Showing posts with label Debra Clopton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Debra Clopton. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 08, 2019

LONGING FOR EVER AFTER - Debra Clopton - One Free Book

Welcome back, Debra. What are some of the spiritual themes you like to write about?
I love the themes of trusting the Lord, of hope and forgiveness. This book is a clean and wholesome book, which is mainly what I write now, but while it doesn’t have an openly Christian message it does have the message of hope after facing extreme pain.

What other books of yours are coming out soon?
This Sunset Bay series has 2 more books, LONGING FOR YOU and LONGING FOR US that will be coming in the next couple of months, Longing For Us is on preorder now for December 31 but will most likely release before Christmas…we shall see.

How can you encourage authors who have been receiving only rejections from publishers?
Don’t give up unless you feel led to. I pushed on for ten years. It took a lot of rejections and perseverance. Keep writing and finishing books, you get better with each book. And don’t be afraid to experiment with new genres. It’s a great time to be an author, I broke out on my own in 2016 and it’s been the best decision I ever made.

Tell us about the featured book.
LONGING FOR EVER-AFTER is about Jonah who has given up on love but one look at Summer and something about her draws him to her and he’s ready to find out everything about her. But Summer has secrets and needs special care. This story was a surprise to me as I wrote it. I love being a pantser, or organic writer and finding out about the stories as I go. Hope you enjoy it.  

That’s pretty much how I write, too. Please give us the first page of the book.
Jonah Sinclair walked down the streets of Sunset Bay, heading toward the long pier and the ice cream cone that was calling his name.

“Hey, Jonah, I hear you and your brothers are competing in the Sunset Bay Regatta.” Hal, the owner of the Pier Ice Cream Shop, handed him his waffle cone of chocolate turtle ice cream.

Jonah took the cone and passed Hal his money. “Yeah, can you believe it? We haven’t competed together in years. Not since Adam headed off to medical school and Tate took off to who knows where.” He grinned. Tate’s whereabouts had been a running joke ever since he managed to make a living out of his adventurous escapades and everyone always asked where he was. Half the time, the family couldn’t keep his schedule straight.

Hal chuckled. “That’s the truth. It will be good to see you all together out there again.”

“Thanks, and thanks for this.” Jonah lifted his cone in salute then headed toward the railing to watch the boats in the bay and the people fishing from the pier.

He enjoyed people-watching at the huge, long public pier. It was a fun place. Tourists who didn’t have a boat came here and enjoyed the day. And families especially enjoyed time together here. Watching them, he realized that, probably soon, at least one of his siblings who had just married the loves of their lives would probably announce they were having a baby. He figured it would be Adam and Rosie, but Brad and Lulu might beat them. Erin had just gotten engaged to Nash, so he figured they had awhile yet. It was between Adam and Brad to be the first of the six Sinclair siblings to make their mother ecstatic. Not that either of them were planning a family just to make Maryetta and Leo—their parents—happy; they were both ready to go all-in on their futures.

He licked his cone and tried not to dwell on the fact that the right woman didn’t seem to be in his future. He’d wanted a wife and kids far longer than any of his brothers or sisters, and yet it hadn’t happened for him. And after too many disappointments, he’d grown weary of looking for her. Endless dates had ended with him feeling down, and constantly having to push himself to go on another date, only to realize pretty quickly that this one wasn’t her either. It had just soured him on the whole dating scene and made him think maybe marriage wasn’t in his future.

How can readers find you on the Internet?
Type my name in and I’ll come up J my website is http://debraclopton.com Please join my newsletter and you’ll get all the updates. I’m at all the other places too but start at the website and click the social media you want. Until then, happy reading!

Thank you, Debra, for sharing this new book with my blog readers and me. I’m looking forward to reading it.

Readers, here are links to the book.
Longing for Ever After (Sunset Bay Romance) - Paperback
Longing for Ever After (Sunset Bay Romance Book 4) - Kindle

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. You must follow these instructions to be in the drawing. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory or country if outside North America. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

KISSED BY A COWBOY - Debra Clopton - One Free Book

BIO: Debra Clopton is a multi-award winning novelist and has written more than 22 novels. Along with writing, Debra helps her husband teach the youth at their local Cowboy Church. Debra's goal is to shine a light toward God while she entertains readers with her words.

Dear Readers, Debra is a Texas author. Every time I'm around her, I love her more. And her books are wonderful. Cowboys, Texas, and romance. What’s not to love? I’ve read most of her books, and when they arrive, I read them right away. Kissed By a Cowboy is my favorite so far, but then I say that with each new book she writes. You won’t want to miss this one.

Welcome back, Debra. What are some of the spiritual themes you like to write about?
I love to write about forgiveness, and redemption - being freed from one’s past. Overcoming pain of one’s past and looking to the future and love conquers all.

What other books of yours are coming out soon?
I’m very excited that DALTON the 5th book in my New Horizon Ranch series is coming out. Readers have been waiting on this story and I’m so glad to have it ready for them now. This series is shorter than my Four of Hearts Ranch romances but just as romantic and heart-warming. DALTON is a great story about a cowboy who keeps his past closed up inside but then one stormy night he rescues a very pregnant Rae Anne Tyson from floodwaters and suddenly Dalton’s life is turned upside down and no matter what he believes he does or doesn’t deserve—he can’t walk away from helping Rae Anne.

I’m working on a new series now that I’m excited about and there will be news next month about it. I’d love for readers to join my newsletter at http://debraclopton.com
           
I’d love to feature Dalton on the blog. Email me. How can you encourage authors who have been receiving only rejections from publishers?
Persevere while at the same time continue to write. Write every day.

Tell us about the featured book.
Cassidy was looking for a home and a place to belong . . . not for a cowboy to steal her heart.
Having lived through her parents’ endless string of “matrimonial bliss gone wrong,” Cassidy Starr knows when the odds are not in her favor. Divorced and humiliated, her faith on rocky ground, Cassidy is through with love. She’s been bucked off that horse far too many times. Instead, she returns to Wishing Springs, Texas, and the rundown farm she’s inherited from her great aunt Roxie. She’ll reopen the strawberry farm and a bed and breakfast and follow in her aunt’s footsteps, remaining forever-independent, happy . . . and single.

