossi. They keep their relationship a secret, separating
their personal from their professional lives, but it’s a hard fought battle.
Rossi wants to take their relationship public and have everyone know Meghan
belongs to him. Meghan’s not sure she wants to belong to any man. Her work is soul-satisfying and important, and
she doesn’t want to have to make compromises or sacrifices between job and love
life.
But Rossi is a determined man and he loves Meghan – the
lifelong, happily ever after kind; the FOR
KEEPS kind.
When an incident at work with her boss brings the question
full force again, Meghan knows where she wants to be. With Rossi. For ever. For
Keeps.
Pre-order on Amazon
Veronica Lynch’s FOR
KEEPS is a wonderful addition to the Candy Hearts Romance series. Keenan
Rossi is that rare kind of hero: alpha with a sensitive side, and I am so happy
Meghan decided to stick with him FOR
KEEPS.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Sunday, January 24, 2016
From the Writer's Eye
How do those characters readers fall in love with look before they
finally come to life in a book? Before they're fleshed out, before they
make readers laugh or cry by almost marrying the wrong man, by spilling
soup all over their date right before the prom, by singlehandedly
keeping the bus from careening over a cliff? Were they always that
beautiful, that endearing, that comical, that needy? Yes - in the
author's heart, but no - in the author's first draft(s). Characters go
through their awkward years on a page - those miles of paragraphs where
they're gangly, dull, and sometimes with a mind of their own. With the
power of "Backspace" I have wrestled Paul, in "Mine to Tell," into the
role of being the most annoying brother a heroine could expect to have. I
have kept Martha, in upcoming "Love on a Train," heading into a
marriage she knows in her heart isn't right. I kept Cletus as the
villain throughout pages and pages in "Asked For" no matter how much my
heroine begged me to knock him off so she could be free. Characters -
great characters - begin with a vision, something only the writer sees.
But after months of hammering away on the keys and hammering out the
character's resistance, a hero worth crying over and a heroine worth
dying for are born.
Colleen L. Donnelly, Author of
Amazon #1 Bestseller "Mine to Tell"
"Asked For"
"Love on a Train"
Colleen L. Donnelly, Author of
Amazon #1 Bestseller "Mine to Tell"
"Asked For"
"Love on a Train"
Saturday, January 23, 2016
Review: Be Mine
Beth waits tables at a local diner. Since childhood she had a crush on her best
friend’s big brother who left town to join the military. Now he’s back and at their first encounter
she trips and dumps a hot plate of lasagna in his lap.
After running into each other, on the street, at the gym, and at her friends home, Mark asks her out. He is sure that he is the man for her but experience has taught Beth not all men can be trusted. Can Mark convince her to be his for Valentine’s Day and forever?
Review Tena Stetler
Five stars
a Rafflecopter giveaway
After running into each other, on the street, at the gym, and at her friends home, Mark asks her out. He is sure that he is the man for her but experience has taught Beth not all men can be trusted. Can Mark convince her to be his for Valentine’s Day and forever?
This was a cute, quick read. I enjoyed the story, laughed at the
characters mishaps and sighed at the satisfying ending. A great Valentine’s Day story!
Release date
January 11, 2016Review Tena Stetler
Five stars
Friday, January 22, 2016
I’m Casey, Adam’s Dog
I don’t know
about you, but it seems awfully unfair to me that I had to die in the first
chapter of Still Counting. I’m not
saying Adam’s not a nice person – he was a great owner and we had lots of good
times together – but he could have started off with me splashing through the
waves on Cape Cod, or maybe told a heart-warming story about that time I
finally caught a squirrel and then coughed up fur balls for the next two hours
just like some stupid cat or something. (And yes, I said it. Cats are stupid.)
So here I am in
doggie heaven – where thankfully the good Lord had the sense to separate us from
those finicky felines (did I mention cats were stupid?) – and I’m trying to
work my way up the social ladder. I could’ve had a slam-dunk express lane to
the top-tier if I’d been featured in a book. How many dogs can say that? It
would have been dope. Primo dope. I’ve tried to haunt Adam about this when he
sleeps, but his response is a pathetic and whiny series of trite platitudes:
“You’re one of
the main characters,” he assures me. “Everyone talks about you.”
“But I’m dead,”
I say. “Like the proverbial doornail.”
“Only in the
physical sense,” Adam retorts. “You’re alive in my heart.”
Yeah sure. With
that and fifteen good old American dollars, I can cross the George Washington Bridge
and maybe not get mugged when I get to Jersey.
“You’ll always
be in my heart,” he continues. “No matter how many dogs come after, you’ll
always be number one.”
Sometimes I
think Adam is more feline than canine. Just saying.
Phil Fragasso
For more on Still Counting, click here
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Author meet and greet with Eve Dew Crook
The Wild Rose Press author, Eve Dew Crook, took part in the
Meet the Local Authors event at the Joyner-Green Valley Library in Arizona on
Jan. 13th, only days after a car crashed into the building and knocked out the
large meeting room. No one was hurt, and some hardy souls showed up to enjoy
the library’s resources. Here’s her picture in front of the table displaying
TAKING THE TUMBLE and PERIL, PASSION, PERU.
