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Hair There and Everywhere

Hair There and Everywhere
A Dog Named Slugger
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Leigh face
Leigh snuggle
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Leigh faceHair There and Everywhere

by Leigh Brill

There’s a dog hair in my wine glass, and I couldn’t be happier.

You might suspect that my joy is inspired by my choice of libation. That’s a reasonable assumption, but in my dog-centric life, it is in fact the floating bit of fur that delights me. I pluck it from my glass and nonchalantly swipe it on my jeans. There, the tiny hair joins countless other reminders of my newest family member.

Piper is my fourth service dog. He follows in the remarkable paw piper faceprints of Slugger, Kenda, and Pato. The handsome black Labrador helps me deal with the challenges of congenital cerebral palsy, and he does so with style – a style I call ‘Pi-perfect’. Although our partnership is just beginning, ‘Pi-perfect’ is my favorite word these days. For good reason.

piper bagWhether he is retrieving the telephone, steadying my steps, or alerting my husband when I need help, Piper’s enthusiasm is boundless.  As a professionally trained service dog, he knows more than fifty different commands. Everything from hold, to get it, to tug, to bump.  Piper even knows the word refrigerator!  Yes, my smart Lab will go to the fridge, open it, grab my lunch bag, close the fridge, and bring me my food.Leigh snuggle

I keep my lunch bag securely closed of course, but to be honest, I do find the occasional dog hair on my lunch plate … and I couldn’t be happier.

 

Pick up A DOG NAMED SLUGGER by Leigh Brill – an Amazon Monthly Deal for just $1.99 throughout December! 

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Val Shapiro’s 10 tips for living as a part succubus (lust demon)

Val Shapiro’s 10 tips for living as a part succubus (lust demon)
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Make Me
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Val Shapiro’s 10 tips for living as a part succubus (lust demon)

 by Parker Blue

 

  1. Never tell full humans about the demon part of you—unless you want to be treated like a monster.
  1. Find the closest Demon Underground to meet other demons. They’ll understand what you’re going through and help keep you sane.
  1. Don’t use your powers too much or they’ll become addictive. Unless you want to go around hoovering up lustful energy from every guy you meet. And don’t let men get too close—they can’t control their urges around you.
  1. On the other hand, don’t suppress your demon side too much or it could burst free at the worst possible time, like when you’re with a guy you really, really want to impress.
  1. Find a healthy, safe way to express your lust . . . like slaying vampires.
  1. Remember, not all vampires are evil. Some are even rather sexy. Slay the bad ones. Leave the members of the New Blood Movement alone.
  1. Don’t date full humans. They don’t understand your need for sucking up lustful energy and it’s too easy to drain them by accident. It’s not a good idea to leave mindless husks in your wake.
  1. Never forget that while you can force men to do whatever you want, women are immune to your powers. Well, your lustful ones anyway. You can still use your strength and speed against them. Unless they’re female vampires. Then use male vampires against them.
  1. Don’t cash your V-card too early—unless you want to lose your powers.
  1. Find a hellhound to partner with. They can be a pain, but they’re great at watching your back and providing a furry shoulder to cuddle with when you need it.

 

BITE ME is free to buy til January! Pick it up quick!

Bite Me

And don’t forget to finish off the rest of the Demon Underground Series! Just click the links below! 

Try Me Fang Me Make Me Dare Me Catch Me

Not for the Faint of Heart

Not for the Faint of Heart
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Chained by Fear
jim_melvinNot for the Faint of Heart
by Jim Melvin
 
For better or worse, my six-book epic fantasy series The Death Wizard Chronicles is a scary, rugged journey into the darkest depths of subconsciousness. Like many recent and very popular epic fantasy series such as Game of Thrones, my 700,000-word saga – including Book 2 titled Chained by Fear – contains graphic violence and a few brief though disturbing sexual scenes. This it not erotica, but it is best read by those ages 18 and above.
 
I did not write my series this way as an attempt to sell books to fans of erotica. Or to upset conservative readers who are offended by such things. Quite the contrary. I wrote The Death Wizard Chronicles this way despite the fact that it might alienate a relatively large proportion of my audience.
 
But when you write from the heart, you can’t pull punches. If you do, it will tear out your own heart.
 
And – believe me – there was a method to my madness.
 