Rancher Jarrod Monahan’s hands are full running the ranch, looking after his ailing grandfather, and chasing down a group of rustlers on the loose. He’s pushed his longing for a family to the bottom of his list of priorities. Besides, he was in love once but ran scared and lost his shot at happiness. But suddenly, the biggest regret of his life has moved in next door with a wounded heart, determined to become a spinster . . . and that’s a challenge that Jarrod can’t pass up.

Jarrod sets his mind to breaking down the walls around Cassidy’s stubborn heart. How can he show her that a cowboy’s kiss lasts forever? For the good folks of Wishing Springs, falling in love has never been so much fun to witness.

Please give us the first page of the book for my readers.
Strawberry Hill.

Cassidy Starr’s headlights shined on the faded words of the wooden sign, which looked nearly ready to collapse.  She knew exactly how it felt. Taking a deep breath, she pushed her kinky mass of red hair behind her ears, then took hold of the steering wheel of her truck and drove up the dark, tree-lined lane. Up the hill, the two-story, yellow Victorian appeared in her headlight beams, and a wave of nostalgia and relief washed over Cassidy. She was home.

Humiliated, but home.

Tears dampened her eyelashes and she blinked them away. “I will not get emotional. I will not get emotional,” she chanted to the silence around her.

She was done with tears.

Seriously done.

So over them.

These days the only thing tears did was make her mad when they dared to threaten.

How can readers find you on the Internet?
I would love for readers to sign up for my newsletter and to find out more about me and my books at http://debraclopton.com and there you can connect with me through other social media.

Thank you, Debra for sharing this new book with me and my readers. I know they’ll be as eager to read it as I was when it came.

Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
Kissed By a Cowboy - Christianbook.com
Kissed by a Cowboy (A Four of Hearts Ranch Romance) - Amazon.com
Kissed by a Cowboy (A Four of Hearts Ranch Romance Book 3) - Kindle

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. You must follow these instructions to be in the drawing. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Google+, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:
Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com

Friday, August 28, 2015

COUNTING ON A COWBOY - Debra Clopton - One Free Book

Dear Readers, I’ve loved every book Debra has written since I first discovered her. Cowboys, Texas, Romance, and a touch of Comedy. What’s not to love? I’ve read Counting on a Cowboy and loved it. Debra’s books go to the top of my to-be-read pile. I loved the characters, who leapt from the page into my heart, and the storyline that is different from other books I’ve read. You won’t want to miss this one.

Bio: Debra Clopton is a multi-award winning novelist and has written more than 22 novels. Along with writing, Debra helps her husband teach the youth at their local Cowboy Church. Debra's goal is to shine a light toward God while she entertains readers with her words.

Welcome back, Debra. Why do you write the kind of books you do?
I want to sweep people away into a small town world where they can de-stress from their day, or have an adventure, while making them laugh and think at the same time. I want to be a light in a darkening world. God gave me a gift of storytelling and I want to use that gift to make people smile and hopefully shine a light back to him.

Besides when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?
I have several happiest days-both of my wedding days, to my first husband, Wayne and then my second husband, Chuck, 6 years after Wayne went to be with the Lord. Both days my sons were born and all 3 days my granddaughters were born. There is no way to separate out a single day. God’s been so good in my life and blessed me in so many ways. There have been very difficult days too but I try to focus on the blessings.

I do, too, Debra. How has being published changed your life?
Being published enabled me to fulfill the ministry God prepared me for, which is exactly how I view my writing.

What is your current work in progress?
I just finished Kissed By A Cowboy, book 3 in my Four of Hearts Ranch Romance series. This is the oldest Monahan brother, Jarrod’s story. This story originally had an entirely different plot but when I sat down to write it, it didn’t work with the first 2 books in the series. I changed it up and am really happy with where the new plot took me. Also, I’m now finishing up Chase book 3 in my shorter New Horizon Ranch of Mule Hollow series which I’m enjoying too. I’m writing constantly but having a great time.

What would be your dream vacation?
Oh goodness, I guess I’d say Kauai and I’ve been blessed to go there twice. With my husband’s career, we travel a lot and see so many amazing places-I’m going to start a Road Tripping with Debra Clopton Blog or something-but I’m usually working while we are driving down the road and at the hotel so its so nice to get away on a real vacation where he and I both can totally get away from everything. Kauai is our favorite place to do that.

How do you choose your settings for each book?
I’m known for my small-town Texas settings so I try to set the books in interesting areas of Texas. But I love other states too and see a lot of interesting places so I hope to venture out a little later on.

What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?
Road trips with my husband are fun. I used to paint and hope to get back to that one day but right now, my writing and spending time with my family are all the time I have.

What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?
I want my openings to pop, to pull readers in and so it is sometimes hard for me to get started because I work on that so much. I have to push myself to move on with the story and then come back to the beginning. And many times I will finally force myself to change an opening that I have been working on and it finally works with the new opening but it is hard to let that go after I’ve envisioned it in my mind for so long.

What advice would you give to a beginning author?
To learn story structure and remember that entertaining the reader is key but there is a structure that helps the story move in a captivating flow that keeps the reader’s attention. And attend writing conferences; I love learning and when I’m at a conference I still attend workshops because I love seeing how others creative process works. And of course finish the book and start a new one! 

Tell us about the featured book.
After losing everything she held dear, Abby never wants to love again. But a certain cowboy may just spur her to wonder if love might be worth the risk.

Running from a past that haunts her, Abby Knightly is drawn to the cozy town of Wishing Springs, Texas. Maybe this small town could offer hope and healing and a future for Abby . . . if she’s brave enough to reach out and take it by the reins.

Bo Monahan isn’t interested in the new romantic destination his little town has become—or the women who might be looking at him like he’s their next Mr. Right. Between taking care of his Pops and his growing stirrup business, he isn’t looking for serious romantic commitments. But when the infant son he never knew about shows up at his doorstep, his world is turned upside down.

This confirmed bachelor might not think he needs a wife, but he sure needs help. Even Abby can see that, and despite her best efforts to keep her distance, she can’t help but be drawn to this new father-son duo. As Abby throws herself into helping Bo navigate fatherhood, hope sparks between them, revealing that maybe, just maybe, they can navigate their dark pasts and emerge together into a future as bright as the Texas sun itself.

