Charlene Raddon's Blog: Historical romance, page 3

August 21, 2012

Book Trailer for FOREVER MINE

See my book trailer for FOREVER MINE on YouTube http://youtu.be/pc98A4RGhpU
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Published on August 21, 2012 09:05 Tags: book, book-trailer, historical, lighthouse, oregon, reading, romance, video, writing

July 27, 2012

Come Meet Author Elizabeth Delisi

Today, visit my blog, http://www.charleneraddon.blogspot.com, and meet talented Elizabeth Delisi. Learn about her great new e-book, Fatal Fortune.

Lottie Baldwin, a charmingly eccentric psychic, decides to investigate when her best friend’s husband goes missing. Lottie’s boyfriend, Harlan Erikson, the Chief Deputy in the Sheriff’s Office, thinks she takes too many risks and wishes she’d leave the investigating to him. But men are overprotective, right? What could go wrong?

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of Elizabeth's fascinating book.Fatal Fortune
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Published on July 27, 2012 07:30 Tags: comtemporary, investigation, physic, romance, tarot

Come Meet Author Elizabeth Delisi

Today, visit my blog, http://www.charleneraddon.blogspot.com, and meet talented Elizabeth Delisi. Learn about her great new e-book, Fatal Fortune.

Lottie Baldwin, a charmingly eccentric psychic, decides to investigate when her best friend’s husband goes missing. Lottie’s boyfriend, Harlan Erikson, the Chief Deputy in the Sheriff’s Office, thinks she takes too many risks and wishes she’d leave the investigating to him. But men are overprotective, right? What could go wrong?

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of Elizabeth's fascinating book.Fatal FortuneFatal Fortune
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Published on July 27, 2012 07:29 Tags: comtemporary, investigation, physic, romance, tarot

Come Meet Author Elizabeth Delisi

Today, visit my blog, http://www.charleneraddon.blogspot.com, and meet talented Elizabeth Delisi. Learn about her great new e-book, Fatal Fortune.

Lottie Baldwin, a charmingly eccentric psychic, decides to investigate when her best friend’s husband goes missing. Lottie’s boyfriend, Harlan Erikson, the Chief Deputy in the Sheriff’s Office, thinks she takes too many risks and wishes she’d leave the investigating to him. But men are overprotective, right? What could go wrong?

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of Elizabeth's fascinating book.Fatal Fortune
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Published on July 27, 2012 07:29 Tags: comtemporary, investigation, physic, romance, tarot

July 23, 2012

The Joys and Pitfalls of Research

The Joys and pitfalls of research is what I'm blogging about today at Cheryl St. John's blog site. Come join me and leave a comment to be eligible for the drawing. I'll be talking about the research I did for my book Forever Mine, with photos of the setting and the wedding picture that inspired the story. Don't miss it.
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Published on July 23, 2012 13:42 Tags: 1891, charlene-raddon, cheryl-st-john, drawing, historical, lighthouse, oregon, romance

July 21, 2012

Interview on Across The Plain of Shining Books

Today I'm being interviewed by Pat McDermott at her site, http://www.acrosstheplainofshiningboo.... Drop by and leave a comment to quality for the drawing for a $10 Amazon.com gift card.
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Published on July 21, 2012 08:39 Tags: charlene-raddon, drawing, historical, interview, romance

FOREVER MINE e-book Now Available

The day has finally arrived. Forever Mine is now available as an e-book at most e-book stores. Forever Mine - e-book by Charlene Raddon

Blurb:
Their love was fated…
A mail-order bride from Cincinnati, Ariah Scott traveled all the way to Oregon to marry one man, only to lose her heart to another. What will become of her now? Ever since her father died at the hands of a vengeful relative, Ariah's life has been shadowed by dark secrets. And now her forbidden desire for Bartholomew Noon fills her with uncertainty—and a secret longing that can never be fulfilled.

And forbidden…
From the moment Bartholomew saw Ariah standing alone at the Portland train station. the keeper of the Cape Meares Light was lost. Hopelessly in love with this angelic beauty who is fated to live beside him at the isolated lighthouse as the wife of another man, Bartholomew never dreams that destiny will someday bring them together. Is Ariah truly the woman he can cherish…forever?

Excerpt:
Cape Meares, Oregon 1891

To Bartholomew Noon the unceasing rumble of the sea and the melancholy cry of gulls were the very embodiment of his loneliness. Constant. Never ending. But loneliness was not the cause of the heavy sense of foreboding that had come over him on awakening that morning. A warning he knew better than to ignore.

In the hope of escaping the gloomy cloud hanging over him, he had hiked the steep trail down to the beach where a man could be alone. Here on the driftwood littered strand, he could be himself. No one to placate. No one from whom he must hide his innermost feelings in order to keep from being manipulated or tormented. Here, he could ponder his unwonted presentiment without interruption.

