Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2020

THE HEALING SUMMER - LIZ FLAHERTY!

By Liz Flaherty


One of the very best things about life is how interesting it all is. Even if you get bored you can always go somewhere else, do something else, or if you're a writer, you can look at the same old things in brand new ways and, voila!, a story is born.

Now that I've made that landmark statement, I'm trying to think of a way to illustrate it. While I sat here staring at the screen (it stares back; have you noticed?), my phone clanged a message received and Facebook dinged in a notification on the computer.

I know very well the phone message is from the pastor and the Facebook notification is a new comment on a post I'm following. But if I were sitting here unable to think of anything to write—and the screen was staring back blankly—that clanging message could be from "the guy who got away" years ago or a doctor's office with a scary "call me Monday" message or even an "I was born on this date. Were you there?" warning. The notification could be from someone from school. Who died junior year. Didn't she?

I'm not one of those who have so many ideas teeming in their writers' minds that they won't have time to get all their stories written, so it's important that I find things interesting. In 2012, Carina Press published One More Summer. It's the only book I ever wrote that "wrote itself." Its first draft was 83 days of getting up at 3:00 to write before work. It took more than 10 years and I have no idea how many submissions to sell it. Its publication is still one of my favorite parts of my writing career.

I never intended to write a sequel.

But a few years after One More Summer, I saw a tall guy walk across a hospital parking lot. He was moving quickly, impatiently. He got in his car and just sat there. In retrospect, I'm not sure if I actually saw this scene or dreamed it, because I can't tell you what hospital it was, but it gave birth to the sequel I never intended to write. Both my Carina editor and I were shocked when it didn't sell there, and for a long time, I let it lie under my virtual bed while I sulked. And then I started it on the rounds, and like the book that came before it, it's been through more submissions than I can remember.

Like the book before it, it still holds more of my heart than any one book should hold. It's all well and good to say I don't have a favorite, and I don't, but there are some that still make my heart ache for the people within them. Still have protagonists who, even in their happily-ever-afters, come back to visit and remind me that the happily-ever-after road has potholes in it.



I am so very happy that the sequel, The Healing Summer, was released by The Wild Rose Press.

I can't begin to say how much this means to me. My husband laughs because of my goals over the years. You know how they went: If I could just sell a story. If I could just sell a book. If I could just sell another book. A series. Make one of the lists. With The Healing SummerI feel as if the last goal has been reached.

So I guess I better make another one. Goal, that is. Because writing, like life, is much too interesting to stop now.


It’s a summer romance--what happens come September?

When Steven Elliott accidentally rides his bike into Carol Whitney’s car at the cemetery, the summer takes on new and exciting possibilities. Long friendship wends its way into something deeper when their hearts get involved. Feelings neither of them had expected to experience again enrich their days and nights.  But what happens when the long summer ends? When Carol wants a family and commitment and a future, Steven isn't so sure. He’s had his heart broken before—can he risk it again?





Liz Flaherty, Author



Retired from the post office and married to Duane for…a really long time, USA Today bestselling author Liz Flaherty has had a heart-shaped adult life, populated with kids and grands and wonderful friends. She admits she can be boring, but hopes her curiosity about everyone and everything around her keeps her from it. She likes traveling and quilting and reading. And she loves writing.



Buy links:



  

Monday, October 02, 2017

GUEST POST AND HISTORICAL ROMANCE TOUR



DESPERATE BRIDE
by
A.S. Fenichel



Pub
Date: 9/26/2017



An
unexpected promise . . . an everlasting passion.
An
accomplished musician, Dorothea Flammel has refused more proposals
than any London debutante; her only true love is her music. Dory’s
shimmering talent and beauty have long been adored from afar by
Thomas Wheel, an untitled gentleman who can only dream of asking for
the hand of a nobleman’s daughter. But when her father, the
insolvent Lord Flammel, arranges for Dory to marry a lecherous Earl
in order to pay off a debt, she runs to Thomas—and proposes
marriage to him.
Eloping
to Scotland saves Dory from a disastrous fate, but what is for her a
mere marriage of convenience proves more passionate—and more
complex—than either imagined as rumors, scandal, and buried
emotions come to light. And when a vengeful challenge from a drunken
and embittered Lord Flammel puts Thomas’s life on the line, will
the fragile trust between husband and wife be enough to save them
both?



