BACK TO YOU: BAD BOYS OF RED HOOK

I woke up New Year’s Eve morning as excited as a kid on Christmas because my book, BACK TO YOU: BAD BOYS OF RED HOOK was released.

This is not the normal book launch for me. Typically, I might run out to my local bookseller just to see it on the shelves and take a picture to post on Facebook. I’d admit to checking my sales rank more than once throughout the day, but I’m not usually one to walk around on cloud nine doing my version of a Snoopy Happy Dance and not just because I worry that I look more like Elaine on Seinfeld than Snoopy. I think it’s because once a book is out there on the shelves, there’s very little I can do to improve sales and nothing I can do to improve the book itself—by the time the book hits the shelves, the Kindle, Nook, or iPad, I’ve already moved on to the next book.

Don’t get me wrong, it’s not as if I don’t feel any enjoyment in the fact I have a new book out. But most of the joy I get comes when I receive my box of advanced readers copies and get to see it in print for the first time.

I have a bit of a ritual when I receive my ARCs. I sleep with one under the pillow. I know, I’m strange, but I prefer to think of myself as quirky. I’ll wake up a few times throughout the night and feel for the book under my pillow to make sure it isn’t just a dream.

Truth be told, by the time the book is released, I’m in the midst of revisions of my next book and the thrill of the launch is pretty much lost on me.

Until this morning.

I don’t know why this launch was any different from any other—after all, this was my eighth book, but I’ve never been so giddy over a book release before. It’s always pretty cool to think of having another book on the shelves but I’ve never felt this much elation. We’d gone to visit my sister-in-law and her family for New Years so I lay in my nice, warm, borrowed bed trying to contain my excitement and not wake my husband.

I managed to keep still until 6:30 A.M., at which time I figured my husband had gotten enough sleep. I rolled over sang my version of Happy Release Day to Me—probably off key—which explains the weird look my husband gave me. Believe me, I usually don’t even speak in full sentences before I’ve had at least a giant mug of my favorite brew and rarely break out into song until after I’ve had at least four cups, and never before my first. But for some reason this release day was bigger and better and brighter than all seven of the others put together.

Maybe it was because I think BACK TO YOU is my best book to date, or because this was first book that went to audio—I couldn’t wait to listen to someone other than me read it aloud. Maybe it was because this was my first book chosen as a Rhapsody Book Club alternate selection—yes, it’s going to be printed in hardback. How cool is that? It was probably a combination of the three. But there I was dancing around like a loon, barely containing myself while I waited for the audio version to download on my iPhone. I even trudged through the snow because their wifi didn’t reach to the guest cottage my husband and I were sleeping in. Yes, I put on snow boots and a coat and ran to the house in the bitter cold just to download a book I probably know by heart.

And to make matters worse, the excitement hasn’t worn off yet which is why it’s now almost two in the morning and I’m still too thrilled to sleep. I’ve listened to the first two chapters when I wasn’t tweeting or facebooking or dancing around and questioning my own sanity. See, I told you I was quirky! But I have to admit my own book read by Emily Durante is beyond cool—she even got the whole Brooklyn accent down without overdoing it.

So what makes you so happy that you break out into song or do your version of a Snoopy Happy Dance? And tell the truth, do you, like me, look more than Elaine than Snoopy?

I have two copies of BACK TO YOU: BAD BOYS OF RED HOOK to send out to random commenters (US and Canada only).

Here’s an excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

“I think you killed him.”

Ten-year-old Nicoletta said it with such immutable calmness, Breanna Collins wondered if this wasn’t the first time a strange man had entered Nicki’s room at three in the morning and been taken down by a woman wielding a cast-iron frying pan.

Bree’s heart traded punches with her sternum, winding her more than a ten-mile run uphill. She sure as hell hoped Nicki’s assessment of the intruder was right. Better a dead burglar than a live one.

The dim glow of a streetlight outlined the shadowy figure lying facedown on the carpeted floor between Bree and Nicki. Dropping the skillet, Bree skirted the body before grabbing Nicki’s arm, pulling her off the bed, and shoving her toward the door.

The man groaned, and, like something out of a horror flick, a vise-like grip closed around Bree’s ankle. She landed hard, kicking and screaming. She reached for the frying pan, only to be flipped like a tortilla on a hot griddle, and covered with one extra-large serving of man.

“Get off me!”

He held her hands on either side of her head as his breath washed her ear. “I’m not going to hurt you.”

“Yeah? Well, I’m going to hurt you.”

“You already have.”

Light flooded the room, causing temporary blindness. When Bree’s vision cleared and she saw he wan’t an intruder, she wanted to crawl under the pink princess canopy bed and hide. Instead, she dove right into the turbulent, ocean blue eyes of an enraged Storm Decker—the past occupant of Nicki’s room. Storm Decker—a man Bree had known since before she started wearing sexy underwear. Storm Decker—a man who epitomized the reason women bought the lacy, uncomfortable stuff in the first place.

“Breezy, a frying pan? That was the best you could do?”

Bree hated that nickname—maybe because Storm was the only one who dared to use it. It didn’t help matters that the sound of it rolling off his tongue had always been enough to make her breath catch. She struggled, trying to slide from beneath him, but succeeded only in pressing her body against his. His heat scorched Bree through her Mr. Bubble boxers and matching tank top. She couldn’t believe Storm would be a witness to the remnants of insanity caused by a wild shopping spree at the Walmart in Secaucus. Women built like her shouldn’t wear tank tops—not even to bed.

Storm didn’t move a muscle, keeping her pinned beneath him. He didn’t behave like a gentleman should and get off her, help her up, and make sure she was all right—not that she was surprised. Storm Decker was a bad boy, and he had the rap sheet to prove it.