More about Eve's books, click here
More about Eve's books, click here
Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Review: Me + You - A Candy Hearts Romance
Me + You By Brenda Gayle
Mark Wilder’s fling resulted in his daughter, Grace. Mark did the right thing, married the mother, a free spirit, only to divorce a short time later. He loves his daughter, but being from a family of boys, has a tough time connecting with his little girl.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Teacher Lori Tait has always wanted
a family. At 40 her biologically clock is ticking with no man in sight that
measures up to her standards. All the good ones are taken. So she devotes
herself to her students. One little girl, Grace, in particular has a brilliant
and artistic mind but is unable to comprehend math. Against her mother’s wishes Lori is asked by
Grace’s dad to tutor the girl in math.
Mark Wilder’s fling resulted in his daughter, Grace. Mark did the right thing, married the mother, a free spirit, only to divorce a short time later. He loves his daughter, but being from a family of boys, has a tough time connecting with his little girl.
When Lori discovers Grace’s problem,
Mark’s world is thrown into turmoil; he’s the last person who can help his
daughter. He pushes everyone away, confirming Lori’s thoughts about men. Grace has
other ideas and puts her plan into action to create a Valentine Surprise.
I enjoyed reading this book.
It’s well written with characters that tug at your heart strings. I highly recommend Me + You and fun flirty
Valentine’s Day read. 5 stars
On Amazon
Tena Stetler
Author of A Demon's Witch release 9-25-15
Charm Me release date 1-6-16
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
from The Wild Rose Press
Remember the Magic for Happily Ever After!
"Life is not a
journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty
and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn
out, and loudly proclaiming, WOW what a ride!"
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Review: For Keeps - A Candy Hearts Romance
Review: For Keeps by Veronica Lynch:
What a fun, quick read about two successful people who are
devoted to their jobs, and each other. Their demanding jobs put a strain
upon
the time they have for each other but when they're together, they make
the most of it. I enjoyed the personalities of the characters. Meg is a
strong, independent woman who won't compromise her values, and Kee is
the sexy
alpha male who doesn't make her. The author does a suburb job of drawing
you
into the characters with seamless, expressive writing.
I received an ARC of this book for an honest review.
Maureen Bonatch
Making the ordinary extraordinary and laughing all the way.
Monday, January 18, 2016
Review: Say Yes - A Candy Hearts Romance
Say Yes, by Katie O'Sullivan
I was given an ARC of this
book for an honest review. 5 stars
Darby Malone left the big
city behind to open up an art gallery in her small home town. She has
renovations planned after Valentine’s day.
Because she has trouble saying no, she ends up hosting a children’s
Valentine party in her gallery. As she
is cleaning up the last remnants of the blue goo from the party, Ben a
well-known Cape Cod artist walks into her gallery. He wants Darby to host a showing of his new
paintings that are not even close to the breezy shore paintings he’s known
for. The death of his wife four years
ago has changed him, thusly his paintings.
Darby has sworn off
artists, nothing good can come of dating an artist, in her opinion. Yet, there
is something about Ben. He stirs feelings in her that have been dormant for too
long. Against her better judgement, she
agrees to take a look at his recent paintings.
They are not what she expects.
This was a great
read. I enjoyed the characters
interactions. Both were strong individuals but learned the art of
compromise.
Ms. O’Sullivan’s
Valentine’s Day romance wraps up nicely and the main issues come to a
satisfying resolution. If you’re looking
for an entertaining, feel-good read, you need to check out this book.
On Amazon
Tena Stetler – review
Release January 18. 2016
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Review: For Keeps - A Candy Hearts Romance
For Keeps by Veroncia Lynch Available Feb 10th
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Meghan Muldoon is a victim’s advocate struggling to balance
her high stress job and relationship with Keenan Rossie, a cop with his own set
of stressors. Her on call schedule
clashes with his more often than not. He wants to make the relationship
permanent, she not so much. She loves
her job, but her boss is a demanding prick.
We’ve all known those. Huh? Timing is everything but a series of
complications on Valentine’s Day make Meghan rethink her position.
Any hoo, the book is a fun entertaining read. I highly recommend it. 4.5 stars
On Amazon
On Amazon
Tena Stetler
Author of A Demon's Witch release 9-25-15
Charm Me release date 1-6-16
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
from The Wild Rose Press
Remember the Magic for Happily Ever After!
"Life is not a
journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty
and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn
out, and loudly proclaiming, WOW what a ride!"
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Saturday, January 16, 2016
Review: Got Love? A Candy Hearts Romance
GOT LOVE (A CANDY HEARTS ROMANCE) by Angela Hayes
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Reviewed by Peggy Jaeger
5 stars!
Banshees and Fairies and Cupid, OH MY!
GOT LOVE ( A
Candy Hearts Romance) by Angela Hayes is a patchwork of fantasy characters who
are as real as you or me!
Flora Hawthorne is a fairy and, as her name implies, a
florist. With Valentine’s Day imminently approaching, she’s up to her sprite
shoulders in preparations for the day of love and in no frame of mind to deal
with her own love life. Not that she’s got a love life. Her two best friends,
elf Runa Gilchrist and banshee Fia O’Malley have something to say about that.
When a real live Cupid comes to town, they think he and Fiona would be a
perfect match.
Centuries-old Cupid, Tharin Terize, is looking to find a
place he can set his arrow down and call home.
When he meets the lovely Flora, for the first time, Cupid’s proverbial
arrow actually fires at him! Getting Flora on board to be his forever will take
some doing, but he’s not Venus’s son for nothing. When he takes aim, watch out,
because he won’t let fiery fairy Flora out of his sights.
