Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Women who DARE by Tessa Dare



Thank you so much for inviting me to guest blog today! Yesterday marked the official release of GODDESS OF THE HUNT, my debut historical romance and first in a back-to-back trilogy. Since you’ve been so kind as to schedule for three months running, I thought it might be fun to talk a little each time about the heroine of the current book.

First a word about my heroines in throughout the trilogy. They’re all quite young, they’re all very clever, and they each have something they passionately, desperately want. These young women are willing to pursue their dreams with body, mind, and heart—but they don’t always choose the wisest means of doing so. At least, not initially.

Goddess of the Hunt stars Lucy Waltham, a 19-year-old hoyden (Regency slang for tomboy) who’s been raised by her lackadaisical older brother, Henry. For eight years, she’s kept pace with Henry and his friends on their hunting excursions, determined to fit in as “one of the boys”. Lucy never cries, and she never backs down from a dare.

She’s grown into a bright, irrepressible, and often reckless young woman who eats heartily, shuns embroidery, and generally does as she pleases. And she’s been happy with that life—until she discovers the object of her eight-year infatuation, the divinely handsome Sir Toby Aldridge, is poised to marry a well-bred society beauty. Lucy’s determined to do whatever it takes to snare Toby for her own—be it adopting ladylike behavior or resorting to brazen seduction.

Basically, she thinks she must change herself to win the man of her dreams.

Little does Lucy suspect that very nearby, there’s a man who’ll love her just as she is: Jeremy Trescott, the Earl of Kendall. Well, to be fair, Jeremy hardly suspects it either. Their attraction takes them both by surprise—but it’s swift, undeniable, and far more powerful than any girlhood crush. Soon Lucy faces her most daunting challenge yet. She must give up what she wants and dare to love the intense, brooding man who is exactly what she needs.

So that’s Lucy! If you’d like to get to know her better, please visit my website to read an excerpt from Goddess of the Hunt. (http://www.tessadare.com/bookshelf/goddess-of-the-hunt)

I think we’ve probably all seen a friend (or our younger selves!) trying to change her appearance or personality to catch a man’s attention. Have you ever seen it work?

Answer Tessa's question to have a chance to win a signed copy of Goddess of The Hunt. One winner will be chosen from all who comment and leave their email addy!



Excerpt

Autumn, 1817

A knock on the door in the dead of night could only mean disaster.

Jeremy pulled a pair of worn breeches on under his nightshirt and stumbled toward the bedchamber door. A fire? He didn’t smell smoke. Perhaps a Waltham family emergency? An urgent message from his steward, maybe—unrest at Corbinsdale would not come as a surprise.

A memory assailed him, unbidden. Unnerving. His heart thudded wildly in his chest. He paused, clutching the door handle, cursing his body for recalling so quickly what he’d worked long years to forget.

Logic caught up to his racing pulse, reining it in. The dim glow of banked coals cast ominous shadows, but Jeremy forced the room into focus. This was not that night. He was in his usual bedchamber at Waltham Manor, not wandering Corbinsdale Woods. More than twenty years had passed, and he was no longer a boy. Whatever surprise awaited him on the other side of the door, he was fully equipped to face it.

When he slid back the rusted bolt and wrenched open the door, Jeremy was prepared for the worst.

“Hold still,” came the whispered command.

He had an instant to register a feminine silhouette, a tangle of dark curls, and two hands grasping his shoulders. Then Lucy Waltham, the younger sister of his oldest friend, popped up on her toes and pressed her lips to his with such force, he stumbled against the doorjamb.

Good Lord. The girl was kissing him.

Well, he thought ironically, he’d been prepared for the worst. And of the many kisses Jeremy Trescott had experienced in his nine-and-twenty years, this was, undoubtedly, the worst.

Lucy kissed with her lips perfectly puckered and her eyes open wide. And if she lacked in finesse, she compensated with bold enthusiasm. Her hands were everywhere at once—tangling in his hair, skimming his shoulders, exploring the broad expanse of his chest.

This wasn’t a kiss. It was a siege.


Furthermore, it was incomprehensible, wholly illogical, and a dozen different shades of wrong.

Somehow Jeremy’s hands found their way to her elbows, and he wrested himself from her eager embrace. “Lucy! What the devil do you think you’re doing?”

“Shhhh.” Her eyes darted to either side, scanning the darkened corridor. Then her gaze tilted back up to his, narrowing with a disturbing intensity, and Jeremy fancied briefly—absurdly—that someone had painted a target on his face.

“I’m practicing,” she whispered, her fingers tightening over his arms. “Let me try one more time.”

She swooped up for another kiss, and he instinctively ducked, pulling her into the room and shutting the door behind them. In a more rational moment, it might have occurred to him that the impropriety of kissing his host’s sister in the corridor would only be compounded by yanking her into his bedchamber. But Jeremy’s faculties of reason had temporarily vacated Waltham Manor.

Lucy had, quite literally, kissed him witless.

“Did it work, then?”

He stared at her, mute with confusion. Did what work? At the moment, it seemed that nothing worked, least of all his brain. Shock had frozen his limbs. He certainly couldn’t force an answer from his lips.

Stepping back, she crossed her arms over her crimson velvet dressing gown and surveyed his form boldly. As her gaze traveled downward, Jeremy grew uncomfortably aware of his own dishabille, from nightshirt to worn breeches to bare feet.

A satisfied smile spread across her face. “It must have worked. You did pull me into your bedchamber.” She reached for the door handle. “Very well, Jemmy. I suppose that’s enough practice. I’ll see you at breakfast.”

She cracked open the door. Jeremy put out a hand and slammed it shut.

Shooting him a glare, she grasped the handle with both hands and tugged. “I beg your pardon. I’ll be on my way, then.”

“No, you won’t.” He leaned his weight on the door, effectively bolting it closed. Lucy might be used to flouting her brother’s half-hearted attempts at guardianship, but Jeremy had four inches and two stone on Henry Waltham, not to mention an iron will. Lucy did not walk all over him.

