| Yay! |
| Unless they are as weird as you... which means potential friends! :D |
| ...and then she screamed as the killer KILLED HER! KILLED HER TO DEATH! |
| See? It's real! That's my face in the banner. |
| Yay! |
| Unless they are as weird as you... which means potential friends! :D |
| ...and then she screamed as the killer KILLED HER! KILLED HER TO DEATH! |
| See? It's real! That's my face in the banner. |
I hate writing introductions because my first thought it how can I make this as extra as possible. Honestly, I'm not that interesting. I write books sometimes and hang out with my family and eat nacho's on Friday nights when my daughter goes to her Grandparent's house. Sometimes I dress spooky, but lately because of Covid (yeah... Covid. Right...) I've become too fluffy to fit into my goth clothes. I'm married. I like comics, and I like sleeping in, though I rarely get to do it these days.
As I promised months ago--I know I skipped a few months somewhere--this is the book cover for my newest novel "The Red Quilt", a sweet romantic suspense novel taking place on Prince Edward Island during the Holiday Season.
A book makes a great Christmas gift. It's easy to wrap, and you can place it under the tree or hide it in a stocking...along with a pack of 'happy' tissues. How horribly wrong, or right, could a last-minute Christmas trip go? Well...
A last-minute Christmas trip goes horribly wrong for Eli and his five-year-old granddaughter, Ruby. On their way to a Bed and Breakfast on Prince Edward Island after a kitchen fire forced them out of their house, they get caught in a blizzard and end up in the ditch.
Retired Military Nurse, Lana, lives on a potato farm with the ghosts of her husband and son. She welcomes into her home the marooned Eli and the young child he raises alone. The storm outside rages on and problems arise as Eli faces the demons and mistakes of his past, Lana becomes entangled in her neighbors’ illegal activities, and Ruby wishes for something Santa cannot give her.
The resulting mix offers hope for a second chance even as it threatens their lives. Can Eli and Lana survive another storm to enjoy the love growing between them? And will Ruby’s wish be granted?
"The Red Quilt" is the first book in my latest series "Fifteen Shades". So, what is the Fifteen Shades Series and how did I come up with?
Way back when I could meet my friends in person, before the pandemic turned me into a hermit, Jody and I were talking about book covers and titles. During our conversation, she made a comment about colors and the different meanings associated with them. It sparked a crazy idea, an idea that has been rattling around my brain ever since. What if I pick a color then introduce a shade of that color in every chapter of my story? The more I thought about the concept, the more interesting it became.
Finding fifteen shades of a color was easy, finding the meaning or origin of each shade involved more research, but finding a storyline in which I could seamlessly lace these different shades together proved challenging.
I was wrapping presents with my little granddaughter last November when inspiration struck. What about a sweet Christmas story with an adorable little girl and a dog? As the story came to life in my mind, a red glow settled over it. I had found the right storyline with the right color.
I wrote The Red Quilt in four months, which is a record speed for me. It is a standalone Christmas novel that will make you feel all good and toasty inside--after many twists and turns.
Next, I will tackle the color blue. A storyline is currently taking shape in my mind, thanks to my son's recent wedding. All the elements aren't in place yet, but I may borrow a minor character from The Red Quilt, and turn him or her into the main character of The Blue Ribbon.
The Red Quilt is available in print at Amazon now & at Barnes & Noble on Nov 15.
The Red Quilt will be released in ebook on Nov 15, but it can be pre-ordered now at your favorite retailer. To pre-order/purchase, click here.
Happy Reading & Stay Safe
JS
J.S. grew up in Shawinigan, a small French Canadian town, married a young military officer, and raised three spirited children. Over the years, she enjoyed many wonderful postings in many different regions of Canada. After her children left the nest, she began writing. Three years later, she captured her dream of becoming a published author. She writes a blend of romantic suspense and murder mysteries. Most of her stories are set in Canada, and if they are not, they feature Canadian characters. J.S. isn't sure where time flew, but decades later, she ended up writing under the Northern Lights in Alberta while spoiling four adorable grandchildren.
Eileen O’Finlan was a member of the Worcester Writers Workshop for many years and now hosts a writing group at her home in Holden.
Kelegeen, published by BWL Publishing, is her debut novel. She is currently working on the sequel to be titled Erin's Children set in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Eileen is a holds a Bachelor’s Degree in history and a Master’s Degree in pastoral ministry.
When not writing or working her full-time job, Eileen facilitates online courses for the University of Dayton, Ohio.
I write classic, fact fiction,
historical novels set in different eras. At heart I am a historian and enjoy
research that brings my characters’ lives and times to life. Three of my
published novels, Far Beyond Rubies, Tangled Love and the Captain and the
Countess are set in Queen Anne Stuart’s reign, 1702-1714. I am now writing my
fourth novel set in her reign.
