Lake Country: Better than any elixir

LakeCountryI recently drove from Michigan to Idaho with Kathleen Stocking’s Lake Country as a literary companion… Let me clarify before I’m accused of being a reckless driver: I read and drank truck-stop cappuccinos while my husband Keith drove.

During the journey, I was caught between Kathleen’s lyrical essays about life in rural Michigan and my own memories, dipping in and out of my northern Michigan adventures from the past thirteen years: kayak-camping on Round Island in the Straits of Mackinac while freighters lit up the night like giant Christmas trees, mountain-biking up my nemesis Rattlesnake Mountain on a cool fall day to view an eruption of  tree bouquets in red, orange, pink, and yellow, hearing the loons of Lake Emma cry out at night.

“We walk first down the sandy two-track… then to a meadow filled with sweet fern where the sun through the tall trees is making a lacy light,” Kathleen writes. “The sweet fern is abundant, lush, fragrant, and smells like expensive Shalimar, but better.”

And she’s so right: the north woods are more precious than any perfume or elixir, a place where clouds of neon-blue damselflies mingle with black-and-white dragonflies, fishing and kayaking are the only plans for the day, a place both timeless yet antiquated, invaluable because of that quality.

I finished Kathleen’s book as we entered the North Dakota plains. Trees no longer hid the sky nor protected us from wind. We drove across a scorched, exposed landscape, far removed from lake country. Still, the ending paragraph from Kathleen’s insightful book stayed with me, as true in northern Michigan as eastern Montana.

Letters“… let’s say somebody asks me what America is like. I would tell them about John Shepherd and his surrogate grandmother who found him in some modern-day equivalent of the bulrushes in Detroit… his cat Neutrino, his cottage on Intermediate Lake with the space station growing out of it like a giant mushroom, the red Fiat with the lightning finder and then I would say… ‘America is like that.’ “

Two Days of CWTR: Move over Diana Gabaldon, there’s a new voice in Scottish romance

AWORLDAPART_NACWTR: No, it’s not an acronym for an arcane operating system or a clandestine bureaucracy; rather, it’s my shorthand for new books I Can’t-Wait-To-Read (CWTR). And this week I’m throwing around the label twice: yesterday with Minstrel’s Serenade by Aubrie Dionne and today A World Apart by Cd Brennan

She left home to find herself…and found love along the way.

Lizzy travels to Scotland to track down her roots, hoping where she comes from will help her figure out where she needs to go. An Aussie girl through and through, tough as nuts and a bit wild, she believes there’s nothing so wonderful as a world seen through wine-tinted glasses…

…until she meets Hottie Hamish, Bridge of Allan’s most eligible bachelor.
Hamish is Lizzy’s polar opposite in every way. He’s serious, driven, and motivated, focused on becoming the youngest associate professor at the Glasgow School of Art. But he’s hiding a social phobia behind his gruff exterior that makes it almost impossible to connect with people…

…until he meets Lost Lizzy, all sunshine and lightness, an Australian beauty with the proverbial heart of gold. Where they come from may be worlds apart, but atop a Scottish Munro, they begin to realize where they’re going is best traveled side by side. CONTENT WARNING: Graphic descriptions of haggis ingredients.

Excerpt

Just as Lizzy had determined that she would be brave and take his hand, Hamish leaned into her. “This song they are playing is called Flower of Scotland.”

“It’s beautiful.”

“Aye…it’s our song.”

Lizzy leaned in closer, her eyes buried deep into the Scotsman’s, mere inches away. “Ours?” It came out a whisper.
His eyebrow rose in question. “For all the Scots…for you, too. It’s one of our unofficial national anthems.”
“Oh…righto.”

Embarrassed, Lizzy looked away from him to the dance floor. She was surprised no one was dancing, only a few remained at the edge in small groups, laughing and talking animatedly. That’s where Hamish should be.
The lights in the room had finally been dimmed to get ready for dinner, and servers went from table to table lighting the candles.

“Will you dance with me?”

“The ceilidh doesn’t start until after the dinner.”

CdBrennan_pic
Cd Brennan

“Who says we have to dance when everyone else dances?”

WATERSHED_NA_JulySaleAnd don’t miss Watershed–the first book in the Love Where You Roam series: on sale this week for only 99 cents!

