NANCY MORSE Award-Winning Romance Author
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It Takes Two To Mango

3/10/2015

2 Comments

 
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Many years ago a friend of mine had a big, beautiful mango tree in his yard.  When I expressed my desire for a mango tree of my own, he dug up three shoots that had sprouted from mangoes that had fallen to the ground and packed them in soil in tin cans. I planted all three shoots in my yard, and when they were about knee high, I dug up the two weaker ones and keep the strongest shoot to grow into a tree. And grow it did.

Several years later it towered about 20 feet above my head and produced the sweetest, most delectable mangoes. At least that’s what I’m told. You see, I don’t eat mangoes. I just never acquired the taste for them. But my dad couldn’t get enough of them. The little shoot I had planted and nurtured which had grown into a mighty tree became known as Fred’s Mango Tree. Every time he came over to the house, the first thing he’d do was head outside to check on “his” mango tree. We’d stand under that tree together, and he would gaze up into the canopy and say, “Nan, do you think we’ll have mangoes this year?” “Yeah dad,” I’d say. “It looks like we’re gonna have a good crop.”

One year Hurricane Wilma swept through South Florida and Fred’s Mango Tree had its top shorn off. We were devastated, but that plucky tree came back even better than before, bigger, fuller and loaded with fruit. But as the mango tree flourished, my dad’s health declined, and in 2009 he passed away. I was assigned the task of collecting his ashes from the funeral home. Before I delivered the ashes to my mom to place in the urn she had chosen, I held the small sealed box that contained my dad’s remains and wondered what final thing I could say to him. And then it came to me. I carried the box outside and sat on the ground with it beside me to give him one last visit under the mango tree. “It looks like we’re gonna have a good crop,” I told him.

I moved away from that house five years ago and had to leave the tree behind. But before the move I dug up two small shoots that had sprouted from mangoes that had fallen to the ground and which the squirrels hadn’t stolen. The first thing I did when I got to the new house was plant them in pots. Over the last five years both trees have grown. One is now about six feet, the other is around ten. For the first time since being planted the bigger tree bloomed this year. Every day I’d go outside to look for mangoes. At first I saw nothing. Then, lo and behold, there they were, tiny round things that have slowly grown over the weeks into recognizable mangoes.

It comforts me to stand beneath Fred’s Mango Tree and watch the fruit getting bigger. I can hear his voice as plain as day. “Nan, do you think we’ll have mangoes this year?” Yeah, dad, it looks like we’re gonna have a good crop.


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The Day After

2/16/2015

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Well, actually, it's a couple of days after. Valentine's Day, that is. And I'm happy to report that the Love Historicals Valentine's Day Blog Hop was a smashing success. One grand prize winner walked away with a $100 Amazon gift card. That will buy a lot of books. And one lucky person now has a copy of WHERE THE WILD WIND BLOWS loaded on her Kindle.

On a personal note, this Valentine's Day was bare bones for me. Having been married for a very long time, I've reached a point where I honestly don't need chocolates and flowers and dinner out on Valentine's Day. For one thing, I got my box of chocolates from a friend several days before Valentine's Day. You see, my birthday is in Dec., hers and her husband's are in Jan., and my husband's is Feb. 8.  So, to celebrate all 4 birthdays, each year I bake a cake on 2/8, and this year she brought a box of hand-picked Hoffman chocolates. As for flowers, roses are hit-or-miss. Some years they last and some years they don't even open. I like to have a vase of fresh flowers on the entry table, so I buy alstromeria because they last a long time. That brings me to dinner out. This is something my husband and I do on a regular basis anyway. So where did that leave Valentine's Day? We exchanged greeting cards, a hot smooch, a few well chosen words of love, and that, as they say, was that.

For me, Valentine's Day really isn't about chocolates in heart-shaped boxes, a dozen red roses, and dinner at a nice restaurant. It's about loving and being loved. It's about the stormy times when love is tested, the sweet times when you sail under rainbow skies, and for all the times you have navigated life together. And before you say, wait a minute, there is no man/woman/significant other in my life, if you have a pet, there's your love right there.The truest, most genuine kind of love there is.

