Showing posts with label Grand Central. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grand Central. Show all posts

6/02/2015

E.E. Burke's BEST OF THE WEST with Award-winning Author Laura Drake

Today, my Best of the West guest is Laura Drake. A Texan at heart (now in residence), she writes women's fiction and contemporary Western romances featuring uber-hunky bull riders. Check this one out.

A Love as Bold as a Texas Sunset . . .

Ex-army medic Katya Smith has always healed other people's pain. Now she has to deal with her own. Taking a job as an athletic trainer on the Pro Bull Riding circuit seems like the perfect escape from her grief--except Katya doesn't know anything about bulls, and even less about the tough men who ride them. She doesn't expect to fall for the sport, or for one tantalizing cowboy who tumbles her defenses.

For rodeo champion Cam Cahill, fifteen years of bucking bulls have taken their toll on his body. Before he retires, he wants a final chance at the world title--and he doesn't need some New Age gypsy telling him how to do his job. But when the stunning trainer with the magical hands repairs more than his worn muscles, everything changes. Soon Cam finds himself trying to persuade Katya to forgive her past so she can build a future . . . with him.

Here's an excerpt

Katya’s heels echoed as she entered the white tiled hallway. The long, emotional day left her wilted, feeling as if she’d worn this suit for days. And she still had to nail this job. She rolled her shoulders. This next hour would be the crossroads of her future.

Buck up, soldier. She straightened her spine, tightened her core muscles, and marched.

She turned the corner of the white tiled hallway. Her step faltered. A cowboy strode ahead of her, head down, spurs jingling. What Maydelle had called chaps hugged his slightly bowed legs, fringes bouncing. She hadn’t seen a cowboy from the back before. Wide bands of smooth leather curved from between his thighs to cup his butt, creating a frame for a perfect picture. Not that the jeans were tight. They were a working man’s jeans, used and dusty. Which made them all the sexier.

Wowzer.

He held the vest the riders wore in one hand and a rope in the other, a bell on the end dragging behind. The bright red Western shirt he wore tightly tucked at his small waist widened to broad shoulders, his blond hair was cut short beneath the dark brown hat.

Nice. A muscle under her ribs fluttered. Walking behind men in those chaps would be a sweet perk of this job.

He hurled the rope in a sudden vicious burst. The bell clanged and echoed as it hit the wall.

“Shit!” The cowboy squatted, clutching his shoulder and swearing like a drill sergeant.

She almost stopped, to see if she could help. When he rolled his shoulder, she knew he hadn’t dislocated it.

Dr. Cody was waiting. If she didn’t nail this job, she’d never be able to help anyone.

He swore viciously.

“Well. Excuse me.” Figures. No matter how studly they may look, star athletes were at heart tantrum-throwing toddlers. She had two years of locker room stories to prove it. New sport, same infantile behavior.

“Pardon me, ma’am.”

He sounded sincere, but she glanced back, just to be sure.

God save the world from baby-faced men. Washed, blue-sky eyes with sun-squint lines at their corners, a strong jaw, and full lips. Lips, that as she watched, quirked as his eyes took a long, slow trip up her legs.

She faced forward so fast her neck popped. Why do the good-looking ones have to be assholes?

Meet Laura 


Laura Drake is a city girl who never grew out of her tomboy ways, or a serious cowboy crush. She writes both Women's Fiction and Romance.

She sold her Sweet on a Cowboy series, romances set in the world of professional bull riding, to Grand Central. The Sweet Spot (May 2013), Nothing Sweeter (Jan 2014) and Sweet on You (August 2014). The Sweet Spot won the 2014 Romance Writers of America®   RITA® award in the Best First Book category.

Her 'biker-chick' novel, Her Road Home, sold to Harlequin's Superromance line (August, 2013) and has expanded to three more stories set in the same small town. The Reasons to Stay released August, 2014.

In 2014, Laura realized a lifelong dream of becoming a Texan and is currently working on her accent. She gave up the corporate CFO gig to write full time. She's a wife, grandmother, and motorcycle chick in the remaining waking hours.

Website:  http://LauraDrakeBooks.com
Twitter:  @PBRWriter
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LauraDrakeBooks
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/247709.Laura_Drake

E.E.: What’s the first book you remember reading?
Laura: Aside from the obligatory Dick and Jane stuff, I remember getting Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry for my birthday. Loved the story, and especially the watercolor paintings of that round-belly pinto with flowers woven in her mane, standing on a beach with a blue sky background. Sigh. Horse stories were like crack to a horse-crazy little girl from Michigan!

E.E. What sound or noise do you love? 
Laura: The sound of water. Fountains, rain, the ocean . . . but my favorite is the sound of water, chuckling over rocks in a stream. I fly fish (catch and release only-and I still feel sorry about hurting the trout!), I think fully half the reason is just to be out in nature with the shadows of leaves sliding over me, and the sound of the water… Oh, this is making me want to go fishing!

