Showing posts sorted by relevance for query then there was you. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query then there was you. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Today's Special - - Jessica Scott


It's my pleasure to welcome Jessica Scott to the Romance Dish today.  I was first introduced to Jessica a few years back at various romance internet sites where we both posted - at the time, she was on active duty in Iraq - and I've followed her writing, and military, journey since then.  She's a career army officer, mother of two daughters, three cats, three dogs and two escape artist hamsters, wife to a career NCO and wrangler of all things stuffed and fluffy.  She has commanded two companies, served in Germany, Korea, Fort Hood and Iraq.  She says she's a terrible cook and an even worse housekeeper but she's a pretty good shot with her assigned weapon.  Her children are pretty well adjusted and her husband still loves her, despite burned water and a messy house.  Her debut novel, Because of You was released last November and October brings another new book, Until There Was You.  You can find Jessica on the internet at her websiteblog, FacebookTwitter and Goodreads.  Sign up for her newsletter here.   





Welcome, Jessica!  Congratulations on the upcoming release of UNTIL THERE WAS YOU.  Please tell our readers what they can expect from this book. 

Evan & Claire are an opposites attract storyline. They battle so often and so much when they actually start getting along, neither of them can believe it. Here’s the official blurb:

From the back cover:

He plays by the rules, she’s not afraid to break them. Now these two strong-willed army captains will prove that opposites attract . . .
A by-the-book captain with a West Point background, Captain Evan Loehr refuses to mix business with pleasure—except for an unguarded instance years ago when he succumbed to the deep sensuality of redheaded beauty Claire Montoya. From that moment on, though, Evan has been at odds with her, through two deployments to Iraq and back again. But when he is asked to train a team prepping for combat alongside Claire, battle-worn Evan is in for the fight of his life.
Strong, gutsy, and loyal, Captain Claire Montoya has worked hard to earn the rank on her chest. In Evan, Claire sees a rigid officer who puts the rules before everything else—including his people. When the mission forces them together, Claire soon discovers that there is more to Evan than meets the eye.
He’s more than the rank on his chest; he’s a man with dark secrets and deep longings. For all their differences, Evan and Claire share two crucial passions: their country and each other.

Sounds like a story I'm going to enjoy!  Jessica, as an Army officer, you’re already intimately acquainted with military life.  How does this knowledge help – or hinder – your writing process when creating stories set within the military?

Thanks so much for having me here today! I’d say the military experience makes it harder b/c I speak the lingo and understand so much more intuitively than non military readers. I don’t say or think improvised explosive device, I say/think IED. I don’t say physical training uniform, I say PTs and everyone around me gets that. So forcing myself to translate makes things a lot tougher, you know? That’s usually something I save for the round of revisions.

That has to be difficult when using acronyms is the norm.  My late husband was career military (though we didn't meet until after his retirement)  and I was forever asking him to translate the lingo.   

Many scenes from books and movies end up on the “cutting room” floor.  What’s the one scene you would never cut from UNTIL THERE WAS YOU?

Oh wow. In my last book there were a couple of scenes that made it through every single draft. On this one, I can’t think of a single scene that survived since the first draft. I think the one scene that could not change, though, would be the one where Claire first learns Evan’s secret. It’s probably my most favorite scene.

Most military-set romances are romantic suspense yet your books are straight romance.  Was this a conscious decision you made before you started writing or did the characters dictate their story to you?

Well, first off, I suck at writing suspense. Love reading, can’t write it worth a damn. But that not withstanding, I did make a conscious choice to write these books as contemporary romances. I wanted to showcase real things soldiers were facing and have more emotional connection to them, if that makes sense.

That makes perfect sense!  I know a lot of readers who enjoy romances in a military setting but don't want the suspense.  

UNTIL THERE WAS YOU is your second novel.  Is it a stand-alone or will readers enjoy it more if they read BECAUSE OF YOU first?

It’s a stand alone novel. Originally, it was connected and the last book of the trilogy but my editors worked with me to change things up to make the storyline more powerful. There’s actually no overlap between UNTIL THERE WAS YOU and BECAUSE OF YOU.

You’re a wife, mom, active duty Army officer and author.  That’s a lot of balls to keep in the air!  How do you balance all of your roles? 

I don’t. Some days, being a mom wins. Some days, being a soldier wins. Other days, being a writer takes precedence. Anyone who tells you they’ve got everything covered, well, that person isn’t me. I drop things all the time. My housework for instance. There is a mountain of laundry in my hallway that I should be deeply ashamed of. Instead, I’m writing
J and happier for it, I should add.

I imagine the above-mentioned roles also bring a great deal of stress into your life.  What’s your favorite way to relax and “get away from it all?”

Every so often, when things get really out of control, I go get a massage. It’s therapeutic in a lot of ways.

I'm a firm believer in the therapeutic benefits of massage.

