February 11, 2013

Talking about memorable stories with Autumn Piper (Lone Star Trouble, Trouble Won't Wait)


    Some stories stick with a reader more than others do, and some characters stick with us, too. I love a couple who are so at odds with one another, they butt heads and bicker nonstop until they snap and go after one another. (LOL. Whip out the psychology books for that one, right?) I also love to see the Stag Brought Down. You know the trope, sworn-forever-single stud, cold, powerful, has only physical relationships with women…until the right one comes along and brings him to his knees.
    Personally, I’m not a big fan of those stories where the hero has to sacrifice his relationship with the love of his life in order to “save” her (a la Spiderman with Toby and Kirsten). Tortured heroes just torture me too darn much.
    Which romantic couples do you remember most?
I’ll start. I think Jamie and Claire from the Outlander series are “with” me quite a lot (but that could be in part because I’ve got to be “with” them for so long, just to finish the series). I still remember totally falling for Jondalar when Ayla did in the Earth’s Children/Clan of the Cave Bear series back when I was a teenager. And when they had trouble, I felt it! In movies, I really love Edward and Vivian of Pretty Woman, and I’m an absolute sucker for Dusty (George Strait) and Harley in Pure Country (and I’ll admit, part of that could be my obsession with King George).
    Leave me a comment with your favorite couple(s)…and your email address, and I’ll be drawing 1 name for a free ebook copy of Lone Star Trouble, on Feb 28.
    Have a great Valentine’s Day, and thanks for coming by!

Autumn Piper
Got romance?
On Best of 2012 USA Today list: http://usat.ly/Z1PRUV
Autumnpiper.com
Twitter: @AutumnPiperAuth

LONE STAR TROUBLE:

BLURB:

     One hot cowboy plus one tough rancher-girl adds up to trouble!

     Kiersten Day holds a grudge against all things Texan, especially cattle baron CJ Howell, with his hubcap-sized belt buckle and tacky white hat. He’s set his sights on her tiny Colorado ranch, and he’s a master of dirty tactics, slinging threats to make her sell out.
     Caught in the fight of her life, Kiersten meets Cleve, a tall, handsome good guy. Too late, she finds out he’s Howell’s son. She might be pregnant, she doesn’t know who to trust, and danger is closing in. She’s head over heels -- and kicking herself!

     Content warning, a hot cowboy, dirty tactics and lots of lone star trouble.

EXCERPT:

