INTERVIEW with LOVELAND author Andrea Downing @andidowning


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INTERVIEW with LOVELAND author Andrea Downing

 

 

•          How did someone who has spent most of her life living in the U.K. come to write a western historical novel?

I have spent most of my life in the U.K., but I grew up in the states on a diet of westerns on television.  I tell some people that when I decided to move to England to do my MA I made a wrong turn and went east instead of west!  But my love of the west never faded; almost all our family vacations while my daughter was growing up were spent on ranches out west.  I think at last count we notched up 17.  Loveland is a combination of both worlds, Britain and the American west.  The story came to me when I was reading histories of the west and discovered how many of the large cattle companies were run by ‘remittance men’—second sons of the aristocracy.

•          How much research did you have to do for Loveland?

Quite a bit.  I had to read a number of memoirs of the period to be sure to get the words and voices correct.  I don’t know if I always succeeded but I certainly tried.  And, of course, I went out to Loveland, Colorado, to see the land, see the prairie, and also drove up to Cheyenne, Wyoming, which gets a mention in the book.  In actual fact, at one stage, Cheyenne was the hub of the British aristocracy in the west and it was the wealthiest city in the world on a per capita basis.

•          What inspires you? 

I’d have to start with my daughter—she’s the most inspirational person I know.  But if I put motherly pride aside, just being out west inspires me.  Those wide open spaces where you feel you can really breathe and be yourself, the towering mountains standing like guardians—the whole geography of it just fascinates and inspires me.  To think of the people who first went there, not knowing what lay ahead, turning open prairie into tilled fields and cattle range and making a new life for themselves away from everyone and everything they knew—that’s truly inspirational.

•          How long have you been writing?

Since about age 6.  I think my first novel was written in one of those speckled black and white notebooks—and it was probably a western!  I worked in publishing for a time and later edited a poetry magazine and have been writing on and off for years, but am rather shy about showing my work. Some years ago, while I was still living in Britain, I wrote a 600 page book I intended to try to have published.  It got rejected by about 3 agents so I gave up—which, when you think about it, is pretty laughable.  Anyway, all my friends sort of ‘yelled’ at me, told me how foolish that was, as did my daughter.  They’ve all been my cheerleaders until I finally decided I had nothing to lose.

•          Can you talk about what you are working on now?

    I have a short story, Lawless Love, coming out Sept. 4 fro The Wild Rose Press as well as a full length contemporary in front of an editor.  Tentatively titled Dances of the Heart, it’s about four people with very different lives, very different conflicts who come together and relationships blossom while they all undergo some interior change.  There’s a mother who is a successful writer but has a deep fear of growing old and letting a man, who might reject her, into her life; her daughter, meanwhile, has just suffered the death of her fiancé, quit law school and now lacks direction to get her life back on track.  Then there is a hard drinking father who blames himself for having sent his oldest son off to Afghanistan, where he died, while his younger son carries a secret which affects them all in the end.

•          What drew you to write romance?

I don’t know that I was specifically drawn to write romance but they are definitely the stories I imagine.  I like having happy endings, I like having a beginning, middle and an end, and I don’t particularly go for this modern thing of leaving a story hanging inconclusively.  And, of course, I like to think of people overcoming the odds to be together and fall in love. I mean, who doesn’t like a good love story?

 

•          What’s the most challenging part of the writing process for you?

I call it ‘the tyranny of the clean white page.’  Usually I have the beginning and the end figured out, can even write the last scene prior to anything else.  But that middle bit, that getting from A to Z, is difficult.  I’m a pantser and my characters write the story themselves so I never really know what’s going to happen and at times that white page just looms and torments me.

ANDREA DOWNING

Andrea Downing has spent most of her life in the UK where she developed a penchant for tea-drinking, a tolerance for rainy days, and a deep knowledge of the London Underground system.  She received an M.A. from the University of Keele in Staffordshire and stayed on to teach and write, living in the Derbyshire Peak District, the English Lake District and the Chiltern Hills before finally moving into London. During this time, family vacations were often on guest ranches in the American West, where she and her daughter have clocked up some 17 ranches to date. In addition, she has traveled widely throughout Europe, South America, and Africa, living briefly in Nigeria. In 2008 she returned to the city of her birth, NYC, but frequently exchanges the canyons of city streets for the wide open spaces of the West.  Her love of horses, ranches, rodeo and just about anything else western is reflected in her writing.  Loveland, a western historical romance published by The Wild Rose Press, is her first book.  She is a member of Romance Writers of America and Women Writing the West.

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Heartstrings By Sara Walter Ellwood @sara_w_ellwood **Spotlight**


 

 

 

 Heartstrings

 

 

 

Cover (1)

Blurb:

 

 He’s determined to set things right, no matter the cost.

