Wednesday, May 15, 2024

About author Barbara Britton, and a giveaway!!


 

Hi there readers! Today we welcome author Barbara Britton to the Diamond Mine. She's going to speak about how she went from writing her first book, to becoming an author writing a series. It's quite an interesting progression to hear, especially for writers!
She is also offering a free copy of one of her books, "Christmas at Whispering Creek." You can enter the drawing by leaving a comment with your email. Good luck! Now here's Barbara!

Sticking With the People You Create



I had no idea that I would ever be an author. I taught chapel to elementary students and when I needed to write curriculum, I prayed for creativity. I guess I should have been more specific because I received a prompting to write a book. Needless to say, I had a lot to learn when I had a completed novel and no experience in the publishing industry. Writing a series never crossed my mind. Writing a single story was difficult enough.

After I had completed two novels of biblical fiction, my publisher placed a “Tribes of Israel” tag on my books. I knew that series were usually three to five books back in 2017, so I got to work on a third book. All of those works of biblical fiction were standalone stories placed under an identifying tag.

Later on, I decided to stay with the daughters of Zelophehad and write a series with the same characters. A sort of series within a series. These books would be different in that I stayed with the same five sisters and carried them across a longer timeline. Was it easier to stay with known characters? Yes. I knew these girls well and I had a lot of fun deepening their personalities and interactions. Though, I had not planned to do three books on the famous sisters, so I scrambled to get the series written. 

You would have thought that I would be a series professional, but my mind wasn’t thinking in series mode. When I jumped genres and wrote a Contemporary Romance, I never thought about writing multiple books around a small town.

Fortunately, I had a pitch session with an agent who suggested I write three book blurbs around my characters and small town.

That was wonderful advice. Because I had book blurbs written, I could easily write a sequel, or several more books. I was beginning to embrace the series model.

I highly recommend drafting book blurbs for a series even if you think your current novel is one and done. Readers like staying with beloved characters and returning to familiar settings. It just took my brain a while to figure out this writing gem.

Thanks so much Barbara, for sharing with us today!! And now readers, here's more about Barbara, followed by a blurb from "Christmas at Whispering Creek."

Barbara M. Britton lives in Southeast, Wisconsin and loves the snow—when it accumulates under three inches. She writes Christian romantic adventures for teens and adults from Bible Times to present-day USA. Barbara has a nutrition degree from Baylor University but loves to dip healthy strawberries in chocolate. You can find out more about Barbara and her books on her website barbarambritton.com.

And here's the blurb for “Christmas at Whispering Creek”:

All Samantha Williams wants to do is to use her teaching degree to instruct a classroom of second graders. But, after a breast cancer diagnosis at the age of twenty-three, and failed reconstruction surgery, Sam finds herself without a job and temporarily living with her parents. This isn' t the life Sam expected. When a family friend dies and leaves Sam a house and land in Whispering Creek, Tennessee, Sam must decide if leaving Wisconsin for Southern living is in her lesson plans.

Nashville native, Cole Donoven, left his family' s electrical business to write country music. When Cole' s song-writing partner and girlfriend dumps him for a country music star, Cole abandons Nashville to hole up in Whispering Creek and compose one more song. The last thing Cole expects to find in the sleepy small town is a deceased friend, estate squabbles, and a Northern beauty. Will the chaos in Whispering Creek help create a bestselling song for Cole and possibly help him find a life-long collaborator?


You can find “Christmas at Whispering Creek” on Amazon or wherever books are sold.

And yes, there will be a sequel releasing on September 27, 2024— “Escape to Whispering Creek.” I learned my lesson. EtWC Link


                Remember to leave a comment to be entered in the drawing!!

Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Romance, Road Trips and Recipes with Nancy Lavo

 This week, we welcome Nancy Lavo to the Diamond Mine. Nancy writes contemporary romances. Keep reading to find out how you can enter to win a copy of her newest release.


About Nancy


A lifelong love affair with romance novels and a fiction writing course at the community college started Nancy on the road to publication. She’s published in sweet and inspirational fiction. After a decade-long hiatus to care for her family, Nancy decided to answer the tug of her heart and rejoin the ranks of writers.

