December 2011

Timeless Renewal

By Joanne Rock

joannerock.com

As a historical author, I’ve found one of the benefits of my research is discovering the roots for modern traditions. Most recently, I’ve been thinking about the blog theme of change and renewal in light of its historical underpinnings. I’ve discovered that cultures all over the northern hemisphere have thought about change and personal growth at this time of year.

It’s a Winter Solstice thing. For centuries, mankind has witnessed the return of the sun and increasing daylight after the winter solstice. This renewal of light is something to be celebrated, especially by those of us who live at more extreme ends of those hemispheres. And I’m sure Seasonal Affective Disorder today is nothing compared to the stir craziness our ancestors might have felt in the dark months of the year before the invention of the light bulb. But even today, I am grateful to see the length of our daylight hours increasing and to know that spring and warmth will return. Each year, I’m relieved to see the tide turning and the days getting longer.

And, it seems, with the return of the light comes the desire to look forward. As we witness changes in the world around us, we think about changes within. What better time to plan for spring than in the cold days of winter? Like a farmer perusing his seed catalog, we think about what seeds we’d like to sow in our hearts and minds. How will we encourage ourselves to be better in the coming year? What ideas and habits should we start planting for a happier, healthier future?

Beyond the inspiration of the changing world around us, our resolutions and commitment to personal growth at the New Year also derives from the accounting necessary at the end of one calendar year and the beginning of another. While the New Year has been marked on different dates in history depending on what calendar is being used, January 1 has been associated with our calendar since the Roman emperor Julius Caesar gifted us with the current system of timekeeping. With one year ending and another beginning, it’s natural to tie up loose ends from a bookkeeping perspective. We pay taxes, calculate what profit we’ve made through our industry, and take stock of our inventory. The act of resolving to earn more, borrow less, be more successful or learn a new trade has a direct tie to the end of the calendar year and the start of another one in which we can realize specific, measurable goals.

Our need to organize, renew and grow at this time of year is now so entrenched in our culture that it’s easy to forget how deep the roots of the tradition extend. Now, I know it’s time to start reorganizing because my January issue of Better Homes and Gardens tells me how! My local department store gives a discount on the exercise equipment I need to get in shape and the storage bins I need to clear the clutter in my house. I’ll resolve to be a better bookkeeper too, as soon as my tax forms are on my desk.

So while I don’t need to remember centuries of solstice celebrations to know that it’s time for renewal and change in my life, it sure is fun to look back and feel that connection with innumerable generations of ancestors that came before us. I guess that’s part of the fun of writing and reading historical stories in general – we are reminded that no matter how much politics times have changed, we share much in common with those who came before us. A woman falling in love in medieval times, Regency times and modern times all experience something universal and timeless. Just like a woman in the Roman Empire experienced quite the same thing you or I do when we dream about the New Year full of possibilities and all we might achieve.

Are you making a resolution this year? Content to ring in 2012 with friends from the comfort of your living room? Tell me about your New Year plans and I’ll give one commenter a copy of my historical In the Laird’s Bed.

   

               

Henry VIII: Serial Killer?

By Kathy Lynn (a.k.a. Kate) Emerson


There aren't too many historical figures who have been presented to modern audiences in quite so many different ways. He's been shown as the obese, obnoxious potentate, swilling ale and gnawing on a turkey leg and as a young, handsome leading man the ladies just can't help falling for. Scholars try to analyze him. Writers of fiction attempt to come up with some logic behind his actions in order to make their novels believable. But the truth is that the mind of the sixteenth-century male, let alone one who was a king, is all but incomprehensible to the modern American female. He was raised for the church until his older brother died, taught that women were second-class citizens, to say the least. Later, according at at least one of his biographers, Philip the Fair of Burgundy became his role model. Philip is the one who probably turned his wife, Juana of Castile, into Joanna the Mad.