He had the nerve to shoot her his guaranteed-good-time grin, the one that made any woman in the vicinity want to remove the sexy underwear she’d purchased with him in mind. “If I were out to hurt you, you’d be in a real tight spot right about now.”

“No, she wouldn’t.”

Storm’s attention snapped to Nicki standing in the doorway, holding the phone in one hand and the frying pan in the other.

“You’d be out cold again, and the cops would be on their way. Now, do you want to get off her, or am I gonna have to use this?” She waved the frying pan and did her best to look menacing.

Nicki was too cute to manage that, but Bree gave her points for trying.

Storm turned back to Bree, their noses almost touching. “Who’s the kid?”

“Storm, this is Nicki. Nicki, meet Storm Decker, Pete’s son.” She tried not to think about Storm’s proximity and concentrated on the pained and confused look on his face. He wasn’t the only one confused. “What are you doing here?”

Storm rolled off her. She thought she’d be able to breathe better without two hundred pounds of man crushing her, but she was wrong. No, the breathlessness was still there. Crap. She was twenty-eight and a far cry from that seventeen-year-old caught in Storm Decker’s wake.

“Logan couldn’t get away from the vineyard—something about harvest season. He got ahold of me and told me Pop was sick. Since Logan was unable to make it, I was elected. I’ve been traveling for”—Storm glanced at his watch—“twenty-three hours, and this is the welcome I get? No wonder I haven’t been home in years—”

“Eleven years.” Bree sat and hugged her knees to her chest.

“So you did miss me.”

“Yeah, like a rash.”

“I might not have seen you, but I’ve been home a few times. The last time was five or six years ago. You were probably away at school.”

Bree rose and brushed herself off, just to have something to do with her hands. “You must have left quite an impression. Funny, no one mentioned it to me.” She took the phone and the pan from Nicki. “It’s late, sweetie. Go back to bed.”

“Aw, Bree.”

Dropping a kiss on Nicki’s forehead, Bree cut her off. “I’ll see you in the morning.”

Storm rose to his feet. He’d looked a lot smaller when he was out cold. He picked up his duffel bag with a grunt, one hand held against his head over what must have been one hell of a lump.

Bree waited for Nicki to climb into bed and curl around a big teddy bear before pulling up the light cotton blanket and brushing a hand over her hair. “I’ll be in the next room if you need me.”

“Okay.”

Bree followed Storm out, doused the light, and closed the door behind her. Without looking at him, she headed straight to the kitchen, grabbed a bag of frozen peas, and tossed them at him. “Are you okay? Do I need to take you to the emergency room to have your head examined?”

He sat on a bar stool and winced when he placed the bag against his head. “I’m fine.”

She looked him over—his pupils were equally dialated. “Any nausea?”

“Why, Breezy, if I didn’t know any better, I’d think you cared.” The side of his mouth quirked up.

“I don’t. I just don’t want to be charged with murder. Now answer the question.”

“No, I’m fine.” His phone rang, sounding like a foghorn. Pulling it off his hip, he checked the caller. “I’m sorry, I have to take this.”

“Fine.” Bree started out of the kitchen, but he wrapped his fingers around her wrist and held on. The tingle shot straight to her breasts. She didn’t dare look down.

“Storm Decker.” He listened for a moment, and a smile spread across his face as her cheeks ignited. His black hair was cut short, much shorter than she remembered. It only served to accentuate the chiseled features of his face, while his strong, square jaw covered with dark stubble added to his dangerous look. Blue eyes watched her and changed color with his mood. When he’d been on top of her, it had been like looking into an angry sea, and now his eyes were the color of a summer sky—deep blue and full of promise. When he smiled, his perfect teeth gleamed white against his tan skin. His voice was as soothing and buttery as a bottle of Macallan’s fifty-five-year-old single malt scotch. At $17,500 a bottle, she’d bet a case of it that the person on the other end of the line was female.

“Hi, Sandy.”

Bingo. Bree twisted her wrist and pulled away, breaking his grip.

“How are things at home? Any problems today?” Storm’s gaze lingered on Bree’s chest before moving to his pricey watch. She wondered if they sold cheap knockoffs on the street corners in Auckland. She doubted it. It looked more expensive than the run-of-the-mill Rolex. They probably charged extra for the dive watch to withstand the pressure of the ocean’s depths or the corner office. Then again, maybe his watch had been a prize for winning the Sydney Hobart Yacht Race. So okay, she’d Googled him and found a picture of Storm and his team holding the Rolex Cup. It was just her luck the photo hadn’t done him justice.

“Tell Laurel I’ll be back in plenty of time to go to the yacht club dinner. This should only take a week, two tops.”

Bree did a quick boob check while she wiped the already-clean kitchen counter and tried to look as if she weren’t listening to every word of his conversation. Unfortunately, the girls were standing at attention. Still, it didn’t keep her from wanting to smack him upside the head with the damn frying pan again on general principle. A one- or two-week visit was no help. She had called Logan because she needed someone responsible to stay for the next couple of months at least. Storm’s plan seemed to be to blow in, stay just long enough to assuage his guilty conscience, then leave for the next eleven years or until Pete’s funeral, whichever came first. It was disappointing, but not unexpected. He probably had Peter Pan tattooed on his incredible ass.

Storm snapped his phone shut. “I guess I should thank you for the great homecoming. Now, do you want to tell me just what the hell is going on and who that kid is in my old bedroom?”

“Who are you to walk in here and start demanding answers? You ignored Pete for years, and now . . .” Storm was . . . God, he was here. Her energy level bottomed out, and she leaned against the counter for support. “Why couldn’t Logan have come? And if he had to send someone, why couldn’t he have called Slater?” After all, Slater was safe. “Slater’s in Seattle. And last I checked, Seattle is a hell of a lot closer to Brooklyn than New Zealand, if you’re still in New Zealand.” With the Storm Chaser, one never knew.

