Showing posts with label Contemporary Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contemporary Romance. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2022

Creating Community as a Character in Our Books ... M. Lee Prescott

 

“Community is the single most important factor in learner-centered classrooms.” (Carol Avery)

Hello,

It’s Mary Lee (alias M. Lee Prescott) saying hello. The quote above is from my life as a teacher (retired in June 2021). Creating a community in one’s classroom is critical if a teacher wishes to build trust among all stakeholders – adults and children – and encourage the kind of risk taking that allows learning to thrive. You might be asking yourself—why in a writer’s blog, is she writing about teaching and classrooms? The answer is simple creating a supportive, nurturing community where my characters live is at the heart of most of my fiction. Certainly, community is, indeed, a main character in all four of my series. I thought in this post, I tell you a little about these communities. Perhaps you’ll come and visit someday?

The Morgan’s Run books are set in the southwestern United States in the fictional town of Saguaro Valley. An orographic effect characterized by unusual cloud formations and abundant moisture has created this extraordinary green valley that lies between two mountain ranges, vast deserts beyond.

Home to six thousand residents—ranchers, farmers, entrepreneurs, and others – much of the land is owned by a few wealthy ranchers, Ben Morgan among them, who take their stewardship seriously, providing livelihoods and support to every resident. The undiscovered valley mostly remains isolated in its pristine beauty and agricultural abundance, except when the occasional movie star arranges a pack trip up into the mountains. Saguaro Valley is a place where everyone knows everyone and takes care of everyone. If you’re in danger, trouble or need, you are never alone. Many beloved characters leave home and return, to heal, to find love, and to raise their families. Others spread their wings and move east as do two of the Morgan sons, Sam, an architect to Maryland and Kyle, a veterinarian, to Horseshoe Crab Cove, a New England town that is home to the Morgan’s Fire community (see below!).

In this spin-off series to Morgan’s Run, readers come to the village of Horseshoe Crab Cove, home to Ben Morgan’s younger brother. Formerly a world traveler and longtime Maine resident, Richard purchases a five hundred acre property, where he builds an enormous farmhouse, barns, stables and eventually a winery. Richard is also an investor in Field and Field, a farm-to-table restaurant on the property, created and run by his son-in-law.

The community encompasses several small seaside towns, Horseshoe Crab Cove at its center. On tiny Main Street, with its shops and restaurants, is a garden space, Laura’s Community Garden, started by Richard’s daughter, Pam in memory of her mother. There in the four acre plot, residents come to plant, grow, and share the fruits of their collective labors. Horseshoe Crab Cove is also home to the Darn Yarners, a group of eight women in their sixties, friends for over four decades, who support each other, each other’s families, and the village proper. Over the years the Yarners have raised money for parks and other civic projects, their fellowship intricately woven into the fabric of village life. Like Saguaro Valley, no one in Horseshoe Crab Cove is alone and the close community provides a safe, loving place for longtime residents and newcomers like Kyle Morgan, who follows his wife Harriet, daughter on a Darn Yarner, to town. When, at age fifty, Joe O’Leary leaves the priesthood, he, too, comes to the village to learn how to live outside the confines of the church. 

Village of Old Harbor, a coastal village with a Quaker school at its center, seems like just another sleepy town, where murders happen a little too regularly! Born and raised in the area, Detective Roger Demaris, and his team, along with his former schoolmate and high school girlfriend, art teacher Bess Dore, explore the worlds beneath the town and school’s placid surfaces uncovering unimaginable evil. Despite its aura of tranquility, this is a sometimes fractured community, infiltrated by outsiders bent on dredging up the past, wreaking havoc on the present, and changing the course of the future for the residents of Old Harbor. There is, however, a core of community resilience that prevails and triumphs over the darkness—thank goodness!

Finally—there are the communities traversed by private investigator, Ricky Steele. When not chasing criminals at a snobby boarding school or helping a friend find her husband’s killer in the exclusive, coastal town of Windy Harbor, Ricky prowls the mean streets of Spindle City, trailing errant spouses, and mingling with sex workers and drug lords. All of these communities have an identity that shape Ricky’s often bumbling, but heartfelt investigating style. Her office is in one of the old granite mills that populate the landscape of Spindle City. These behemoths, left over from the city’s heyday as a thriving textile manufacturing hub, reflect the gritty strength of the community and its denizens.

