Showing posts with label Jillian Stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jillian Stone. Show all posts

6/08/2018

Dare to Cross the Veil and Get Lost in Fae Worlds…




Just Released! 

FAE WORLDS 
One veil . . . Five worlds.

One veil keeps the human world separate from the Fae born. Some believe it’s safer this way. That magic and mundane simply shouldn’t mix. But what happens when worlds collide, and the veil is crossed? Or worse, broken?

Fae Worlds is a limited edition fantasy romance anthology featuring five never before published novellas ranging from sweet and playful, to downright dark and dangerous.

Join us as we travel into diverse new worlds of magic and possibility, danger and desire, brought to you by five unique and imaginative authors. We promise it’ll be magic.

Fae Worlds is available at all major online booksellers:  



Forbidden Hearts 
By Lisa Kessler 



Excerpt:

Scott carefully slid the dagger into his belt and took her hand. There’s no way he would ever forget her. He memorized every curve of her face. “I’ll find you.”

Her lips curved into a hint of a sad smile. “I hope so. The ceremony will take place next week.”

His pulse jumped. “But time moves differently on your side of the veil, right? How much time will I have?”

She didn’t want to think about it. “Maybe a month in the human world.”

Fuck. If he didn’t remember the blade, she could be sacrificed. The stakes were too high. He pulled out his cell phone and quickly typed in a note.

Cross the veil. Save Kathryn.

She got up, walking toward the balcony where her frozen guard still stood at the ready to launch an arrow. Scott followed, his heart pounding in his ears. He caught her arm, and she turned to look up at him, her lips parted slightly. His voice softened to a hoarse whisper. “You stay alive for me.”

She nodded, a ripple of color washed through her blue eyes. Everything about her was magic. Before he could stop himself, he bent to brush his lips to hers. He brought his hand up to cup her cheek, and she tilted her chin up, returning the kiss with so much tenderness, he was weak and strong all at the same time.

She smiled up at him and whispered, “Tromhad múirn laoch... Come back to me, my warrior.”

“I will.” He rested his forehead on hers, reveling in the realization that she made him forget he was an auto mechanic, like a warrior might be his true self. “That won’t be our last kiss.”

Without another word, she turned away and ran to the railing of the balcony. Keeping her eyes locked on his, she snapped her fingers. Sound washed over them, intruding on the silence as time resumed. The guard marched toward them.

“Kathryn, wait!” Scott called, but it was too late.

She sprang forward, slapped the guard, and then leapt off the railing. Scott rushed to look over the side, but she hadn’t fallen. Kathryn soared over the bay. How did no one else see? Was it glamour? Who knew?

She blew him a kiss before diving into the water. The moment she broke through the glass of the bay’s surface, a shockwave of magic knocked him back onto the floor.

He blinked, clearing his vision as he looked around. His head throbbed, fuzzy and out of focus. Wasn’t he with someone? He got up, puzzled. How did he get out on the balcony? He rubbed his temples, struggling to piece together the missing time.
He ran out here. They were in trouble. Weren’t they?

They.

Scott stood up and glanced out at the water. He was forgetting something. Someone. Maybe he hit his head when he fell. Scott sighed and reached for the door back into the exhibit hall, when his hand brushed over something on his belt. He frowned and withdrew a tiny dagger.

The stones shimmered with his touch. Images crept back into his mind. A woman with blue and violet hair.

Scott smiled. Kathryn. He remembered. The magic and her fathomless blue eyes. Tucking the dagger back into his belt, he turned back toward the bay. “I’ll find a way through the veil, Princess. I will...”

And with that, he disappeared back into the throngs of people.


The Lost Boys Bar and Grill 
By C.C. Dowling

With the help of exiled Lost Boys assassins, can a desperate Fae princess and an ex-Army soldier save Faerie from a horde of Elven invaders, and their own hearts from a fate worse than death? Find out in The Lost Boys Bar & Grill by CC Dowling!

Excerpt:

After arriving on Earth, the Fae princess is attacked by a creature sent by her enemies. Being the hero he was born to be, Deryk steps in to help, and lays eyes on a goddess he isn't even sure is real.

    Wearing nothing more than a gossamer shift, not even covering her bare essentials, is the most beautiful woman I’ve ever laid my weary, jaded, definitely single-too-long eyes on. Figures, after the shit text I just got, and the reminder why I’d sworn off women, someone like her would fall into my life. No, not fall. Fight.

    Drops of blood from my wound drip onto the ground as beams of moonlight, and the dull rays from the scattered garden lights, shimmer off her skin. The deep, rich tone reminds me of the black calla lilies my grandmother used to grow outside her window. She’d always said getting them to grow in New York’s climate required a lot of love. I wonder if that same love is what made this woman into the nymph before me.

   Pull yourself together, Deryk, my inner voice warns. The hotter they are, the more likely they’ll run, and the more it’s bound to hurt when they do. Another lesson thanks to Mariana, and screw this. I might know better, but I can’t help but drink in the stranger’s body with my eyes like a shot of whiskey after a year of sobriety.