When she’s not writing, which happens more often than it should, she can be found taking long walks or lunching with friends. She is married to her college sweetheart and they have three children.


Connect with Nancy: Website | Facebook | Instagram


Suzie: Welcome to the Diamond Mine, Nancy. It’s a pleasure to have you join us this week. I always like to start with a couple would you rather questions.

Would you rather live without internet for a year or without air conditioning and heating for a year?  

Nancy: Easy one! Goodbye, internet. I might survive without heat, but Texas air conditioning is a must.


Suzie: Same in Tennessee. Summers tend to get unbearable.

Would you rather give up social media or eat the same dinner for the rest of your life?  

Nancy: Tough call. I could cheerfully eat a diet of tacos the rest of my life, but if I wasn’t on social media I might get more writing done. I frequently gripe about social media, but the truth is I have a wonderful community there who I would miss terribly.


Suzie: I have a love-hate relationship with social media. Alright, that’s enough of those. Tell us a little about you—family, hobbies, day job, or whatever you’d like to share that’s not in your bio.

Nancy: I love a good road trip. I love to hop in the car, gps at the ready, and head to someplace new. And I’m a bit of a tea snob. My husband and I travel with an iced tea maker and tea bags to insure a decent glass or cup along the way.


Suzie: I enjoy a good road trip too. What are three books on your current tbr?  

Nancy: The Do-Over by Bethany Turner; Finding the Road Home by Tina Radcliffe; and The Right


Kind of Strong
by Mary A Kassian




Suzie: And I just The Right Kind of Strong to my tbr. :)

What does your writing space look like? 

Nancy: Chaos. 

Nancy: I write out my manuscripts in longhand—I use pretty Vera Bradley notebooks, then I type it into the computer and print a hard copy. I make changes on the hardcopy and type them into the computer and print a new hard copy. And on and on. By midway through the book, I’ve created a mountain of papers. Chaos!


Suzie: I can imagine!

Would you share with us a little about your road to publication? 

Nancy:  I started writing back in the nineties. I published six books over the next ten years then quit writing completely. It felt like that season of my life was over. After that, I worked in a library, surrounded by books, and in time, felt the pull to come back to writing. I joined a critique group in 2015 and have been writing ever since. 


Suzie: What are some of your favorite things about writing romance? 

Nancy: I love watching the character’s relationship and attraction develop. The first time their eyes meet… the first time they kiss… I just love it. Funny that even though I’m writing the story, they sometimes surprise me. And I love happy endings.


Suzie: As a reader of romance, I love everything you just said (especially the happy endings).

Tell us more about your latest release. 

Nancy: A Slice of Paradise is a sweet, light-hearted romance—enemies to lovers. I had so much fun writing it. Some books are a battle to get down on paper and others just flow. A Slice of Paradise just flowed.


Suzie: In A Slice of Paradise, Eden is a baker. Would you share a favorite recipe from your kitchen (or Eden’s) with us? 

Nancy: Eden first wowed her new friends with blueberry muffins, so here goes:

6 TBSP butter, melted and cooled, plus extra for greasing the pan


2 cups all-purpose flour

1 TBSP baking powder

Pinch of salt

Heaping ½ cup light brown sugar

1 cup blueberries, fresh or frozen

2 eggs

1 cup milk

1 TSP vanilla extract


Preheat oven to 400 degrees

Grease a 12-hole muffin pan. (Or line pan with muffin papers)

Sift together flower, baking powder, and salt into large bowl. Stir in sugar and blueberries.

Beat two eggs lightly in a large bowl, then beat in the milk, butter, vanilla extract.


Suzie: Yum! And it's berry season. The perfect time to try these out.

Thank you for spending some time with us and sharing more about yourself.


About the Book


Can a taste of love cure the scars of yesterday?


Single mother and baker Eden Lambert arrives in quaint Village Green looking for a home for herself and her 18-month-old son, Jake. Her warm welcome by her elderly hostess, Mary Jo Piermont, is offset by the cold disdain of Mary Jo’s self-appointed protector, Joe Wolfe.

