Showing posts with label Patrick's Charm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patrick's Charm. Show all posts

3/28/2017

E.E. Burke's Birthday Celebration



"The two most important days in your life are the day you are born, and the day you find out why." 
Mark Twain

I envy Mr. Twain (aka Samuel Clemens). He figured out his purpose fairly early in life. It took me 50 years to figure out my “why.” 

From the time I was small, I loved telling stories. These included stories I made up in my head to captivate my friends, as well as games of pretend I lured them into playing. At the time, it didn't strike me that I was what one might call a “born storyteller,” but looking back I can clearly see this characteristic emerged early.  

As I struggled over which direction to go with my career, I remember having conversations with family about my interest in writing. I was encouraged to “do something that pays enough to make a living.” So I majored in journalism. After a brief stint with newspapers and a wire service, my path veered off into public relations and advertising. I used my creative gifts to tell other people's stories.

At age 50, I had what some might call a mid-life crisis. I prefer to call it an enlightenment. The “why” question burned in my mind, and I knew that if I planned on ever going after my dream, I had better get busy. 

Ten years have passed since I set out on this path, and I can honestly say I have never looked back. Not everything has worked out the way I imagined or hoped, but the best thing that's come from chasing this crazy dream is that I do finally know the answer to my why

To celebrate, I've put three of my books on sale this week for 99 cents. Each of these stories features a heroine who is pursuing her life's calling. Happy Birthday to me! And thank you for giving me the gift of reading my stories.


On sale through April 1
A Dangerous Passion 
(Steam! Romance and Rails)

Life in a small New England village is too quiet, too ordinary for a free spirit like Lucy Forbes. When her father lands a job out West, she packs her books and her dreams and eagerly sets off to pursue the kind of grand adventures she longs to experience and write about. Yet the moment she steps off the train, she’s thrust into the gritty reality of an untamed frontier and into the arms of a scoundrel.





On sale through April 1 

Santa's Mail-Order Bride
(American Mail-Order Brides)

A schoolteacher plays matchmaker for the local Santa, who also happens to be her brother’s fiercest competitor. She’s the only bride he wants--if he can just convince her they would be the perfect match.









On sale through April 1
Patrick's Charm 
(The Bride Train)

Patrick, an Irish immigrant and disabled Union veteran, sees his luck take a turn for the better after a famous actress literally falls into his arms. Pity she doesn't intend to stay there.











Tell me about a time when  you discovered your passion or pursued a dream, or just figured out the "why." From comments, I'll pull a random winner and gift them with one of the above books, their choice. Don't forget to provide your email.



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8/09/2016

E.E. Burke's Best of the West: Here Comes The Bride Train With a New Release and a Special Offer

E.E. Burke
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This Thursday, Aug. 11, the latest release in The Bride Train series arrives. Over the next three days we'll be featuring each of the books in this top-rated series along with interesting tidbits about the brides and grooms--plus, some cool giveaways.  

Hop aboard The Bride Train and hold onto your hat...

A little history on The Bride Train 

Ship in women to pacify rioting men? This idea was actually proposed in 1869 when settlers in Kansas were burning ties and tearing up tracks to protest what they viewed as unfair railroad land policies. The unusual matchmaking program never got off the ground, but what a great idea for a romance series!

The Bride Train follows seven women who are among those answering a railroad advertisement seeking single young ladies to become brides for settlers on the Western frontier. 

The Bride Train takes them to a land plagued by violence and unrest...a place where passion rules, and only a woman's touch can tame it into love.

Meet the brides

While researching the railroad-sponsored bride immigration program, the first question that popped into my head was: “What kind of woman would answer an advertisement to leave everything behind and go to an uncivilized land to marry a virtual stranger? 

Valentine's RoseBook 1, features destitute Irish laundress Rose Muldoon, who grew up in Five Points, a crime-ridden slum in New York City that housed a large Irish immigrant population. 

The descriptions of this slum were so awful it made me wonder why more people didn’t leave. Crowded, unsanitary, crime-ridden…but to the immigrants who lived there, it was home. For Rose, it takes more than poverty to drive her away. After unimaginable tragedy strikes, she leaves behind the familiar and ventures into the unknown, longing to replace the family she’s lost and find a place to belong.

Valentine’s Rose, Book 1, The Bride Train Series
An English nobleman, an Irish laundress… Only in America could Fate be foolish enough to bring them together.

Read it for FREE
One choice can change lives for better, or for worse. 

Constantine Valentine, the second son of an English baron is in America for one reason—to make a fortune so he can return home and repair a tarnished reputation. Wedding a destitute Irish laundress isn’t his first choice, but a strange twist of fate makes a hasty marriage the key to gaining riches.