E.E.: What do you do to unwind and relax? 
Laura: Aside from fishing, I love to ride my motorcycle. I rode 100,000 miles behind my husband before learning to ride my own, and I now have more than 100k under my belt!  All our vacations were taken on the motorcycles at one time and we were putting more than 10k a year on them. I’ve been to all the Western states, and Western Canada as well. It’s an amazing way to see the country. Your destination is just an excuse to go – the important part is the journey going there! 

E.E.: Do you have stories that inspired your books?
Laura: Boy, do I have stories! In fact, the first book I wrote, Her Road Home (first book in my Widow’s Grove series), was sparked by coming around a sweeping turn on the back of my husband’s motorcycle in Central California, and seeing an old Victorian on a grassy hill all by itself, shabby and abandoned. Its white paint was gray with age, but it was still regal, sitting atop that hill. I wanted to stop and buy it. Hubby nixed that idea, so I gave it a fictional family, instead.

E.E.: What one thing about your hero drives his heroine crazy? And what one thing about your heroine drives her hero nuts?
Laura: In Twice in a Blue Moon, my heroine, Indigo Blue, makes Danovan DiCarlo nuts because he wants her - but not only is she his boss, she’s a widow, grieving for her septuagenarian husband. Why would a Hollywood ‘arm-candy’ wife want to run a winery, when she admits to knowing nothing of the business? She doesn’t even drink, for cripes sakes! He just doesn’t ‘get’ her at all. Danovan makes Indigo crazy because he keeps lying to her! Every time she relaxes, and starts trusting and caring for him, she discovers another untruth. And a lie out of kindness is still a lie.

E.E.: If you were given a chance to travel to the past where would you go?
Laura: The old West, of course! But I’d want to come back as a man – I’m not sure I’m tough enough to be a woman back then. I’d just love to know what it was really like. 

Cribs Birdcage, licensed under GFDL via Wikipedia
The best glimpse I ever had of that past was when I visited the Birdcage Theatre in Tombstone, Arizona. Have you ever been? It is amazing. It looks like the patrons locked it up and walked away, a hundred years ago. There are poker tables on the main floor, a stage up front with the original red velvet drapes, dusty and falling apart. On both sides, above your head, are the ‘cribs’ where the soiled doves plied their trade. Oh. My. Gosh. Each was about seven feet long, and five feet deep, and had only curtains covering the view to the floor below! Can you imagine? Below the stage is a small room where the world’s longest poker game was held. One continuous game went on there for 8 years, 5 months, and 3 days! If you ever get the chance to visit, don’t pass it up.

E.E.: What dreams have been realized as a result of your writing?
Laura: I’ve been lucky enough to have a bunch of them – from signing at conferences to meeting real live fans (they like me! They really like me!) But the biggest thrill of my life (but don’t tell my husband, he thinks he is) was winning the RITA for Best First Book at the RWA National conference last year! In case you don’t know, the RITA is the ‘Oscar’ of the Romance writing industry, and they are given away at a black-tie dinner for 2,000. 

I figured it was my only chance in my life to legitimately ‘go glam’, so I rented a sequined dress that looked like molten gold in the lights – when they called my name, I couldn’t believe it was actually happening! It was the high point of my life. Here’s a link to my acceptance speech, and that gorgeous dress! 


E.E.: What drew you to write in the genre(s) you do?
Laura: I write romance and Women’s Fiction with uplifting outcomes. Books have sustained me through some very hard times in my life. I’d like others to know that though it may not seem like it in those moments, things do get better, and there’s always an HEA just waiting to happen . . .

Today, Laura will offer three autographed copies of Sweet on You (mailed in the U.S. only). Just comment and enter the drawing.

Where would go on a "dream trip? and why?"

a Rafflecopter giveaway

8/20/2012

Get Lost in darkest London with Kristen Callihan



As long as there is a Moonglow. 



Once the seeds of desire are sown... 
Finally free of her suffocating marriage, widow Daisy Ellis Craigmore is ready to embrace the pleasures of life that have long been denied her. Yet her new-found freedom is short lived. A string of unexplained murders has brought danger to Daisy’s door, forcing her to turn to the most unlikely of saviors...

Their growing passion knows no bounds... 
Ian Ranulf, the Marquis of Northrup, has spent lifetimes hiding his primal nature from London society. But now a vicious killer threatens to expose his secrets. Ian must step out of the shadows and protect the beautiful, fearless Daisy, who awakens in him desires he thought long dead. As their quest to unmask the villain draws them closer together, Daisy has no choice but to reveal her own startling secret and Ian must face the undeniable truth: Losing his heart to Daisy may be the only way to save his soul.