At first, the long-legged blonde and her kid look like trouble to Joe. Mary Jo saved the builder’s life years ago, and he will do no less for the woman he considers a surrogate mother. But as he keeps an eye on the unwanted guests, Joe’s suspicions soon become replaced by admiration and respect for Eden’s resolve and dedication to her son. With his background of abuse and abandonment, Joe is aware of the dangers facing the vulnerable and wants better for Eden and Jake. He offers her a business arrangement—he’ll build her a bakery, and she can run it.

As they join forces to start the bakery, can they overcome the scars of the past to find a recipe for love?




Giveaway

Nancy is giving one of our blog visitors a print copy of A Slice of Paradise. To enter, leave a blog post comment and let us know what you enjoy baking. Giveaway is valid with 5 entries. Open to US addresses only. Giveaway ends on 5/14/24.



Wednesday, May 1, 2024

 I’m so excited to interview award winning author, Donna Jo Stone, today! If you’ve been lucky enough to read her novelette, “A Wedding to Remember” you already know how touching her writing is. Her debut novel “Joann”, part of the Apron Strings series, releases this month and we get to hear more about it today! Without further ado, here’s Donna!

Donna Jo Stone writes southern-flavored novels for the inspirational and general market. Her stories are often about people facing tough times. Not all of her books have romance but when they do, the romances are sweet. No graphic language, sex, or violence, just plenty of heart-tugging emotion with endings that leave readers with a sense of hope.


First, let’s learn a little bit about you. Can you share a few things about yourself that have nothing to do with writing?

When I was a young child, I once won a gardening contest. Unfortunately, my green thumb disappeared as I grew into adulthood, though I keep buying plants.

My favorite places to visit are small, interesting places along the way to somewhere else, a habit probably developed from road trips with the family in the old station wagon. Tiny museums, small town libraries, and thrift shops draw me like a bee to honey. I could spend hours poking around in such places.

I collect teapots, and have given a few teas. I adored having tea parties for my daughter and her friends. And my sons were always happy to taste test the trifle and scones

That’s fascinating! I love road trips with my family and may have to start collecting a few things along the way, as well :) What drew you to write?

I’ve always loved writing and reading.

My father was a great storyteller and would regale anyone who’d listen with a tale or two, so I think it’s inherited. My mother loved to read and we visited the library regularly. Books were special in our house. My mother didn’t write novels, but she was constantly writing letters.

I wrote my first “book” at age seven. I made a booklet with illustrations and a green construction paper cover. In my story, when the princess found the frog and kissed him, he didn’t turn into a prince—she became a frog.

You wrote your first book at seven? Your love for story is evident! How do you come up with your story ideas?

Sometimes I get fascinated about the history of a place and start wondering what life would have been like. The next thing I know, a story seed starts blooming. When I was a young child, we lived in a rural area. I was the sort of girl who loved fairy tales and the woods were the perfect place to dream up all sorts of characters and scenarios.

My stories are often sparked by a photo, a song lyric, or a quote, but I also have fun with putting my own spin on assigned stories, working within set perimeters to create a novel.

The idea part is usually easy. However, that does not mean the execution is!

We’ve all been waiting. Tell us about your new release. Joann is part of the Apron Strings Series, correct? Can you share a little bit about the series and where this story fits in the series?

Joann is book five in the Apron Strings book series, a collection of inspirational novels connected by one cookbook, Mrs. Canfield’s Cookery Book, as it changes hands from woman to woman. There is one novel for each decade from 1920 to 2020 featuring a new character. All of the stories are set in small towns or rural communities.

My novel is set in the 1960s. Joann lives in Pecan Grove, Louisiana, and helps in the family store. During that period of history, women were often forced to choose between working or getting married. There’s a romance, and a sister story. Of course, I had to put music in a story from the 60s.

The Apron Strings Series is the brainchild of Jenny Knipfer. I was thrilled to join the lineup of inspirational authors Naomi Musch, Amy Walsh, Patti Wolf, Jessica Marie Holt, Sandra Ardoin, Lisa R. Howeler, Dawn Klinge, Regina Walker, and Dawn Kinzer. It’s a wonderful series, and a wonderful group of ladies.