A.S. Fenichel adores
writing stories filled with love, passion, desire, magic and maybe a
little mayhem tossed in for good measure. Books have always been her
perfect escape and she still relishes diving into one and staying up
all night to finish a good story. Originally from New York, she grew
up in New Jersey. She now lives in the southwest with her real life
hero, her wonderful husband. When she is not reading or writing she
enjoys cooking, travel, history and puttering in her garden.





THE REUNION
by
Sara Portman
Genre: Historical Romance
Pub
Date: 9/26/2017

An
inconvenient engagement turns a marriage of convenience into so much
more in this sparkling new series from award-winning author Sara
Portman . . .
Lady
Emmaline Shaw’s reputation was irreparably damaged when her fiancĂ©,
John Brantwood, disappeared immediately after their engagement four
years ago. Since then, she’s grown from a shy, uncertain girl to a
woman who knows her own mind. And what she knows is that London
society holds nothing for her.
Rumor
has it that John ran off to war and died in battle. Now, as the new
Duke of Worley, his shocking resurrection throws the ton into a tizzy
and makes him one of England’s most sought after bachelors—except
that he’s already engaged.
John
needs a wife capable of smoothing his beloved sister’s introduction
into society. But though Emma happily grants him his freedom, her
fiery beauty and resilient spirit hold him captive. In fact, John has
no intention of letting her go. Her fate is now in his hands, but
will her heart be safe there as well?



Sara Portman
is an award winning author of historical and contemporary romance. In
addition to being named the 2015 winner in the Historical Category of
the Romance Writers of America® Golden Heart® contest, Sara has
been a finalist and winner in several other writing competitions. A
daughter of the Midwest, Sara was born in Illinois, grew up in
Michigan, and currently lives in Ohio. In addition to her writing
endeavors, Sara is a wife and mother in a large, blended family.






LADY BE GOOD
by
Heather Hiestand
Genre: Historical Romance
Pub
Date: 9/5/2017

When
exiled royalty and espionage combine, expect a romance as bold as the
1920s . . .
Olga Novikov is a princess without a throne. Her fiancĂ© and her family
slain in the revolution, she flees Russia and finds herself working
as the head of housekeeping at London’s luxurious Grand Russe
Hotel. It’s a far cry from the glamour of her former life, but
she’s grateful for the job—until a guest forces her to question
where her loyalty lies. The charming nobleman challenges her at every
turn—and arouses dreams of romance she thought she’d abandoned
forever . . .
Douglas “Glass” Childers is living a double life. On the surface, he’s
the indolent Viscount Walling, but in truth he’s an intelligence
agent searching for a Bolshevik weapons master. The coolly beautiful
and headstrong housekeeper is a distraction he doesn’t need—unless
she’s the key piece in the puzzle he must solve. Trusting her could
be dangerous—but loving her is an undeniable temptation . . .


Heather Hiestand
 was born in Illinois but her family migrated west before she
started school. Since then she has claimed Washington State as home,
except for a few years in California. She wrote her first story at
age seven and went on to major in creative writing at the University
of Washington. Her first published fiction was a mystery short story,
but since then it has been all about the many flavors of romance.
Heather’s first published romance short story was set in the
Victorian period and she continues to return, fascinated by the rapid
changes of the nineteenth century. The author of many novels,
novellas and short stories, she makes her home in a small town with
her husband and son and supposedly works out of her tiny office,
though she mostly writes in her easy chair in the living room.



A Great Hobby for History Lovers - Genealogy
by Heather Hiestand

I’d been seeing those Ancestry.com ads for years regarding getting your DNA tested to learn about your ethnic background. As an adoptee, I’d always been leery of dipping into dangerous waters. Did I really want to know anything about the people who’d given me away to strangers? Did I really want to know what the circumstances were behind this (presumably) enormous decision?

However, a part of me was always deeply curious about my greater family tree. I had questions, and what little I had been told as a child about my ethnicity didn’t match up with what I’d accidentally learned as an adult. So when my husband expressed momentary curiosity about his family tree, namely to learn if he really was part Native American or not, I jumped on it and bought two DNA test kits when they were on sale over the holidays.