Raves for Firelight and Moonglow


"Top Pick! 4 12/ Stars! Darkest London glows with the light of Callihan's creativity...Callihan sets the mark for a new style of paranormal historical." (Moonglow- RT Book Reviews )

"Compulsively readable...a compelling Victorian paranormal with heart and soul." (Firelight- Publishers Weekly, starred review )

"Beauty and the Beast meets Phantom of the Opera (with hints of Carrie and an abundance of Egyptian mythology) in this gripping, intoxicating story, simmering with incendiary sensuality and featuring a heroine who risks all to save the man she loves. An exceptional debut and the first of what promises to be a compelling series." (Firelight- Library Journal, starred review )

“Dark, violent, and addictively enthralling, this exceptionally steamy tale is a worthy sequel to Callihan’s stunning Firelight and a perfect lure for Winterblaze,” (Moonglow- Library Journal)


More about Kristen


Kristen Callihan is a child of the 80's, which means she's worn neon skirts, black-lace gloves, and combat boots (although never all at once) and can quote John Hughes movies with the best of them. A life long daydreamer, she finally realized that the characters in her head needed a proper home and thus hit the keyboard. She believes that falling in love is one of the headiest experiences a person can have, so naturally she writes romance. Her love of superheroes, action movies, and history led her to write historical paranormals. She lives in the Washington D.C. area and, when not writing, looks after two children, one husband, and a dog -- the fish can fend for themselves.

Jillian: How often to you get lost in a story?
Kristen: Not as much as I used to, unfortunately. Nowadays, work takes up a lot of my time. Still, there is nothing quite like getting drawn into a good book. Hours will slip past and I’m not aware of it. There is so much power in that.
Jillian: I know the feeling...I wish there were more hours in the day just to enjoy reading.

Jillian: What’s your favorite cartoon character?
Kristen: Bugs Bunny. Hands down. He lived great adventures, was witty, devious, and almost always came out on top. But when he failed, he let it go.

Jillian: Where do you read and how often?
Kristen: I read either curled up on my couch or in bed. I’m a bit of a freak when it comes to reading in that I average about 70-100 words per hour. So, when I’m not too busy, I’ll read a book a night. Heh, they help me unwind.

Jillian: Is writing or story-telling easier for you?
Kristen: Hmm… that’s an interesting one. It depends on the story. If we’re talking about the stories I write down, then writing is much easier. It get to delve into a world, discover its dark corners, and play around for a while. However, when I put my kids to bed, I’ll say, okay, give me the character and what he/she is doing at this moment. Then I’ll make up a story from there. That’s a great challenge because I have to make it up on the fly, make it short, have a moral, and a happy ending –it’s a bedtime story after all.

Jillian: Do you read reviews of your books? If so, do you pay any attention to them, or let them influence your writing?
Kristen: I read the ones that pop up in my tweet stream from time to time, but always the reviews people send me. It would be an insult to them not to. There are so many books out there. For someone to chose to read mine and take the time to write a review, be it good or bad, is something I appreciate deeply. But I don’t read the negative ones. Ever. I know they’d hurt me or mess with my head, so it’s just healthier for me to stay away. I also think that trying to please people is a lot like chasing rainbows. I’ll never please everybody, so I just try to write the best story I can and hope readers like it. Then there is the fact that the book is done. I can’t go back and time and change things. So why beat yourself up for that?
Jillian: My agent's advice on reviews: Believe everything the good reviews say and nothing in the bad ones. Lol!

Jillian: What does it mean to love someone?
Kristen: As a romance writer, this is what I explore with every book I write. It’s a hard thing to pin down, isn’t it? We can say, oh love means this, that, and the other thing. But I think it can be different for each person. Love can give you strength, or make you afraid. It can make you feel secure, or unhinged. The only constant I can find in my stories is that being in love wakes you up. Often we sleepwalk throughout life, you know, go through the motions of it. But love is such a powerful emotion that one can’t help but be pulled into the here and now.

Kristen has a question for commenters: Where is your favorite place to read? Two copies of MOONGLOW to commenters chosen at random (can be international).

Kristen's contact information:


@Krist10callihan
Facebook: Kristen Callihan 


***Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America  addresses only. If an Advanced Reading Copy (ARC) is available, the author may utilize that option for International participants. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants.



7/06/2012

Let's Misbehave with Molly

AIN'T MISBEHAVING

Grand Central Publishing
ISBN: 978-1-4555-1572-1
Sometimes even good girls need to be a little bad...
Marla Jean Bandy might be down, but she's not out. Even though her no-good ex-husband left her for another woman--a Bookmobile-driving librarian twenty years her senior--Marla Jean won't settle for another lonely night. She's not ready for Mr. Right, but why not have a little fun with Mr. Right Now? The only wrench in her plan is her childhood crush. Jake-and the memory of the one toe-curling kiss they shared on a hot summer night years ago.
~ ~ ~ ~
“Stop it, Donny Joe.”
“Come on, Marla Jean. I thought you wanted to.”
An hour earlier she would have agreed with him. An hour earlier she wiggled into her tight red dress, tugged on her favorite cowboy boots, and headed out to the local watering hole sure of exactly what she wanted. An hour earlier she’d left her house with every intention of finding a willing man and having her way with him.

Lately she’d felt dried up, dustier than a ghost town in an old Western movie. The swinging saloon doors of her nether portal were rusted shut from lack of use. In other words, Miss Kitty hadn’t seen any action in a long, long time.

And now, because she’d decided to rectify the situation, she, Marla Jean Bandy, found herself sitting in the front seat of a Ford pick-up truck with Donny Joe Ledbetter’s hand stuck halfway up her skirt.