GOT LOVE was an
enjoyable, charming read. What better tale to tell on Valentine’s Day, then the
minion of love himself? I thoroughly
recommend you add GOT LOVE to your Valentine’s Day reading list. You won’t
regret it…and just maybe Cupid will aim an arrow your way.
Friday, January 15, 2016
My 12 Favorite Books of 2015 You Might Enjoy Reading Too
I
read a lot of books-a lot of books. I’ve listed out (not in any
particular order) twelve of my favorites in hopes you might enjoy a few
of them as well.
My Favorite: I don’t know if it was just the lure of Christmas cheer, but Debbie Macomber’s kooky characters and sweet romance made her Dashing Through the Snow my favorite pick of the year. Some of the reviews on this book were bah humbug, but I found it had just the right amount of silliness, crazy, and candy cane to start off the season. Looking forward to the Hallmark Channel movie!
Top Secret Twenty-One by Janet Evanovich
Fair Play by Deeanne Gist
Divided in Death by JD Robb
The Governess Affair by Courtney Milan
A Christmas Bride/Christmas Beau by Mary Balogh
Midnight Jewels by Jayne Ann Krentz
After Dark by Jayne Castle
Rivers End by Nora Roberts
The Widow’s Suiter by Rose Ross Zediker
Burning Lamp by Amanda Quick
Dashing Through the Snow by Debbie Macomber
Blue-eyed Devil by Lisa Kleypas
Enjoy!
Annalisa
Annalisa Russo is the author of the Cavelli Angel Saga, a romantic suspense quartet about an Italian immigrant family in 1925—the Cavelli family. The family consists of three brothers—Michael, Raphael, and Gabriel, named after the archangels (and angels they’re not!) and two sisters, Anna and Tessia.
www.twitter.com/RussoAuthor
www.facebook.com/AnnalisaRussoAuthor
My Favorite: I don’t know if it was just the lure of Christmas cheer, but Debbie Macomber’s kooky characters and sweet romance made her Dashing Through the Snow my favorite pick of the year. Some of the reviews on this book were bah humbug, but I found it had just the right amount of silliness, crazy, and candy cane to start off the season. Looking forward to the Hallmark Channel movie!
Top Secret Twenty-One by Janet Evanovich
Fair Play by Deeanne Gist
Divided in Death by JD Robb
The Governess Affair by Courtney Milan
A Christmas Bride/Christmas Beau by Mary Balogh
Midnight Jewels by Jayne Ann Krentz
After Dark by Jayne Castle
Rivers End by Nora Roberts
The Widow’s Suiter by Rose Ross Zediker
Burning Lamp by Amanda Quick
Dashing Through the Snow by Debbie Macomber
Blue-eyed Devil by Lisa Kleypas
Enjoy!
Annalisa
Annalisa Russo is the author of the Cavelli Angel Saga, a romantic suspense quartet about an Italian immigrant family in 1925—the Cavelli family. The family consists of three brothers—Michael, Raphael, and Gabriel, named after the archangels (and angels they’re not!) and two sisters, Anna and Tessia.
www.twitter.com/RussoAuthor
www.facebook.com/AnnalisaRussoAuthor
Thursday, January 14, 2016
We're in a Leap Year - Happy 2016!
Have you noticed that 2016 is a Leap Year? I just did and decided to
find out exactly what a leap year is. I thought the following
information extremely interesting.
If we didn’t have leap years, our seasons wouldn’t be correct and in synch. The reason is the Earth’s orbit around the sun. Our calendars use a precise 365 days when, in fact, the Earth takes approximately 365.242199 days to travel around the sun. In addition, the time it takes Earth to revolve once, which we call a day, is not exactly 24 hours—but closer to 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds.
Every four years, the extra time is added as February 29th.
Last June, according to NASA, we were given an extra leap second to account for the gradual slowing of the Earth’s rotation due to the gravitational war among the Earth, moon and sun. NASA explains that a day lasts 86,400 seconds, but the mean solar day – the average length of a day, based on how long it takes Earth to rotate – is about 86,400.002 seconds long.
So, enjoy the extra day the Earth and sun has given you!
Linda Nightingale
Love For Sale
Coming Soon Gambler's Choice
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=03972_A_5-Y
If we didn’t have leap years, our seasons wouldn’t be correct and in synch. The reason is the Earth’s orbit around the sun. Our calendars use a precise 365 days when, in fact, the Earth takes approximately 365.242199 days to travel around the sun. In addition, the time it takes Earth to revolve once, which we call a day, is not exactly 24 hours—but closer to 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds.
Every four years, the extra time is added as February 29th.
Last June, according to NASA, we were given an extra leap second to account for the gradual slowing of the Earth’s rotation due to the gravitational war among the Earth, moon and sun. NASA explains that a day lasts 86,400 seconds, but the mean solar day – the average length of a day, based on how long it takes Earth to rotate – is about 86,400.002 seconds long.
So, enjoy the extra day the Earth and sun has given you!
Linda Nightingale
Love For Sale
Coming Soon Gambler's Choice
Wednesday, January 13, 2016
Behind The Scenes Of My Romantic Suspense Off The Grid
I love those behind the scenes glimpses into the creative process, don’t
you? When directors, artists and musicians talk about the inspiration
behind their art. For instance Richard Curtis, writer of the film
Notting Hill, has said his inspiration for the movie came while he was
lying in bed one night. The idea for the plot came to him as “the idea
of a very normal person going out with an unbelievably famous person and
how that impinges on their lives.”