    The creamy smoothness of her thighs and arms, and the swell of her breasts, is unblemished perfection. It’s clear she’s never had to spend one day in the harsh reality of New York winters. Her hair looks as if strands of moonlight settled on her head and curled in on itself to get closer to her body. I want to get closer, too.

   Dammit. When did I become such a sappy, romantic poet? Moonlight hair. Calla lily skin. It’s a good thing the boys from the bar can’t see inside my head right now. They’d never let me live this down.

C.C. Dowling's Contact Information:
Web site:  www.ccdowlingauthor.com
Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/CCDowling/
Newsletter: http://www.subscribepage.com/CCDowlingNewsletter


Name your favorite fae creature for a chance to win a
$10 Amazon Gift Card. 


The Enchanted One  
By Linda Thomas-Sundstrom

Can a young woman from California face a new kind of mystery that could change the world as she knew it after inheriting an Irish cottage from a grandmother she never knew?

Will Teryn Clark’s arrival kick off a deadly contest over which kind of Fae will claim her - Dark Fae, or the Lords of Light? And actually, can that handsome neighbor really be a Dragon?

Excerpt:

Aedan’s neighbors had otherworldy features. That was the only way to describe the beauty each one of them possessed. They had thin faces and smooth, pale skin. More silver wrapped around their foreheads in twisted bands that winked in the light like jeweled diadems.
All three of these Fae turned to go. But they had the last say in letting Teryn know things were still stranger than she knew, without them uttering a word.
Raising their arms, they drew the wind from where it had been waiting. As that wind reached where they stood, their gleaming bodies began to stretch and grow. Long tails appeared. Wings with a span of twenty feet or more unfolded as these Lords of Light left the term impossible behind and rose moonward together as a trio of rare great white dragons.

Linda's Contact Information:
Web site: www.lindathomas-sundstrom.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/LindaThomasSundstrom
Amazon: www.amazon.com/author/linda-thomas-sundstrom
Bookbub:https://www.bookbub.com/authors/linda-thomas-sundstrom
Newsletter:http://www.lindathomas-sundstrom.com/newsletter.htm


Night Bloomers 
By Jillian Stone

Dark doings and mysterious goings-on around
Paradox Lake. 
As a sworn protector of the fae, Elsbeth Moonflower returns to home to Paradox Lake, only to cross paths with her once upon a time high school crush and nemesis, hotter than hot, Owen Brady, Essex County Deputy Sheriff, who’s determined to get to the bottom of some murderous local mischief.

Owen bravely steps into Elsbeth’s mysterious fae world, only this time around will he risk his heart?


Excerpt:

   Owen climbed into the driver’s side and immediately wanted to haul her into his arms, taste those soft pliable lips, run his hand under that little sweater with all those cute buttons…
   “Nice truck.”
   He nodded. “Bought it a few months ago—last years model.” Nothing but moonlight lit the interior. “So where am I taking you, Elsbeth?”
   She stared at him. “Where would you like to take me?”
   His eyes narrowed. He knew what he would have done with most women. “I understand you live near an ancient woodland on the north shore. Strange lights have been reported around the lake these past few nights. Maybe you could give me a tour? Show me where the faeries hang out.” He grinned. “I seem to have captured a Moonflower. I figure I’d better take advantage.”
   She stared at him wide-eyed. “Who have you been talking to?”
  “Nate Goodson, Francis MacLeod, both of them mentioned you. Also, there’s an old trapper named Beckworth Adams who lives on the south side of the gulch—know him?”
  “Am I being questioned about the Henry Hazlitt thing?”
  “No rush, doesn’t have to be tonight.”
  “I can only imagine the kind of crazy faerie stories you’ve been told, especially by Francis.” She stared at him for the longest time. And she chewed her lip which was so damn distracting he had to look away. “Nate Goodson probably complained about me being against the waterpark—the petition and all.”
   Owen nodded.
 “So am I a suspect?”

Night Bloomers is chock full of interesting fae creatures, including
walking trees (spriggans) and seductive water nymphs (naiads). 

   He chuckled softly. “A fatal car accident as strange as this one is always considered suspicious. Prominent citizen loses control of his 450 SL but still manages to drive it through a hundred and twenty-five feet of dense forest—doesn’t even clip a tree before he sails off a cliff.” He shook his head. “Doesn’t add up. Hell, it might never add up.”
  “And you’re thinking…what?”
  “Something happened out there, Elsbeth.”
   Moonlight edged the shallow rapids of the La Chute River. They both peered out the windshield at the fast-moving water.
  “I suppose you could drive me home. Along the way, I could show you a few faerie hot spots.” She turned away from the river. “No guarantee you’ll see anything. The fae are leery of coppers.”