We never tire of hearing how a new author receives “the call.”  The story of your first sale is unusual and fascinating.  Will you share it with us?

Last year, right after the Navy SEALS got Bin Laden, the romance world went nuts for military romance. Sue Grimshaw had just been hired on at Ballatine Bantam Dell and I saw a blog where she said she was looking for a military romance that was not romantic suspense. I sent her a note on twitter because her old email address had bounced and well, the rest as they say is history. Seriously, DO NOT do this unless editors/agents say they’ll accept pitches that way.

What’s next?

Next up is finishing up BACK TO YOU which will tie into BECAUSE OF YOU. That will be the last book in this leg of the Coming Home series. After that, we shall see where the muse takes me!

Thank you for visiting with us today, Jessica.  It's been a pleasure!  Do you have a question for our readers?   

Tell me how you decide to try a new author?  


I’m giving away a digital eARC of UNTIL THERE WAS YOU to someone today!   


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Jessica is having a preorder giveaway - the UNTIL THERE WAS YOU PREORDER SWEEPSTAKES -  all throughout September until Oct 7th! If you preorder UNTIL THERE WAS YOU, you get entered into a chance to win a Kindle Fire HD or a Nook Color. a Rafflecopter giveaway

Here’s the official excerpt! UNTIL THERE WAS YOU by Jessica Scott, Excerpt You can preorder UNTIL THERE WAS YOU at these ebookstores or wherever ebooks are sold! B & N | Amazon | Powell's| iBookstore



Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Excerpt & Giveaway - - A Little Christmas Spirit

A Little Christmas Spirit
by Sheila Roberts
Publisher: MIRA
Release Date: September 28, 2021


Single mom Lexie Bell hopes to make this first Christmas in their new home special for her six-year-old son, Brock. Festive lights and homemade fudge, check. Friendly neighbors? Uh, no. The reclusive widower next door is more grinchy than nice. But maybe he just needs a reminder of what matters most. At least sharing some holiday cheer with him will distract her from her own lack of romance…


Stanley Mann lost his Christmas spirit when he lost his wife and he sees no point in looking for it. Until she shows up in his dreams and informs him it’s time to ditch his scroogey attitude. Stanley digs in his heels, but she’s determined to haunt him until he wakes up and rediscovers the joys of the season. He can start by being a little more neighborly to the single mom next door. In spite of his protests, he’s soon making snowmen and decorating Christmas trees. How will it all end?