The birthday dinner scene in Notting Hill is one of my favourite movie scenes. Ordinary gent William Thacker shows up with famous actress Anna Scott to a friend’s house for dinner. From awkward first impressions to heartbreaking confessions, we get a look at how the other dinner guests react to the surprise guest.
It’s the same with novels, of course. I wonder what arrow of inspiration pierced the author’s interest. Sometimes it’s an idea for a plot, a glimpse of a possible character, maybe the concept is driven by theme, premise, or setting.
Setting was certainly the inspiration for my romantic suspense, Off The Grid, set in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, British Columbia. The first time I heard about the DTES, infamously known as Canada’s poorest urban postal code, the story ideas started flowing. A historical ‘skid road’ because of the city’s history in timber and logging, it has since fallen from grace and is known to many as the Low Track. An area plagued by urban decay associated with poverty, drug use, and crime. Fortunately, for the many people who call the Downtown Eastside their home, the DTES is also known for its community activism. As developers move in to gentrify the neighbourhood and push them out, activists move to stop them.
The stories behind the statistics were the inspiration for my characters: activist and inner city Dr. Sophie Monroe, ambitious Family Law expert Caleb Quinn, and corporate development kingpin Jason Drummond. I couldn’t resist the pull of the Downtown Eastside. It’s a dangerous place. But hope exists there. Families are formed. To a fortunate few, it’s second-chance kind of place. What better setting for a romantic suspense?
Off The Grid is on sale for 99 cents until January 22nd.
How about you? Have a favourite setting? Small or big? Urban or Rural?
Off The Grid by Karyn Good On Sale For 99c www.karyngood.com/blog/
The birthday dinner scene in Notting Hill is one of my favourite movie scenes. Ordinary gent William Thacker shows up with famous actress Anna Scott to a friend’s house for dinner. From awkward first impressions to heartbreaking confessions, we get a look at how the other dinner guests react to the surprise guest.
It’s the same with novels, of course. I wonder what arrow of inspiration pierced the author’s interest. Sometimes it’s an idea for a plot, a glimpse of a possible character, maybe the concept is driven by theme, premise, or setting.
Setting was certainly the inspiration for my romantic suspense, Off The Grid, set in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, British Columbia. The first time I heard about the DTES, infamously known as Canada’s poorest urban postal code, the story ideas started flowing. A historical ‘skid road’ because of the city’s history in timber and logging, it has since fallen from grace and is known to many as the Low Track. An area plagued by urban decay associated with poverty, drug use, and crime. Fortunately, for the many people who call the Downtown Eastside their home, the DTES is also known for its community activism. As developers move in to gentrify the neighbourhood and push them out, activists move to stop them.
The stories behind the statistics were the inspiration for my characters: activist and inner city Dr. Sophie Monroe, ambitious Family Law expert Caleb Quinn, and corporate development kingpin Jason Drummond. I couldn’t resist the pull of the Downtown Eastside. It’s a dangerous place. But hope exists there. Families are formed. To a fortunate few, it’s second-chance kind of place. What better setting for a romantic suspense?
Off The Grid is on sale for 99 cents until January 22nd.
How about you? Have a favourite setting? Small or big? Urban or Rural?
Off The Grid by Karyn Good On Sale For 99c www.karyngood.com/blog/
Review: Chill Out - A Candy Hearts Romance
Chill Out by Jana Richards.
Renata Cabral hides at her friends lakeside cabin for the weekend. She arrives exhausted and falls asleep on the couch. When she awakes, there’s a man in the cabin stocking the cupboards with food.
Enter Noah Brownlee, who worked with Doctor’s Without Borders and has his own reasons for hiding out. He has permission to use the cabin and arrives in the middle of a snowstorm with his big goofy dog, Spike.
The blizzard makes it impossible for either to leave the cabin. The last thing either expects is the attraction the feel for each together. Will Valentine Magic and candy hearts bring them together? I’m not telling, you’ll need to read the book to find out.
What I will say is I’m a sucker for a big lovable dog and a Valentine’s Day Romance. This was a fun, flirty story that I enjoyed a lot. This story sucked me in and kept me rooting for the characters until the story’s satisfying end.
On Amazon
Tena Stetler
Author of A Demon's Witch release 9-25-15
Charm Me release date 1-6-16
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
and A Witch's Journey late 2016
from The Wild Rose Press
Remember the Magic for Happily Ever After!
"Life is not a
journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty
and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, totally worn
out, and loudly proclaiming, WOW what a ride!"
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
The Fictional Casey’s Real-Life Counterpart
Still Counting
opens with Casey, a cancer-stricken Labrador retriever, being put to sleep. As
I shopped the manuscript around, I heard a consistent comment about the
opening: very powerful but perhaps too
sad for many readers. My Wild Rose editor felt the same way and asked me to
tone it down. Which I did.
PhilFragasso/
I fully understand this emotional reaction because I wrote
most of the scene through teary eyes. Two years ago on December 27, 2013, Ruby,
my sweet and gentle 12-year-old Lab succumbed to cancer of the spleen. I often
refer to it as the saddest day of my life, which strikes some people as odd. I
have, after all, lost my parents and grandparents to illness and old age. I’ve
lost friends to suicide, auto accidents, and illness. So how could the loss of
a dog be sadder than the passing of a loved one?