The above notwithstanding, the community readers love more than those mentioned, is where Ricky lives—the Grove. There in her ticky-tacky beach cottage, she is surrounded by friends and neighbors like Maddie and Fulton, the deaf octogenarians to the east, who keep the canapes and cocktails coming, and Vinnie to the west, a dear friend who helps with carpentry, security, underworld information, and cat sitting. The Grove also draws to its community, Dr. Charlie Bowen, who renovates a waterfront property around the corner, while wooing the independent Ricky. Will love win out? Time will tell.

So… is “community” synonymous with setting? Are they the same? I would answer no, but I could be persuaded either way. As author, community unfolds in my stories as the living, breathing manifestation of setting. Community allows characters to take risks to dare to be themselves, to grow, to develop, to thrive. Is this the same as setting? Hmm… You be the judge!

Great blogging with you! I love to hear from readers and writers so please be in touch anytime.

Warm wishes,

Mary Lee


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Thursday, November 4, 2021

Holiday Stories for Your Reading Pleasure


 As you check out these books, you may notice that several of the authors are our own Genre-istas and the others have been our guests from time-to-time.

Learn more about how You can receive one or more of these books here!

In addition to this amazing opportunity to read awesome holiday stories from these authors, check out this anthology from our Aussie Author friends here!


Enjoy!!!

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Finding the funny... by Peggy Jaeger

 You would think as someone who loves screwball comedies, romcoms, and who watched endless sitcoms growing up, that I would easily be able to come up with funny scenarios for my characters in my books.

Yeah...I'd totally think that too, but I'd be wrong.

So wrong.

Writing funny is hard. Wicked hard.

And comedy can be so subjective. What I laugh out loud at something so hard I wet my pants, my husband doesn't even crack a smile for. Drawing the line at farcical is something I have to consider, too. You want your characters involved in situations that lead the reader to laugh and relate, but you don't want them thinking, "never in a gazillion years would something like that happen."

The book will close in a heartbeat when that thought occurs.

Now, I’m considered a wise-ass by most people who know me, and I won’t deny that descriptor at all. I can be bitingly sarcastic – but never cruel – and I’ve been known to make grown women leave a dinner table and head for the ladies' room just so they won’t pee in their pants from laughing.

I can be quick, biting, snarky, and sometimes guffaw-able, in real life.

But on the page? I die to find the funny.

Most humor is based on tragedy, or the saying goes. Most of my humor is found in dumbass situations that happen every day in my life. The Lucille Ball moments we all have at one time or another.

But when I’ve got characters I want to invest a little humor in, oftentimes I’m lost.

Most of us know at least one person, an uncle, a friend, even a co-worker, who can take any situation and see the humor in it enough to make everyone around them laugh. These people are usually the “best friends” in novels, like the Rosie O’Donnell character in Sleepless in Seattle. Always ready with a witticism – usually spot on and deadly – about whatever is occurring in the scene at hand. These characters lighten the mood, add realism to the situations in the book, and generally are well-liked by readers.

I think it was famed actor Edmund Kean who said, “Dying (Tragedy) is easy; comedy is hard.”

Yup. Truth.

So, just how do I find the funny? Well, being a die-hard people watcher is one way. I've been to Panera's a time or two and watched the most ridiculous things happen to people while they are waiting in line for their food. I'll be honest and tell you I've used one or two ( or more!) of those events I've witnessed in my RomCom novels.

Not only am I a people watcher, but I will also talk to a rock! And I've got the kind of face that just screams TALK TO ME from everyone I meet, so many times I'm told stories that resonate with me and which I can use for my own characters.

And I want my characters to sound like real people - the witty neighbor down the street, the aunt who's always got a funny anecdote to share, the uncle who loves a good slapstick move. These are the people I think of when I write my RomComs.

I have a friend who says it's the situation a person is caught up in and their response to it that can make the scene funny. I agree...to a point. You see, I believe PEOPLE are inherently either funny or they're not. Some people can tell a joke and you'll smile. Someone else will tell the same joke and you'll be holding your sides because the pain caused by laughing is great. These are the people I strive for when I write my RomComs. These are the people I want as my hero and/or heroine, and these are the people that give me the most agita to create!