Still, poor Henry gets an undeservedly bad reputation in some ways. Compared to his fellow monarch, Francis I of France, he was a reasonably faithful husband, even with all those wives. I've been writing about various of his alleged mistresses for some time now. The latest novel, AT THE KING'S PLEASURE, will be available in stores and as an ebook on January 3, 2012. The protagonist is Lady Anne Stafford, sister of the 3rd duke of Buckingham and wife of George, Lord Hastings (later created earl of Huntingdon). In 1510, accused of an affair with the king, or with his boon companion Sir William Compton, or perhaps both, Lady Anne was spirited away from court by her brother and her husband and incarcerated in a nunnery. I seriously doubt that she was ever King Henry's mistress. Compton is another story, and the love triangle of Will, George, and Anne is at the heart of my novel. The subplot, though, has to do with Anne's brother the duke and his eventual execution by King Henry for treason.


Was he really plotting to take the throne himself? That's something else I have doubts about, although it is true that he didn't think much of the way Henry Tudor was running things. The real question is this: why did the king think it necessary to behead Buckingham? There is no simple answer. Yes, Buckingham had a distant claim to the throne and yes, the Tudors did tend to kill off kinfolk who got too uppity. But was Henry VIII really a serial killer, committing judicial murder to rid himself of potential threats to the succession (and the occasional wife)? That was certainly the end result. And in a couple of instances, he didn't even bother with the mockery of a trial before he signed the death warrant. But Henry himself would not have thought of himself as a murderer. To his mind, he was just protecting the realm.


One of the things that makes the Tudors so fascinating to write about, and to read about, too, is that they were bigger than life, colorful characters who weren't afraid to let their passions show. Their flaws were big, too, and at a distance of several centuries, those flaws make them even more interesting.

           

Beyond Yesterday

By C.P. Avery


Available on E-reader


BEYOND YESTERDAY is the first of a series of books set in the high desert area of Nevada where life has special challenges. It explores a small town coming back to life after years of decline. This series delves into various characters who toughed it out and new ones who came to take advantage of opportunities.


Setting: Nugget City, Nevada, a small town in the high desert west of Reno. The main characters are descendants of the owners of the first gold mine in Nugget City.


Subgenre: Inspirational Romantic Suspense


Summary: Nugget City is heading for extinction, but the mayor is determined to keep the town from turning into one of the state’s 300 ghost towns. To save it he brings back Jason Mann, who’d left town under a cloud of suspicion fifteen years ago. Will Jason save it, or destroy it?


Allison Cates grew up feeling excluded from her family’s heritage. Now that she has inherited everything, she’s come back to sell the properties, but she has to help save the town or she could lose everything. Yet a long-held family secret puts her in danger.


Can she and Jason do enough to stave off disaster before it’s too late? And will the trouble that caused Jason to leave years ago return with his arrival?


Things your heroine would never be caught dead doing/saying: That she is incapable of doing something. She’d never be caught backing away from trouble.


Heroine’s occupation: Allison worked as a high school librarian before California’s cutbacks. Now she’s looking for a new job while she renovates her properties.


Hero’s occupation: Jason has managed several Gold mines since he graduated from college with an engineering degree in mining. His most fervent dream has been to return to his home town and run his family’s properties.


What do you think readers will like best about this book: Hopefully, the strong characters, the mystery, and the richness of family heritage.


What’s next: A WILLIAMSBURG WINTER should be out in late January.


Nicholas Bellamy is seeking the secret of his past. When he finds his mother’s old birth certificate he discovers she has changed her name and his grandmother is alive and lives in Williamsburg, Virginia. He goes there to learn about his roots and find out who is father is. But his grandmother is suffering from dementia and his new-found cousins want her committed to a nursing home. Nicholas is waiting until mid-February to make a decision. Only Liz Seymour believes his cousins have ulterior motives.


Questions:


The theme of BEYOND YESTERDAY is achieving dreams from the past after years of believing it was impossible. How difficult is it to hold on to your dreams for 15 years? Are the obstacles the same as they were 15 years ago? Do some things resolve themselves just because time has passed or do they become harder?


How do you retain your faith that things will go the way you want them to? Do you sometimes fixate on a goal that might not be the goal for you? Do you have faith that God will show you where you need to be? Please share some of your experiences with us.


GIVEAWAY—Please comment on any of the above questions and you will be included in a random drawing. A Williamsburg gift package will be given to the lucky winner. Please visit my web page at www.CPAvery.com to read an excerpt of BEYOND YESTERDAY.

I hope you all have a wonderful and blessed holiday season and a very happy and fulfilling New Year!







SHOULD OLD ACQUAINTANCE BE WELCOMED BACK?