I actually don’t know the answer to that question. Sometimes
I think it’s because our love for dogs is free from emotional baggage. It’s
steady and unequivocal. There are no memories of difficult moments, harsh
words, broken promises, or any of the other zillion ways that people invariably
disappoint each other. Sometimes I think it’s because dogs are totally
dependent on us. They view us as God-like creatures who can make food and fresh
water magically appear.
Most of the time I think it’s because – to paraphrase Tom
Cruise in Jerry Maguire – they
complete us. They serve as life-is-way-too-short role models. Ruby loved
everything. No matter what she was doing, it was the best thing she could
imagine doing. And if I interrupted her rapture while she was playing fetch,
swimming in the ocean, or chewing a favorite toy, she was never hesitant. She
was always excited to move on to the next activity because that was going to be even more fun.
We have a plaque in our house that reads, “May I become the
person my dog thinks I am.” I often think the more appropriate wish is that I
become the kind of person Ruby would have been.
Phil Fragasso
https://www.facebook.com/Monday, January 11, 2016
Review: 3 Wishes - A Candy Hearts Romance
3 Wishes by Peggy Jaeger
I was given an ARC of this book for an honest
review. 5 stars
Chloe San Vantentino is a chocolatier in her own
candy shop. Valentine’s Day is her favorite day of the year and it’s also her
birthday. Years ago she made a list of the perfect man, he would have one blue
eye and one green eye (like her), care about people and it would be love at
first sight. Chloe pulls out this list every year on her birthday. Despite the matching making efforts of her
huge Italian family, Chole is now the big 30 with this dream man nowhere in
sight. Until….
This year Chloe’s birthday celebration with her
family is interrupted and she winds up spending it in an unlikely location. Will she ever meet the man of her
dreams? What about the three
wishes? To answer these questions, you
are going to want to read the book.
3 Wishes is a quick, enjoyable read. The characters are engaging and entertaining.
I found myself rooting for Chloe and the cast of characters from the very
beginning. A great Valentine read that comes to a satisfying resolution. I
highly recommend this book.
On Amazon
Tena Stetler – review
Release date 2-8-16
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Review: ASK ME (A Candy Hearts Romance) by Laura Strickland
Reviewed by Peggy Jaeger
5 stars!
ASK ME, by Laura
Strickland, asks one very important
question: do opposites really attract, and the answer is a resounding “Yes!”
History professor Leo Rankin and tattoo artist Geraldine
“Gerry” Webb are as different from one another as chalk is from cheese. When
they both find themselves alone on Valentine’s day, they venture to their local
library to attend the BLIND DATE WITH A
BOOK event, billed as a way for people to vault out of their literary ruts
and discover new genres and authors.
What Leo and Gerry discover is an attraction to one another that neither
makes sense nor seems plausible. Along with the book (wrapped so the title is
unknown, hence the BLIND part of the program), they are given a bag of candy Sweethearts, which seem to hold only
one message on the embossed candies: ASK
ME. So, when faced with that question and the undeniable attraction between
them, Gerry “asks” Leo if he’d like to come home with her and not be relegated
to spending Valentine’s Night alone. His affirmative answer surprises them
both.
Opposites in every way, Leo and Gerry at the same time seem
made for one another and doomed. Persistence, though, runs through Leo Rankin
like his life’s blood and when he wants something, his tenacity knows no end.
And he wants Gerry Webb.
Getting her to admit she wants him just as much is a task he
is up for.
ASK ME was a
delightful, romantic read and I highly recommend you add it to your Valentine’s
reading list. Hopeful romanticism is a genre everyone can enjoy reading, no
matter if you’re a staid professor or a carefree artist.
Available for Pre-order on Amazon and other retailers.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Review: Breakfast With Santa
Breakfast With Santa
by Carol Henry
Katelyn and Mark were high school sweethearts. Then he joined the Special Forces leaving
Katelyn to deal with an unexpected pregnancy of which he was unaware. Six years later, Mark returns with a young
son. No matter how hard Katelyn tries to
avoid him it’s not in the cards, playing elf for Santa sends them on a collision
course.
During Mark’s six-year absence, Katelyn moved on with her life and became engaged, This Christmas her fiancĂ© is in Norway due to a family celebration. Events unfold and she flies to Norway to be with him. She arrives only to discover a startling truth. Katelyn’s reaction and behavior dealing with the situation in Norway, was very brave. Upon her return to Lobster Cove more surprises await her.
During Mark’s six-year absence, Katelyn moved on with her life and became engaged, This Christmas her fiancĂ© is in Norway due to a family celebration. Events unfold and she flies to Norway to be with him. She arrives only to discover a startling truth. Katelyn’s reaction and behavior dealing with the situation in Norway, was very brave. Upon her return to Lobster Cove more surprises await her.
I love a feel-good Christmas story. I could relate to the characters as they
dealt with loss, picking up the pieces and moving forward. They were meant to be together. Will unearthed secrets be the key to their
happiness or heartache? You’ll have to
read the book to find out! I truly
enjoyed this read and highly recommend Breakfast With Santa.
On Amazon
5 stars
Tena Stetler - Review
Saturday, January 09, 2016
Interview with Two Murder Cops
An interview from Author Trisha Sugarek
Art of Murder - Coming Soon to The Wild Rose Press
TS. I thought an interview with my two protagonists; my murder cops, would be fun to write and hopefully fun for you to read.