Rose Muldoon, who grew up in a New York slum, has battled hardship, hunger and heartbreaking loss. Against impossible odds, she still trusts love—something her privileged husband has never experienced, and can't accept.

Rose longs for home and family. Val has no intention of staying in a marriage of convenience, not even for a beautiful woman who fires his blood and makes him yearn for what he doesn't have…or deserve. But when the unforeseen happens threatening everything Val holds dear, he must make a choice.

Want to read Valentine's Rose FREE? Sign up for my newsletter and I'll send you a link to download a copy. As a subscriber, you'll receive updates on my new releases along with special promotions and exclusive content.

The young bride in Patrick's Charm is far different from Rose, but in some ways, just as desperate. Charm LaBelle is a famous actress traveling incognito. Her character is loosely based on the famous 19th century performer Charlotte "Lotta" Crabtree, who got her start as a child entertaining miners in San Francisco. 

19th century actress Lotta Crabtree
Making acting a profession in the 1800s required enormous courage and fortitude, especially for women. Traveling through the wilds was bad enough. Performances were held in mining camps, saloons, or on makeshift stages. Only a famous few appeared in large theaters. 

Actresses who traveled the West were strong-willed and independent and certainly didn't fit the ideal of Victorian womanhood. In fact, the term "actress" was a euphemism for prostitute. Little wonder these women had difficulty finding suitable mates or forming relationships with ladies outside their circle.

Charm signs onto the bride train as a means of escaping danger. Rather than be forced to marry a stranger, she takes a job as a saloon singer. Her decision has far-reaching effects, but I won't spoil the story by going into them. I'll share more about Patrick's Charm tomorrow.

You'll meet Prudence Walker on Thursday when I introduce my latest book, Tempting Prudence. Like Rose and Charm, Prudence sets out in a desperate bid for a new and better life. In her case, she longs to escape loneliness as a spinster. Plain and unassuming, unable to inspire desire, Prudence is willing to settle for a husband who respects her...but she does have her standards.

Prudence is one of the many women of her day who strongly opposed drinking--the Western man's favorite past time. Although Prohibition didn't come about until after the turn of the century, women were campaigning for abstinence long before.

I wondered what might happen if a temperance crusader was mistakenly kidnapped to become the bride of a bootlegger?  Stay tuned for more on Prudence's story Thursday...

If you could travel back to the Old West, would you choose to be a mail-order bride or to make your living some other way besides marriage? 

Leave a comment and enter the drawing for a copy of all three eBooks in the series, an autographed copy of the book of your choice, or a $10 Amazon gift card.

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4/26/2016

E.E. Burke's Best of the West: a new arrival on The Bride Train


Last month, I introduced a brand new historical romance series, The Bride Train. Today, Book 2 arrives with a story about a disabled veteran and a runaway actress who find luck in love when they least expect it...

Available April 26

She believes in nothing. He has nothing left to believe in, except his good luck charm.

Lady Luck hasn’t been kind to Patrick O’Shea. The Irish immigrant has suffered loss, betrayal and bitter disappointment since arriving in America. But when a talented performer shows up at his saloon looking for a job, it appears his luck is about to change. 

Runaway actress Charm LaBelle considers the position at O'Shea's a lucky break, and a way to avoid fulfilling her bridal contract. She's learned the hard way not to entrust her life, or her heart, to any man, in particular one as charming as her employer.

Patrick is determined to hold onto his good luck through whatever means necessary, but Charm won't give up her freedom, or her secrets. It’s only a matter of time before luck runs out…