My series delves beneath the surface and meanders purposefully between the lines. Eastern philosophy plays a significant role in my thematic presentation, but not in the way that would scare off other faiths or philosophies. Rather, The Death Wizard Chroniclesdeeply explores the fundamental definitions of good and evil, hope and despair. And it asks the ultimate question: What should we, as sentient beings, fear the most?
 
The answer: Not death. But rather, a life lived in ignorance.
 
Only, how do you define ignorance? Sexual perversion is certainly one part of the equation. Violence against other living beings is another. Attachment. Aversion. Fear, itself.
 
The Death Wizard Chronicles is not Harry Potter. Or even The Lord of the Rings, though much of Tolkien’s genius has influenced my work.
 
No … The Death Wizard Chronicles is a work all its own. As unique as it is disruptive. As challenging as it is offensive. And it has much to teach, if you are willing to learn.
 
 
Only a Death Wizard can die.
 
And live again.
 
Only a Death Wizard can return.
 
And remember.
 
Only a Death Wizard can tell you what he has seen.
 
Not all care to listen.
 
 
Not all care to listen. Sigh. I have this strange and rather discomforting feeling that my series will be “discovered” after I’m gone. If I were a Death Wizard, that wouldn’t be a problem. J
 
But I promise you this:
 
The Death Wizard Chronicles, including Chained by Fear, is exciting and action-packed. It has magic and monsters, sorcerers and dragons, and a slew of fantastical characters that you’ve never seen before in any genre.
 
Give it a chance … and you won’t regret it.
 
Just be prepared. The Death Wizard Chronicles might alter the way you feel about your own life.
 
And eventual death.
 
It will test your mettle. It certainly tested mine.
 
But maybe it will toughen it, as well. 
Pick up Jim Melvin’s CHAINED BY FEAR for just $0.99 til the 15th! 
This deal won’t last long! Click the cover to purchase! 
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Why is there no Grandmother’s Day?

Why is there no Grandmother’s Day?
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Crossroads

Deb Smith 300 dpiWhy is there no Grandmother’s Day?

This is a trick question.

Every book I write, including The Crossroads Café, focuses not only on a core romance story but is also about family;  mothers, fathers, daughters, sons, and grandparents. Sometimes the theme may be subtle, sometimes not. Family is the parallel core, regardless.

My mother made me what I am today.

All the good stuff and the bad. Some of it sad, but forgiveness was always a given between us.

She was simple, easy, heartbreaking, wonderful. Ma was normal, flawed, like me, but kinder than I am and more realistic. I miss her every moment of every day. She died in my home nine years ago next December, her bedroom filled with Christmas decorations, with me standing beside the rented hospital bed, yelling for help from the hospice nurse.

I am writing this in a sunroom that is now my office, just outside her bedroom. Fifteen feet from where she lay in that sad, rented bed with its undulating air-pump mattress to prevent bed sores, its pull-up rails to keep her from tumbling out, and the loud, gasp-and-release gush of the oxygen concentrator that fed life into her cigarette-ruined lungs.

A few of her clothes still hang in the room’s closet. I store my yarn in there, and so I often stroke her dresses while searching for a skein or hank. Her soft fleece jacket, her nightgowns. I talk to them. To her.

I want her forgiveness for something. It’s always there, the need to be forgiven by her.

Forgiveness was never an issue with my grandmother, however. Forgiveness was for weaklings. She wanted to mold me into a fire-breathing dragon, the spitting were-cat of Southern womanhood. Just like her.

As a result, I’m a product of a mixed marriage.

Submissive, chain-smoking, hard-drinking, tender-hearted Mama.

Dominant, teetotaler, hard-hearted Grandmother.

I have the fantasies of a Valkyrie mixed with the manners of a furious wildcat shellacked with the veneer of Melanie Wilkes.

Why, bless your heart. And to hell with you.  

There she is. Grandma is peeking around the corner of my mind, whispering to me. Good angel or fallen angel? Both?

She defended me fiercely during my years as a whacky teenager, but would come into my tiny bedroom when I slept too late and throw a pan of sizzling, oven-broiled buttered toast on me.

On the eve of my wedding, she very dramatically (at 85 years old) staggered down her hallway and collapsed loudly against my bedroom door.

“Have your fun and spend your money the way you want to before you get married. After that, you’re stuck.”

No offense to my beloved Husband of lo’ these many years, but she had a point, at least in her experience. She’d given up her career at Western Union in the 1940’s, as a trainer of telegram operators, because my grandfather (who also worked for Western Union) said she must stay home and become a fulltime mother to my Dad.

