Precious Riches – Cover Unveiled!

(Hidden Prospects #1)

Precious Riches (Hidden Prospects #1)

After years of supporting his mother and siblings, Paul Lancaster now has his independence.  He splits his time between his placer mine and the boardinghouse he built for his mother.  When a single spinster comes to town to visit a friend, he considers giving up that new found independence for love.  Life turns upside down when his business is threatened.  Paul must choose what riches are the most precious to him.

Millie Pritchett harbors a decades old secret that has kept her a spinster well into her late thirties.  Because of the pain of her past mistakes, she has taken on a shy personality to protect her heart.  When her father remarries and sends her away, she goes to Prescott, the town where her only friend lives.  Though she had to find a job, she never expected she would end up working for such an attractive business man.  Her secrets threaten to destroy her last hope for love.

I will give you hidden treasures, riches stored in secret places, so that you may know that I am the Lord, the God of Israel, who summons you by name.  –Isaiah 45:3 (NIV)

Coming Fall / Winter 2013

Characters

Paul Lancaster

Millie Pritchett

Caroline Anderson

Thomas Anderson

Get a sneak peek!

Read Chapter 1

Read Chapter 2

 

Author Spotlight – Ruth Francisco

RF_5544_21. Tell us a little about yourself and what you like to do when you aren’t writing.
I tend to write novels that are a little controversial. I don’t intend to, but a question grabs hold of my mind—do we have a right to say no to medical technology? What would it be like to be Jackie Kennedy? What would happen if you found out you were adopted as an adult? What would it be like to live with grizzly bears? Where is Islamic extremism taking us? What would it be like to live during WWII in America—and it won’t let go. I have to explore it, I have to write about it.

When I’m not writing, I like to be outside. I live in a beautiful part of Florida. I kayak and run and hike and garden and fish. I also love to cook, and was a food blogger for Mad Housewife Wine for several years.

2. What inspired you to write this book?
When I first drove to the Florida Panhandle from Los Angeles five years ago, I was smitten by the unspoiled beauty of the place. Thousands of Monarch butterflies flitted around my car as I drove down to Alligator Point. The first morning I woke to mullet jumping in the canal and screeching great blue heron. I looked out the window and saw snowy egrets and bald eagles. White squirrels jumping between branches of the pine trees. I went for a bike ride and saw bob cat, deer, and boar. I went kayaking and saw turtles and dolphin and dozens of different fish. I felt like a guest in a land ruled by animals.

One day I saw a fisherman throwing a cast net into the water and asked him to show me how to do it. We got to talking. When he heard I was a writer, he told me about several dozen soldiers who lost their lives during a training exercise while at Camp Gordon Johnston during WWII, how the tragedy was covered up.

So a few weeks later, I visited the WWII museum in Carrabelle and started doing research and interviewing people. I got completely sucked into the research, spending hours in the museum reading old newspapers on microfiche. Everything fascinated me—especially the newspaper advertisements—from girdles to hair tonic.

I started interviewing locals. Everyone had something to add. It all started to come together.

3. Is there anything in your book based on real life experiences or is it purely all imagination?
I truly love writing fiction as if it were fact, so much so that sometimes people don’t know what is fact and what is fiction. I did an incredible amount of research for this novel. The vastness of my ignorance when it came to WWII military history was epic, so I had to do vast amounts of reading. I became a little overwhelmed and left the story for a few years to write other things.

It wasn’t until I interviewed Vivian Hess, who had been a little girl on the Camp Gordon Johnston Army base, that I felt I had a hook. Yet, as I wrote about her, the character separated herself from the real person, becoming increasingly impish and inventive. I wanted Major Goodwin to be a man of absolute integrity, but as I wrote him, he took on depth, becoming a man of great sorrow and great compassion. Vivian’s mother was somewhat based on my own mother, but soon she became this incredibly strong woman who had made great sacrifices, yet still yearned to be adventurous and free.

The mix of fact and imagination as it gets stewed in the writer’s brain is fascinating to me.

4. What books have most influenced your life and why?
When I was in high school, I began reading late 19th and early 20th century writers, like Thomas Hardy, D.H. Lawrence, Henry James, Dostoevsky, Hermann Hess. Their characters lived simple lives, but lived them on an epic emotional stage. When I read “Tess of the d’Urbevilles” I thought to myself, “I would like to write a novel like that.” I had to go through several careers before I settled down as a writer. I think it took me years to synthesize experience, and to have something to say.