Excerpt

A shadow in the doorway caught Patrick's attention. The small figure outlined in the bright light from outside looked female. Short, slight, but too shapely for a girl.. 
She sallied into the male domain with surprising boldness for a lady. Her yellow silk skirt was bunched up in the back in what he assumed was a new style. Gold braid trimmed a black velvet jacket. No farmers’ wives he knew wore that get-up.
Golden curls framed a face with youthful contours. Yet she possessed a mature poise. Patrick tried to guess her age, and couldn’t. 
He didn’t wait for her to find whoever she sought, but went straight over to warn her she had best wait outside. As he approached, she regarded him quizzically.
“I’m here to speak with the owner." She spoke distinctly, without any discernible accent. Thick lashes a few shades darker than her hair framed luminous brown eyes. He hadn’t seen many brown-eyed blondes, and it added to the mystery.
Her delicacy and youthful beauty and something else, perhaps the innocence shining in her eyes, drew out a strong protective urge along with unexpected stirrings of desire. Patrick didn't analyze the disturbing reaction. She had to leave. Now.
"Miss, you can't be in here."
The young lady gave him the kind of smile a teacher might bestow on a slow child. “Mr. O’Shea…do you know where I might find him?”
The way she responded, like he hadn't understood, annoyed him. “I’m Patrick O’Shea.”
The mystery woman’s smile vanished and she blinked as if surprised. She quickly recovered her poise. “Yes, Mr. O'Shea... I saw your advertisement on the side of the building.”
“My advertisement?”
Her lips twisted in a wry expression. “I supposed it was yours. Someone wrote, “Female entertainers wanted.”
“Oh, that…yeah, that’s mine. I wrote it…” He caught himself before he kept blabbing on like a fool. Maybe he had taken too much medicine and it had fogged his brain.
She brightened up after he claimed responsibility. “Good. Then I’m talking to the right person.”
“The right person?” He still couldn’t figure out why she was here, though now he recognized her as one of the women who had arrived on the bride train earlier in the month. That didn’t explain why she’d come to the saloon to talk to him about a sign he put up…unless she had an objection.
That had to be it. She was one of those busybodies who liked to tell folks what they could and couldn’t do.
He crossed his arms over his chest and frowned down at her. “Are you here to tell me I shouldn’t be hiring women?”
      Confusion flashed across her face, replaced by a look of amusement. “No, Mr. O'Shea…I'm here to apply for the job.”

More about Patrick's Charm...

I’m so excited to introduce you to Patrick and Charm.

While researching this book, I learned a great deal about the Irish experience in America’s Civil War. While the war was raging in the early 1860s, the Union turned to the immigration docks for recruits. These young men were signed up “fresh off the boat” and sent into battle, often with little understanding of what they were up against. 

This is how Patrick O’Shea starts his new life in America. Although he questions the wisdom of his decision to enlist, he nevertheless serves honorably, as did his countrymen, many of whom fought with ill-fated Irish Brigade.

Patrick’s permanent injuries are a constant reminder of his bad luck. Wounded soldiers were routinely dosed with opium for pain. Many of them, like Patrick, became dependent on the drug. Opium addiction among former troops was so widespread it was given the name Soldier’s Disease. Today, it’s difficult to imagine the strength it would’ve taken to cope with injury, addiction and the rigors of starting a new life on the frontier. I think you’ll find Patrick a fascinating character.

Patrick meets his match in Charm LaBelle.

Charm is a famous actress traveling incognito. She signed onto the bride train as a means of escaping danger with no intention of getting married. Instead, she takes a job as a saloon singer. Her decision has far-reaching effects. I won't spoil the story by going into them.

Charm’s character is loosely based on a famous 19th century actress, Lotta Crabtree, who got her start as a child, entertaining miners in San Francisco. 


Making acting a profession in America in those days required a great deal of courage and fortitude. Traveling through the wilds was bad enough. Performances were held in mining camps, saloons, on makeshift stages. Only the famous few appeared in large theaters. Actresses who traveled the West were strong-willed and independent and certainly didn't fit the mold of Victorian womanhood, which it made it difficult for them to find suitable mates or form relationships with women outside their circle. It wasn't an easy life.

In her impromptu audition, Charm sings two songs popular during the war and afterwards. One you might classify as a "fight song," The Irish Volunteer. If you listen to this, you'll want to jump up and dance like the men did at O'Shea's saloon. The other, Lorena, is a ballad sure to bring tears to the eyes of lonely soldiers. If you want to hear them, check out these versions on YouTube:








Both Charm and Patrick have lived with tragedy, betrayal and bitter disappointment. Trust isn’t something that comes easily for either of them. They are both wounded in different ways. First, they must come together to help each other, and then, through love, find healing.

Get the free prequel
I hope you enjoy Patrick’s Charm

If you haven't started the series yet and would like to check it out, why not start with the free prequel, which follows the journey of one of the women who answer a railroad advertisement seeking single young ladies as brides for settlers on the western frontier. 

The Bride Train takes them to a land plagued by violence and unrest, a place where passion rules…and only a woman’s touch can tame it into love.

To celebrate the release of Patrick's Charm, I'm giving away a $20 Amazon gift card and two eBook copies of Valentine's Rose, Book 1 in the series. Enter the raffle to be eligible to win.

My question for readers:
Do you have any favorite songs from a historical era? Which ones, and why?

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3/28/2016

Get aboard for an exclusive from bestselling author E.E. BURKE


I have a surprise today for Get Lost In A Story readers. Here's a COVER REVEAL and a SNEAK PEEK at the second book in my new historical romance series, THE BRIDE TRAIN.

And don't forget to enter the giveaway below!



Patrick’s Charm
Book 2 in the series, The Bride Train

She believes in nothing. He has nothing left to believe in...except his good luck charm.