About the author

Having traveled and lived all over the world, Cd Brennan now talks with a strange accent, a mix of distant terminology, a blend of culturally cute but confusing euphemisms that leaves everyone looking at her with a blank stare. Luckily, her Australian husband (who she met in Ireland) and her two Aussie/Yankee sons have no problem understanding her – well, except for the word NO.

Now settled back “home” in Michigan, she enjoys reliving her glory days by writing about them. She considers the last fifteen years abroad the perfect research for her Love Where You Roam series; matchmaking women and men from different cultures, even different hemispheres, helping them find their true one across oceans of difference.

As destiny plays a hand in all the stories, Cd Brennan truly believes that what is for you, won’t pass you by. She hopes to inspire others to get out there: “Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” [Mark Twain]  And of course, fall in love.

Two Days of CWTR: He’s sworn to protect her, but can he save her from himself?

CoverCWTR: No, it’s not an acronym for an arcane operating system or a clandestine bureaucracy; rather, it’s my shorthand for new books I Can’t-Wait-To-Read (CWTR). And this week I’m throwing around the label twice: today with Minstrel’s Serenade by Aubrie Dionne and tomorrow… I’ll keep you in suspense until then–be sure to check back in 24 hours.

He’s sworn to protect her, but can he save her from himself?

Danika Rubystone has hated the minstrels ever since her mother ran away with one. As Princess, she’s duty bound to marry Valorian, a minstrel from the House of Song. But problems in the kingdom are mounting. With her father dead she’s the sole heir to an imperiled throne, and wyverns attack Ebonvale’s southern shores. But after Danika finds a lone survivor of a wyvern’s attack who holds the key to protecting the kingdom and she finally meets the enchantingly sly Valorian, everything changes.

As Ebonvale’s Royal Guard sails with the minstrels to smite the uprising of wyverns, Danika dances a line between sticking by duty like her father, or following her wild heart like her mother.

About the author

Aubrie Dionne
Aubrie Dionne

Aubrie Dionne is an author and flutist in New England. Her books have received the highest ratings from Romance Times Magazine and BTS Magazine, as well as Night Owl Reviews and Two Lips Reviews. She has guest blogged on the USA Today Happy Ever After Blog and the Dear Teen Me blog and signed books at the Boston Book Festival, Barnes and Noble, and the Romance Writers of America conference. Her books are published by HarperImpulse, Entangled Publishing, Astraea Press, Spencer Hill Press, Inkspell Publishing, and Lyrical Press. When she’s not writing, Aubrie teaches flute and plays in orchestras.

Friday’s CWTR: Every woman should embrace her inner goddess

Goddess-Awakened-MEDCWTR: No, it’s not an acronym for an arcane operating system or a clandestine bureaucracy; rather, it’s my shorthand for new books I Can’t-Wait-To-Read (CWTR). And today I’ve got one that will put you in a heavenly mood, ready for a long weekend of reading…

The Goddess Connection Book 1 – Goddess, Awakened by Cate Masters

With a little help from a goddess, battling evil is a piece of cake for Jocelyn Gibson.

A descendant of the goddess Iris, Jocelyn Gibson may have forgotten about the realm of magic, but it hasn’t forgotten her. When Eric Hendricks is targeted by a demon, Joss must step in to battle the evil and save the town’s awkward, but endearing, vet…who also happens to be the man she loves.

Joss’s new inn, a culinary career specializing in cooking with lavender and a new love all make for a fine recipe of disaster. She needs to embrace her inner goddess and harness the powers she never knew she had before it’s too late.

The Goddess Connection Series

Every woman should embrace her inner goddess. What’s your connection?

In each novel of The Goddess Connection series, the heroine is somehow connected to a goddess. Her lifelong quirks will become strengths once she finds her true place in the world, and accepts herself for who she really is.

And in each, the heroine is encouraged to embrace her inner goddess. And the hero treats her like one! As it should be for every woman.

And be sure to check out the book trailer.

goddessad2About the Author

Cate Masters has made beautiful central Pennsylvania her home, but she’ll always be a Jersey girl at heart. When not spending time with her dear hubby, she can be found in her lair, concocting a magical brew of contemporary, historical, and fantasy/paranormal stories with her cat Chairman Maiow and dog Lily as company.