What was your Valentine's Day like? 
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Love Historicals Valentine's Day Blog Hop and Giveaway

2/14/2015

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The Love Historicals authors are hosting a Valentine’s Day Blog Hop. Here’s how it works.

 Write down the name of the hero from the scene that appears below, then follow the link immediately after the scene to the next website and write down the name of that scene’s hero. When you have followed all the links and collected all the heroes' names, head over to the Love Historicals site at http://www.lovehistoricals.com/contests/valentines-day-blog-hop and enter the contest to win a $100 Amazon gift card so that you can load up your Kindle with great historical romance novels. 

 But wait! You have two chances to win a prize. You can also win a digital or print copy of WHERE THE WILD WIND BLOWS by liking my Facebook page here: http://tinyurl.com/q36h8oz Then, message me on FB and I’ll choose the lucky winner.

 Good luck, and good reading!

And to celebrate Valentine's Day here's a little something from me to all the lovers out there.
https://animoto.com/play/rVVcWFZgxMGJks3jm0lL7w




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Sometimes, it’s not so easy to say “I love you”. Perhaps you’re too shy to utter the words. Or you’re not certain the one you love feels the same way. Or the feeling is new and it scares you. Or maybe, like in the scene below from WHERE THE WILD WIND BLOWS, it’s because the words are spoken in an unfamiliar language.

 Katie and Black Moon have overcome many obstacles to their love. Now, only one remains.

                               ***

 “What are you thinking?” she asked.

            “I was remembering what it was like to hold you like this, before you went away, before the sickness took so many of my people and they were hunted like prey, before the agency at Deer Creek and the soldiers’ iron house. Nothing will ever be the same. The only thing that has not changed is what I feel for you which has only grown stronger since the day I brought you to live among my people.”

            Katie moved out of his embrace and turned her body toward him. Looking into his eyes, she said, “I love you and only you.”

            “My heart rejoices,” he said. “And I–”

            “No,” she cut in. “Not in Lakota. You asked what you could do to make up for what you did. It is this. You can say it in my language.”

            Black Moon hesitated. In all his life he had never spoken the white man’s language except to speak her name. The expression on her face, of love and expectation, told him that it was something she needed to hear.

            He asked, “How is it said?”

            She spoke the words slowly, deliberately. “I love you.”

            For several long moments he gazed into the eyes of the woman who had brought him such incredible joy and such deep sorrow, the one he had fought his attraction to as if fighting an enemy. She was the one star in the heavens that Wakan Tanka had singled out only for him.

He brought his hand to her face and caressed her cheek with the back of his finger, and said softly, “I love you.”

                                  ***


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Featuring Joan Reeves

1/12/2015

9 Comments

 
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This month I welcome best-selling ebook author, Joan Reeves.

Hi Joan. Tell us about your book.

LuvU4Ever, a Romance Short Story, is part of a new short story series by Joan Reeves: A Moment in Time by Joan Reeves.

LuvU4Ever, that's what David had engraved on the plain gold heart he gave Noelle when he proposed.

Can 9 little words destroy a Forever love?

"I told you NEVER to call me at home."

Noelle faces the biggest decision of her life. Will she choose payback? Will she choose love? Or will she just walk away?

What inspired you to write this book?

I moved last year so I had to go through lots of boxes stored in the attic. I came across an autograph book I had received as a birthday gift when I was very young. I flipped through it and smiled as I read words written so long ago. Most of them were from people in my neighborhood, not celebrities.

One of the autographs caught stirred my imagination. It was from a teenage girl whom I idolized. I thought she was so beautiful. She had written: U R 2 sweet, 2 B 4 Gotten. Other "autographs" in my little book were similar. I started thinking of the shorthand way of expressing sentiments. I could just see a teenage boy in a letter jacket drawing something like that on the back of a girl's hand with a ball point pen. LuvU4Ever.

When we're teens, we think forever never ends. When we grow older, we learn there are pitfalls and booby traps on the way to forever. The story just wrote itself, and the autograph book has inspired a whole series. The next short story, planned for March, is 2Sweet2BSexy.

What kind of research was involved?