  “What about you, Elsbeth Moonflower, are you leery of coppers?”
  “Depends on the copper—I try to keep an open mind.”
  “So there’s a chance for me.”
  “Maybe.” She wagged her head a bit. “Maybe there’s more than a chance.”
   He turned the key and the engine rumbled to life. “Seatbelt.” She pulled the strap around and he helped her buckle up.
  “When did you get so cute and sweet, Owen?”
    He gazed into large liquid-blue eyes. “Cute and sweet? Not—too hot to handle?”
   She stared at him. “Better than arrogant asshole.”

GLIAS READERS: Visit Jillian's web site: https://jillianstone.com and sign-up for her newsletter. Monthly giveaways include free advance review copies and lots of cool swag—all designed with the characters and stories in mind!


The Hidden War
By Marie Andreas


Another arrow shot toward them, but missed both. “Stand down and your deaths will be merciful.” The voice was heavily accented, sounding more like a running brook than actual words. But the meaning came through. A second arrow, closer this time as she tried to move back the way they’d come, clarified any confusion.

Eladrea knew the next arrow would be through her or Lachie.

She removed her hand from the hilt of her sword, raised her hands in the air, and motioned for Lachie to do the same. The smaller woman didn’t look like she was going to agree at first, she was looking around the trees trying to gauge a way out. Finally, she raised both her hands as well.

Silence filled the area. No animals, no birds. Just the trees rustling gently.

Finally shapes came through the trees. Two males and two females. Taller than even Sadlin, they were thin and graceful. And beautiful. There was no doubt they were Fae. Long hair was pulled up in elaborate knots exposing their delicately tapered ears. Three had the same silvery hair that had been on the one murdered by the villagers and carried bows nocked with arrows. The leader’s hair was ebony and, even in knots, flowed down to his knees. He had an elaborate bow across his back but walked forward empty-handed.

“We would rather not hurt you, actually. A scouting party of ours came through here and two of our kind were murdered. We are seeking answers and justice, nothing more.” His voice had grown softer now, the type of voice who wanted nothing more than to keep you from harm. “If you had nothing to do with their deaths, we will leave you with naught but a memory.”

Eladrea found herself transfixed by his mouth. It was perfect. The words coming out of it were perfect. He was perfect. Of course, the Fae hadn’t drained their land of magic and fled. The destruction to those villages wasn’t them at all.

“We sent envoys to try to reestablish contact with our human companions, but all were thrown back. This time, two were killed. The first was beheaded. The second was stabbed with a single blade. A perfect fatal strike.” He held his hands out in supplication. “All we want is to help your people once again, but first we need to find these murderers. Won’t you help us?”

He seemed so rational, so calm, so trusting of her to help him. His eyes were the deepest blue she’d ever seen. Eladrea found herself nodding and getting down off her horse. As she moved, her hand rested on her pack and the dagger spoke to her. It released her from the spell the dark-haired Fae cast.

The world appeared brighter than before, as if the Fae’s words had somehow stolen the colors from the land around her. She took a deep calming breath. Lachie and both of the horses were still spelled, and Conall had either run off or already met the same fate as Meyrick.

 It was up to her to stop this.

Marie is an award-winning fantasy and science fiction reader with a serious reading addiction. If she wasn't writing about all the people in her head, she'd be lurking about coffee shops annoying total strangers with her stories. So really, writing is a way of saving the masses. Besides, this novella, Marie has the first five books in her humorous fantasy series- The Lost Ancients- out (with drunken faeries no less.

The first two books in The Asarlaí Wars space opera trilogy, which launched with Warrior Wench- are also out.

An A Curious Invasion—a steampunk adventure—is also available.

When not saving the masses from coffee shop shenanigans, Marie likes to visit the UK and keeps hoping someone will give her a nice summer home in the Forest of Dean.

To find out more about the books, and future series, please visit her website at www.marieandreas.com--especially if you happen to have a small cottage to give.



Elves, Faeries, Goblins or Dragons?

Get Lost in a Story Readers: Tell us all about your favorite fae creature for a chance to win a $10.00 Amazon Gift Card. Winner will be selected at random. Don't forget to leave your email contact info along with your comment—good luck!

6/01/2018

Sizzling Summer Reads from the Get Lost in a Story Crew




It's time to start putting your summer reading list together, and the crew from Get Lost in a Story is ready with a few sizzling read recommendations:


E. E. Burke
Romance and rodeos, Old West adventure, even a few ghostly tales.

Deadwood's wild past and exciting present come alive in Wild Deadwood Tales, a limited edition collection of 17 original short stories written by USA Today and Amazon bestselling authors: E.E. Burke, A.C. Wilson, Amanda McIntyre, Angi Morgan, Ginger Ring, Jacqui Nelson, Lizbeth Selvig,
Maggie Ryan, Megan Kelly, Nancy Naigle, Paty Jager, Peggy McKenzie, Sylvia McDaniel, Teresa Keefer, Terri Osburn, Tina Susedik, Zoe Blake.

Proceeds from Wild Deadwood Tales go to benefit the Western Sports Foundation, an organization providing critical assistance to athletes competing in Western lifestyle sports. Whether they need help recuperating from an injury or planning for the future, WSF is there for them.