As a huge fan of the 1930s and 40s slapstick RomComs starring Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn, Jimmy Stewart and Claudette Colbert, I strive to live up to their wonderful examples. The writing of Prestin Sturgiss, Billy Wilder, and later, Nora Ephron and the Cohen brothers are my yardsticks. Their characters were relatable, lovable, and regular people who were, and are also, hysterically funny.

So, finding the funny isn't the easiest thing to accomplish when you're a writer. It's hard, sometimes soul-sucking work. But the first time you see a reader hold a book you've penned and they laugh at the right -funny - parts, the rewards are immeasurable!

Here are a few of the books I've penned that I consider funny reads: The Match Made in Heaven series ( 3 books) 

It's a Trust thing

3 Wishes

Christmas & Cannolis

Mistletoe, Mobsters, and Mozzarella

Looking for me? Here I am:

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Until next month, peeps ~ Peg

Saturday, February 20, 2021

Taking A Chance on Love with JL Regen

Secret Desires by JL Regen (aka Joan Ramirez)

Nothing in Margo Simmons’s life comes easy. She can’t claim the inheritance on a condo apartment her uncle has left to her until she is gainfully employed in a job for a year. She meets the man of her dreams but anguishes over a loving relationship because he is still emotionally tied to his deceased wife. 

With great difficulty, she becomes the guardian to a recently orphaned child she had been tutoring.   Margo evolves from an insecure, newbie elementary teacher into a woman determined to fulfill the secret desires locked in her heart. 

My story speaks to anyone who has suffered a loss and had to start over.

A contemporary romance, Secret Desires, is all about taking a chance on love. Margo and Edward come from two different worlds. When they meet in his office to discuss her inheritance, sparks fly, hearts ignite, and love begins to bloom. However, as the old bards were fond of saying, the course of true love has to withstand many potholes in the road to a loving union. I invite you to read their story.

Learn more about J.L. Regen aka Joan Ramirez 

J.L. Regen’s book was inspired by a real life story of lovers who join hearts against many odds. 

She lives in the New York metropolitan area, is a published photojournalist, has short suspense stories online, and has taught English as a Second Language to students around the globe. 

This is her first contemporary romance. 

J.L. has also published three nonfiction books and is crafting a historical suspense and a historical family saga set in World War II. Her most recent publication is The Write Rules, a handbook on how to start your own enterprise.

Check out J.L.'s website: joansbookshelf.com

You can find J.L's books at

https://www.amazon.com/Secret-Desires-J-L-Regen/dp/099840991X/

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/secret-desires-j-l-regen/1125516296

https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/secret-desires-12

Connect with J.L. on Social Media:

https://www.facebook.com/Secret-Desires-1819428604992553


 

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Holiday Romance Author Erin McLellan

 Erin and I are both Alaskan authors. I had the pleasure of interviewing her recently—enjoy!

Lynn Lovegreen 




What do you write, and what do you enjoy about it?

 

I write queer contemporary romance. Some of my work is angsty and some is really fluffy and light. All of it is very sexy. I enjoy writing contemporary romance because I like exploring slice-of-life scenarios in locales that are interesting to me. In particular, it’s important to me to write queer characters living, loving, and thriving in flyover states.

 

What is your writing process (panster or plotter)?

 

I’m very much a pantser. Normally, I have a seed of an idea for a book. It might be a particular trope or a scene or a character. That seed gets me started, and everything will develop from there. Usually, I’ll have one of my main characters figured out, and I’ll craft their partner to be a good foil for them in some way. Sometimes, especially if I’m strapped for time, I’ll plot out the whole story, but I don’t feel as comfortable writing that way.

 

This month's theme is holiday reads. Please tell us about yours. 

 

I have a series of holiday erotic romance novellas called the So Over the Holidays series. The first book in the series is a Christmas story called Stocking Stuffers with a queer heroine who sells sex toys. She gets snowed in at a B&B with the hero. She’s a bit of a grinch, and he loves Christmas. When I started writing that book, my goal was to write a story with all the heart and kitsch of a Hallmark Christmas movie but to make it very naughty.

 

The next books in the series are Candy Hearts, which is a secret relationship m/m Valentine’s Day story, and Bottle Rocket, which is a second chances m/f Independence Day novella with a queer hero. 

 

All of the books can be read as standalones, and they’re all short, fluffy, sexy, and fun!