“I get that you’re not happy I’m here. Deal with it, Breezy, because like it or not, I’m all you’ve got.”

“Lucky me. When it comes to helping someone other than yourself, you were always as useless as an inflatable dartboard.”

Storm’s head snapped back, and his chin followed, as if Oscar De La Hoya had hit him with a right cross. “People change.”

She’d won this round. She’d pinned him against the ropes with the two-ton weight of her gaze, willing him to explain his disappearance years ago, but his eyes told no tales. “Pete collapsed at the Crow’s Nest. Heart attack. They did bypass surgery, and he’s not handling it well.” She threw the sponge into the sink and wiped her hands on a towel. “I have a hard enough time managing the restaurant and Nicki single-handedly. I can’t take care of Pete too. I need help. I’m surprised Logan called you, but I’m even more surprised you came.”

“Why wouldn’t I have come? Just because I moved away doesn’t mean I’m not close to Pop.”

“Oh yeah, I heard you friended him on Facebook. I’m sure that means so much to him.” Bree took a deep breath and released it slowly. “He’s at Methodist Hospital, and with any luck, he’ll be out in a few days. He needs to heal, and I don’t know how much he’ll be able to do once he’s back on his feet.”

Storm stood and in two steps was around the breakfast bar. “Breezy? Is Nicki yours?”

“Mine?” She stepped back. “Why would you think that?”

“Why wouldn’t I?”

Bree ran her hand through her hair and tucked it behind her ear. “No. Nicki is Pete’s.”

“Pop’s? Since when?”

“It’s been a few months now.” If Pete hadn’t told him about Nicki, it wasn’t her place to do it. “Look, I’m tired. I’m going back to bed. Help yourself to whatever you want. There’s beer and leftover pizza in the fridge. The guest towels are in the linen closet. I’m in Logan’s old room. You can stay in Pete’s room tonight—the sheets are clean. Good night, Storm.” She brushed by him on her way out of the small kitchen.

“Good night, Breezy.”

Bree felt his eyes on her the whole way back to her room. She closed the door and thought about locking it—not sure whether it would be to keep him out or keep her in. Climbing into bed, she fought the searing memory of the last time she’d seen Storm Decker. He’d been running out that same door and leaving her behind.

Storm’s gaze locked on Breezy as she moved away. Reddish brown hair framed her face and gave her that hot, tussled, just-rolled-out-of-bed look women spent a fortune to duplicate—Breezy did it without trying. But then she had just rolled out of bed. He couldn’t help but smile at the way her big green eyes sparkled with humor or anger whenever she hit her target. She had a hell of an aim, and not just with frying pans.

Her face had softened with time but still showed off those high cheekbones, short, upturned nose, and wide, full mouth. Her face wasn’t the only thing that had changed. At seventeen, she’d been a skinny kid, but she’d filled out in all the right places. Her tank top showed off an abundance of cleavage, and those breasts were one hundred percent natural. He could tell. The rest of her body did anything but disappoint, and it put her in the realm of fantasy material. Damn, leave it to Breezy to be the only woman alive who could make those stupid cartoon pajamas look better than anything he’d seen as a teenager in the Victoria’s Secret catalogue—the poor man’s Playboy.

Storm fingered the goose egg on the back of his head. Shit, he was going to kill Logan when he got his hands on him. Logan failed to mention Breezy worked for Pop. But then, Storm had never asked about her either. The last thing he needed was a reminder of Breezy—hell, he’d dreamed about her every night for at least a year after almost having sex with her.

Storm pulled the phone off his belt and called Logan. He didn’t give a shit what time it was. While the phone rang in his ear, he looked around the apartment he’d grown up in. It hadn’t changed much except for some new carpet, paint, a big-screen TV, and a leather couch. Pop’s favorite recliner still sat in the corner. Even though smoking in New York had been outlawed, since the apartment was above the Crow’s Nest, it still held the faint scent of stale tobacco and beer. It smelled like home—something he hadn’t realized he missed until he’d walked through the door. That was . . . right before Breezy beaned him with the frying pan.

“Do you know what time it is?” Logan didn’t sound happy. Good, neither was Storm, and it was three hours earlier in California. Hell, Storm didn’t even want to know what time zone his body thought it was in.

“It’s twelve forty-five your time. I guess the better question would be, do I care? I’m home, and you have a lot of explaining to do.”

“What do you need explained exactly? Pop’s in the hospital, and one of us needs to help him until he’s back on his feet. I’m in the middle of a harvest, and Slater is doing an internship for school. You were elected. Besides, it got you out of the winter blues down under, so what the hell are you complaining about?”

Storm raked his fingers through his hair, momentarily forgetting about the goose egg until his hand traveled over it. He sucked in air through his teeth, the ones he was currently grinding. “Logan, you never told Bree I was coming. The first thing she did when I got here was hit me upside the head with a frying pan. She thought someone had broken into the apartment.” The deep chuckle on the other end of the phone irritated him.

“What did you want me to tell her? She asked for help, I sent help.”

“You also failed to tell me about the kid.” Storm didn’t know what to do with a kid, especially a girl. Women, sure. Girls, no way.

“What’s this about a kid?”

“You didn’t know either?”

“What the hell are you talking about? What did Pop do now, take in another stray?”

“This one is a little kid. Her name is Nicki.”

“Did you say her?”

“Yeah. Her, as in ‘Congratulations, it’s a girl.’”

“How old is she?”

“How the hell do I know? She’s not walking around with her date of birth stamped on her forehead.”

“Well, is she two? School age?”