But it didn’t feel right somehow, and that really pissed her off.
Sex had always been something she’d embraced enthusiastically right up until the moment her husband dumped her for another woman. If he’d dumped her for some young bimbo, it would have been embarrassing and humiliating. She would have been mad, outraged even, but no — Bradley left her for Libby Comstock, the fifty-four year old never-been-married librarian who drove the Bookmobile. She’d started to wonder why he ran out the door like a kid who’d just heard the ice cream truck whenever it turned the corner onto their street. But she’d always told him he should read more, and this was the one time in their six year marriage he decided to listen to her.

Libby seduced him with the Russian classics, challenging him to stretch his mind and feed his soul. He tackled Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Brodsky, Pushkin, and eventually he tackled Ms. Comstock, too. The fact that he’d left her for someone twenty years older, frumpier, smarter, and fluent in five languages was something she’d never forgive him for.

But back to Donny Joe. He was a stud. A big fish in a small pond. A lover of all things female, and his ability to make the earth move was heralded far and wide by most every woman in and around Everson, Texas.

GOOD GOLLY…WHO’S MISS MOLLY?
Molly Cannon lives a charmed life in Texas with her husband, Mr. Wonderful and her extremely large cat Nelson. When she's not writing, she spends her days reading, taking dance classes with MW, and watching every kind of sporting event imaginable. Molly has three grown children, all married to terrific people and two wonderful grandchildren. Life is good!

ARE YOU ROCKIN’ & A ROLLIN' with the Q&A?

ANGI: How often to you get lost in a story?
MOLLY: Every day that ends in Y! Either the story I’m reading or the story I’m writing.

ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading?
MOLLY: I was reading before I started school. It must have been my sister’s first grade reader. I didn’t understand why Dick and Jane were running all the time and why I had to see it.

ANGI: What’s your favorite “love” word?
MOLLY: My favorite love word is “Wuv”. As in, I wuv you, sweetie pie, sugar pea, butter noodle. Man, how hot is a hero who talks baby talk? No?

ANGI: Can you tell us about a real-life hero you’ve met?
MOLLY: When our house burned down the firefighters and Red Cross volunteers were super heroes as far as I was concerned. And all our friends and family that stepped in to help were heroes, too.

ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
MOLLY: I always loved the Ugly Duckling. I remember as a child, my sisters and I sang about the poor little fellow at shows we performed at orphanages. Quack, Quack. That was my part. I like stories of transformation and acceptance. And any day now I expect to turn into a swan.

ANGI: What’s your favorite cartoon character?
MOLLY: All the characters on The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Sherman and Mr. Peabody, Natasha and Boris, Dudley Do-Right. Fractured Fairytales.

ANGI: What turns you off like nothing else?
MOLLY: Laughter at another person’s expense.

ANGI: Is there a playlist you’d recommend for reading your latest release?
MOLLY: I don’t listen to a lot of country music, but this book takes place in a small Texas town. So, with that in mind: Give in to Me – Garrett Hedlund, Anything from The Goat Rodeo Sessions by Yo Yo Ma, Jason Aldean with Kelly Clarkson - Don't You Wanna Stay, Sunny Sweeney- Please be San Antone.

ANGI: Where do you read and how often?
MOLLY: I don’t read in the shower. Everywhere else is fair game. Are you asking me how often I shower?

ANGI: What sound or noise do you love?
MOLLY: I enjoy the sound of a back-up alarm. I always go beep-beep-beep along with it just for fun.
ANGI: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
MOLLY: Gypsy. Natalie Wood, Rosalind Russell. Alas, my plans to be in Burlesque didn’t pan out.

ANGI:
Fairy Tale or Action Adventure?
MOLLY: Fairy Tale

ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
MOLLY: It involved a raisin telling a story to a bunch of grapes. They were his grandchildren.

ANGI: Who’s your favorite villain?
MOLLY: Mags Bennett in the Justified TV series. That woman was creepy!
ANGI: What is your biggest vice?
MOLLY: Why? What have you heard?
ANGI: Shucks, I was sworn to secrecy.

ANGI: Is there a “Blooper” in your story (it may have been changed before printing)?
MOLLY: The dog in my book was originally a cat. I live in fear that somewhere in my book that dog will be purring.

ANGI: How is it working with hot guys and sexy women all day?
MOLLY: You call this working?


ANGI’S GOTTA ASK: Since we’re in the same writing chapter, Miss Molly…I know that you and your hubby are dancers. Ballroom and others… What’s your favorite couples’ dance and to what song?
MOLLY’S GOTTA ANSWER: You can probably guess just by looking at us that we like to Rumba. The sensual dance of love. Let’s Stay Together by Al Green is a great song. I-I-I’m so-o in love with you. Or Besame Mucho works, too! It’s all in the hip action.

FIND MOLLY
Contact  Website  Facebook  Twitter  @cannonmolly    Good Golly,Miss Molly  

UP NEXT: CRAZY LITTLE THING CALLED LOVE due to be released April 2013

MOLLY’S GOT A GREAT GIVE-AWAY TODAY !!
TWO copies of AIN’T MISBEHAVING

Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only unless specifically mentioned in the post. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants. Winners of drawings are responsible for checking this site in a timely manner. If prizes are not claimed in a timely manner, the author may not have a prize available. Get Lost In A Story cannot be responsible for an author's failure to mail the listed prize. GLIAS does not automatically pass email addresses to guest authors unless the commenter publicly posts their email address.