 

What part of the books were most fun to write?

 

One of the reasons I love writing holiday books is because it’s fun to twist holiday traditions and tropes. All the books in the So Over the Holidays series have fun queer casts and found families. I like to play with the themes of family, independence, coming of age, and self-actualization, and those themes work perfectly when paired with holidays. Holidays can highlight changes that a person needs or wants to make in their life. They can function as catalysts for transformation, which is a great jumping off point for a story.

 

What's next for you?

 

My next book is the fourth book in the So Over the Holidays series, Party Favors. It’s a f/f New Year’s Eve romance between two online best friends who meet in person for the first time. It was a ton of fun to write and will be released on Dec. 1st.

 

Blurb for Party Favors:

 

Three…

Amanda Ellis knows three things: she’s tired of doing what’s expected of her, she hates her job at her family’s business, and the last thing she wants to do is attend her parents’ boring New Year’s Eve ball with a date her mother picked. A few days of fun with her online best friend is exactly what she needs to ring in the New Year on her own terms.

 

Two…

Wren Rebello is impulsive and always ready for fun. A last-minute girls’ getaway sounds like the perfect way to spend New Year’s. But even Wren isn’t prepared for the spark of attraction she feels when she meets Amanda in person for the first time. Good thing Wren loves popping Amanda’s cork.

 

One…

After days spent sharing end-of-year resolutions and the one bed in their cottage, the clock strikes midnight and the ball drops on their time together. As Amanda and Wren go their separate ways, they leave new resolutions unfulfilled. Is there enough New Year’s magic left to turn their online friendship into real-life love?


Here is the preorder link for Party Favors: https://smarturl.it/partyfavorskindle




More Author Info:

 

Erin McLellan is the author of the Farm College, So Over the Holidays, and Storm Chasers series. She enjoys writing happily ever afters that are earthy, emotional, quirky, humorous, and very sexy. Originally from Oklahoma, she currently lives in Alaska and spends her time dreaming up queer contemporary romances. She is a lover of chocolate, college sports, antiquing, gardening, Dr Pepper, and binge-worthy TV shows.

 

 

Facebook Group: https://smarturl.it/ErinMcLellansFBGroup

Newsletter: https://smarturl.it/mclellannewsletter

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/erinmclellanwrites/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/emclellanwrites

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorerinmclellan/

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/erin-mclellan

Website: https://smarturl.it/erinmclellan


Friday, September 25, 2020

Without Hope...by Peggy Jaeger

This month's topic strikes a chord in me for so many reasons. I'll try to  keep it down to a few well thought out ones and not drone on or wax prolific.

You're welcome ( hee hee!)

The definition of hope according to Webster's Dictionary is: a feeling of expectation and desire for a certain thing to happen. In essence, it's an outcome that we all desire, and each hope is individualistic.

The concept of Hope is something near and dear to me. As a practicing Catholic, hope is one of the cannons of my religious life. Catholics hope for a life everlasting when we die and our souls exit our bodies. We hope to be reunited with our loved ones who have gone before us once we get to Heaven.

Or in my case IF I get to Heaven. Hee hee.

When my daughter was born, I hoped she would inherit a world that would be free of wars, poverty, bigotry, and racism and where very single person is judged by the content of their character and not the color of their skin, where they were born, or their sexual preference.

I'm still hoping for that world and she is now 31 years old.

When I start writing a new romance book, in the back of my mind I always have a question for my hero and heroine: what is it they hope for, or hope to find, once the book is done? Do they want to find everlasting love? Have people accept them for who and what they are? Be the best person they can be?

Do they hope for an easy life, or one filled with excitement? Money, fortune, and fame; or a quiet country life sitting by a fire each evening? A grand passion or the easy, comfortable love of someone who knows you better than you know yourself?

Since I write romance you would think the major hope would be that they find their own happily ever after. Well, that's the end goal for sure. But they may not be hoping that along the way when I tell their story.

My own hope is that when someone reads a book I've penned they've found a few hours of joy and escapism from the horrors of the world we now inhabit and that I bring a smile and a little happiness into their day. I try to instill each book with a sense of hope - for the future and for the lovers - that all will be well and love will rule the day.

It may sound sappy and corny to some, but a Happily Ever After for everyone is my ultimate hope.