 

 The last person Abby Crawford wants to face down is country music superstar Seth Kendall. Last time she did, she flat-out lied so he’d go to Nashville without her. She’s never understood why their mutual best friend proposed, but she went with it so her baby wouldn’t be fatherless. Now she’s a divorced mother of a teenager, and secretly Seth’s biggest fan. 

 

Seth is home in McAllister, Texas for his father’s funeral…and a chance to meet the daughter he’s never known. He’s willing to face the music of his own making and admit he’s known about his little girl all along. For fifteen years he’s kept his distance because Abby told him to follow his dreams without her, insisting she didn’t love him. But now he won’t leave until he knows his daughter and she knows him, even if it means facing the woman who broke his heart for good.

 

Confessing she’s lied about her daughter’s paternity all these years won’t be easy for Abby, especially with her ex blackmailing her to keep the secret. And Seth doesn’t know the hardest truth of all: Every love song he plays on his guitar still plucks her heartstrings.

 

CONTENT WARNING: Spicy sex.

 

 Excerpt:

 

Seth leaned in. His lips were close enough to kiss, and his scent of sandalwood and something exotic enveloped her, taking her back to that night on the beach. His eyes flashed with the dangerous fire of his temper. It was similar to the flame of the passion she’d once seen in the green depths. Abby didn’t expect or want the heat curling in her belly, and shivered with a sudden and fierce desire.

 

“I’m her father, Abigail. I wanted to be her father after she was born. It was you and Mike who insisted I had no business messing things up.”

 

“I never said any such thing. You never tried. You just left.”

 

He pounded a fist on the counter top so hard she jumped. “Yes, I left! I wasn’t welcome at home. Dad ran me off with a shotgun. Mike wouldn’t even let me see my daughter. He made it quite clear you and he were happily married, and I had no place in your life. I was under contract to be in Nashville to start recording my first album.”

 

What did he mean, Mike wouldn’t let him see Emily?

 

Before she had a chance to voice her question, his eyes darkened as the pupils dilated, obscuring the stormy green. “But I’m no longer nineteen and scared shitless. I could make things very rough for you and this fantasy you’ve got working.”

 

A cold lump quickly replaced the tangle of heat in her belly. “What-what do you mean?”

 

He backed off and tapped the countertop. “I’m talking a custody battle. I could have a judge order a paternity test. I think we both know the media hoopla the results would cause.”

 

Her heart slammed into her chest wall. “You wouldn’t do that.”

 

“Try me. Now that I’ve met Emily, I want to get to know her.” He walked over to look out the kitchen window. The hard line of his jaw melted, and he swallowed so hard his throat moved up and down. “I was a fool when I let Mike talk me out of being in her life after she was born.”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

He glanced at her. “Don’t pretend you don’t know.”

 

The strings of guitar music provided a soft counterpoint to the hard tension in the kitchen. Emily was outside on the patio playing around with her guitar, waiting for them to finish with the dishes she and Seth had insisted on doing.

 

“All I want is to have some time with my daughter. That’s all I’m asking for.” When he looked over his shoulder at her, sadness replaced the anger in his eyes. “I’ll keep your little secret. I’ll just be her favorite singer. The family friend who made it big in Nashville. I don’t want to hurt her. As much as it galls the hell out of me, I see what Mike means to her.”

 

He moved toward her and shoved his hands into the pockets of his jeans. “Besides, I don’t want to hurt Carolann or Frank any more than you do.” He glanced outside again, his voice husky as he spoke. “But I’ll sue you if I have to.”

 

A part of her wanted to give in to him, but a larger part wanted to punish him. Let him take her to court; she’d make sure the world knew what kind of jerk Seth Kendall really was.

 

She gritted her teeth and fisted her hands by her sides. “I’ll let you have tonight, Seth. But don’t ask for more.”

 

She turned away and strode through the French doors.

 

 

 

Bio:

 

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Sara Walter Ellwood is an award winning author whose novel Gambling On A Secret was named by bestselling author Carolyn Brown in the Happy Ever After Blog on USA Today as one of her favorite romances of 2012. Although Sara has long ago left the farm for the glamour of the big town, she draws on her experiences growing up on a small hobby farm in West Central Pennsylvania to write her stories. She’s been married to her college sweetheart for nearly 20 years, and they have two teenagers and one very spoiled rescue cat named Penny. She longs to visit the places she writes about and jokes she’s a cowgirl at heart stuck in Pennsylvania suburbia.

 

She also writes paranormal romantic suspense under the pen name of Cera duBois.

 

Buy Links:

 

Lyrical Press: http://lyricalpress.com/heartstrings/

 

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