     This couldn’t be good. She never ran into other people up here. And after yesterday’s confrontation… Why hadn’t she strapped on her pistol before she left the cabin?
     A sweaty buckskin gelding topped the hill, then halted.
     Time for another confrontation.
     The cowboy dismounted and made a thorough visual examination of her.
     Freckles. The first thing he’d see would be her freckles, since she never bothered with makeup except for trips to town. Add to that her big messy ponytail, and it was amazing the guy was taking a second look. And a third? Well, he wasn’t exactly looking at her face, now was he? Warm from her hike up the hill, she’d unzipped her jacket, exposing the only curves on her body—her breasts. The tall stranger was all but ogling them.
     Not in the least appreciative of his silent admiration, she tugged her jacket closed.
     With a small cough, he cleared his throat. “Howdy, neighbor. I’m Cleve. You must be Miss Day.”
     Another Texan, but clean shaven, with light skin, short dark hair and nearly black eyes. He wore a red flannel shirt with a blue t-shirt under, tucked cowboy-style into his Wranglers. Around his waist he sported a plain leather belt and everyday buckle, not a shiny gold-and-silver number like the guy she’d met yesterday. Brown boots, and the straw cowboy hat he’d removed when he introduced himself.
     It was hard not to meet his wide, open smile with one of her own. Too hard, in fact. “Hi. Kiersten.” A tiny gold hoop hung from his left ear, odd on a cowboy, but nothing blame-worthy. And he was definitely fine to look at—if she’d been interested in looking at men anymore.
     He took her hand in his and shook it with big, friendly strokes, settled his hat back atop his head and looked around. “Some view up here.”
     She nodded. “See that peak over there, the darker one? It’s in Utah. My Grandpa said it’s about a hundred and fifty miles away.”
     Cleve whistled behind her. “You walk up here?”
     She grinned at how winded he was from riding horseback up the mountain. “I walked the fence line, checking for snow damage. I’ll be hanging it back up in the next few days.”
     “What kinda fence is that?” The wire net lay flat and ran parallel to an army of steel posts marching straight as an arrow into the horizon.
     Cattlemen marked the edge of their property with two or three simple strands of barbed wire, rather than the net fencing sheep ranchers used. “It’s a fence to keep my nuisance sheep in, and your fat cows out, since the law says I’m responsible for both.”
     He rubbed his chin with the back of his fingers. “I meant, why’s it on the ground?”
     “Seven feet of snow on a hillside tends to make a mess of a fence, come spring. Used to come up here and find this part of the fence crumpled up way down there.” She pointed at a stand of aspens about twenty feet down the hill. “Might find several steel posts bent over flat. One of the other old-timers came up with the idea of unhooking the wire from the posts in the fall. Keeps the snow from leaning on it for months on end, and the elk from getting tangled in it.”
     “Pretty good idea, then.”
     “You’ll find I’m not stupid, in spite of what your boss might think.”
     “Ah…Boss?” He scratched the back of his hair, tipping the front of his hat a little.
     “Yeah. Charles. The world’s last remaining male chauvinist pig. Boss Hogg, in a Cadillac truck instead of his trademark white convertible. Give him my regards.”
     Her middle fingers raised in another rebellious salute.
     His eyebrows lifted. “Doesn’t sound like he put his best foot forward.”
     “Just let him know that next time, his foot better have a bullet-proof boot on, cause I’ll be comin out with my twelve-gauge. And let him know I thought over his offer.”
     Cleve’s eyes lit. “And?”
     “You’re probably shy about giving your boss the bird, even though it’s a message, so just tell him, ‘Not everybody can be bought, Jackass, and there are a million five reasons why,’ okay?”
     His eyes widened. “Ah. Wasn’t too persuasive, then?”
     “Definitely not a people person, that Chaz. I thought his lawyers were bad. You must be his new, what, manager? Ranch foreman?”
     Big fingers rubbed over his chin. “Somethin like that.”
     Why was the guy so confused? Maybe the thin air was starving his brain of oxygen. Seemed nice enough. Too bad he’d gotten hooked up with such a peckerwood. “Well, it’s been nice meeting you, Cleve. Good luck with Boss. Is there a Mrs. Hogg, I mean Howell?”
     He grinned. “Not yet.”
     “I’d say his chances keep getting thinner as his waist gets thicker, and women get more crazy ideas in their heads about equal opportunities, all that Women’s Lip nonsense.” The mere thought of Chaz’s asinine ideals had sent her hands to her hips again. Damn. “I need to get back and do something domestic around the house now.”
     With a wave over her shoulder, she started back down the hill.
     “Wait!” Cleve followed down the hill on his side of the fence. “You want some help when you put up this part-time fence?”
      Work with the cattlemen? She’d be damned if she’d ever take help from Chaz, but Cleve seemed friendly. And cute. Shaking off cute, she shrugged. “Sure.”
     “Wanta do it tomorrow? Same time?”
     “I’ve, um, got a…date.” And why did she say that? Why should she want him to think she had a date? “How ’bout Sunday.”
     “Sunday it is,” he answered with a smile.
     Damn fine smile he had. George Strait fine.
     As she walked away, she called back, “Don’t forget your gloves!”
     “Hey, wait!”
     Criminy. She stopped again.
     “You startin at the top, or bottom?”
     “Top. If we get to the bottom, I’ll feed you lunch.”
BUY LINKS:
BIO:
     I write contemporary romance and women's fiction/mom-lit. My stories often have a high heat index to match their American southwest settings. Known by my writing buddies as "Angst", I have a penchant for making my characters suffer. My novels may be tributes to the old saying, "No pain, no gain", but my hero and heroine always get the happily-ever-after they so deserve.
     I love sunny days, hot bread, the ocean, and that fluttery feeling I get inside at the first spark of a great romance. In between being a wife, mom of two teens, writer, and editor, I like to read, take morning walks, make people laugh (this probably happens when I break into a jog!), garden, and play Jigsaw World on Facebook. (sad but true)
     For me, an excellent book has characters you can sympathize with or hate (sometimes both at once), a story you simply must see through to the end, and realistic dialogue. Give me those key elements, and I'll read any genre or time period, any author.

    

5 comments:

  1. My favorite couple of all time is Mac and Jericho Barrons from Karen Marie Moning's Fever series. I love that Barrons found Mac so beneath him at the start of the series, but that something about her rainbow-loving, pink-frills wearing self just kept drawing him in.
    jessigage at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  2. My favourite couple are Elena and Raphael from Nalini Singh's Guild Hunter series. I can't help but like how they fight, and then mess up the bed-sheets as they make up.

    I have a copy of this book, but I'd love one for my mother-in-law. She reads 3-5 books a week, and can never get enough, plus it's her 60th birthday on Feb 24th. What a treat this would be.

    joannewadsworth007@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. Brynna completed the drawing and the winner is.... Jessi Gage!

    ReplyDelete

I look forward to hearing your comments.

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