He mustered his most autocratic, Earl-of-Kendall tone. “You are not going anywhere. You’re going to sit down and explain yourself.” She opened her mouth to object. He grabbed her by the elbow and steered her toward the chair. “But first,” he said, “I am going to have a drink.”

She stopped struggling under his grip and dropped gracelessly into the chair. “A drink,” she repeated. “Why didn’t I think of that? A drink would be just the thing, thank you.”

Shaking his head, Jeremy strode to the bar and poured a single glass of whiskey. He downed half the liquor in one greedy swallow, closing his eyes to savor the burn spreading down his throat. When he opened them again, he looked around to assure himself this was, indeed, the same Waltham Manor he’d been visiting each autumn since Cambridge. Roughhewn beams scored the sloping ceiling. Muted tapestries covered the walls, and an unfussy, timeworn carpet obliged his bare feet. The room had not altered in the past eight years, anymore than it likely had in the past one hundred.

In décor, in landscape, in the quartet of old friends enjoying their annual sporting holiday—Waltham Manor had remained a welcome constant in Jeremy’s life. Until this year, when everything had changed.

“Why couldn’t everything just go on as it was?” Lucy stirred the fire with a poker, sending swirls of agitated sparks into the air. “Why did Felix have to go and get married? He’s ruined everything.”

Jeremy drowned his reply with a sip of his drink. He would not have admitted it, but he rather agreed.

“It was all right when Henry got married,” she continued. “Marianne’s so busy with the children, at least she stays out of the way. But that shrew Felix married is going to expect to be entertained. And to make it all worse, she’s brought along her sister, that Sophia.”

“Mrs. Crowley-Cumberbatch and Miss Hathaway are, by all accounts, charming young ladies. One would think you’d be glad of their company.”

She threw him an incredulous look.

“Or not.” Truth be told, Jeremy wasn’t glad of their presence, either. There was nothing precisely offensive about Felix’s wife, Kitty, or her sister, Sophia. To the contrary, Sophia Hathaway was the epitome of an inoffensive, well-bred society beauty. A bit of meringue—insubstantial, but pleasing enough, if one’s tastes ran to sweet. As Toby’s apparently did.

Jeremy tossed back another swallow of whiskey and tasted the irony. Henry and Felix married, Toby on the verge … their bachelor’s retreat had become a family house party. Well, if all his friends were determined to shackle themselves in marriage, at least he would be in no imminent danger of joining them. All three ladies at Waltham Manor were safely accounted for.

The sound of fingers drumming wood interrupted his thoughts. “Do you intend to drink the whole bottle yourself?”

Unless, of course, one counted Lucy.

And he did not count Lucy. She was neither eligible, nor a lady. She was Henry’s much younger sister and ward, and she was Jeremy’s personal version of a biblical plague. She’d spent years devising ways to get under his skin. Now she was charging into his bedchamber and … and practicing.

Much as he wished to erase that kiss from his memory, he couldn’t ignore it. Neither could he ignore the obvious implications of that word, “practicing.”

He could, however, ignore her request for a drink. Jeremy refilled his own glass and carried it toward the hearth, dropping into the chair opposite hers. Raking a hand through his hair, he exhaled slowly. “I don’t like to ask this. I dread your response. But for what, exactly, are you practicing?”

“Not ‘what,’” she answered. “Who.”

Oh, it only got worse. “For whom are you practicing, then? Some local youth? The vicar’s boy?”

“For Toby, of course.”

He gave a wry laugh. “For Toby? Why would you be kissing Toby? He’s all but engaged to Miss Hathaway.”

She hugged her knees to her chest, curling into a ball of red velvet and chestnut curls. The chair’s masculine proportions dwarfed her, and her green eyes brimmed with raw, undisguised hurt. “Then it’s true.”

Bloody hell. Suddenly this bizarre nighttime visit made sense. Jeremy punched the arm of his chair. Of all the irretrievably stupid things to say.

“My maid said she heard it from Toby’s valet. I didn’t want to believe her. I couldn’t believe her. But it’s true.”

Jeremy had to look away. It was a matter of self-preservation. Lucy’s countenance was a collection of pixie features set within a heart-shaped face—a face designed to display, unfiltered, every emotion of the heart within. One couldn’t look at her without knowing exactly how she was feeling—and Jeremy didn’t wish to know how Lucy was feeling. He preferred to keep a respectful distance from even his own emotions.

“How could he?” she squeaked.

Jeremy winced. Lucy sniffed loudly, and he took another slow sip of whiskey. She could not cry, he wanted to remind her. That was the rule—Henry’s single exercise in authority. He’d allowed the chit to run roughshod over them every autumn, tagging along on their hunting and fishing excursions, parroting their curses, even taking nips off their flasks—under one condition. Lucy was not to cry. In eight years, Jeremy had never seen her shed a single tear. He prayed she wasn’t about to start now. If there was one thing he couldn’t abide, it was a crying woman.

He stole a glance at her. Damn it, her chin was quivering. “You’re not going to start weeping, are you?”

“No.” Her voice quivered, too.

Jeremy busied himself adding wood to the fire, stalling for time.

Curse Toby. This was all his fault. He’d always made such a pet of the girl. Every autumn, Lucy clung to Toby like a tick on a hound. He baited her hooks and taught her bawdy Latin conjugations. He brought her flowers and wove her crowns of ivy that went straight to her head. His Diana, Toby called her. Goddess of the hunt.

Goddess he may have dubbed her, but the worship was all on Lucy’s side. A young girl’s harmless infatuation—that was all it had seemed. Obviously, to Lucy it had seemed much more. And now the task of disabusing her of all those romantic notions had somehow fallen to Jeremy. Just his luck. But also fitting, he supposed. If he’d ever harbored a romantic notion, which was doubtful, he’d been disabused of it long ago.