In my newest Holiday RomCom, MISTLETOE, MOBSTERS, & MOZZARELLA, Madonna San Valentino hopes that one day she will find a man who loves her for who she is and that she can fulfill her dream of going to design school. Will she get what she's hoping for??
 

You'll have to read the book to find out ( Hee Hee!)


You can follow me here: FOLLOW ME



Friday, July 31, 2020

When Readers Demand More! by Kathleen Lawless

Like a lot of authors, I started out in traditional publishing and slowly made my way to the world of independent publishing.  I really like the direct contact with readers and the chance to respond to their requests.  I also like the ability to set my own publishing schedule and publish as many books a year as suits my writing speed and my lifestyle.

This freedom means I have the ability to listen to my readers and act on it in a timely fashion.  So when I wrapped up my popular western series, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and readers weren’t ready to say goodbye to this family and this town, I didn’t lose any time.  These are sweet books with characters I love, and it’s fun to bring them back for a second round in my new series Widows of the Wild West.  Readers took a liking to Percival Bloom, an interesting secondary character in the original series, and clamored for his HEA. 

HOPE, Percy’s love interest, kicks off the new series and is available for pre order here.    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08DSL7Y8H

Snippet from HOPE 

         Hope found herself scrutinized by passersby from time to time and wondered if she stuck out like a sore thumb in a town where she expected most everyone knew everyone else.  If the rumors of ten men to every woman out West were to be believed, the men must be back at the ranch, while the few town ladies went about their errands.   

         Impossible to say what she had hoped to accomplish by her trip, but being here didn’t make her feel closer to Percy.  On the contrary . . .

         Disheartened, she returned to the hotel.  There was nothing for her here.  It had been a mistake to come. 

         As she approached the hotel, the faint sounds of piano music greeted her.  How wonderful!  Someone must be playing the grand piano she had seen in the lobby earlier; a welcome distraction from her thoughts. 

         Inside the lobby, she stopped short.  Even though his back was toward her, there was something familiar about the pianist.  As if on cue, the song ended, he ran his hand along the keys in a flamboyant finale, rose and turned her way. 

      Percy!

         “Hello, Hope.  Welcome to Bullet.”           

 There is a prequel with these two that is free to anyone who signs up for my newsletter. http://eepurl.com/bV0sb1

If I’ve piqued your curious about the series, Book 1, BRODY’S BRIDE, is currently on sale for only 99 cents.  https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07SRHCQK8

 

As a lover of both summer and the beach, I jumped at the chance when I was invited to join 13 other talented bestselling authors in a brand new summer box set, LAST CHANCE BEACH: Summer’s End, currently available to preorder for only 99 cents.  https://amzn.to/3hJseeT

BLUE SKY SUMMER is part of the set, a classic second chance romance. 

Here’s a preview. 

To Alisha, the town looked different with Mark by her side, as he entertained her with a running monologue of the town’s history that she expected was at least half made up.  The sun shone brightly in a sky so blue it almost hurt her eyes.  Seated next to Mark, her heart overflowed with contentment.  The whole island looked different.  Brighter.  Special.

         She shifted to study Mark’s profile as he drove.  She’d always managed on her own, but she’d managed better with Mark.  He’d been the first one to truly believe in her. 

         Tentatively, she put a hand on Mark’s leg, feeling the warmth of his skin beneath his board shorts and the pull of his quad muscle as he accelerated. 

         “I’m sorry I hurt you,” she said in a small voice.

         She saw his Adam’s apple bob as he swallowed thickly.  No quick grin this time.  No denial of the fact that she hurt him.

         “We were good together,” he said finally.   

         She nodded, blinking away the unwelcome sheen of tears behind her sunglasses.

         “Was that the problem?  You couldn’t handle good?”

         “I knew you would never leave me to attend med school, even after you’d been accepted,” she said finally, feeling it was time for the truth.

         He stomped on the brake and threw the Jeep into park so suddenly she was grateful for her seatbelt.  He turned to face her.  That’s why you dumped me?”   

         She nodded.

         “So it was all a crock.  What you said about needing to concentrate on your career without the distraction of a boyfriend?”

         “I thought, if you weren’t feeling responsible for me, or committed to me, you’d look after yourself first.  Chase your dream.”

         “You never thought, maybe this was something we should have a conversation about?  Possibly even reach some sort of mutual agreement?”