Dad turned out to be an only child. Go figure.

She put aside her daily downtown Atlanta life, where she rubbed shoulders with Margaret Mitchell, shopped at Rich’s Department Store, and was among the first at Western Union to know that President Roosevelt had died at Warm Springs—top secret messages came through her office on their way to Washington, D.C.—to become a farm wife wearing aprons and canning vegetables.

The anger in her was immense. As a child I watched her gleefully wring chickens by the neck; she patrolled her property with a sawed-off shotgun and challenged neighbors to so much as set foot inside her territory. Before electric or even hand-cranked can openers, she jabbed the wicked blade of a hand-held can opener into quivering tin containers. She pumped the blade around their rims like an oysterman cracking a shell.

She could kill people with that can blade. I’m not sure she hadn’t stabbed a few. Some of her nefarious siblings (from a dirt-poor family of eleven kids) challenged her as long as she lived.

She adored her baby brothers—they could do no wrong, in her mind—the preacher, the polio survivor, the dead war hero, and the youngest brother who joined the navy not long after World War One and eventually settled in sunny California with a bawdy, lovable, California beach babe.

But her sisters? Whoa. It was whispered she’d hauled her indiscreet younger sisters to back-alley abortionists in their teens; she’d even incarcerated one sister in a Catholic “school” for girls. Grandmother didn’t care about religion, not seriously, so she had few prejudices in that regard. To her, Catholic nuns were admirably strict.  She judged them on that merit, alone.

Grandmother didn’t take excuses for an answer. This was the girl who got on a train in 1911 and traveled to the far end of Georgia. She was seventeen years old and had never been outside her own home county before.

She worked her way through a teacher’s college amidst the hot cotton fields of South Georgia, waiting tables in the faculty dining room.

It was a co-ed school. The boys studied farming. Modern agriculture. Grandma became sweethearts with a football player. She posed for a picture on a tennis court, of all things, holding a racket and pretending she would ever willingly smack a ball for fun; besides, the college’s dress code was still rooted in the 1800’s. So there she stood, the farm girl corseted into a dark, full-length dress with puffed seeves. Her brown hair was done up in a high Gibson Girl ’do.

Her expression looked grim.

You’re going to aim a stupid little ball at me? You’ll wish you’d been skinned alive, instead. 

She never doubted herself, never apologized, never backed down. At the end of her life, as she lay in a nursing home at ninety-two, with me holding her hand, I said, “I love you.” I had hardly ever said that to her before. She’d never said it to anyone, me included.

“I love you,” I said.

“I know,” she answered.

Couldn’t pry a return confession out of her. Not even with Death’s scepter as the can opener.

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LOVING MEG: AN INTERVIEW WITH BEN CAMERON

LOVING MEG: AN INTERVIEW WITH BEN CAMERON
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Loving Meg
Falling for Zoe

astAn interview with Ben Cameron

by Skye Taylor

 

Today we are pleased to have Ben Cameron visiting with us at Blogging on the Beach. He is the hero of Skye Taylor’s latest book, Loving Meg and the third son (by mere minutes) of Sandy and Nathan Cameron of Tide’s Way. The baby of the family, Jake Cameron, was with us earlier when his book, Falling for Zoe, came out in April, and Will, Ben’s identical twin, will hopefully come for a visit next year when Trusting Will comes out.

 

Skye: So – Welcome, Ben. We know you grew up in Tides’s Way and come from a big family, that you’re married, to Meg, of course, ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????and have two sons, Rick and Evan.  But who is Ben Cameron? Tell us about yourself.

 

Ben: You know, my wife and I had a discussion about that not so long ago. She seemed to think that my job was who I was, but I think I got her turned around.  At least I hope I have. Meg is the light of my life. She has been since I first met her. She was my best friend’s kid sister, and I had to pretend we were just friends for the first few years because I was way too old for her. But it was worth the wait. We’ve been married for ten years come next May and I can’t imagine life without her. Being a dad is another big part of who I am. Until Rick was born I never had a clue how terrific fatherhood could be. I have a fantastic dad of my own, but being a dad is even better.

 

Skye: What do you do for a living?