By Jaycie Cash


Should old acquaintance be forgot? Well . . . sometimes. It all depends on why you went your separate ways in the first place. Whatever the reason for your split, however, the beginning of a new year seems the perfect time to contemplate renewing relationships with one-time friends.

First, of course, you have to consider why you originally stopped being pals. If you can’t remember—or explain—what came between you, I’d recommend giving that old friendship another chance. Depending on how long it’s been since the two of you last saw each other, chances are good you’re both relatively different people today than you were when you stopped hanging out together. You might very well find you enjoy each other’s company once again, and have the added bonus of sharing memories from back in the day.

If instead, however, you stopped being close chums due to a traumatic event that involved one of you betraying the other, I probably wouldn’t recommend jumping back into a friendship with that individual. You’d probably be smarter to wish that person all the best and to continue along the highways and byways of your life unaccompanied by him or her and all the baggage you share with each other.

Recently, a one-time friend re-entered my life. Neither of us had done anything truly rotten to the other. She was my first college roommate and we simply hadn’t gotten along as well as we would have liked. Small situations became blown out of proportion and we got bitchy with each other. My communication skills weren’t too hot back then (they’re not always that much better today) and I didn’t know how to stand up for myself in a positive way.

So, we went our separate ways for years. When we ran into each other recently, my ex-roomie apologized profusely and told me how deeply she regretted our falling out. I assured her there’s no doubt in my mind that we share equal responsibility for things not working out between us. Since then we’ve emailed several times. Once the hectic madness of the holidays is behind us, I look forward to our getting together and becoming reacquainted.

In this situation my old acquaintance is not forgotten. I’m looking forward to seeing more of her in 2012.

HOW ABOUT YOU? HAVE YOU EVER RENEWED A FRIENDSHIP OR HAVE YOU EVER WANTED OR REFUSED TO DO SO? LEAVE A COMMENT ABOUT THAT OR ANYTHING ELSE. A FREE COPY OF MY DEBUT NOVEL, MRS. GOODFELLER, WILL BE RANDOMLY AWARDED TO ONE PERSON WHO LEAVES A COMMENT BELOW BEFORE THE NEXT WRITERSPACE BLOG IS POSTED.

Jaycie Cash blogs on a regular basis for Writerspace.com. Her debut novel, MRS. GOODFELLER, is available through most major eBook outlets, including Amazon and Barnes and Noble. She’d love for you to like her Facebook Author page.


 

It's Beginning to Ache A Lot Like Christmas

By Jaycie Cash


My stockings aren’t washed, forget hung by the chimney with care.


No tree is on my premises, but dying plants abound, far more than is fair.


Swollen ankles, you betcha, propped atop some old mags,


That’s what comes of running through malls—now I’m past 30— carrying lots of full bags.


There’s snoring aplenty seconds after sitting in my chair, even after my smallest dog lands on my lap and, as always, drops plenty of hair.


Still, I smile with accomplishment once I awake.


Even after looking in my checkbook, no crying I make.


Sure, what I have left for the month equals around $1.99, yet I manage to feel quite fine.


For every item on my list has finally been marked through.


Oh, Lord, please tell me I didn’t forget Aunt Sue!!


Jaycie Cash blogs on a regular basis for Writerspace.com. Her debut novel, MRS. GOODFELLER, is available through most major eBook outlets, including Amazon and Barnes and Noble. She’d love for you to like her Facebook Author page.


One person who leaves a comment about "It's Beginning to Ache a Lot Like Christmas" before the next Writerspace blog is posted will win a free copy of MRS. GOODFELLER.

 

A Fun Holiday Project--Homemade Cocoa

Hi, readers!


I've got a great treat for you…homemade cocoa mix. I make it every December and keep a big jar handy. Drink this while you're reading your favorite romance novel on a cold winter's night! It's also a great treat to give to the neighbors and teachers at the holidays--this recipe makes ten gift bags! I've made this with the children since they were very small. It's so fun to dump the ingredients into a large bowl, stir with a wooden spoon, and then scoop the custom-made cocoa into cellophane treat bags, complete with homemade labels and a tag with the instructions.


