G.G. Andrew's Blog, page 2

October 30, 2021

A Free Halloween Story!

Happy Halloween! In honor of this Halloween weekend, I’ve got a free short Halloween romance for you all. As some of you know, I’ve been writing short fiction for Woman’s World magazine, and I love writing these little romantic scenes. I hope you all enjoy this story. If you need more to read, check out my Halloween romances or my recent list of great witchy reads on Scribd.

🎃 🎃 🎃

The Halloween Hour

Having a bad breakup wasn’t high on my October to-do list. But when my latest Prince Charming turned out to be Prince Alarming, it was time to cut and run. So I’d be spending this Halloween on the couch, alone, stuffing my face with candy.

“No, you won’t,” my best friend, Molly, told me over pumpkin spice lattes that morning. “You’re coming to this Halloween party my co-worker is throwing. It’s in an old Victorian mansion, and everyone in town will be there. Just come for two hours.”

I narrowed my eyes. “I’ll come for a half hour, that’s it.”

“One hour,” Molly said. “Final offer.”

So that’s how I ended up stumbling up a mansion’s creaky steps that night to attend a very crowded, very loud Halloween party in an old witch’s costume I’d found buried in my closet. After ducking so I didn’t get fake cobwebs in my hair, I passed a couple in matching zombie costumes before entering the old Victorian home to the sound of ghoulish screams, laughter, and pounding rock music. I was already counting down the minutes until my hour was up as I shoved through the crowds to find Molly.

Finally I located her in a red she-devil costume talking to a vampire and a guy wearing a white sheet with two holes for eyes. He looked like he’d spent even less time on his costume than I had.

“Breanna!” Molly shrieked. “You made it!”

“You made me,” I reminded her.

She introduced me to the vampire, and then the ghost, whose name was Jake. The vampire was pretty friendly, but Jake just nodded in my direction, not saying much.

After twenty minutes of chatting, the vampire wandered off and Molly saw another friend across the room and excused herself. Knowing Molly, she’d be talking for a while—past the time I had to stay at the party.

I turned to Jake. “Hey, can you do me a favor? I’m going to split, but when Molly comes back, can you tell her we talked for”—I checked the time—“28 minutes?”

After a minute, Jake shook his head. “That’s going to be a problem. You see that guy over there?” He pointed to a werewolf across the room. “I was going to ask if you could stay here while I left, and then tell him we’d been talking for the past 35 minutes.”

I started laughing. “We seem to be in the same predicament.”

Jake joined me in laughter, whipping his ghost sheet off. I was surprised to see that under that white linen, he was very alive—and very cute. Sure, he had tousled sheet hair, but with his reddish-brown curls, it only made him more attractive.

“Let me guess,” Jake said. “You were forced to come to this, too?”

“You got it.” I sighed dramatically. “I just had a bad breakup—it’s totally my right to mope and eat candy. But tell that to Molly.”

“Me too.” The corner of his mouth lifted. “With the breakup, I mean.”

“Bummer,” I said. “Should we play rock-paper-scissors to see who has to stay here?”

Jake grinned. “Deal.”

We put out our hands, and Jake’s strong fingers brushed mine. I got tingles, and it had nothing to do with the creepy music in the background.

Jake won the first round of the rock-paper-scissors game, so I suggested we do a best-three-out-of-five tournament, hoping I’d start winning—and accidentally touch his hand again.

We both moved to a nearby couch and got our game faces on. As he scooted closer to me, I inhaled a whiff of his woodsy aftershave and something in my belly fluttered. Maybe the candy could wait.

After I won the next three rounds, Jake suggested we do best out of nine. But by the time we finished, we’d lost track of who was winning and were laughing too hard to keep playing.

“I think we’re both going to have to stay here and suffer,” I said.

“Yeah, I think that’s only fair,” Jake said. “To be honest, it doesn’t really feel like suffering anymore.”

“Because you took off that sheet?” I guessed. “I have no idea how you could breathe under that thing.”

He shook his head, then held my eyes a beat. “That helps. But mostly it’s because I met this really incredible, really beautiful witch.”

My heart soared. “You’re not so bad, yourself,” I said. “For a dead guy, at least.”

I glanced over to where Molly was talking with her friend. She met my eyes and gave me a big thumbs-up.

Jack followed my gaze. “So how many more minutes do you need to stay?” he asked.

“I don’t know.” I turned back towards him. “I stopped counting.”

Then I put my hand in his.