I think most of the research was finding a plain gold heart and "engraving" it. Although I didn't end up with that painstakingly created piece of art, I did use it in the video book trailer. Here's a link if you'd like to see the blurb in movie-style: http://youtu.be/P1WCB2yE04k (Subscribe to my YouTube Channel and receive a free gift from me! Just leave a comment telling me you LIKE the video and have subscribed.)

Author Bio:

Bestselling eBook Author Joan Reeves makes her home in the Lone Star State with her hero, her husband. She lives the philosophy that is the premise of her romance novels: "It's never too late to live happily ever after." 

Joan's Blog: SlingWords.blogspot.com 
Website: www.JoanReeves.com. 
Sign up for Joan's FREE newsletters: http://eepurl.com/Yk61n for Readers and http://eepurl.com/fX7JT for Writers.

Buy links:

All Romance eBooks: https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-luvu4ever-1717051-149.html

Amazon: http://amzn.com/B00RDY7WUW

Kobo:http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/luvu4ever

Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/luvu4ever-joan-reeves/1120969147

Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/505046

Excerpt:

Once, life had been a bowl of cherries. Now the cherries were gone, and life was the pits.

Noelle pressed her forehead to the cold glass and stared at the snowflakes drifting past the hotel window. By the time she left this room, her marriage would be over.

Her life would be over because she couldn't imagine life without David. Yet, she couldn't imagine staying with him either. Not since nine little words had destroyed her world.

"I told you never to call me at home."

Leave? Stay? What was she going to do? She had plenty of ideas ranging from tying him naked to the bed and walking out, leaving the door wide open for the world to see, to sleeping with another man and making sure David knew about it. Let him see how it felt to be betrayed.

So get a little payback first?

By the time David walked through the door, expecting his girlfriend, Noelle hoped she'd figured out what to do.


9 Comments

Louisiana For A Song

12/17/2014

1 Comment

 
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Although the Louisiana Purchase Agreement was signed in April 1803, the French officially handed New Orleans, the colonial capital, over to the Americans on Dec.20,1803. So, I thought I'd post an excerpt from TAINTED LOVE, my historical paranormal set during that period. First, a little background:

“Let the Land rejoice, for you have bought Louisiana for a song.”
Gen. Horatio Gates to President Thomas Jefferson

He was referring, of course, to the sweetest land deal of the millennium when the United States signed the Louisiana Purchase Treaty in Paris, acquiring 828,000 square miles of land west of the Mississippi for roughly 4 cents per acre. The American negotiators were authorized to pay France up to $10 million for the port of New Orleans and the Floridas, but when they were offered the entire territory of Louisiana—an area bigger than Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Portugal combined—at $15 million, they jumped at it.

But not everyone was happy about it. The Spaniards were outraged, having held Louisiana for two generations only to have it sold out from under them. The saucy-tempered Creoles of French-Spanish blood were offended by the influx of brash Americans into their territory. And admitting a new slave territory to the delicate balance established in the country touched off anger from the Americans, some of whom thought slavery immoral and those who thought there were already too many black people in North America.

Into this hotbed of hostilities and the sultry air of New Orleans comes Prudence Hightower.

As a fledgling vampire Pru feels her humanity slowly slipping away. The only thing that can save her is love. Not the tainted love offered by Nicholas, her vampire lover from BLOOD RHAPSODY, Book I in the Soul Searchers Series, but the love of a mortal man—the pirate Stede Bonham. But Stede’s happy-go-lucky nature hides a secret that threatens to destroy Pru’s faith in love as surely as her mortality was destroyed by Nicholas. 

As the French tricolor is lowered and the red-white-and-blue is raised and tempers flare between old world Creoles and fortune-seeking Americans, Pru’s path crosses with an ancient witch inhabiting the body of a powerful voodoo queen. Can Pru trick the witch into chanting the spell that will restore her mortal soul? Will a voodoo love potion win Stede’s love? 

From the mud-filled streets of New Orleans, to the steamy bayou throbbing with voodoo drums, to the pirate stronghold of Barataria, Pru follows a tempestuous path into the heart of darkness and a love-hate relationship with the vampire who will never let her go.

Here’s an excerpt from TAINTED LOVE.

“I knew you would come.”

His voice, that sweet, spellbinding voice, though barely a whisper, was filled with the arrogance that was so much a part of him. All the old feelings of contempt and disdain came rushing back to her.