1 package (25.6 oz) nonfat dry milk powder


6 cups miniature marshmallows


1 container (16 oz.) instant cocoa mix for milk (such as Ghirardelli's Premium Hot Cocoa Mix "Double Chocolate"--or Archer Farms brand at Target, which is only 12 oz, so buy more than one canister)


1 jar malted milk powder--if you've never seen it before, it's white/yellow powder in a glass jar found right next to the Nestle's Quick chocolate milk powder on your grocery store shelf


1 16 oz. jar powder non-dairy creamer (such as Coffee-Mate)


1 cup sifted confectioner's sugar


1/2 teaspoon salt


In an enormous bowl (I actually use my roasting pan), combine dry milk, marshmallows, cocoa mix, malted milk powder, confectioners sugar, creamer, and salt; stir until well blended. Store in airtight container in a cool place. Give with serving instructions.


Yield: about 20 cups mix (10 gifts)


To serve: Pour 6 ounces hot water over 1/3 cup cocoa mix; stir until well-blended.

-Kieran Kramer







And The Winner Is...

By Joanne Rock and Jaycie Cash

While thinking about writing this particular post—the final one that allows readers to leave a comment and thereby become eligible to win a free Kindle—authors Joanne Rock and Jaycie Cash started thinking about winning. What does it mean to win? Who is the real winner in life?

Both came to several definite conclusions and offer them here on the chance that they’ll resonate with you as well.

From Joanne:


They say winning isn’t everything, but it sure is a nice bonus. I was reminded of this during high school football season when my son’s team was knocked out of the playoffs in a heartbreaker of a game after an – up until then- undefeated season. We had so much fun watching him play this season. And not just play, but win.

In the sporting world, winning means recognition for your hard work. Affirmation that you’re doing something right. No doubt the losing side has often worked just as hard. But the winner has the bonus of seeing those efforts pay off in something tangible. Luckily, we discovered, there are more intangible benefits to losing. After the tough loss at the end of football season, my family had to work a little harder to find the silver lining of those benefits.

We thought more about the camaraderie of the team and what it meant to go through battle on the field together week in and week out. We took the time to reflect on the meaning of the friendships my son had formed on the field and that my husband and I had formed with other parents in the stands. We remembered the rewards of unselfish play and working toward a common goal as a team. Would we have taken time to appreciate those things as much if we were busy cheering over a trophy? Maybe not.


As the holidays approach and bring the end of the calendar year, it’s a natural time to count blessings and take stock of 2011. We could look at the hard economic times as a loss, of course. But we could also think about what we’ve won in pulling together during tough times as a team, a family or a couple. We think more carefully about how to spend those dollars and about what’s really important. Is it to buy the newest, coolest toys for our kids? Nope. And one of the nicest gifts we can give our kids is the reminder that the holidays celebrate something more important than what Santa brings. I hope your holidays bring you lots of happy blessings and the intangible rewards that make the season so memorable. Happy Holidays to you and yours, and thank you to all our entrants for the Amazon Kindle giveaway!

From Jaycie:

This time of year, the first winners who come to mind are the ones who find the most cherished, meaningful gifts for the people they love at a price the giver can afford. The good news: in my experience a gift doesn’t have to cost a thing to be meaningful.

For example, I don’t know that my mother ever cared more for any gift than one I made and gave her in my early 20s. Working from a photo, I made a pencil sketch of mom when she was just a few years older than I was then. While nothing fancy, the finished product ended up at least looking like her. I think she appreciated the caption I put at the bottom of the page as much or more than the portrait: “Mother at 24. I wish I could do your beauty and gentleness justice. Merry Christmas, Mom. As always, I love you.”


She had it framed along with the photo I’d worked from and kept it on her wall for the rest of her life. I now have it on mine. Guess that makes me a double winner because every time I look at that portrait I’m filled with so many memories and so much love.

Although only one person is going to be awarded the free Kindle Joanne and I are giving away, there are going to be several winners. Joanne and I are chief among those who are coming out ahead. Because of the great response we’ve had to the contest, and the lovely folks with whom we’ve been able to interact, we’re definite winners. It’s our hope that everyone who has entered by leaving a comment for one or more past blogs and who leaves a comment today will feel that this contest has been time well spent on their part, making them winners as well.

