Showing posts with label #holidayreads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #holidayreads. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2025

The Years That Were, Are, and Will Be - A final post for RTG by M.L. Buchman

                                                    


Years That Were

It’s funny looking back over the years of my coming to play at RTG. 

My very first post here, December 8, 2012, sounds very positive (https://romancingthegenres.blogspot.com/2012/12/agile-thinking.html, OMG those early covers were awful…and the next ones were worse!). 

I’m not quite sure how I did that because it was one of those depths-of-despair times that occur in any long writing career. My publishing career was taking off, very slowly. I’d just received my first royalty notice from my trad publisher. They’d bought eight books (four were already written and in the pipeline), but the first one had only just released. 

Imagine, as my wife unfolded that royalty statement while I washed the dinner dishes, how excited we were. I’d been laid off in August [thank you, Mr. Unscrupulous Boss] and we were dead broke [thank you, recession]. Then she read out the amount the represented our great hope for the future. What we’d earned was below the publisher’s minimum threshold for cutting a check ($2.34 against a limit of $10). We lost it! I mean both lying on kitchen floor holding our sides against the laughter that lay dangerously close to hysteria.

Less than six weeks later, I’d given up the corporate job hunt (after a 30-year career), dumped the city apartment for a place half the price out on the Oregon Coast, sold the house we’d built to retire in (but had to rent out) for half its real value (again, thank you, recession), and gambled on my writing career actually taking off. 

You see, it was the year after the Kindle Christmas. I’d written a little Christmas book set in the same world as my traditional books, but I was selling it indie. Curiously, The Night Is Mine and Daniel’s Christmas would continue to be my bestselling books until I launched my Miranda Chase thrillers in 2019.


The Night Stalkers #1 and The Night Stalkers Holidays #1


Years That Are

Did I make breakout success due to indie? Well, yes and no.

I didn’t get any boost by being one of the very first to publish indie back in 2009 when the wisdom was: Publish anything indie and you’ll make a fortune. The $0.99 revolution didn’t touch me. My Amazon and Facebook ads rarely even paid for themselves (even when I got professional help). The Bookbub storm blew in some other sea than mine… 

I did it by writing the best stories that I could as fast as I could. The learning curve was horrendous, challenging, fascinating, and (did I mention?) horrendous. The production rate is something I’ve never achieved since—the power of desperation to grab onto that brass ring of being a full-time writer was immense. I’d been dreaming about that ring since I first started writing in 1993 and had my first book published in 1997.

Curious side note: though I’ve only managed to write one more book in that series, I can’t wait to get back to it. I already have two more already started…now I just need to find time to finish them.

So, a mere 6 weeks after that first RTG post, I’d made the jump. I was now a hybrid author struggling to complete the leap of faith my wife had agreed to take with me.

Curiously, and rather unexpectedly, one of the most important changes to happen that year was announced very quietly in an RTG post. In 2012, while my known world was collapsing around me, an editor forced me (almost literally) to write a short story for a Christmas Ghosts anthology. The fact that I didn’t write short stories, holidays, or ghosts carried no weight with her. So, in 2013, my first short story launched—to rave reviews.

Over the next decade, I’ve written over 200 short stories and they make up a full third of my income. Ghost of Willows Past still sells nicely every Christmas season.

Always remaining flexible is one of the great keys to success in this industry. After seven years, forty-two novels, and seventy short stories in the military romantic suspense of my Emily Beale Universe (https://EmilyBeale.com), I began to worry about keeping myself challenged as a writer. That’s an essential, to always learn and grow. Otherwise creative stagnation becomes closely followed by career stagnation.

Besides, I had discovered a character who I couldn’t wait to hear from. It took me two years to develop and understand Miranda Chase enough to write her. Two years of wondering if my military romance audience would follow me into thrillers. Of wondering if fans of the ultra-competent icon of Major Emily Beale would embrace an autistic air-crash investigator unsure of everything about her.

Fifteen books later? The answer was absolutely! 

But it was only by facing my fears and following my character into story that it happened. Had I failed to embrace Miranda, I expect my career would be having a much smaller arc, rather than still supporting my family as a full-time writer thirteen years after corporate America spit me out.