“How did you know I was in New Orleans?” she asked, not bothering to hide her scorn.

“I merely followed the trail of bloodless corpses.” He rose, removed the instrument from its endpin, and placed it carefully in its velvet-lined case. “I must say, Prudence, you’re not very neat about it, are you?”

She turned her face away from those green eyes that glowed out of the darkness like emerald beacons and held the power to mesmerize, and said flippantly, “I am what you made me.”

“I didn’t make you to be so sloppy about it.”

“I’m not here to discuss my feeding habits with you.”

“Why are you here?”

“I want to know why you followed me to America.”

“Oh, now Prudence, self-flattery is so unbecoming.”

She detested that mocking tone. “All right, if you didn’t follow me, what are you doing here?”

“I’ve been here quite often these past few decades. The Americans were fighting their war for independence, or perhaps you were too busy cavorting about the globe to notice. The pickings were wonderful. Who was to notice another dead colonial when they were all over the place anyway? And, of course, there were all those redcoats running around. I do so love the taste of English blood.”

He said this with a devious smile that would have made the color drain from her face were she not already so pale. “You’ll never have a taste of my English blood again,” she spat.

“Again you flatter yourself. What makes you think I want it?”

“Because I recognize that look in your eyes.”

He floated toward her. “Yes,” he said, looking strongly into her eyes, “I do hunger for you. That much has not changed in all these years. When I saw you in Paris, looking so beautiful beneath the lamplight, I had all I could do to restrain myself. Everything about you thrills me. Even your disdain for me. It used to be your innocence that I found so compelling. Now it is your self-assuredness, your pluck, your treachery that draws me to you.”

“Do you forget that I tried to kill you for what you did to me?”

“That’s something one does not forget.”

“Or that I would try again?”

“Even that does not deter me. You are my creation, Prudence. You are mine.”

“I will never be yours.”

“And if I were to take you right here and now on the floor the way we did it in the garret room in my house in Hanover Square?”

The heat rose to her face, flushing it with momentary color before receding and returning it to its deathlike pallor.

“There is my answer,” he said arrogantly.

Her guard went up against the danger of his kiss and the threat of what his touch could do to her. She stiffened and turned quickly away. “Don’t touch me.”

“What will your pirate think, I wonder, when he finds out you are not as innocent as you appear?”

Pru gasped. She whirled back around and came forward in a rush, and in a voice angry and threatening, she warned, “Stay away from him.”

“Pirate’s blood doesn’t interest me,” he scoffed. “Not when there is so much sweeter Creole blood around for the taking. But what about you, Prudence? Are you so sure you can resist the temptation to drink from your pirate’s throat?”

“I wouldn’t do that.”

“Of course not,” he said, amused. “You will fornicate with him first. Well, that’s understandable. I would be a fool to think you would remain celibate forever.”

“I’ll do more than that with him.” Her voice held a hint of dangerous expectation.

He raised a dark, questioning brow, but even he was not prepared for her answer.

“I will fall in love with him.”

A familiar look flashed through his eyes, not of petulant danger, but of a wounded animal. It was the kind of distressed confusion she’d seen before, reminding her that beneath the impenetrable exterior of the vampire lurked a human vulnerability.

He turned his face aside to hide it. “Why would you want to fall in love with a common pirate?”

“He is easy to fall in love with. He is kind and gentle and generous. He has an agreeable nature. And he is oh so good looking.”

“Enough!”

“You asked.”

“What will it be like for you, watching him grow old and die? That’s what will happen, you know. There can never be any future for you with him, or with any mortal man.”

“Future?” she cried. “What future is there for me now? You robbed me of whatever future I might have had. I might have married. I might have had children. A family of my own. Now there is nothing for me.”

He reached for her in a swift, undetectable motion and pulled her hard against him. “There is me. There will always be me.”

He brought his mouth down on hers in a kiss that defied all logic, reminding her with the power of his lips the undeniable fact that they were alike. The same bloodlust drove them. The same hunger for carnal pleasure.

She pulled her mouth from his. “Let go of me!” Pushing herself away with a mighty shove, she backed away from him and started for the door. “I’m tired of hating you.”