Throughout the 18th
century the basic details of a gentleman’s suit, a coat, waistcoat, and
breeches were the same. However, the details changed. Full dress and undress
differed according to the materials they were made from. Hard wearing ones were
chosen for undress, less formal wear. Damask. cut velvet and satin, often
lavishly trimmed, or embroidered were popular for full dress. At court, gold
stuff, silver stuff, brocade, flowered velvet, or embroidered cloth was worn.
Coats were
close fitting, with wide skirts that flared from the waist to a little after
the knees. The loose-fitting, full sleeves with large cuffs ended above the
wrist allowing the sleeves to be gathered into a narrow band edged with a
ruffle aka frill.
Neckcloths. The
lace edged ends of a simply tied neckcloth made, of linen, lawn or muslin
flowed from the throat to halfway down the chest. An alternative was the
steinkirk with ends threaded through a buttonhole on the right and fastened
with a brooch.
Waistcoats were
tightly fitted at the waist, the skirt stiffened with buckram. Buttons and
buttonholes matched those on coats. The lower buttons were unfastened.
Bridegrooms wore white waistcoats.
Breeches were made
of cloth, velvet, plush or silk knit lined with holland linen, dimity or
shagreen silk. Unless they matched the coat, except for leather riding breeches,
they were often black.
Stockngs. Hand
knitted stockings were either plain or ribbed with clocks either knitted into
the design, or hand embroidered with coloured silks, gold, or silver thread.
They were made from thread, cotton, yarn, jersey knit, worsted, and silk; and
were worn either over the hem or below it, held in place by a garter. Popular
colours were red, scarlet, sky blue, brown, black, white, or grey. White
stockings were worn at royal weddings.
The Greatcoat, aka
Surtout or Cape Coat was a voluminous, knee length overcoat
with a flared skirt, and a vent at the back necessary for riding a horse. A
small collar, above a wide, flat one, could be pulled up over the ears to keep
them warm. The greatcoat was often unfastened from the waist down. They were
made from cloth, oilcloth, duffle, frieze, and other materials, and were fully
or partially lined
Cloaks were
full and gathered at the neck and fastened by a clasp beneath the chin. Sometimes
they were worn over the shoulder.
Extract from W. Winthrop of Boston
written to his brother in 1706. I desire you to bring me a very good camlet
cloak lyined (sic) with what you like except blew (sic). It may be purple or
red or striped with those, or another colour (sic), if so worn.
Footwear. According
to research shoes with square toes and high square
heels were made from black leather, but it is worth noting beaux wore shoes
with red heels. Metal buckles were small, square, or oblong. Gold and silver
ones were studded with diamonds. Thin, flexible pumps, some
made from Spanish leather, had low heels, and were fastened with
buckles. Slippers were worn indoors, For riding, hunting, and travelling,
and for the military, Jackboots made of heavy black leather reached
above the knees. Light Jackboots were shaped close to the leg but had a U-shape
at the back to make it easy for the wearer to bend his knees. Half Jackboots
were tight fitted to below the knees. They had cuffs in light coloured soft
leather turned down over the tops.
http://bookswelove.net/authors/morris-rosemary
www.rosemarymorris.co.uk
I am S. L. Carlson, a proud and grateful BWL Publishing Inc. author. My books can be viewed and purchased by visiting https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
I read a recent meme online: “A friend asked me how I was preparing for the fall, and it took me a while to I realized she meant autumn, not the fall of civilization.” This especially cracked me up because I once wrote a dystopia novel, and could easily see from where that thinking had come.
Because of my busy past couple months, I am grateful
that this year fall (autumn colors) have come later so I could enjoy them. Some
chalk the delay up to climate change. The change in foliage color certainly does
have to do with climate and the coming cold. I don’t really care when it arrives,
I look forward to hiking and dancing each fall among the crispy colors.
Colors are very much a part of writing description. It helps the reader see what and where we write.
For War Unicorn: The Ring, I’d paid a NY editor
to look over the novel before subbing it to BWL. I vividly remember her comment
that by the end of the book our hero had no physical description. Yes, it came
through that he was an innocent, strong-but-bumbling, country boy, but he had no
eye nor hair color. I defended that, thinking that with no description, anyone
could relate to him. Wrong. Readers need colors, even if it’s not their own.
And depending on the culture and time, would depend on
what a color is. Red River, in the afore-mentioned book, came as a result of blood
flowing down the river after a battle. It was named such considering the
peasants who lived in the area, and a way to remember their history. There are
many other more sophisticated words for red, e.g., cherry, vermillion, crimson,
wine, cerise, to name a few. For outdoorsy, tree-loving me, sugar-maple red
(especially on a sunny day) is quite spectacular.
What colors have you, an author, described? What
colors do you, the reader, remember from books, leaving a vivid memory?
S. L. Carlson Blog & Website: https://authorslcarlson.wordpress.com
BWL Inc. Publisher Author Page: https://www.bookswelove.net/carlson-s-l
Born in MI; lived in 6 other states, now back in WQI. Teaching and writing have been my greatest careers. (WRONG! Being a wife and mom are so far ahead of these two. But following those, these careers rule.)