He clapped the dust from his hands and reclined in his chair. In his most magnanimous tone, he began, “Now, Lucy, you must understand…”

She shot him a murderous glare. At least it wasn’t that mournful expression she’d worn just moments ago. “Don’t, Jemmy. Don’t you dare speak to me as if I were a child. I ought to have come out two seasons ago. If only Marianne weren’t perpetually confined. Perhaps I am not a genteel lady like Sophia Hathaway. But I’m not a girl any longer, either.”

She stretched a bare foot toward the fire and absently flexed her ankle. The sinuous grace of the motion caught Jeremy’s gaze. Caught it, and trapped it. He couldn’t look away. She circled her foot idly, her skin glowing golden in the firelight. His eyes swept upwards, tracing the sweet curve of her calf to where it disappeared under her dressing gown.

Then Lucy shifted, crossing her legs. Red velvet fell like a theater curtain, abruptly ending the show. A swift blow of disappointment caught Jeremy in the chest. The sensation drifted downwards, mellowing to the familiar ache of thwarted desire. God, this night was simply rife with surprises.

“I suppose you’re not,” he muttered, tearing his gaze away and giving himself a mental shake. “Very well, let us speak as adults. You can begin by dropping that childish nickname and addressing me in a proper fashion.”

“You mean by your title? I don’t even remember your old one, let alone the new.” She looked up at the ceiling. “You can’t possibly expect me to call you ‘my lord,’ Jemmy.”

Jeremy sighed, abandoning any effort to soothe. “Then let us be perfectly plain. Toby is going to marry Miss Hathaway.”

“But he can’t! It isn’t fair!”

He snorted. “Spoken like a girl, Lucy.”

She ignored him. “I’ve always known I would marry Sir Toby Aldridge, ever since the day we first met.”

“That’s absurd. The day you first met, you were twelve years old.”

“Eleven.”

“Eleven, then. And Toby shot at you.”

“He didn’t shoot at me. He shot at a partridge I startled. He didn’t know I was there, because –”

“Because you were following us after Henry forbade you,” Jeremy finished impatiently. “Yes, yes. I remember it clearly.”

Too clearly, he added in silence. He remembered everything about that day in painful detail. The glaring afternoon sun, the acrid odor of gunpowder. But he especially remembered the sounds. How could he forget? A frantic staccato of wingbeats, the crack of Toby’s gun, a piercing shriek. The dreadful silence as all four of them charged through knee-deep brambles, only to find Lucy sitting in a clearing, unharmed and unrepentant.

Ensuing years had proven that near-miss to be the beginning of a pattern. Lucy Waltham was always flirting with disaster, and therefore Jeremy had always avoided Lucy. He didn’t want to be in the vicinity when disaster inevitably struck.

With a sniff, Lucy reached out and took the glass of whiskey from his hand. Her fingertips grazed his wrist. So much for safe distances.

She rested her chin on one knee and stared morosely into the amber-brown liquid. “What does Sophia Hathaway have that I haven’t?”

“Besides impeccable breeding, accomplishment, and a dowry of twenty-thousand pounds?” He extended his hand to retrieve his drink.

She downed a generous swallow of whiskey before relinquishing the glass. “She doesn’t love him.”

“More girlish fancies. This is marriage, Lucy. Love is hardly required. They get on well enough, and their families will approve. She has wealth but no title; he is a baronet. It’s a fortuitous match for them both.”

“Fortuitous?” She narrowed her eyes. “Only you, Jemmy. Only you would speak of marriage as a prudent business arrangement.”

“It isn’t only me. It’s society. Love matches like your brother’s—they are the exception, not the rule. Ladies who insist on romance end up disappointed. You’d realize the truth of this, if only you –”

“If only I what? If I only I were cold and jaded, like you?”

Jeremy clenched his jaw. “If only you had paid the slightest attention to any of those governesses Henry hired for you. If only you’d had some model of female behavior, aside from an overburdened sister-in-law and a senile aunt. If only you had a modicum of sense.”

“If only I were like Sophia Hathaway.”

“You said it. Not me.”

She crossed her arms. “Well, I don’t care what you—or society—say. I’m going to marry for love, and that means I won’t marry anyone but Toby. I refuse to believe he could marry anyone other than me. He loves me. I know it, even if he doesn’t yet.”

“Lucy, the matter is all but settled. I expect he will propose any day.”

“Then I shall have to act tonight.” She rose from the chair and began pacing the floor. Her brow was furrowed, and she toyed absently with a lock of her hair, catching it between her teeth. It was a warning sign he’d learned to heed. Lucy always fidgeted with her hair when she was scheming.

She usually wore her hair up—for convenience, not fashion. But they hadn’t yet invented the hairpin or bonnet that could contain Lucy’s curls. They were forever working loose at the edges and winding between her fingers, finding their way to her lips. Now her hair fell in heavy waves down to her waist, rippling like a thick, luxurious pelt as she prowled the carpet’s knotted fringe. She turned and swept back across the room, fluid fabric wrapping around her curves.

Curves. Great God. When had Lucy grown curves? Lucy was always a collection of bony, awkward angles, held together by sheer force of will. Now that hard frame of determination was cloaked in soft, supple, womanly curves. And she and her curves were parading about his bedchamber in a state of undress. At the ungodly hour of—he stole a glance at the clock on the mantel—two o’clock. The impropriety of the entire situation struck him with sudden force.

“You shouldn’t be here. It’s late, and you’re … upset. Go back to your room and get some sleep. We can speak more on this tomorrow.”

“Tomorrow may be too late,” she said. “I can’t take that risk. I’ll have to do it tonight.”

“You’ll have to do what tonight?”

“Seduce him, of course.”

Jeremy stared at her, dumbstruck. A log settled in the fire with a loud crack, and a flurry of red sparks shot out from the hearth.

Lucy stopped before the mirror. She untied her dressing gown and opened it, surveying the simple linen nightgown beneath with a dissatisfied expression. “Silk and lace would be better, I suppose, but I haven’t anything finer.” She made a quarter turn and looked askance at her reflected profile. Thrusting her shoulders back, she smoothed her nightgown tight against her torso until every swell and peak of her flesh strained against the sheer fabric.

