Monday, November 27, 2017

Ana Morgan @anamorganana Author of Stormy Hawkins #Historical #Romance #Western



I’d like to welcome Ana Morgan, author of Stormy Hawkins to my blog today.

RW:    Tell us about yourself, your family, where you live, etc.

AM:    I had an intercontinental childhood, immersed in the disparate cultures of Washington, D.C., Europe and Africa. So, when my new, ex-Marine husband announced he wanted to try dairy farming in northern Minnesota, I said, “Sure.” (We’re still together.)

RW:    Why did you decide to write? When did you submit your first manuscript and what genre was it?

AM:    The nag to write started after a horoscope reading. The astrologer said, “If you aren’t writing, you should be.” I committed to writing after I read a contrived ending in well-known romance writer’s book. I assured myself I could do better. (I had a lot to learn.)

RW:    Has your life changed since you became a writer? What’s the best thing about being a writer?

AM:    I get up early, usually between four and five am, so I can write when the house is quiet, before I have to go to work.

Two best things about writing:

1.            The sense of joy after reaching each mini-milestone, be it crafting a just-right sentence, uncovering a character’s deepest emotions, or typing The End.

2.            The amazing generosity of the romance writer community.

RW:    Who are your favorite authors? Who influenced your writing?

AM:    I will always be in awe of Jane Austin, Bertrice Small, and Robert Heinlein. Each time I reread their stories, I am humbled by their ability to tell a story.

RW:    How much does reader feedback matter to you? Do your fans’ comments and letters influence you in any way? Do you have a favorite comment or question from a reader?

AM:    Stormy Hawkins is my first published book, and I have been thrilled to receive four and five-star reviews. I labored over the manuscript for five years, often doubting it would ever be good enough. When a reviewer wrote that she was looking forward to book two, I was over the moon.


RW:    How much of your personality and life experiences are in your writing?

AM:    Some scenes in Stormy Hawkins are based on real experience. I’ve herded cattle, put in fence posts, cooked on a wood stove. We borrowed a bull from a neighbor one summer, and it tried to kill me.

RW:    How do you come up with story ideas? What kind of research do you do for a book?

AM:    I start with an issue that interest me: herbal vs modern medicine; reincarnation; gossip in a small town, etc. I conjure a hero and heroine who start on opposing sides of the issue. Then I add in a villain who can destroy them unless they overcome their differences.

About a quarter of the time it takes to write a story is devoted to research. I check most every historical detail, for my Soul Mate editor will call out everything she can’t verify.

RW:    Would you like to write a different genre or sub-genre than you do now?

AM:    I have a time-travel that needs a rewrite. I have a half-written contemporary suspense on hold until I fulfill a contract for two sequels to Stormy Hawkins.

RW:    What are your thoughts on love scenes in romance novels?

AM:    I cut my author teeth on Beatrice Small’s erotic historicals and Robert Heinlein’s chauvinist science fiction. Neither shied from descriptive sex, but neither fully developed emotional arcs. I feel a good author has to do both.

RW:    Bubble baths or steamy showers? Ocean or mountains? Puppies or kittens? Chocolate or caramel?

AM:    Steamy showers! Kittens. (Puppies grow into dogs and I am not good at dog training.) Definitely chocolate, preferably dark.

I hate to choose between oceans and mountains. I live far from both right now, and I miss both deeply. But lovely seasides and ski slopes tend to be crowded places. I do like living in a log cabin hidden in the woods.

RW:    Those are all the questions I have for you. Thank you for speaking to me.

Stormy Hawkins

The Plot

Blade Masters has finally spotted his ideal Dakota Territory ranch, where he can live alone, forget his cheating ex-fiancée, and bury the shards of his shattered heart. All he needs to do is sweet-talk the ailing owner, and his spitfire daughter, into retiring.

If she weren’t desperate, Stormy would never hire a cowhand. She’s learned the hard way that she’s happier working her family’s ranch alone. But, the greedy banker who holds their mortgage just demanded payment in full—or her hand in marriage.

Will this handsome drifter protect her? Or does he have designs of his own?

An Excerpt:

Stormy gripped Blade’s hand as they approached the docks.

Fires in iron cressets, mounted on poles, gave off smelly black smoke and illumined the dock with an eerie, writhing glow. Hulking men in mismatched clothes spit tobacco on the rough-hewn planks suspended over the river. A woman wearing an eye patch leaned against a stack of burlap sacks and tossed a small dagger into the air.