Keep our rodeo heroes riding strong. Purchase your copy of Wild Deadwood Tales today.
Excerpt from Unexpected Calamity 

   Jane slapped her hand on the smooth surface to get the booze clerk’s attention. “Pour me two fingers of oh-be-joyful,” she bellowed.
   The bartender wiped out a glass with his apron and set it in front of her. For some reason, he held the bottle upright instead of pouring. “That’ll be two bits.”
   “I’ll pay when I’m finished.” She reached for the bottle.
   He held it away and narrowed his eyes. “Here, you pay before you drink.” 
   If she had anything to pay with, she’d have pulled out the coins. As it was, she was broke. She could always pay later. “How do I know it ain’t bluestone swill?”
   “Pay or go elsewhere,” he insisted.
   “Don’t you recognize me?” She took off her hat. “Calamity Jane. I’ve been featured in dime books with Deadwood Dick. That’s worth a free drink.”
   “Not in here it isn’t.”
   “I’ll buy her a drink.” From behind, a man reached out and laid two bits on the bar. She glimpsed his strong, long-fingered hand and neatly trimmed nails, which were almost familiar...
   When she spun to look at him, she couldn’t see his face on account of it being so dark inside and him having a wide hat brim pulled low over his eyes. But she could make out the light brown mustache framing his mouth.
   A shiver rippled over her skin like an unexpected cold snap.
   As he sauntered away, she stared in disbelief at the fine frock coat stretched across his shoulders, the long golden hair hanging from beneath the hat. With his back to her, he dragged out a chair. It looked like he was rejoining a poker game with four others.
    A gambler. Of course, he just reminded her of Wild Bill.
   “Hey, mister,” she called out.
   He didn’t turn around. Some of the other men glanced up at her but went right back to playing cards.
   “Here’s your drink,” the bartender said.
   Jane gave her attention to the whiskey long enough to toss it back in one burning gulp, set the glass on the bar and turned to give the stranger her thanks.
   He was gone. In fact, there wasn’t even a chair where he’d been sitting. 


Jillian Stone


FAE WORLDS
One veil…Five worlds.


One veil keeps the human world separate from the Fae born. Some believe it’s safer this way. That magic and mundane simply shouldn’t mix. But what happens when worlds collide, and the veil is crossed? Or worse, broken?

Fae Worlds is a limited edition fantasy romance anthology featuring five never before published novellas ranging from sweet and playful, to downright dark and dangerous. Travel into diverse new worlds of magic and possibility, danger and desire, brought to you by five unique and imaginative authors:
Marie Andreas, C.C. Dowling, Lisa Kessler, Jillian Stone, Linda Thomas-Sundstrom.

Pre-order at Amazon before June 5 and get the ebook for $2.99

Excerpt from Night Bloomers by Jillian Stone

Everyone’s heard the strange stories about Paradox Lake… 

   Owen climbed into the driver’s side and immediately wanted to haul her into his arms, taste those soft pliable lips, run his hand under that little sweater with all those cute buttons…
  “Nice truck.”
   He nodded. “Bought it a few months ago—last years model.” A glimmer of moonlight lit the interior. “So where am I taking you, Elsbeth?”
   She stared at him. “Where would you like to take me?”
   His eyes narrowed. He knew what he would have done with most women. “I understand you live near an ancient woodland on the north shore. Strange lights reported around the lake these past few days. Maybe you could give me a tour? Show me were the faeries hang out.” He grinned. “I seem to have captured a Moonflower. I figure I’d better take advantage.”
   She stared at him wide-eyed. “Who have you been talking to?”
  “Nate Goodson, Francis MacLeod, both of them mentioned you. Also, there’s an old trapper named  Beckworth Adams who lives on the south side of the gulch—know him?”
   “Am I being questioned about the Henry Hazlitt thing?”
   “No rush—doesn’t have to be tonight.”
   “I can only imagine the kind of crazy faerie stories you’ve been told, especially by Francis.” She stared at him for the longest time. And she chewed her lip which was so damn distracting he had to look away. “Nate Goodson probably complained about me being against the waterpark—the petition and all.”
   Owen nodded.
  “So am I a suspect?”
   He chuckled softly. “A fatal car accident as strange as this one is always considered suspicious. Prominent citizen loses control of his 450 SL but still manages to drive it through a hundred and twenty-five feet of dense forest—doesn’t even clip a tree—before he runs it off a cliff.” He shook his head. “Doesn’t add up. Hell, it might never add up.”
  “And you’re thinking…what?”
  “Something happened out there, Elsbeth.”
   Moonlight edged the shallow rapids of the La Chute River. They both stared out the windshield at the fast-moving water.
  “I suppose you could drive me home. Along the way, I could show you a few faerie hot spots.” She turned away from the river. “No guarantee you’ll see anything. The fae are leery of coppers.”
  “What about you, Elsbeth Moonflower, are you leery of coppers?”
  “Depends on the copper—I try to keep an open mind.”
  “So there’s a chance for me.”
  “Maybe.” She wagged her head a bit. “Maybe there’s more than a chance.”
   He turned the key and the engine rumbled to life. “Seatbelt.” She pulled the strap around and he helped her buckle up. He looked up into large liquid-blue eyes.
  “When did you get so cute and sweet, Owen?”
  “Cute and sweet? Not—too hot to handle?”
   She stared at him. “Better than arrogant asshole.”