He moved silently and swiftly to block her path. “Then stop.”

“I have no reason to stop. I am reminded of how much I hate you every time I see a happy couple walking arm in arm, every time the grit of soil disturbs my sleep, every time I am unable to preen before a mirror as all women like to do because there is no reflection.”

She paused with her hands on the French doors and looked at him. He stood there looking dejected, his mouth sulky, his eyes concealed beneath a sweep of dark lashes. But she knew him well enough to know there was much more going on inside of him. He was hurt. But she refused to be swayed by the pain she saw in his eyes. He was, after all, such a clever manipulator.

Pushing past the telltale weakness, she hissed, “I shall hate you until the day I die. Oh, that’s right, I can’t die, can I?”

 
TAINTED LOVE is available at these e-tailers:

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/442532

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00KMD5CDU

https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/tainted-love/id883841216?mt=11&uo=4

Nook http://tinyurl.com/kxenlme

Google Play 
http://play.google.com/store/books/details/Nancy_Morse_Tainted_Love?id=642yAwAAQBAJ

 Also available in print at CreateSpace

 

 

 

 



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Just in time for Christmas

12/2/2014

16 Comments

 
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This month I welcome Lana Williams, one of the Love Historicals authors, and her Christmas novella…just in time for the holidays!
                                                                             

Thank you so much for having me, Nancy! I’m very excited to share my latest release, A Knight’s Christmas Wish. This medieval novella is the start of a new series for me and it’s only $.99!

Here’s a little more about it: Weary and injured, Sir Rylan de Bremont wants only to return home for Christmas after two long years away. But first he must deliver terrible news to a newly widowed lady.

Lady Kayte Dufrane has been miserable in her marriage to a gruff lord far older than she. Rylan’s news gives her freedom but she fears her late husband’s brother will claim her for his own. This strong, handsome knight might be the answer to her prayers if she can convince him to help her escape.

Though Rylan has no desire to become embroiled in the beautiful Kayte’s dilemma further delaying his journey home, he can’t resist her pleas. Will his Christmas wish be filled with more than he bargained for?

What inspired you to write this book?

This book follows the oldest son of Nicholas and Elizabeth, the hero and heroine from Trust In Me, the second book in The Vengeance Trilogy. When I decided to write another medieval series, it seemed natural to follow the children of the couples in my previous stories. I love getting a glimpse of previous characters in books I’ve read and hope my readers do too.

The hero in this story, Rylan, has a father and siblings with second sight, but he does not have it. I thought it would be interesting to explore how that affects him and his confidence in himself. Kayte is a wonderful match for him and has a few issues of her own. J

 
What kind of research was involved?

The story is set in 13th Century England and in addition to getting that period correct, I also did significant research on Christmas traditions in medieval times. Obviously they didn’t have Christmas trees then, but interestingly enough, they did decorate with evergreens. It was interesting to discover how many of our traditions began centuries ago. December and January were difficult months of the year as the days were short and the nights long. The fields couldn’t be worked, and with only candles to see by, it is no wonder that most people celebrated a full two weeks between Christmas Eve and the Epiphany.

Author Bio:

Lana Williams writes historical romance filled with mystery and adventure. Her medieval romances begin with A Vow To Keep, the first in The Vengeance Trilogy, followed by Trust In Me and then Believe In Me. A Knight’s Kiss, a novella, is available exclusively in the Love Historicals Presents Lost In A Kiss collection. Her latest medieval release is A Knight’s Christmas Wish.

Unraveling Secrets is the first book in her Victorian romance trilogy followed by Passionate Secrets.

Filled with a love of books from an early age, Lana put pen to paper and decided happy endings were a must in any story she created. She writes in the Rocky Mountains with her husband, two growing sons, and two dogs. Connect with her at www.lanawilliams.net, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/LanaWilliamsBooks, or on Twitter - @LanaWilliams28.

Buy links: A Knight’s Christmas Wish is available exclusively on Amazon.

Amazon US: http://amzn.com/B00QEGRSL8

Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00QEGRSL8

16 Comments

FEATURED AUTHOR FOR NOVEMBER

10/28/2014

4 Comments

 
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This month I welcome Maggie Plummer from Big-Sky country and her novel SPIRITED AWAY, a Novel of the Stolen Irish.