 

Ben: I raise and train German Shepherds for police work. It does keep me pretty busy, but I love working with the dogs, and I love seeing them succeed. I’ve got a new project in mind, too. It’s a long story how I got involved, and I’m sure that’s not what you’re interested in here so I’ll skip to the punch line. I want to enlarge my operation to include training dogs to work with returned veterans who are struggling with PTSD and other disabilities brought on in their service to our country. It’s be awhile before I can get it up and running, but eventually I want to have a home where the veterans will come to be paired with their dogs and training can happen. From what I’ve discovered having a service dog often can make the difference that all the drugs and psychiatric work can’t in helping these guys get their lives back, and I can’t think of anything more rewarding that making that happen.

 

Skye: Didn’t Meg just return from Iraq. She’s been in the Marines for most of your married life, but this was her first overseas deployment. That must have been difficult for you and the boys. What was the hardest part for you?

 

Ben: All of it. (Ben shakes his head and a cloud passes over his face.) I hated watching the news. It just made me more afraid than I already was. I knew she was out there, accompanying conveys along roads that those bas— sorry, terrorists love to booby trap with IEDs. So, I didn’t watch the news, and I tried to stay busy and not worry. But the hardest part was probably the nights. She tried to call as often as she could,and she’d time it when she knew I was climbing into bed. I’d lay there in the dark, clutching the phone to my ear, listening to her voice and wishing desperately that she was laying next to me instead, and that the nightmare of her being gone and in danger was over.

 

Skye: Have you ever told Meg that?

 

Ben: Yeah. I’ve told her, but I’m not sure she understood how really hard it was for me being left behind while she went off to conquer her world.  I told Will, too. He’s my twin you know. He’s the other half of me. I told him everything. Or most everything.

 

Skye: What’s it like being an identical twin?

 

Ben: You mean being the other half of me? (Ben chuckles) Will says the same thing. He thinks I’m the better half and if only he could Falling for Zoe - 600x900x300be a little more like me, he’d be a better man. But I think it’s the other way around. Will is a lot like Meg and I admire that – that ability to strike out into the unknown – to take on a task that seems far bigger than it might have seemed at the start. Something bigger than just themselves, but they stick it out. They put themselves out there and do jobs others can’t. Me? I’ve been on the same path all my life. Everyone, including me, knew where I was going with my life since I was just a kid. And there wasn’t anything dangerous or adventurous about it.

 

Skye: What started you on your path in life so early?

 

Ben: You sure you want to hear this? It’s not all that exciting. Not when compared to the places Meg’s been.

 

Skye: We’re sure.

 

Loving Meg - 600x900x300Ben: Well, when I was maybe nine or ten someone gave my dad this dog, Taffy. We’d always had dogs as long as I could remember, usually more than one at a time, and Dad was always the one who trained them. But Taffy just seemed like she was going to break him. I think she was a golden retriever, but so inbred there’s no doubt where her less than stellar brain capacity came from. She had one ear that popped up and flopped over half way up – the other hung down like a retriever’s is supposed to. It gave her this really silly goober look. Very fitting, considering.

 

Anyway, one day Dad was trying to teach her to stay. He’d take her out to this spot about 20 feet from the front steps and tell her to sit. She was great at sit. Then he’d give her the signal and verbal command to stay and he’d turn his back on her and come over to the steps. By the time he got there and turned around she was right behind him grinning up at him as if he’d told her to follow instead of stay. Finally, I asked Dad if I could try. He handed me the leash and said go to it. Neither of us really expected much. But I walked out to the magic spot and told her to sit, put my hand in front of her nose and said stay as sternly as I could with my little kid’s voice and headed back to the porch. Dad was sitting with his elbows resting on the step behind him watching, but even before I got to him, he sat up and looked from me to somewhere behind me. I turned around expecting to see Taffy right on my heels like she’d been on dad’s every time. But I was gobsmacked. She was still sitting where I’d left her. I called her and she dashed toward me so fast she ran me down. And that was when me and everyone else knew I’d end up training dogs for a living.

 

Marrying Meg was another thing everyone knew long before it happened. Long before Meg knew it anyway. I grew up in my parents house by the sea and I told them I was always going to live there too. I saw this spot of land when I was still in college. I didn’t have scratch for money, but I begged my dad to give me the down payment and I worked two jobs all through college to make the mortgage payments. So, you see, Will and I are like the other half of each other. He’s Alpha. I’m Beta. He’s the adventurous one. He’s impatient to see new things, go new places, meet new people all the while I’m living the life I planned out years ago. I’m so settled down I can’t imagine life any other way. Will’s still trying out every new extreme sport that catches his fancy and dating lots of really nice ladies but not settling for just one. Although I really hope he finds his Miss Right. I’d like him to have what I have with Meg.