“Definitely school age.” He tried to think back that far. He didn’t see many kids, so he didn’t have much to compare her to. “She’s at that awkward age when nothing quite fits together. Her legs are too long and skinny; her teeth are too big.” She was old enough to have the same look in her eyes he’d seen every time he’d looked in the mirror as a kid. Nicki was on a first-name basis with pain and fear and the dirty underbelly of society. Still, that knowledge came to some really young. “I don’t know, somewhere between eight and twelve.”

“Why didn’t Pop tell me?”

“How the hell do I know?” Storm kicked the wall under the breakfast bar, something that never failed to get him a smack on the back of the head from Pop when they were kids. “I guess I shouldn’t feel so bad since he didn’t tell you either. After all, I’m the black sheep.” Pop had never forgiven him for leaving without a word, even though he’d planned to join the merchant marines. He never explained why he’d shipped out two months earlier than expected—explanations were always messy.

“When did the kid show up?” Logan asked.

“Bree said it’s been a couple months. Why the hell has it been months since you’ve talked to Pop?”

“Look who’s talking. I’ve been busy at the vineyard.”

“And Slater?”

“School and work. Pop came out last winter, and the three of us got together in Vancouver.”

Storm hadn’t been invited. Not that he would have flown to the West Coast, but shit, he used to be one of them. An invite would have been nice.

“It must have been before he got her. Pop never said anything about a girl. He never said anything about a heart problem when he was with us either.”

“A quadruple bypass is a little more than a problem.”

“I was shocked when Bree called and told me he had a heart attack.”

“Yeah, I know. Looks like he’s closer to Bree and Nicki than to any of us.”

“What are you waiting for? The pity platoon to come rescue you?”

Storm groaned. Even to his ears that sounded whiney. After all, Pop had rescued him, Logan, and Slater from foster care and loved them as if they were his own. Then they’d grown up, and Storm had moved on. Hell, he’d left Red Hook, but not because of Pop. He left because he had no choice—he couldn’t disappoint Pop, and he couldn’t stay. There was no future for him in Red Hook, only a past he wasn’t proud of.

“Are you going to see him tomorrow?” Logan asked.

“No, I came all this way to hang out at the bar. Of course I’m going to see him. I’ll be at the hospital first thing.”

“Good, get some sleep. And Storm, you might consider buying a helmet.”

“Don’t laugh. I might do more than just consider it. The woman has one hell of an arm.”

“I’m glad you’re home.”

“Yeah, well, I’m here. But I need to get back in two weeks.”

“Two weeks?”

“I told you, this is the busiest time of the year for me. I just landed a commission for a Class 40 racing yacht. I’m slammed with tight deadlines. As much as I love the old man, I can’t stay in dry dock forever.”

“Okay, I guess we just have to hope Pop’s better. I’m in the middle of harvest, and it’s not something I can take care of from Red Hook.”

Storm ended the call and stared at Breezy’s door, wishing he had X-ray vision. Even after all these years, he hadn’t needed the lights to know who lay beneath him. One breath and Bree’s scent—an intoxicating blend of citrus and spice—tossed him back eleven years, landing him in the exact place he’d been before. On top of her. Between her legs. Hard.

“Fuck.”

He wasn’t sure what had him reeling more—the conk on the head or seeing Bree.

He’d done the right thing eleven years ago. He’d left because he knew he wouldn’t have had the strength to walk away from her again. Bree was like a daughter to Pop, and Storm had broken the cardinal rule: Don’t mess with Pop’s little girl.

Storm rounded the breakfast bar and tossed the wet bag of once-frozen peas back into the freezer with more force than necessary. Being in Red Hook with Breezy was as dangerous as sailing through the Bermuda Triangle—he couldn’t afford to get sucked back in.

Tomorrow he’d go to the hospital, size up the situation, and figure out what to do. If anyone thought Storm planned to stay here for more than two weeks, he was a few hands short of a full crew.

To read the rest of Chapter One of BAD BOYS OF RED HOOK, check my website at http://robinkayewrites.com

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Twelve Days of Christmas

The medieval celebration of Christmas was a lengthier affair than we recognize today, one of many reasons that I enjoy looking back to medieval times. Why don’t we extend our winter holiday- no matter which you celebrate? My Jewish friends have the right of it in making the winter holiday a drawn out affair. But, if I can be so bold as to nudge our important dates around like so much living room furniture, I think it would be lovely to push the holidays a bit deeper into the winter to give those of us in the cold and darkest parts of the world a break from the fierce season.

Think about it. Once we pack our holiday décor away, the Northerners among us have a long, dark winter ahead. The extension of twelve days of Christmas would have at least given us reason to make merry a bit longer. Traditionally, the Twelve Days began the day after Christmas and ran until the Feast of the Epiphany on January 6th. The season was sometimes celebrated all the way to February 2nd when pagans celebrated Candlemas and Christians recognized the Presentation of the Infant Jesus in the Temple. Can you imagine? Medieval Christmas traditions include an extended period of socializing, something sorely lacking in my winters. I like the idea that a holiday would encourage more visiting and parties.

I think our medieval ancestors had the right of it here. As much as the religious aspects of the Christian holiday are beautiful rites of celebration, there is also a very practical nature to a holiday of merrymaking in the darkest part of the year. It lifts our spirits when we are low, an emotional necessity at a time when the lack of sun naturally makes people feel a bit more blue (SAD, anyone?). A winter holiday gives us a reason to hold hands and sit by the fire, a time to see family and rejoice in the bonds of brotherhood at a time of year when we need it most.

If only it were a bit longer…

To that end, I’m suggesting we all make merry a bit longer. Enjoy your holly for another week. Buy another half gallon of eggnog and share it with your sweetheart in the glow of holiday lights. There will plenty of time to plan your New Year and clean up the house. For now, extend that period of socializing and invite a friend to the movies. It’s a long, dark winter but there’s no reason you can’t stoke the hearth fire a bit higher and watch the flames into the night with someone you love.