Merrily, of course. A certain Christmas ghost is going to make sure of that!

~~~~~~~~~

Sneak Peek Excerpt for The Romance Dish of

A LITTLE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT

By Sheila Roberts

MIRA Books September 28, 2021

  

Lexie Bell awoke on Black Friday before her six-year old son and went downstairs to the kitchen, where she pulled out the leftover pumpkin pie she’d brought home from the so-called Orphans Thanksgiving dinner she’d attended.

She didn’t know very many people in the town of Fairwood yet, and she’d appreciated the invite from one of the older teachers at Fairwood Elementary, who had wanted to make sure everyone, especially a newcomer like Lexie, had a place to go. She’d met some nice people at that party and it gave her hope that she’d find her tribe and be able to settle into her new town as well as she was settling into her new job. She’d already made one good friend, Shannon, another single teacher at school, and she was looking forward to adding more.

As for settling into the job, that had been easy. What was not to like about being a kindergarten teacher? She enjoyed working with children, especially the little ones. She looked forward to going to work every day and seeing all those smiling, innocent faces, looking up at her every day, eager to learn.

And she was always eager to teach. She loved children, would have liked to have more than one herself. But so far one was all that was in the cards. She’d just discovered she was pregnant when her fiancĂ© confessed that he’d been cheating. She’d ended things right then and there, and there had gone the plans for the big, destination wedding they’d been saving for, not to mention the big, happy family she’d dreamed of having.

“That’s what comes of putting the cart before the horse,” her grandma had said.

Thankfully, she only said it once. The last thing Lexie wanted Brock hearing about was horses and carts and how foolish his mother had been and what a loser the man she’s fallen for had turned out to be. She supposed there would come a time when she’d have to address that but not yet.

The cheater had signed over his parental rights and moved to San Diego, so it had always been just Lexie and Brock. A sweeter, more precocious boy you would never find, and while she may have made a mistake in the man she picked she didn’t regret the child she’d gotten out of the deal.

She wished her grandma was still alive so she could see what a great kid Brock was. She hoped Granny would be proud of how Lexie was raising her son. She felt she was doing okay. They both were.

She cut the big slice of pie in two, leaving the slightly smaller half for Brock, then squirted a pile of canned whipped cream on top. Nourishment for the quest that lay ahead: shopping Black Friday specials online for the perfect presents for her aunt and uncle and cousins back in California, and her mom and, of course, Brock.

She loved holiday sales. They were the only time she could actually afford all the expensive gifts that were usually out of reach for a single mom on a teacher’s salary. She settled on the couch with her pie on the coffee table and her laptop in her lap, started some Taylor Swift playing, cracked her knuckles, limbering up. Then she brought her computer to life. Let the adventure begin.

She’d already purchased a plane ticket for her mom so she could fly up from sunny California and join them for the holidays, but Lexie wanted something to put under the tree as well.

What to get? Perfume? No. Mom would say, “Your father’s gone. What’s the point?”

It was what she said about everything, from getting her nails done to whipping up the gourmet meals she used to love cooking. For years Lexi had gotten her a can of tennis balls as a stocking stuffer because Mom loved to play tennis, but that wasn’t an option. She’d stopped playing. She’d also given up her book club, claiming that since Daddy’s death it was hard to concentrate on the words on the page, so there was no point in getting her a book. Something for the house? Her mother had enough stuff.

Chocolate! Even the most miserable of women could be helped by chocolate. Lexi knew that from experience.

She ordered a box of Godiva truffles.

She found a deal on body butter and ordered some for the cousins, then started the search for the perfect present for her aunt.

“I’m awake, Mommy.”

She looked up to see her son entering the living room, looking adorable in his superhero pj’s. His brown curls (a gift from the father fail) were tousled, and he rubbed his eyes (brown, also from the father fail) as he joined her on the couch, snuggling up next to her.

“What are you doing?” he asked.

“I’m checking out the sales. I have to get my holiday shopping done.”

“And we have to see Santa,” Brock reminded her.

“Don’t worry. We have plenty of time to see Santa,” she assured him.

“Does he know I want a puppy?”

“I think he does, but I think he also knows that Mommy said no puppy yet. You have to wait until you’re older.”

Brock’s lips dipped downward. “I just want a puppy.”

“You’ll get one eventually, but not this Christmas. Start thinking about something else to ask Santa for.”

The lower lip jutted out.

“Oh, my, what a sad, pitiful mouth,” she teased. She leaned over and picked up her pie from the coffee table. “I think it needs something to make it happy,” she said, forking off a bite.

Brock squirmed in delight and opened his mouth.

“There. Did that make your mouth happier?” she asked once it was in.

He nodded, chewed and swallowed. “My mouth wants some more.”

“It’s a good thing I have a piece saved for you in the refrigerator, then. Want to go get it?”

He nodded again, this time even more eagerly, and followed her to the kitchen.

Not the most nutritious breakfast in the world, she thought as she dished it up. But not the worst either. After all, it did have pumpkin and eggs. Anyway, it was Thanksgiving weekend. Everyone deserved to party a little on a holiday weekend.

She’d hoped to find some people to party with right here in her cul-de-sac when she’d first moved in. She’d fallen in love with the house, with its simple lines and big front porch, and had assumed that there’d be another family living in one of the neighboring houses.

But she hadn’t found a family when she moved in. Instead, she’d found workaholics who were rarely around and a divorcing couple whose quarrels she’d heard clear over on her front porch. They’d soon moved out and taken their sulky teenager with them, leaving the house standing empty. The Sold sign now posted in the front yard gave her hope, but it was about her only hope. The little old lady who occupied the house two doors down didn’t come out much, and there was a reclusive older couple next door.

At least she assumed it was a couple. So far she’d only seen the husband, and he wasn’t inclined to chat.

Once, she’d caught sight of him driving toward his house when she was outside, raking the leaves from the big maple tree in her front yard—a hefty man with thinning gray hair and bushy eyebrows. She’d given him a friendly wave and a smile, and he’d nodded and managed to lift his fingers off the steering wheel, then he’d turned into his garage, and it had swallowed him up. She’d seen him one other time and gotten the same half-hearted acknowledgement. She’d taken over some cookies once when she’d thought she caught sight of someone in their dining- room window, but the only welcome she’d gotten had been from a couple of garden gnomes sitting on the front porch. When no one had answered the door, she’d wound up leaving them on the doorstep.

Did he have a wife? If he did she had to be bedridden or as reclusive as him. It was like living next door to Boo Radley.

Well, she’d find her peeps. She was working that direction with Mrs. Davidson of the Orphans Thanksgiving dinner and Shannon, who was also nearing the big three-oh and who taught fourth grade. Her social life would sort itself out. Maybe, if she was lucky, her love life would also.

She settled Brock at the kitchen counter with his pie, promising him a trip to town for hamburgers for lunch—let the fun continue—then returned to her computer. There was a lot of Black Friday left, and she had shopping to do.

 

 

Stanley sat down at his computer to check the stock market and then his email. Not many emails came for him anymore. Still, out of habit, he checked. The inbox was filled with Black Friday offers. Fifty percent off this. Get that now before it’s gone. BOGO. Enter this coupon code.

He deleted them all. No need for shopping bargains when he wasn’t going to shop. That had been Carol’s department, not his. She’d spent a fortune on her sister’s family and all her girlfriends, buying stuff that would probably end up in a garage sale or a landfill.