Years That Will Be

In the dozen years since that first post, the publishing world has changed in new ways at a new pace. No, I’m not ignoring the history when Dickens, Twain, and others were self-published. Nor the rise of the big publishers, the catastrophic fall of the pulp magazines in 1959 and 1960, or the nearly overnight collapse of the local distributors in the 1990s. Publishing has long since proven that it is far from done with evolving. 

However, between indie, the rise of direct sales (https://shop.mlbuchman.com), and now AI, the speed of that change is mind-boggling.

They’re not the only thing that is changing in my world either. I’ve been mostly writing Miranda Chase for the last 5 years. But a funny thing happened on Wedgetail, Miranda Chase #15. My first readers asked, “So, what’s your new series?” 

“My new one? I’m still writing Miranda.”

They shook their head sadly at my writerly naiveté. 

My Emily Beale Universe, being in the romance world, had a new hero and heroine in each book. Yes, Emily was a power figure throughout the multiple series that universe became, but it wasn’t all her story.

Miranda Chase led all fifteen titles in her thriller series personally, growing and evolving with each one. And, in Wedgetail, I’d brought all of her emotional curves to closure without realizing it. Well, almost. She has at least one more book coming, probably this fall.

So, while I have many books that have been on hold while I’ve written Miranda, will any of them become such a major, career-altering force as Emily or Miranda? How will direct sales, AI, and whatever comes after that affect my career? How will it affect yours?

We have a few key phrases on our refrigerator to remind us of how to approach the future. And thirteen years coming to play at Romancing the Genres (thank you so much for the support and congratulations on achieving something so wonderful for so long), I think these make the best advice I can offer to myself and to you:

  • Semper Gumby – If you’re too young to remember the Gumby character, look it up. This fixture of my childhood is the ultimate reminder to be flexible.

  • That was so three days ago. – Don’t stay rooted in the past simply because that’s what has worked before. 

  • Violet is Level Six. Start where you stand. – This is a different version of the previous one, coming from a misquote of my second book (thankfully long since out of print). Translates as The past is meaningless. Look ahead. At every disaster along the road (and there will be plenty of those), we remind ourselves to look ahead, not back.

  • Have fun! – Seriously. This is the biggest tool I’ve got. If you aren’t having fun, a) your audience can tell, and b) why bother? Life is too short to be wasting your time.



USA Today and Amazon No. 1 bestseller M. L. “Matt” Buchman is the author of 75+ action-adventure thriller and military romance novels, 200 short stories, and lots of read-by-author audiobooks
.


PW says: “Tom Clancy fans open to a strong female lead will clamor for more.” Booklist declared his romances were: “3x Top 10 of the Year.” A project manager with a geophysics degree, he’s designed and built houses, flown and jumped out of planes, solo-sailed a 50-foot sailboat, and bicycled solo around the world…and he quilts.


Come visit: https://mlbuchman.com. 


Tuesday, November 7, 2023

Signals and signs ...

The number one signal for me (some might say warning) of the coming holiday season is fruitcake.  Not that dry, cakey stuff you get at the grocery store. The fruitcake I bake contains a kilogram of dried fruit (raisins, cranberries, cherries, blueberries, etc.), chopped nuts, a good amount of rum, and enough butter, eggs and flour to keep the whole thing together. I bake my cake at least a month early and feed the cake with more rum on a regular basis … to preserve the fruit, you understand.

If when you think of mincemeat, you’re picturing that horribly sweet glop from the grocery store, stop. Instead, conjure if you will a mixture of ground beef (yes, real meat, this stuff was invented to preserve sources of protein), apples, raisins, aromatic spices, and citrus peel all simmered to a velvety loveliness. My mum made this every year as did her mum and her mum. 

Shortbread cookies. Buttery, vanilla-y, flaky. I pretend I can remember Grammy in the farmhouse kitchen, rolling out the dough on the old, scarred table, using star and bell-shaped cutters, then sliding the cookie sheets into the monster wood-fired oven. All us grandkids gathered around the table waited impatiently for the cookies to cool enough to eat. I have no memory of her baking shortbreads, but I have many memories of my mum doing so.

Hm … these all seem food related … wonder what that says about me …

A non-edible sign that the holidays are upon us is my annual hunt for greeting cards to send to friends and relations. I used to see what was on offer at the usual stores, but with the advent of online shopping, the sky’s the limit. I came across an artist a few years ago who creates the most wonderful images – right up my alley. AND she uses some of those images for greeting cards

Nothing says festive season quite like holiday movies and books paired with a glass of eggnog – seasoned with more of that rum, can’t let it go to waste. Instant warm and cosy.