Well, we’ve had so much fun that my parents became interested as well. So now I have four different people to research! And yes, my husband really is part Native American. So am I! I had no idea I’d discover that the “Cherokee princess” myth so many families have might possibly be true in my case. If you have deep roots in the American South it’s something to look into…

I had a connection to my British-set novels, too. On the subject of my Grand Russe series with Kensington, I discovered that I actually had ancestors in London in the 1920s. They weren’t working in a grand hotel, though. They were in the garment trade in the east end, and many, if not all of them, immigrated to Canada and the US during this decade. I’ve been humbled by my imaginings of what it must have taken for my great-grandparents to journey from Russia/Poland to the UK, to Canada, and then to the Unites States, all in one generation. Tough, tough people that I’m descended from, don’t you think? I’m pretty sure that my great-grandparents would have had the moxie to battle the Russian baddies in my books.

I’ve also been tickled pink to discover who my royal ancestors were, on some lines at least. Most of us have them. After all, wealthy and well-fed people were more likely to have surviving descendants, but I’d never been able to point my finger to anyone in particular until now. I have presidents too, in my family tree, and people who came over on the Mayflower. I’ve even discovered a possible connection to Elvis Presley!

Yes, genealogy can be a blast for a history lover. It’s a real thrill to connect to distant cousins with the same love of history and see what you can learn about common ancestors. I could go on for pages and pages about all the different approaches to conducting research, but here are some places to start. And don’t forget, if you do take a DNA test on Ancestry.com, make sure to link it to your family tree, so that your distant cousins with the same hobby can get in touch.

Here are some resources:
You can both test your DNA and build a linked family tree on this site: http://www.ancestry.com
Note: I subscribe to both the US and UK editions via Kindle. Some Barnes and Nobles carry both of them if you want to see a sample edition: http://www.familytreemagazine.com/


Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway!




Wednesday, July 10, 2013

GUEST TESSA GRAY SHARES HER TEXAS DREAM CATCHER SERIES

Author Tessa Gray
            I grew up in the foster care system, so I had several different homes, but when the dust settled, I ended up living in Osseo, Minnesota, a small town near Minneapolis. As a child, I wasn’t a particularly avid reader, but in elementary school, I loved a series of books about the adventures of three Swedish triplets: “Flicka, Ricka, and Dicka” (I kid you not!) Another series I enjoyed was the Trixie Belden adventures; I even had Trixie Belden paper dolls and spent hours playing with them, making up more stories.
            The genre I love best is women’s fiction because the characters are multi-dimensional with real-life experiences. My favorite authors are Kristin Hannah, Anita Shreve, Nicholas Sparks, Susan Elizabeth Phillips, and Debbie Macomber. When I’m not writing, I love to spend time quilting. It’s a fairly new hobby for me, and I find it therapeutic. I’ve been a singer all my life, so I’m always finding myself a gig. I always tell friends, “I’ve never met a microphone I didn’t like.” It’s true…I love entertaining very much. During my early years, singing sustained me. As a life-long educator I realize that every child needs something they excel at, and for me it was music.
            I have a favorite quote that most people are probably familiar with: “An unexamined life is not worth living.” While there’s a great deal of debate as to who said it (Socrates or Thoreau), it remains a staple for me. I teach college students to write argument essays and in preparing them, I insist they constantly reexamine their values systems and explore other people’s ideas. In doing so, we learn a great deal about ourselves. I practice what I preach and incorporate this motto into my own writing, and it helps me create better,  more believable characters that often undergo a complete metamorphosis as the book comes to an end.
            Although I always made up stories in my head as a child (inventing that perfect family I never had!) I didn’t begin seriously pursuing writing until 2004. I generally sit in my family room, staring out into our pasture, watching our goats and miniature donkeys as I write on a laptop. Music, of course, is required, and my taste fluctuates between Celtic, Classical, and Country. Since I’m writing the Dream Catchers series set in the small, West Texas town of Alpine, country music is what I most often listen to know: George Strait, in particular.
            I’m probably not your typical writer because I spend at least a month “thinking” out my storyline and characters before writing a single word. After I’ve thought out the book, I grab my trusty storyboard and get to work. I plan the turning points, black moment, etc. When I’m finished with that, I use different colored sticky notes to plot out every single scene. By the time I begin the book, it’s completely planned out. It changes along the way, of course, but the skeleton of the novel is in place. That’s the teacher in me; I simply can’t help myself!
Cemetery Inspiration

            I must confess that the people and events in my novels are based on often based on real life. Several years ago a recently divorced acquaintance made a trip back to where she was raised and went to pay her respects to a relative buried in a small, Texas cemetery. Coincidentally, a classmate of hers happened to be there, paying his respects to his deceased wife. The two reconnected and they ended up getting married. That image stuck in my mind, and when I wrote LAST CHANCE TEXAS years later, I knew from the beginning of the novel that the couple would meet in a cemetery. Nathan Wainwright is a widower, paying his respects to his wife; Kelsey Malone is an out-of-towner who pays her respect to a distant aunt. When some girlfriends and I took a road trip to the tiny, West Texas town of Alpine, the first stop I made was at the Alpine Angel’s Cemetery. That became the first scene in the book.