         She pleated the hem of her shorts between her fingers.  “I see that now.  I see a lot of things I didn’t see back then.”

         Mark exhaled a long, pained sigh, put the Jeep back into drive and soon they left the town behind, following a narrow coastal roadway.  Alisha rested her head against the seatback.  She’d been sure she’d feel better after apologizing to Mark.  So why did she feel worse?

Join us at LAST CHANCE BEACH, SUMMER’S END, a full slate of favorite tropes and authors in one binge-worthy collection.  https://amzn.to/3hJseeT

Kathleen Lawless blames a misspent youth watching Rawhide, Maverick and Bonanza for her fascination with cowboys, which doesn’t stop her from creating a wide variety of interests and occupations for her alpha male heroes.   

Not that she can ever stick to just one genre.  So many stories to tell—never enough time.

With close to 30 published novels to her credit, she enjoys pushing the boundaries of traditional romance into historical romance, romantic suspense, women’s fiction and stories for young adults.        

Sign up for Kathleen’s VIP Reader Group to receive a free book, updates, special giveaways and fan-priced offers.    http://eepurl.com/bV0sb1

 

AMAZON | WEBSITE | NEWSLETTER | FACEBOOK | TWITTER | BOOKBUB

 


Thursday, July 30, 2020

Hangover Husband by Bonnie Edwards

HANGOVER HUSBAND

Years ago, I came up with the delicious beginning of a book. I think I wanted to submit it to Harlequin for one of their spicy lines of romances.

The opening pages were about a young woman waking in a huge hotel room bed, alone. She heard a droning sound and realized that there was a man in the shower, and she had a cigar band on her ring finger. The marriage licence on the floor was her third clue that something had changed in her life.

I came up with a great title right away and Hangover Husband was born. I came up with a synopsis (which is an intriguing retelling of the concept – not an outline).

Alas, there was no real conflict until I realized months later that the man in the shower was happy about being married to her.

One of my guiding questions when creating characters is, “Who is the worst possible person for this hero or heroine?” And honestly, the man in the shower wasn’t the worst guy for her.

I stalled on Hangover Husband and set it aside because other books were easier to write. Some books know the meaning of the word cooperate. My Hangover Husband did not want to cooperate. Apparently, he was the wrong guy for me!

Last Chance Beach: Summer’s End 

Then Last Chance Beach: Summer’s End opened up a new way to look at that hasty Vegas wedding and I knew who the man in the shower was…

Meet Danny Carling: Now that Danny Carling had his career on track he focused on his next goal. Staying married to Stacy Leon. His little sister’s best friend had been tying him in knots since she first appeared in Jenna’s life.

A high school sophomore had been way too young, and he’d waited patiently for his crush to fade. It had taken years. He told himself he had not been waiting for Stacy to grow up. He’d moved on a long time ago, grown past the fevered dreams and yearning.

He’d had plenty of other women, appropriately aged and experienced and ready to say “so long” when his next assignment came in. Nothing in his life had been permanent. He’d chased every dream around the globe, taking photos that had won him awards, acclaim, and cash.

And then, last month, he’d gone to Vegas for Mason’s bachelor party while the bridesmaids had done their thing on the other end of the strip. As the men had wandered up the strip, the women had wandered down, crashing together somewhere in the middle. The only thing that wasn’t a blur was seeing Stacy, her luscious body glittering with sparkly stuff, her skirt tight and her top loose so her breasts could swing free.

Her eyes had widened when she saw him, and her lips had pouted when he’d pulled her into a bear hug. But she’d stayed under his arm and when the two groups separated again, they stayed together. Alone.

And now meet me: I’m Bonnie Edwards and I write romance. I write in my head, I write on paper, I write when I’m driving, walking, sleeping. I’ve written novels, novellas, and short stories for Kensington Books, Harlequin Books, Carina Press, and Robinson (UK) although now I publish my work myself. Learn about more exciting releases by subscribing to my newsletter Bonnie’s Newsy Bits.

https://www.bonnieedwards.com/

 Follow me on BookBub, a great site for readers and writers to connect and talk books!