Jeremy leapt to his feet, upending what remained of his whiskey onto the carpet. In a matter of two paces, he crossed the room and stepped between Lucy and her scandalous reflection, grabbing the edges of her dressing gown and wrapping them firmly about her waist. The third button of her nightgown was undone, and the thin fabric gaped to reveal a crescent of golden skin. Jeremy forced his gaze up to her face. “Don’t tell me that … that this is what you’re practicing.”

She nodded. The cool intensity in her gaze told Jeremy that, ridiculous as the idea might seem to him, Lucy thought seduction an entirely sensible plan. He put his hands on her shoulders and willed authority into his voice. “Lucy, Toby does not love you.”

“Yes, Jemmy, he does.”

“What makes you so sure? Has he given you any reason to hope?”

“I wasn’t aware that hope required a reason, any more than love. In case you have forgotten—I have no talent for hoping. I don’t hope. I know. I believe. I expect. I know that Toby loves me. I believe we belong together.” She jabbed a finger into the center of his chest. “And I expect you to understand.”

Jeremy groaned. How was he supposed to reason with a girl—a woman, he corrected—who put no stock in reasons? “Lucy, Toby is quite fond of you.” He realized he was still holding her by the shoulders. Retreating a step, he let his hands drop to his sides. “But fondness isn’t love. Besides, what would you know of seduction?”

“Oh, I have a book.”

“A book?” He pulled a hand through his hair. “Good Lord, Lucy, I am not going to ask you where you obtained such a book or what pearls of wisdom it might contain.” She opened her mouth to interject, and he silenced her with an outstretched hand. “In fact, I beg you not to tell me. Suffice it to say, I hope you will not heed the lessons of whatever lurid novel you’ve managed to get your hands on.”

“I’ll admit book learning has its limitations.” She regarded him cagily, her gaze searching his.

“That’s one way of putting it.”

She inched closer. “Reading is certainly no substitute for practical experience.” She drew nearer still.

“But … wait … Lucy, you can’t possibly–” And then he blurted out a question directed more at God in heaven than at Lucy herself. “Why me?”

“You mean besides the fact that there’s no one else? You’re so proper, Jemmy, so cold. There are icebergs in the North Sea with less frost on them. If I can thaw you out, I’ll have no problem seducing Toby.”

“I assure you, you could not ‘thaw’ me, even if I wished to be … thawed. Which I don’t.” He retreated a step. Then two.

“Try to resist, by all means. I like a good challenge.” She closed the distance again, her eyes lit with mischief. “I’ve learned to snare grouse and angle for trout. Is catching a husband really so different?”

Yes, Jeremy meant to insist, but somehow his jaw would only move up and down noiselessly, in a rather good imitation of—well, of a trout.

And then she caught him by his shirt and reeled him in, catching him up in that net of chestnut curls and kissing him within an inch of his life. Her lips attacked his with the same steely determination. But when she threw her arms around his neck and fell against him, the rest of her was soft, pliant, yielding. Silky strands of her hair slid over his forearm. Lush curves molded against his chest.

Before he could gather his wits to protest, she pulled away suddenly and studied his face.

“Well? Is it working?”

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Last Weeks Winner




*Patti ~ Two Books by Julie Anne Long

Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to our winner and I hope you enjoy your prizes!



Thursday, July 23, 2009

Since The Surrender by Julie Anne Long



An Excerpt from Since The Surrender

The walk was unpleasant, fast and silent.

Gaslight newly installed in the district lit soft patches of cobblestone and left chessboards of darkness and light along the street. His arm was rigid; he was alert as a panther prepared to spring. His gait was only a trifle uneven. She half-sensed he would welcome another attack, for at least he could spend some of his anger.

She turned toward the house, went up the stairs, and her hand trembled, fumbling endlessly with the key, and still his hand remained where it was.

She got the door open. She turned to him, with a naively hopeful, “Thank you, Captain Eversea. I bid you good-”

He pulled her into the house, closed the door with a certain amount of feeling.

And released her elbow at last.

She rubbed at it while he whipped off his coat and hat and arranged them with swift neatness in a stack on the table where her mail and invitations would have collected, had anyone been about to collect mail or invitations for her.

“Why,” he said, that soft-smoke voice far too reasonable, “the bloody hell are you wearing a pistol strapped to your thigh?”

Something had happened to her lungs. They seemed disconnected from the rest of her body. She couldn’t breathe. Then again, she couldn’t think or speak, either.
She could hear his breathing now, which could not bode well.

“I will ask again: why are you wearing a pistol strapped to your thigh, Mrs. March?”

“I-”

Suddenly he was on his knees before her and before she could gasp his hands roughly yanked up her dress. He swiftly looped her garter with a finger and sliced it with frighteningly sharp a knife that seemed to come from nowhere. The silk gave like butter under its blade and came away in his fingers.

He did the same with the other.

The gun fell heavily into his hand.

The tips of his fingers rested where the gun had been, on that satin, vulnerable skin between her legs. He left them there, her dress hiked to just above where her legs v’d, her legs parted just the width of the gun.

She was terrified, shivering.

And it was all she could do not to open her legs and invite him in, oh please, please.

He looked into her face, his hand still hot on her bare thigh. His fingers spread, savoring her skin, tormenting her. Teasing her. Frightening her.

His eyes flared hotly at what he saw in her face. He dropped his eyes, steadying his own breath. And deliberately, he slid his fingers down, down, away from her. Leaving a hot trail over her skin. Snagging briefly in her stockings.

And then he yanked down her dress.

And sat back in a chair.

All done in seconds.

She was speechless.

And he said nothing at all.

A moment passed while they both gathered composure. The breathing in the room seemed unnaturally loud.

The fire was a wan thing, and she wished she could poke it up a bit, but she hesitated to move just yet.