***I celebrated Christmas this year with a new Harlequin Historical Undone, MAID UNTIL MIDNIGHT available for download now. I hope you’ll join me for this passion-filled trek back in time! And- in a nod to my other writing persona as half of writing duo J.K. Rock- I’d be pleased for you to check out the new cover for my YA debut, CAMP BOYFRIEND at http://campboyfriend.net. Until next time, my friends, Happy New Year!

www.joannerock.com

 

 

So what’s the big deal?

My second book, READ AND BURIED, came out at the beginning of December. It’s the next in line to A KILLER READ in the Ashton Corner Book Club mysteries. Having been through the writing, editing, cover conference, release day, launch, promotion cycle before, you’d think I’d be used to it. No big deal…right?

Well, wrong. At least from my perspective. I’m finding every aspect just as exciting the second time around. I was relieved and thrilled, tinged with a tiny bid sad, when I finished the manuscript and sent in it to the editor. Sad because I’d enjoyed spending time with the book club gang and working through this mystery. Then the waiting-on-tenterhooks period descended. Would my editor like it? Would there be major revisions? What am I doing with my life?

The editing round went smoothly as did the cover discussion. Then into the next phase entitled, Will the Readers Like It?

Usually the author copies arrive a week or so before the release date. Because of Hurricane Sandy, shipping from the warehouse was delayed and prioritized – the bookstores got them first. No problem with that. But, until I have the book in my hands, there’s still that sense of disbelief. Is it really a book? Did I really write this? And, back to the big one, will the readers like it?

The launch is the big ‘reveal’ and high-pitched excitement, the format for the evening. I was so happy to share the launch with my good friend and fellow member of The Ladies’ Killing Circle (our critiquing group), Joan Boswell whose fourth book, CUT TO THE BONE, came out a month ago. Even after four, Joan admits it’s still as great a feeling.

Now, the reviews are starting to come in and the promotional journey is beginning. I’ve already done several signings and am registered for Left Coast Crime in March, and Malice Domestic in May where I’m hoping to meet as many readers, and fellow cozy writers, as possible. That’s as far ahead as I’ve planned because by that point, I’ll be going through this process yet again with the third book, COVER STORY, which is at the editor and due out in August.

And, I think it will just as exciting as this time. And last time. What I’m doing with my life is enjoying it! Writing cozies – it’s a really big deal to me.

 

CHRISTMAS CUSTOMS, CUSTOMIZED

There are universals to Christmas. Almost universals, that is. A tree decorated with lights and ornaments, a big dinner, presents wrapped in bright paper, family gatherings, going to church (though that last is becoming less universal every year), put most folk in mind of Christmas.

But there are various other customs. People of Norwegian descent often have a meal of lutefisk (dried cod treated with a lye solution – uff da!). Eastern Orthodox Christians follow a different calendar and celebrate Christmas after the retail stores are winding down after-Christmas sales. Wiccans and pagans celebrate the Solstice, which happens before December 25.

But every family also has its own individual, even unique, customs. They evolve down the years, changing as children are born, stop believing in Santa Claus, start producing grandchildren. Some families make their pets a part of the celebration, putting reindeer antlers on their long-suffering dogs and disgruntled cats.

One of our two cats has a passion for roses, so every Christmas Eve I buy her the smelliest rose I can find – has anyone noticed that roses hardly smell anymore? She drags it around the place, pausing to inhale its fragrance, now and again plucking a petal off and sometimes eating it. Our other cat just wants me to sit on the couch and rub his upside-down torso from throat to tummy while he kneads the air and purrs, a gift that keeps on giving. Years ago I bought my then cat a box of catnip, wrapped it, and hid it among the other presents under the tree. She carefully searched it out, took it into a bedroom, opened it, and had her own private Christmas celebration before the rest of the family arrived.

The past several years I've had a friend (used to be two friends, but one has died) over and we bake little loaves of Austrian Christmas Bread. Called Vanocka, it is a sweet yeast bread with grated orange peel, almond slivers, and two colors of raisins in it. I found the recipe in a magazine, so it's not something handed down my family. Rich and very delicious, and we've been doing it long enough that the smell of it baking has come to mean Christmas in our place. We slice the first loaf as soon as it comes from the oven, slather it with butter and smile greasily at one another as we eat it with a cup of cocoa or tea.

And I manage some time during the run up to Christmas to watch “A Christmas Carol,” the real one, with Alistair Sim starring as Scrooge. I think it's closest to the Dickens version, plus Mr. Sim is convincing both as the wicked miser and the cheerful repentant.

The last few years, I've had a new book coming out at Christmas and so am doing appearances and signings in connection with it. The current new book is AND THEN YOU DYE, and it doesn't have a Christmas setting but a spring and summer one. Though the weather was very pleasant for most of this year's book tour, the drive home from Omaha to Minneapolis in the dark and snowy night makes me wonder if I shouldn't ask for my books to come out in a more clement season.

Two of my Betsy Devonshire novels and one I wrote as Mary Monica Pulver are set at Christmas time. The Ferris novels are CREWEL YULE and A STITCH IN TIME. The Pulver one is ORIGINAL SIN.

I would like to offer a random reader of this blog entry his or her choice of one of these three in paperback. You can read more about them at my website: Monica-Ferris.com.

 

Ho Ho Hostess

‘Tis the season to be entertaining! I love to entertain. And I’m good at it. Hey, it’s true. ^_~ What I love most about entertaining is the preparation, specifically the food and beverages. I always put a lot of thought and effort into my menus whether it’s a cocktail party or a full out dinner party.

I always buy the good booze, the good food and then decorate accordingly. As my guests arrive, I make them feel at home and always make sure before they arrive that I have their beverage of choice on hand. While many people will drink anything, several people will not. My husband and I are in the will not crowd.