DON’T FORGET to FOLLOW us on Twitter (#GetLostStories) or LIKE us on Facebook to keep up with all our guest authors and their prizes. Come back tomorrow and Sunday when I’m back again to host Kara Lennox. And next week on Wednesday when we kick off HARLEQUIN INTRIGUE WEEK. ~Angi

GOT A QUESTION YOU’D LIKE TO ASK YOUR FANS?
I love movies and had trouble naming just one. Tell me your favorite movie-and why you love it. Or if you don’t have a favorite movie, tell me a joke.

My favorite joke: A horse walks into a bar. The bartender asks, “Why the long face?”

7/27/2011

Vicky Dreiling

HOW TO SEDUCE A SCOUNDREL Hachette/Grand Central: Forever Imprint ISBN: 978-0-446-56538-7
SCOUNDRELS, RAKES, AND ROGUES BEWARE . . .
Lady Julianne Gatewick is in a pickle. It started when her brother’s best friend—for whom she’s long nursed a secret tendre—agreed to act as her guardian for the Season, only to seduce her with a risquĆ© waltz.

But when the music stopped and the expectant ton waited for the Earl of Hawkfield to claim her as his own, he made his disinterest clear. Rather than succumb to humiliation, Julianne does what any recently discarded, wickedly witty young miss would do. She secretly pens a lady’s guide to enticing unrepentant rakes . . . and it becomes the hottest scandal in London.

Every honorable rake knows that friends’ sisters are forbidden. But suddenly Julianne has a spark of mischief in her eyes that Hawk can’t resist. Try as he might to push her away, he spends his days listening for her laughter and his nights dreaming of her kisses. He’s always avoided innocents and their marriage-minded mothers, but has the man least likely to wed finally met his match?

ALL’S FAIR IN LOVE AND WAR Read the Excerpt
~ ~ ~ VICKY DREILING is a confirmed historical romance junkie and Anglophile. Frequent business trips to the UK allowed her to indulge her passion for all things Regency England. Bath, Stonehenge, and Spencer House are among her favorite places.



Her first two novels HOW TO MARRY A DUKE and HOW TO SEDUCE A SCOUNDREL debuted on Nielsen Bookscan’s Top 100 Romance List. And yes, she really did set off a security alarm in Windsor Castle.
~ ~ ~ A LITTLE HISTORY ABOUT VICKY: ANGI: How often to you get lost in a story?
VICKY: Daily. I wear noise cancellation headphones & listen to music while I write. When I’m in the story zone, nothing else exists. My daughter said a team of robbers could invade, and I probably wouldn’t notice. LOL!
ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading?
VICKY: The Cat in the Hat
ANGI: What’s your favorite “love” word?
VICKY: Je t’aime. (That’s French for I love you.)
ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
VICKY: Cinderella – I love when the girl least likely wins!
ANGI: What’s your favorite cartoon character?
VICKY: The Tasmanian Devil
ANGI: What turns you off like nothing else?
VICKY: I have zero tolerance for cruelty and bullying.
ANGI: Is there a playlist you’d recommend for reading your latest release?
VICKY: I have playlists on the Fun Stuff page on my website for all three of my books, including HOW TO RAVISH A RAKE, due out in spring 2012. Want to listen?
ANGI: Where do you read and how often?
VICKY: I read in bed most nights. Sigh – I do wish I had more time to read.
ANGI: Fairy Tale or Action Adventure?
VICKY: Fairy Tale
ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
VICKY: I wrote a short story in grade school about a bear.
ANGI: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
VICKY: Pretty Woman
ANGI: Who’s your favorite villain?
VICKY: Richard III
ANGI: Be honest, when reading...do you put yourself in the heroine’s role?
VICKY: Not when I’m reading, but definitely when I’m writing.
ANGI: Is writing or story-telling easier for you?
VICKY: If by “writing,” you mean constructing sentences, I don’t think about it. I just write. I do have an English degree, and I have spent considerable time studying story structure. But when I write a novel, I’m focused entirely on the characters and their journeys. At some point in writing my novels, I will usually hit a roadblock. This is when I analyze what I’ve established thus far. More important, I look at the characters’ development up to that point, which helps me envision the book going forward. Finally, I always keep the premise of the book in mind in every scene. Premise acts as a lighthouse for me when I go astray.
ANGI: What’s something you’d like to tell your fans?
VICKY: Thank you so much for all the messages and emails telling me how much you enjoy my books. As a new author, this means a great deal to me.

ANGI’S GOTTA ASK: I was taking a look at your website and found a playlist for HOW TO RAVISH A RAKE. Can you let us know when the next installment will be available? But I noticed that there’s some very modern music … DOLLHOUSE … Please tell us a little how this will fit in with Book #3. **grin**
VICKY’S GOTTA ANSWER: I listen to both modern and classical music while I write my books. The playlists often feature songs with lyrics that are pertinent to plot points. For example, the playlist for HOW TO SEDUCE A SCOUNDREL features a song called Dark Waltz by Haley Westenra that I listened to while writing a scene featuring a waltz. Also, I choose theme songs for my books. Better Man by Pearl Jam is the theme song for HOW TO SEDUCE A SCOUNDREL. I Believe in You/Je Crois en Toi by Il Divo and Celine Dion is the theme song for HOW TO MARRY A DUKE. As for Dollhouse and HOW TO RAVISH A RAKE, I can’t tell you yet, because that’s a spoiler. *grin* HOW TO RAVISH A RAKE is slated for publication in April 2012.