Showing no fear of challenge, Blade strode purposefully through the maze of goods piled on the pier. Soot-covered dock rats who stared at Stormy soon looked another way and said, “Evening, sir.”

Blade stopped a foot from the edge of the dock and looked down at the river.

She did the same and gasped. The water flowed with a ghostly light.

“Moonlight reflects off silt particles suspended in the water. Missouri River freighters run day and night.”

With a stab of guilt, Stormy realized Blade’s tales of working on the river were true. She’d chosen not to trust him. About this and a lot of other things. Hoping he wouldn’t read her face, she turned her head and peered downriver. “I don’t see the freighter.”

Blade tapped her arm and pointed in the opposite direction.

Ana Morgan

Bio

When she was small, Ana Morgan’s dream was to know something about everything. She has studiously waitressed, driven a school bus, run craft service on indie film sets, wandered through European castles, wired a house, married a Marine, canned vegetables, and studied the stars. She knows how to change a flat tire but prefers gallant, handsome strangers who strip off their jackets and spin the lug nuts for her.

Ana embarked on her writing career by crafting succinct cooking directions for her Secret Garden soup mixes—and graduated to lyrical essays about living on a small organic farm for her CSA’s weekly newsletter. Eventually she realized she wanted to write what she loved to read—steamy romance novels.

She and her husband eloped six weeks after they met and moved from southern California to northern Minnesota. They taught themselves how to milk cows (at first by hand), and raised three go-getter children. One is an award-winning woodworker. Another is IT super-smart. The third is an actor-director-producer.

Ana edits for a regional literary publication, “The Talking Stick,” and currently serves as president of From the Heart Romance Writers.

Book Links:


Contact Ana at anamorgan1950@gmail.com

Twitter: @anamorganana



Sunday, November 19, 2017

Linda O’Connor @LindaOConnor98 Author of Perfectly Series #SultryNightsBoxedSet #Contemporary #RomCom




I’d like to welcome Linda O’Connor, author of the Perfectly Series, to my blog today.

RW:       Tell us about yourself, your family, where you live, etc.

LOC:      I live in Ontario, Canada in a house on the water. I usually sit and write where I can look at the lake. When the weather is warm, I’ll write outside. I balance writing with my work as a physician at an Urgent Care Clinic and being a mom to three sons (luckily grown and capable of throwing together a decent meal, in a pinch).

RW:        How many hours a day do you spend writing?

LOC:     I write for two to three hours on the days I’m also working at the clinic and about six hours on the other days.

RW:       Why did you decide to write? When did you submit your first manuscript and what genre was it?

LOC:    I’m a physician, and I started writing because I wanted to find a fun way to disseminate medical information and to educate and empower readers to take ownership of their health. Targeting a female audience with romance novels seemed like a good idea, because women are usually the ones who see a doctor. (Males typically only go when a girlfriend/partner/spouse/mom encourages them to do so. :D) I write romantic comedies because I love being in a fun headspace when I’m writing. I submitted my first manuscript in 2014.

RW:       Who are your favorite authors? Who influenced your writing?

LOC:      My favorite authors are Nora Roberts, Marne Davis Kellogg, Jeffrey Archer, Graeme Simsion, and Ruth Reichl. I think every author whose books I’ve ever read has influenced my writing in some way, but the romance authors who hosted workshops about writing, editing, publishing, and marketing skills have made the most impact.

RW:       Who are your favorite characters among the books you’ve written?

LOC:      My favorite characters are Chloe Keay in Perfectly Planned (she’s a lot of fun), Sam O’Brien in Perfectly Honest (he’s really hot), and Patty Kelt in Perfectly Crazy in Love (she’s sweet and a little bit crazy).

RW:      What makes a good book? A great romance? Is humor important in fiction and why?

LOC:     I read for relaxation, and I love happily-ever-after endings. I don’t enjoy books that make me cry. Laughter is essential to great health, so humor is a must!

RW:       How much of your personality and life experiences are in your writing?

LOC:    One hundred percent of my personality is in my writing. :D My life experiences are woven into the stories in some shape or form, often not consciously or exactly as they happened, but sprinkled with my imagination.

RW:        How do you come up with story ideas? What kind of research do you do for a book?

LOC:      News stories, headlines, snippets of conversations I hear, lyrics of songs, watching people and putting a story behind their body language or expression—they all inspire my imagination. I’m a physician and my characters are often doctors. The patients they see are often inspired by something I want to teach.