            I don’t write every single day and make no apologies. For me, I need a break from writing and that’s often when I either quilt or do some singing. I think life is all about balance and in the end, if you pursue other things and don’t ‘put all your eggs in one basket’, you’ll be a better writer.
            The most important job of writers (in my opinion) is to bring real, true-life characters with enormous depth. The third book of the Dream Catcher series features Jake Crenshaw. Jake’s a washed up rodeo rider who tends bar. He’s not well educated and relies on his enormously good looks to get him the girl. I suspect some readers will be taken back by the fact he’s blue collar, but in the real world, not everyone has a college education. I think it’s so important to write about real people. My books stress hope and change; I know this sounds like a political commercial, but it’s true. People can change at any age; that’s so important!
            My long term plan is to continue teaching and writing. I can’t imagine a time when I won’t enjoy helping young writers find their own, authentic voice. What could possibly be more fulfilling? I do have several things on my “bucket” list. One of those includes taking a line dancing class at a nearby community center. It’s something I’ve always wanted to do and I can’t wait to start! Next summer I’m flying to Ireland with friends to go back to my roots. My ancestors came to America during the Potato Famine of the 1840’s, and I’ve always been curious about what that part of the world is like. I’d be lying if I didn’t say the Irish pubs and whiskey tours weren’t an additional draw!


            In addition to finishing up my Dream Catchers series, I’ll be working on four novellas  set  in a fictitious Minnesota town called Crescent Falls. Each novella features one of four sisters (the Hanlon girls) who are forced to deal with their father’s diagnosis of Alzheimer’s. Like all siblings, each one reacts differently to tragedy, using completely different coping mechanisms to survive. Sarah’s story begins in December of 2013, and the other siblings (Maggie, Clare, and Chloe’s will follow in March of 2014, June of 2014, and September of 2014, respectively.)
            The best advice I can give any writer is to write for the love of it. If you want to quit after receiving rejections, you’re really not a writer. I think of writing as fulfilling a mission; giving readers your own, unique message that no one else can give them. It’s an awesome responsibility.
            I’ve been asked to give an interesting fact about myself, so here it is. I’ve sung the national anthem at a Texas Rangers game. In 2003, my women’s quartet, “Forward Motion” was honored to perform and we did well! As I looked up at the huge screen and watched all of us sing that marvelous song, I thought that I was the luckiest person in the world to be able to perform in front of over 17,000 people and have the time of my life! I’ve also been asked about something that would surprise readers about me. This past year I joined the world of Twitter.  Vice President Joe Biden asked people to tweet a question about gun safety, and I responded, as did thousands of others. My question was selected as one Mr. Biden would address at a town hall meeting on February 19, 2013. It was amazing to hear him spend five minutes on my question. I almost felt famous!
            Before ending this discussion, I’d love to present readers with an excerpt from the second in the Dream Catchers series STARS OVER TEXAS which has a September 15th, 2013 release date:
Prologue
Just put a gun to my head, Blake, and let’s get this over with. I’d rather die than stay married to you.
Meredith Chapman’s stomach pitched violently as she readjusted her seatbelt, preparing for take-of. Her husband of fifteen years sat next to her, his shoulders stooped, head slumped over as he pounded out another text message. Aware he’d probably blow her off, she made one last attempt to get him off the phone. “The plane’s about to take off, Blake. Please turn it off.”  
Blake shot her an angry glare, his piercing blue eyes sending chills through her. “I’m almost done. Quit nagging, will you?”
“Sir, all electronic devices must be turned off.” The meticulously dressed flight attendant leaned over, hands on her hips, and glared at him as she spoke.
As several nearby passengers watched the drama unfold, Meredith smiled weakly; just as she always did when apologizing and trying to run interference for a husband she’d fallen out of love with years ago. 
The attendant’s voice grew louder as she implored him to comply. “Sir, I’m telling you one last time. Turn off your cell phone.”
“Blake, please---“
“Oh, all right.” Slamming it shut, he sank down in his seat, looking like a small child who’d been reprimanded. Without warning he grabbed Meredith’s arm, wrapping his fingers around it so tightly she nearly blacked out. “If you ever embarrass me like that again they’ll be hell to pay.”
And that was the last thing she remembered.