TS. We are sitting in an interview room. It is windowless, small and claustrophobic. Some kind of foam soundproofing covers the walls and there are bare spots where nervous suspects have picked at it. In the far corner, at the ceiling, there is a camera. Why do I feel so guilty?
Sargent Detective O'Roarke is well...no other word for it...big! He seems to take up most of the room's space and more than his fair share of air. Handsome, tough and his Irish heritage is mapped on his features. Detective Stella Garcia, sitting next to him, is a lily amidst the stones. Refined features, with cheekbones that could cut steak. Clear, sharp hazel eyes and streaky light brown hair cut in an effortless pageboy.
I begin.
TS. Tell me, have you always wanted to be in law enforcement?
O'R. I was raised in Hell's Kitchen before it was gentrified. I had my share of brushes with the law and I saw some of my friends go to jail or get dead. The writing was on the wall. Did I want to end up in prison or worse? As a juvie; I think I was fifteen, a cop picked me up for shoplifting. It was my sister's birthday and I didn't have any money for a present for her. First he put the fear of hell in me. Kept me handcuffed and stuffed me in a room just like this one. Left me alone there for two hours. When he came back he had a sandwich and a soda for me. He moved the cuffs to the front and I had to eat like that. He told me I was damn close to the age where he could charge me as an adult. What was I going to do with my life? He confirmed what I already knew, prison or dead. Then he asked me if I'd like to ride along
with him some night? I remember feeling like an anvil had fallen on me. Be a cop? Really? Was this guy joking? I rode with him and his partner a couple of nights later and that was all it took. The old cop started mentoring me and helped me get a partial scholarship to NYU.
TS. And you, Detective Garcia? (O'Roarke snorted and barked out a laugh)
SG. Cut it out O'Roarke. (She turned back to me) I grew up on a horse farm, upper Connecticut. Lived atop a horse or in the barn until I was eighteen, when I went to UC. The first year I had no idea what I wanted to do, didn't declare a major until the middle of my sophomore year. Some sonority sisters and I went to Manhattan to see a show one weekend. When we left the theatre, a half a block down, three cop cars suddenly converged on the street, lights and sirens. Six cops jumped out of their cars and grabbed what we heard later were three armed perps. One broke away and ran up the street toward us waving a gun. People scattered but my friends and I were frozen to the pavement. A female cop chased after him and, as luck would have it, tackled him right in front of us. It was a flying tackle; she landed on his back and they both went down. She disarmed him and had him in cuffs by the time her partner got to them. The cop stood up; she'd lost her hat and she had a split lip but she was grinning like crazy at her partner. From that moment on I was toast. Monday morning I went in to school and declared my major in criminal justice. I made Detective two years ago.
TS. And you're in NYPD's Homicide Unit.
O'R. Yeah, I was in Vice for a few years and then moved to Homicide.
SG. Domestic Violence and Kids at Risk Unit and then I went over to Homicide. So many deaths result from domestic violence but once the Homicide detectives arrive we’re done. I wanted to be able to follow my cases to the end. O'Roarke and I have been partners since my transfer.
O'R. (Grinning at his partner) Yeah, I had to train the rookie, here. A dirty job but somebody's got to do it.
TS. You get some pretty high profile cases assigned to you. That famous Broadway director, the celebrity chef on the Food Network Do those kinds of cases require anything different?
O'R. No. Because under all that wealth and glitter they're just people like you and me.
TS. Wasn't Chef Jeff Kirikos the mayor's brother-in-law? That had to add some pressure on the NYPD. (O'Roarke snorted again, this time in disgust. I had the distinct impression he didn't suffer fools or politicians, in this case.)
SG. That was a cold case. The mayor requested that we take another look at it. We were happy to get it solved.
TS. Are either of you married? Have children?
SG: I am, with two boys. R.J.'s eleven and Robbie is seven.
TS. 'R.J'?
SG. Nickname. He's Raul Garcia, Jr., for his father.
TS. And you, Detective O'Roarke? (Now it was Garcia's turn to snort.)
O'R. Single, and no further comment.
SG. I have high hopes for O'Roarke here. (She poked him in the ribs.) Someday some woman will gob-smack him into marriage.
O'R. Cut it out, Garcia! Right now! (The rough detective was blushing.)
TS. Must be tough on home life.
SG. Yes. At times very much so. But I have an amazing husband. He teaches high school and coaches the swim team. He can be home when my boys get there and they're amazing too. They always tell me how proud they are their mom’s a cop.
TS. What are the toughest cases on you personally?
O'R. SG. (They answer simultaneously.) Domestic.
TS. Why so?
SG. The children. (Her eyes were suddenly bright with tears.)
O'R. We just closed a case where two little kids, toddlers, hid behind a chair while their father beat their mother to death.
SG. Those cases stay with you the rest of your life.
TS. What do you do for fun? Do you have time for a personal life?
O'R. I work out, watch soccer on the tube. Meet with friends for dinner occasionally. But we're on call 24/7 so when the mobile lights up we go.
TS. And you Detective Garcia?
SG. Still riding horses. Our family tries to get up to my parents' farm at least once a month. We ride, help around the barn and visit with my folks. (She beams with pride.) My boys are naturals.
O'Roarke's mobile lights up and the theme from 'Dragnet' comes from his jacket pocket. Garcia's starts playing the theme from Star Wars and vibrates across the table. O'Roarke opens his text.
O'R. Speak of the devil. We got a body.
Art of Murder - Coming Soon to The Wild Rose Press
TS. I thought an interview with my two protagonists; my murder cops, would be fun to write and hopefully fun for you to read.