She could not have guessed what passed through his mind in that long stretch of wordlessness. Still, she did know when a tentative peace arrived, when the worst of his anger had ebbed. It was palpable.

“Tea?” she suggested tentatively.

His mouth quirked.

She stood, and in the tiny kitchen filled a kettle and put it on to boil. The maid had left a fire burning low.

When she returned to the sitting room, he was still studying the pistol. “Mathew’s.”
She found her voice. It emerged subdued.

“Yes. It was Mathew’s. I intended it for protection.”

“Protection.” He said this flatly. “Protection.” His head came up; he stared at her incredulously. “What if it fired while you were dancing a quadrille, ricocheted off the punchbowl, severed the chain above the chandelier, which then fell and crushed the cream of London society?”

It was certainly one possible scenario.

“ ‘Cream’ is a subjective term, wouldn’t you say?”

Two blue marble eyes stared at her.

“I didn’t intend to quadrille, as I wasn’t precisely invited to the ball.”

So she wouldn’t be able to charm him this evening. The eyes continued boring into her.

“Weren’t you?” he said dryly. “I suppose that means you weren’t invited upstairs for brandy and cigars with the gentlemen, then, either.”

“What if your damned ever-present boot pistol shot off your foot during a vigorous …”
Oh, bloody hell.

She was about to say “quadrille,” but his quadrille days were likely behind him for good.

Her eyes squeezed closed. When she was a child, she’d had a beautiful Spanish shawl, a bit tattered, handed down from girl to girl in the family by an aunt. She used to pretend its shimmery folds could make her invisible.

She rather longed for that shawl now.

She opened her eyes, as she would need to do that at some time, anyway.

He was watching her, and damned if he didn’t look amused. “ ‘Damned?’ ” he repeated softly.

She felt herself blushing again.

“A vigorous what, Mrs. March?” That low voice dragged over her senses like a silk scarf. Unfair. Unfair “What do you imagine I do vigorously, these days?”

He had a talent, a positive diabolical skill, for knowing when she was uncomfortable and then fanning her discomfort into something approaching excruciating.

Because now she was picturing precisely what she was certain he would do vigorously and well. She imagined she could still feel five hot places left behind by the press of his fingers on the inside of her thighs. She imagined the slide of his long, warm fingers inside her. Her skin pulsed as if he were touching it still.

If he hadn’t found her pistol, she might have…he might have…they might have…

Well, she might have slept better this evening than she had in years.

She was suddenly terribly afraid of how quickly she’d capitulated, how quickly her sense had surrendered to sensuality. It unnerved her to think that anyone could have that sort of control over her.

He was watching her closely. Eyes as darkly fascinated as though he’d watched everything she’d just imagined take place right before his eyes.

“Should the pistol have accidentally fired, likely it would have killed me before it killed anyone else,” she reassured him. An attempt at lightness.

The light instantly abandoned his eyes.

“Yes.”

Less a word than a hiss issued between clenched teeth. As if a slow child had finally arrived at the proper solution to a problem.





Julie will giveaway the first two books in the series—THE PERILS OF PLEASURE and LIKE NO OTHER LOVER-to one lucky commenter.

What do you need to do, ask Julie a question about the above excerpt and leave your email addy in the comments section. Don't forget to check back this weekend to see if you are the winner.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Winners of Tamed by A Laird



*Virginia

*throuthehaze

*Maureen

*Estella

*dag888888

Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to all our winners and I hope you enjoy your prizes!

Winners of The Moon Looked Down



*Renee G

*Karen H in NC

*Beth

*Aramena

*MJ


Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to all our winners and I hope you enjoy your prizes!

Winners of One Scream Away



*cqueen2

*mariee

*Caffey

*pams00


Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to all our winners and I hope you enjoy your prizes!

Monday, July 13, 2009

Here Are A Few Reviews For Books I've Read. They Make Great Summer Reading!



Wild Highland Magic by Kendra Leigh Castle is the last of this trilogy which has just the right amount of paranormal and fantasy sugar coated in romance. A delicious read without any added calories that will certainly satisfy your most carnal sweet tooth.

Bastian an Morgain is tall, lean and sexy hot. A man, a prince and wizard, he is also cursed with the most foul disgusting creature to crawl out of anyones worst nightmares. He lives one day at a time never knowing when the creature will finally give in to its hunger and devour him thus ending a legacy of powerful magic users who were once a mighty race.

Catrionna MacInnes is a rare beauty. Part were, part witch, part human makes for an unusual mix but one that is as deadly as the night is dark. A temper easily roused and a spirit that craves unbridled freedom will one of these days get her into trouble. This is one beauty who desperately needs to be tamed.

Our story continues from our last installment with just a small fraction of time passing by. The author has given us a smooth transition and she has given our characters a well needed vacation but as with all things, shit happens and life is not always what we hoped for.

Our hero and heroine meet at the MacInnes compound in Scotland a few days prior to the annual clan get together. Bastian doesn't exactly show his best side and Cat thinks he's a pompous ass which I'm sure he would gladly accept that title in lieu of linking himself to anyone and the danger that is ever present in his life.

The story gets ever more complicated with the addition of a tall, dark and snarky dragon which you will just love to hate even though his comments will surely having you giggling under your breath. Bastian actually saves the jerks proverbial ass and nearly roasts his own in the process. Cat's sister is enlisted to help the snarky twirp and finds out that she has finally met her match in personality. Who would've thunk! LOL! Believe me when I say you'll love this enticing interaction.

This story gives us not one but two budding romances even though one gets much more attention than that of the other. A tale of trust, deception, love, lies and blood thirsty action, you'll slip from one page to the next with the ease of silk sliding over skin. Each chapter will have you hungering for the next with primal need and if you are anything like myself, you will be praying the author comes out with a spin off in the very near future.

Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca (May 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1402218567
ISBN-13: 978-1402218569




In Over Her Head by Judi Fennell is a wave rollicking storm of comic delight. Throw in a bare chested hunky Mer Man and you'll really need to be at the beach just to cool down in the frothy ocean waves. Yumm!

