Guys, are you ready for Summer? Well I am. And I'm also ready for the June Harlequin book tour. The book on today's schedule is Wanted: Texas Daddy, by
Here is a Q&A from the author:
You can buy this for yourself on Amazon & enter below to win a copy of it.
disclosure: giveaway for copy of book to 48 US contiguous states only. *free materials to review*may contain aff. links.
Here is a Q&A from the author:
- What was your favorite part about writing WANTED: TEXAS DADDY?
I loved having a pregnant heroine, and doting daddy-to-be.
- What was challenging about writing this book?
I covered the entire pregnancy, from the first mention of having a child together, to bringing baby home from the hospital. A lot of ground to cover in 55,000 words!
- How would you describe the relationship between Sage and Nick?
Committed. They started out as great friends, became lovers and then finally husband and wife.
- How did you come up with their names? Do they mean anything specific?
Nick is a guy’s guy, so I wanted him to have a name that was both masculine and accessible. Sage is a popular girl’s name in the southwest—probably because the plant is both hardy and evergreen and beautifully blooming. Sage really blossoms in response to Nick’s love and attention.
- When did you first realize that you wanted to be writer?
I started dreaming up stories when I was eleven-adding details to the story was how I put myself to sleep most nights. I got serious about putting words to page when my children were toddlers.
- If you didn’t write, what would you do for work?
Teach.
- What else do you love to do besides writing?
Spend time with family. Garden, read, listen to music, watch TV and movies to feed my voracious appetite for ‘story’.
- What is the biggest misconception about your genre?
That the books are silly, pointless, or easily created. A great love story stays with the reader long after the last page is read. Creating a memorable story is a lot of work!
- What future projects are you working on?
I just started a new six book series about the heroes and heroines of fictional Laramie County.
- Do you have any advice for new writers?
Finish the book. Taking the story from beginning all the way to the end teaches a writer more about craft, than anything else. Then, while trying to sell the first book, start another, and finish that, too!
You can buy this for yourself on Amazon & enter below to win a copy of it.
disclosure: giveaway for copy of book to 48 US contiguous states only. *free materials to review*may contain aff. links.
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