 

Skye: I know you’re a busy man with things to do and places to go, even if they aren’t far from home or dangerous, so I’ll let you go. But we’ve enjoyed having you. Thanks for coming.

 

Ben: Thanks for having me.

TIKI ROAD TRIPS AND FLAMING COCKTAILS

TIKI ROAD TRIPS AND FLAMING COCKTAILS
Too Hot Four Hula
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Three to Get Lei
Mai Tai One On

TIKI ROAD TRIPS AND FLAMING COCKTAILS

by Jill Marie Landis

 

According to Wikipedia (and we all know how reliable Wikipedia is!) the tortured artist is both a stock character and a real-life stereotype. Artists who suffer for their work often succumb to self-mutilation, a high rate of suicide, hours of therapy and/or gallons of Ben and Jerry’s.

 

I wouldn’t exactly describe myself as a tortured artist, but I will go to just about any length in the name of research. When I wrote western historical romances, I rode horses and rounded up cattle. I watered down pigs. I’ve visited so many historical sites and museums that my husband now punches the car accelerator as we approach any building or rock that might be sporting an historical marker.

 

Since I began writing The Tiki Goddess Mystery Series for Belle Books, I’ve gone overboard doing research. I’ve devoted countless hours to paging through Pintrest, pinning photos with the subject heading “Tiki.”  I’ve shopped eBay for tiki mugs to add to my collection. I’ve spent many a night in the local watering hole here on Kauai writing notes on cocktail napkins and taste testing umbrella drinks. An author’s life is one of sacrifice. Believe me, I’ll go to any length to get things right on the page.

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So, in the name of research, I’ve visited Tiki Bars on Kauai and on every other Hawaiian Island. When we’re on the mainland (you know it as the continental US), I refer to my handy dandy “Tiki Road Trip, A Guide to Tiki Culture in North America” by James Teitelbaum. I’ve been in tiki bars in some of the most unlikely, out of the way places in the world and lived to tell about it.

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I’ll have to admit my husband and our dinner guests were surprised on evening when I walked into the kitchen armed with a long handled gas lighter and a fire extinquisher. I explained I’d decided to create a recipe to include in TOO HOT FOUR HULA, Book 4, the latest of the Tiki Goddess Mysteries and I needed assistance.

 

I handed my friend and fellow author, Stella Cameron, a fire extinguisher. As I recall, I said something like, “Stand back Stella, and if I blow myself up, use that thing!”

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Stella laughed until I started lining up the ingredients which included chocolate candy kisses and three kinds of liquor, one of which was a bottle of 151 Proof rum, the liquor most mixologists recommended for igniting a flaming cocktail.

 

That night “The Flaming Manic Monkey” cocktail was born. The drink was inspired by a scene in TOO HOT FOR HULA when Uncle Louie relates a trek to the Amazon in search of the legendary Amethyst Monkey Skull.

Thankfully, Stella didn’t have to use the extinguisher after all because we later noticed that warranty on the thing expired ten years ago!

 

Do stop by and visit me at www.thetikigoddess.com and sign up for my newsletter and read other fun blogs.

 

Don’t forget to grab Jill Marie Landis’s newest release

– TOO HOT FOUR HULA –

out today!!

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Just click the link above!

And make sure you grab the other fabulous books in the Tiki Goddess Series! Just click the links below!

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Fried Okra and an (Almost!) St. Paddy’s Birthday

Fried Okra and an (Almost!) St. Paddy’s Birthday

Fried Okra and an (Almost!) St. Paddy’s Birthday

by Jean Brashear

 

Is it possible to love leprechauns too much? To thrill overly to the sight of a shamrock and too-deeply cherish the color green?

 

Yes, my name is Jean, and I adore St. Patrick’s Day to a possibly embarrassing degree.

 

Okay, so I got attached as a child—its proximity to my birthday and the ready-made party theme imprinted on me early. Learning that my ancestors came from Ireland (with more than a few braw Scots in the mix) only cemented the bond.

 

Discovering that the first of my family tree to arrive on the shores of what would become America occurred as a result of my ship’s captain ancestor wrecking on the Virginia coast…oh, golly, does that mean I can maybe throw a pirate into the mix? Be still my heart!

