Casey Dawes's Blog, page 24

May 21, 2013

Chasing the Tumbleweed Free until May 24

My romantic suspense, Chasing the Tumbleweed, is free today at Amazon. Kindle apps can be imported to almost any device.

If you like the book, please leave a review. Thanks!

http://www.amazon.com/Chasing-the-Tum...
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Published on May 21, 2013 07:32 Tags: free, kindle, romantic, suspense

May 20, 2013

The Cupcake Diaries: Taste of Romance

The Cupcake Diaries Book Three:

TASTE OF ROMANCE


(Avon Impulse; on-sale May 21st, 2013;

e-book ISBN: 9780062242839)

Taste of Romance, Contemporary Romance


For fans of Debbie Macomber comes Taste of Romance, the third installment in the Cupcake Diaries series. Kimberly Burke has avoided all types of risk since her mother’s deadly plane crash—including risky relationships. Seems like everyone is always leaving her behind: her ex-boyfriend, her mother, and now her sister Andi and best friend Rachel—who have each found the man of her dreams. Then she meets Nathaniel when she mistakes his backyard for the new community park. He loves her passion, and when he learns of her wistful desire to travel, he takes her up in a hot air balloon, hoping to overcome her fear of flying so that she can accompany him abroad. But before he leaves, they must catch the Cupcake Bandit and replace the money stolen from Creative Cupcakes before the shop is shut down. Will discovering the thief’s identity persuade Kim to take a risk on love … or will she stay behind and let Nathaniel fly off without her?


Avon Romance / Amazon / Barnes and Noble


Excerpt

From THE CUPCAKE DIARIES : Taste of Romance by Darlene Panzera.


Copyright (c) 2013 by Darlene Panzera.


Reprinted by permission of Avon Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers



Chapter One



All I really need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn’t hurt!



—Charles Schulz



 


 


Focus, Kim reprimanded herself. Keep to the task at hand and stop eavesdropping on other people’s conversations.


But she didn’t need to hear the crack of the teenage boy’s heart to feel his pain. Or to remember the last time she’d heard the wretched words “I’m leaving” spoken to her.


She tried to ignore the couple as she picked up the pastry bag filled with pink icing and continued to decorate the tops of the strawberry preserve cupcakes. However, the discussion between the high school boy and what she assumed to be his girlfriend kept her attentive.


“When will I see you again?” he asked.


Kim glanced toward them and leaned closer.


“I don’t know,” the girl replied.


The soft lilt in her accent thrust the familiarity of the conversation even deeper into Kim’s soul.


“I’ll be going to the university for two years,” the girl continued. “Maybe we meet again after.”


Not likely. Kim shook her head, and her stomach tightened.  From past experience, she knew once the school year was over in June, most foreign students went home, never to return.


And left many broken hearts in their wake.


“Two years is a long time,” the boy said.


Forever was even longer. Kim drew in a deep breath as the unmistakable catch in the poor boy’s voice replayed again and again in her mind. And her heart.


How long were they going to stand there and torment her by reminding her of her parting four years earlier with Gavin, the Irish student she’d dated through college? Dropping the bag of icing on the Creative Cupcakes’ counter, she moved toward them.


“Can I help you?” Kim asked, pulling on a new pair of food handler’s gloves.


“I’ll have the white chocolate macadamia,” the girl said, pointing to the cupcake she wanted in the glass display case.


The boy dug his hands into his pockets, counted the meager change he’d managed to withdraw, and turned five shades of red.


“None for me.” His Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed. “How much for hers?”


“You have to have one, too,” the girl protested. “It’s your birthday.”


Kim took one look at his lost-for-words expression and said, “If today is your birthday, the cupcakes are free.” She added, “For both you and your guest.”


The teenager’s face brightened. “Really?”


Kim nodded and removed the cupcakes the two lovebirds wanted from the display case. She even put a birthday candle on one of them, a heart on the other. Maybe the girl would come back for him. Or he would fly to Ireland for her. Maybe.


Her eyes stung, and she squeezed them shut for a brief second. When she opened them again, she set her jaw. Enough was enough. Now that they had their cupcakes, she could escape back into her work and forget about romance and relationships and every regrettable moment she’d ever wasted on love.