5. Is there an author who you would consider a mentor?
I don’t have a mentor, but I do have influences. Philip Roth, Anita Brookner, and Patricia Highsmith, as well as Ruth Rendell, Joyce Carol Oates, and Stephen King. I guess my tastes run to the dark side. Beyond being great storytellers, all of these writers have characters who yearn for something greater than themselves, who challenge standard ways of thinking and behaving. And they use language beautifully.

6. What are you working on now?
I don’t know what I’ll write next. I originally envisioned “Camp Sunshine” as the first in a three-part series about the Florida Panhandle. I actually wrote and published Part 3 first, “Sunshine Highway,” about a corrupt sheriff in contemporary Florida. Now I have to write the middle volume about the “sixties.” It’s a stupid way to write a series, but that’s the way the stories came to me.

My readers of “Amsterdam 2012” also really want a sequel. I really want another trip to Europe. So perhaps that’s next.

7. How do you handle criticism?
I’ve been writing for a while now, so I’m not nearly as tender as a new writer might be. I think most people offer criticism with the intention of helping you write better, so I generally accept criticism, consider it, and often act on it. Occasionally someone will post a poor review on Amazon, and it makes me sad, because I want happy customers. Often the reader is critical because the book isn’t a genre they enjoy.

8. Do you have anything else you’d like to say to readers?
I hope when people read my book that they feel as if they’ve time-traveled back to 1942. I want them to hear the big band music and blues, feel the incredible vitality of the whole country pulling together for the war effort. It inspired me how selfless people were. When I started the research, I didn’t know that the Civil Rights Movement had its beginnings in WWII with soldiers agitating for an integrated military. I didn’t know about jook joints. I didn’t know about how the industrial war complex manipulated the war effort, how it all affected race relations in the South. So I hope readers will be as fascinated as I was with the history, as well as being entertained with the antics of the characters.

Author Bio
Ruth Francisco worked in the film industry for 15 years before selling her first novel “Confessions of a Deathmaiden” to Warner Books in 2003, followed by “Good Morning, Darkness,” which was selected by “Publishers’ Weekly” as one of the ten best mysteries of 2004, and “The Secret Memoirs of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.” She now has nine novels, including the best-seller “Amsterdam 2012,” published as ebooks. She is a frequent contributor to “The Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine.”

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Camp Sunshine by Ruth Francisco

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Genre: Historical fiction, mystery

Book Blast: Winter’s End by Rebekah Lyn

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Title: Winter’s End (Seasons of Faith)

By Rebekah Lyn

Book Two of the Seasons of Faith Series

Musician Michelle Burton just had the best night of her life. Her band Tangled Web opened for Wonderland in downtown Orlando and the crowd loved them. Too excited to sleep she makes a fateful decision to go to work early. The best night of her life turns into the worst day of her life.

Nearby, at boutique Hotel Lago, Stephen Longbottom, acting concierge manager, is anxiously awaiting the arrival of the board of directors for Silken Pleasures, a multimillion dollar company based in New York and specializing in high end cosmetics, fragrances and lingerie. Their incessant demands before they even arrive are driving him to distraction. Meanwhile Lizzie Reynolds, his boss is on a romantic ski trip in Vermont leaving him to manage his first solo event.

Hope, forgiveness and love are an integral message throughout the book and like a fine tapestry the threads of God’s master plan for the character’s lives are woven into a fabric of great storytelling, conflict and humor.

Readers who came to know and love the characters of Summer Storms will enjoy catching up with Lizzie, Stephen, Michelle, Jeffrey and Ian.

Kindle | PaperbackRebekah Lyn
ScanRebekah is a Christian with a heart for new beginnings. She is a Florida native and a graduate of Jacksonville University, Jacksonville, Fl. A love of history, research and journaling led naturally to a passion for writing. She enjoys travel and has traveled extensively across the United States and Canada as well as Europe and the Caribbean. Her reading taste run from the classics to light fiction. When she is not working or writing, she enjoys cooking,baking and sharing recipes on her blog, http://rebekahlynskitchen.wordpress.com

Her current works include, Summer Storms and Winter’s End, books one and two in The Seasons of Faith series, and Julianne the first book in The Coastal Chronicle series. She is currently working on the, as yet untitled, second book in the Coastal Chronicles set in coastal Florida during the early years of the space program.