“It’s a way to show people you care,” she’d tell him.

She had a point there. He still fondly remembered the year she’d gotten him a slick, new bowling ball. She’d wrapped it and put it inside a huge packing crate with a bow on it so he couldn’t guess what it was.

“Do you like it?” she’d asked when he took it out of its box.

He had, and more than the gift itself, he’d liked that loving expression on her face.

Even though he never bought gifts for anyone else, he’d always gotten something nice for her: bubble bath, chocolates, jewelry. One year he’d bought season tickets to the local theater because the season included several musicals. Carol loved musicals. (Stopping in the middle of what you’re doing to sing a song never made sense to him. But then he’d been an electrician, not a poet, so what did he know?)

There was no one he needed to lavish presents on now, no one he needed to show that he cared. “Waste of time and money,” he muttered. No holiday shopping this year. Or ever. No presents for anyone. Did you hear that, Carol?

People shouldn’t waste so much time buying crap. When you weren’t wandering in and out of stores, you had more time for other things.

Stanley gave his nose a scratch. Other things. Like checking the stock market, doing your Sudoku puzzle … He scratched his nose again. Watching TV. Yeah, he had a busy life.

But don’t forget keeping the house maintained, emptying the garbage.

Shaking his fist at heaven.

How he’d looked forward to retiring and enjoying himself, spending more time with Carol, doing things together. There was no together. Only the solitary doing of routine.

He sighed and turned off the computer. It was almost time for lunch. A slice of toast with some peanut butter. A glass of milk. A couple of cookies. Hardly gourmet fare, but who cared? He’d never been much of a cook. He wasn’t going to start now.

After his busy day of Sudoku and TV, he made dinner. This time a ham sandwich. No more spicy food before bed. He topped his meal off with some more ice cream and called it good.

Now, what to watch on TV tonight? He flipped it on and checked his options. Hulu, Netflix, Amazon, Home Movies.

Home Movies! He didn’t have a Home Movies option, and he’d never seen that old-fashioned movie projector icon before. He blinked and leaned forward, squinting at the TV screen. There were his options. Hulu, Netflix, Amazon.

Okay, take a deep breath. That was just a weird…something.

He went to Netflix and opted for one of his favorite police series. There you go. Cops called to a murder scene, people standing behind the yellow tape, gawking. There, toward the back of the crowd was… He let out a yelp and pushed back against his recliner. It was Carol, middle-aged and with that short haircut he’d told her he liked even though he hadn’t. She waved at him.

Oh, man. What was wrong with him? He took a deep breath, leaned forward and stared at the screen. She was gone. He kept looking for her throughout the rest of the show, but she never returned.

Both frustrated and unnerved, he shut off the TV and opted for a book. That would do him just fine.

He read until he was sleepy, then went to bed, torn between hoping Carol would make another appearance and dreading another scold. Being nagged from beyond the grave was unsettling.

 

 

She did return late that night, and where her first visit had been unsettling, this one was downright scary. She wasn’t cute like she’d been the night before. The nightie was gone, and she was in jeans and a red sweater, topping off the outfit with a Santa hat.

That part was okay, but the face under the Santa hat was a different story. Her pretty blue eyes replaced with what looked like red hot coals. Aaah!

He bolted upright, his heart pounding. “Carol?” he whimpered, pulling the covers up to his chin like a shield.

Some shield. What he needed to do was dive under the bed.

“Don’t be silly. I’d find you there,” she said, reading his mind. “I wanted to watch home movies, Stanley. Obviously, you didn’t get the message. I don’t think you’re taking me seriously.”

“I am,” he whispered, averting his gaze.

Averting didn’t work. She whooshed right in his face, forcing him back against the headboard. “I heard what you said about not shopping.”

He squeezed his eyes shut tightly. “That was your thing, not mine.” Arguing. He was arguing with a ghost. What was he thinking?

“All right, I’ll give you that. But you’re going to have to find some way to get involved with life. Take an interest. There are people all around who need you.”

“Nobody needs me,” he grumbled. Not anymore, not with her gone.

“That’s not true. There are always people who need you. Open your eyes, and you’ll see them.”

He didn’t want to open his eyes. He might see her.

“If you’d watched those movies like I wanted, you’d have realized how good life is when you’re out there doing things.”

He’d gotten all their home movies digitized, and they’d barely made a dent in watching them before she was gone. “There’s no point, because I was doing things with you. Life’s not good now, and watching them will just piss me off.”

“Stanley, stop feeling so sorry for yourself. Start looking out and focusing on others instead of in and only on yourself. It’s the season of peace on earth, goodwill toward men. Get out there and show some goodwill. And, while you’re at it, decorate this place. It’s so…un-Christmassy.”

Decorate? “Oh come on, that was your thing, too,” he protested, eyes still squeezed shut.

“Not hanging lights. That was always your job.”

“There’s no reason to hang the lights. You’re not here to appreciate them.”

“I’m here now.”

He cracked one eye open, only to see those fiery eyes boring into him. Yes, she was.

“I know,” he said, “and, no offense, but you don’t look so good, babe,” he added and shut that eyelid back down.

“It’s because I’m not happy. You’re killing me, Manly Stanley.”

It would probably come across as callous to point out that she was already dead.

“You’d better start taking me seriously.”

“I always took you seriously.”

“Then, get with the program. I’m going to haunt you till you do.”

“Please, no. Don’t do that,” he begged. “I can’t handle seeing you like this.” Those glowing eyes really were creepy.

“Then, I suggest you start thinking about making me happy.”

“I will, I will,” he promised.

“Good. I’ll be watching,” she said and left in swirl of cold wind.

Stanley’s eyes popped open, and he saw his covers had fallen off. No wonder he’d felt a breeze. It was his subconscious telling him he was cold, that was all. Like those times he’d dream he was looking for a bathroom and would wake up to realize he needed to take a whiz.

But why was he seeing Carol? Why was she choosing now, of all times, to haunt his subconscious?

Because she’d loved Christmas, of course. That was it. That was all.

He could swear he smelled peppermint again. Was there such a thing as olfactory hallucination? That had to be what he was suffering from. Had to be.

He abandoned the idea of trying to go back to sleep. It was four thirty in the morning. He’d conked out around eleven. Five and a half hours was enough. Anyway, he’d rather walk around gritty-eyed than take a chance on meeting Burning Coals Carol again.

He showered, he shaved. He got dressed. Proof that he was, indeed, taking an interest in life.

“That ought to make her happy,” he muttered.

Make her happy. He’d have liked nothing better. If she was still alive. But she wasn’t. And he was laying off the ice cream. Ice cream was the culprit.

Or else he was going insane.

No, that couldn’t be. Surely if he were going to lose his mind he’d have done so long before this. Of course, it was never too late to go around the bend.

He drank his morning coffee and ate a bowl of cereal. Then he watched the morning news and went online and checked the stock market. His stocks were still holding strong. All was well. Not that his stocks mattered much these days. He had what he needed to live on stashed away in a retirement account that was intended for two, and no one to leave any money to. Still, it was good to have something to check.

Come ten o’clock, he fetched his coat and hat and gloves and went to the garage. Time to take the SUV to the shop and have snow tires put on. There was no snow in the forecast yet, maybe wouldn’t be any at all this winter, but Stanley liked to be prepared.

Stanley also liked to be organized, which was why he always kept the garage immaculate—a sheet of cardboard under the SUV to catch oil drips, his tools neatly hung on a peg board or stored under his work bench, bins of seasonal decorations that he’d hauled in every year for Carol belonged on the shelves.

But now one was sitting in the middle of the floor, tipped sideways.

On the floor! What the heck?