She didn’t need it. Not like her older sister, Andi, who had recently lost her heart to Jake Hartman, their Creative Cupcakes’ financier and reporter for the Astoria Sun. Or like her other co-owner friend, Rachel, who had just gotten engaged to Mike Palmer, a miniature model maker for movies who also doubled as the driver of their Cupcake Mobile.


All she needed was to dive deep into her desire to put paint on canvas. She glanced at the walls of the cupcake shop, adorned with her scenic oil, acrylic, and watercolor paintings. Maybe if she worked hard enough, she’d have the money to open her own art gallery, and she wouldn’t need to decorate cupcakes anymore.


But for now, she needed to serve the next customer. Where was Rachel?


“Hi, Kim.” Officer Ian Lockwell, one of their biggest supporters, sat on one of the stools lining the marble cupcake counter. “I’m wondering if you have the back party room available on June 27?”


Kim reached under the counter and pulled out the three-ring binder she, Andi, and Rachel had dubbed the Cupcake Diary to keep track of all things cupcake related. Looking at the calendar, she said, “Yes, the date is open. What’s the occasion?”


“My wife and I have been married almost fifteen years,” the big, square-jawed cop told her. “We’re planning on renewing our vows on our anniversary and need a place to celebrate with friends and family.”


“No better place to celebrate love than Creative Cupcakes,” Kim assured him, glancing around at all the couples in the shop. “I’ll put you on the schedule.”


Next, the door opened, and a stream of romance writers filed in for their weekly meeting. Kim pressed her lips together. The group intimidated her with their watchful eyes and poised pens. They scribbled in their notebooks whenever she walked by as if writing down her every move, and she didn’t want to give them any useful fodder. She hoped Rachel could take their orders, if she could find her.


“Rachel?”


No answer, but the phone rang—a welcome distraction. She picked up and said, “Creative Cupcakes, this is Kim.”


“What are you doing there? I thought you were going to take time off.”


Kim pushed into the privacy of the kitchen, glad it was Andi and not another customer despite the impending lecture tone. “I still have several dozen cupcakes to decorate.”


“Isn’t Rachel there with you?”


The door of the walk-in pantry burst open, and Rachel and Mike emerged, wrapped in each other’s arms, laughing and grinning.


Kim rolled her eyes. “Yes, Rachel’s here.”


Rachel extracted herself from Mike’s embrace and mouthed the word “sorry.”


But Kim knew she wasn’t. Rachel had been in her own red-headed, happy bubble ever since macho, dark-haired Mike the Magnificent had proposed two weeks earlier.


“I’ll be in for my shift as soon as I get Mia off to afternoon kindergarten,” Andi continued, “and the shop’s way ahead in sales. There’s no reason you can’t take a break. Ever since you broke up with Gavin, you’ve become a workaholic.”


Kim sucked in her breath at the mention of his name. Only Andi dared to ever bring him up.


“Gavin has nothing to do with my work.”


“You never date.”


“I’m concentrating on my career.”


“It’s been years since you’ve been out with anyone. You need to slow down, take time to smell the roses.”


“Smell the roses?” Kim gasped. “Are you serious?”


“Go on an adventure,” Andi amended.


“Working is an adventure.”


“You used to dream of a different kind of adventure,” Andi said, lowering her voice. “The kind that requires a passport.”


Kim wished she’d never picked up the phone. Just because her sister had her life put back together didn’t mean she had the right to tell her how to live.


“Painting cupcakes and canvas is the only adventure I need right now. I promised Dad I’d have the money to pay him for my new art easel by the end of the week.”


“Dad doesn’t care about the money, but he does care about you. He asked me to call.”


“He did?” Kim stopped in front of the sink and rubbed her temples with her fingertips. Her sister was known to overreact, but their father? He didn’t voice concern unless it was legitimate.


With the phone to her ear, she returned to the front counter of the couple-filled cupcake shop, her heart screaming louder and louder with each consecutive beat.


They were everywhere. By the window, at the tables, next to the display case. Couples, couples, couples. Everyone had a partner, had someone.


Almost everyone.


Instead of Goonies Day, the celebration of the 1985 release date of The Goonies movie, which was filmed in Astoria, she would have thought the calendar had been flipped back to Valentine’s Day at Creative Cupcakes. And in her opinion, one Valentine’s Day a year was more than enough.