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/bonnie-edwards

https://www.amazon.com/Bonnie-Edwards/e/B001IO9UTO

https://twitter.com/BonnieEdwards

https://www.facebook.com/Bonnie.Edwards.Author/


Monday, July 13, 2020

Why Good Girls Like Bad Boys





By Marcia King-Gamble
www.Lovemarcia.com

Call me risk averse, but I’ve never been a fan of bad boys. Yet there are women who love them. And books about bad boys sell. Must be that “I’m going to fix him thing.” To me, that’s way too much work. Come to me fully formed. I’m not looking for a project or to remake anyone. I’m looking for a man.


When I see muscles and an open shirt with ample chest hair peeking through, and too-tight jeans, I run for the hills. I’m not into trouble. But put that kind of guy on a book cover, and watch those books fly off the shelves. Sales are guaranteed to soar.

A cowboy in a ten-gallon hat seated on a stallion gets readers’ attention.  The construction guy in a hard hat is a definite seller Have him lose his shirt and women will buy.

But readers also tend to go for kind. He might look like a bad boy, but he better be a reformed one. Readers might go for the outer trappings of a hunky guy, but they also go for integrity and heroic qualities. That’s why in romance novels the male love interest is called a hero.


Which brings me to my new release, a novella,, titled By Heart. https://amzn.to/3fi4Gg3. You may remember, By Design, released a couple of years back with co-author Sandra Kitt. This time, it’s Cyndy Lawsen’s story. Cyndy was Elle Stanford’s co-worker and friend. They were associates at H.E Caldwell’s in the gift department ETC.



Cyndy’s life undergoes a change when sculptor, Jacques Moreau demands to see the newly promoted manager. But Jacques is no villain, although initially he comes across as such. The villain in this case, is Tanisha Shaw, the manager of the neighboring department, Between the Sheets. Tanisha is after Cyndy’s commissions and the hero’s heart. She will do almost anything to discredit Cyndy and move in on Jacques.

As you can see, villains come in different shapes and forms and aren’t necessarily men.



Here is an excerpt from By Heart.
   “He’s not going to buy squat from you. Bet you I could get him over to Between the Sheets and spending some bucks.” “Tanisha said, pushing Cindy aside and setting off to stalk Cyndy’s potential buyer. Cyndy wasn’t about to let that happen. She cut Tanisha off mid- path.
    “You have customers waiting. I can handle this.” Cyndy turned to the customer in the expensive – looking camel coat.  Peter helping another woman, smothered a grin and went back to showing his customer an intricate cuckoo clock.  “May I help you?”
   The man set down the handmade quilt he’d been fingering. and raised his head. Their eyes connected, and Cyndy’s heart rate went up a beat. “Jacques what are you doing here?”  
   I was in the neighborhood and thought I’d stop by to see you.”               
   Cyndy’s tongue felt as if it was tied in a double loop. She pulled herself together in time to say. “Did your package arrive on time?”     
   “It did, Cheri. I can’t thank you enough. We are still on for tonight, oui?”
   “We are.”  
   Conscious of Tanisha gawking. Cyndy linked an arm through Jacques and, led him to the side. “Pay no attention to that woman. She sees only dollar signs. Her goal is to get you over to Between the Sheets and spending money.”
   Jacques flashed his whites, his eyebrows jiggling.  “Between the sheets. Now that’s an idea.”



 Coming soon is a collaboration with 13 other authors with individual short stories. We hope that you will join us at Last Chance Beach. There, sand, blue skies and romance are definitely on. Who won't like a second chance at love? You can pe-order  here https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08CV3GN3R/


In my story, One Last Shot, the villain appears to be a former celebrity photographer, who needs just one good shot to get back into the business. As luck would have it, he’s renting a house right next door to a sitcom star hiding out from a major scandal. All these stories are a definite beach reads and should help lighten an unforgettable summer.  So take the ferry  to Last Chance Beach, grab a beach chair, and get comfortable. Here, villains turn into love interests and hearts aren’t broken.

Do you have  a villain you love to hate?  Then why not enter the Florida Romance Writers Golden Palm Contest?  You still have time.

For more information please check out. www.Frwriters.org.



Marcia King-Gamble is a National Bestselling author of over 45 books and novellas. She originally hails from a sunny Caribbean island where the sky and ocean are the same mesmerizing shade of blue. This travel industry executive and current world traveler has spent most of life in the United States. A National Bestselling author, Marcia claims exercise, traveling to exotic locales, and caring for her animal family, keep her sane.



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