My husband isn’t a big drinker but when he does have a drink, his tastes are simple. He likes his Jack over. Many people ask him if Seagram’s will do. He smiles and says, “No thank you, how about a Sprite?” After a while you wise up. Several years ago I bought hubby a flask for Christmas.

“Now, you can take Jack with you,” I told him. I’m happy to report, that over the years word has gotten around that hubby drinks Jack. Rarely does he have to whip out the flask, but just in case, he fills it before we head out to a party.

Me? I love my vine, and always have a backup bottle. ^_~ That’s all I need, a nice glass of wine. See? I’m easy. Lol. How about you? Are you a will or will not person?

I have a copy of BLOOD LAW, book one in my Blood Moon Rising series or a copy of BLOODRIGHT, book two, for a randomly selected commenter. And speaking of BLOOD LAW and BLOODRIGHT, BLOOD VOW, the final story in the Blood Moon Rising trilogy released earlier this month and is on a bookshelf near you! Oh, and if we’re not friends yet on fb, friend me! www.facebook.com/karintabkeauthor

Happy holidays, everyone. Thank you for stopping by, and may your hearts be filed with love and joy!

Cheers,

Karin

www.karintabke.com

 

January Releases Lead Way to a 2013 Filled with Romance and Adventure

Ready for a fresh new year filled with joy, romance and adventure? Then start things off right and check out the great new January book releases, which include . . .

Virgin River (A Virgin River Novel #1)
By Robyn Carr
Mass Market Paperback
Published by MIRA
Reissued 12/18/12 (from 04/07)

This is the novel that started the very popular Virgin River series.

Wanted: Midwife/nurse practitioner in Virgin River, population six hundred. Make a difference against a backdrop of towering California redwoods and crystal-clear rivers. Rent-free cabin included.

When the recently widowed Melinda Monroe sees this ad, she quickly decides that the remote mountain town of Virgin River might be the perfect place to escape her heartache, and to reenergize the nursing career she loves. But her high hopes are dashed within an hour of arriving: the cabin is a dump, the roads are treacherous and the local doctor wants nothing to do with her. Realizing she's made a huge mistake, Mel decides to leave town the following morning.

But a tiny baby, abandoned on a front porch, changes her plans…and former marine Jack Sheridan cements them into place.

Some Enchanted Evening (Lost Princesses #1)
By Christina Dodd
Mass Market Paperback
Published by Avon
Reissued 12/26/12 (from 07/04)

Once upon a time, high in the Pyrenees Mountains, there were two happy and prosperous kingdoms. In one kingdom, a son was born and declared the crown prince. In the other kingdom, three daughters were raised in royal splendor.

This is the story of one lost princess, Princess Clarice, who flees with her younger sister to Scotland, where they survive by their wits and daring. But just when Clarice begins to believe she's safe at last, she attracts the attention of one of Scotland's most powerful and dangerous men.

Robert MacKenzie, the earl of Hepburn, is enchanted by Clarice's dazzling beauty -- and wary of her talent for disguise. For years justice had been his only desire. A war hero, he knows the cruelness of the world and he cares too much for the people of his village to let them be victimized and exploited. But the moment Robert sees Clarice riding into town -- her lush, smiling lips, her copper-colored curls, her warm amber eyes -- he is overcome with emotions that have been deeply buried for far too long. Feeling he must have her at any cost, he invites her to stay with him at his manor house and won't take no for an answer.

Copper Beach (A Dark Legacy Novel)
By Jayne Ann Krentz
Mass Market Paperback
Published by Jove
Released 12/31/12

Within the pages of very rare books some centuries old lie the secrets of the paranormal. Abby Radwell’s unusual psychic talent has made her an expert in such volumes—and has sometimes taken her into dangerous territory. After a deadly incident in the private library of an obsessive collector, Abby receives a blackmail threat, and rumors swirl that an old alchemical text known as The Keyhas reappeared on the black market.

Convinced that she needs an investigator who can also play bodyguard, she hires Sam Coppersmith, a specialist in paranormal crystals and amber—“hot rocks.” Passion flares immediately between them, but neither entirely trusts the other. When it comes to dealing with a killer who has paranormal abilities, and a blackmailer who will stop at nothing to obtain an ancient alchemical code, no one is safe.

Dream Eyes (A Dark Legacy Novel #2)
By Jayne Ann Krentz
Hardcover
Published by Putnam
Released 01/08/13

The death of her friend and mentor, Evelyn Ballinger, brings psychic counselor Gwen Frazier back to the small town of Wilby, Oregon, and brings back memories she would rather forget. Two years earlier, a killer stalked the members of one of Ballinger's research studies including Gwen. And though she survived while two others didn't, Gwen knows that Ballinger's death is related.

Sent by a friend to help Gwen, psychic investigator Judson Coppersmith arrives in Wilby barely in control of his own talent and his own life, haunted by urgent dreams. His attraction to Gwen is primal, but there are secrets he must keep to protect himself from surrendering to her completely, even as their investigation draws them into dreamscapes, into decades of deception, and into the paranormal fires of a desire too strong to resist. . . .

Beautiful Sacrifice
By Elizabeth Lowell
Mass Market Paperback
Published by Avon
Reissued 12/26/12 (published in hardcover 5/22/12)

Archaeologist Lina Taylor has devoted her life to studying ancient Maya artifacts, splitting her time between digs in the Yucatan and teaching in the college classroom. Burying herself in her work, Lina has had little experience handling men—especially one as fascinating, headstrong, and exasperatingly secretive as Hunter Johnston. A former immigration and customs enforcement officer—a lone wolf used to calling the shots—Hunter bursts into Lina's world after some important, extremely valuable Maya relics have gone missing. To recover them, he'll need the beautiful, brainy archaeologist's help . . . and in the process, he sets her structured academic life spinning wildly out of control.