TS. We are sitting in an interview room. It is windowless, small and claustrophobic. Some kind of foam soundproofing covers the walls and there are bare spots where nervous suspects have picked at it. In the far corner, at the ceiling, there is a camera. Why do I feel so guilty?
Sargent Detective O'Roarke is well...no other word for it...big! He seems to take up most of the room's space and more than his fair share of air. Handsome, tough and his Irish heritage is mapped on his features. Detective Stella Garcia, sitting next to him, is a lily amidst the stones. Refined features, with cheekbones that could cut steak. Clear, sharp hazel eyes and streaky light brown hair cut in an effortless pageboy.
I begin.
TS. Tell me, have you always wanted to be in law enforcement?
O'R. I was raised in Hell's Kitchen before it was gentrified. I had my share of brushes with the law and I saw some of my friends go to jail or get dead. The writing was on the wall. Did I want to end up in prison or worse? As a juvie; I think I was fifteen, a cop picked me up for shoplifting. It was my sister's birthday and I didn't have any money for a present for her. First he put the fear of hell in me. Kept me handcuffed and stuffed me in a room just like this one. Left me alone there for two hours. When he came back he had a sandwich and a soda for me. He moved the cuffs to the front and I had to eat like that. He told me I was damn close to the age where he could charge me as an adult. What was I going to do with my life? He confirmed what I already knew, prison or dead. Then he asked me if I'd like to ride along
with him some night? I remember feeling like an anvil had fallen on me. Be a cop? Really? Was this guy joking? I rode with him and his partner a couple of nights later and that was all it took. The old cop started mentoring me and helped me get a partial scholarship to NYU.
TS. And you, Detective Garcia? (O'Roarke snorted and barked out a laugh)
SG. Cut it out O'Roarke. (She turned back to me) I grew up on a horse farm, upper Connecticut. Lived atop a horse or in the barn until I was eighteen, when I went to UC. The first year I had no idea what I wanted to do, didn't declare a major until the middle of my sophomore year. Some sonority sisters and I went to Manhattan to see a show one weekend. When we left the theatre, a half a block down, three cop cars suddenly converged on the street, lights and sirens. Six cops jumped out of their cars and grabbed what we heard later were three armed perps. One broke away and ran up the street toward us waving a gun. People scattered but my friends and I were frozen to the pavement. A female cop chased after him and, as luck would have it, tackled him right in front of us. It was a flying tackle; she landed on his back and they both went down. She disarmed him and had him in cuffs by the time her partner got to them. The cop stood up; she'd lost her hat and she had a split lip but she was grinning like crazy at her partner. From that moment on I was toast. Monday morning I went in to school and declared my major in criminal justice. I made Detective two years ago.
TS. And you're in NYPD's Homicide Unit.
O'R. Yeah, I was in Vice for a few years and then moved to Homicide.
SG. Domestic Violence and Kids at Risk Unit and then I went over to Homicide. So many deaths result from domestic violence but once the Homicide detectives arrive we’re done. I wanted to be able to follow my cases to the end. O'Roarke and I have been partners since my transfer.
O'R. (Grinning at his partner) Yeah, I had to train the rookie, here. A dirty job but somebody's got to do it.
TS. You get some pretty high profile cases assigned to you. That famous Broadway director, the celebrity chef on the Food Network Do those kinds of cases require anything different?
O'R. No. Because under all that wealth and glitter they're just people like you and me.
TS. Wasn't Chef Jeff Kirikos the mayor's brother-in-law? That had to add some pressure on the NYPD. (O'Roarke snorted again, this time in disgust. I had the distinct impression he didn't suffer fools or politicians, in this case.)
SG. That was a cold case. The mayor requested that we take another look at it. We were happy to get it solved.
TS. Are either of you married? Have children?
SG: I am, with two boys. R.J.'s eleven and Robbie is seven.
TS. 'R.J'?
SG. Nickname. He's Raul Garcia, Jr., for his father.
TS. And you, Detective O'Roarke? (Now it was Garcia's turn to snort.)
O'R. Single, and no further comment.
SG. I have high hopes for O'Roarke here. (She poked him in the ribs.) Someday some woman will gob-smack him into marriage.
O'R. Cut it out, Garcia! Right now! (The rough detective was blushing.)
TS. Must be tough on home life.
SG. Yes. At times very much so. But I have an amazing husband. He teaches high school and coaches the swim team. He can be home when my boys get there and they're amazing too. They always tell me how proud they are their mom’s a cop.
TS. What are the toughest cases on you personally?
O'R. SG. (They answer simultaneously.) Domestic.
TS. Why so?
SG. The children. (Her eyes were suddenly bright with tears.)
O'R. We just closed a case where two little kids, toddlers, hid behind a chair while their father beat their mother to death.
SG. Those cases stay with you the rest of your life.
TS. What do you do for fun? Do you have time for a personal life?
O'R. I work out, watch soccer on the tube. Meet with friends for dinner occasionally. But we're on call 24/7 so when the mobile lights up we go.
TS. And you Detective Garcia?
SG. Still riding horses. Our family tries to get up to my parents' farm at least once a month. We ride, help around the barn and visit with my folks. (She beams with pride.) My boys are naturals.
O'Roarke's mobile lights up and the theme from 'Dragnet' comes from his jacket pocket. Garcia's starts playing the theme from Star Wars and vibrates across the table. O'Roarke opens his text.