 ~~~~~~~~~

  

The author of more than 50 books, Roberts is best known for her holiday stories, women’s fiction and romance novels in small-town settings. Her On Strike for Christmas was a Lifetime Network movie, and her The Nine Lives of Christmas is a perennial Hallmark channel movie favorite. Before she launched her author career, she played in a band and owned a singing telegram company. She divides her time between two homes in Washington and a beachside retreat in southern California and writes at all three.


Do you enjoy Christmas stories?

How early do you begin reading them?

Two randomly chosen people posting a comment before 11:00 PM, September 9 will each receive a print ARC (advance review copy) of A Little Christmas Spirit. My thanks to Sheila Roberts for the giveaway. 

*U.S. / Canada only

*Must be 18

*Void where prohibited


Birthday Giveaway #8

One randomly chosen person who posts a comment before 11:00 PM, September 9 will receive a book from my conference stash. 

*U.S. only

*Must be 18

*Void where prohibited



Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Today's Special - - The Saints of the Lost and Found


I recently received an advanced reader copy of The Saints of the Lost and Found by T.M. Causey. I picked it up late one afternoon, thinking I'd read the first chapter and get a feel for what it's all about. I turned the final page at 1:46 AM the next morning and have now added a new book to my keeper shelf. Wow, what a story! It grabbed me from the first page and would not let me set it aside. I missed dinner, the dog's evening walk, the college basketball game I had planned to watch and my bedtime. This story - and these characters - absolutely refused to turn me loose.  Causey pulled me through an emotional wringer; I didn't just read about Avery's story, I lived it with her. And, though the journey was at times heart-wrenching and horrific, the end brought a smile of hope to my heart. If you enjoy dark, Southern Gothic suspense with complex characters, enough twists and turns to keep you guessing until the very end, and a touch of paranormal realism, then you'll want to lose yourself in T.M. Causey's The Saints of the Lost and Found. I have a feeling that it will be quite some time before I'm able to stop thinking about it. 