She reached a hand into the pocket of her pink apron and clenched the golden wings she had received on her first airplane flight as a child. The pin never left her side, and like the flying squirrel tattooed on her shoulder, it reminded her of her dream to fly, if not to another land, then at least to the farthest reaches of her imagination.


Where her heart would be free.


Okay, maybe she did spend too much time at the cupcake shop. “Tell Dad not to worry,” Kim said into the phone. “Tell him … I’m taking the afternoon off.”


“Promise?” Andi persisted.


Oh, yeah. Tearing off her apron, she turned around and threw it over Rachel’s and Mike’s heads. “I’m heading out the door now.”


Five minutes later, Kim stood outside the cupcake shop on Marine Drive, wondering which direction to go. The tattoo parlor was on her left, a boutique to her right, and the waterfront walk beneath the giant arching framework of the Astoria−Megler Bridge stretched straight in front.


Turning her back on it all, she decided to take a new path and soon discovered an open wrought iron gate along Bond Road. This had to be the side entrance to Astoria’s new community park, the one Andi had been raving about the week before, and hadn’t her sister told her to “smell the roses”?


Kim walked through the gate toward a large circle of white rosebushes and began to count off each flower as she leaned in to fill her lungs with their strong, fragrant scent. “One, two, three … ”


After smelling seventeen, she moved toward the yellows. “Eighteen, nineteen, twenty … ”


Past the gazebo she found red roses, orange roses, and a vast variety of purples and pinks. “Forty-six, forty-seven, forty-eight … ”


Her artist’s eye took in the palette of color, and imagining the scene on canvas, she wished she’d brought along her paints and brushes. “Sixty-two, sixty-three, sixty-four … ”


Andi had been right. The sweet, perfumed scent of the roses did seem to ease her tension and help block out all thoughts of romance. Even if the rose was a notorious symbol of love. And the flower that garnished the most sales over romantic holidays. With petals used for flower girl baskets at weddings.


Who needed romance anyway? Not her.


She bent to smell the next group of flowers and noticed a tall, blond man with work gloves carrying a potted rosebush past the ivy trellis. As his gaze caught hers, he appeared to pause. Then he smiled.


Kim smiled back and moved toward the next rose.


“Can I help you?” the gardener asked, walking over.


Oh, no. He had a foreign accent, Scandinavian, like some of the locals whose ancestors first inhabited the area. And she had an acute weakness for foreign accents.


“I think I need to do this myself,” Kim replied. “My goal is to smell a hundred roses.”


“Why a hundred?”


“That’s the number of things on my to-do list. I thought stopping to smell one rose per task might balance out my life.”


“Interesting concept.” The attractive gardener appeared to suppress a grin. “How many more do you have to go?”


“I’m at sixty-seven.”


“I didn’t mean to interrupt.” He set the rosebush down, took off a glove, and extended his hand. “I’m Nathaniel Sjölander.”


“Kimberly Burke,” she said, accepting the handshake. His hand, much larger than her own, surrounded hers with warmth.


“I have to load a couple dozen roses into my truck for the Portland Rose Festival tomorrow, but by all means—keep sniffing.”


Kim pulled rose number sixty-eight toward her, a yellow flower as buttery and delicately layered as a … freshly baked croissant. Hunger sprang to life inside her empty stomach, and she realized she’d been so busy working, she’d forgotten to eat lunch.


She watched Nathaniel Sjölander move between the potted plants. Was he single? Would someone like him be interested in her? Maybe ask her to dinner? And why hadn’t she dated anyone in the past few years? She could argue that good-looking single men were hard to come by, but the truth was, she just hadn’t taken the initiative to find one.


Nathaniel made several trips back and forth between the greenhouse and the gate, his gaze sliding toward her again and again. Oh, yes! He was definitely interested. Her pulse quickened as he approached her a second time.


“I think you missed a few.” Nathaniel pulled a cut bouquet of red roses from behind his back and presented them to her.


“Thank you.” She hugged the flowers against her chest and lifted her gaze from the Sjölander’s Garden Nursery business logo embroidered on his tan work shirt to his warm, kind … blue eyes.