WILL YOU HAVE A DRAWING FROM THOSE LEAVING COMMENTS? Yes, I’ll give away a copy of HOW TO SEDUCE A SCOUNDREL along with Romance Trading Cards for both my books to one reader – US & Canada only.
Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only. If an electronic Advanced Reading Copy (ARC) is available, the author may utilize that option for International participants. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants.

GOT A QUESTION YOU’D LIKE TO ASK YOUR FANS? What sort of hero do you like best and why? I’m fond of rakes and charmers, but there are other popular types as well.

READERS can find Vicky at her Website; Contact her: vicky@vickydreiling.com
Friend her on Facebook or follow her on Twitter.

DON’T FORGET to LIKE GLIAS on FACEBOOK and FOLLOW us on TWITTER or just catch all our guests and their new releases. Drop by Thursday for author April Dawn & Friday for author Jennifer Haymore.
Til next week! ~ Angi

7/13/2011

Jane Graves

Black Ties and Lullabies
Grand Central Publishing
ISBN: 978-0446568470






A good girl can be bad for one night . . .
Bernadette Hogan doesn’t make mistakes. Not when it comes to caring for her mother, and not at her job protecting Texas’s most eligible—and infuriating—bachelor. Maybe that’s why she’s overcome with guilt after one tiny indiscretion: a passionate fling with her boss that’s left her confused, intrigued . . . and pregnant.


but can a bad boy be good for a lifetime?
To self-made millionaire Jeremy Bridges, women are like fine wine: if held for too long, they sour. But one wild night with Bernadette changed all that. She makes him laugh, she makes him think, and soon she’s going to make him a father. For the first time, Jeremy wants to be a one-woman man. So how can he convince the fiercely independent Bernadette he’s ready to change from partying playboy to dependable dad—and become the loving husband she deserves?




~ ~ ~ GET LOST IN THE STORY ~ ~ ~



"You're every bit as possessive of me as you are of this baby," Bernie said. "And, for that matter, everything else within the sound of your voice. You need to work on that, Bridges. It's a real character flaw."


"One vice at a time," he said. "Let's deal with my jealousy issues first. Come closer."


The intensity of his gaze drew her in, enticing her to lean toward him.


"Closer," he said.


When she didn't move, he took hold of her arm and pulled her forward until their lips were only inches apart. Suddenly in his space, she felt every bit of the magnetism he held for the women of the world and realized she wasn't immune to it. She'd never be immune to it. No matter how maddening his arrogance could be, no matter now much she protested to the contrary, she'd be drawn to this man until her dying breath.


"Listen up, Bernie," he said softly. "Are you listening?"


He was so close now that she could feel his breath as he spoke, and each second seemed to drag on endlessly. The August heat, even after dark, permeated the car, adding to the feeling that everything was moving in slow motion.


"I'm listening," she said.


"I told you the truth. I was jealous. Don't ask me why, because I'm still not completely sure myself. All I know is that by time I left that museum, I'd already decided that if any man was going to touch you tonight…" His voice dropped to a near whisper. "It was going to be me."



~ ~ ~


Jane Graves is the author of eighteen contemporary romance novels. She is a seven time finalist for Romance Writers of America's Rita Award, the industry's highest honor, and is the recipient of two National Readers' Choice Awards, the Booksellers' Best Award, and the Golden Quill, among others. Jane lives in the Dallas area with her husband of twenty-nine years and a beautiful but crafty cat who rules the household with one paw tied behind her back.



~ ~ ~ QUESTIONS ~ ~ ~
ANGI: How often do you get lost in a story?
JANE: Every day, at least for a little while. I've been a bookaholic since I was four years old. But—here's the problem—my reading habits have changed considerably. I'm a real geek for the craft of writing, and the more I learned about it as the years went on, the more I found it hard to read as a reader instead of as a writer. I've read some great books lately, but instead of saying, "That was a wonderful story," I find myself saying, "That author did a really great job with plot and characterization." Frankly, it's pretty frustrating. I remember the days when I could immerse myself in a book and not come up for air until I turned the last page, and I wish I could get back to that. But maybe my examination of every book I read in minute detail is my own way of getting lost in a story!


ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading?
JANE: One of the Sally, Dick and Jane books. Am I dating myself? My brother brought one home from his first grade class. Even though I was a year and a half younger than he was, I learned to read that year by sitting on the sofa beside him and watching him learn to read. By the time I hit the first grade, I wasn't just reading stories. I was writing them. You'll find that a lot with authors—we get the burn to write at a very young age.


ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
JANE: The Ugly Duckling. How many people start out in this life thinking they're somehow not as good as everyone else, only to blossom into somebody wonderful they never expected to become?