Excerpt

In starting her life over, Joss had expected some resistance, even some trouble, but not this. The bedroom floor boards trembled beneath her golden-slippered feet. Tendrils of an unseen power curled upward from deep within the ground, tingling through her toes. She paused to steady herself, then continued to put the finishing touches on her costume. The tremors grew into rumbles and their hum seeped beneath her skin. When their tiny wisps twined through her mind, she clenched her hands. Enough. Go away.

Thick as starlight on a clear summer’s eve, sweet as the lavender blossoms she had yet to plant, energy whooshed up through the cracks of the worn wood and out into the October night.

She gripped the bureau until it passed, the vibrations rolling over her in lessening waves. Bubbly, effervescent waves. “Third time tonight, Taz.” Each departure took longer, and more of the essence remained.

When the dog whined, she stroked his fur. “Don’t worry, it won’t hurt you.”

Even if tonight the waves were palpable enough to make her hairs stand on end. Oh, no, please.

Nothing could ruin tonight. More than a party, this event would determine her future. And after three years of grief, she’d never allow anything to trap her in its clutches again.

Quick Picks: Watch Your Back – Murder on skis

WatchYourBackAuthor Tracy Bilen has combined two of my favorite activities–skiing and reading mysteries-into an intriguing mixture of action, romance, and suspense.

The only catch… I’ll have to wait until April 2015 to read Watch Your Back (Tulip Romance) but I’m already looking forward to it:

“When sixteen-year-old Kate hears the boom that ends her parents’ life, she doesn’t even realize it has anything to do with her. Until the police arrive at her front door.

Sent to live with her aunt at a ski school in Vermont, Kate tries to adapt to her new life. But then Kate’s aunt is hit by a speeding car and a rogue FBI agent tries to force Kate into his car at gunpoint. She’s saved by Ryan, the risk-taking skier she’s only just met.

On the run, the two must unravel the truth about her parents’ murder in order to stop a terrorist plot and save their own lives.”

Quick Picks: Murder and Madness in Klukwan, Alaska

I haven’t had a chance to read this one yet but I’m getting lots of recommendations from friends and family: The Whale House: A novel of the Northwest Coast  by Peter W. Andersen – “Based on actual events, The Whale House tells the story of Klukwan, Alaska, the legendary carvings that were created there, and how their immense beauty led the village into murder, madness, and war.”

Literary Cures: Anne of Green Gables Conquers the Common Cold

AnneLast fall, while visiting my mother, I came down with a dreadful cold. Chilled and miserable, I banished myself to the basement bedroom. Leafy silhouettes framed the windows and I could just make out the bottom of fence posts. The subterranean setting—usually a wonderfully dark and quiet place to sleep—didn’t improve my mood; however, directly across from the bed sat rows and rows of built-in cabinets filled, almost to bursting, with books.

Classic editions of Jane Eyre and Kim nestled up next to volumes of Idaho history and Mexican travel books. Runny nose forgotten, I selected Anne of Green Gables, a book that I somehow never read when I was young. Of course, I knew the story, had even seen the mini-series starring Megan Follows, Colleen Dewhurst, and Richard Farnsworth, which I highly recommend.

But I wasn’t prepared for how much the book would affect me. I could see, almost smell and hear, all the sights and sounds of L.M. Montgomery’s Prince Edward Island. Soon I forgot about my cold with one foot in my basement bedroom and the other in Green Gables.

It reminded me of how many times I have found a literary cure, whether it be listening to Barbara Rosenblat read an Elizabeth Peters mystery while recovering from the flu or making worries disappear through Persuasion (or any book by Jane Austen).

I found myself malingering a bit, not wanting to leave Anne and the rows of bookshelves. The sun splashed through my basement window and a leaf fell to the ground. I read, “I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. It would be terrible if we just skipped from September to November, wouldn’t it?” Anne was right—it was time for me rejoin the world and enjoy autumn.

Anne of Green Gables had conquered the common cold.

Boulder Lake Back Country: A Winter Solstice Day

BackcountryA few weeks ago, I experienced a Winter Solstice day. And no it didn’t involve time travel; rather it reminded me of Rosamunde Pilcher‘s wonderful novel Winter Solstice, in which the setting became a character.