Out where the water deepened, a wave of translucent jade crested, curled in upon itself, then broke in a boiling froth that tossed and fumed until its force ebbed. Indolently, it crept toward him until the foam-tipped water encircled his boots, as if to embrace him in empathy and compassion, before being sucked back into the gray Pacific Ocean, stealing the sand from under him as it went.

A derisive snort erupted from deep inside Bartholomew's chest as he shrugged off his imaginings. The sea neither embraced nor understood him. What it did do, a few grains at a time, was erode away the land, the same way life with Hester was eroding away his soul.

The sky darkened from gray to black as a storm drew near. Fog, pushed by the wind herding the storm inland, had already obliterated the headland to the south where Hester and the lighthouse awaited him. The air grew more chill. Soon the rain would begin. Resolutely, he thrust his icy fingers into his coat pockets and turned his back on his beloved sea. It was time to see to his responsibilities.

The thick February mist formed droplets on his lashes and the tip of his sturdy nose. Under his keeper's cap, his damp sable hair formed a mass of loose curls.

"Come on, Harlequin," he called to a puffin feeding in the shallow water, "time to go."

The stubby bird scooped up a last mouthful of tiny mole crabs in its garish orange and red beak and waddled out of the surf toward the man, every bit as though it had understood the human command. Awkwardly, it flapped its raven wings, flying barely high enough to reach the man's broad shoulder, but it seemed content there. Bartholomew patted the sleek snowy feathers of its breast as he climbed the bluff that rose above the strand. The wing Bartholomew had mended was nearly as strong as ever. Any day now the bird would rejoin its own kind on the seastacks off the Oregon coast, leaving Bartholomew more alone than ever.

Evergreens draped in moss crowded close around him as he made his way up the trail, and added to the gloom of the foggy morn. Tree trunks, misshapened by ferns that rooted in every gnarl, appeared like phantoms in the drifting mist, writhing and moaning in the rising wind. It was when the track ran close enough to the cliff to offer a last view of the sea that Bartholomew saw the ship.

One second the vessel was there, the next it was gone. The fog congealed to the consistency of Hester's sausage gravy and laid every bit as heavily upon the sea as the gravy did in Bartholomew's stomach. His dark eyes strained to penetrate the ghostly vapor. If he was right, Pyramid Rock lay directly across the vessel's course.

Like a too-tight seam, the fog split apart. In the resultant window, he spotted the ship, heading straight for the hidden rock.

He screamed for the vessel to veer sharply portside, knowing in the more reasonable portion of his brain that he was much too far away to be heard.

The rising wind hurtled the ship closer to its destruction, as easily as a stone cast from a sling. To Bartholomew the scene played out in painful, slow motion, grating on his nerves like wood beneath a rasp. People were on that ship, people who would die. He wanted to rage at the heavens for allowing such tragedy.

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Published on July 21, 2012 08:25 Tags: 1891, americana, charlene-raddon, historical, mail-order-bride, oregon, romance

July 19, 2012

Interview with Charlene Raddon

Go to
http://britdarby.com/2012/07/19/autho...
today for an interview by Brit Darby of award winning author Charlene Raddon. Be sure to leave a comment so you'll be included in the drawing for a $10 Amazon.com gift card.
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Published on July 19, 2012 09:18 Tags: author-interview, romance, western-historical

April 6, 2012

Ranch Romance Magazine

Remember a couple of messages ago, I mentioned some old magazines I'd found called Ranch Romances? Well, I am now serializing one of the short stories from the Oct 1953 issue on my blog, Charlene Raddon's Chatterblog. Very fun. The first segment was posted yesterday and the second is scheduled for today. Drop by and check it out.
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Published on April 06, 2012 08:48 Tags: ranch-romances, short-stories

March 24, 2012

Spring--A Downer Or An Upper For Writing

Evidence of spring's arrival lies abundant in my yard. Red tulips, purple dwarf irises, blue crocus, yellow forsythia. The birds certainly know it's nesting time. Rather than worms hanging from their beaks as they fly by, it's bits of bark, twigs, dried leaves or human debris. Sitting here admiring the sunny day makes me want to go out there and shove my hands in the soil, pull weeds and feel productive. But I wouldn't get any writing done that way.

Is spring a detriment to writing? There'll be more to do now, that's for sure--yard work, traveling, hiking--and that can take away from writing time. But the sunshine, flowers and spring air also fills me with a sort of energy I haven't felt since last spring. It awakens the urge in me to get things done, be active, produce. Well, writing is an accomplishing something. Right?

So what I have to do is use this new energy spring brings me and simply accomplish more each day.
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Published on March 24, 2012 17:12 Tags: spring, writing

Historical romance

Charlene Raddon
Check out my eBooks, Forever Mine, Tender Touch and To Have and To Hold. They're getting great reviews and ratings. ...more
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