Best of luck and a big thank you to all participants. The person who wins the Kindle will be announced by noon tomorrow (Wed., Dec. 14) on the Facebook pages for Joanne Rock and Jaycie Cash.

 

 

 


 

















Celebrating December with Books

By Jaycie Cash



My mother was a planner. And if there’s one thing she knew for sure it was that she didn’t want any child of hers to be born in December. She figured it would be sad for the youngster--having to compete with the holidays for attention--and an extra trial for her, having that kind of added expense, gift buying and party planning during an already expensive and hectic month.


Well, my mother had two children. My birthday is December 2, my brother’s is December 30.


Yet another example of how we plan and God laughs.


That said, I’ve always loved having my birthday in early December. It’s when everyone’s just starting to gear up for the holidays and all the festivities they entail. It’s like everyone is chanting and thinking PARTY, PARTY, and you’re the one who gives them an extra excuse to do just that
 . . . and to shower you with presents while they’re at it. Lovely!


As luck would have it, I’m blessed with wonderful and generous friends, two of whom went in together this year to buy me the middle-priced Kindle. How great is that?! Since I received my new e-reader last night, I haven’t had a chance to familiarize myself with it yet, but my fingers are itching to do just that.


And I’m not the only one who’s going to be learning how to use a new Kindle over the next couple of weeks. Author Joanne Rock and I are going in together to award a free Kindle e-reader to one lucky commenter, just in time for the holidays. Read all about that exciting prize—AND HOW YOU CAN ENTER TO WIN IT FOR YOURSELF (or for your favorite reader)--at the very end of this blog.


One thing’s for certain, both the winning commenter and I are going to have plenty of terrific books to choose from. Below, is a list of all the December books that Writerspace authors are releasing this month alone. Let the celebrations—and the filling of e-readers and book buying—begin!


THE LAST WORD
By Ellery Adams
Berkley Prime Crime


FATE'S EDGE
By Ilona Andrews
Ace


ENDANGERED
By Pamela Beason
Berkley Prime Crime


THE GHOST WAR
By Alex Berenson
Berkley Trade


DEAD BOLT
By Juliet Blackwell
Obsidian


SHAEDES OF GRAY
By Amanda Bonilla
Signet Eclipse


DOUBLE BOOKED FOR DEATH
By Ali Brandon
Berkley Prime Crime



SPELLS & STITCHES
By Barbara Bretton
Berkley Trade


AGONY/ECSTASY
An Anthology
By Meljean Brook
HelenKay Dimon
Jean Johnson
Margaret Rowe
Berkley Heat


RED-HOT SANTA
By Tori Carrington
Harlequin Blaze


LOVE BITES
By Tori Carrington
Severn House


RECKLESSLY YOURS
By Allison Chase
Signet Eclipse


TAILS OF LOVE
An Anthology
By Ann Christopher
Stella Cameron
Lori Foster
Donna MacMeans
Sarah McMarty
Patricia Sargeant
Berkley