Luanna Stewart has been creating adventures for her imaginary friends since childhood. She spends her days writing many flavours of romance. When not torturing her characters, she’s in her kitchen baking something delicious. She lives in Nova Scotia with her patient husband and two hens. 


Saturday, November 4, 2023

Christmas to the Max by Bonnie Edwards

 

I am grateful to Marcia King-Gamble for this invitation to guest here on Romancing the Genres. I’m honored.

I’m Bonnie Edwards and I’ve been writing romance for a lot of years and if there’s one thing I understand about romance it’s this: Everyone in my fictional world deserves a happy ending.

This is the story of a lonely man.

Max Whyte walked into my mind as a convenient ex-husband to a lush 30-something divorcee. The story that introduced him to the world was the start of a trilogy of Christmas stories set between Canada and the US. In Not-so-Blue Christmas, Max didn’t get much more than a mention.

In Invitation to Christmas we learned a little more about him and the reason for the divorce. He and his wife had simply grown apart. They were excellent parents who put their children first.

When it was his ex-wife’s turn to fall in love in One Crazy Christmas, we saw more of Max and how he still supported his ex as a friend and confidant. He was warm and caring and exactly the right person for the heroine to talk to about her disastrous love and broken heart. (which eventually got sorted on Christmas Day.) And so my trilogy, Love at Christmas, ended.

This writer moved onto other series, and a couple of years later I was in need of a new couple to move to my fictional small town in Washington State. The series is titled Return to Welcome and focuses on people who come home and need to regroup.

I had my heroine but where to find a great hero for her? And then it hit me.

Max Whyte’s ex had moved to Washington State and taken his daughters to live with her new husband. What’s a caring, loving father to do but move to be close to them?

Christmas to the Max fell into place quickly. Every once in a while an author has the perfect blend of characters, plot, and setting and the writing goes smoothly and quickly. This is what I call a “gimme” book. No tears are shed, or hairs pulled during the writing of a gimme.

Since Christmas to the Max is a lynchpin book, it links two series and gives my readers of the first series an introduction to the second series. And readers who start on the second series get some background on characters from the first series. Everyone wins!

But no one needs to read either series to enjoy Max Whyte’s happy ending. This is a stand alone book and so are all the others.

Right now, Christmas to the Max is on sale for only 99c and is available to read in Kindle Unlimited.

BLURB:
Just in time for Christmas, building contractor Kaylin Simpson returns to Welcome, WA to give her twins a better life in the small town she loved as a child.

In a town where no one remembers her, it’s tough for a woman to launch a business, especially one dominated by men. Kaylin’s resourceful, determined, and desperate.

Single dad Max Whyte has bought a rundown Victorian house that needs a total renovation. When he saves a young boy from a near-miss with a car, he takes a chance and hires the boy’s attractive mother.

The lovely, talented, and skilled Kaylin soon proves her worth as they work together to rebuild his home—and their lives in Welcome.

The single parents soon share more than tools as they navigate their way through the work together. Sharing all the traditional small-town Christmas events brings them even closer.

Drawn to Kaylin and her adorable twin boys despite his reservations, Max finds that Kaylin's wit and feisty spirit pull at his heartstrings.

Kaylin is afraid to fall for her client, but good sense can be overwhelmed when two hearts fall into synch.

As Christmas draws near, she and Max struggle to find a way to move beyond past hurts to let love blossom.

If you love stories with warmth and the love of family don't miss Christmas to the Max.

Amazon

BIO: 

Bonnie Edwards has been writing all her life, starting with a poem about Santa suffering with gout. She was seven, Santa was a thousand years old. Delighted with writing, she went on to write family sagas, humorous contemporary romance, romantic suspense, erotic paranormal ghost romances and more.

She may jump around within romance, but all her stories come with a tear, a laugh, and a happy ending. Published by Kensington Books, Harlequin Books, Carina Press, and Robinson (UK) Bonnie’s stories stretch from short stories to novellas and novels. Now, she's happy to be publishing her work herself. Her website. Sign up for up-to-date news and deal on Bonnie’s Newsy Bits.

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Holiday Reads...Part 2 .... Delsora Lowe

Holiday books aren’t just for the late fall. I read them on into January and beyond. In fact, we’ve all heard of Christmas in July, right? This list is long, but they are all on my Kindle, so I will eventually read each one of them. The books with a quick summary are the books I’ve read, so far. These are added to my list posted in November.