ANGI: What turns you off like nothing else?
JANE: People who talk on their cell phones at the top of their lungs as if I'm remotely interested in hearing their entire conversation. I once sat in a Starbucks and listened to a guy arguing with his mother over the phone. Loudly."That's why nobody has anything to do with you, Mother! You're so rude!" Some people just aren't very self aware, are they?


ANGI: Is there a playlist you’d recommend for reading your latest release?
JANE: That's hard to say, because I can't listen to music when I write. I hear about how much it helps other authors get into the mood of a story, but I can't listen to organized sound and write at the same time. And if there are lyrics, my mind goes straight to them and I can't concentrate. That goes hand in hand with the fact that I'm a terrible multitasker. I'm lucky to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time. White noise is fine. Somebody can be running a leaf blower right outside my office window, and it doesn't bother me a bit. A bomb could go off beside me, and I'd keep on writing. But music? It takes me right out of the book I'm trying to write.


ANGI: Where do you read and how often?
JANE: Believe it or not, I read the most when I'm sitting at my desk in my office. It isn't very often that I carve out time to go flop somewhere just to read, but throughout the day I'll grab a book or my iPhone where I've downloaded books and sneak in a few chapters. I read a lot of books that way!


ANGI: What sound or noise do you love?
JANE: Last week, our ancient, decrepit dishwasher finally bit the dust. We got a new one. I had no idea they make dishwashers now that make NO SOUND AT ALL. You can't hear them running! After years of listening to all that banging and swishing and squeaking, the sound of dishwasher silence is truly a beautiful thing.


ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
JANE: When I was in the first grade, I wrote fun new adventures for Flicka from My Friend Flicka. I loved horses, and I loved to write. I also illustrated my books. The artist in me went by the wayside, but it looks as if I stuck to the writing.


ANGI: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
JANE: I have many, and they're all different. For instance, I loved The Shawshank Redemption. That's probably number one. But I also loved Enchanted. A prison movie versus a fairy tale. But for me, the genre is irrelevant. It's all about whether it draws me in and holds my attention. If I don't look at my watch for two hours, it's a good movie.
Oh—another favorite movie? Snakes on a Plane. People think I'm nuts, but I thought it was hilarious. In that same goofy, campy vein, my daughter tells me Zombies, Zombies, Zombies is worth a look, too. Zombies times three. How could that possibly be anything but a cinematic classic?


ANGI: Be honest, when reading...do you put yourself in the heroine’s role?
JANE: We're back to my frustrating inability to read as a reader instead of a writer. I'm much more likely to admire the author's ability to create a realistic, fully-rounded character than I am to imagine myself as the heroine. Considering some of the wonderful heroes being written today, maybe that's a curse!


ANGI: Is writing or story-telling easier for you?
JANE: Storytelling is way easier. When I'm just telling a story, people will forget my repetition, mundane word usage, and non-linear plot and just remember the guts of the story. Writing, on the other hand, is hard for me. Very hard, and very slow. When my story is set down in ink, copied tens of thousands of times, and distributed all over the world, I don't have the luxury of sticking in all that extraneous stuff I always do when I'm just telling a story.


ANGI: What’s something you’d like to tell your fans?
JANE: The hero of Black Ties and Lullabies is Jeremy Bridges, the womanizing multimillionaire from Hot Wheels and High Heels. I've received more reader mail requesting his story than any other character I've ever written. It's odd, really, because he was a villain of sorts in Hot Wheels, tempting the heroine in ways he shouldn't have. But I think what readers saw was a hint of something deeper inside him at the end of the book, and they were interested in seeing it revealed. When I was trying to decide who his heroine should be, I went with the woman who was right under his nose—his tough, no-nonsense bodyguard, Bernadette Hogan. After a night of totally unexpected passion, what could be worse for a playboy millionaire and a woman who's never even considered motherhood than to find out they're having a baby together?








And I hope you'll watch for



Heartstrings and Diamond Rings,


too, which will hit the shelves on September 27.









ANGI’S GOTTA ASK: So, Jane, if cost wasn’t a factor…is there one place you’d like to travel? What would you do and why THAT location?
JANE’S GOTTA ANSWER: The moon. There I'll weigh one sixth of what I do on earth, so I'll never have to diet again. You did say cost wasn't a factor.



GOT A QUESTION YOU’D LIKE TO ASK YOUR FANS?
What trends do you see on the horizon where romance novels are concerned? What subgenres do you see too much of? Not enough of? If you could tailor a novel to your exact preference, what would it be?



WILL YOU HAVE A DRAWING FROM THOSE LEAVING COMMENTS?
Yes. I'll give away two copies of Black Ties and Lullabies.
Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only. If an electronic Advanced Reading Copy (ARC) is available, the author may utilize that option for International participants. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants.


FIND JANE AT:
Website: janegraves.com
Twitter: @JaneGraves
Facebook: JaneGravesAuthor

DON’T FORGET to come back tomorrow for a fun interview with Young Adult author Rosemary Clement-Moore. Follow us @GetLostInAStory; Like us on Facebook/Get Lost In A Story and come back daily for your favorite authors and their give-aways. Every day’s someone different with lots of fun. ~Angi


2/15/2011

Elizabeth Hoyt

Get Lost in This Story…




Their lives were perfect . . .