Nan Dixon

Fitzgerald House Bed & Breakfast - A World of Open Arms and Open Hearts

Excerpt from TO CATCH A THIEF


  Sage boosted his butt onto the stool, moaning like he was Gramps after being in the saddle for a day.
  Two women worked behind the counter drawing beers. He closed his eyes and took a couple of deep breaths.
 “Sage?”
  His eyes blinked open. “Carolina?”
  The napkin slipped out of her fingers and floated to the floor.
 “You got the job.” Did that make him feel better or worse since she hadn’t called?
 “First day.” Her deep blue eyes had that stunned look, like a white-tailed deer caught in a four-wheeler’s lights at dusk.
 “How’s your mother?” He schooled his voice, hoping she couldn’t catch his disappointment.
  Her shoulders moved up and down with her sigh. His eyes dropped to her chest. Even in the modest polo, he didn’t need much imagination to remember how she’d pressed against him as they’d kissed.
So why in blazes hadn’t she called?
  “They can’t get her seizures under control.” Her fingers crushed the second napkin she pulled for him. “She’s still in the hospital.”
   He caught her hand. “I’m sorry.”
 “Thanks.” She stared into his eyes.
   The noise of the room slipped away. He wanted to make the pain in her deep blue eyes disappear, too.
   She shook her head. “Um, what can I get you?”
 “What’s on tap?”
 “First day.” She winced. “Lots of Southbound.”
 “I’ll have their seasonal.” He could have one beer and make it last through dinner.
 “I’ll get that.” But she stayed right in front of him.
  He smiled. Maybe she hadn’t been blowing him off. Warmth flooded through him.
 “Sage?” she asked.
 “Yeah?”
 “I need my hand back.”
  Cripes. He let go and the warmth faded like a leaking balloon. He was an idiot. “Sorry.”
  Over her shoulder, she quipped, “I didn’t mind.”
 “Like I said, I’m available for dinner or just a shoulder to cry on.” Preferably in bed, but even he wasn’t crass enough to suggest that to her. He wanted to help any way he could. It was the Cornell way.

Pre-Order

Angi Morgan
RANGER GUARDIAN
Texas Brothers of Company B, #3

They took his daughter... Getting her back is all that matters.

  “Fishing or the barber shop? Which do you want to do after pizza?”
  He’d let Skylar Dawn decide. This was her day to play hooky and his to wonder about their future.
  “Pizza, then Mr. Craig at the candy shop.”
  The old-fashioned barber pole looked like a candy cane. He didn’t bother to correct her. It didn’t matter. 
  Where had the time gone? Out of the corner of his eye, he caught Skylar Dawn rocking in the saddle. This was probably the longest she’d been in it. No matter, he’d let her ride with him on the way back. That would help.
  “My, my, my,” she said, sitting back in her saddle like him. “Have you and Mother had another fight?”
  “What? Since when do you call Mommy ‘Mother’?” He knew the answer. His mother-in-law always said “my, my, my,” so this had to be her insistence on proper English. Never mind that. He needed to answer the real question. “Why do you think we had a fight?”
  “You’re acting funny, Daddy.”
He guided Jupitar to face both Skylar Dawn and her little pony. What could he say to make her feel better? No lies. He refused to do it. But he also refused to make his daughter’s life miserable.
  “Hey, baby. Sometimes things go wrong. So, yeah, Mommy and I argued. But that doesn’t mean we don’t love you or each other. Remember that time you had a fight with Stacy? What was that about?”
  “Bumble. She said he had a stupid name. We aren’t supposed to say stupid in school.”
  “That’s right. But you still went to play at her house that Saturday.”
  She nodded her sweet little head. “You and Mommy are still friends, too?”
  “Always. No matter what.”
  “Okay.” She shrugged, pulling the reins to go around him.
  Dammit. No matter what happened…
  “What’s that?” She pointed behind him.
  He turned in his saddle and saw a dust cloud.
  Dust? After all the rain they’d had last night? Not dust. Exhaust!
  “I don’t know, sweetheart.”
  The sound of all-terrain vehicles echoed off the stock pond’s built-up back containment wall. There were several of them. The Thompsons had only one. This was not good. Something was off.
  “Hey, baby girl, I think you need to ride with Daddy for a while.” He guided Jupitar next to Stardust, then reached down to lift Skylar Dawn. Setting her in front of him, he looped his left arm around her.
  “You’re squeezing too tight, Daddy.”
  “We’re going to go fast, baby. You like fast, right?”
  “Yes!”
  He kicked Jupitar into motion. The mud might slow down the men headed their way, but not his mare. She was as fast as the lightning that had cut across the sky in the early morning hours.
  “Hang on, baby!”
  A gunshot pierced the sound of the galloping hooves. He couldn’t slow down enough to tell if they were really aiming at them or not. Mud shot up from Jupitar’s legs. The wind whipped their faces as the sun beat down, warming them. His mare darted to the right, causing him to rise in his saddle.
Skylar Dawn screamed. “Daddy, slow down!”
  “I can’t, baby. I can’t.”
  Public Exposure! The information they’d obtained must have scared them into going after all of Kendall’s family. It was the only explanation. He hadn’t been on any major Ranger cases. No one was after him. It had to be Brantley Lourdes.
  “Haw!” he shouted to Jupitar.
  No use trying to get his cell out of his back pocket. Both hands were occupied controlling Jupitar and holding on to Skylar Dawn.