 

I KNEW there was a reason Eudora “Pea” O’Brien of THE GODDESS OF FRIED OKRA (can you say The Great Subconscious?) became a swordswoman!

 

I’m all grown now, and, yes, I know March 17 isn’t actually my birthday…but I still have this deep-seated urge to brandish shamrock napkins and don green leprechaun birthday hats every March…and maybe to also whip out my sword and join Pea and Glory in a little celebratory sword dance to honor the sisterhood of all those remarkable Goddess of Fried Okra women!

 

Happy St. Paddy’s, fellow lovers of all things Emerald!

 

Jean

 

New York Times and USAToday bestselling author of THE GODDESS OF FRIED OKRA and nearly 40 other novels in romance and women’s fiction, a five-time RITA finalist and RT BOOKReviews Career Achievement Award winner, Jean Brashear will also confess to an ongoing fangirl adoration of the remarkable women at Bell Bridge Books and the amazing books they publish

 

Visit Jean’s website

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AND DON’T FORGET TO GRAB JEAN BRASHEAR’S NOVEL – THE GODDESS OF FRIED OKRA – TODAY FROM AMAZON!!

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AN AUTHOR’S MOST FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION

AN AUTHOR’S MOST FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION
Out Of Her Depth

AN AUTHOR’S MOST FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION

by Brenda Hiatt

 

More often than not, one of the first questions I hear when someone finds out I’m a writer is, “Where do you get your ideas?” All writers get this question, of course. Frequently. So frequently that some writers have come up with pat, tongue-in-cheek answers, like Harlan Ellison’s famous post office box in Schenectady. “You send in two dollars and a self-addressed stamped envelope and they send you back an idea.” The thing is, people really do want to know the answer to that question, even though for most writers that answer is simply, “Everywhere.” Certainly, that’s my answer, if I’m honest. To illustrate, I’d like to share two very different examples.

The first occurred more years ago than I care to admit, back when I was still writing traditional Regency romances for Harlequin. I was gazing idly out of the car window while my husband drove and the song “Venus” was playing on the radio. (I think there’s more than one song by that name. I mean the oooold Frankie Avalon one.) I wasn’t paying much attention, but then came the line, “Venus make her fair/ I’d love a girl with sunlight in her hair.”  Suddenly I started wondering about that specific line. Make her fair? What if the goddess answers his prayer, but sends him a brunette?  Will he know she’s the one, or will keep waiting for a blonde? I toyed around with that idea until it grew into the plot for my next Regency, Lord Dearborn’s Destiny.
The second example occurred more recently, during a family Spring Break vacation to Aruba. My husband and I and our two daughters had all recently become certified scuba divers (during a previous Spring Break trip to the Florida panhandle), so of course we worked in a couple of dives while on that island paradise. It was during a dive to the wreck of the Debbie II that my younger daughter found a wedding ring on the ocean floor, sixty feet below the surface. Cool, huh? There was no way to trace it, but that didn’t stop my writer brain from speculating on all the various ways it might have ended up down there. Maybe a spat, during which a wife dramatically tossed her wedding ring overboard? Maybe somethng more sinister? Once that writer brain grabs onto something, it’s hard to make it let go. In fact, I ended up spinning a whole convoluted plot that eventually became Out Of Her Depth—a book that turned out to enormously fun to write.

So, while I can obviously tell you where a few of my writing ideas came from, there’s no way on Earth I can predict when or where the next one will strike. I just try to stay alert at all times, so I can pounce on it when it does!

 

Get Brenda Hiatt’s OUT OF HER DEPTH for only $1.99 at Amazon Kindle Today!

MY VERY FAVORITE VALENTINE

MY VERY FAVORITE VALENTINE

MY VERY FAVORITE VALENTINE

By Trish Jensen

 

I have an admission to make. I’ve never had a really cool Valentine with any boyfriends or even my husband of ten years. Same old, same old flowers and dinners out and yada, yada. Nice, but just not all that creative or new. I appreciated but kept thinking, “This is what you came up with? Did I really believe you were special?”

I spent every year thinking up treasure hunts or whatever to make them fun.  And every year I’d get roses and cards. Actually, one year I received a new furnace. I almost fainted with the romance of it all.