Oh, man, why did they have to be blue? Blue was her favorite color. She could get lost in blue. Especially his blue, a blend of sparkling azure with a hint of sea green. Reminded her of the ripples in the water where the Columbia River met the Pacific Ocean just a few miles outside Astoria.


“Sjölander. Is that Finnish?” she asked.


“Swedish. Most of my family resides in Sweden, with the exception of my brother and a few cousins.”


His name was incredibly familiar. Where had she come across the name Sjölander before? The Cupcake Diary!


“I’m co-owner of Creative Cupcakes,” Kim informed him. “Didn’t you book us for an upcoming event?”


“Must be for the wedding.”


Wedding? She held her breath. “Yours?”


He flashed her a smile. “No. My brother’s.”


“Of course.” She breathed easy once again.


“They’ve decided to have the ceremony in the new community park.”


Kim looked around, confused. “Isn’t this the new community park?”


Nathaniel laughed. “The park is two blocks down the street and much larger than my backyard.”


“Your backyard?”


Kim’s mouth popped open in an embarrassed O. Heat seared her cheeks. No wonder he’d been watching her. He was probably wondering what crazy chick was wandering around his property!


And as for the flowers? She doubted he meant them to symbolize anything romantic. Why would he? She was an idiot! The guy was probably just trying to be nice. Or maybe he thought giving her flowers would encourage her to leave. Worse—she would have to face him again in a few weeks at his brother’s wedding.


With an inward groan she squeezed her eyes shut, wishing she could start the day over. Or maybe the whole last decade. Then without further ado she set her jaw and looked up.


“Thanks for the roses,” she mumbled. And before she could embarrass herself further, she hurried out the gate and back to the cupcake shop—where she belonged.



About the Author

Darlene Panzera is the winner of the “Make Your Dreams Come True” contest sponsored by Avon Books. The win led her novella, The Bet, to be published with Debbie Macomber’s Family Affair. The award-winning novella (chosen in a blind-read by Debbie Macomber) was then published as a full length novel retitled, Bet You’ll Marry Me. Born and raised in New Jersey, Darlene is now a resident of the Pacific Northwest where she lives with her husband and three children. When not writing she enjoys spending time with her family, two horses, and loves: camping, hiking, photography, and lazy days at the lake.


Find Darlene at:


Her website, Darlene Panzera


Facebook


Twitter: @DarlenePanzera


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Published on May 20, 2013 00:03

May 17, 2013

Contests Galore!

As we head toward Memorial Day weekend, I want to let you know about three exciting events I have coming up! All of them give you a chance to win book-related prizes.

The first is a weekend giveaway that starts TODAY! http://nkuhnebooks.blogspot.com/p/wee...

The second is a blog tour for the Cupcake Diaries, books written by the woman who won Debbie Macomber's Dream contest.

The third is a fabulous blog hop for Books To Go Now authors. I'll be giving more about the background of my romantic suspense, Chasing the Tumbleweed, as well as a chance to enter for gift certificates and kindles.

The last 2 events will be at: http://www.stories-about-love.com/blog.

Hope to see you there!
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Published on May 17, 2013 06:15 Tags: blog-hop, chasing-the-tumbleweed, contest, romantic-suspense

May 6, 2013

Back Roads Montana

Helmville, MT


My husband and I have a deal. He follows me into quilt shops and I let him take a dirt road. We wind up with days like last Saturday that I started describing in my quilt blog.  These are days that we get to be uniquely us, days that bring us closer together, days to love.


Swan Range, Rocky Mtns, MTAfter our hamburgers at the Avon Family Cafe, we traveled north toward Helmville, a speck of a town with a view of a long valley dominated by cattle and a view of the Swan Range of the Rocky Mountains. Somewhere in that mass of mountains the Continental Divide directs water to different oceans.


The dirt road we followed on Saturday led us out of Helmville to the Northwest, through some of the cattle ranches, with vista views of the Swan Range, intimate glimpses of the Blackfoot River, and a lens on raptors, songbirds, and a sandhill crane.