  If he could just make it back to the house… 


Nancy Thompson



Once Upon a Time…

…a struggling single mother found out she was really a princess. Except Sophie Baldwin outgrew that fantasy a long time ago. She wasn't sure she even believe in "happily ever after" anymore.

Until the handsome stranger showed up on her doorstep and whisked her away to an exotic kingdom…

Luc Lejardin had been dispatched to bring Sophie to St. Michel to take her proper place among the French royalty. As next in line to the throne, she needed his protection 24/7. But watching over the reluctant royal was proving Luc's most challenging mission. How could he keep his mind on business when all he wanted was pleasure…in the princess's arms?

Buy link:  Amazon 

5/04/2018

May the FOURTH be with you!


Whether you're a Star Wars fan or not, you're probably familiar that May the 4th is Star Wars Day. That's when social media gets to post crazy memes and fans (like me) take pride in sharing. Not familiar with the Star Wars movies? Are you like one of my physical therapist assistants and have never seen one of the flicks? Wow and sad face. When the original movie (A NEW HOPE) premiered I was one of the few people in my group that had a car and could drive. I stood in line a long time (no multiplex theaters), Gas was inching up in price so if you rode, you contributed to the fifteen mile drive to the ONLY theater where it was showing. I know I saw the original movie (in theater) as many times as their were weeks in the summer. Yep. That was me. I hope you a have a wonderful day (and weekend) and yes, I have to say it...May the Fourth be with you!

Taking advantage of this day in pop culture history, I asked the Crew to share a Star Wars memory--good or bad. So I'll start...

ANGI MORGAN
I've seen the original three movies more than I can count. But I still remember the very first time I saw the space ship appear in the very first scene.  It kept going and going and going. I got goosebumps. So of course by the time I had kids, I wanted to share it. Just wasn't the same watching on a small screen television off a video tape (which took years) but we did it anyway.  So...a funny memory related to Star Wars:
My son had everything Star Wars, toys, pajamas, figurines, models, and books. And in 1983 books came with read-along tapes. My son listened to his tapes all the time. One night at my parents, he was ready for bed and told my dad he'd read the story to him. AND HE DID. My dad was so amazed. I mean REALLY amazed. He thought my kid was brilliant...right up to the middle of the book when my son said, "BEEP. Time to turn the tape over."  Yeah, my son was smart, but he'd only memorized the tape. My dad laughed about that for years and years. I can still hear him laughing until he had tears in his eyes.
May the Fourth be with you!

Now for the commercial...  Have you pre-ordered RANGER GUARDIAN yet? Out in stores mid-June and available for download July 1st. Don't miss book 3 in the Texas Brothers of Company B series.







LIZBETH SELVIG
I'm old enough that I was out of high school and ready to graduate from college when the first Star Wars movie (Episode 4) came out in 1977. I went to see it in the theater with my husband and sis-in-law, and we were mesmerized right along with everyone else. I will never forget the scene where all the young rebels are going after the Death Star, trying to get that shot down the tiny shaft. When Han Solo and the Millenium Falcon showed up to save the day, nobody at that time had seen the movie or expected Han's return. Literally every person in that theater stood straight up and cheered--as loudly as anyone ever cheers for a sporting event. I still remember my goosebumps! Nowadays my kids are the Star Wars experts. They think they own the geekiness of being a SW fan--but I know differently. I was there at the very start! And it was a magical ride.




I don't write Star Wars but my two most recent books are adventures in their own rights. Check out Missing By a Heartbeat and pre-order Wild Deadwood Tales containing my short story "Gotta Have Faith" at your favorite retailers!





NANCY ROBARDS THOMPSON
This may be an unpopular confession, but I’m rather blasé about Star Wars. Yep. I am. I know! I know! I can hear some of you gasping and muttering behind your hands, What’s wrong with her?? Rest assured, I don’t hate the Star Wars franchise. They're great stories. They just don't strike the same chord with me that they do in others. I don’t get jump-up-and-down excited when the newest installment hits the big screen. Having said that, I usually see the movies…eventually…when my husband or daughter drags me to see them…and I always find them enjoyable enough. So, in that spirit, May the Fourth be with you. Is that how you say it?