Please give us the first page of the book for my blog readers.
“Wake up, Abby,” Abby Knightley demanded of herself through a huge yawn. Sitting straighter, she gripped the steering wheel of her car as if her life depended on it—and it did.

Abby’s stomach knotted at the thought . . . her firsthand knowledge of just how truly life could change in the blink of an eye. She knew getting behind the wheel was always life or death. She’d suffered great loss—she pushed the memories away, unable and unwilling to go there. She blinked back the sting of tears and berated herself for driving while tired. For putting herself in this situation.

She almost pulled over to the side of the deserted road to sleep. But thankfully her GPS reported that her destination, the small Texas town of Wishing Springs, was only about five miles ahead. She could make that . . . just a little farther. And that was the only reason she was still driving . . .

Her eyes blurred and she eased her foot off the gas pedal as the worry gripped her further. She should have stayed in Houston after being delayed so late. But she hadn’t wanted to. She’d feared that if she didn’t leave right then, there might have been another delay tomorrow. And then another one. With so many friends and family trying to talk her out of moving—like today, Abby might not have ever gotten up the determination to leave again if she hadn’t finally gotten in her car and driven off. Of course the fact that she’d sold her home and had a moving company haul her belongings off to storage was a pretty good sign she was going somewhere. But Wishing Springs, Texas?

How can readers find you on the Internet?
My recently updated website is www.debraclopton.com and I’m on facebook at www.facebook.com/debra.clopton.5 and on twitter I’m @debraclopton I love to hear from readers!


Thank you, Debra, for sharing this new book with us. I can hardly wait for book three to release.

Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
Counting on a Cowboy - Christianbook.com
Counting on a Cowboy (A Four of Hearts Ranch Romance) - Amazon
Counting on a Cowboy (A Four of Hearts Ranch Romance Book 2) - Kindle

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Google+, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:
Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com

Friday, March 20, 2015

BETTING ON HOPE - Debra Clopton - One Free Book

Dear Readers, I have loved reading Debra Clopton novels since I first found her years ago.  She’s also a Texas gal and she sets her novels in Texas.  The stories are romantic comedy with a richness of spiritual depth. I read Betting on Hope as soon as it arrived in my house. She has moved from shorter novels to trade-paperback length, and the transition was a very good one. These new characters and the new setting grabbed me right away. And the storyline kept me turning pages to see what would happen to these people. You REALLY don’t want to miss this one.

BIO: Debra Clopton is a multi-award winning novelist and has written more than 22 novels. Along with writing, Debra helps her husband teach the youth at their local Cowboy Church. Debra's goal is to shine a light toward God while she entertains readers with her words.

Welcome, Debra. Tell us how much of yourself you write into your characters.
There is a little of me in all of my books. I don’t know how there couldn’t be. I’ve felt the pain of loss and the aftermath of grief. I’ve also felt joy and peace and love. I can’t help but draw upon those emotions and use them in my work. I feel that drawing on those true emotions makes the stories richer, deeper, and able to touch reader’s hearts in a more personal way.

What is the quirkiest thing you have ever done?
Hmm, goodness, I’m not sure what would classify but I’ll go with this: I’m really, really scared of driving in the mountains because I have a horrible fear of heights—though I push myself, like when I made myself go to the top of the Empire State building and had to stay up against the wall because I couldn’t walk over to the edge, but I was up there and that made me happy. So anyway, I went to a writing convention in Reno and decided to stay a few days after the conference and go see Lake Tahoe. I asked the older man at the rental car place for the safest directions. He must have misunderstood me, and he sent me the SCENIC route, which was over the tallest mountain! By the time I realized I was on the way up a very steep two-lane road over the mountain, I couldn’t turn around. I drove extremely slow, backed up traffic and wanted to turn around so badly but that would have meant I would have been on the outside lane and that was just something I couldn’t force myself to do.

So I stayed against the mountain, stopped at every passing cutout to let the irate travelers behind me pass, and I eventually made it over the top and was blessed with the most amazing and beautiful view looking down over Lake Tahoe. I loved it and was so thankful that the drive down to the lake on that side was much flatter and less curvy than coming up. It just goes to show that sometimes if we push ourselves we are rewarded with something fantastic. I don’t want to do that drive again, but I’m glad it happened. That was the year my first book came out, and it was a kind of celebration road trip. 

When did you first discover that you were a writer?
I started thinking about it the end of my senior year in high school when my English teacher told me I needed to be a writer. That set a desire in me but not a belief. Over 10 years later after starting a few books and stopping, I woke up one morning and started writing and never stopped.

Tell us the range of the kinds of books you enjoy reading.
I read to relax. I read how-to books on writing but when it comes to what I really read, I love romance. I love happy endings and the best way to make me stop reading you is to mess up the ending. We all deal with real life every day. When I open a book I want a happy ending and that’s that!

How do you keep your sanity in our run, run, run world?
Oh who said I have kept my sanity? Lol, I lost that a long time ago … but to keep myself on track I make a list, and I prioritize, and I am very disciplined.  

How do you choose your characters’ names?
I love this part! You may find this funny … I sit and stare at my computer screen and then I type a first name and I stare at it. (Okay, seriously this is it). Then I type another one and toss it around for a minute and wait for inspiration. When the right name comes on the screen I just know it. Sometimes I hear them speaking to me or I see their face.  It doesn’t usually take long. Very seldom have I had to change a name.

In Counting On a Cowboy, Tru’s brother Bo started out with another name, and it was a little too different so the editors asked me to change it. That was so hard to do. I asked readers on my FB to help with that and we ended up with Bo, but I still had to go through the process all over again. Bo had the same feel as the other name so it worked. They asked me to change Tru also because of good reasons, editing Tru and true can be a little hard but there was just no way I could change his name. Tru Monahan’s name chose him and came to me from the moment I started writing Four of Hearts Romance Series. So we just worked around editing issues, and I believe all is well.                        
                 
What is your favorite food?
Cheesecake! Always has been and always will be. Love that manna from heaven!  