Redwing BlackbirdWe’re awed by the diversity of life in a seemingly barren landscape and keep an eye out for potholes, small depressions filled in with water. The variety of life is astounding in these small areas. The typical mallards are here, but a swan drops in and coots scuttle around the edges. Springtime mating colors liven up the multiples of browns that serve as a backdrop and camouflage.


 


Sandhill CraneOver the years we’ve been privileged to see many animals and birds. We always laugh about the preponderance of “butts” we see! Sometimes animals just won’t cooperate and give us the front or side view.  That was the case with this eagle who was trying to eat dinner on top of an electric pole.


Bald Eagle butt


Have you ever taken a back road? What was your experience? Leave a comment.


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Published on May 06, 2013 09:18

April 23, 2013

The Rancher and the Event Planner

I’m happy to introduce Cheryl Gorman and her new contemporary romance, The Rancher and the Event Planner.  I’m a big fan of contemporary romances, especially those with a western theme (probably has something to do with living in Montana)! If you like the blurb and excerpt below, be sure to support the author with a purchase and a review!


The Rancher and the Event Planner

contemporary romance, cheryl gorman, The Rancher and the Event PlannerAfter taking her eyes off the road for a second, Jennifer “JC” Barrett flattened a mail box, nearly killed a man, a dog and her career. Now she must complete thirty days of community service in her home town of Salvation, Texas helping sexy ranch owner and mayor, Rafe McCord revitalize the town for a chance at winning The Best Texas Vacation Contest before she can plan the most important event of her career. JC stopped believing in fairy tales and happily ever after a long time ago. But Rafe is a cowboy fantasy in the flesh and romantic feelings she doesn’t believe exist are growing in her heart.


Rafe knows he isn’t good at relationships as he was never able to make his deceased wife happy. Unfortunately, the local judge—his soon-to-be-disowned brother—has saddled him with his best friend’s little sister, Jennifer Barrett to help the town win the contest, give a much needed boost to the economy of Salvation and a chance to host the East Texas Rodeo. Only Jennifer has changed from an ugly duckling into a gorgeous swan and resisting her is impossible.


Excerpt from The Rancher and the Event Planner

Chapter One


    WELCOME TO SALVATION, TEXAS. The sign sported a smiley face as an exclamation point and a bullet hole over the “I”…which pretty much summed up Salvation in one image.


“Welcome to hell is what they should say,” JC Barrett said to herself. Thank goodness she was only passing through her home town and not staying. Her brother, Cade still lived in Salvation but she knew he’d understand if she didn’t stop by and see him. He loved this town and she hated it. Always had, always would. Besides, Rafe McCord lived here and she had mixed feelings about seeing him again.


She glanced at the dashboard clock. Another hour and a half and she’d be in Dallas to oversee Senator Grant’s fundraising gala for her Shreveport employer, ‘Affairs to Remember’. She cranked the fan on the air conditioner of her compact car and grabbed another chocolate chip cookie from the bag sitting on the passenger seat.


She bit into the cookie savoring the sweet chocolate, and tried to ignore the fact she’d be wearing the cookies tomorrow on her hips and thighs. True, she’d have to put in some extra time on the treadmill to work off the calories, but right now she needed chocolate—bad. Especially before planning a big event. She zipped down Main Street, passed Duncan’s Hardware, Joe’s Market and Phillip’s Pharmacy. The town had always been on a first name basis with itself. Some people might call that cozy and comforting. JC called it suffocating.


With one hand on the wheel, she dug around inside her purse with the other. Damn it. The cell phone continued to ring. Probably her boss with some last minute instructions.

For a moment, she took her eyes off the road while she groped for her phone. A siren’s wail filled the air with an ear-piercing scream, and her head snapped up. A police car with flashing lights ate up the road behind her. “Holy Christmas monkeys.”


Her gaze jerked back to the road as a small dog darted across the pavement in front of her.


A spurt of panic fueled with adrenaline zipped through JC’s body. She wrenched the steering wheel to the right and slammed on the brakes, narrowly missing the ball of white fur. The car skidded in a circle for what seemed an eternity. Breath gusted from her lungs in short, ragged gasps. “OhmyGodOhmyGodOhmyGod!”