Take your time. Enjoy the holiday throughout the year. And please jot down your favorite holiday romances in the comments area, so we can all check them out.


I hope everyone has a great holiday season, no matter what holidays they celebrate. Happy New Year. And here is to a great 2023, with many more new books to choose from.

ENJOY!!!!!

Share your favorite holiday titles…

 BOOKS I READ IN DECEMBER:

The Wolf of Christmas Present by Kristen Strassel (December 2022)

Rediscovering her roots, finding the perfect mate at Christmas, and finding family (pack.)

The Oak King and the Holly King by N. W. Moors (December 2015)

A quick, short story read about the Solstice celebration, with a sweet surprise.

Merry Little Christmas Spritz by Cherie Colyer (November 2021)

A charmed bookstore, the woman who wants to save it, and the man who is intent on tearing it down and turning the historical store into condos. Some cute and magical twists and turns, and a fun cast of characters.

Christmas at Holly Hill Inn by Maddie James (November 2022)

3 books in one set. Can’t wait to read the other two stories. The first is about a wedding and reunion of college friends.

Sakar: A Sci-Fi Holiday Tail by Ella Blake (November 2022)

An inter-planetary romance at Christmas, with great kids, a blizzard, and a barnful of animals

Frost: A Sci-Fi Holiday Tail by Ava Ross (November 2022)

On the run and across the border between the humans and the planetary enemies, can two who are meant to be together find home?

Lights of Love by Morgan Malone (November 2022)

Settling into a new town and knowing few, Judy immerses herself in preparing for Hannukah. A sweet, later-in-life, second chance love story with plenty of amusing secondary characters to push two town newcomers together for the holidays.

Holly Berry Inn by Nancy Fraser (December 2022)

Friends in college gather together for a wedding, all members of the wedding party. A reunion, second-chance romance for the first book.

Country Snow and Mistletoe by Anne Carrole (November 2022)

Second chances at both love and starting over in life’s journey. Big family and friend’s Christmas celebration.

Charming the Prince: A Dickens Holiday Romance by Maddie James (Oct 2022)

A reunion story during the holidays with the backdrop of a diner in Dickens and a bigger than life dog.

The Christmas Wedding Guest by Susan Mallery (2021)

Two sisters work together to organize their parent’s renewal of vows ceremony. But each finds their own love in a second chance for one and an opposites attract romance for the other. Warning: cute kids, pets, and plenty of small-town Christmas spirit.

Sasha’s Secret Santa: A Dicken’s Holiday Romance (A Dickens Christmas, Book 11) Dorrit’s Diner by Peggy Jaeger (Oct 2022)

Finally home and burying herself in work at the diner to forget the past, Abra finally opens up to a customer. Will he help fix Christmas for her?

Meringue Snowflake Magic by Tena Stetler (Nov 2022)

A sweet love story about merging families—were wolves of Alaska with witches of Colorado. The couple run a preserve for injured animals near Bar Harbor, Maine. Many interesting secondary characters, including a dog, a wolf, and an Albatross.

The Eve of Love (New Year Anthology) by Elf AhearnEliza CarterKathy CrouchHeather HallmanCynthia Anne HurtJoan KosterClaudine LamarrJulia MastersAnnie R. McEwenZia Westfield (Oct 2022)

Thanksgiving through New Year’s Eve holiday stories. I’ve read a few of the Christmas books and can’t wait to go back and read the others.

BOOKS TO READ: 

Christmas Wedding Cookies by Jeanne Kern (November 2022)

Wedding Bells on Victory Street by Pam Howes (October 2020)

A Princess by Christmas by Julia London (October 2020)

Cowboys and Angels by Vicki Lewis Thompson (Oct 2022)

Shine a Light by Rebecca Crowley (Nov 2021)

Operation Snowball by Kathryn Hills (Oct 2022)

Naughty or Nice: A Holiday Regency Anthology (Oct 2022) by Bree WolfSydney Jane BailyTracy Sumner, et. al. 