What is the problem with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you overcome it?
Well, I’d say it was characterization. I kept not digging deep enough into my characters and who they were. When I sat down to write The Trouble with Lacy Brown, my first published novel, I had two goals in mind: to write a memorable, entertaining story and to create a world and a main character that no one would call cardboard! (I hate that term lol) Lacy Brown became as real to me as it gets and so has the whole world of Mule Hollow. 22 books in that series and I believe I’ve succeeded in my goals. With this new series I’m loving the reviews! RT Magazine, Publishers Weekly and the Library Journal so far have all pointed to my characters in some lovely way … that pleases me. I wanted Wishing Springs and my cast of characters to be fun and real. And like my Mule Hollow characters have become to readers through the years, I wanted Wishing Springs and the Four of Hearts Romance group to become a place and group readers want to return to.  Hopefully I’ve succeeded.
                   
Oh, I’m sure you did. Tell us about the featured book.
Advice columnist Maggie Hope will do anything to help her friend, top Houston TV show host who helped Maggie when she had nothing and no one. Maggie will even interview champion horse trainer Tru Monahan on live TV! Not the spotlight kind of gal her nerves are already quaking when she meets the good-looking cowboy for the interview. Sparks fly both on-and-off camera and a casual bet that Tru can teach Maggie to ride a cutting horse has both of them being forced by outside sources to go through with the bet … and the story goes on from there. This story is filled with a town of loving, but nosey, goodhearted people who I hope readers will love. There is a subplot that will tug at heartstrings with the runaway and her baby. And also the budding romance of the older couple in town adds another layer to the small town, feel that I wanted this book to have. Oh, and of course there are the cowboys…
 
Please give us the first page of the book for my readers.
“What have you gotten me into, Amanda Jones?”

Staring at the rough-looking building, Maggie Hope clutched her cell phone to her ear and fought down a hot flood of panic. “The sign says The Bull Barn. What is this place?” she gritted through tense jaws.

Rustic was an understatement for the faded wooden building sitting on the outskirts of Wishing Springs, Texas. It had dark windows and a long plank porch supported by columns made of knobby tree trunks. The steeply pitched red roof sagged in the middle. It was a dive, a shack.

“Calm down, Mags,” Amanda croaked, the flu causing her to sound like an eighty-year-old smoker, instead of the intimidatingly elegant, thirty-five-year-old bombshell, who was the key ingredient of the most popular morning show on Houston’s local channel. She coughed. “It may look a little rough, but it’s the cowboy and local folks’ hangout.”

“But—it’s deserted. Lonesome. If it’s a hangout, where is everyone?” It didn’t look like a place anyone would want to hang out in. Especially Maggie. Dives brought back memories she worked hard to forget.

How can readers find you on the Internet?
My website is http://debraclopton.com sign up for my newsletter! Monthly giveaway and news of new releases coming in 2015
Twitter: @debraclopton, http://twitter.com/debraclopton

Purchase Links for Betting on Hope:




Indie Bound: http://www.indiebound.org/book/9781401690496

Thank you, Debra, for sharing this first book of the new series with us. I know my readers will love it.

Readers, leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Google+, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:

Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

FOUR WEDDINGS AND A KISS - Margaret Brownley, Debra Clopton, Mary Connealy, Robin Lee Hatcher - One Free Book

Readers, this is a novella collection by four of my favorite authors of historical romance. This time the collection has a Prologue and Epilogue that gives in a different flavor.

I read the book as soon as my copy arrived. As always, each of these women gave us an interesting story with three dimensional characters who grabbed my heart and didn’t let go until their story was told. Each unique story stayed with me a long time giving me a chuckle and a smile every time I revisited it.

You won’t want to miss this book.

Margaret Brownley's story
Courting Trouble

How did this collection come about?
The four of us worked together on A Bride for All Seasons, and we had so much fun we decided to do it again. We started with a phone conference to brainstorm. Robin suggested we do something with unlikely brides and the next thing we knew our muses were off and running.

Are these stories connected in some way?
The book opens with at a revival. One of the ministers attending is miserably in love with a woman he fears would make an unsuitable pastor's wife. The other ministers tell him stories about other unsuited couples and how God brought them together.

How does your story fit in with the others?
In Courting Trouble, my heroine is known as the “black widow.” That's because all three of her husbands died under mysterious circumstances. How's that for an unsuitable bride?

Who chose the setting for this collection?
We each chose our own settings. My story takes place in Colorado.

What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
My goal in writing is to provide readers with an entertaining story that puts a smile on their faces and maybe even a little hope in their hearts.

Readers want to get to know the authors they read. Can you tell us three things my readers probably don’t know about you?
I live in a halfway house. That's because I'm surrounded by projects that are only half complete and may never see the end. Can anyone use a half sweater or half quilt?

I run a shelter for abused, neglected, and depressed Boston ferns. I can turn any fern into a gigantic mass of fronds guaranteed to take over the room. No one is allowed into to my house unless first agreeing to adopt a fern. And no, you can't bring your sick fern over.

My office is painted Monet purple, and I sit on a big rubber ball. I fell off it recently during an earthquake.

Please give us the first page of your story.
Colorado 1882
Brock Daniels scowled at the brief he’d been studying for more than an hour. Obstreperous conduct? It took thirty-two pages to list a complaint that added up to little more than one shop owner calling another a name generally reserved for crooked politicians and stubborn mules.

Hardly a week went by that a similar freewheeling lawsuit didn’t cross his desk. No wonder the town was on litigation overload. They sure didn’t do things here in Colorado like they did back in Philadelphia.

Tossing the brief down, he reached for his fountain pen. No sooner had he dipped the nib in the ink well and started to write than a slight sound made him lift his gaze. A boy about ten or eleven stood in front of his desk, staring at him with big rounded eyes.

It wasn’t the first time someone had sneaked up on him while working at his desk. The two room office had been his for six months and he still hadn’t gotten around to attaching a bell to the front door.

Brock stuck the pen in the holder and reached into his vest pocket for his watch. The gold case opened with a flip of his thumb. It was nearly ten p.m. Too late for someone so young to be roaming the streets. He snapped the watch shut.

 “May I help you?”

For answer, the lad placed four coins on the desk with such care that the money had to have been hard earned. The coins added up to fifty-six cents.

 “I want to hire you,” the boy said.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
You can find me on FaceBook, Twitter, Google+, and Pinterest.


Now we’re welcoming Debra Clopton, a fellow Texas author.

How did this collection come about?
We had an all-out brainstorming session conference call that was the most fun. We tossed about everything but the kitchen sink and grabbed hold of this idea when it showed up. It was a blast.