The End 🦇

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Published on October 30, 2021 11:02

June 8, 2021

Happy Women’s Fiction Day!

Today, June 8th, is Women’s Fiction Day! Started by the Women’s Fiction Writers Association (WFWA), it’s a day to celebrate women’s fiction books and their readers, authors, agents, booksellers, and publishers. According to the WFWA, women’s fiction is a book genre characterized by “layered stories in which the plot is driven by the main character’s emotional journey,” regardless of whether those stories are set in the past or contemporary, or if they include elements like romance, mystery, horror, humor, or thrills.

Though I’m originally a romance author, I’ve been increasingly writing women’s fiction–stories that often have romantic love, yes, but also focus on a woman’s emotional journey and the other relationships in her life. In particular, I’ve been writing stories about women who uncover long-buried secrets in Texas small towns, and how this shapes their families, friendships, communities, and romantic lives. I’m agented for my women’s fiction novels, and hope to have more news soon on these stories coming out into the world. (If you’re not already on my newsletter list, you can sign up here to be in the loop.)

Of course, I also love to read women’s fiction novels! Some of my favorite women’s fiction books I’ve read this year include The Haunting of Maddy Clare by Simone St. James, Reviving the Hawthorn Sisters by Emily Carpenter, and The Hunting Wives by May Cobb–three very different stories that nonetheless have an emotional journey at their core.

How can you celebrate Women’s Fiction Day? Besides reading (or writing!) a fabulous women’s fiction novel, check out #womensfictionday on Instagram, where you can participate in giveaways as well as Instagram live videos from authors and agents on the women’s fiction genre, book recommendations, and so much more!

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Published on June 08, 2021 02:00

May 18, 2021

Graffiti in Love on Sale!

Graffiti in Love, and in fact both books in my Love & Lawbreakers series, have gotten a makeover! To celebrate the new look, Graffiti in Love is now .99 at all stores! If you haven’t yet read it–or want to gift it to a friend–grab it before the price goes back up this summer.

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Published on May 18, 2021 11:00

July 27, 2020

A New Monthly Giveaway!

During this odd, unsettling time of the global pandemic, I’ve been trying to stay grateful for what I have–and to find little ways to help others, too. With that in mind, I’ve started a very fun giveaway on my newsletter, the Things I Love giveaway.





Each month I share three things I’ve enjoyed or appreciated–a tasty recipe, favorite song, or hobby I’ve started. Then I ask my newsletter subscribers to email me back three things they’re grateful for. Out of those responses, I choose one winner each and every month to win a $5 Amazon gift card.





I’m really enjoying the giveaway so far, and I think many on my newsletter list are, too. If you’re not already on my list, join here!

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Published on July 27, 2020 14:00

January 24, 2019

Winter Reading & Other News

Hope you all are having a cozy start to 2019! I’ve been busy chasing kids, writing for BookBub, and starting a new novel, but I’ve also been trying to make time for walks, reading, and crafting this month.


It’s been a surprisingly cold week here in Texas — I even had frost on my car windows this morning! While I prefer milder weather, I do love curling up in bed or on the couch when it’s cold and reading a good novel. If you’re reading this, you’re probably a book nerd, too. Check out my latest BookBub articles listed below for reading recommendations and other news out of the literary world.


Also, several of my books are now on Kindle Unlimited, which means if you’re a member, you can read them for free! These include Graffiti in Love, the first in my Love and Lawbreakers series; my short romance Girl Meets Grammarian (with a new look!); and Crazy, Sexy, Ghoulish, for those of us who know it’s never to early to celebrate Halloween.

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Published on January 24, 2019 11:46

November 18, 2018

Autumn Reading Recommendations


If you’re looking for a book to read this fall—or if you’re like me and already have a huge stack by your nightstand, but can’t help but add just one more book to the pile (spoiler: it’s never just one)—check out some of my recent book lists below!


26 Autobiographies Everyone Should Read (BookBub)


24 of the Best Crime Books of All Time (BookBub)


15 Terrifying Horror Books for Teens (BookBub) (In case you missed some scary reads for Halloween–some excellent novels here!)


11 Dark Romance Books That Will Make You Shiver (A Love So True)


12 Books to Read After a Breakup (A Love So True) (Bibliotherapy–it’s a thing!)


Counting Down the Top Ten Nicholas Sparks Books (A Love So True)


~


And some fun and fascinating news I’ve covered in the book world…


This Woman Opened a Bookstore and Drove it Across the Country (BookBub) (Love this story!)