The amazon link to LAST CHANCE TEXAS is:
The amazon link to TEXAS SUNSET is:
Both books are also available in print, as well as e-book versions.
TesssaGrayBooks (Twitter)

Thanks to Tessa for visiting us today
.
Thanks to you, readers, for stopping by! 


Monday, November 05, 2012

FOOD ON THE OREGON TRAIL AND A GIVEAWAY

Guest Post and Recipes by Charlene Raddon

Charlene Raddon has a terrific guest post for today. First, let me tell you about her generous giveaway of a copy of TENDER TOUCH and a $10 Amazon gift card. Don't forget to leave your email with your comment if you want to be entered in the drawing.

Second, let me announce the winner of the free download of HIGH STAKES BRIDE from my weekend post. The winner is Denise Z. Congratulations, Denise. I'll be emailing you about your prize. AND WATCH FOR MY BIG ANNOUNCEMENT AT THE END OF THIS POST!

Now,  here's Charlene's excellent post.


Cooking on the Oregon Trail
The trip to Oregon from Missouri took five months. How did the pioneers know what to take with them and how to be sure they were well enough supplied for the long trek? Several guidebooks existed, as well as newspaper articles. Some pioneers had the additional advantage of advice from family and friends who had already made the trip. The key lay in keeping everything in the wagon as light as possible and taking easily preserved staples. 2,000 pounds total weight per wagon was the goal. As the journey progressed and draft animals tired, pioneers faced the difficult and painful task of discarding excess food, furniture, and other goods.

Staples needed per person:
200 pounds of bread stuff (flour and crackers)
100 pounds of bacon (see note below)
12 pounds of coffee
12 pounds of sugar

Additional staples per family:
From 1 to 5 pounds tea
From 10 to 50 pounds rice
From 1/2 to 2 bushels beans
From 1/2 to 2 bushels dried fruit
From 1/2 to 5 pounds saleratus
From 5 to 50 pounds

Optional:
Medicines
Whiskey or brandy
Cheese, dried pumpkins, onions and a small portion of corn meal


Cooking utensils: cast iron skillet or spider, Dutch oven, reflector oven, coffee pot or tea kettle, tin plates, cups, and utensils, matches, crocks, canteens, and buckets or water bags for liquids.
Other basics: a rifle, pistols, powder, lead, and shot for hunting game, and for self-defense. Candles (less expensive and lighter than oil). Several pounds of soap. Two to three sets of practical, sturdy, and warm clothing of wool and linen and a small sewing kit for repairs, shovel, ax or hatchet, tools to repair wagon equipment, bedding and tents.

1,600-1,800 pounds of the supplies were food, leaving little space for anything else. Furniture, books, and treasured belongings, were too often discarded along the way. Many accounts of the journey tell of the trail being littered with the cast offs of previous wagon trains. Prices and availability of goods varied from year to year, but a minimum of $600 to $800 was needed to assemble a basic outfit of wagon, oxen, and supplies.
Note: the bacon the pioneers carried was not in plastic covered one pound packages or sliced, but "salt pork," a heavily salted, fatty side or back portion of pork, un-smoked, and preserved in a barrel of brine. Pieces were taken out, the needed amount of meat cut off and the rest replaced. The piece to be used often needed to be soaked to dissipate the saltiness before being sliced for frying or cut into chunks for soups or stews.

Butter churns were sometimes attached to the side or underneath of the wagon. By day's end, with the jolting and swaying of the wagon, there would be butter to be had for the next stop.



Recipes

Cornmeal Mush

1 cup cornmeal
4 cups boiling water
1 tablespoon lard or butter
1 teaspoon salt
dried currents (raisins) optional
Put currents into water and bring to a boil. Sprinkle cornmeal into the boiling water stirring constantly, adding butter and salt. Cook for about 3 minutes, then portion into bowls. Can be topped with milk, butter, sugar or molasses.