Lady Luck hasn’t been kind to Patrick O’Shea. The Irish immigrant has suffered loss, betrayal and bitter disappointment. But when a talented performer shows up at his saloon, it appears his luck is about to take a turn for the better.

Runaway actress Charm LaBelle doesn’t believe in luck, and she’s learned the hard way not to place her faith in a charming man’s promise. Nevertheless, she needs sanctuary, and a job in Patrick’s saloon seems a better option than marriage...until her employer asks for her hand in marriage.

Patrick needs Charm to save his dream. Charm must protect her secret. And it's only a matter of time before luck runs out...

Sneak Peek Excerpt

A shadow in the doorway caught Patrick's attention, a small feminine figure outlined in the bright light from outside. Short, slight, possibly a girl. 
She sallied inside, and her shapely form declared her a woman. Golden curls framed a face with youthful contours, yet she possessed the poise of a mature women. He tried to guess her age, and couldn’t. Her yellow silk skirt bunched up in the back in what he assumed was a new style. Gold braid trimmed a black velvet jacket. No farmers’ wives he knew wore that get-up.
Patrick didn’t wait for her find whoever she sought, but went straight over to warn her she had best wait outside. As he approached, she regarded him quizzically. 
“I am here to speak with the owner." She spoke distinctly, without any discernible accent. Thick lashes a few shades darker than her hair framed luminous brown eyes. He hadn’t seen many brown-eyed blondes, and it added to the mystery. 
Her delicacy and a timeless innocence shining in her eyes drew out a strong protective urge coupled with the unexpected stirrings of desire. Patrick didn't analyze the disturbing reaction. She had to leave. Now. 
"Miss, you can't be in here."
The young lady gave him a patient smile. “Mr. O’Shea…do you know where I might find him?”
The way she responded, like he hadn't understood or was slow, annoyed him. 
“I’m Patrick O’Shea.”
The mystery woman blinked like the news surprised her, and then recovered her poise. “I saw your advertisement on the side of the building.”
“My advertisement?”
Her lips twisted in a wry expression. “I supposed it was yours. Someone wrote, “Female entertainers wanted.”
“Oh...yeah…that’s mine. I wrote that…” He caught himself before he kept blabbing on like a fool. He didn't often step on his tongue. Maybe he had taken too much medicine and combined with the whiskey it fogged his brain.
She brightened up after he claimed responsibility. “Good. Then I’m talking to the right person.”
“The right person?” He still couldn’t figure out why she was here, though now he recognized her as one of the women who had arrived on the bride train earlier in the month. That didn’t explain why she came to the saloon to talk to him about a sign he’d put up…unless she had an objection. 
That had to be it. She was one of those busybodies who liked to tell folks what they could and couldn’t do.
He crossed his arms over his chest and frowned down at her. “Are you here to tell me I shouldn’t be hiring women?”
       Confusion flashed across her face, replaced by a look of amusement. “No, Mr. O'Shea…I'm here to apply for the job.”
~~~

Get aboard The Bride Train
Taming the West, one bride at a time...

Download it FREE
The mail-order bride phenomenon in 19th century America spawned personal advertisements, matrimonial newspapers and matchmaking services...even railroads wanted a piece of the action. The Bride Train was inspired by a series of true events that took place in southeastern Kansas five years after the Civil War.

Start with the FREE prologueA Bride's Journeyand meet one of the women who answers a railroad advertisement seeking single young ladies as brides for settlers on the Western frontier. 

The Bride Train takes them to a land plagued by violence and unrest, a place where passion rules…and only a woman’s touch can tame it into love.

Book 1, Valentine's Rose, kicks off the series with a heartwarming story of an English nobleman and a poor Irish Rose who are thrown together in a strange twist of fate...
One choice can change lives for better, or for worse. 

Constantine Valentine, the second son of an English baron is in America for one reason—to make a fortune so he can return home and repair a tarnished reputation. Wedding a destitute Irish laundress isn’t his first choice, but a strange twist of fate makes a hasty marriage the key to gaining riches.

Rose Muldoon grew up in a New York slum and has battled hardship, hunger and heartbreaking loss. Against impossible odds, she still trusts love—something her privileged husband has never experienced, and can't accept.

She longs for home and family. Val has no intention of staying in a marriage of convenience, not even for the beautiful woman who fires his blood and makes him yearn for what he doesn't have…or deserve. 

But when the unforeseen happens, threatening everything Val holds dear, he must make a choice.

The series is getting great reviews and I'd love for you to give it a try. So I'll give away a copy of the first two books, Valentine's Rose and an advance reader copy of Patrick's Charm.

Leave a comment and enter the drawing below.

Do you love mail-order bride stories? What makes them so appealing?


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