O'R. Speak of the devil. We got a body.
Trisha Sugarek, Author, Playwright, Poet, & Blogger
Art of Murder - Coming Soon to The Wild Rose Press
NOW AVAILABLE!! The Creative Writer's Journal
Friday, January 08, 2016
TATTOOS – All You Never Needed to Know
Not sure why exactly, I became fascinated with
tattoos and did an immense amount of research. I even thought of getting a
tattoo myself, but felt at my age, I didn’t want the pain, so I opted for
washable tattoos. What fun! I appeared
at a writers group with an Egyptian type tattoo just below my neck. It was a great
conversation piece. Move over, Nefertiti.
While my second book MY DIVINELY DECADENT DUKE, by Sandra Masters, will be released January 29th, it features the above cover. My duke originally did not have a tattoo, but as the hero in the book called to me, this author decided he would have a tattoo inked on him by a Barbados witch doctor to protect him from evil. He has a Lion Clan tattoo. Thanks to RJ at The Wild Rose Press and my graphic artist, Debbie Taylor, my cover is picture perfect.
Swallow: Obtained when first setting out to sea. It was considered good luck.
similarly tattooed in Japan while serving in the British Admiralty solidifying what would become a family tradition.
In later years, Lady Randolph, Winston Churchill’s mother, sported a snake tattoo around her wrist, and for formal occasions, had a specially made diamond bracelet to cover it when she was in society. Winston Churchill also had a tattoo!!
Hope you enjoyed knowing more than you’ll have to about tattoos worldwide.
While my second book MY DIVINELY DECADENT DUKE, by Sandra Masters, will be released January 29th, it features the above cover. My duke originally did not have a tattoo, but as the hero in the book called to me, this author decided he would have a tattoo inked on him by a Barbados witch doctor to protect him from evil. He has a Lion Clan tattoo. Thanks to RJ at The Wild Rose Press and my graphic artist, Debbie Taylor, my cover is picture perfect.
Effective January 8th through 22nd, the e-book
will be available for 99 cents.
Thereafter, it will be $5.99. You can
preorder this book on Amazon.com.
The history of tattoos goes back centuries and is
referred to in the bible. It was common around the world, especially in China,
Japan, Asia and Polynesia. It spread throughout Europe like wildfire. It
already held a place in Central America and Australia. In fact, some
anthropologists claim that the history of tattoos may date back as long as
15,000 years. Certainly, we know that many of the ancient civilizations used
tattooing techniques.
Throughout history, tattoos have been used as:
·
Signs of status and place in society
·
Magical
amulets against evil (My novel’s reason)
·
Punishment
·
Reminders of a religious belief
·
Adornments for the sake of beauty
·
Gang members to establish identity
Between 1766 and 1770, Captain James Cook made three
voyages to the South Pacific. When Cook and his men returned home to Europe
from their voyages, they told tales of the ‘tattooed savages’ they had seen.
The word tattoo itself comes from the
Tahitian tatau and was introduced
into the English language by Cook’s expedition (though the word ‘tattoo’ or ‘tap-too’ , referring to a drumbeat, had existed in England since at
least 1644.
It was in 1769 that Cook first noted his
observations about the body modification and is the first recorded use of the
word tattoo to refer to permanent
marking of the skin. He recorded it in his Ship’s log book. This method is a
painful operation and is performed but once in their lifetimes.
Cook’s Science Officer and Expedition Botanist, Sir
Joseph Banks, returned to England with a tattoo. Banks was highly regarded as a
member of the English aristocracy. Cook brought back a Tahitian Chief whom he
presented to King George and the English Court. The talk of many in society was
the tales of the “tattooed savages.” Many of Cook’s men, ordinary seamen and
sailors, came back with tattoos, a tradition that would soon become associated
with seamen and men of the sea in the public’s mind. In the process, sailors
and seamen re-introduced the practice of tattooing in Europe and it spread
rapidly to seaports around the globe.
In fact, many tattoo artists held permanent residences
in the ports of England, Spain, France and Italy. It is claimed there was a
tattoo artist in every major port city.
Some Popular
Symbols:
Anchor: Refers to a someone who has sailed across the
Atlantic
Dragon: Refers to a sailor that has served in Asia
Fully rigged ship: Represents traversal of Cape Horn
Golden Dragon: Means a sailor has crossed the
International Date Line
Harpoon: Refers to a member of the fishing fleet
Rope around the wrist “Hold Fast” across the knuckles” Represents
a sailor who was a deckhand
Swallow: Obtained when first setting out to sea. It was considered good luck.
By the 19th century, tattooing had spread
to British society but was still largely associated with sailors and the lower
or even criminal class.
It is said that aristocratic and royal families of
Europe may well have been the first celebrities to indulge in the taste for
tattoos. The royal court was fascinated and the Tahitian Chief’s tattoos were
admired. The Chief was presented to King George V and he himself got inked with
the “Cross of Jerusalem” when he traveled to the Middle East in 1862. The Dukes
of Clarence and the Duke of York were similarly tattooed in Japan while serving in the British Admiralty solidifying what would become a family tradition.
In later years, Lady Randolph, Winston Churchill’s mother, sported a snake tattoo around her wrist, and for formal occasions, had a specially made diamond bracelet to cover it when she was in society. Winston Churchill also had a tattoo!!
Hope you enjoyed knowing more than you’ll have to about tattoos worldwide.
SANDRA MASTERS