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Tell us about your book:

My novel is historical fiction that will make you say, "Why have I never heard of that?"

SPIRITED AWAY – A NOVEL OF THE STOLEN IRISH paints an intimate portrait of 1650s Irish slavery in the Caribbean.

The book tells a story from a forgotten chapter in the history of human trafficking. In fact, I dedicated the novel “to all the people and organizations combating modern-day human trafficking.”

The novel begins in May of 1653, when young Frederica (Freddy) O’Brennan and her sister Aileen trust a stranger on an empty beach in western Ireland, inadvertently placing themselves in the crosshairs of Cromwell’s notorious Reign of Terror.

Freddy awakens in the crammed hold of a slave ship bound for Barbados. Ripped from their loved ones, she and Aileen endure the voyage – only to be wrenched apart when purchased at auction by sugar plantation owners from different islands. Freddy faces the brutal realities of life as a female Irish slave on a seventeenth century Barbados sugar plantation. Amidst the island's treacherous beauty, she must find a way to bear her cruel, drunken Master’s abuse. 

Heartsick with yearning for her family, Freddy must reach deep inside herself for the strength she needs to protect her young spirit from being broken. As she struggles to survive rape, degradation, beatings, and the harrowing spectacle of her Irish countrymen being flogged and starved to death, she is buoyed by powerful friendships with her fellow slaves – especially the Native American kitchen slave with whom she works long hours in the plantation cookhouse. The two women risk severe punishment by sneaking food and medicine to the suffering Irish and African field slaves.

Eventually Freddy braves much more for the sake of love and loyal friendship.

I am proud of this, my debut novel. It took four years to research and write. I’m also proud of the brand new, professionally-narrated audiobook edition of the novel, available on Amazon, Audible, and i-Tunes.

SPIRITED AWAY has been well received. Currently it has 91 five-star reviews! There are a total of 183 customer reviews, averaging 4.2 stars.

Publishers Weekly says: "... Short chapters full of hope and Freddy's fierce spirit will keep readers turning the pages."

Also, this novel has earned:

* Quarter-Finalist, 2014 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Contest (General Fiction)
*
2nd Place, Best Historical Fiction of 2013, The Paranormal Romance Guild (PRG) and
* 2013 Finalist, Best Indie Book Awards

What inspired you to write this book?

In 2008, I was reading about Irish history and stumbled across this information:  During Oliver Cromwell's Reign of Terror in the 1650s, a majority of Ireland's Catholic population was either slaughtered, exiled to the west, or sold into slavery in the Caribbean.

I did a triple-take, amazed.

How could it be that I'd never heard of that?

 I asked around, and no one else had heard of it either.

 I began reading. The more I read about Cromwell's Reign of Terror in books and articles, the hotter my Irish-American blood boiled. These massacred, ousted, and enslaved people were my ancestors.

I had to write something about this obscure yet pivotal period of Irish history.

That is how the novel's main character, Freddy O'Brennan, came to be. With the exception of Cromwell, all of the characters in the novel are fictional. The story, however, is based on real history.

 In 1649 Cromwell led an invasion of Ireland that many historians call genocide, or ethnic cleansing. During the 1650s, Ireland lost about 41 percent of its population. The infamous Irish Famine of 1845 to 1852, by comparison, resulted in a loss of 16 percent of the population.

Cromwell hated Catholicism and wanted to punish Irish Catholics for the rebellion of 1641. Catholicism was banned; priests were wanted men. An estimated 100,000 Irish people, mostly women and children, were sold to West Indies sugar plantation owners and literally worked to death. Some were flogged to death. They toiled long days and suffered horrific conditions, disease, starvation, and torture.

"The curse of Cromwell upon you" is still a popular saying in Ireland. To this day, Irish mothers threaten their misbehaving children with the ultimate punishment: "Cromwell's going to get you!"

The bitterness caused by what took place during the 1650s has been a powerful source of Irish nationalism for more than 350 years.

Irish slavery was an atrocity that should not be forgotten. I find it outrageous that so few know about it, and I hope this novel is helping bring it to light.

What kind of research was involved?