Trail Beans

Prepare 4 cups of beans by rinsing and placing in large pot, covering with water and letting stand overnight for at least 12 hours. Drain, then place in pot with 1/2 lb. ham hock or 1/2 lb. bacon, covering with fresh water to simmer on low fire for 3 hours. At start of 4th hour add these ingredients: 1/4 cup dark molasses, 2 tsp. salt, 1/2 tsp. cayenne, 1/2 tsp. ground pepper. Optional ingredients to add if you have them, and according to taste: 1 garlic clove, 1 tsp. mustard, can chopped tomatoes. Stir and let simmer an additional hour, then serve. If additional liquid is needed, use the water beans soaked in.


Soda Biscuits

Take 1 lb. of flour, and mix it with milk enough to make a stiff dough; dissolve in a little milk 1 tsp. carbonate of soda; add this to the paste with a teaspoon of salt. Work it well together and roll it out thin; cut into round biscuits, and bake them in a moderate oven. The yolk of an egg is sometimes added. (Sarah J. Jale, Mrs. Hales New Cookbook 1857)



Molasses Pudding
1/2 cup molasses
1/2 cup milk
2 cups flour
1/2 cup butter
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
raisins, optional

Blend molasses and milk. Add in butter, baking soda, salt and mix well - butter will be chunky. Add in flour, 1/2 cup at a time. Add raisins of you like. Pour this thick dough into a buttered deep bread pan, spreading evenly. Put pan on top of pebbles in a large kettle of slow-boiling, shallow water. Liquid should only go half way up the sides of the pan. Cover and steam for 1 1/4 hours. Serve sliced, as is, or drizzled with syrup.

Vinegar Lemonade
Mix 1 to 2 Tablespoons of Apple Cider Vinegar into a 12 oz. glass of water. Stir in 2 Tablespoons of sugar or to taste, and Drink Up!

Dandelion Greens
Cut off leaves of plants that have not blossomed yet, pick over carefully, wash in several waters, put into boiling water, boil one hour, drain well, add salted boiling water, and boil two hours; when done, turn into a colander and drain, season with butter and more salt if needed. Or boil with piece of salt port, omitting butter.

Sandy Duff
Mix flour and water into thick batter, add raisins, and boil in small canvas bag. Sweeten with syrup or sorghum before eating if preferred.
Gravy and sourdough were the food staples of the pioneers. Nearly all meals could be prepared using a bake oven, and gravy was made to complement the main dish. Gravy served as added nutrition, but mostly it served as a filler when other food was not available. Sourdough was so precious to the pioneer cook, she often slept with her sourdough starter so the yeast action would not be killed by the cold.

Pioneer remedies:
Eye ailments—Put a few drops of castor oil in eyes.
Eyewash—Gun powder dissolved in water.
Fever—Boil two roots of wild ginger in a cup of water; strain and drink.
 Hiccups—Hiccup can usually be stopped very quickly by taking a teaspoonful of granulated sugar and vinegar. If it does not give relief, repeat the dose.
 Infection—For drawing out infection on burns, use raw grated potatoes.
 Scrapes and abrasions—Smear rabbit fat over raw areas.
 Bee stings—Put mud or red clay on area.





And here's the a blurb from Charlene's story about travel on the Oregon Trail:

They had lost everything that mattered . . .

Three nightmarish years of marriage has shattered Brianna Wight's sheltered world. Leading her husband to believe she's been murdered, she flees to St. Louis . . . harboring terrible secrets that could be the death of her.

The tragic loss of his Indian wife left Columbus Nigh a wanderer; necessity made him a wilderness guide. But now he finds himself drawn to the enigmatic woman who's hired him to lead her westward. Her gentle strength stirs his lonely heart . . . her tender beauty arouses his deepest passions.

Would they find love again on a western journey?

But the perils of the Oregon Trail pale beside the murderous wrath of the man who tracks them across the harsh frontier. Briana knows the only way to save herself and Columbus is to risk their tender love. Only then can she free herself from the horrors of the past -- and embrace a rapturous future . . .