Everything We Know about the Killers of the Flower Moon Movie (BookBub)


This Loyal Bookstore Customer Just Won a Bookshop (BookBub) (Can you imagine?)


We Were the Lucky Ones to Be Adapted for TV (BookBub)


Host of My Favorite Murder Podcast Announce True Crime Book (BookBub)


~


Happy reading, happy fall, and, for those of you celebrating, happy Thanksgiving this week!

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Published on November 18, 2018 20:18

August 9, 2018

The Adaption of Jane Austen’s Unfinished Novel — and Other Recent Articles


 


As I did last month, I’m here to share some of the recent book lists and articles I’ve written for the BookBub Blog and the romance site A Love So True. Hope you all are enjoying some lovely August reading (and relaxing!).


Jane Austen’s Unfinished Novel to Be Adapted for PBS (BookBub) (Yesss!)


32 Books That Changed the World (BookBub)


Shonda Rhimes to Adapt Julia Quinn’s Bridgerton Series (BookBub) (So excited for this!)


Everything We Know about the New Little Women Movie Adaptation (BookBub)


10 Janet Dailey Books You Need on Your Shelf (A Love So True)


Happy reading!

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Published on August 09, 2018 06:32

July 8, 2018

What should you read this summer? I’ve got a few suggestions.


This little blog has gotten dusty in 2018, but it’s not for lack of writing. As some of you know, I’m a regular contributor at both the BookBub Blog and over on the romance site A Love So True.


For those of you wondering what you should stuff in your beach bag this summer, I’ve rounded up some of the recent book lists I’ve written for those sites, whether you’re into werewolves, military romance, love triangles… or just want to know the biggest books coming out this summer! (I also cover news stories in the book world for BookBub. Go here for my latest articles, if you’re interested.)


The Ultimate 2018 Summer Reading List (BookBub)


11 Werewolf Romance Books to Sink Your Teeth Into (A Love So True)


13 Spine-Tingling Military Romance Books (A Love So True)


27 Beach Reads Recommended by Authors (BookBub)


12 Love Triangle Books That Will Tear Your Heart in Two (A Love So True)


9 Dystopian Romance Novels That Will Rock Your World (A Love So True)


10 Gay Romance Books You’ll Totally Love (A Love So True)


11 Second Chance Romance Books That Will Make You Believe in Love (A Love So True)


10 Mafia Romance Books to Die For (A Love So True)


10 Romance Books by Author Heather Graham (A Love So True)


 


Happy reading! If you need more book recommendations, or have a recommendation to share, comment below!


 


 

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Published on July 08, 2018 08:08

December 8, 2017

The Best Holiday Romances on Netflix

This is a joint point with Jen of Heartforms. Check out her site for humorous stories, sentence diagrams, and how to slay a roach in ten easy steps.


It’s December, which means that holiday romances on Netflix are cropping up as quickly as holly and mistletoe. But with so many options, and Holiday in Handcuffs no longer streaming, where’s a romance fan to start? Good news: We’ve done the festive watching for you, checking out everything from heartwarming films to fun flicks to all those fake relationship movies (so.many. fake relationships) to find the very best holiday romance movies streaming this month. Grab a hot drink and queue up one of these next time you’re in the mood for some holiday swooning!


Christmas in the Smokies

Christmas in the Smokies is a sweet and charming second chance romance.  Shelby (Sarah Lancaster) runs her family’s berry farm, which is in financial straits.  Mason Wyatt (Alan Powell) was Shelby’s boyfriend back when they were teenagers, but is now a roguish country music playboy who’s screwed around too much and needs to figure out his life.  (The video of Mason totally bombing a Dancing with the Stars-type country music show is a highlight of the movie.)  Mason ends up staying at the farm to clear his head, in part thanks to Shelby’s father (Barry Corbin), the wise bumbling type full of jokes and folksy advice.  Mason is 100% appealing as the prodigal boyfriend who learns to grow up, and Shelby is the competent business woman who doesn’t take nonsense from anyone. Watching Shelby warm to Mason as he helps her attempt to save the farm will melt the icicles on anyone’s heart.