Are these stories connected in some way?
Yes, by a fifth romance. It starts out with a bunch of pastors sitting around a campfire. This young pastor needs advice dealing with romance troubles that involve a young woman he thinks is unsuitable as a pastor’s wife. The 4 older pastors tell the poor fella about an unlikely couple that they’d known. And so the stories of unlikely brides begins.

How does your story fit in with the others?
OH, my heroine is very unlikely. She’s been trapped beneath her destroyed home after a tornado ripped through her land and killed her pa. I fashioned her after Crazy Cora from the movie Quigley Down Under and loved every moment bringing her to life. She was unconventional before she got hit on the head since her pa raised her to shoot better than most men and to use a whip—both he deemed the necessary tools a woman in the west needed to survive. She has no idea how to handle love … and the men she’s pointing her pearl handled pistol at are truly shaking in their boots. I think readers will love Crazy Katie Pearl … at least I hope so.

I know I did, and I didn’t know she was fashioned after Crazy Cora. I absolutely love the movie Quigley Down Under . Who chose the setting for this collection?
I believe we all did.

What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
I want readers to sigh at the ending after they have rooted whole-heartedly for my hero and heroine. I also want them to see that God walks beside us all the time, even in unlikely times.

Readers want to get to know the authors they read. Can you tell us three things my readers probably don’t know about you?
1. I truly understand God’s faithfulness … my first husband passed away in 03, and God never left my side.
2. 6 years later, trusting God, I finally went on my 1st date a blind date and met my husband J God truly works in mysterious ways.
3. I absolutely believe Banana taffy of any kind is God’s special gift … I even have my donkey Samantha in my 2nd book And Baby Makes Five love it, because I’m so crazy about it.

My husband of almost 50 years was a blind date, and I didn’t like blind dates. My first one had been rather unpleasant and I never planned to go on another one. Yes, God works in mysterious ways. Please give us the first page of your story.
A COWBOY FOR KATIE:

She might be as crazy as they said but Katie Pearl had learned that most men were light between the ears. She wondered which one of them she was gonna have to shoot today.

It wasn’t as if she wanted to, but if they came snoopin' around, she was willin’ to oblige them.

“There ain’t no sense pretending you like this, Katie Pearl, no sense at all,” Katie told herself.

From her perch on the wagon seat she could see the dusty buildings of town. And as Myrtle May pulled the wagon round the bend in the road Katie’s insides tensed up.

“You’re a good horse, Myrtle May. Yes you are.” She was glad to have the comfort of her old horse with her as the fire in the pit of her stomach informed her trouble was near.

Town was trouble and there was no getting around it.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
I love to hear from Readers and have them join my newsletter. I try to return all letters but sometimes because deadlines are pressing its hard. So I love being able to connect with them through my monthly newsletters and also my contests. Join at http://www.debraclopton.com from there they can easily find my links to facbook, twitter and goodreads. Happy reading everyone!!!


Welcome Mary Connealy. Each of these novellas are also available individually as ebooks. Here’s her cover for that.

How did this collection come about?
This is the second book in a two book contract we signed with Thomas Nelson. The first book A Bride for All Seasons came out last summer. Once we tricked TN into doing one, they decided to trick us into doing two. It’s been great.

Are these stories connected in some way?
They are connected by a group of pastors sitting around a campfire talking about the “unlikeliest couple” they’d ever performed a wedding ceremony for.

How does your story fit in with the others?
The stories don’t intertwine at all beyond the pastors spinning their yarns, a small prologue and a short epilogue tie them stories together.

Who chose the setting for this collection?
We picked a date which coincided with a gathering someone had heard of, of pastors with ministries on the frontier. But the settings were left up to each of us. We did talk about it, wanting to mix things up a bit and not all set our stories in the same place.

What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
I think the basic story is Maizy MacGregor learning to take pride in who she is. She’s quite a character but she’s got all the things a woman needed to succeed in the west and if she wasn’t always a proper lady, well, too bad.

Readers want to get to know the authors they read. Can you tell us three things my readers probably don’t know about you?
Um….I have a sort of “problem” with pretty jewelry. Not fine gemstones, just fun pretty jewelry. I LOVE IT! I’ve got quite a pile of it.

Please give us the first page of your story.
Spitfire Sweetheart
Saurita, New Mexico 1879

Maizy MacGregor leaned her head back against the rocks and knocked her Stetson off. She grabbed it as it fell, then tossed it aside in disgust. She had on men's clothes, her hat, her britches, her shirt, her boots, the six-gun she wore on her hip. It had never bothered her before Rylan Carstens moved in next door.

She wiped her eyes. It was sure enough bothering her now.

The water roared beside her, cascading down in a rush. She came here when she needed to be alone. And she really needed that now.

Tossing aside her buckskin gloves, she pulled her red handkerchief out of her hip pocket—no lace kerchief tucked up her sleeve for Maizy—and wiped her eyes again and blew her nose in a completely unladylike way.

How had she let herself get this upset? And over a man, of all things.

Over her neighbor who she'd long ago accepted would never see her as anything but a child and an unattractive, annoying child at that.

She was used to it and ignored it mostly, but today stung. He'd found her walking among his Angus cattle.

Maizy looked to her left and watched the sleek black herd spread out on the long downhill slope. She hadn't gone near them this afternoon. Instead she'd just slipped into this spot. She'd been using it for a get-away since childhood.

But this morning she'd walked right into the middle of his herd, wanting a close-up look. They were gentle cattle, not a horn on a single one of them. They weren't tame enough to touch, they gave way if she got too close. But they didn't run for the hills one day then attack the next like longhorns tended to do.

She'd heard they were gentle, even the bulls. And she was savvy about cattle. She knew how to judge their tempers and stay clear of them when necessary. Her eyes rested on one especially young calf that might have been born just today, long after cows usually threw their calves.

Maizy knew better than to go near a new mama, no matter how easy going she'd been before her calf was born.

She'd told Rylan all that and tried to make him see she was in no danger. He'd thrown her off his land anyway and later followed her home to complain to Pa, like she was a misbehaving child. He'd forbidden her to trespass ever again.

The river was the border between his property and her pa's, and it was true she was, right this minute, on the trespassing side. But surely he didn't mean her little hidey hole was off limits. She barely had a toe over the line and she was completely safe from his placid, fat cattle.