Please enjoy the following Q&A with T.M. Causey (a/k/a Toni McGee Causey) and leave a comment for a chance to win a signed copy of the book. 


Q.       Before writing THE SAINTS OF LOST AND FOUND, you wrote a very different kind of book under the name Toni McGee Causey. Tell us about those books.

A.       A long time ago, I wrote a comedic thriller /caper trilogy about a crazy southern-fried heroine, Bobbie Faye Sumrall, who took no prisoners and pretty much would destroy everything in her way if she was trying to get to someone she loved to help them out. She was an absolute hoot to write -- smart, but vulnerable, smartass, but kind-hearted, and the kind of woman who'd looked for love in all the wrong places and had blown up a few of them afterward. I loved her so, and she'd make me wake up at night, laughing, when I had apparently dreamed the next scrape she was about to get into.

I wanted to write a female super-action figure type of person, someone who had her own sort of negative mythology to live down, who was just trying to go about her day and survive and keep people she loved alive, and to do it by her wits and strength and tenacity.

It amused me when one reviewer early on thought she was a “Mary Sue” – someone who can do everything and do it perfectly. (Which told me he didn’t read the book, because she pretty much screws up from page one.) It also amused me when a few readers felt she wasn’t realistic, because I hadn’t expected anyone to really  believe that there was this woman running around, blowing up half of the state. What thrilled me was how so many people embraced the Crazy and laughed and told me they’ve re-read her many times, because there’s a deep story buried in her life. There’s  a lot of pathos. If you don’t have hardships and tragedy beneath the comedy, then it’s just slapstick and meaningless, (to me, at least), so I knew her life had been rough, she’d been in some really tight spots financially trying to take care of her brother and sister, and she was still struggling just to make ends meet.

I love her. I have smiled (and laughed) over the numerous people who tend to think of me as Bobbie Faye. I take that as a compliment. (Though I have a lot of insurance, just in case life imitates art.)


Q.       Your just-released Southern Gothic contemporary mystery/suspense novel is quite a departure from those early books. Why the change in direction?

A.       One of the odd surprises of my life is that the thing you never expect to hit is the thing that hits, and in so many ways, that's what happened with Bobbie Faye. She was fierce and fun and I loved giving my humor a wide field in which to play, from subtle to sarcasm, from irony to near. I always saw Bobbie Faye ​as Wile-E-Coyote just as he goes over the edge of the cliff, looking back at the camera with that oh, crap! expression, and it was a joy to write her.

          The great thing about being a writer is that you have so many stories you want to tell. The terrible thing is that you have so many stories you want to tell.

          I was never very good at writing what I was "supposed" to write next. There was a sort of fallow period immediately after the trilogy where I tried several different stories and... they sucked. Massively. They didn't make it past the first act because I shuddered and deleted them, never ever ever to be seen again, thank goodness. Mostly they sucked because I was trying so hard at that time to write what I thought I was supposed to write next, to fit in with the market, to sell, to keep making the fans of the writing happy (or, at the very least, not disappointed), and I can tell you, there are brilliant writers out there who are genius at this, and their storytelling / quality of writing does not suffer. Unfortunately, I was not one of them.

          So after the suckage-fest, I finally faced facts: I needed to write something that inspired me, that I knew I wanted to dig into, and I'd had this idea for a long time about a woman who finds lost things, and what would that be like?

          Oddly, at first, I thought it was going to be a funny novel. But Avery showed up almost simultaneously with the idea, and every time I tried to "write funny," it went flat. And the more I looked at her, the more I delved into who she was, and how she got that way, there was so much pain, so much darkness, and quite honestly? I was scared of it. I think I quit writing this book more than a dozen times.

          I was on a writing retreat at the esteemed Joan Johnston's house, with Peggy Webb and my dear friend, CJ Lyons, and we did a ton of brainstorming for each other’s works in progress, of untangling confused story-lines or suggesting twists and turns. I'd never participated in something like that before, and still, I was terrified of writing this story. There was more fear than just the "what if I fail?" thing that plagues nearly every writer. There was the bone deep realization that there were some truths I was going to have to tell, some things I was going to have to mentally live through that were hard, and I had to face the fact that I would feel exposed for the first time, really, as a writer. I don't think you can tell as dark a story as SAINTS is without that sort of vulnerability. At least, I can't.

          There was a point in the retreat when the ending (a critical piece of it) came to me, and I stood there in tears, because I knew that the journey there was going to be so hard for Avery, and so necessary, and while there was some hope in that ending, it was not going to be easy. I almost quit the story right then, and Peggy Webb found me in the kitchen in tears and sat me down to listen to the story again. When I had gone through the truths I knew I would have to delve into, she said, "You have to write this. You're meant to write this. You can do this. I believe in you."