Eventually, the truth finally sunk in. Men just didn’t get it. Valentine’s Day was something they had to do because it was expected. There wasn’t a romantic bone in any of their bodies.

So, okay, men were dolts. A fact of life. Live with it.

But then on Valentine’s Day, after my marriage kind of crumbled and I was looking at a pretty bleak day, my doorbell rang. It was a delivery guy, holding a box and a balloon. He sang “I’ll always love you,” then handed over the box and the balloon. The balloon said, “Happy Valentine’s Day, my sweetheart.” In the box were two things: One was a beautiful necklace and the other a note. “You’ll always be my baby.”

It was from my dad.

And that was my best Valentine’s Day ever.

It doesn’t matter who the love comes from, it matters what it means. And that meant the world to me.

I wish you all a happy Valentine’s Day! And no furnaces as gifts! J

 

For A Good Time Call is $1.99 at the Kindle Store.

Stuck With You is $1.99 at Kobo.

DREAM OF MY LIFE

DREAM OF MY LIFE

Dream Of My Life

By Jim Melvin

I grew up in Tampa Bay (Fla.) and spent many years running around barefoot in a pair of shorts and pretty much nothing else. A group of boys my age lived on the same street, and we spent hour upon hour playing the usual kinds of games boys adore—football, baseball, basketball, kill the carrier. But we also played more imaginative games, usually based off the movies and TV shows of that era (Mission Impossible, Star Trek, Lost in Space, Captain America).  A stick became a sword, a garbage can lid a shield, a pine cone a grenade. We were tireless.

In the mid-1970s when I was a junior in high school, the “Dream of My Life” took hold of my awareness. I decided then and there that I wanted to become a best-selling novelist and make millions of dollars. The novels were my dream, the millions just sort of a thick gravy. I knew I would succeed; any doubts were overwhelmed by my youthful enthusiasm.

At age 20 I wrote my first novel that I titled Sarah’s Curse. It was a scary, brooding, artsy horror novel that was never published. But at the time I didn’t care. It’s rarely the first but rather the second or third novel that hits it big.

At the time, I was enthralled (and still am) by J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings, so I began to envision a fantastical tale about a band of desert warriors called Tugars who would battle an evil sorcerer. The Tugars’ leader would be named Torg, and he would have magical powers derived from death itself.

I started writing and got to about page 20. Then hit a wall and threw it all away. I started over again and got to page 15 and hit another wall. Again. Again. Twenty-five years later, there was no second novel, much less a third.

I had become one of the millions of people who have a “Dream of My Life” and never realize it.

But during those 25 years, I never quit thinking about Torg and his heroic desert warriors. While I was driving alone in the car, taking a shower, or falling asleep at night, I would invent tales about them. And I would repeat these tales in my mind, hour upon hour, just like the playtime of my youth. The stories became engrained in my memory.

When I turned 45, my wife and three youngest daughters (five, all told J ) moved from Tampa Bay to Upstate South Carolina to be near my wife’s elderly parents. My wife and I chose to step out of the rat race, take a couple of years off, and live off savings. This wasn’t the smartest financial move, but the dream thing kept haunting me. I didn’t want to remain one of those who never fulfilled it. So in my new home in Upstate South Carolina, I wrote—on Sept. 3, 2004—the first word of Book 1 of what would become The Death Wizard Chronicles. And because of those previous 25 years of thinking-thinking, the words poured out of me as if I were channeling.

On Dec. 8, 2007 I wrote the final word of Book 6. Seven hundred thousand words in all.

As you’re reading this blog posting, the Year 2012 is nearing its end—and I’m lucky enough to be with Bell Bridge Books, an emerging force in the publishing industry that is operated by some  talented and, more importantly, high-quality people. Keep in mind that I first envisioned The Death Wizard Chronicles  in the late 1970s when Jimmy Carter was president. Now Barack Obama is in charge. A lot has passed in between. Book 1 was published in August 2012 and Book 2 in November 2012. The final four books, already written by me (but not yet edited by BBB’s ultra-talented Pat Van Wie), are on their way.

The “Dream of My Life” has been fulfilled. I can look myself in the mirror knowing that I willed it to  happen.  If I also eventually make even a small portion of those vaunted “millions of dollars,” I certainly won’t complain. J

Do you have a “Dream of Your Life”?

If so, why put it off any longer?

Start on it next week. Or tomorrow.

Or today.

Life is short.