She did admit to taking childish pleasure in defying him. And it was a harmless defiance. If he didn't know she was here, then he couldn't throw her off.

Her horse was tied well across the river, on MacGregor land, cropping grass. She couldn't see the brown and white pinto from here and neither could her neighbor.

Hoping to get control of her hurt, she let herself soak in the peace of stone and water and air, loving the way this rocky ledge cut off the world. She couldn't hear anything thanks to the rushing water. Her spot was curved into the rocks and she could only see straight ahead and to the left. Water was on the right, cascading down from the mountain peaks. Her almost-cave hid her from behind and overhead.

She could be in her own world, alone with her thoughts. She'd always come here to lick her wounds.

A gunshot cut through the air and she sat up straight and banged her head.

Looking for the source of that gun, she turned left and saw him.

Rylan Carstens.

And he was coming straight for her, galloping on his big chestnut stallion. Even at this distance she could tell he was looking right at her. How had he known she was in here?

Another gunshot echoed from his Winchester.

Rylan bent low over his horse, coming as fast as he could on the rocky ground that rose to this bluff along the river. Was he trying to kill her? If so, he was doing a poor job of it. The bullets were missing, going way over her head. But even on their worst day she'd never done anything that oughta make the man killing mad.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
Seekerville
Petticoats and Pistols
My Blog
My Website
My Newsletter
And Twitter: http://twitter.com/maryconnealy

Now let’s welcome the final author in this collection, Robin Lee Hatcher.
How did this collection come about?
We had so much fun brainstorming and writing the first collection, so it was very easy to slip into brainstorming mode for another conference call. Then one of us took the ideas and wrote up a proposal and sent it off to our editor.

Are these stories connected in some way?
Yes, which is why it is best for readers to get the entire collection (print or ebook) rather than just the individual ebook novellas. The collection opens at a pastors' convention, old west style, where one pastor is pondering his feelings for a certain woman back home, a woman he fears is unsuitable to be a pastor's wife. When he confesses the same to the other four pastors in his small prayer circle, they begin telling him stories about couples who God brought together but who seemed unlikely matches. This leads into the four novellas. The first pastor's story is wrapped up in an epilogue at the end of the book.

How does your story fit in with the others?
It is the pastors who tie the stories together.

Who chose the setting for this collection?
We each chose where we wanted to set our stories. I chose to set mine in western Wyoming.

What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
I want them to sigh with happiness at the romantic ending.

Readers want to get to know the authors they read. Can you tell us three things my readers probably don’t know about you?
I love to treat myself to a full-body massage on a regular basis. Helps the aches that come from all those hours at the computer.
I used to have naturally curly hair.
I got to be in the delivery room for the births of three of my grandchildren. Awesome!

Please give us the first page of your story.
A LOVE LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor:
Do you think there are men in this world who can value a well-educated woman with a mind of her own and the courage to speak it? Is it possible for a man and a woman to have an equal partnership in marriage, seeing each other as God intended them to be? After thirty-five years on this earth, I have begun to doubt it.
Sincerely,
Wishful in Wyoming
                        *****

Killdeer, Wyoming, August 1879
Molly Everton flung open the door to her father’s office in the Killdeer Sentinel, not caring that it hit the wall with a loud crack. “Is it true, Father?”

Roland Everton looked up from the papers on his desk. “Is what true?”

“You know good and well what I mean. Have you hired someone else as editor of the paper?”

Her father removed his glasses and pinched the bridge of his nose. A familiar delaying tactic. She’d seen it many times in her thirty-five years.

Molly closed the door and then stepped closer to his desk, trying to check her temper. “It isn’t fair. You know it isn’t fair.”

“My dear, you should know by now that many things in life are not fair. Far from it.”

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?

Readers should visit my web site and blog at www.robinleehatcher. From there, they can find links to my accounts on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Google+, and Goodreads.

Thank you, Ladies, for sharing this new collection with us. As I prepared this post, your first pages took me back to each story, and I thoroughly enjoyed revisiting each one. 

Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
Four Weddings and A Kiss - Christianbook.com
Four Weddings and a Kiss: A Western Bride Collection - Amazon
Four Weddings and a Kiss: A Western Bride Collection - Kindle


Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

If you’re reading this on Goodreads, Google+, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link:
Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

A BRIDE FOR ALL SEASONS - Margaret Brownley, Debra Cllopton, Mary Connealy, Robin Lee Hatcher - One Free Book on This Blog, Plus More

Readers, I'm interviewing a group of authors, who all write the kind of books I love to read. They've come together for a special novella collection. I think you'll love their writing, too. First, we have Margaret Brownley.

Welcome, Margaret. How did your story for the collection come about?
Actually, it was our agent Natasha Kern who put the four of us together. We then arranged a conference call and brainstormed. That’s when the “magic” happened!

What are you reading right now?
I’m in research mode, so I’m reading the Thrilling and Truthful History of the Pony 
Express, or Blazing the Westward Way with Other Sketches and Incidents of those   
Stirring Times (How’s that for a title?)  The book was published in 1908 by William 
Lightfoot.  This research is for a novella I’m writing for A Pioneer Christmas collection.

What other books have you had published?
I’ve published 28 books so I’ll just give you the most recent ones:
Brides of Last Chance Ranch series
Dawn Comes Early
Waiting for Morning
Gunpowder Tea (October 2013 release)

Also my Rocky Creek Series:
A Lady Like Sarah
A Suitor for Jenny
A Vision of Lucy

What is the hardest thing about writing a part of a novella collection?
Setting a collection in the same town with some of the same characters can be tricky, particularly when combining four different writing styles. In our collection, the only connecting factor is the Hitching Post Mail Order Catalogue and its matchmaking owner.

How did collaborating with this team impact you?
It was truly an honor to work with such talented and professional writers—the dream team. The best part is I get to do it again. We’re working on a second collection tentatively titled Unlikely Brides.

How do you choose your characters’ names?
I receive signals from some mysterious source—probably from out of space.  At least I did in A Bride for All Seasons.  Our editor pointed out that my hero had the same name as Debra’s. I changed his name, only to find out that our heroines shared the same name, too! I’ve got to stop snooping around Debra’s brain!