Lady Hero Batten, the impeccable sister of the Duke of Wakefield has everything a woman could want, including the perfect fiancĆ©. True, the Marquis of Mandeville is a trifle dull and has no sense of humor, but that doesn’t bother Hero. Until she meets his notorious brother . . .

Until they met each other.

Griffin Remmington, Lord Reading is far from perfect—and he likes it that way. How he spends his days is a mystery, but all London knows he engages in the worst sorts of drunken revelry at night. Hero takes an instant dislike to him, and Griffin thinks that Hero, with her charities and faultless manners, much too perfect for society, let alone his brother. Yet their near-constant battle of wits soon sparks desire—desire which causes their carefully constructed worlds to come tumbling down. As Hero’s wedding nears, and Griffin’s enemies lay plans to end their dreams forever, can two imperfect people find perfect true love?



I am thrilled to host one of my favorite historical authors, Elizabeth Hoyt, on the blog today. I picked up her Princes Trilogy back in 2007 and have been hooked ever since. Her latest novel, Notorious Pleasures, was recently released and has already hit the New York Times Best Seller List (Congratulations Elizabeth!!!), so we know she is a favorite of many readers! Her next book, Scandalous Desires, comes out in November.

Also, Elizabeth is giving away an iPad on her Facebook site. See at the end of this interview how to link to her page for your chance to win!

So now, let's hear from Elizabeth herself…

Elizabeth Hoyt is a New York Times bestselling author of historical romance. She also writes deliciously fun contemporary romance under the name Julia Harper. Elizabeth lives in central Illinois with three untrained dogs, two angelic but bickering children, and one long-suffering husband.

Heather: How often do you get lost in a story?
Elizabeth: I read everyday, but I only read a really, really good book like every three months or so.

Heather: What’s your favorite kind of story to get lost in?
Elizabeth: Romances, mysteries, and urban fantasy. Well, actually, mostly just Jim Butcher’s urban fantasies. ;-)

Heather: Where do you read and how often?
Elizabeth: In bed every night.

Heather: What’s the first book you remember reading?
Elizabeth: Little House in the Big Woods.

Heather: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
Elizabeth: Some Like it Hot

Heather: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
Elizabeth: Rapunzel

Heather: Do you write while listening to music? If so what kind?
Elizabeth: Oh, Yes! Pop. Low pop. Recently I’ve been listening to a lot of Meatloaf when I write love scenes. ;-)

Heather: If you couldn’t be a writer anymore, what profession would you take up?
Elizabeth: Nothing. I’m sadly unqualified for any other profession.

Heather: What do you do to unwind and relax?
Elizabeth: Gardening and walking my dogs.

Heather: Do you read reviews of your books?
Elizabeth: Nope.

Heather: What dreams have been realized as a result of your writing?
Elizabeth: Are you kidding? I write full time! At home! Or at a coffee shop! People pay me to write—in my p.j.’s sometimes! My entire writing career is kind of surreal. Also, I can now afford to send my kids to college—always a good thing. ;-)

Heather: Tea or Coffee? And how do you take it?
Elizabeth: Both, depending on my mood. I take both with milk.

Heather: What’s in your refrigerator right now?
Elizabeth: Three jars of capers. You never want to run out of capers.

Heather: Dog person or cat person?
Elizabeth: Dog! I have three dogs, which is waaaay too many. Some days I look around and wonder where all these dogs came from.

Heather’s GOTTA ASK – Elizabeth’s GOTTA ANSWER J

Heather: So, I noticed on your website that you are an avid gardener, which I envy. (I have a garden stone in my rocked over garden that says “I tried, but it died”). What is your most favorite plant or flower and have you incorporated your passion into any of your stories?

Elizabeth: It’s hard for gardeners to pick just one favorite plant, but in early spring I look forward to lavender species crocuses—one of the first flowers to bloom in my garden.

In The Raven Prince, my first book, there’s a ruined secret garden that’s kind of symbolic for Edward and Anna’s relationship. And Edward gives Anna a dozen dormant roses, which for any avid gardener would be a wonderful gift. For anyone else, they’d look a lot like a bunch of dead, thorny branches. ;-)


GOT A QUESTION YOU’D LIKE TO ASK YOUR FANS?

Which secondary character in the Maiden Lane series would you like to see in a future book?

WILL YOU HAVE A DRAWING FROM THOSE LEAVING COMMENTS?**

Yup, I’ll give away a signed copy of Notorious Pleasures.

Thanks so much for being with us today, Elizabeth! Where can your fans learn more about you on the web?

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Elizabeth-Hoyt/263534612300?ref=search&sid=1033016156.428653851 (please note that I’m giving away an iPad on my Facebook page in Feb.)
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16202.Elizabeth_Hoyt


**Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North American addresses only. If an Advanced Reading Copy (ARC) is available, the author may utilize that option for International participants. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants.

Come back again tomorrow, when Angi hosts Bronwen Evans!