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Six of the Best-450
Hi, everyone! It’s time for Sunday’s Six of the Best post. This is part of a little blog hop showcasing six paragraphs from published books and works in progress by some of your favorite authors. For my part this week, I’m sharing some sexy flirtation between Liv Aune and Trey Journey, from my book Liv’s Journey, the first of the Journey Family series.

Trey has just met Liv, and their flirting is fun and frisky. They’re talking about the ranch and this happens…

Cover: Liv's Journey Blushing BooksHe was enjoying their flirtation, and thought maybe it would be a particularly pleasant week if they could build on it. Maybe he’d wish for some rain so their stay would be extended. “Do you like ridin’?”

Her eyebrows rose. “I presume you mean horses.”

“Naturally.” He tilted his well-worn Cavender’s cowboy hat back a little on his head. “Have you ever been in the saddle?”

She groaned, then giggled. “It’s an innuendo-fest.”

“I can introduce you to a real stud.”

Her laugh was full enough to make a passing make-up artist turn to look. “You, Mr. Journey, are a card.”

There’s more to their banter, and a lot more to their romance, including a little BDSM and plenty of spanking. If you’d like to read more of Liv’s Journey, you can pick up the ebook here:

Blushing Books, Amazon.com, and Barnes and Noble

Or find it in the first volume of the paperback set here:

Amazon

After you one-click your way to true love, hop along to the other blogs in the links below. You might meet your new favorite author!

book gourmet
First Course — The Amuse Bouche

Whispered Pain (by Ashley Fontainne): “Who am I? Where am I? How do I escape this black void? Help. Please, help me.”

The Scarlett Mark (by Shelley Kassian): “A Lord cursed. A Princess cast aside. A Mark that could change everything!”

Second Course — The Appetizer

Changing it up a little this week, I’m sharing one of my favorite novels of all time, The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler. You might be familiar with the movie starring Bogie and Bacall, but, take my word for it, the book is even better. I saw the movie first, many years ago, and later found the book and was wowed by it. Since Chandler is long dead, this book is posthumously printed by Black Lizard Publishing, a Penguin Imprint for classic books. They set the price. Here’s the blurb for it.

“When a dying millionaire hires Philip Marlowe to handle the blackmailer of one of his two troublesome daughters, Marlowe finds himself involved with more than extortion. Kidnapping, pornography, seduction, and murder are just a few of the complications he gets caught up in.”

If you love murder mysteries of the noir, hard-boiled detective kind, get this first of the Philip Marlowe, Private Investigator, books and enjoy. It’s set in Los Angeles, my old stompin’ ground, and it’s quite authentic. The language is also perfect. I try to emulate his brilliance with each of my mystery-based books.

Journey Series in Print-smThird Course — The Entrée

Are you familiar with my Journey Family series? There are seven books, all about the five Journey siblings, their father, their trusted and loved housekeeper, and their spouses. Meet Ace, Deuce, Queenie, Trey, and Jackie (their mother was a poker player and named the five), Leo and Consuelo. These books are about Texans, and the main action takes place in that state on the large cattle ranch, Journey’s End. Each sibling has his or her own story, and often other siblings are mentioned in the various books, though it is not strictly necessary to read all the books in order.

The series has been available on Kindle for a while, but now the books are available as a three volume paperback set as well. The first paperback volume (Journey’s Luck) includes, Liv’s Journey and Ace-High Flush; the second volume (Journey’s Turn) includes, Spanking Her Highness and Deuce’s Dancer; and the third paperback (Journey’s Chances) includes, Jackie Draws a Straight, Journey’s End, and a bonus novella, Journey’s Valentine. If you’re into paperbacks, the set is worth having. If you’d like the Kindle books, they’re available as individuals. Following any of the links in this Entrée segment will lead you to the descriptions and excerpts from each book.

Fourth Course — The Dessert

I would like to give a public thank you to Joey Buchan, the terrific person who put me in touch with so many drag queens for the book I’m writing right now. Without him, I couldn’t have begun the work. You can find Joey at Blushing Books and Mystic Books, where he is an awesome publishing professional.

woman author 43995616_sSome people call me an “author.” To me, that sounds a little like I’m having tea and sugar cookies while signing book jackets. While it’s true that I “author” books, down at the core, I simply write stuff. Sometimes the stuff is long enough to be a book and sometimes it’s a short story. Occasionally, it’s an article like the one you’re reading now. Before I wrote fiction, I wrote business materials and literary analysis. It’s all stringing words together to create something new and, hopefully, interesting for readers.

I can only speak for myself; and since I do this full-time, I don’t represent all writers, but my typical workweek is made up of five workdays and two days off. On my workdays, I work about seven hours, and take a half hour lunch break. The hours I work are intense because, in many ways, they entail mandatory creativity. Usually, there’s a movie in my head and all I need to do is transcribe it. But some days—oh those days!—there are interruptions, crises, irritations, and the movie just isn’t there. I’ve had days when I felt like a clay brick, dense and heavy and anything but creative, but I wrote. And, you know what? The feeling of dull helplessness went away and, at the end of the day, I’d done a good day’s work.

When I wrote Rescued by the Spy, I had trouble with the ending. I spent an entire day on about 1,000 words. I knew what I wanted to say; it was getting it just right that was tricky. That’s a huge outlay of time for very little progress, but ultimately it was the ending that the story needed, and although I wasn’t having a particularly creative day, I managed to come up with the important segment in a workmanlike way. Sometimes, a little mental muscle is what it takes.

My last book, My Vacation in Rio: Romantek (not yet released), flowed like wine from a carafe. It was full of panoramic landscapes just waiting to be described. Those are the days that a writer lives for. They’re the drug of choice, by far.

Research is also part of a writer’s day. You can’t write about what you don’t understand. When I wrote my historical romance, The Blackmith’s Bride , I had to do extensive research on the historical period, the geography, and the cultures involved. Fortunately, I enjoy history and scholarly pursuits, so the research was a pleasure. Then I had to pick and choose which tidbits to use. I think we’ve all read books where the writer sort of dumps all that research on the reader. One of the fiction writer’s chores is to sort through and use what needs to be used, rather than every “fascinating” detail.

Even contemporary pieces require research. For Striker, I had to investigate police procedure, for example. And for Liv’s Journey, I had to study Texas geography, even though I lived there for five years. Research can also lead to creative moments.

Marketing is a big factor in writing. Writers of all levels have lots of marketing to do. I spend an hour or two each day at marketing chores. Would I rather be writing fiction? You bet! But I’d be writing only for my own consumption if I neglected my website, blog, lists, and social media.

There is a business aspect to writing as well. Becoming a professional writer is opening a small business. One has to track royalties, sales and taxes, as well as preparing manuscripts for sale, synopses for proposals and cover letters that entice publishers.

Writers also have to be readers, and for the majority of us, that’s where the writing bug bit us. We’re inspired by what we read, so much so that we are compelled to do it better, explore new aspects of characterization and plot, and build new worlds. So, a chunk of any writer’s day has to be spent reading. That sounds like fun, but remember, this is critical reading and analysis, and entertainment is only one factor.

When I’ve finished for the day, I close my various documents (character profiles, setting profiles, plot notes, and manuscript) and walk away from the computer. I don’t stop thinking about the story, and often I dream about upcoming segments, but I don’t write anything more than a scrawled note to myself. Mandatory creativity is tiring.

So that’s a day in a writer’s life—my life. Creativity, research, analysis, marketing and business are all part of the process. Does it sound like fun or work? For me, it’s fun most of the time, and work part of the time. I can’t imagine having a better job.

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