          Sometimes, it's just that, those little moments in a writer's life, where everything turns, and the realization of how big a moment that doesn’t come until years later. ​

Q.       THE SAINTS OF THE LOST AND FOUND is genre bending. How do you define the genre for this fantastic book?

A.       Well, first, thank you for the compliment.
         
          My answer is simply that it’s “a novel.” There are blends of suspense/mystery, a little bit of southern literary, and some gothic elements in there, which I can understand makes it a little difficult for booksellers to know where to shelve it. (I apparently cannot do anything the easy way.)

          I started calling it a southern gothic mystery/suspense more out of a warning to my past readers that this was absolutely not humor, as my previous books had been. I would much rather not make a sale than to have a reader buy the book because they did not understand what they were getting and then come away shocked or disappointed. I hope the darkness and subject of the cover, the description, even the title, gives a clear idea of the tone and mood and type of book this will be.



Q.       Mystery, thriller and suspense fans will no doubt love THE SAINTS OF THE LOST AND FOUND, but what’s in it for romance readers?

A.       First and foremost, SAINTS is not a romance. There are ramifications—terrible ones, bittersweet ones—for the love of Avery’s life, and for her and for the choices they made, which is crystal clear at the beginning of the story. I feel it’s important for romance readers to know that there is a story about love deep in the bones of SAINTS. It’s just not an easy one, and there are obstacles—serious, deadly obstacles—that Avery will have to navigate just to survive. If she can survive. And I’m not being disingenuous about that—I want romance readers to know that the kind of love story that’s a part of the very marrow of this story is a brutal one, but I think, it’s also a love story that will resonate.


Q.       SAINTS has a fantastic paranormal element in which Avery Broussard, the heroine, “sees” people’s losses. In fact, she comes from a family gifted with unique abilities. What inspired you to gift your characters with these abilities?

A.       My dad told me a story once a long time ago that stuck with me, and I think the seeds were planted way back then.

He and my Paw Paw had been hunting. My dad’s family was very poor, and if they didn’t hunt, they didn’t eat. This was back in the days of the Great Depression, and my Paw Paw’s three hunting dogs were prized because they ensured successful hunts.

On one such trip, two of the hunting dogs returned, but the best one did not. My Paw Paw and Dad searched everywhere and couldn’t find her. Dad was about ten years old at the time, and after they’d been searching futilely for a while, Paw Paw told him to get in the truck. They drove for about forty-five minutes far south of the property they’d been hunting on, and my Paw Paw pulled up to a very old house where an old timer (even by Paw Paw’s standards) sat on a rocker on his front porch. His eyes were milky-white the cataracts were so thick. When Paw Paw got out of the truck, Dad was surprised that the old man started talking first—and knew who they were. Without anyone having said a thing yet. (This was before the times of phones in every home, and even word of mouth wouldn’t have traveled that fast.)

“You lost a dog a ways back,” the old man said by way of intro, and Dad said his hair stood straight up on his head.

“Yep,” Paw Paw said, but didn’t elaborate as the old man turned his head and sort of stared out into the trees.

“You know that river where you were hunting?”

“Yep.”

“Well, about two miles west of where you were, the river forks. You know it?”

“Yep.”

“Take the right fork, and go on down a ways, ‘bout a mile or so, and your dog’s hung up there in the barbwire fence.”

Paw Paw thanked him, promised him some food from the hunt, and he and Dad climbed back in the truck, heading the almost hour drive back to where they’d been hunting.

My dad’s not the kind of person who believes in woo-woo stuff, especially something like this, so he indicated he thought it was all a waste of time, but they found the fork in the river, veered to the right, and about a mile from the fork, the dog was hung up in the barbwire fence.

I probably would have dismissed the entire thing as completely far-fetched, except that it was my dad telling the story, he was sincere in his disbelief-until-he-saw-the-proof aspect, and I’d had enough oddball experiences finding things that other people had lost that I knew there could potentially be more at work than someone simply telling a tall tale.

For many years, I’d get flashes of where something was that I was looking for... I’d “see” it, and then sure enough, that’s where it was. I’d never thought much about it other than assuming I had simply probably memorized its location as I walked through a room—maybe something akin to a photographic memory—but I never assumed it was anything short of just memory, until one day, a friend was telling about her mother’s lost high-heeled red stiletto shoe, and I “saw” it underneath her porch. She lives in Nova Scotia, and I didn’t know that. I’d never seen the house (not a photo, nothing), didn’t know anything about its architecture, and yet, I saw the shoe.

The shoe was exactly where I saw it, in that same condition.

That weirded me out. Plenty.

So, I told a couple of people, and the first thing they did was ask me about something they’d lost. I was almost always wrong about my guesses. I think my ratio of correct “images” to questions was so low, it probably needed multiple zeroes after a decimal point.