Holiday Breakup

This one was a fun surprise: funny, cute, creative, and with one of the best rom-com heroines. Chloe (Manon Mathews) grew up believing that “falling in love meant you never had to grow up.” And she hasn’t. She works in a toy store, does trust falls with herself (yes, really), and when she hits Jeff’s car with her own while texting, she offers him a toy as recompense. Naturally, the two start an adorable courtship. Jeff (Shawn Roe) is Chloe’s opposite in many ways: more serious, a businessman, and the son of an uptight man who doesn’t think he should be with someone silly like Chloe (cue the conflict). So Jeff tries to make Chloe more serious, especially since they’re about to move in together. Spoiler: it doesn’t work. “My dad was right,” he tells her. “You do need a clown school.” Chloe, excited to hear this, exclaims, “There’s a clown school?” The two break up, but because of the pressure of the holidays, they decide to pretend like they’re still together for the sake of braving holiday meals with their families. What follows are a string awkward dinners, lessons learned from their own parents (good and bad), and one “perfectly appropriate kiss between two incompatible adults” that makes them realize what they’ve been missing.



A Christmas Prince

iZombie’s Rose McIver stars in A Christmas Prince as Amber, a junior editor who spends her time rewriting the crappy stories of more senior writers.  When she gets an assignment, she is sent to cover Prince Richard (Ben Lamb), a ne’er-do-well newsmaker the gossips say might abdicate the throne.  Amber instead finds herself mistaken for young Princess Emily’s (Honor Kneafsey) new tutor and uses the misunderstanding to move into the palace and their lives hoping to find a scoop about Richard and prove herself as a reporter.  A Christmas Prince has royal balls, horseback rides, archery lessons, thrilling rescues from danger, poetry, secrets, retrograde jokes about the unwashed masses from snobby royals, and plot twists.  Lessons are learned and true meanings are found.  McIver, Lamb, and Kneafsey are so fun and earnest and winning as the three leads that any sappiness can be forgiven.


The Spirit of Christmas

The Spirit of Christmas manages to be many things at once: a little bit creepy, a lot romantic, fairly cheesy, possibly historically inaccurate, and nuttier than your grandma’s fruitcake. In other words, I’m probably going to be watching it again this winter. Kate (Jen Lilley) is a workaholic lawyer sent to appraise an old country inn before Christmas.  Problem is the place is haunted by the spirit of Daniel (Thomas Beaudoin), a murdered bootlegger who becomes corporeal for 12 days around Christmas each year. He even eats… though he doesn’t need to sleep for some reason. We also don’t see him shower or wash his period-piece clothing (and it’s been almost a century, guys), but he does iron shirtless in one scene (praise be). Anyway, Kate and Daniel must unravel the mystery of Daniel’s untimely demise while getting the inn appraised, negotiating their feelings, and properly bartending an event at the inn. Because yes. Why aren’t you watching this right now?


12 Dates of Christmas

The movie begins with a dig at Nicholas Sparks, and one of the characters, in talking about the tragic death of his wife, says it was “no great Lifetime Channel tragedy.”  Zing!  This is not one of those Christmas movies.  The movie-equivalent of a Christmas cheese ball, 12 Dates is sweet and tasty and nutty and a little bitter all at once.  Kate (Amy Smart) is set up on a blind date with Miles (Zach Morris. I mean… Mark-Paul Gosselaar) for Christmas Eve.  (Do people really go on blind dates on Christmas Eve?)  The problem is she’s still hung up on her ex-boyfriend (Benjamin Ayres), whom she ditches Miles to see, and she’s kind of a jerk to a bunch of additional people along the way.  No worries, though, because at midnight her day starts again with Amy waking up in a department store, after having been spritzed by some apparently magical perfume and fainting.  She ends up reliving Christmas Eve twelve times and by the end has learned some important lessons.  I’m a sucker for stories in the A Christmas Carol and It’s a Wonderful Life vein: anything that shows you what a tool you’ve been and gives you a do-over until you get it right.  It’s probably not hard to see why movies with these themes are so perfectly suited to Christmas, when we’re all supposed to have a little holly in our hearts.


Christmas Crush

If you like your holiday movies with a dash of high school, look no further than Christmas Crush. In this film, Georgia (Rachel Boston of Witches of East End) returns home and attends her high school reunion, hoping to reunite with her old flame, Craig. The problem is she’s boyfriendless and works as a fashion assistant, which is, apparently, somehow embarrassing to her and her father? (I had to double-check that this movie was made after the economy collapsed.) Meanwhile her old friend Oliver (Jonathan Bennett) is also back in town, and we know he’s really the guy for her because he’s better-looking than Craig, and also his shirt is untucked. Sometimes I don’t get the appeal of the friends-to-lovers plot–If two people secretly like each other so much, why aren’t they together already?–but it feels realistic here. And the two leads are so likeable: Georgia is the type of girl you want with you when you get a promotion or bad diagnosis; and Oliver is wry and funny, a refreshing change from the often too-earnest male lead, and his banter with Georgia is playful. There are some wooden characters and a couple musical numbers here (’tis the season), but there’s also a food fight montage and a sweet takeaway: find the one you can be goofy with.