Because finding the missing artifacts is only the beginning of a mystery that will plunge two unlikely partners into adventure, romance, passion, and danger more thrilling, sensual, and deadly than either of them could have ever imagined . . .

Big Sky River (Parable, Montana #3)
By Linda Lael Miller
Mass Market Paperback
Published by Harlequin HQN
Released 12/18/12

Sheriff Boone Taylor has his job, friends, a run-down but decent ranch, two faithful dogs and a good horse. He doesn't want romance—the widowed Montanan has loved and lost enough for a lifetime. But when a city woman buys the spread next door, Boone's peace and quiet are in serious jeopardy.

With a marriage and a career painfully behind her, Tara Kendall is determined to start over in Parable. Reinventing herself and living a girlhood dream is worth the hard work. Sure, she might need help from her handsome, wary neighbor. But life along Big Sky River is full of surprises…like falling for a cowboy-lawman who just might start to believe in second chances.

 

Books for Gifts

Good morning and Happy Holidays.

Don't you just love this time of year? I do. I love all the hustle and bustle, the parties and get-together with family and friends. I love the yummy food and the bright lights on cold winter mornings.

Most of all I love the holidays we celebrate at this time of year. There’s Kwanzaa, Hanukkah, Winter Fests and my personal favorite is Christmas. I love the spirit of giving that comes with the holidays.

So is everyone finished with all of their shopping? I imagine you have finished buying presents you had to mail out.

But what about your last minute purchases?

Let me propose some gift ideas for the last minute.

How about books or magazines? As readers and writers, let's do our part in supporting our favorite business. Books, books and more books.

My family and friends know they will be getting books and magazine subscriptions for Christmas (and any other occasion that pops up like birthdays, anniversaries, etc). A novel written by any of the authors you have met here at writerspace.com make super great gifts. So how about a trip to your local bookstore? They could use your support.

If you don't have time, there are always gift cards you can purchase online. Christianbooks.com has a before and after Christmas sale with savings up to 97%.

Barnes and Noble has some great offers including a whole section on stocking stuffers.

And my publisher, Montlake Publishing of Amazon Publishing has a plethora of books for sale and for free.

Did you know that my latest novel, CURRENT OF LOVE is available now in paperback and ebook on Amazon.com? I’m sooooo excited. Shhhh don’t tell my family because that is what they are getting for Christmas.

Books are great to buy for children. After all, learning to enjoy reading is important for our youth. They say that a child who is read to will learn to read with more success. So hop on down to the bookstore and buy a book for those special children in your life.

Magazine subscriptions are a great gift also. They are a gift that keeps on arriving all year long.

There are some great magazines for children. Highlights and Cricket are two of my favorites.

National Wildlife has some wonderful magazines for all ages. National Geographic has magazines for children also. The fun thing about magazines for children are all of the activities included.

Magazines are wonderful for adults also. National Geographic is one of my favorites. I also give family and friends Arizona Highways in hopes of luring them out west for a visit.

Other book ideas include devotionals, self-help books, spiritual growth books, and don't forget a good cookbook is always handy, especially during the holidays.

So I hope this has given you some great ideas for that last minute shopping. And you'll be supporting our publishing business while you are at it.

In the spirit of Christmas giving, I will be giving away FIVE gifts—Your choice of a hard bound copy of PRICE OF VICTORY or a kindle version. I also write children’s books so you can choose one of my children's books. Your choice. So leave a comment and tell us what books or magazines you are buying as gifts this year and be entered to win.

Or if you have a great idea or site for a book or magazine share it with us. Provide the link also.

Be sure and take time to rest and reflect on the spirit of giving. Grab a cup of coffee or hot chocolate and sit in front of a warm fire. I have a table filled with fresh fruit and yummy pastries so help yourself. Chocolate Velvet coffee is brewing.

Happy holidays, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

Check out sandraleesmith.com for opportunities to win books. There is a link to her children’s book webpage at sandywardman.com.

Sandra Leesmith writes romance designed to warm the heart and make you smile. She has published with Harlequin, Warner, Avalon and currently with Montlake Romance of Amazon Publishing. Sandra loves to hike, read, bicycle and write. She lives in Arizona with her husband and two dogs, a Labrador retriever and a toy poodle. During the hot summers she and her husband travel throughout the United States in their motorhome where she enjoys the outdoors and finds wonderful ideas for her next writing project

Sandra’s latest novel, CURRENT OF LOVE is available online at Amazon.com.

Janelle Edwards is a sultry singer who’s nursing a perpetually broken heart. Everett Jamison, III is a handsome workaholic with no time for love on his busy agenda. Both have sworn off relationships and marriage…but on a cozy steamboat cruise up the Mississippi River, the two keep crossing paths. They try hard to ignore the growing attraction, even as family and friends urge them on. But when danger threatens the ship, Janelle and Rett must make a decision: continue running from their emotions—or let the tides of passion sweep them away.

A light Southern romance sweetened with a splash of humor, CURRENT OF LOVE blends brilliant storytelling with endearing characters to make even the biggest skeptics believe in love again.

 

Quick Embroidery Projects (and Other Last Minute Gifts)—You’ve Still Got Time!

You’re in a rush to get those holiday presents bought and wrapped. But sometimes, you’d like to sit down, relax, and put some thought into your gift. Or maybe, it’s the day before Aunt Molly’s Christmas party, and you just remembered you forgot to get her a present!

Relax. Thanks to some very simple embroidery patterns, you can make a gift within an hour or two. Below are some links to get you started:

Mary Corbet’s Needle ‘n Thread Hand Embroidery Patterns

Needlecrafter’s Free Embroidery Pattern Library

Needlework Tips & Techniques Free Redwork Patterns

Free Cross-Stitch Patterns at my website

Of course, if you’re short on time but you don’t want to give an embroidered gift, books are quick and easy! With both the Kindle and the Nook, you can give books as gifts within minutes if you know the email address your gift recipient uses for their Kindle or Nook. Simply find the title you’re looking for on either site and click the option to give the book as a gift.