What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
My heroine is a gambler’s daughter who sees the world in terms of luck, good or bad. Through her struggles, she eventually comes to realize that God, not luck, is at work in her life. 

Are you a member of American Christian Fiction Writers? If so, why?
Yes, I am a member and the group has been a tremendous help in providing industry news, promotional opportunities, support and friendships.  I highly recommend it.

What is the best piece of advice you received as an author?
The best advice I ever received was to give readers something to “see” in every paragraph. The black mustang lifted his tail and galloped away, hooves barely touching the ground.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
I’m on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Readers can also reach me through my website: www.margaretbrownley.com

Now we have fellow Texan, Debra Clopton.

Welcome, Debra. How did your story for the collection come about?
Before I start, thanks for having me here, Lena! Honestly, I couldn’t come up with a unique enough idea and it was driving me crazy! I decided to look at popular names for women in the 1800’s. I’d already read true stories about mail-order brides and fallen in love with their determination to change their lives, many in the face of unbelievable odds. But no story had sparked my imagination. Names of my characters like most writers are many times a launching pad for me so I prayed the Lord would lead me to one. Scanning the list I saw Eldora and then further down Melvina and—don’t you just love it when that story magic happens—the second I saw those two names my tag line hit me. Melvina Eldora Smith killed three people by the age of one…That was it for me. I had my mail order bride and within a moments I had the blurb for her story written and couldn’t wait to write the story. From the moment Melvina Eldora aka Ellie stepped into my mind, I had a blast telling her story and hope readers will enjoy meeting her too.

What are you reading right now?
Right now I’m reading a RITA book and can’t give out the name. But the author is fantastic with word play. I love quick, witty conversations between the hero and heroine and she’s doing a great job!

What other books have you had published?
I’ve written 20 books for Love Inspired all set in my tiny, fictional Texas town of Mule Hollow. Some of those are, The Trouble with Lacy Brown, No Place Like Home, Her Forever Cowboy, Cowboy For Keeps, Her Lone Star Cowboy to name a few. In May Her Unforgettable Cowboy released—it is the first book in my new Cowboys of Sunrise Ranch series for Love Inspired. Until A Bride For All Seasons all of my books have been contemporary.

What is the hardest thing about writing a part of a novella collection?
Well, for me it was learning how to do the research for a historical and getting comfortable that I could write a historical. I felt quite intimidated by Mary, Margaret, and Robin’s work but thrilled to be collaborating with them. However, once I got started and relaxed it was such a great experience. If I had any question, the gals were quick to point me in the right direction.

How did collaborating with this team impact you?
I loved it. I think we’ve made a fantastic team and I couldn’t have asked for a better group to help break me into the historical market. Fun! And amazing! Yup, that’s my experience. I do believe readers will enjoy this collaboration and the also the second one we just came up with! Honestly I’ve always completely worked alone so this was my very first real experience with brainstorming an idea with others—I loved it. 

How do you choose your characters’ names?
I answered this in the first question, but sometimes it’s not as easy as looking at a list and the right name jumping out at me, waving wildly like Melvina Eldora did. I love looking at the cast and crew names at the end of movies. I’ve stolen names from friends too. Very seldom do I use their entire name but parts of them. I love names.

I do, too. Names are important. What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
My spunky, character Ellie sets out to change her life and she is determined to do it with God on her side. I love that! I hope readers realize with God by their side anything is possible.

Are you a member of American Christian Fiction Writers? If so, why?
Yes I am. It is a wonderful organization and I always direct writers there because of the vast knowledge and access they gain through being a member.

What is the best piece of advice you received as an author?
To sit in the seat and write to the end! Just sit down and do it and don’t stop till you finish. I believe this is the best advice because so many people start a book, but it’s the ones who hang on till the end who have a shot.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
Please come see me at http://debraclopton.com or http://facebook.com/debraclopton

Debra has a very humorous writing style. So does our next author, Mary Connealy.

Welcome, Mary. Let’s do some fun questions first. What song most closely resembles your life?
Let's go with God Bless the Broken Road." Only that's about a love story, I'm thinking of the broken road I followed to be an author.
Second up, "My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys." Now is that perfect for me or what? HUH?? I'll bet you thought I wouldn't have an answer for this one, didn't you, LENA!!!!!???

I had plenty of faith in you, Mary. Do you have a favorite Bible verse? And why is it a favorite?
One I come back to a LOT is, Psalm 27:1 The LORD is my light and my salvation--whom shall I fear? The LORD is the stronghold of my life--of whom shall I be afraid?

It always seems to me that if we could all remember this, cling to it, CLAIM it, we would live so much differently. My soul is safe with the Lord, whom shall I fear? Such simple wisdom, and yet we all spend our lives worrying and fearful. Me included. I've used this verse either openly or for a foundation in my writing many times.

What is the one thing you wish you could go back and change in your life?
Lena for heaven's sake. Do you lay awake nights thinking up hard questions? “Let's See,” Lena says to herself, “What will make Mary ponder and fret and stew. I'VE GOT IT!!!”

Shame on you!

I like where I am now and I guess I needed to go through all I've gone through to end up here, so I'll say nothing—I'd change NOTHING. And that from a woman who spends significant time remembering monstrously stupid stuff she said and kicking herself for it. Maybe I should change to being MUTE for most of my life. I'd have less material for self-loathing.

What is the most important characteristic for a good friend to have?
Oh good grief, Lena! These questions!! (Would all readers please insert a ten minute pause while I tried to think of an answer?) I think I personally am a lousy friend. I spend a lot of time alone and preoccupied with the 1880s, so I doubt I'm available when friends need me. Plus, I have so many friends who are authors, online, that I really am not at all lonely. Add in I've got seven brothers and sister, four children, a very nice mom, a countless number of nieces and nephews and honestly, all my social time, what little there is, is booked. So ask someone else what they want in a friend. They'll probably send you a picture of ME with a red circle around my head and a slash through it.

Mary, I’m so glad you’re my friend. What extracurricular activities did you participate in when you were in school?
I was sort of a classic Jack-of-all-trades, master-of-none. I was in everything and I pretty much excelled at NONE OF IT. All the sports, back then we had volleyball and track. Speech, drama, though it was just class plays not a real drama team. Future Homemakers of America, Year Book, 4-H, softball in the summer, a much less organized sport than now. Whatever they had, I joined.