Rebekah currently resides in Florida along with her “attack” cat, Mia. They would enjoy meeting with you on her Facebook page.

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Historical Research for The New Millennia by Phillip Bryant

Historical Research for the new millennia.

Time was, before the advent of a public internet and the advances in OCR technology, that one needed to have time and money to travel to gain entrance to collections of material scattered about the United States to conduct any 19th century period research.

Not even the Library of Congress collection of original source material and out of print publications has all one might need for doing research, for example, on the Civil War battle of Wilson’s Creek. University libraries, such as the University of Missouri or historical foundations and museums in and around the small town of Prospect, Missouri held within their much smaller collections the material one would need to fill in the gaps left open by the larger repositories.

Travel is still required if you are writing a nonfiction account of a place, time, or person as much of the first hand information is still in physical form – thankfully universities and the Library of Congress have digitized much of their collections and are still adding more. What I intend with the rest of this post is to focus on research for the historical fiction author with the minimum of travel.

Have a large personal library.

Much of my research into the Shiloh series of books has benefited from my years of collecting nonfiction resources on the war. You can never have enough books!

Project Gutenberg

If you are focusing on any time period in the last 50 years and older, this is the place to look first before buying a reprint of a book. You can find for free an epub or mobi format book of some of the same works you can buy in a bookstore. Peruse this source. I picked up a memoir written by a woman about her childhood in upstate NY during the civil war period (1840′s to 1860′s) to get a feel for home life as a civilian. You won’t find this kind of book on the bookshelves of your bookstore or even in your library.

Google Books

This is another resource of primary, out of print books. The interface isn’t as nice as Apple’s iBooks or Kindle, but they have their own repository that you won’t find at Project Gutenberg.

Online Repositories

It would be impossible to catalogue every foundation or university who now has a digital database of OCR material, you’d just have to google a topic and see what comes up. Many universities who owned copies of 18c periodicals have digitized their collections. A periodical that featured first hand participant essays on the civil war was New Century Magazine, a publication that ranged from the 1870s to late 1890s. There are many more from this period in digital format. These resources are great for gleaning the mind of the men involved.

Secondary resources

Books baby! More and more contemporary nonfiction books are being formatted for eReaders, now ones library need not fill every square inch of your available wall space but can fill a digital shelf on your handheld. Always be reading nonfiction, scholastic monographs on the time period as well as other topical works. Here is where you will get the evaluation and interpretation and benefit from the condensing of the author’s research into a single volume.

Site visits

It is impossible to fully understand an area of geography from a map or a two dimensional description in an account. You do have to visit the site in order to understand why something happened the way it did. Crossing a creek doesn’t sound like much when you read about it or look at a map. You should get a feel for the land itself, how high a hill might be, how far a distance might be, how long a field might be – all are things that you pretty much have to walk yourself in order to add little details into the story. Though I had been to Shiloh several times before finishing They Met at Shiloh, until I went with a pen and pad and took notes I was missing a level of detail in the narrative. I make it a part of all of my planning now to visit a site before it becomes part of a story, to stand on a place and note how the ground lays, where a road is, where a field was, where a house stood. Plan to spend a day note taking on anything of interest that will bring the story that much more life and grounding on the historic.

Obviously, you can use any of these to greater or lesser degree but I believe all should be in your arsenal of tools for buttressing your historical novels.

My short story, Two Struck Images is free today for Kindle, check it out. My new release, Book 2 of the Shiloh series, A Certain Death, will be releasing sometime in February. Keep tabs on my Facebook Author page for announcements.

Author Bio

pbPhillip Bryant is a graduate of the University of New Mexico with a degree in History. He works in IT as a systems administrator and holds certifications in Red Hat Linux and Microsoft systems. He has spent 15 years as a civil war reenactor and is the author of They Met at Shiloh, a civil war historical fiction novel and is working on a seven novel series based on this first book.

 

They Met At Shiloh by Phillip Bryant

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