Tons and tons of research was involved! It is not easy to write about the 1600s. Material about that era is tough to find. Much of our information about slavery, colonialism, and piracy is about the 1700s. 


The most important research I did was get my hands on a book called To Hell or Barbados: The ethnic cleansing of Ireland by Sean O'Callaghan (Brandon, 2000). This wonderful book inspired me to create my novel, by providing authentic, astounding details about what Irish slaves went through in Barbados.

I also thank author Padraic O'Farrell for his book, Irish Toasts, Curses and Blessings (Sterling Publishing Company, 1995). Many of the charming Irish blessings and curses I used in SPIRITED AWAY came from O’Farrell’s book.

Also, I traveled to Ireland in 2008. Much of the imagery in the novel is based on my experiences there.

I found myself constantly Googling while writing this novel (and while writing the sequel, too). For example, I continually checked on words, to make sure that they weren’t too modern to be used in the novel. As I wrote, I almost always had an online etymology site ready in the wings. 

 Author Bio:

I have wanted to write fiction since I was sixteen years old.

I grew up in Detroit, Michigan during the 50s and 60s, but both of my parents were from western Montana. As a kid, I heard about Montana almost every day. After a whole lot of “Volkswagen Gypsy” wandering around the United States during the 1970s, I finally settled in northwest Montana.

I’m a retired journalist who is finally writing and publishing novels. I also am a part-time book editor. Along the winding trail, I’ve been the Odd Job Queen, working as a book publicist, census enumerator, school bus driver, field interviewer, waitress, post office clerk, fish processor, library clerk, retail salesperson, Good Humor (ice cream truck) girl, fishing boat first mate, race horse hot walker, apple picker, and bus girl.

I am the author of a non-fiction book entitled PASSING IT ON: VOICES FROM THE FLATHEAD INDIAN RESERVATION, published in 2008 by Salish Kootenai College Press (Pablo, Montana). SPIRITED AWAY is my first published novel. I am almost finished with a second one, the sequel, entitled DARING PASSAGE: BOOK 2 OF THE SPIRITED AWAY SAGA.

Buy links:

SPIRITED AWAY is available in paperback, e-book, and audiobook here:

 amzn.to/1qK9PwF 

Excerpt:

            Try as they might, they could not awaken poor Bridget. That afternoon, the smell of death crept into the hold's lethal stink. When Silas brought their daily salt meat and biscuit, he indifferently dragged the girl's corpse to the steep steps. Without a word, he heaved her thin body over his shoulder, climbed to the main deck, and put her down to lock the grate. 

            A moment later, the women's heads turned toward the loud splash.

            "She's free now," someone said.

            "May God level the road for her soul," Ciara prayed. 

            "Aye, may she rest in peace," the others intoned numbly.           

            "Among the angels," Freddy added in her native tongue.

            "She's just the first," someone across the hold muttered. "There's many can't survive the middle passage…"

            "Aye, some of the men are sick with the scurvy," someone else added.

            "Small wonder I heard the right wicked wail of a banshee last night," another said.

            "And felt the stark chill of ghosts on this death ship," yet another added mournfully.

            "Let's don't start that sort of talk," Ciara snapped.

            For once, Freddy was glad of the older girl's bossy ways.    

#

            "I dreamed of Bridget floating down with the wee faerie folk, down into the green glen where they live under the western sea," Aileen whispered. The sisters huddled together, shivering in spite of the night's steamy heat, the scent of death lingering in their noses and in their minds. It was damp and misty. The patch of sky above them held no stars this night.

            "Aye, I can see it." Freddy hugged her sister. "And her in bliss among the Tuatha de Danaan in lovely Tir na nÓg. The strength of St. Patrick's horse to her."

            "Tell me, please…"

            "Tell you what?"

            "About Tir na nÓg..."

            Freddy smiled in the darkness and tried to imitate Mam. "Imagine," she whispered into Aileen's ear, "a land of youth and beauty, a golden otherworld where there is no sickness, no hunger, no thirst, and no death…only music, strength, life, and eternal happiness."

            The night's silence was broken only by the ship's creaking as they both pictured it.

            "Why does God punish us so?" Aileen asked, her voice as soft as a sigh.