No wonder I like you. We are a lot alike. I was in FHA and 4-H, I worked on the yearbook staff, and my college degree is in speech and drama. What is your favorite movie of all times?
While You Were Sleeping starring Sandra Bullock and Bill Pullman. A sweet, funny little romantic comedy and every second of that movie is worth watching over and over.

That’s even one of my favorite movies. Tell us about why you wrote this book.
I have never done a Mail-Order Bride story and I’ve always wanted to. Margaret Brownley, Debra Clopton, Robin Lee Hatcher and I got the idea to team up on this book. A Mail Order Bride was suggested. It was a great chance to write a fun book that’d been in my head a long time. I jumped at it.

Please give us the first page of the book.
Chapter One
Megan McBride stood shivering outside the Tremont Hotel, buffeted by the cold November wind.

The doorman had refused to let her in. He’d told her to go around back to the servants’ entrance. No amount of protest would convince the snooty man she had any business—other than as a laborer—in their fancy hotel.

But she couldn’t very well meet her new husband and his two young laddies if she was in the back of the hotel, now could she? So here she stood waiting in the cold.

A fine coach drew her attention when it rolled to a stop. Two little ones scrambled down. The boyos were so close in size she’d have thought them twins if David’s letter hadn’t said they were four and five. Behind them emerged a finely dressed man.

He was a handsome man, and that was no blarney, but he looked gaunt for a fact. He’d spoken of pneumonia in his letter and one look convinced Megan he’d indeed been ill. His skin had an ashen color. A rancher, a man who spent time outdoors, should be tanned even in November. Clothes hung on his tall frame as if he’d lost weight—a lot of it. His hair was well-trimmed and his face clean shaven, but it looked to Megan as if all the tidying had been done lately, his face and neck looked scraped raw by a recent shave and haircut.

Sure, and it had to be David Laramie—the two lively youngsters being the best clue.

Megan walked forward to meet them. The children, one was at best an inch taller than the other, laughed and shoved each other while the man’s searching eyes rested on her and stopped. She’d described herself fairly it seemed, because he nodded a greeting from across the distance of the busy sidewalk.

“Miss McBride?” He removed his hat in a show of good manners and bad sense, since his head would now be cold.

As she opened her mouth, the smaller of the boys shouted in anger. “That’s my hat!”

The cry drew Megan’s attention in time to see the older boy reel back and fall beneath the wheels of their carriage just as it began to move.

“It’s mine now!” The younger boy waved a woolen cap at his big brother and jeered.

“Stop the horses!” Mr. Laramie dove for the child. “Ben!”

The carriage driver jerked the brake on his rig. “Whoa!”

It had just started rolling forward, now the carriage skidded and the driver fought the reins. One horse reared and jerked the carriage forward. “Whoa!”

“Zachary, I’m gonna get you!” The older brother, almost under the wheels, ignored the danger, and dodged his father.

Mr. Laramie’s big hand caught the front of the boy’s shirt and hauled him out from under the heavy carriage.

Megan saw the littler boy, Zachary, run, still laughing.

He dashed around the back of the carriage and straight into the street. Carriages, wagons, carts and riders flowed from both directions. Zachary saw the rushing traffic. The boy, four years old, cried out in fear, tried to turn back and stumbled to his knees.

A pair of dappled gray draft horses drawing a heavy stagecoach thundered toward him.

How can readers find you on the Internet? 
Seekerville 
Petticoats and Pistols 
My Blog 
My Website 
My Newsletter
And follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/maryconnealy 

And our last author has been writing a long, long time--Robin Lee Hatcher.


Welcome, Robin. How did your story for the collection come about?
The four of us had such fun brainstorming the premise of the mail order catalog and its meddlesome manager. The idea for my novella developed slowly over time, and when I was ready to start writing it (after finishing a novel first), I knew my hero and heroine and could throw them together and watch the sparks fly.

What are you reading right now?
Novel: Just finished Gone to Ground by Brandilyn Collins and haven't decided what to read next
Christian Living: The Well by Mark Hall
Non-Fiction: Bonhoeffer by Eric Metaxas

What other books have you had published?
A Bride for All Seasons is my 67th release. I've written both women's fiction and historical romance for the Christian market. My most recent novels are the three books in the Where the Heart Lives series: Belonging, Betrayal, and Beloved (coming in Sept 2013).

What is the hardest thing about writing a part of a novella collection?
LOL! Worrying that I would be the weak link.

I know that feeling. How did collaborating with this team impact you?
Working with Margaret, Debra, and Mary has been a complete joy. And when I work with really creative people (which these ladies all are), it increases my own creativity. That's a bonus.

How do you choose your characters’ names?
Sometimes a name just pops into my head and I know it’s right. When that doesn’t happen, I pull out my trusty character and baby name books and I also use the Internet to look up popular names for boys and girls in the year my characters were born. On occasion, I’ll think I've got the right name, but the character will reject it. If that happens, I just keep looking.

I had a character rename himself half-way through a book. I had a lot of things to change, because of that. What did you want the reader to take away from your story?
A warm feeling in their hearts and a smile on their lips.

Are you a member of American Christian Fiction Writers? If so, why?
Yes. Mostly for the networking with other writers.

What is the best piece of advice you received as an author?
To write what I'm passionate about.

Where can my readers find you on the Internet?
My web site is http://www.robinleehatcher.com. And I love to interact with readers on my Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/robinleehatcher. I can also be found on Twitter and Pinterest and Goodreads.

Four novellas, four brides, and four stories to fall in love with. 

Enter the world of mail-order brides with four of your favorite authors: Mary Connealy, Robin Lee Hatcher, Debra Clopton, and Margaret Brownley. In A Bride for All Seasons (Thomas Nelson) each of the prospective brides is hopeful for a second chance at love—and that second chance always seems to come in an unexpected package.
BrideBlogButton
 
The authors are celebrating with a fun 12 Days of Unexpected Packages Giveaway! Between July 12-23 visit the authors’ Facebook Page to enter to win a new giveaway each day. Winners will be announced at the Facebook Author Chat party on July 23rd! Such fun!

Thank you, ladies, for sharing this new book with us.

Readers, here is another link where you can buy the book from Christianbook.com. 
A Bride for All Seasons

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)

Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.

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