As in Ms. Pilcher’s Scotland, snow dominated our day, falling in big, fluffy flakes. Our setting–the logging roads and two-tracks off Boulder Lake Road near McCall, Idaho–took my husband Keith and me through deep woods and up ridges to one of our favorite back-county skiing areas. A snowshoe hare hid behind a log, its black eyes staring at us, and we made lazy turns through about six inches of untracked snow.

But it was what happened when we pulled into the parking area that really evoked Ms. Pilcher’s novel. As we removed our skis from the bed of our truck, a sleigh pulled by the shaggiest horses I’ve ever seen glided down the street. It was such a surprise–like going back in time, complete with a duster-wearing sleigh driver, and certainly something Ms. Pilcher would have included in her novel. Our setting had become a character–I could almost hear the snow falling, the mountains breathing, and the trees shifting in our direction.

And it ended back in McCall with Keith’s delicious crock-pot dinner of Southwestern chicken over rice–the perfect compliment to a “Winter Solstice” day. I think Ms. Pilcher would have approved.

Idaho Author Shares Love for Africa

“I was a woman near my 48th birthday in the middle of a love affair with the land and with the self I met in Africa,” says author Jeannine Antoniou.

And she shares that love in Throwing the Bones:  African Encounters. Katherine Jones of the Idaho Statesman called Throwing the Bones, “Part memoir, part poetry, part biography.”

And reviewer Eric Wallace said, “Throwing the Bones is a kaleidoscopic collection of  anecdotes, impressions and observations, a beautiful mosaic of images, thoughtful ideas, and, ultimately, wisdom. The setting is southern Africa. The time: from the last decades of the 20th century to the present. Antoniou takes us on a contemplative journey to many places—places where tourists rarely venture. She gives us meaningful glimpses into the lives of ordinary people…”

According to Jeannine’s website: “A portion of the proceeds in the sale of the book is donated to the Greg Carr Foundation and his project in Mozambique, in the restoration of Gorongosa National Park or Small Village Foundation.”

Jeannine is also available to speak at service organizations, schools, and book clubs throughout the Northwest.

Falling for Wilbur: My year in flight

If someone had told me a year ago that the bulk of my 2013 reading-life would be spent with rocket engineers, astronauts, and flight pioneers, I would have said, “You’re nuts.”

But that is exactly what happened after a long visit to the Kennedy Space Center during late November of 2012. Wandering through the Rocket Garden, I realized how little I knew about the space program. Even basic facts like the timeline from Mercury to Apollo were a mystery, all jumbled in my brain. It scared me a little, this void, and I decided to fill these holes in my knowledge— something I’ll probably spend the rest of my life trying to do.

I started with A Ball, a Dog, and a Monkey (1957–The Space Race Begins) which led to Wernher Von Braun and the Nazi engineers who came to the United States after WWII. One book snowballed into another and I ended up with a five-book reading plan, a solid—and very readable foundation—for anyone interested in space or just simply American history:

A Ball, a Dog, and a Monkey: 1957–The Space Race Begins by Michael D’Antonio – Describes the early days of America’s space obsession complete with exploding rockets and Florida hijinks.

Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe – A tour de force which will leave you completely in awe of Chuck Yeager.

A Man on the Moon by Andrew Chaikin – An amazing, detailed portrait of the Apollo program and all its astronauts.

Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War by Michael Neufeld – A balanced biography of the rocket pioneer from his roots in Germany to his success with the Saturn V.

Riding Rockets: The Outrageous Tales of a Space Shuttle Astronaut by Mike Mullane – Combines fraternity-boy humor with a poet’s sensibilities. Very readable and entertaining.

But it was two earlier flight pioneers who truly captured my heart and imagination. During the same trip in which I encountered the Kennedy Space Center, I also visited Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. There I explored Wright Brothers National Memorial and realized the gaps in my knowledge were worse than I imagined. I spent the next month with James Tobin’s To Conquer The Air—the perfect blend of literary journalism, where research and gorgeous writing fuse into a flawless readable mix: nonfiction that reads like fiction (when I grow up I want to write just like Mr. Tobin!). I cheered when Wilbur soared in the glider and wept when he died.

But the Wright Brothers aren’t finished with me yet—Wilbur and Orville by Fred Howard sits next to my bed. And after reading it, I’m sure I’ll find other gaps to fill, books to explore, and history to uncover. As the saying goes, “So many books so little time.” And I can’t think of a better way to organize my schedule.