Buy Now at Amazon


About Cheryl, Contemporary Romance Author

Cheryl Gorman Contemporary AuthorCheryl Gorman is a multi-published award winning author of contemporary and romantic suspense novels. Her first novel, Wolf Island was a 2006 Eppie Finalist. She also co-authored the non-fiction book Ten Steps to Creating Memorable Characters. She grew up in Burke County Georgia whose claim to fame is The Bird Dog Capital of the World. Cheryl graduated from Georgia College and State University with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1979 and went to work at the Medical College of Georgia. In 1987 she moved to the beautiful state of Colorado and there her life truly began. On her arrival in Colorado, Cheryl felt she had finally come home after being away for a long, long time. She put fingers to keyboard, stated writing and has never looked back. She lives in Highlands Ranch with her husband, their daughter and two little furry children named Pilot and Rocky.


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Published on April 23, 2013 23:00

April 19, 2013

Plotting to Win Cover Reveal

Plotting to Win Contemporary Romance Cover


Plotting to Win

By: Tara Chevrestt

Releasing June 1st


Blurb

In New York City, seven writers compete for a hundred thousand dollars, a publishing contract with Bright House, and the title of the next bestseller. One is Felicity James. One is Victor Guzman.


Drama, plagiarism, and trash talk play out to enthralled audiences across the country as all seven contestants compete against each other in a range of heated challenges, with tensions reaching breaking point. As Felicity and Victor start up a show‐mance, their relationship burns up the ratings.


Will this sizzling fling escalate into a vicious battle for money and fame, or will these two authors manage to write their own happy ending?


 


Author Info

Tara Chevrestt, contemporary romance authorTara Chevrestt is a deaf woman, former aviation mechanic, writer, and an editor. She is most passionate about planes, motorcycles, dogs, and above all, reading. That led to her love of writing. Between her writing and her editing, which allows her to be home with her little canine kids, she believes she has the greatest job in the world. She is very happily married.


Her theme is Strong is Sexy. She shares a website with her naughty pen name: http://tarachevrestt.weebly.com/index.html and they have a Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Tara-Chevrestt-Sonia-Hightower/218383211513877


 


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Published on April 19, 2013 00:00

April 16, 2013

Cycles of Life — Vineyard’s Spring

Let’s face it, wine and winemaking are entwined with romance. Books about winemakers and the life in Napa and Sonoma are popular. When my husband and I lived in California, we were entranced by the number of wineries around our home in Santa Cruz County. We were so engaged that we wrote a book about that historic region.


We learned a lot about the winemaking process and how hard it is to own and operate a vineyard and winery. By the end of harvest in the fall, everyone is ready for a break, including the vines.


Winter is a good time to curl up with a book and a glass of wine in between winery tasks. Vines are pruned, but not much else is done in the vineyard.


Around the end of March an air of expectancy occurs, like the anticipation of a baby’s birth. If you follow a winery on Twitter or Facebook, you’ll start seeing the announcements fly around.


Bud break!


new bud on grapevine


It’s time to begin the hard work of the vineyard again–watching for late frost, netting for birds, insuring the vines get the right amount of water and not too much, keeping an eye out for glassy winged sharpshooters and other pests.


Every state has a winery or two, even my home state of Montana. Give a gift to yourself and explore the wineries in your state.


Don’t forget to take along a copy of California Wine, the story of Marcos, an Italian winemaker, and Elizabeth a California entrepreneur. (Read an excerpt here.)


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Published on April 16, 2013 05:11

March 29, 2013

Strangers — A Short Story

Tess stepped off the train in Billings, Montana on a dusty Saturday morning, freshly minted MFA in her hand, Karate black belt around her waist.


Strangers. Everywhere.


“How ‘bout I meet you for a drink tonight–seeing you’re new in town,” the taxi driver asked.


Only one way to become friends.


“Sure.”


The bar was dingy, her new friend late. A cowboy-hatted stranger sat down next to her and started talking. The driver came in and crowded her other side.


The next morning she got on the eastbound train, back to New York City.


Strangers knew their place there.


———————–


Enjoy this?  Consider Chasing the Tumbleweed, a short romantic suspense.



Strangers


Tess stepped off the train in Billings, Montana on a dusty Saturday morning, freshly minted MFA in her hand, Karate black belt around her waist.


Strangers. Everywhere.


“How ‘bout I meet you for a drink tonight–seeing you’re new in town,” the taxi driver asked.