Photo cards are another way to give a quick gift within a gift. I took a photograph of my children sitting in front of our fireplace, got an inexpensive photo package from Shutterfly (you can do the same with CVS, Walgreens, Target, Rite-Aid, etc.), and stuck the 4” x 6” photos onto cards designed for that purpose for out-of-town relatives. While I was buying the photographs, I got 5” x 7” prints for the grandparents.

And, when all else fails, baked goods are always a hit. Even refrigerated cookie dough becomes a special treat when you’ve added your own embellishments (sprinkles, candy pieces, nuts) and put them in a decorative bag or box.

Last, but not least, since you’re working so hard for everyone else, you deserve a little present just for you. Please comment on this post to be entered to win a copy of my latest novel, THREAD ON ARRIVAL. Good luck! Now relax with some coffee or hot cocoa.

www.gayletrent.com

 

Where Ideas Come From

Next to asking us how we work together without killing each other, where our ideas for books come from is the question people most ask us.

Sometimes people ask the question because they have ideas they’d like us to listen to. Other times, readers can’t imagine how we do what we do.

It’s a delicate balance when you’re looking for ideas. The idea has to have a wide appeal. It has to have a wonderful setting and sympathetic characters.

Because we tend to write series mysteries, it also has to hold up to more than one book and/or fit in with what we’re already writing.

In the case of A HAUNTING DREAM, our new book in the Missing Pieces Mysteries, the idea had to showcase Mayor Dae O’Donnell and her life in the small town of Duck, NC. Our books in this series call for Dae to step out of her comfort zone and discover things about herself.

We decided the hardest thing she could do was to work with Anne Porter (her beau’s) ex-fiancé. Dae would be distracted by what was happening emotionally when she realized that a young girl had been kidnapped.

Through a series of dreams, Dae meets and talks with Betsy Sparks (kidnapped girl) but can’t tell Dae where she’s being held captive. Betsy’s father has been killed and Dae fears for the girl’s life too.

This plot was very aware of the time passing as hours become days with no sign of Betsy. Dae tries everything she can but can’t make the connection. That’s when she has to bow to the inevitable and take help from Anne.

Anne, by the way, wants Kevin to leave Duck now that she’s back in his life!

It was very tense writing the scenes in the book. It’s hard to push your characters beyond where they want to go, as hard as it is to push yourself.

Dae did us proud in A HAUNTING DREAM. We won’t go into further details. You’ll have to read the book to find out what happened!

Thanks for reading!

Joyce and Jim Lavene

The mayor of Duck, North Carolina, Dae O’Donnell, is a woman with a gift for finding lost things. When her boyfriend Kevin’s ex-fiancée Anne arrives in Duck looking for a second chance, Dae suddenly finds herself facing certain heartache. And while her romantic life is in shambles, she’s even more concerned by the sudden change in her gift. After touching a medallion owned by a local named Chuck Sparks, Dae is shocked when her vision reveals his murder—and a cry for help. Dae doesn’t know what to make of the dead man’s plea to “Help her,” until she has another vision about a kidnapped girl—Chuck’s daughter, Betsy. With a child missing, the FBI steps in to take over the case. But Dae can’t ignore her visions of Betsy, or the fact that Kevin’s psychic ex-fiancé might be the only person who can help find her.

Joyce Lavene writes bestselling mystery with her husband/partner Jim. They have written and published more than 60 novels for Harlequin, Berkley and Charter Books along with hundreds of non-fiction articles for national and regional publications. She lives in rural North Carolina with her family, her cat, Quincy, and her rescue dog, Rudi. Visit her at www.joyceandjimlavene.com, www.Facebook.com/JoyceandJimLavene, Twitter: @authorjlavene, and http://romanceofmystery.blogspot.com.

 

The Christmas Gift

Happy Holidays!!!

For some time Reginald Jones was attracted to his best friend Alyssa, but their relationship didn’t create fireworks for either of them. Since he’s a workaholic, he didn’t even notice. It wasn’t until Alyssa fell in love with another man that he realized he was attracted to Melinda who he’d thought hated him for some reason he was unaware of and was too busy to even care. But now that they have their chance, she has pushed him aside. Reginald has never let anything interfere with his work, but he knows that if he wants Melinda he has to work as hard to get her as he’s worked to build a successful business. He only hopes he hasn’t waited too long, because the fireworks between him and Melinda are absolutely sizzling. But even if Melinda doesn’t accept him, he loves her enough to try to help her find joy in her life again.

Christmas is a week away and Melinda just can’t dredge up any holiday spirit. Although her sister was murdered two years ago, she’s still grieving. She loves Reginald, but she can’t be what he needs right now. Besides, his feelings might be on the rebound. But soon, he’s around all the time and she just doesn’t know how to handle it. It isn’t too long before she begins to believe again, but then someone tries to kill her and she doesn’t know why. This puts an entirely new perspective on things. She isn’t dreading Christmas but will she stay alive long enough to enjoy it?

Please come with me on this trip to Paradise Island, a cozy island near Virginia Beach.

What do you consider the most precious Christmas gift? Do we get too wrapped up in physical gifts that we forget the joy and true meaning of the season? What do you enjoy most about the Christmas, Hanukah, or Kwanzaa season? Have you ever started a new holiday tradition?

Please comment on any of the above questions and you will be included in a random drawing. The prize winner will receive a $20.00 Amazon or Barnes and Noble gift card. Please visit my web page at www.CandicePoarch.com

I hope you have a very happy and safe holiday season.

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