P.S. While Star Wars isn't exactly my thing, romance is. If you're looking for a fun secret crush/ rivals to lovers story, please check out my latest release, MADDIE FORTUNE'S PERFECT MAN. It's part of Harlequin's best-loved Fortunes of Texas series (and my 3oth book for Harlequin). If you haven't read any of the Fortunes stories, never fear, all books stand alone. This would be the perfect place to jump in.

                    Amazon | B&N | Google | iBooks | Kobo


E.E. BURKE
My favorite scene in Star Wars is where Leia tells Han she loves him. He has the best reply ever.


I just LOVE Han Solo. He has all the makings of a romance hero. Who are some of your favorite hero figures from movies or books?

My latest hero is a wise-cracking blind man with a dog named Bear. Hank Donovan has a rather unconventional romance with the local madam in JOLIE, one of the Brides of Noelle books. You can check it out at my website, along with my latest project: www.eeburke.com

May the Fourth Be With You!

AMANDA McINTYRE
Confession. Serious Star Wars geek. So much so that stood in line with friends three hours before the theater opened the day of its release. I can remember thinking it was the most amazing cinematography I'd ever seen. But SW geekdom was not limited to simple movie madness. Heck, no. Why not make it a part of your wedding?

Picture an August evening. A beautiful Iowa sunset. A grand pipe organ at the back of the historic catholic church in a the peaceful rural farm town...and a musician who knows his way around a pipe organ!!

Our recessional (he cranked up the volume on that pipe organ!) )  was the music from the original S.W. Final /Throne Room scene, which btw, makes for a very nice wedding recessional! Here is the you-tube of the music. #starwarsgeeksforever

Star Wars opened up our imaginations, once again proving that love (be it for family, hero, heroine, friends, or even strangers) will always find a way!

You can find my contemporary western and historical at: http://bit.ly/AmandasAuthorPage
May the Fourth be with you!

NAN DIXON 
My favorite memories are renting the movies and having a weekend Star Wars marathon. We would buy two dozen tacos, nachos grande and cinnamon twists and have a picnic in the family room. (It takes a lot of food to feed 5 athletic kids.) No pop--they had to drink milk. And at least one child would snuggle up or even fall asleep.  Great memories!  

Maybe it's because of all my family memories that I create families in my stories. And in my latest Fitzgerald House release, I introduce a secret half-sister. (It was really fun.) You can check out TO CATCH A THIEF  and read about the entire series on my website.

KATHERINE GARBERA 
I think I fell in love with Star Wars when I saw the very first commercial for the movie as an eight-year-old.  I didn’t know what was going to happen in the movie at all but it looked like a fun adventure with a scary bad guy.  I made sure to sit by my dad when we got to the theatre (I have two sisters so this took some planning!) and then the movie started and I was swept away into a world that I have never forgotten.  My mom was very strict about our time when we were younger and allowed only one half hour of television a day so my sisters and I would spent most of our time outside playing different movies or books that we loved.  And Star Wars dominated our playtime that summer.  Of course my middle sister who likes to cause trouble was always Darth Vadar—she volunteered! My youngest sister and I were the Princesses Leia and her sister and we would fight against Darth Vadar all day and then sometimes escape the Death Star that mom had made for us out of sheets drying on the clothes line.   I still love the Star Wars universe and look forward to each new foray into that world that film makers and novelists make though none of the stories are as exciting as our acting it out on those long summer days back in 1978. 
 




Coming August 2018
from Harlequin Books 
& Katherine Garbera




PJ FIALA 
I've seen all of the Star Wars movies. Not always the day they come out, but soon after. As a writer, even though I don't right science fiction, I still live mostly in a fantasy world. So, Star Wars fits right in with that fantasy. Add in a husband and children who love fantasy and we've got a great recipe for family fun. 

Star Wars has it all in terms of what people want to see. 
The good will save the world, even though it isn't easy - check. 
Family drama - check. Who can forget the words, "Luke, I am your father."
Sibling rivalry - check.
Adventure - oh yeah.
Travel - through the stars and then some.
Magical creatures - Some of the weirdest creatures ever known to man.
Leave the theater feeling like you can conquer the world? For sure!




I invite you to check out my latest release, Ford, The Bounty Hunters Book One.  And coming soon, Moving Home, book 6 in the Rolling Thunder series will be released.  Let me know your thoughts won't you?

And, May the Fourth be with you!





JILLIAN STONE
For me, the best thing about STAR WARS is Carrie Fisher aka Princess Leia. Once you get past the wacky hairstyles and strange wardrobe choices, it's really all about attitude with her. It can't be easy being Princess Leia Organa of Alderaan surrounded by all that fantasy space opera testosterone. But Carrie pulls it off—a heroine who is smart, sassy and can handle a blaster as well as the boys.


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DO YOU HAVE A STAR WARS MEMORY?