Our heroine Erika runs a marina but is spasticly scared out of her wits about the ocean. She hasn't always been like this, no as a matter of fact she used to love the ocean and diving. It's only been since her childhood when she had a frightening incident below the waves that she made a vow to never, never set foot in the ocean waters again. Oh and this includes being on a boat, no matter the size. Nope, no one is going to make her go into that blasted ocean.

Our hero Reel is a Mer Man but without his fins. Hmm...no fins when the rest of his family has them...ahh, must be a birth defect. At least this is what he thinks. Even with his supposed handicap he gets around without any problems. As a matter of fact he seems to attract trouble of any shape and from any distance. I guess it doesn't help either that he is a known prankster of epic proportions.

Our story gives us a detailed, wonderfully colorful, rich and diverse accounting of undersea life that carries you from page to page with the smoothness of water running through your fingers. A story that has highly entertaining characters with personality traits of all sorts. From the most serious to the irritating slap em up side the head get out of my face characters. This is a tale that will have you chuckling one minute, sitting on the edge of your seat the next and all the while keep you guessing as to what is going to happen next.

Judi Fennell has given us a light, funny, drool worthy accounting of what it's like to have just plain bad luck or could we go further and say no luck. A tale that will make the perfect summer beach read. Just pull up a beach chair, slick on some suntan lotion, stick your feet in the sand and crack this book open for a wild ride of hilarity.


Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca (June 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1402220014
ISBN-13: 978-1402220012




To Beguile A Beast by Elizabeth Hoyt has to be the most charming historical romance I have read in a long time. This author is new to me but not for long. I have already ordered her other books in this series and cannot wait to indulge myself in a delicious treat that has no calories. YUMM!

Helen Fitzwilliam is a woman with a mission. Having lead her adult life as a Duke's mistress she is bound and determined that she deserves better and will go to most any length to achieve this. She also wants so much better for her children than to be raised and labeled "Bastards". Will she be able to escape a past of imprisonment? Does she really have the courage and know how to survive in the unknown world with two children in tow without endangering any or all of their lives?

Sir Alistair Monroe is a tortured soul. Having seen the ravages of war up close and personal and come out with wounds that would surely drive even the strongest of men to the brink of madness, can he find it in himself to overcome his appearance? Will he ever be able to look beyond the cover of himself to see the truth inside that is ever so beautiful? I most surely hope so!

Our story takes us from London England to Scotland on a journey of self discovery, passion, pain, fear and longing with a fairy tale charm. This is a tale of a true Beauty and The Beast but one that could be ever so true in life today as we know it. A tale of the ravages of war and the results of what happens to a beautiful man scarred for all eternity on the exterior making him retreat to the interior of his being to keep himself safe. The trick is, will our author be able to do the impossible and give us a fairy tale ending? An ending that will bring tears to your eyes and joy to your soul! An ending that will show one and all that beauty is really not just skin deep but travels all the way to the soul of each of us! Ahh....but now you must read to find out.

Mass Market Paperback: 368 pages
Publisher: Forever (May 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0446406937
ISBN-13: 978-0446406932




Knight of Desire by Margaret Mallory is sizzling must have summer read. Delicious from page one to the very end, this is one love story you won't soon forget. A Debut book by this author that will leave you hungering for more.

William FitzAlan is a Knight of renown and high on the King's list of best of the best. A man with no title, lands nor wife, he is surprised when the King hands him all this on a platter for being who he is, a devoted Kings man to the death.

Catherine is Lady of Ross Castle and a close friend of the Prince. She is also the battered wife of a sniveling coward who rules this Castle and a man that has little to no scruples. When Catherine is trust into a plot to overthrow the King and Prince she knows where her allegiance falls and betrays her husband.

The story starts really quickly with the death of Catherine's husband and William's acquirement of lands, title and wife if he will have her. The king has given William two choices as to what he may do with the Lady of Ross Castle and he wonders if he will regret his choice for quite some time.

This is a delicious romance that flows smoothly from beginning to end, action packed throughout and sit on the edge of your seat fascinating that you won't be able to put it down. Even now with having finished this book I am craving more, ever so much more that I read the excerpt for the next book which is due out in December and wonder if I can indeed wait that long without going stark raving mad.

Our Author is new and this is a Debut book and one that surely make you come back for more. She has included all the best of deceit, love, pain, doubt, intrigue and so many more emotions that you will constantly be driven to go from one page to the next and wish you could read this in all one day. It will be very hard to put this one down even for the must have potty break.


Mass Market Paperback: 384 pages
Publisher: Forever (July 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0446553395
ISBN-13: 978-0446553391

Friday, July 10, 2009

Congrat's To This Week's Winners


*MoziEsmé ~ Love At First Flight by Marie Force

*RachieG ~ Wicked Little Game by Christine Wells

~ I Shot You Babe by Leslie Langtry

Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to all our winners and I hope you enjoy your prizes!

Knight of Desire by Margaret Mallory Blog Tour Winners


*Shawna

*etirv

*Cheryl F.

*MYL

*budletsmom

Please send your snail mail info to terraontop57 at yahoo dot com. Congrats to all our winners and I hope you enjoy your prizes!

Thursday, July 09, 2009

The Heroine’s Point of View by Marie Force



Since my new book, Love at First Flight, hit the shelves last week, I’ve heard from many readers who’ve said they didn’t envy the difficult decision Juliana faced with two men competing for her heart. Today I thought it would be fun to ask her a few questions about her journey to true love.

Marie: Thanks for being here today, Juliana. I see we’ve caught you between clients.

Juliana: No problem. I’ve got a cut and color coming in fifteen minutes, so I have some time to chat.

Marie: Readers and reviewers really seem to love your story (and Michael’s).

Juliana: (blushing) It’s quite a story. Sometimes I still can’t believe it all happened to me.

Marie: Tell us about what happened and how you ended up torn between two men, both of whom truly loved you?