Here's an excerpt from TENDER TOUCH:

Chapter One


St. Louis, Missouri, April 1849
Brianna Wight’s heart pounded as she reluctantly fol­lowed her housekeeper’s son inside the dingy, cavernous livery stable. She felt as though she were entering the very bowels of hell.
Heat from the blacksmith’s shop blasted her delicate skin through her clothes and fluttered the veil covering her face as she waited for her eyes to adjust to the dark­ness. The flames leaping from the forge and the murky silhouettes of men, dancing about the fire like so many devils, were all she could make out.
Harsh, angry voices flew at her out of the blackness, like hurtled knives. Instant terror stiffened her body and she threw up an arm to shield her face.
“Wait your turn, stinkin’ squawman. Whaddya need yer horse shod for anyways? It’s only one o’ them Injun ponies. Get back to yer slut squaw an’ have her pick the lice from yer hair, why doncha?”
The voice that answered was soft, deep and—Brianna thought—deceptively calm, but the words were unclear.
“Why, you bastard!” the first voice yelled.
The sound of flesh and bone striking flesh and bone froze Brianna. Her heart stuttered. That sound was entirely too familiar, as was the pain that always followed. She tensed, waiting to feel the expected blow. Instead, a man sailed toward her out of the smithy. Brianna screamed in the instant before he slammed into her. Together, they tumbled to the straw-littered floor in a tangle of arms, legs and skirts.
“You blasted squawman!” someone bellowed. “Look what ya done now. Get up, damn you! That’s a lady you’re laying on.”
Brianna fought for air and shoved frantically at the heavy man weighing down her already bruised and bat­tered body. Pain from a hundred places threatened to rend her unconscious. Inside her head, a voice shouted,“It’s not Barret!  Not Barret! But the fear had her in its grip. She could not stop batting for her life, as she had been forced to do, so many times before.
Close to her ear a low rumbling voice muttered, “Hell- fire! Give it up, woman. I ain’t gonna hurt you.”
Hands like steel bands pinned her wrists to the hay-and horseshit-strewn dirt floor. His panted breath warmed her cheek, smelling of tobacco, and, oddly enough, apples. Brianna felt her breasts flatten against his hard chest, felt that same hard chest expand and deflate along with hers, as they each gasped for air. Something stirred inside her, something she had never felt when Barret held her this way, something that left her confused, as well as scared.
“All right,” the low voice rumbled. “I’m gonna get up now.”
The weight lifted from her body. He towered above her, ten feet tall and at least three across. As she lay there staring up at him through her veil, still fighting off the fear, he reached down to offer her a hand up. She could see better now, well enough to note that his palm was dirty and callused, the smallest of the long, slender fingers missing a joint.
“You all right?” he asked, not unkindly.
Before she could gather enough sense and wind to answer, Sean and his mother were there, bending over her. Brianna groaned as they hauled her to her feet. Every bone in her body ached. It was all she could do to stay upright while Mrs. O’Casey brushed the dirt and straw from her rumpled skirts. She refused to give way to the tears and pain and terror that threatened to engulf her. If she couldn’t even survive one day of freedom without knuckling under, how would she live long enough to start a new life?




You can find TENDER TOUCH here:
Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Tender-Touch-ebook/dp/B009OMPHEY/ref=sr_1_3?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1351879968&sr=1-3&keywords=Charlene+Raddon

Smashwords:
http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/244139



 Charlene Raddon began her fiction career in the third grade when she got up and told her class that a little sister she didn't have died of a black widow bite. Many years later, a particularly vivid dream drove her to drag out a portable typewriter and go to work on her first novel. In 1990 her second completed book, TENDER TOUCH, brought her a first place win in a writing contest and the following year became a Golden Heart Finalist. She has five romance novels set in the American West, published by Kensington, one, THE SCENT OF ROSES, under the pseudonym Rachel Summers. Her books have placed or won other contests and one, FOREVER MINE, received a Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice Award nomination. Charlene has always loved the Old West and her novels reflect that emotion in their depth and vividness.

When Charlene isn't writing, she loves to travel, do genealogy, digital scrapbooking, and dyes eggs in the Ukrainian style. And she enjoys camping and fishing with her husband in the Utah wilderness.

You can learn more about Charlene here:
Charlene's website http://www.charleneraddon.com/
Blog http://charleneraddon.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/CharleneRaddon
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1232154.Charlene_Raddon

Remember to leave your email with your comment if you want to be entered in the drawing for a copy of TENDER TOUCH and the $10 Amazon gift card!

Now that you've read Charlene's post, please go to her blogsite where I have a guest post, http://charleneraddon.blogspot.com I have a giveaway there also. 

And if you sign up for my newsletter at the link about midway on the sidebar, I will include you in a special drawing for a Kindle Fire on December 15th, in plenty of time to give as a gift or load up with your own holiday reading.

Thanks for stopping by!