My Santa

File My Santa under So Bad It’s Good.  Samaire Armstrong (from The O.C.!) stars as harried single mother Jen, a human interest reporter who just wants a nice Christmas for her son.  Matthew Lawrence (Joey Lawrence’s brother!) as Chris (Kris?) plays Santa at the local shopping center, is “looking for the perfect wife,” and possesses an odd ability to know stuff about people (like their names before he’s met them) that seems to increase as he and Jen grow closer.  Jen got cynical years ago when her ex-husband left her at Christmas, but Chris/Kris is from “the North Canada” and can glamour people and also make cookies and hot chocolate from scratch in about 10 minutes.  Oh, and he needs to find a wife by midnight Christmas eve.   Will Jen discover the magic of Christmas in time?  This one is fruitcake-level nutty: it’s like Miracle on 34th Street meets The Santa Clause with a dash of True Blood.  Watch with a glass of spiked eggnog.


A Holiday Engagement

If you like your roms heavy on the com, Holiday Engagement may be your flavor. Hillary (Bonnie Somerville), a former reporter, gets dumped by her “serious snag” lawyer fiancé and is faced with going home for Thanksgiving manless. Like Christmas Crush in its popular holiday theme, Holiday Engagement focuses on the pressures of holiday perfection: to return home with a man on your arm, not to mention a perfect job and life. So Hillary hires actor David (Jordan Bridges) to be her fake fiancé for the trip, after meeting him when he’s working as a giant cell phone mascot (which completely sold me on this gem, by the way. Mascots FTW!). The two return home, where much deception and hilarious awkwardness ensue as Hillary and David fall for each other for real. More sharp in its humor than others on this list, Holiday Engagement brings the laughs. It also has one of the more fun, relatable heroines and some tender moments between the leads and Hillary’s mother, Meredith (played by Shelley Long). Relationships are a family affair, after all, warts and all.


All I Want for Christmas

Young boy Jesse (Jimmy Pinchak) sends a video into an “All I Want for Christmas” contest sponsored by a toy company looking for some good publicity.  He asks for a husband for his widowed mother Sara (Gail O’Grady).  The toy company sees bank, and Sara agrees to the dating competition reluctantly, in exchange for the exorbitant amount of money she needs to keep open their community center, named for her husband.  However, after going on a series of dates, the toy mogul’s son (Greg Germann), who has been orchestrating the publicity stunt, begins to have feelings for her, and when they are caught kissing on camera, events begin to spin out of control.  Meanwhile, their neighbor and good friend Ben (Robert Mailhouse) is basically already family to Sara and Jesse — and also he’s in love with Sara.  Watching Greg Germann of Ally McBeal and Amanda Foreman of Felicity as Ben’s girlfriend (in a role that was too small!) was part of the treat of this sweet film.  Who will win Sara’s heart in the end?


While You Were Sleeping

This one will likely be a rewatch, but like an old warm afghan, While You Were Sleeping is worth snuggling up and watching again. In the 1995 film, Lucy (Sandra Bullock) gets a chance to save the life of the man she’s in love with from afar, Peter (Peter Gallagher), when he falls on the train tracks. He winds up in a coma, and through a series of misunderstandings that could only happen in a rom-com, his family comes to believe Lucy is Peter’s fiancé. And they’re overjoyed, welcoming the lonely Lucy into their world. But then enters Peter’s brother, Jack (Bill Pullman), who’s suspicious of Lucy even as he finds himself increasingly drawn to her. Set around Christmas and the icy January after, it’s got enough of a big, loud family and belly laughs to keep you warm–not to mention the unexpected romance between Lucy and Jack, which Bill Pullman manages to inject with a surprising sexiness. Rewatch to at least remind yourself that sometimes it can be good to slip on the ice.