Juliana: Well, Jeremy and I had been together for a long time—ten years, in fact, when his company sent him to Florida for a yearlong project. It never occurred to either of us when he left that the distance and infrequent visits would put such strain on our relationship.

Marie: It’s tough to be apart that long.

Juliana: (wistfully) It really is. Sometimes I still wonder what might’ve happened if he’d never been sent to Florida... Anyway, I met Michael in the airport when I was on my way to visit Jeremy for the weekend. Things between Jeremy and me had been kind of “off” the few weeks before that visit, so I was really anxious about how the weekend would go. The flight was delayed, and I got talking to Michael in the gate area. Turns out he was in the same situation with his fiancée Paige and was also really stressed out about the engagement party Paige and her parents had planned for that weekend. We had a lot in common, and he was really fun to talk to during the flight.

Marie: You two seemed to have an instant connection.

Juliana: (smiling) We really did. It was easy right from the beginning. Anyway, we realized we were on the same flight home on Sunday night and agreed to meet up again to compare notes on how our weekends went. As you know, we both had an awful time and were still reeling when we met up again on the flight home.

Marie: It must’ve been really hard to hear that Jeremy was having thoughts about other women.

Juliana: It was devastating. I’d always thought we were so happy—two halves of a whole. But after that . . .

Marie: For what it’s worth, I think you did the right thing to take a break from each other to think about what you wanted going forward. You’d been together a long time, and this was the first time you’d had any serious problems.

Juliana: How could I just walk away from him after everything we’d been through together? For so much of my life he was the only one who truly loved me. I couldn’t just break up with him because he’d had “thoughts.” He hadn’t acted on them.

Marie: A tough situation for sure. Then you found out that Michael had ended his engagement to Paige—”

Juliana: Right in the middle of their engagement party! I couldn’t believe that!

Marie: His interest in you, so soon after you’d both been through such upheaval, must have been hard to handle.

Juliana: I couldn’t believe it at first. I figured he was looking for a rebound or something.

Marie: But he wasn’t.

Juliana: (softly) No.

Marie: One of Michael’s comments to you really stayed with me: “Have I ever said anything to you that I didn’t mean?” Wow. His devotion to you really blew me away.

Juliana: Me, too. He never wavered in his love for me, even when I gave him ample reason to.

Marie: We don’t want to give away too much of the story, but I do want to ask you: do you feel you got your happily ever after?

Juliana: (satisfied smile) Totally. I’m the luckiest woman in the world.

Marie: I’m glad for you. No one deserves it more after everything you went through.

Juliana: I think I appreciate it more because of all we went through to get it.

Marie: That’s awesome. Well, thanks for spending your break with us. Looks like your next client is here.

Juliana: Thanks for having me—and for giving me such an amazing happily ever after.

Marie: My pleasure.

Sourcebooks is sponsoring a giveaway of Love at First Flight—so leave a comment to be entered in the drawing for a copy!

If you wish to discuss all the rules I broke in Love at First Flight, join me Monday, July 20, at 7 p.m. EDT on my blog (http://mariesullivanforce.blogspot.com) for a Book Club discussion. Warning, there will be spoilers, so make sure you read the book before the party! I’ll be giving away some great prizes to participants.

Once you’ve read the book, come by my website at www.mariesullivanforce.com to find out how to enter the contest for the Love at First Flight Grand Prize gift basket. I’ll accept answers to daily questions about the book through July 15. The winner will be announced during the July 20 Book Club Meeting.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Wicked Little Game by Christine Wells



Hi Terra and Yankees, it's great to be with you today to talk about my brand new Regency historical romance, WICKED LITTLE GAME. Thank you for having me and I hope you all celebrated the 4th in style!

The Marquis of Vane has been obsessed with Lady Sarah Cole for years, forced to watch the proud beauty condemned to a degrading marriage to all around philandering rat, Brinsley Cole. When Cole comes to Vane and offers him one night with Sarah for 10,000 pounds, Vane is tempted almost beyond reason. But despite his resolve to hold on to his honor and refuse the offer, events conspire to bring Lady Sarah to him. Their mutual passion spirals out of control.

Sarah's husband is murdered that night, and Sarah becomes the chief suspect. Does she admit where she was? Her alibi will bring scandal and disgrace to her family. Will Vane agree to help her after the way she treated him that night? Or will he take advantage of her plight to claim her for himself?

Romantic Times said of WICKED LITTLE GAME: "Sizzling sensuality and powerful storytelling -- Wells' hallmarks -- make this a fast-paced, enticing read."

I must admit, almost a year after writing this book, I'm still more than a little in love with my big, sexy, prizefighting Marquis of Vane. I hope you all fall in love with him, too! Here's an excerpt:


Vane’s heart thundered in his chest, and he knew it wasn’t from the fight. He barely made it to his door without ravishing her on the stairs. He was achingly aware that she studied him, painfully reminded of what he wanted—had always wanted—from her.

But she was in his house to earn Brinsley his ten thousand pounds. She was not there because she desired him. If she desired him, she could have had him any time these seven years or more.

Obviously, Brinsley had not given up on his contemptible scheme. Was she here to seduce Vane into changing his mind? The real question: was he strong enough to resist her if it came to that? Did he even want to?

Ten thousand pounds was nothing. A lot more than he’d ever needed to pay for his pleasure before, but a drop in the vast ocean of his wealth. He had, he reminded himself, paid for pleasure in the past. He did not make a habit of consorting with certain married women of the ton who granted their favors freely. Uncomplicated relationships with practiced courtesans were more his style.

Until Lady Sarah Cole.

They passed through a small sitting room and entered his private domain. He’d never taken a woman there before.

He indicated an over-stuffed armchair, displaced from its
position beside the fire by the enormous, high-backed bathtub. She took off her bonnet and laid it on the table next to the chair. Then she sat, arranged her skirts and folded her hands in her lap. She kept her gloves on, he noticed.

