Conny Withay reviewed Hidden Identity, my July release, on her blog and gave it 4.5 of 5 stars. She said, “With twists and turns, Post engages the reader to realize how important trust is in a relationship.”
To read the full review, click here.
Conny Withay reviewed Hidden Identity, my July release, on her blog and gave it 4.5 of 5 stars. She said, “With twists and turns, Post engages the reader to realize how important trust is in a relationship.”
To read the full review, click here.
We’re back for the second installment of Writer Wednesdays, a year-long blog party by a group of Firebirds (2012 Golden Heart finalists). Here is this month’s prompt:
This is an interesting one for me, because…I don’t have a desk! I think if I had to actually sit in an office, it would hamper my creativity. So I have several places where I write. When I get bogged down and the words aren’t flowing the way I’d like them to, it’s time for a change of scenery. I move from the dining room table to the screen room to the recliner to a beach chair in the front yard.
But there’s usually at least one “object” that follows me wherever I choose to write.
This one:

Or this one:
Or this one:
Sometimes I’m blessed with all three:
All three of my animals are rescues. We got Midnight (our black cat) from the pound a couple of hours before he was going to be gassed. Itsy (our gray and white cat) came from the Humane Society, and Morgan (our long-haired dachshund) was taken out of a very abusive home. I think animals understand what we save them from and respond by giving us their undying love. And what better inspiration is there than that?
Now that you’ve read about the favorite “items” on my desk, check out what my writer friends have written. (For future topics, see the calendar below.)
Kay Hudson – Jamie Wesley – Jean Willett – KD Fleming – Kat Cantrell – Kathleen Bittner Roth – Kristen Ethridge – Lauren Christopher – Natalie Meg Evans – Priscilla Kissinger – Sharon Wray – Tamra Baumann – Wendy LaCapra
This month, we are celebrating the release of KD Fleming’s Her Hometown Reporter.
TOBY HENDRICKS HAS THE INSIDE SCOOP ON GINA LAWSON
The reporter is looking for a story that’ll be his ticket out of his small Georgia town. With her political connections, legal assistant Gina Lawson could help Toby realize his aspirations. Their friendship is just an added bonus, but falling in love isn’t part of his five-year plan.
Gina’s devoted to her family and community, and doesn’t plan to ever leave. Though she finds her favorite reporter maddeningly irresistible, she must guard her heart. But when a betrayal of trust threatens to shatter both their dreams, will Gina and Toby learn that they share the same values after all?
AMAZON – BARNES & NOBLE – HARLEQUIN
I’m back at The Suspense Zone where Susan Sleeman is interviewing me. See a picture of my writing space (it’s not what you’d think) and learn about the most rewarding thing I’ve ever done. Join me at The Suspense Zone by clicking here.
Hallee Bridgeman is interviewing me on her blog today. Wanna know my inspiration for writing and my first screen crushes? Join us by clicking here.
I used to love entering contests. I would carefully read the rules and condense them down to an easy-to-follow list that I would check, double check and triple check before sending in my entry. Then I would mark the calendar and anxiously count off the days until the finalists would be announced. In those early entries, I have to admit that I made almost every mistake imaginable. – See more at Seekerville.
Join me for a game of “Would You Rather…” on Jessica R. Patch’s blog. Would You Rather…
Susan Sleeman is interviewing me on her blog today. Wanna hear the craziest thing and the scariest thing I’ve ever done? Join us at The Suspense Zone.
I am amazed and heartbroken over how many pets are just discarded.
Shortly before my husband and I were to leave for the holidays, a tenant moved out of one of our rental properties and abandoned five dogs—a black lab named Jackson, a lab/cur mix named Bruno and a dachshund mix with two puppies.
For the rest of this post, visit Roxanne Rustand’s blog by clicking here.
Not much strikes fear in the heart of a new writer like having to write a synopsis (or suck-nopsis as an author friend of mine likes to call it.) And they’re not a whole lot of fun for the experienced writer, either. But there are some tricks to make the process a little less harrowing.
For the rest of this post, join me at Savvy Authors by clicking here.
Several years ago, my parents, my sister and brother-in-law, and my husband and I went in together on a 100-year-old log cabin on 12 acres in the North Carolina mountains. After a couple of trips up from Florida to make it almost livable (replaced leaky roof, fixed septic system so toilets would flush, etc.), we decided to all spend Christmas up there. The cabin had no heat, and we couldn’t build a fire in the fireplace, because the chimney had toppled years earlier. So we tried our best to keep warm by the wood-burning stove we had installed on one of our previous trips.
To read more, join me at Weaving a Threefold Strand by clicking here.