Are there certain themes explored in the story?

Joann is a practical type of person, the kind who rolls up her sleeves and tries to make things better. She’s the oldest and feels responsible for her family, so it’s hard for her to lean on others, including God. She has to work out the balance between her desire to be in charge of her own destiny and her need to let someone else steer the ship a little bit.

The 60s were a time of huge change and pivotal events. I wish I could’ve explored more of the topics of the decade, but there were so many, more than enough to write ten books! We can learn a lot from those who went before and how they faced upheaval and change.

The characters in your books always feel so real. Do you have any favorites ?

Can I say all of them? They are all unique. Some break your heart a little more, due to the circumstances they face. I have a few stories featuring teens on the autism spectrum and those get me in my emotions. Teens are often alternately heart-tugging and humorous.

What are you working on now?

I have two projects I’m currently working on for release later in 2024.

When the Wildflowers Bloom Again, a southern, coming-of-age set in 1978 rural North Louisiana. My character, fourteen-year-old Marigold Parker, is part of a close-knit family. When she’s assaulted by her older male cousin and turns up pregnant, she doesn’t know who to turn to for help. This book will be out later in 2024.

I believe with all my heart God helped me write When the Wildflowers Bloom Again. It needed the most editing (read that as total gutting and rewriting) of anything I’ve written. When the Wildflowers Bloom Again has won multiple literary awards.

Also slated for release later this year is a domestic suspense with romance as part of the Our House series, a collaboration with a wonderful group of inspirational fiction authors. The books are set in different eras, some historical, some contemporary, and are of different genres, but all share the same location, an English Village in Suffolk. I could not resist joining this project, since my mother was from England. She would’ve gotten a kick out of it.

My book is set in 1983. My main character is a successful real estate agent but her deepest wish is to reconnect with her birth mother. Then, when she gets a letter threatening her mother (there’s a shady business deal she knows about and the bad guys want to shut her up) she flies to England and must find her.

When you’re not writing, what do you enjoy doing?

I’ve always enjoyed all sorts of handicrafts. I took up quilting about fifteen years ago but still consider myself a beginner. I make about one quilted jacket a year, and one quilt. My storytelling finds its way into that as well, though. When my mother went into the hospital and we knew it was for the last time, I began designing and sewing a grieving quilt.

I posted the pattern and the meaning behind the quilt here. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Xl6sM5yI2x9tx8qXf_nupn2hlWEoqAyk7osy7IqXnIA/edit?usp=sharing

This past year I made a quilted jacket from a sweatshirt using fabrics and scraps from my stash. I have great fun practicing free motion quilting. Just don’t look too close at the stitching!


O ne cookbook connects them all...
Joann ~ Book Five in a string of heartfelt inspirational stories, featuring different women throughout the decades from 1920 to 2020.

Twenty-four-year-old Joann Kincaid’s life ambition is to one day run the family’s general store in Pecan Grove, Louisiana. It’s 1965 and the times may be a-changing, but Joann’s father is stubbornly hanging on to old-fashioned views about what he wants for his daughter. She’s just as determined to prove she’s a capable businesswoman.

In the past, she entertained romantic dreams alongside her vision for the store but discarded those notions when her high school sweetheart, Nathan, left for college. Now he’s back to reestablish his family’s farm—and a relationship with Joann. She still loves him but isn’t sure she can trust him.

As the conflict in Vietnam escalates, there’s a real possibility Nathan could be drafted. Should Joann pursue her lifelong dream to continue her family’s legacy? Or give Nathan a chance to prove he’ll be her true and committed love before it’s too late for them?

JOANN Apron Strings Book Five, releases May 15 and will be available for kindle, in paperback, and on KindleUnlimited.

Connect with Donna Jo:

Website: https://donnajostone.com.

Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61556916105499

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/donnajostone/ 

Goodreads:https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7768860.Donna_Jo_Stone

Amazon author page:https://www.amazon.com/stores/Donna-Jo-Stone/author/B0CR8VJT1S

Almost an Author Writing Column Writing for YA : https://www.almostanauthor.com/category/genre/writing-for-ya/

Email: donnajostone@gmail.com