Her eyes grew large in her fine, oval face as she contemplated the waiting bath, but when she caught him watching her, all sign of anxiety vanished. She smiled, regarding him with that amused contempt with which she always seemed to view Brinsley.

Vane’s temper flared. His gaze gripped hers as he shucked his pantaloons, peeled off his stockings, and finally, undid the string of his drawers and pushed them down.

He was aroused. He didn’t try to hide the fact. God help him, he relished the momentary dip of her eyes, the slight flush that crested her cheeks as she took in his size, then cut her gaze away.

Hadn’t she believed he’d carry out his threat to bathe in front of her? Of course, she was accustomed to dealing with Brinsley. Perhaps now she’d realize the man standing before her was a different beast altogether from that spineless weasel she called husband.

Vane stepped into the tub and lowered himself into the steaming water. Laying his head against the tub’s high back, he gave a throaty sigh that was supposed to signify contentment.

It sounded more like a hungry growl.

Now, a question for you, dear readers! What crazy thing would you do for $10,000? The most outlandish or amusing response will win a signed copy of WICKED LITTLE GAME.

Christine Wells writes Regency historical romance for Berkley. Her debut, SCANDAL'S DAUGHTER won the RWA Golden Heart award and her second novel, THE DANGEROUS DUKE, has been nominated for a RITA. Her next historical romance, WICKED LITTLE GAME, is in stores now. You can find her at http://www.christine-wells.com/




Tamed By A Laird by Amanda Scott (5 Copy Giveaway)


Synopsis
National bestselling author Amanda Scott sweeps readers back to the turbulent fourteenth-century Scottish Borders, where valiant men and women risk everything for their land. Jenny Easdale is ready to accept her fate. She's agreed to marry a man she will never love - yet not before slipping away for one last adventure. Following a traveling minstrel troupe, she's whisked into a world of intoxicating freedom. Then, all too soon, she finds herself in danger - from a vengeful political plot against Scotland and from the man who has come to take her home. Dutybound to return with his brother's wayward bride, Sir High Douglas is not prepared for how her quick wit, courage, and laughing eyes touch his warrior heart. Now, as the merry minstrels play matchmaker and passion sparks between Hugh and Jenny, the conspiracy against Scotland builds...and threatens all they hold dear.


I've got 5 copies to give away, many thanks to Anna at Hatchette for the books!!

So This Is What You Have To Do To Get An Entry!
1. Leave a Comment +1
2. Follow Me +1 already a follower +2
3. Post this contest on your blog (can be on your sidebar or a post) +3


PLEASE put your email in your comments or no entry (no exceptions).
This is for the USA and canada only please and no Po Boxes (publishers rule)!
Winners will be announced on July 18th!

The Moon Looked Down by Dorothy Garlock (5 Copy Giveaway)


Synopsis
The new Americana romance from bestselling author Dorothy Garlock, this time set against the backdrop of WWII.


Sophie Heller's family immigrated from Germany to Victory, a small town in Illinois, before WWII began. Now that the war has affected the town, the townspeople discriminate against Sophie and her family. When a train derails, it is an accident but the Heller family is blamed. Coming to Sophie's rescue is a teacher from the high school, and despite their cultural differences, a romance starts to bloom.


I've got 5 copies to give away, many thanks to Anna at Hatchette for the books!!

So This Is What You Have To Do To Get An Entry!
1. Leave a Comment +1
2. Follow Me +1 already a follower +2
3. Post this contest on your blog (can be on your sidebar or a post) +3


PLEASE put your email in your comments or no entry (no exceptions).
This is for the USA and canada only please and no Po Boxes (publishers rule)!
Winners will be announced on July 22nd!

Monday, July 06, 2009

One Scream Away by Kate Brady (5 Copy Giveaway)


Product Description
Killer Chevy Bankes is a master of disguise, and just paroled, he's coming after the woman who sent him to jail, the beautiful antiques expert Beth Denison. A set of antique dolls brings Beth into his sight, and inspire Chevy's disturbing crimes as he draws closer to Beth and her young daughter. Chevy sends the dolls to Beth one-by-one and she soon realizes that these antiques carry the same marks as his victims, signaling that the final piece in his collection will be for her.

Neil Sheridan gave up his FBI shield five years ago, but his best friend Rick, a cop, pulls him in as a consultant on a case involving a serial killer who is eerily similar to a murderer Neil encountered in the past. The investigation leads Neil to Beth's doorstep, and he is certain she isn't telling him the truth. Neil is the only one who can get through Beth's defenses and, as they grow closer, discover the secrets that Beth is hiding about her fateful night with Chevy.


I've got 5 copies to give away, many thanks to Anna at Hatchette for the books!!

So This Is What You Have To Do To Get An Entry!
1. Leave a Comment +1
2. Follow Me +1 already a follower +2
3. Post this contest on your blog (can be on your sidebar or a post) +3

PLEASE put your email in your comments or no entry (no exceptions).
This is for the USA and canada only please and no Po Boxes (publishers rule)!
Winners will be announced on July 18th!

Saturday, July 04, 2009

Happy 4th Of July


May you all have a wonderful 4th of July and please make sure and stay safe.
Gonna Drink, Don't Drive!!

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

We've Been Awarded!


Special thanks to Lady Vampire at LadyVampire's Lair http://ladyvampire2u.blogspot.com/2009/07/ive-been-awarded.html for presenting Yankee Romance Reviewers with the Lemonade Award (for showing great attitude and gratitude). Our Lady Vampire does an excellent job discussing and reviewing fantasy books!

Rules:
Link back to the person he/she received the award from.
Nominate 10 bloggers who are deserving of this award.

Here are my nominees for the Lemonade Award:

Anna's Book Blog

Lori Brighton

Meandering with Miche

Pudgy Penguin Perusals

Shaunie's Happy Place

Welcome to Broken Heart

What Cheesy Reads

winabook@westofmars.com

Amberkatze's Book Blog

Casablanca Author's