Eight Kisses by Mindy KlaskyLori Ann BaileyRose Grey, et. al. (November 2019)

Greek Snowball Surprise Cookies by M.J. Golias (December 2022)

Snowbound Christmas by Jo Ann Brown

The Family You Make by Jill Shalvis

Merry EX-Mas by Courtney Walsh

Wrapped Up in You by Lori DiAnni

A Lucky Texas Christmas by Liz Alvin

A Cowboy for Christmas by Lori Wild

Rancher Family Christmas by Leslie Nor

Once Upon a Duke (12 Dukes of Christmas) by Erica Ridley

Mistletoe Season by Michelle Major

Her First Christmas Cowboy by Maisey Yates

Christmas Wedding Guest by Susan Mallery

The Cowboy Prince Charming by Maisey Yates

Heartwarming Christmas (12 Story Collection from Heartwarming Christmas Town) (Oct 2015) by Melinda CurtisAnna AdamsAnna J. Stewart, et. al.  

Let’s Get Naughty: A Limited Edition Romance Anthology (Let's Get Naughty Book 1) 
by Ashley Zakrzewski, et. al.

Cherishing Christmas Love
Boxset: Bumper Christmas Mail-Order Bride Historical Western Romance - 32 Book Box Set by Callie Gardner, Rosalee Adams, et al.



Find all Books in various formats under Delsora Lowe 
on Amazon and Draft2Digital

~ cottages to cabins ~ keep the home fires burning ~

Delsora Lowe writes small town sweet and spicy romances and contemporary westerns from the mountains of Colorado to the shores of Maine.

Author of the Starlight Grille series, Serenity Harbor Maine novellas, and the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series, Lowe has also authored short romances for Woman’s World magazine. Her newest novella is The Love Left Behind. Look for both a Christmas novel (The Inn at Gooseneck Lane) and novella (Holiday Hitchhiker) later this fall.

Social Media Links:
Author website
: www.delsoralowe.com
Facebook Author page: https://www.facebook.com/delsoraloweauthor/community/
Amazon Author page: https://www.amazon.com/Delsora-Lowe/e/B01M61OM39/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
Books2Read Author page: https://www.books2read.com/ap/8GWm98/Delsora-Lowe
BookBub Author Page: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/delsora-lowe-93c6987f-129d-483d-9f5a-abe603876518
Goodreads Author Page: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16045986.Delsora_Lowe
Instagram: #delsoralowe / https://www.instagram.com/delsoralowe/

Book Covers: Attributed to each author. 
Free Clip Art Credits:  
Free Free December Cliparts, Download Free Free December Cliparts png images, Free ClipArts on Clipart Library (clipart-library.com)
Free Solstice Cliparts, Download Free Solstice Cliparts png images, Free ClipArts on Clipart Library (clipart-library.com)

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Inspiration for My Holiday Stories By Kathy Coatney


I started writing Christmas themed romances a few years ago and really enjoyed writing the Crooked Halo Christmas Chronicles

I started a new Christmas series in 2021, A Vermont Christmas Romance, after I lost a dear friend, Jody Sherin, who died in April of that year.

 I met Jody at the Emerald City Romance Writers conference about ten years ago through mutual friends. They were all having dinner together, and they graciously invited me to tag along.

 Not only did Jody welcome me with open arms, but the day before our dinner she bought my book, Forever His, and read it overnight, then raved about it all through dinner. She stole my heart in that moment, and we became fast friends. She was also my loyal reader, and eventually became my proof reader/critiquer. I always looked forward to our dinners in Seattle—until COVID when our annual dinner was cancelled along with the conference.

BOOK 1

 The last time I spoke to Jody was two months before she died. We were discussing my latest book, but then we transitioned to family, and of course her great grandchildren, and how adorable each one was, and how much she loved them. I’ve never met anyone more caring or knowledgeable, or anyone who loved Christmas more than she did. She spent weeks decorating her house for the holidays and had not one, but several Christmas trees. Her husband, Dave, made a special Christmas village that grew every year.  Wherever Jody is, I’m certain heaven is decorated for Christmas year-round.

 After Jody died, I wanted to do something in her memory and came up with the Vermont Christmas Romance series where Jody and her husband, Nick C-L-A-Ws, play matchmaking Santa and Mrs. Claus in the town of Snowside, Vermont. They bring lonely hearts together just in time for Christmas.