I didn’t mind being constantly wrong. It was a relief, actually, because the hope that people have when they are asking that question is unrelenting, and dashing those hopes, or seeing their disappointment, was equally brutal.

Years later, Avery was born, and I think she’d probably been there all along, from the first time I found something... or maybe even as far back as when my dad told me that story. Because I always wondered, “What if?” What if something like that was real... and consistent, and you really could find things? What would you do? How would you use it? Would you help the police? With what? Big things? Children? All the missing children in the whole world?

And what if you got it wrong?



Thank you to T.M. Causey and Nancy Berland Public Relations for today's Q&A.

What about you, readers? Have you ever had the experience of finding something you shouldn't have been able to? Have you done it more than once? 

One person who leaves a comment on today's post will receive an autographed copy of The Saints of the Lost and Found. Deadline for the giveaway is 11:00 pm (EST) Thursday, March 10th. 

Monday, May 28, 2018

Review - - Then There Was You



Then There Was You
By Miranda Liasson
Publisher: Grand Central /Forever
Release Date: May 29, 2018
Reviewed by Janga


Dr. Serafina “Sara” Langdon has returned to her hometown of Angel Falls, Ohio, to help care for her grandmother who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. Sara is eager to be there for her beloved Nonna, but she has mixed emotions about returning. She is happy to have more time with her siblings, sisters Evie and Gabby and younger brother Rafe and Evie’s two adorable kids, but she wonders if her father is pleased to have her join him in his practice. She is also still haunted by the debacle of a bachelor party a year ago that left her a jilted bride with a distaste for cake and left Tagg Milhouse, her boyfriend of ten years, living with the woman who jumped out of the cake in the house where Sara and Tagg expected to start their married life. Sara holds Colton Walker responsible for what she lost at that bachelor party, and she knows there is little chance of avoiding the man with whom she has been at odds (most of the time) since she was fourteen.

Colton was an angry teenager who could easily have gone in the wrong direction had it not been for his dead father’s cop friends and Tagg and his family who befriended him. Now he’s chief of police in Angel Falls and a favorite son of the town where he constantly goes the extra mile to care for the people. Colton has had a crush on Sara since high school, but he has always stepped back in favor of Tagg to whom he owed a debt. But now Sara is back, Tagg is not, and Colton is determined to take his chance at winning Sara—if only he can find time between his job and caring for his grandmother and younger sister.

Sara’s brother insists that Colton is a better man than Tagg, and the more time Sara spends with the police chief, the more she believes her brother. But just as she starts to believe that Colton is her Mr. Darcy, Tagg is back in town, begging for a second chance and creating complications in a relationship that seemed headed for an HEA.

Then There was You introduces Liasson’s Angel Falls series, and it does exactly what a first book in a small-town series needs to do. First, it establishes Angel Falls as the kind of heartwarming but imperfect place that readers will want to revisit. Second, it introduces a cast of characters that readers will want to know more about. Sara’s family is an interesting group. They have suffered from the death of her mother when the Langdon siblings were young, and now they are dealing with their grandmother’s Alzheimer’s. Their father has remarried, but his silence about his first wife bothers his daughters. Lawyer Gabby is dissatisfied with her job and seems to be settling in the romance department. Firefighter Rafe’s life has been filled with loss, and he now avoids commitment. Readers will be longing for both their stories.

Colton’s relationship with his young sister Hannah furnishes some leavening humor as well as some touching moments, and young as Hannah is, she is already in love. Will he prove to be the love of her life? Most important, Sara and Colton are believable, likable characters who are interesting people as individuals and whose romance offers an enemies-to-lovers tale with a bit of a twist that will win contemporary romance fans, especially those who have a fondness for that trope.

Kudos to Liasson for making the Alzheimer’s thread read true. This is not anther trendy disease story. This author shows the pain of losing someone you love by degrees, the need to cherish the moments when the real person shines through, the difficulty of recognizing the patient’s autonomy as long as possible while protecting them from the dangers into which they may wander, and the reality of laughing sometimes to keep from crying. I’ve been there, and I confess this story moved me to tears more than once. At the same times, Nonna’s story never overshadows the romance. And I love the fact that her unfiltered comments move several threads in the right direction.

This first book was sufficient to make an Angel Falls fan of me. If you like small-town romance that feels real and touches your heart, I think you will like this one too.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Have you read any of Miranda Liasson's books?

Do you enjoy light, fun contemporary romances or those with more emotional depth? Or maybe, a bit of both?

Colton is a police officer and and Sara's brother, Rafe (please let him have his own book!) is a firefighter. What is it about a man in uniform?

One randomly chosen person who leaves a comment on this post before 11:00 PM, May 30 will receive a print copy of Then There Was You. (U.S. addresses only)