SURRENDER
By Pamela Clare
Berkley Sensation


DAYBREAK
By Ellen Connor
Berkley Sensation Trade


WINGING
By Deborah Cooke
NAL Trade


UNDEAD AND UNEMPLOYED
By MaryJanice Davidson
Berkley Sensation Trade



FIVE WAYS 'TIL SUNDAY
By Delilah Devlin
Samhain Publishing


RED-HOT WINTER
An Anthology
By Delilah Devlin
Samhain Publishing


WALKING BACK TO HAPPINESS
By Lucy Dillon
Berkley Trade


SOME LIKE IT HOT
By Louisa Edwards
St. Martin’s Paperbacks


A CAVANAUGH CHRISTMAS
By Marie Ferrarella
Harlequin Romantic Suspense


THREADBARE
By Monica Ferris
Berkley


BUTTONS AND BONES
By Monica Ferris
Berkley Prime Crime


A PLAY OF HERESY
By Margaret Frazer
Berkley Trade


GAINING INTEREST
An e-book (reissue)
By Dara Girard
Ilori Press


TABLE FOR TWO
An e-book (reissue)
By Dara Girard
Ilori Press


MR. MONK ON THE COUCH
(First time in paperback)
By Lee Goldberg
Obsidian


HENRY TILNEY'S DIARY
By Amanda Grange
Berkley Trade


WET & WILD
(Reissue)
By Sandra Hill
Avon


A DIXIE CHRISTMAS
An e-book (two-in-one)
By Sandra Hill
Bell Bridge Books


BOUND BY THE VAMPIRE QUEEN
By Joey W. Hill
Berkley Heat


TO WED A WILD LORD
By Sabrina Jeffries
Pocket Star


AN UNEXPECTED GENTLEMAN
By Alissa Johnson
Berkley Sensation


SEDUCTIVE AS FLAME
By Susan Johnson
Berkley Sensation


DESIRE & DECEPTION
An e-book (reissue)
By Nicole Jordan
Spencerhill Associates


THE SAVAGE
An e-book (reissue)
By Nicole Jordan
Spencerhill Associates


WILDSTAR
An e-book (reissue)
By Nicole Jordan
Spencerhill Associates


FAMILY CHRISTMAS IN RIVERBEND
By Shirley Jump
Harlequin Romance


TRUE SHOT
By Joyce Lamb
Berkley Sensation


GHOUL INTERRUPTED
By Victoria Laurie
Obsidian


A SPIRITED GIFT
By Joyce and Jim Lavene
Berkley Prime Crime


LAWE’S JUSTICE
By Lora Leigh
Berkley Sensation


A COOKIE BEFORE DYING
By Virginia Lowell
Berkley Prime Crime


IT’S ALL GREEK TO ME
By Katie MacAlister
Signet


ACQUAINTED WITH THE NIGHT
By Piper Maitland
Berkley


SLADE
By Sarah McCarty
Berkley Sensation Trade


VAMPIRES DEAD AHEAD
By Cheyenne McCray
St. Martin’s Paperbacks


THE BARDS OF BONE PLAIN
By Patricia A. McKillip
Ace Trade


THE OTHER LIFE
By Ellen Meister
Berkley Trade


YOU MIGHT AS WELL DIE
By J. J. Murphy
Obsidian


HEARTS AND SWORDS
By Robin D. Owens
Berkley Sensation Trade


THE SAVAGE HEART
By Diana Palmer
HQN


TRUE BLUE AND CARRERA’S BRIDE
By Diana Palmer
Harlequin Special Edition


THE COCOA CONSPIRACY
By Andrea Penrose
Obsidian


FOUL PLAY AT FOUR
By Ann Purser
Berkley


WHISPERS
An e-book (reissue)
By Erin Quinn
Books We Love Publishing


KISSING KRIS KRINGLE
An e-book
By Erin Quinn
Books We Love Publishing


THE WISH
An e-book
By Francis Ray
St. Martin’s Paperbacks


JUSTICE
By Karen Robards
Pocket Star


THAT OLD BLACK MAGIC
By Michelle Rowen
Berkley Sensation


THE UNEXPECTED MISS BENNET
By Patrice Sarath
Berkley Trade


CROPS AND ROBERS
By Paige Shelton
Berkley Prime Crime


THE BORDER VIXEN
By Beatrice Small
Signet Eclipse


HUNTERS: ELI AND SAREL
An e-book (reissue)
By Shiloh Walker


CHASING THE SUN
By Kaki Wamer
Berkley Sensation


FERAL
By Sheri Whitefeather
Berkley Heat


PASSING THROUGH PARADISE
(Reissue)
By Susan Wiggs
Grand Central Publishing


BEL-AIR DEAD
By Stuart Woods
Signet


 


Don't miss your chance to enter Joanne Rock and Jaycie Cash’s drawing for an Amazon Kindle, complete with power adapter, on December 13 at the Writerspace Blog!  As of this date you have two chances to enter – leave a comment to this blog and another before midnight on December 13 at the special joint Joanne Rock/Jaycie Cash blog posted that day right here on Writerspace.  Post a comment on both blogs for the greatest chance to win (actually, those who also posted last week on Joanne Rock’s November 30th blog will have the greatest chance, but opportunities still abound!) The winner will be chosen at random from comments/entries to all three blogs and his or her name will be posted on both authors’ Facebook pages by noon on December 14.


Jaycie Cash blogs on a regular basis for Writerspace.com. Her debut novel, Mrs. Goodfeller, is available through most major e-Book outlets, including Amazon and Barnes and Noble. She’d love for you to like her Facebook Author page.