Dear Santa

Dear Santa is a sillier version of the more subdued All I Want for Christmas.  Both movies feature children seeking spouses for their widowed parents and are set largely in community centers that are in honor of the departed spouses but are in danger of closing.  Crystal (Amy Acker), a spoiled, rich, careless society girl, stumbles on a “Dear Santa” letter from a little girl looking for a new wife for her dad.  When Crystal’s parents threaten to cut her off by Christmas if she doesn’t find some way of supporting herself, she decides to track down the girl and her father Derek (David Haydn-Jones) and fulfill the little girl’s wish.  Amy Acker is winning in a warm if pretty ridiculous role.  Crystal immediately inserts herself into Derek’s life, volunteering at the soup kitchen he vowed to his dying wife to keep open, teaching his daughter Olivia (Emma Duke) how to ice skate, and taking her shopping.  Contrivances, cliches (gay soup kitchen cook dressed in pink chef’s hat and apron), and light gender stereotyping (fathers apparently are incapable of taking young daughters clothes shopping) abound in this holiday tale, but it remains cuddly and cute throughout.  Crystal goes up against Derek’s awful girlfriend Jillian (Gina Holden) — we know she’s no good because her accessories are knockoffs — and in the process proves there’s more to her than “shopping and lattes.”  Oh, and did I mention this was directed by Jason Priestly, late of 90210?


If you liked this post, subscribe to Heartforms and/or join my newsletter list. Happy Holidays!




Tags:  best holiday movies, best holiday romances, holiday romances, Netflix




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Comments:  0 (Zero), Be the first to leave a reply!You might be interested in this:  
 Writers Who Read: Leah Umansky  Ten Types of Angst Book Nerds Get  Writers Who Read: Lisa Gluskin Stonestreet  Writing by Rom-Com: Old Fashioned  Top Ten Ways to Spot a Rom-Com HeroCopyright © G. G. Andrew [The Best Holiday Romances on Netflix], All Right Reserved. 2017.
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Published on December 08, 2017 12:12

October 11, 2017

3 Bits of Halloween Awesomeness

Happy October! 


This is definitely one of my favorite times of year–pumpkins, pumpkin chocolate-chip cookies, Halloween, horror movies, cooler weather, and so many new book releases. For those of you in the Halloween spirit, I’ve got 3 fun updates:


1.) First, my horror-romance novella GHOST FIRE is out today! Set in Paige Tyler’s Dallas Fire & Rescue Kindle World, it’s a romance between a haunted firefighter and skeptic and was so much fun to write. Here’s what it’s about:


When tenacious writer Laney Stonewater ropes firefighter Lucas Moore into staying overnight at the supposedly haunted Cattleman’s Crossing Inn, both of them will get more than they bargained for. The inn was the site of a blaze that killed a man 20 years ago and left Lucas with a strange burn mark on his arm and memories he’d rather forget. Along with a psychic, the victim’s widow, and an amateur ghost hunter, Laney and Lucas set out to learn if Cattleman’s Crossing went up in flames due to a simple mistake…or something much more sinister.


As the night grows darker–and the inn grows warmer, stranger, and more surreal–Laney and Lucas discover they’ve got a connection that burns as hot as any blaze and could have staying power beyond the haunted walls of the inn. 


But first they must survive the night…


You can grab a copy on Amazon here!


 2.) Second, I’m part of a fun page this month on Facebook called Halloween Romance. We’re celebrating all month with ebook giveaways, ghost stories, funny memes, posts about our favorite vampires, and more.
We’re also watching and chatting about some awesome movies this month, including Practical Magic tonight. I’m on the page today talking about Ghost Fire and the bat cardigan I’m coveting and doing a big giveaway. Come like the page and join us! Costumes optional.

3.) Finally, this week I was on Binge on Books’ fun series Sounds Like Halloween. This is an audio series of authors reading from their spookiest (or Halloween-y-est) stories every day in October, and I was so grateful to be among such awesome writers as Sherry Thomas, Christina Lauren, and Charlie Jane Anders. I read from the first chapter of Crazy, Sexy, Ghoulish… Check it out and let me know what you think!

Happy October and HAPPY HALLOWEEN!




Tags:  Binge on Books, Dallas Fire and Rescue Kindle World, GHOST FIRE, Halloween romance, Sounds like Halloween




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 Writers Who Read: Gabrielle Selz  Romance Trope Tuesday: Secret Baby  Writers Who Read: Kassandra Lamb  Writers Who Read: Laurie Boris  Guest Post: Why I Write Romance for Women Over 40Copyright © G. G. Andrew [3 Bits of Halloween Awesomeness], All Right Reserved. 2017.
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Published on October 11, 2017 08:43