3/02/2018

FIRST FRIDAYS WITH THE CREW: HAPPY READ ACROSS AMERICA DAY

Happy READ ACROSS AMERICA DAY!  

Read Across America is a day held annually on March 2nd that encourages children in every community to read and also encourages parents and teachers to celebrate the joy of reading. It’s a holiday that has been celebrated since 1998 and falls on the same day as children’s book author Dr. Seuss.

We loved reading in our house. My mother subscribed to monthly book clubs where new Dr. Suess books would arrive or children classics.  And my sisters and brother and I loved out weekly trips to the library for the summer reading program.

So I asked the Crew what books were most influential--or just plain the most loved from childhood.

If you would like to be eligible for the drawing, make sure you comment below. Here's the question: What book was the most influential or most loved in your childhood.

NAN DIXON


I got these books for my ninth birthday, but my mother used to read to us from them all the time. I remember sitting at her feet (there were 5 kids in our family) and listening to The Cat that Walked by Himself and Rikki Tikki Tavi from the Just So Stories. And I would read them to my younger siblings.

Nan is giving away a copy of her March release -- TO CATCH A THIEF to one lucky commenter.



AMANDA McINTYRE

When I was young I loved two series of books. The Boxcar Children captured my attention in probably fourth grade and for years I fantasized living in a Boxcar! Then came the Little House on the Prairie Books and I fell in love with Laura and her family and the many adventures of life in what was then the frontier heartland. Growing up in the heartland is the inspiration for many of my Kinnison contemporary small town, western stories and my continued love of history in the stories I've written set in the late 19th century to the Victorian era. I was thrilled to be able to buy the sets for my children and cannot wait for my grandkids to be old enough to enjoy them. The values and family strength in these books is ageless.







AVRIL TREMAYNE  
    
I was always book-crazy as a kid, and devoured books like What Katy Did (and What Katy Did Next), The Chalet School series by Elinor Brent-Dyer, Trixie Belden's many adventures, various English boarding school series - seriously, I could go on forever. But one of the very first books that ever held me spellbound was The Children of Primrose Lane by Noel Streatfeild. As with many of the books I read in my early years, I have no idea how I got hold of it. It was published during WWII, well before I was born and was just there one day! It's a derring-do tale of six English children who stumble upon a German spy hiding in their ‘clubhouse’ – the only unoccupied house on their street. When the spy sets out to rendezvous with his contact, the children set off in pursuit.How I wished I were one of those kids! I'm scared to read it now in case my adult perceptions spoil that priceless first memory of kids being the ones to save the day.




NANCY ROBARDS THOMPSON

I've always been a voracious reader. To this day, WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE remains one of my favorites and I have a copy of it on my bookshelf. I loved the Nancy Drew series. I figured with a name like that, she had to be good. :) Another series I loved was the Meg Duncan Mysteries. It was a series of six books that followed Margaret Ashley Duncan and her best friend, Kerry Carmody on all kinds of adventures. It seemed everywhere they turned something exciting - and slightly spooky - was unfolding. It's a wonder I didn't grow up to be a mystery writer.  




JILLIAN STONE

There are so many wonderful books from my childhood, it's really hard to choose a favorite or even favorites! Anne of Green Gables stands out above the rest for a number of reasons, but maybe the most important reason is that I must have reread those books a dozen times! 

I also have a personal attachment to the stories. When my father's family originally immigrated to Canada (French Huguenots) they settled first on Prince Edward Island, which of course, as anyone who's read Anne of Green Gables knows, is the setting for the series. 

Years later, my parents did an east coast vacation and returned to P.E.I. where they connected with relatives that still lived (some of them still farmed) on the island. They loved it so much that they ended up buying a fifty-acre farm—the original home of my father's great, great grandfather.

I spent several memorable summer vacations on the island—and one Christmas holiday! I remember reading Anne of Green Gables—the entire series all over again at the farmhouse. Now that is the true test of a classic novel! One that resonates from childhood all the way into adulthood.  
This shot of the farmhouse is taken in winter from the cliff above the bay.

 

LIZBETH SELVIG

Just as with everyone else, I have so many memories of
favorite childhood books. My dad read to us from the time we were little until we were well into our teens and beyond--and then he read to my mom. So, books were very special to my family. It won't surprise anyone that my favorite series growing up was  "The Black Stallion" by Walter Farley. I lived, breathed, and reread those books so many times I knew them by heart. My very favorite was "The Black
Stallion's Filly." I imagined I owned Black Minx and had a farm just like Alec Ramsay's. The books kept my love of horses alive until I eventually got my own horse. I passed that love down to my daughter and she now owns the farm I always dreamed of having! I've even written my own horse books and dedicated my most recent one "Missing by a Heartbeat"--which takes place on a racetrack!--to Mr. Farley and The Black. It was kind of a dream come true. If you'd like to win a copy of that book--comment below! Happy reading!


To be eligible for the drawing tell us -- What book was the most influential or most loved in your childhood?

Happy READ ACROSS AMERICA DAY!!