RW:       Tell us about your latest book. What motivated the story? Where did the idea come from? What genre is it? Does it cross over to other genres? If so, what are they?

LOC:     My latest book is Perfectly Crazy in Love, a Perfectly Series novella. It’s a fun one! It came from that feeling of finding love—the uncertainty, the nervous thrill, that wonderful feeling when you realize someone feels the same way about you that you feel about them. It’s a romantic comedy - my fav.


RW:       How many books have you written, how many have been published?

LOC:     I’ve written twelve books, eight romantic comedies in the Perfectly Series and four as part of the In the Game Hockey Series. Perfectly Crazy in Love is the eighth one to be published. The first two books in the Perfectly Series are published by Soul Mate Publishing and the rest are published by Interlock Publishing. The hockey romances will be released in 2018.

RW:     After you’ve written your book and it’s been published, do you ever buy it and/or read it?

LOC:      I always buy it, but I never read it. :D

RW:        If I were a first-time reader of your books, which one would you recommend I start with and why?

LOC:      They are all stand-alone stories, so it doesn’t really matter. You could start with the novellas and then read the full-length stories in order. I think it’s fun to revisit the characters as you read them in order.

RW:      Those are all the questions I have for you. Thank you for speaking to me.

LOC:     Thank you very much for hosting me!! I love meeting other authors and new readers. :D

Perfectly Crazy in Love

The Plot
Dr. Patty Kelt is trying to get Dr. Ken Marshall’s attention. They’ve been friends for four years, and it’s time to turn it up a notch. She wants him to see her as smart, competent, strong, and sexy. So far she’s just managed crazy.

Ken’s used to solving problems and giving advice. Crazy he could handle. But dealing with crazy in love? That’s entirely new.

Perfectly Crazy in Love…it’s not as easy as it looks.

An Excerpt:

“What are you wearing?”

Dr. Patty Kelt looked down at her exposed cleavage and grimaced. “Too much?”

Dr. Sylvie Grant, her best friend and colleague, sat down in the seat beside her at the busy restaurant. “Did you wear that to work today?”

“No, of course not. Patients have enough trouble focusing on what I say without a,”—she waved her hand around her chest—“distraction.” She shrugged. “I changed for the meeting.”

Sylvie’s eyes widened. “You changed into that for our dinner meeting? Why? Are you heading out afterward?”

“Maybe. Possibly.” She bit her lip. “Hopefully.”

Realization dawned in Sylvie’s eyes. “You know, if you want to go out with Ken, you should just ask him. Welcome to the twenty-first century,” she drawled.

Patty winced. Ken Marshall, the other family doctor in Emerson who delivered babies in addition to running a busy practice, was hot. She’d worked with him for over four years, and she’d sensed … electricity between them. Well, it might have been more of a sock-stuck-to-a-blanket static electricity, but there was something. She was sure of it. Flirty comments, the look in his eyes, the occasional time he’d touched her arm when he hadn’t needed to—it was subtle, but the signs pointed toward a more-than-friends interest. Except … in the four years since they’d known each other, he’d never actually asked her out on a date. Sure, they’d sat beside each other at meetings, they’d attended the same hospital functions, she’d even included him in parties she’d hosted, but they’d never spent one-on-one time together. She wanted to change that. When he’d started his last relationship and it had hurt to watch him with another woman, she’d vowed that if the two ever broke up, if the opportunity arose for her to tell him how she felt, she would.

That chance had come. He was newly single. It was time to find out if that spark could be fanned into a flame, if the feelings she had for him could blossom into more. And for that, she needed to ramp things up. “I don’t think he’s a twenty-first century guy. I’m hoping,” she glanced at the low cut of her red dress, “this will get his attention.”

“Oh yeah, that’s a lot less brazen.”

Linda O’Connor

Bio

Linda O’Connor started writing a few years ago when she needed a creative outlet other than subtly rearranging the displays at the local home dĂ©cor store. It turns out she loves writing romantic comedies and has a few more stories to tell. When not writing, she’s a physician at an Urgent Care Clinic (well, even when she is writing she’s a physician, and it shows up in her stories :D ). She hangs out at http://www.lindaoconnor.net.

Laugh every day. Love every minute.

Book Links: “Perfectly Crazy in Love” is one of 22 hot romances in the Sultry Nights Boxed Set.
Publisher: Romance Collections https://www.romancecollections.com/sultry-nights

Contact Linda O’Connor at: