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Why Philadelphia?

This was the question everyone asked when my Handsome Husband and I found ourselves with a dog-sitter, an open weekend, and cancelled travel plans. We decided to go to Philadelphia and no one could figure out why.

Herewith are all the good reasons.

First, I got a great deal on a suite at a snazzy hotel.  Second, it takes less than two hours to drive there.  Third, I have an old college chum there who we made dinner plans with.

Fourth, Philadelphia happens to be the place where my favorite event in all of U.S. history took place: the signing of the Declaration of Independence.  It always awes me that these men, who had property, families, and careers—in other words, a lot to lose—committed treason in a very public way against the mightiest military power in the world at the time.

In this very room.

6 Assembly Room--Declar

It gives me chills every time I see it.

And here’s the walking stick carried by my favorite person in U.S. history: Thomas Jefferson.  Lying in the place where he sat as he listened to the Continental Congress debate every word of his brilliantly written document.  More chills.

6 Jefferson's walking stick

While this statue is not historic itself, it represents the drama of what those men did.

8 The Signer

We ate at the historic City Tavern where they recreate genuine 18th century recipes.  Let me tell you, those pewter goblets really keep your water cold.  Unfortunately, the also keep your hands cold!

4 City Tavern place setting

Of course, we visited the Liberty Bell (right across the street from Independence Hall).

8 Liberty Bell solo

Fifth, Philadelphia has a lot of other cool stuff to see and do.

The Franklin Institute had an exhibition of artifacts from the Titanic (alas, they wouldn’t let us take photos of them.)  Outside some ice carvers were creating the ultimate in irony: the ship carved out of the material that destroyed it.

1T ice carving

The finished product.

1T carving with portico

As we entered the exhibition, my husband and I each got a ticket with a passenger’s name, travel class, and history on it.  The exhibit recreated rooms and cabins for each class so we could see where we fit in.  In the last room, we found out if our passengers lived or died.  Sadly, both of ours died, my husband’s with his entire family of wife and six children.  They weren’t even supposed to be on the Titanic, but had been transferred when the coal for their smaller ship had been commandeered to power the Titanic’s maiden voyage.  (There was a coal strike in Britain at the time.)  Such tragically bad luck.

We strolled through Logan Square with its drained fountain toward the Philadelphia Art Museum where Rocky made his triumphant training run up the steps.

1 Fountain, art museum

However, we stopped short of Rocky’s goal to visit the Rodin Museum, a beautiful building housing the collection donated to the city by Jules E. Mastbaum, an early fan of Rodin’s sculpture.  Of course, you recognize this fellow who broods at the entrance.

2 The Thinker in snow

The Beaux-Arts building itself is lovely.

2 Rodin museum exterior

It’s the perfect size for me because I like to linger over the artworks and I could absorb all of them before my Handsome Husband got impatient.

2 Rodin Museum interior

I love Rodin’s muscular sculptures.  This is the back view of The Three Shades.  How gorgeous are those bodies?!

2 The Three Shades back

Another stunning back, this time of a woman, the Danaid.

2 Danaid (The Source)

When we got back to our hotel room, it began to snow, dusting the hat and shoulders of Tadeusz Kosciuszko, who stood on the corner outside.

3 Tadeusz Kościuszko

I was surprised to find Tadeusz commemorated in Philadelphia, since I associate his name with the bridge on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway in New York.  Turns out he was quite a fellow.  Born in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, he came to America to fight in the American Revolution, ending with the rank of Brigadier General in our army.  After the war, he went back to Poland and led an uprising against the Russians, which, alas, was less successful than our rebellion against England.  He was eventually pardoned by the Tsar and ended up in Switzerland where he died peacefully.

So, have I convinced you that Philadelphia is a very underappreciated travel destination?

TAKE ME HOME is on the map!

Yup, my book is representing my home state of West Virginia (Go, Mountaineers!) on Amazon’s map of 50 Great American Love Stories.   I am so honored to be chosen for the job and a little overawed by some of my fellow authors on the map:  me and Margaret Mitchell ?  Or Tennessee Williams? Or Toni Morrison? Really?

If you go to the actual link (above), you can click on a state and it takes you to the book representing it.  Cool, interactive stuff!

great-am-lovestories_map._V377220782_

Ever wonder what a writer’s office looks like?

Now you can find out what MY office looks like, at least.  Norah Wilson has a fun blog feature called Workspace Wednesday where she asks fellow authors to reveal their true environments.  Come find out more about mine at: bit.ly/Xzjwis. There are photos and commentary from me.

If you comment todayGarret Pic 1 comp, you might win one of my back-list titles, autographed and everything!

 

Thanks for the boost!

Yesterday TAKE ME HOME was among the Kindle Deals of the Day.  Your support boosted it into the Top 100 Kindle Books.  Many, many thanks!

You are the BEST readers!

Over the moon about Shower of Stars

Shower of Stars coverWow! Connie Brockway has a good memory! She gives a thumbs-up to my book SHOWER OF STARS in her romance blog. SOS was originally published in 2004 so I’m delighted to have it brought to readers’ attention again. I hope you’ll check out what Connie has to say about this modern-day marriage of convenience tale.

Read her blog here.

 

Would you like a bookmark as my gift to you?

I know many folks are reading Take Me Home on their Kindle, but I do have a rather pretty (even if I do say so myself!) bookmark for those who like print as well.  As a holiday gift, I will send the first 25 people who request it not one, but two, bookmarks: one for Take Me Home and one for my older books.  You don’t have to do a thing except enter my contest here and put “bookmark” (or something similar) in the comments field.  Make sure your snail mail address is there too! (My apologies but I must limit this to U.S. and Canadian addresses only.)

Here’s what the Take Me Home bookmark looks like (front and back):

BMProof-TakeMeHome

You’ve got the LOOK: a sneak peek into my current work-in-progress, Country Roads

Thanks to a fellow author, Jennifer Wilck, for tagging me with the ziggy zig zag tag—“You’ve got the LOOK!”

As part of this tag, I have to take my most recent work-in-progress or my current manuscript and search for the word “look,” then post the surrounding paragraphs/text.

Set-up for the LOOK snippet from my current work-in-progress Country Roads (release date: August 2013):

Artist Julia Castillo is devastated when her uncle-cum-agent refuses to offer her latest horse paintings for sale, saying they will ruin her reputation.  Desperate for a second opinion, Julia loads her canvases into the back of a rusty station wagon and sets off from her home in North Carolina to find the one art dealer whose name she knows, Claire Arbuckle of the Gallery at Sanctuary.

The first time I use the word LOOK is on page 4 of the manuscript:

Julia scanned the landscape around her, LOOKing for a house or a store.  All she could see was a river snaking under the bridge just behind her and a lot of green trees marching up the mountainsides.  Four vehicles sped past her in loud rushes of hot, gritty air.  She wasn’t sure whether to be grateful not to have to worry about accepting help from a potentially deranged stranger, or annoyed that chivalry seemed to be dead.

Another vehicle whooshed past, then flashed red brake lights and pulled over to the side of the highway well in front of her.  As the black, low-slung car reversed toward her, she wished she hadn’t tossed the wrench; hefting it would have made her look a little threatening.  Now she had to settle for arranging her keys between her fingers so their ends stuck out as she made a fist, another tidbit she’d picked up from watching cop shows on television.

The car’s door swung open, and a man in a pale blue shirt, red tie and navy slacks emerged, unfolding his long legs as he stepped out onto the gravel.

“A tie seems pretty upstanding,” she muttered, loosening her grip on the keys.  “Serial killers probably don’t wear ties on a daily basis.”

She planted her feet wide apart and crossed her arms as the Good Samaritan approached with a fluid, ground-eating stride. She guessed he was in his early thirties, and her artist’s sensibility quivered with the urge to paint the planes and shadows of a face that was too strong for classic handsomeness and far more interesting.  He had hair like an ancient Greek portrait: thick, dark waves you wanted to bury your fingers in.  His silver gray eyes almost glowed in contrast against his olive skin.  He would be a perfect model for one of those half-immortal, half-human offspring the Greek gods were always fathering.  What were they called?  Demi-gods.

 His cool silvery gaze flicked over her, making her aware of the dirt on the knees of her jeans from her futile attempt to change the tire.  And the sweat that glued her white gauze peasant blouse to her shoulder blades.  And who knew how crazed her long curly hair looked after being blown around by the passing vehicles?

“Got a flat?” he said, stopping a few feet away as he shifted his survey to the limp pile of rubber nearly falling off the wheel rim.

And now I’m tagging five of my fabulous fellow authors for their LOOK snippets:

C.H. Admirand

Roni Denholtz

Shirley Hailstock

Lisa Verge Higgins

Nancy Naigle

You can post your LOOK snippets in your blogs, website, or on your Facebook pages.

To my readers: these ladies are all great writers, so check them out!

TAKE ME HOME is available today!

Yes, I am totally excited about the release of TAKE ME HOME, the first book in my Whisper Horse series.  It’s set in the mountains of West Virginia where I grew up.  It has lots of horses in it.  I loved drawing on all my memories to write it, and I hope you’ll enjoy taking that journey with me. Here’s the link to my web page where you can read an excerpt and find various places to buy it: http://bit.ly/XgqY6F

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While I’m writing about West Virginia, I now live in New Jersey.  As you know, we got hit hard by Hurricane Sandy; people’s lives have been shattered.  Because I love my adopted state too, I am donating a percentage of the first week’s royalties for TAKE ME HOME to the American Red Cross to help the hurricane survivors recover and rebuild.  If you pre-ordered the book, thank you and don’t worry: your purchase will be counted in the donation.

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I have been lucky: a huge tree fell in our backyard but missed my house.  We have no power or phone, but I have friends who haven opened their homes to me, and the power will come back on. The church and the library have given me sanctuary.  I’ll be fine, but some folks lost everything. My heart breaks for them, so this is my small way of offering solace and help.

I hope the story of TAKE ME HOME will carry you away from your troubles, whether they are caused by Sandy or something completely different.  The truth is: we all need a whisper horse.

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