            Freddy held her tighter and stroked her long brown hair, wondering what Mam would say. "We must not question God's will," she murmured. "It's not for us to know what's in store. May we never fear the will of God."

            "I miss Mam…"

            "As do I…"

            "Will we ever see her again?" Aileen's small chest heaved in a sob.

            "We must have faith." Freddy rubbed her sister's narrow back, searching for the right words to bolster both of them. She took as deep a breath as she could through the apron she had pressed tight against her nostrils. "We must keep our wits and find a way back. We are O'Brennans, descended from the Old Ones, the Tuatha deDanaan, the real people. Da always says so, remember?"

            She could feel Aileen nodding wordlessly in the black night.

            "That's right," Freddy whispered, "even though the Church frowns on such talk and calls our faerie folk demons."

            "Surely they're not demons…"

            "No, macushla, far from it." Freddy rested her cheek on top of Aileen's head. 

#

            "The sharks will eat you if you try jumping overboard," Silas warned, pointing at the turquoise water twinkling around the Three Brothers where it was anchored in the crescent-shaped Bridgetown harbor. "Ye'll take your turn resting, and make yourselves presentable. I'm watching ye."

            When the wind was right, the women could hear voices from the bustling town square. Their view of the Barbados capital was blocked by the tall ships in port. Occasionally the aroma of smoking meat drifted out, making Freddy's mouth water. Warm breezes floated around the deck as they stuffed themselves with local victuals brought on board to plump them up and pinken their cheeks. That way they would bring a higher price. The higher the price, the better the planter, Silas had advised. With clean air and passable food, the young women recuperated quickly from the deadly ten-week voyage. Three more of their group had expired as the Three Brothers plunged across the sea.   

            She and Aileen ate as much as they could. Their favorites were the strange tropical fruit, fried fish, and sweet bread. Aileen loved the juicy papaya, but Freddy refused to taste it. To her it was a bitter reminder: had she not been made the fool by that churl's promise of papaya sweetmeats, they would not be here facing God-knows-what fate.

             The group swabbed the filthy hold and washed away the voyage's stink in tubs placed on the main deck. The women hung aprons from a circle of lines, creating a bathing area curtained away from the men's stares. The welcome baths were delightful, in clear seawater warmed by the Barbados sun. Then, as they took turns rinsing their grimy clothes and hanging them to dry in the hot sun, the younger girls chattered about finding a planter who would become a decent husband.

            Freddy finished her bath, put on her clean dress, and left the women's private circle to perch on a deck crate and dry her thick black hair. The island was beautiful, she admitted to herself, gazing to the north and taking in the white beaches, lush mountains, and swaying palms. Terraced fields ruffled in the warm wind, above water so clear it revealed a pink bottom. The humid air was flower-scented and filled with birds. Near the Three Brothers, seagulls cried as pelicans glided by. Yesterday she and Aileen had watched a cluster of shiny dolphins splash near the ship, amidst the bay's blue and green stripes. Perhaps the others were right. Perhaps the West Indies could be a fine place, where a planter could turn out to be a worthy husband.

            But last night, frightful noises had drifted out from the town. Freddy had heard moans and the high cracks of a whip. Perhaps the island's sunny beauty was fickle and shallow, barely concealing the brutal undercurrent flowing beneath the surface. A painfully lovely place it was, the sort they dreamed of back home when chilled to the bone during months of driving rains and dank fog. But never had they dreamed of heavy ropes on their wrists, of being merchandise bought and sold. The tropical splendor was like a juicy piece of fruit that stuns with bitter poison. It was treacherous, like candied papaya promised to hungry girls on a County Galway beach.

###

4 Comments

To Blog Or Not To Blog

10/13/2014

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That's a question I've been asking myself for quite some time. After all, there are so many hours in a day/week/month/year, and the more I talk about myself or things of interest to me, the less time I'll have to write the books my readers enjoy.

So, after much consideration, I have decided that my blog will be about other authors. This is where I will feature a new author each month. I used to have a Featured Author page, but that didn't allow for readers to leave comments. Now you'll be able to read about your favorite romance authors and their new releases and let them hear from you.

Okay, so now I'll go out and round up a featured author for November. See ya later!
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