 I have so loved writing this series and felt Jody guiding through the story. The first book, Santa Comes to Snowside, released last November and book 2, Jingle all the way to Snowside released on October 4, 2022. Here’s an excerpt from the latest release where Jody opens the story:

 

BOOK 2
Somewhere north of Vermont

 Nick Claws finished polishing the hood of the candy red Mini Cooper and began loading it with suitcases. The October sun crept over the horizon as Nick wedged the last suitcase into the trunk, leaving room for him, Jody, and their miniature poodle, Prancer. His wife had never learned the art of packing light.     


 “So why are we headed to Snowside in October?” Jody asked, coming up to him with Prancer snuggled in her arms. The miniature poodle lifted his head and gave a single bark, as if he also wanted an answer to the question.

       Nick glanced over at her, his blue eyes twinkling as he stroked his long, white beard. “We’re getting an early start on the Christmas season.”

       “The earliest we’ve ever gone is November.”

       “You’re right, but this one’s going to be a bit more challenging, and we’re going to need more time since we’ll be volunteering at two different sites.”

       Jody looked down at Prancer. “Did you hear that?” she asked the dog. “We’re starting Christmas in October this year.”

       “Is that a bad thing?” Nick asked.

       “Absolutely not. You know I love Christmas. I can’t think of anything better than starting now.” Jody clapped her hands, excitement pulsing through her. “So, tell me where we’ll be volunteering.”

       He helped her into the car, and they set off. “As you know, we’re returning to Snowside, and there’s the sweetest woman, Sadie McCluskey. She runs McCluskey River Farm right in downtown Snowside. It’s only three acres, but it’s got all the charm of the Old Time Christmas Tree Farm and Enchanted Inn that Jeremy and Marilyn Clark own. It’s the place we gave Jack and Annie Bradshaw the sleigh ride and romantic dinner almost four years ago. Sadie grows every crop imaginable and does all kinds of weekly events, from brunches to movie nights, crafts for kids and adults, tours of the farm, and she teaches classes on growing successful gardens. But she desperately needs help with the events, which is where you come in. I know you’re going to love it!”

       “I can’t wait to get started. And what about the other place?”

       “It’s a kindergarten classroom, and the teacher is Hank Dabrowski. His hands are full, and he really needs more help in the classroom. He’s dedicated to these kids and their families and wants to do more than just teach them. Many of his kids’ families are living hand-to-mouth, so he’s determined to not only educate the kids, but improve their lives.”

       Jody faced him, her reindeer earrings swaying against rosy cheeks. “So, I assume there’s a connection between Sadie and Hank?”

       Nick cast a side-long glance at his wife, then focused on the road. “Yes. The land Sadie farms is owned by our old friend Elroy Murphy—one of our first holiday matchups and Hank’s great-uncle. Elroy actually wrote to us about them. From what he said, he promised Sadie that he will never allow the land to be anything but farmland, and he’s waiting for her to come up with the financing to buy it. She’s applied for numerous loans, but keeps getting turned down. Hank’s been trying to convince his uncle to contact a lawyer to ensure he gets fair market value for the land, which could mean Sadie would lose her farm.”

       Jody clapped her hands over her mouth, shaking her head. “We can’t have Sadie lose that farm. It’s too important. We’re going to have to convince Hank to change his mind.”

       Nick nodded in agreement.

       “Are Hank and Sadie our holiday matchup?”

       “They are, but it’s going to be a challenge. Hank is driven to make a difference for his students, but he’s suspicious of Sadie, especially after a bad breakup. Sadie is committed to her farm, but her resistance goes deeper. Her parents died when she was in high school, and she went into foster care. Then she married young and her ex-husband hurt her deeply. Now, she’s afraid to love and she’s lost her Christmas spirit.”

       Jody tapped a finger to her lips as she thought over the problem. “Well, we’re going to have our work cut out for us, but we will find a solution.”

       Nick reached over and squeezed her knee. “That’s what I love most about you—your optimism. You don’t believe in can’t.”

       Jody winked at him, tracing her fingers over his cheek as she stared into his face. “I couldn’t do it without you.”

       Nick punched the gas. Jody’s laughter floated on the air again as they jetted down the highway.

***

The Christmas books are part of The Murphy Clan series. The Murphy Clan has four series within it, Falling in Love, Return to Hope’s Crossing, The Crooked Halo Christmas Chronicles, and Vermont Christmas Romance for a total of 13 books.

 I also have a short story Angels R Us you can only get it by subscribing to my newsletter.

 Thank you all. It was lovely spending time with you. I look forward to meeting up with you on:

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