Only one way to become friends.


“Sure.”


The bar was dingy, her new friend late. A cowboy-hatted stranger sat down next to her and started talking. The driver came in and crowded her other side.


The next morning she got on the eastbound train, back to New York City.


Strangers knew their place there.



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Published on March 29, 2013 10:22

March 20, 2013

First time I shot a gun....

nterviewer: Our guest is Laurie Bevins, history graduate from Westminster College in Salt Lake City. Her father is a Hollywood television producer. I understand his first movie, a romantic suspense, is coming out next month. Would you like to tell us about that?

Laurie: Um. Not really.

Interviewer: Oh. We were really hoping to hear about the movie. Um. Let’s see. You grew up on your father’s TV studio lot, didn’t you? I bet there were lots of handsome heroes around then. Did you fall in love with any of them?

Laurie (wrinkles her nose): Ugh. They were all stuck up. I liked the stunt guys because they played with me in the summertime when I was off from school. They even taught me how to to shoot a gun.

Interviewer: Can you hit anything?

Read more and enter the blog hop to win prizes! http://www.stories-about-love.com/fir...
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Published on March 20, 2013 14:13 Tags: romantic-suspense, suspense-story

March 19, 2013

First Time….I Shot a Gun….


(Please note this blot hop is now over.)


Interviewer: Our guest is Laurie Bevins, history graduate from Westminster College in Salt Lake City. Her father is a Hollywood television producer.  I understand his first movie, a romantic suspense, is coming out next month.  Would you like to tell us about that?


Laurie: Um. Not really.


Interviewer: Oh. We were really hoping to hear about the movie. Um. Let’s see.  You grew up on your father’s TV studio lot, didn’t you?  I bet there were lots of handsome heroes around then. Did you fall in love with any of them?


Laurie (wrinkles her nose): Ugh. They were all stuck up.  I liked the stunt guys because they played with me in the summertime when I was off from school. They even taught me how to to shoot a gun.


Interviewer: Can you hit anything?


Laurie:  Well. I used to be able to hit cans off a fence. I got really good at it. I remember the first time I shot a gun.  It took me both hands to hold the six-shooter.  (Laughs.)  I aimed at the can, pulled the trigger and landed flat on my you-know-what!  My mother used to dress me in frilly white dresses, white ankle socks with lace and black patten leather shoes. She yelled at me for hours after that day!


Interviewer: It must have been traumatic–not hitting the target, the guys laughing at you–


Laurie: The guys didn’t laugh!  They were great! After helping me up, they stood behind me to steady me, and helped me learn how to aim the six-shooter.  I practiced every day.  My mother gave up and put me in blue jeans.  By the end of the first season I could hit a can almost every time.


Interviewer: Almost?


Laurie (shrugs):  One out of three times.


Interviewer: Have you gotten any better?


Laurie: I dunno. I haven’t done much shooting since. But let me tell you about how I learned to rope!


Interviewer: We’re out of time, Laurie. Thanks for your time.  You look like your ready for a trip.


Laurie: I’m going to see my folks in LA.


Interviewer:  Safe trip.


Laurie: Thanks. I’m sure I’ll be fine.


# # #


Laurie takes the back roads home to LA, but a stop at a rest area proves to be a very bad idea.  Read all about it in the romantic suspense, Chasing the Tumbleweed!


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WIN A PRIZE (OR TWO)!


I’m offering a free Kindle copy of Cardwell Ranch Trespasser, a romantic suspense by USA Today bestseller, Montanan and fellow writer, B.J. Daniels. To win, leave a comment on the interview below.


VERY IMPORTANT!  Leave your email in the following format to be entered in the contest as well as the blog hop giveaway!  NAME @ URL  (notice the spaces). For example: Laurie-Bevins @ gmail.com .


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Grand Prize


We have TWO Grand Prizes for this hop.


1st Grand Prize


Kindle Fire (international)


2nd Grand Prize


$50 Amazon.com gift certificate


To Enter: Click this link for a Rafflecopter giveaway


VISIT OTHER AUTHORS ON THE BLOG HOP

TO INCREASE YOUR CHANCES TO WIN!





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Published on March 19, 2013 15:00