Psst! You still have time to vote on Monday’s poll and enter the contest for the Amazon e-gift. I’ll close it tomorrow. ~DD
I’m honored, Delilah, to be guest blogging for you again today.
With the holiday season upon us, I started thinking about some of how my characters would celebrate Christmas. My heroine in ADDING HEAT, Giselle Sheridan, would be most likely to celebrate and decorate the way I do.
Giselle is a widow in her 40s who struggles to keep her late husband’s landscape business running and her two sons in college. She’s gutsy and determined and open to having a man in her life again, if only she had the time to search for one. So I gave her an early gift — a cougar cub of her very own.
She met CPA Conlan Trowbridge during the busiest season for them both—the week before the income tax deadline of April 15. But of course they find a way to get together.
Both Con and Giselle grew up in a semi-rural area in Pennsylvania and have traditional values. It’s important for them to have family gathered together during the holidays.
Much like in my own household, they will use traditional, indigenous decorations—fresh pine and spruce boughs and cones, holly, pyracantha and juniper berries, osage oranges and other natural elements gleaned from the acreage surrounding her home and business.
Because Giselle is in the landscaping business, their Christmas tree will, of course, be a live conifer, balled in burlap and resting in an old galvanized tub. They’ll plant the tree in the spring as a memento of their first holiday together. And I can see them starting a tradition that my own family has followed—each year giving one special ornament to the other.
Our tree was always decorated with wooden nutcrackers, hand-crocheted snowflakes, a few precious heirlooms of colored glass, sterling silver stars inscribed with meaningful dates. There’s a guy on skis, a wheelbarrow, a crocheted angel atop the tree, a needlepointed truck (yes, I actually designed and made it!). One year I received a set of Russian matryoshka dolls nested one inside the other. I treasure the tinkling glass wedding bells on a silver ribbon. We found a wooden farm couple: a man holding a rake and a woman with a pail. A replica of a steam engine and coal tender. Musical instruments. And more, but you get the idea.
Back to Giselle and Con, they aren’t always traditional, especially in the romance department *big grin*. Here’s the blurb for ADDING HEAT, a stand-alone story in the Cougar Challenge series from Ellora’s Cave.
Encouraged by friends she met at RomantiCon, widowed landscape contractor Giselle Sheridan decides she’s finally ready to take the cougar challenge and explore sex with a younger man. Except she’s too busy during planting season to go on the prowl.
CPA Conlan Trowbridge is battling the IRS deadline for his clients, but when Giselle saunters into his office with a tax question, all he can think of is sex. She’s all luscious curves and smoldering brown eyes, and he doesn’t care if she’s a dozen years older, she’s a wet dream come true.
Oh yeah, they’re both ready for some hot and heavy sex—in the tub, parking lots, their offices—anywhere and everywhere. But Giselle is afraid her age will eventually bother Con, and her longtime foreman also has designs on her, in more ways than one. When Giselle faces some hard decisions, will she ultimately be able to keep the heat?
Who is Cris Anson?
An older woman who still wants romance in her life. After my husband died in 2005, it took me a long time to come out of my grief. Because my marriage was long and happy, I wouldn’t say no to another love interest in my life. So I find myself writing cougar stories (although readers probably wouldn’t want to read about heroines as old as I am LOL). I’ve also written the four-book DANCE series for Ellora’s Cave as well as several novellas and Quickies.
Read excerpts of my books at www.crisanson.com
Find the entire Cougar Challenge series here: Cougar Challenge
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Not just a couger challege but with a twist with the foreman.. the books sounds good and they’re about women my age which is nice and a second chance of love. I like how you decorate.
Zina 😉
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Hi, Delilah, thanks so much for giving me this space to talk to your readers about decorating for the holidays.
Zina, thanks for your kind words. I love writing about women my age (although I’m a little older than my heroines LOL).
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Hi Cris, your tree–like your books–has to be wonderful!
Merry Christmas, may you get everything you wish for!! 🙂
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Hello, J. Hali, thanks! May Santa be good to you as well.
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I love to read about older women and I love older writers.
loretta
lbcanton@verizon.net
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I love this excerpt. And because I’m of an age I love cougar stories.Happy Holidays and may your dreams come true. 😀
Carol L
Lucky47502aol.com
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Hi, Loretta and Carol L.,
Thanks for your support. I’m happy to keep writing about older women, because I know life doesn’t stop at 40 – heck, or even 50 and over! We still want romance and excitement.
Happy holidays to you both.
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Hi Chris. Really enjoyed your post. I love reading about older women with younger men.
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Hi, Sue, thanks for commenting. Have a wonderful holiday season.
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Hi Cris,
I’m sure plenty of women would love to read romance about women of all ages–I know I do 🙂
As per decorating: fresh tree decorated with old-fashioned and/or keepsake ornaments. Some date back to the 40s (my mom’s friend gave her a boxful when I was 8 or so); others to my childhood, including a few I made. Many others are made by my kids and stepkids. I also used to hang pictures w/Santa on the tree. Love an aluminum tree all lit up too!
Merry Christmas to you and best wishes for all the romance in your life 🙂
Joanna Aislinn
NO MATTER WHY
The Wild Rose Press
http://www.joannaaislinn.com
http://www.joannaaislinn.wordpress.com
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Hi, Joanna, love the nostalgia in your post. Hand-made ornaments show lots of love. Have a wonderful Christmas.